PHILOSOPHY OF LAW IN THE HEGELIAN THINKING Cover Image

PHILOSOPHY OF LAW IN THE HEGELIAN THINKING
PHILOSOPHY OF LAW IN THE HEGELIAN THINKING

Author(s): Agata Mihaela Popescu, Andreea-Ileana Danielescu
Subject(s): Philosophy of Law
Published by: Editura Pro Universitaria
Keywords: jurisprudence; natural law; reality; truth; law;

Summary/Abstract: It is amazing how simple and how present Hegel’s philosophy of law principles seem to be, principles developed in a textbook which went beyond the academic lecture room, and which at the middle of the 19th century, were addressed to both the world of science and the large audience. It is about a legal structure of reality and of the state, about a series of “natural law and State science” elements that the great philosopher built within an accurate, close, and yet subtle philosophical architecture, specific to his method of “Science of Logic”. In his approach, Hegel also focused on some kind of fight between certain truths and other truths “of the same kind, spread from other parts”. Yet, within the state law and ethics, truth is as old as the public morals and religion. Bringing back to the forefront, in the modern epoch, an analysis of the principles Hegel wrote about means a privilege to understanding the national accents of the present legal world in Romania and its interconnections with the rest of the world.

  • Issue Year: 2018
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 58-65
  • Page Count: 8
  • Language: English
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