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  1. The Young Hegel ( German: Der junge Hegel: Über die Beziehungen von Dialektik und Ökonomie) is a book about the philosophical development of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel by the philosopher György Lukács. The work was completed in 1938 and published in Zurich in 1948.

  2. The Young Hegel by Georg Lukacs. Written: 1938; Source: The Young Hegel. Of 571pp, about 200pp reproduced here, without editor's notes; Publisher: Merlin Press, 1975; Translator: Rodney Livingstone; Transcribed: Andy Blunden; Proofed: and corrected by Andy Blunden, May 2007. Contents. Part I. Hegel’s Early Republican phase (Berne 1793-96) Part II.

  3. The Young Hegelians (German: Junghegelianer), or Left Hegelians (Linkshegelianer), or the Hegelian Left (die Hegelsche Linke), were a group of German intellectuals who, in the decade or so after the death of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel in 1831, reacted to and wrote about his ambiguous legacy.

  4. mitpress.mit.edu › 9780262620338 › the-young-hegelThe Young Hegel - MIT Press

    15 mars 1977 · The Young Hegel. Studies in the Relations between Dialectics and Economics. by Georg Lukács. Translated by Rodney Livingstone. Paperback. $40.00. Paperback. ISBN: 9780262620338. Pub date: March 15, 1977. Publisher: The MIT Press. 608 pp., 5 x 8 in,

  5. Hegel regards objective idealism as the highest and indeed the final form of philosophy. In his polemics against Kant and Fichte he elaborates its claims. But he sees the direct antecedents of his own philosophy not just in subjective idealism but also in the philosophy of the Enlightenment.

  6. The campaign waged by the young Marx against Hegel and a Hegelianism in an advanced state of decomposition illustrates the clear connection between the emergence of materialist dialectics and the ideology of the new revolutionary class: the humanism of the proletariat.

  7. This circumstance led Lukács, one of the chief Marxist theoreticians of this century, to embark on his exploration of Hegelian antecedents in the German intellectual tradition, their concrete expression in the work of Hegel himself, and later syntheses of seemingly contradictory modes of though.