Geistphilosophy

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Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.

argument of

  • aesthetics ( in aesthetics: Kant, Schiller, and Hegel )

    ...to the spirit by articulating in concrete form its inner tensions and resolutions. For Hegel, the arts are arranged in both historical and intellectual sequence, from architecture (in which Geist [“spirit”] is only half articulate and given purely symbolic expression), through sculpture and painting, to music and thence to poetry, which is the true art of the Romantics....

  • transcendental subject ( in Kantianism: Early Kantianism: 1790–1835 )

    ...of the Ego and the non-Ego—which meant, in turn, in the case of the aesthetic Idealist F.W.J. von Schelling, “the absolute self,” and in the case of G.W.F. Hegel “the Geist or absolute Spirit,” and finally, in the case of the pessimistic Romanticist Arthur Schopenhauer, “the absolute Will.” In each case (excepting Schulze) the interpretation...

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  • Hegel ( in Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich: Emancipation from Kantianism )

    ...found in love, conceived as a union of opposites, a prefigurement of spirit as the unity in which contradictions, such as infinite and finite, are embraced and synthesized. His choice of the word Geist to express this his leading conception was deliberate: the word means “spirit” as well as “mind” and thus has religious overtones. Contradictions in thinking at the...

  • Klages ( in Klages, Ludwig )

    Klages believed human beings to be distinguishable from other animals by a “spirit” (Geist) that underlies the human capacity to think and to will. This capacity is the source of human estrangement from the world and is the origin of the ego and its desire for immortality. His research sought to define and structure characteristics evidenced in different egos, as documented...

Citations

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APA Style:

Geist. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 08, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/227866/Geist

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