(1986), Glas, Lincoln and London: University of
Nebraska
Press.
Education in Hegel
The old man has seen such othering return many times in his spiritual journey and now recollects the truth in education of the eternal in the present.
In his wisdom he sees recollection as the actual- ity of eternity and knows that the fear of error in knowing the absolute is really the error itself.
Life is death.
Life is the actuality of the eternity known as death.
The life we lead has been an education towards knowing eternity in the finite.
This means for the old man that the thought of life after death takes on a different and recollective significance. We have seen that education in Hegel is death in life, but is there also life in death? What happens when death wins the life and death struggle? What is the view of the victor in that case? Religion and philosophy in the Western tradition have often argued for some form of resurrection of body and soul, or of the soul without the body. This is to say that when death is the victor over life, nevertheless life is still carried in and by death (as death has previously been carried in and by life). Some also see life after death as a metaphor for how the memory of the deceased lives on in friends, family, books and anything else that counts as a legacy. From Ecclesiastes comes the thought that 'I perceive that there is nothing better, than that a man shall rejoice in his own works; for that is his portion' (Ecc. 3. 22) before he returns to the dust from whence he came. Here the deceased becomes part of the recollection of those he leaves behind and he is part of their continuing education regarding truth. For example, this is the wisdom of recollection when the parent sees his own death in the life of his children and grandchildren. This is not merely restricted to legacy and continuity. It is also a recognition that he will become death in the lives of these others. This is perhaps the final gift he can give to his loved ones, to teach them one last time of the wisdom gained as death approaches. 6 In these senses, life is in death just as death is in life. But of course the question that remains is whether the deceased will be able to recollect his own death for himself, or perhaps, instead of recollection, there will be bliss and tranquillity that will have no division between mind and God.
As we saw above at the beginning of Chapter 2, the Phenomenology ends with the same issue. Absolute spirit has recollection as its new shape. All that it has been lost is also preserved in what is. 'Their preservation
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 164 Education in Hegel
[combining] history . . . and the Science of Knowing . . . form alike the inwardizing and the Calvary of Absolute Spirit (Hegel, 1977: 492-93, 1949: 563-64), that is, both life and death. Death has been pivotal to the spiritual education of the reflective subject in this chapter for it has been the forma- tion of every recollection of loss. This was also true, as we saw above, of the relation of self and other. Every educational movement is a death, a loss, a negation. It is how this death is understood that gives what is learned its own shape and content. Spiritual education is what happens when nothing happens. Absolute spirit is absolute because it comes to know death as self- determination, that is, death is the true movement of absolute spirit, and absolute spirit is the truth of death as life. Truth is the experience of death known as formative, as spirit.
Put like this, the question regarding life after death becomes an educa- tion that re-forms itself, that is, that re-forms the question. The truth of death is already present. It is what life is. Life is that which knows itself because it has death as other. But the other here is already determinate of life. Therefore the question, 'is there life after death? ' is re-formed accord- ing to its own actuality. Life is already of death. Life recollects death. Life is already after death. Life must admit its complicity in the positing that underpins the question.
But - and here we raise an issue not taken up in our study of education in Hegel7 - recollection of death is as much recollection forwards as it is back- wards. When death is present as life it is so in the sense that life is both before and after death. Life is after death in that life is victorious in the life and death struggle as the Hegelian spiritual child. Life is also before death as it approaches it in Hegelian old age. Thus life recollects itself in death both backwards and forwards. This groundless standpoint is learning, or is I-philosophy. It is the actuality of time past and time future; the actuality of all time, of eternity known in recollection. This changes how we understand the question as to whether there is life after death. It educates us not to think of their separation on earth and the need for their unification beyond earth. Rather, it educates us to think of life as after death and before death. It commends us, in short, to know the question of life after death as a philo- sophical education that knows not just their separation but also their actuality, their relationship.
The actuality of this relationship is the recollection of absolute spirit, a relation of truth to itself sustained, lost, and sustained again in learning of the finite in the infinite and the infinite in the finite. As a self-relation abso- lute spirit is I-philosophy, other than itself and itself as not the other. It is the truth of groundlessness and of death in the life of the individual. It is
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? I-Philosophy 165
substance as subject. It is the development, culture and Aufhebung of the eternal that is I. It is consciousness, self-consciousness and recollection. This is no longer picture-thinking, this is philosophical education where truth can be known in and by itself. Equally, this is not the reconciliation in any abstract sense of God and the old man. It is only reconciliation in an educational sense, where the reconciliation of subject and substance is in our experience of their difference and not in the overcoming of their difference.
Education in Hegel is not first to comprehend the truth of life as the self- othering of God. But it is perhaps first in comprehending this as a totality of actuality in recollection. The old man faces death, then, from the point of view of its truth, from life. He has recollected his life in the truth of death. His wisdom tells him that he has participated in the life of eternity and has been part of the whole that eternity is. Now he may recollect his death in the truth of life. He knows, also, that wisdom is never closer to its truth than when life and death too are close to each other.
Notes
1 From De Principiis Naturae.
2 I will not in this chapter explore spiritual education beyond the Phenomenology,
although previous chapters have attempted this in different ways.
3 As my Gran said to me, many times.
4 From Nietzsche, (1982: 522).
5 The otherness of woman to man and man to woman, as of woman to woman and
man to man, will also have its truth in life and death, that is, where I am already
other and the other is not me.
6 Barren educational midwives - teachers - who have no children of their own can
find this education in the eternal loss of their pupils. This 'death' of the teacher for the pupil is in the educational truth expressed by Nietzsche that 'one repays a teacher badly if one always remains nothing but a pupil' (1982: 190).
7 See footnote 11, Introduction.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Bibliography
Adorno, T. W. (1973), The Jargon of Authenticity, Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
Adorno, T. W. (1991), 'Why philosophy? ' in D. Ingram and J. Simon-Ingram (eds. ), Critical Theory, the Essential Readings, New York: Paragon House.
Adorno, T. W. (1991), The Culture Industry, ed. J. Bernstein, London: Routledge. Adorno, T. W. (1999), Walter Benjamin and Theodor W. Adorno, The Complete Corre-
spondence 1928-1940, ed. H. Lonitz, trans. N. Walker, Cambridge: Polity Press. Adorno, T. W and Horkheimer, M. (1979), Dialectic of Enlightenment, London:
Verso.
Al-Ghazali, (1980), Deliverance from Error, Louisville: Fons Vitae.
Aquinas, T. (1920), The 'Summa Theologica' of St. Thomas Aquinas, Vol. 9, trans. by
the Fathers of the English Dominican Province, London: Burns Oates and
Washbourne Ltd.
Aquinas, T. (1975a), Summa Contra Gentiles Book 3, Part II, Indiana: University of
Notre Dame Press.
Aquinas, T. (1975b), Summa Contra Gentiles Book 4, Indiana: University of Notre
Dame Press.
Aquinas, T. (1998), Thomas Aquinas: Selected Writings, London: Penguin Books. Aristotle, (1984), The Complete Works of Aristotle (Two Volumes), ed. J. Barnes, Prince-
ton: Princeton University Press.
Avicenna, (2005), Metaphysics of the 'The Healing', trans. M. Marmura, Utah: Brigham
University Press.
Beardsworth, R. (1996), Derrida and the Political, London: Routledge.
Beardsworth, R. (2006), 'A Note to political understanding of love in our global
age', Contretemps, available at: http://www. usyd. edu. au/contretemps/contents.
html.
Beardsworth, R. (2007), 'Responding to a Post-Script: Philosophy and its Futures',
unpublished paper.
Benjamin, W. (1985), The Origin of German Tragic Drama, London: Verso.
Benjamin, W. (1992), Illuminations, London: Fontana.
Caygill, H. (1998), Walter Benjamin The Colour of Experience, London: Routledge. Caygill, H. (2002), Levinas and the Political, London: Routledge.
Cohen, J. (2005), How to Read Freud, London: Granta Books.
Derrida, J. (1978), Writing and Difference, London: Routledge.
Derrida, J.
(1986), Glas, Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. Derrida, J. (1987), Of Spirit, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Derrida, J. (1988), Limited Inc, Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
Derrida, J. (1995), Points. . . Interviews 1974-1994, California: Stanford University
Press.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Bibliography 167
Derrida, J, (2005), Rogues, California: Stanford University Press.
Ecclesiasticus, (1916), The Wisdom of Ben Sira, London: SPCK, reprinted Kessinger,
2004.
Eliot, T. S. (1944), Four Quartets, London: Faber and Faber.
Gallagher, S. (ed. ) (1997), Hegel, History, and Interpretation, Albany: State University
of New York Press.
Hawthorne, N. (1987), Nathaniel Hawthorne's Tales, ed. James McIntosh, New York:
W. W. Norton and Co.
Harris, H. S. (1995), Hegel: Phenomenology and System, Indianapolis: Hackett Publish-
ing Company.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1956), The Philosophy of History, trans. J. Sibree, New York: Dover
Publications (Werke 12 Vorlesungen u? ber die Philosophie der Geschichte,
Frankfurt, Suhrkamp Verlag, 1970).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1967), Philosophy of Right, trans. T. M. Knox, Oxford: Oxford Univer-
sity Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1969), Science of Logic, trans. A. V. Miller, London: George Allen and
Unwin.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1974) Hegel's Lectures on the History of Philosophy Vol. 2, trans. E. S.
Haldane and F. H. Simson, London: RKP; (Werke 19, Vorlesungen u? ber die
Geschichte der Philosophie II, Frankfurt, Suhrkamp Verlag, 1970).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1975), Hegel's Logic: Part One of the Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical
Sciences, trans. W. Wallace, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1977), Phenomenology of Spirit, trans. A. V. Miller, Oxford: Oxford University Press; (Sa? mtliche Werke; Bd. II, Pha? nomenologie des Geistes, Leipzig,
Meiner, 1949).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1984), Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion, Vol. 1, ed. Peter Hodgson,
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1986), The Philosophical Propaedeutic, trans. A. V. Miller, eds.
M. George and A. Vincent, Oxford: Blackwell, (Werke 4 Nu? rnberger und Heidel-
berger Schriften 1808-1817, Frankfurt, Suhrkamp Verlag, 1970).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1987), Introduction to the Lectures on the History of Philosophy, trans. T. M. Knox and A. V. Miller, Oxford: Clarendon Press, (Sa? mtliche Werke, Vol. 15a: Vorlesungen u? ber die Geschichte der Philosophie. Einleitung: System und Geschichte der Philosophie. Vollstandig neu nach den Quellen hrsg.
V. Johannes Hoffmeister, Leipzig, 1940).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1988), Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion; one volume edition,
ed. P. Hodgson, Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1990), Hegel's Philosophy of Mind: Part Three of the Encyclopaedia of the
Philosophical Sciences, trans. W. Wallace, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Heidegger, M. (1987), An Introduction to Metaphysics, New Haven: Yale University Press. Heidegger, M. (1992), Being and Time, Oxford: Blackwell.
Kain, P. J. (2005), Hegel and the Other: A Study of the Phenomenology of Spirit, New York:
State University of New York Press.
Kierkegaard, S. (1983), Fear and Trembling/Repetition, trans. H. V. and E. H. Hong,
New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
Levinas, E. (1969), Totality and Infinity, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press;
(Totalite? et Infini, essai sur l'exte? riorite? , La Haye: Martin Nijhoff, 1961).
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 168 Bibliography
Levinas, E. (1998), Otherwise than Being, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press. Levinas, E. (2001), Existence and Existents, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press. Marcus, L. and Nead, L. (eds. ) (1998), The Actuality of Walter Benjamin, London:
Lawrence and Wishart.
McLaren, P. (1997), Revolutionary Multiculturalism: Pedagogies of Dissent for the New
Millennium, Oxford: Westview Press.
Nietzsche, F. (1982), The Portable Nietzsche, trans. W. Kaufmann, Harmondsworth:
Penguin.
Ott, H. (1994), Martin Heidegger: A Political Life, London: Fontana Press.
Pascal, B. (1966), Pense? es, Harmondsworth: London.
Plato, (1956), Meno, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
Rose, G. (1981), Hegel Contra Sociology, London: Athlone.
Rose, G. (1984), Dialectic of Nihilism, Oxford: Blackwell.
Rose, G. (1992), The Broken Middle, Oxford: Blackwell.
Rose, G. (1993), Judaism and Modernity, Oxford: Blackwell.
Rose, G. (1996), Mourning Becomes the Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Rousseau, J.
This means for the old man that the thought of life after death takes on a different and recollective significance. We have seen that education in Hegel is death in life, but is there also life in death? What happens when death wins the life and death struggle? What is the view of the victor in that case? Religion and philosophy in the Western tradition have often argued for some form of resurrection of body and soul, or of the soul without the body. This is to say that when death is the victor over life, nevertheless life is still carried in and by death (as death has previously been carried in and by life). Some also see life after death as a metaphor for how the memory of the deceased lives on in friends, family, books and anything else that counts as a legacy. From Ecclesiastes comes the thought that 'I perceive that there is nothing better, than that a man shall rejoice in his own works; for that is his portion' (Ecc. 3. 22) before he returns to the dust from whence he came. Here the deceased becomes part of the recollection of those he leaves behind and he is part of their continuing education regarding truth. For example, this is the wisdom of recollection when the parent sees his own death in the life of his children and grandchildren. This is not merely restricted to legacy and continuity. It is also a recognition that he will become death in the lives of these others. This is perhaps the final gift he can give to his loved ones, to teach them one last time of the wisdom gained as death approaches. 6 In these senses, life is in death just as death is in life. But of course the question that remains is whether the deceased will be able to recollect his own death for himself, or perhaps, instead of recollection, there will be bliss and tranquillity that will have no division between mind and God.
As we saw above at the beginning of Chapter 2, the Phenomenology ends with the same issue. Absolute spirit has recollection as its new shape. All that it has been lost is also preserved in what is. 'Their preservation
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 164 Education in Hegel
[combining] history . . . and the Science of Knowing . . . form alike the inwardizing and the Calvary of Absolute Spirit (Hegel, 1977: 492-93, 1949: 563-64), that is, both life and death. Death has been pivotal to the spiritual education of the reflective subject in this chapter for it has been the forma- tion of every recollection of loss. This was also true, as we saw above, of the relation of self and other. Every educational movement is a death, a loss, a negation. It is how this death is understood that gives what is learned its own shape and content. Spiritual education is what happens when nothing happens. Absolute spirit is absolute because it comes to know death as self- determination, that is, death is the true movement of absolute spirit, and absolute spirit is the truth of death as life. Truth is the experience of death known as formative, as spirit.
Put like this, the question regarding life after death becomes an educa- tion that re-forms itself, that is, that re-forms the question. The truth of death is already present. It is what life is. Life is that which knows itself because it has death as other. But the other here is already determinate of life. Therefore the question, 'is there life after death? ' is re-formed accord- ing to its own actuality. Life is already of death. Life recollects death. Life is already after death. Life must admit its complicity in the positing that underpins the question.
But - and here we raise an issue not taken up in our study of education in Hegel7 - recollection of death is as much recollection forwards as it is back- wards. When death is present as life it is so in the sense that life is both before and after death. Life is after death in that life is victorious in the life and death struggle as the Hegelian spiritual child. Life is also before death as it approaches it in Hegelian old age. Thus life recollects itself in death both backwards and forwards. This groundless standpoint is learning, or is I-philosophy. It is the actuality of time past and time future; the actuality of all time, of eternity known in recollection. This changes how we understand the question as to whether there is life after death. It educates us not to think of their separation on earth and the need for their unification beyond earth. Rather, it educates us to think of life as after death and before death. It commends us, in short, to know the question of life after death as a philo- sophical education that knows not just their separation but also their actuality, their relationship.
The actuality of this relationship is the recollection of absolute spirit, a relation of truth to itself sustained, lost, and sustained again in learning of the finite in the infinite and the infinite in the finite. As a self-relation abso- lute spirit is I-philosophy, other than itself and itself as not the other. It is the truth of groundlessness and of death in the life of the individual. It is
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? I-Philosophy 165
substance as subject. It is the development, culture and Aufhebung of the eternal that is I. It is consciousness, self-consciousness and recollection. This is no longer picture-thinking, this is philosophical education where truth can be known in and by itself. Equally, this is not the reconciliation in any abstract sense of God and the old man. It is only reconciliation in an educational sense, where the reconciliation of subject and substance is in our experience of their difference and not in the overcoming of their difference.
Education in Hegel is not first to comprehend the truth of life as the self- othering of God. But it is perhaps first in comprehending this as a totality of actuality in recollection. The old man faces death, then, from the point of view of its truth, from life. He has recollected his life in the truth of death. His wisdom tells him that he has participated in the life of eternity and has been part of the whole that eternity is. Now he may recollect his death in the truth of life. He knows, also, that wisdom is never closer to its truth than when life and death too are close to each other.
Notes
1 From De Principiis Naturae.
2 I will not in this chapter explore spiritual education beyond the Phenomenology,
although previous chapters have attempted this in different ways.
3 As my Gran said to me, many times.
4 From Nietzsche, (1982: 522).
5 The otherness of woman to man and man to woman, as of woman to woman and
man to man, will also have its truth in life and death, that is, where I am already
other and the other is not me.
6 Barren educational midwives - teachers - who have no children of their own can
find this education in the eternal loss of their pupils. This 'death' of the teacher for the pupil is in the educational truth expressed by Nietzsche that 'one repays a teacher badly if one always remains nothing but a pupil' (1982: 190).
7 See footnote 11, Introduction.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Bibliography
Adorno, T. W. (1973), The Jargon of Authenticity, Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
Adorno, T. W. (1991), 'Why philosophy? ' in D. Ingram and J. Simon-Ingram (eds. ), Critical Theory, the Essential Readings, New York: Paragon House.
Adorno, T. W. (1991), The Culture Industry, ed. J. Bernstein, London: Routledge. Adorno, T. W. (1999), Walter Benjamin and Theodor W. Adorno, The Complete Corre-
spondence 1928-1940, ed. H. Lonitz, trans. N. Walker, Cambridge: Polity Press. Adorno, T. W and Horkheimer, M. (1979), Dialectic of Enlightenment, London:
Verso.
Al-Ghazali, (1980), Deliverance from Error, Louisville: Fons Vitae.
Aquinas, T. (1920), The 'Summa Theologica' of St. Thomas Aquinas, Vol. 9, trans. by
the Fathers of the English Dominican Province, London: Burns Oates and
Washbourne Ltd.
Aquinas, T. (1975a), Summa Contra Gentiles Book 3, Part II, Indiana: University of
Notre Dame Press.
Aquinas, T. (1975b), Summa Contra Gentiles Book 4, Indiana: University of Notre
Dame Press.
Aquinas, T. (1998), Thomas Aquinas: Selected Writings, London: Penguin Books. Aristotle, (1984), The Complete Works of Aristotle (Two Volumes), ed. J. Barnes, Prince-
ton: Princeton University Press.
Avicenna, (2005), Metaphysics of the 'The Healing', trans. M. Marmura, Utah: Brigham
University Press.
Beardsworth, R. (1996), Derrida and the Political, London: Routledge.
Beardsworth, R. (2006), 'A Note to political understanding of love in our global
age', Contretemps, available at: http://www. usyd. edu. au/contretemps/contents.
html.
Beardsworth, R. (2007), 'Responding to a Post-Script: Philosophy and its Futures',
unpublished paper.
Benjamin, W. (1985), The Origin of German Tragic Drama, London: Verso.
Benjamin, W. (1992), Illuminations, London: Fontana.
Caygill, H. (1998), Walter Benjamin The Colour of Experience, London: Routledge. Caygill, H. (2002), Levinas and the Political, London: Routledge.
Cohen, J. (2005), How to Read Freud, London: Granta Books.
Derrida, J. (1978), Writing and Difference, London: Routledge.
Derrida, J.
(1986), Glas, Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. Derrida, J. (1987), Of Spirit, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Derrida, J. (1988), Limited Inc, Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
Derrida, J. (1995), Points. . . Interviews 1974-1994, California: Stanford University
Press.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Bibliography 167
Derrida, J, (2005), Rogues, California: Stanford University Press.
Ecclesiasticus, (1916), The Wisdom of Ben Sira, London: SPCK, reprinted Kessinger,
2004.
Eliot, T. S. (1944), Four Quartets, London: Faber and Faber.
Gallagher, S. (ed. ) (1997), Hegel, History, and Interpretation, Albany: State University
of New York Press.
Hawthorne, N. (1987), Nathaniel Hawthorne's Tales, ed. James McIntosh, New York:
W. W. Norton and Co.
Harris, H. S. (1995), Hegel: Phenomenology and System, Indianapolis: Hackett Publish-
ing Company.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1956), The Philosophy of History, trans. J. Sibree, New York: Dover
Publications (Werke 12 Vorlesungen u? ber die Philosophie der Geschichte,
Frankfurt, Suhrkamp Verlag, 1970).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1967), Philosophy of Right, trans. T. M. Knox, Oxford: Oxford Univer-
sity Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1969), Science of Logic, trans. A. V. Miller, London: George Allen and
Unwin.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1974) Hegel's Lectures on the History of Philosophy Vol. 2, trans. E. S.
Haldane and F. H. Simson, London: RKP; (Werke 19, Vorlesungen u? ber die
Geschichte der Philosophie II, Frankfurt, Suhrkamp Verlag, 1970).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1975), Hegel's Logic: Part One of the Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical
Sciences, trans. W. Wallace, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1977), Phenomenology of Spirit, trans. A. V. Miller, Oxford: Oxford University Press; (Sa? mtliche Werke; Bd. II, Pha? nomenologie des Geistes, Leipzig,
Meiner, 1949).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1984), Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion, Vol. 1, ed. Peter Hodgson,
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1986), The Philosophical Propaedeutic, trans. A. V. Miller, eds.
M. George and A. Vincent, Oxford: Blackwell, (Werke 4 Nu? rnberger und Heidel-
berger Schriften 1808-1817, Frankfurt, Suhrkamp Verlag, 1970).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1987), Introduction to the Lectures on the History of Philosophy, trans. T. M. Knox and A. V. Miller, Oxford: Clarendon Press, (Sa? mtliche Werke, Vol. 15a: Vorlesungen u? ber die Geschichte der Philosophie. Einleitung: System und Geschichte der Philosophie. Vollstandig neu nach den Quellen hrsg.
V. Johannes Hoffmeister, Leipzig, 1940).
Hegel, G. W. F. (1988), Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion; one volume edition,
ed. P. Hodgson, Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1990), Hegel's Philosophy of Mind: Part Three of the Encyclopaedia of the
Philosophical Sciences, trans. W. Wallace, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Heidegger, M. (1987), An Introduction to Metaphysics, New Haven: Yale University Press. Heidegger, M. (1992), Being and Time, Oxford: Blackwell.
Kain, P. J. (2005), Hegel and the Other: A Study of the Phenomenology of Spirit, New York:
State University of New York Press.
Kierkegaard, S. (1983), Fear and Trembling/Repetition, trans. H. V. and E. H. Hong,
New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
Levinas, E. (1969), Totality and Infinity, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press;
(Totalite? et Infini, essai sur l'exte? riorite? , La Haye: Martin Nijhoff, 1961).
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 168 Bibliography
Levinas, E. (1998), Otherwise than Being, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press. Levinas, E. (2001), Existence and Existents, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press. Marcus, L. and Nead, L. (eds. ) (1998), The Actuality of Walter Benjamin, London:
Lawrence and Wishart.
McLaren, P. (1997), Revolutionary Multiculturalism: Pedagogies of Dissent for the New
Millennium, Oxford: Westview Press.
Nietzsche, F. (1982), The Portable Nietzsche, trans. W. Kaufmann, Harmondsworth:
Penguin.
Ott, H. (1994), Martin Heidegger: A Political Life, London: Fontana Press.
Pascal, B. (1966), Pense? es, Harmondsworth: London.
Plato, (1956), Meno, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
Rose, G. (1981), Hegel Contra Sociology, London: Athlone.
Rose, G. (1984), Dialectic of Nihilism, Oxford: Blackwell.
Rose, G. (1992), The Broken Middle, Oxford: Blackwell.
Rose, G. (1993), Judaism and Modernity, Oxford: Blackwell.
Rose, G. (1996), Mourning Becomes the Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Rousseau, J.