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(2017) Contemporary debates in negative theology and philosophy, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Hegel and the negation of the apophatic

Andrew W. Hass

pp. 131-161

This chapter looks at the strained yet fecund relationship between Hegel and the apophatic. For on the one hand Hegel is known as the champion of revelation, of enunciated truth in its most manifest expression as world Spirit. Yet, on the other hand, this manifestation is regulated by an ever-present negation, so that Hegel becomes the impetus for so much thinking around the apophatic in later modernity. Hass argues that, rather than allow this ambiguity to preclude Hegel from the great tradition of apophatic thinking, its very internal division becomes constitutive of a negation that goes to the heart of all apophatics. This "negation of the apophatic", in its circular construction, is developed through the denying, the re-cognizing, the generating and the protecting of apophatics, to end at the "beginning of Hegel", which becomes the bringing forth of what cannot be said across all Hegel.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-65900-8_9

Full citation:

Hass, A. W. (2017)., Hegel and the negation of the apophatic, in N. Brown & J. A. Simmons (eds.), Contemporary debates in negative theology and philosophy, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 131-161.

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