All the contents
Articles
The Idea of Cognition. The Doctrine of Spirit. Conclusion
Hegel's Anti-Spinozism: The Transition to Subjective Logic and the End of Classical Metaphysics
I. Fichte and Hegel as Post-Kantians. II. The Wissenschaftelehre of 1810. III. Transcending Spinoza. IV. Hegel versus Fichte.
Hegel's Refutation of Rational Egoism, in True Infinity and the Idea
Introduction. I. The Need for Recognition. II. Reality, Negativity, and True Infinity. III. Multiplicity as Negativity: Essence. IV. Multiplicity as Negativity: The Concept's Objectivity. V. Multiplicity as Negativity: The Idea's Life and Cognition. VI. Objections and Conclusion.
Hegel's science of logic in an analytic mode
History, Concepts, and Normativity in Hegel
Introduction. I. Post-Cartesian Logics and History. II. Hegel's Conceptual History. A. A Sui Generis History of Concepts. B. Conceptual v. Natural History.
The Antepenultimacy of the Beginning in Hegel's Science of Logic
I. Introduction. II. Hegel's Last Chapter. III. Hegel's first Chapter. IV. Becoming as the True Beginning. V. Conclusion
The Concept and its Double: Power and Powerlessness in Hegels Subjective Logic
Introduction. I. The Powerlessness of Nature. II. Absolute Power. III. The Powerlessness of Reason.
The end of Hegel's Logic: Absolute Idea as Absolute Method
I. The Absolute Idea and "All the Rest ...". II. External Form and Absolute Form. III. The Method According to the Form: Anfang and Fortgang. IV. The Method According to the Content: System and End
The One and the Concept: On Hegel's Reading of Plato's Parmenides
Introduction. I. Analysis: With What Must Plato's Dialectic Begin?. Conclusion.
I. Reason and Syllogism. II. From Judgment to Syllogism. III. Differentiation of the Forms of Syllogism. IV. The Minimal Form of Syllogism: The Syllogism of Determinate Being. V. The Syllogism of Reflection. VI. The Syllogism of Necessity. VII. From Syllogism to Objectivity
The Types of Universals and the Forms of Judgment
I. Preliminary Overview of the Forms of Judgment and the Types of Universality. II. Qualitative Judgment and Abstract Universality. III. Quantitative Judgment and Class Membership. IV. Judgments of Necessity and Genus and Species. A. Categorical Judgment. B. Hypothetical Judgment. C. Disjunctive Judgment. V. Judgments of the Concept and the Universal Of normativity. A. Assertoric Judgment. B. Problematic Judgment. C. Apodeictic Judgment. VI. Beyond Judgment....
Ways of Being Singular: The Logic of Individuality
Introduction. I. The Set-Theoretical Interpretation of Individuality. A. Three Models of the Distinction. i. The Virtuosity Model. ii. The Inclusivist Model. iii. The Exclusivist Model. B. Three Questions and Answers. i. Plausible Account of the Distinction?. ii. Illustrative of Hegel's Account?. iii. Does Any Model Stand Out?. II. Objections and Replies. A. Classes and Sets. B. Dialectical Development. C. Exclusivity and Novelty.
Why are There Four Hegelian Judgments?
I. Tour de Judgement. II. Tour de Syllogisme. III. Why Four Art Thou?. Conclusion.
Why Hegel's Concept is Not the Essence of Things
I. The Project of the Logic. II. The Nature of Essence. III. From Substance and Causality to Concept. IV. The Concept. V. Immanence. VI. Conclusion.
Notes
Introduction. I. Arthur Cheney Train and His Literary Progeny. II. Undermining the Shyster Bar: The Attack on Howe & Hummel. III. The Mythical Country Lawyer. IV. Ephraim Tutt: The Paradigmatic Country Lawyer. V. The Crux of the Ethical Dilemma: Public Confusion Between Myth and Reality. VI. The Legacy of Tutt and His Role in Stimulating Changes in Legal Ethics. VII. Conclusion.
The Prosecution of Cybergripers Under the Lanham ACT
Introduction. I. Claims Brought under Traditional Trademark Infringement. A. Likelihood of Confusion under §§ 1114 and 1125(a). B. The Misapplication of §§1114 and 1125(a) to Identical-Name Cybergriper Cases. 1. Planned Parenthood Federation of America v. Bucci. 2. Jews for Jesus v. Brodsky. 3. PETA v. Doughney. 4. Taubman v. Web feats. C. Domain Names Should Be Read Like the Titles of Expressive Works. II. Claims Brought under § 1125(c) (The FTDA). A. History an...


