Buch, Englisch, 256 Seiten, Format (B × H): 154 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 350 g
ISBN: 978-0-7456-2033-6
Verlag: Polity Press
The mature Hegel partly overcame the fierce anti-Jewish attitude of his youth, yet continued to see Judaism as the alienation of its own new principles. Post-Christian Judaism no longer had a real history, only a contingent protracted existence, and although modern Jews deserved civil rights, Hegel saw no place for them in modernity as Jews.
Nietzsche, on the contrary, who grew to be a passionate anti- anti- Semite, admired Diaspora Jews for their power and depth and assigned them a role as Jews in curing Europe of the decadent Christian culture which their own ancestors, the second-temple Jewish "priests", had inflicted upon Europe by begetting Christianity. The ancient corrupters of Europe are thus to be its present redeemers.
Through his masterly analysis of the writings of Hegel and Nietzsche, Yovel shows that anti-Jewish prejudice can exist alongside a philosophy of reason, while a philosophy of power must not necessarily be anti-Semitic.
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Preface.
Part 1: Hegel and the Religion of Sublimity.
1. Hegel and his Predecessors.
2. The Young Hegel and the Spirit of Judaism.
3. Jena and the Phenomenology: A Telling Silence.
4. The Mature Hegel: The Sublime Makes its Appearance.
5. Sublimity is not Sublime: The Philosophy of Religion.
6. Hegel and the Jews: A Never-Ending Story.
Part II: Nietzsche and the People of Israel.
7. Nietzsche and the Shadows of the Dead God.
8. The Anti-Anti-Semite.
9. Nietzsche and Ancient Judaism: The Antichrist.
10. Diaspora and Contemporary Jews.
Epilogue.
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index.