
This book approaches Hegel from the standpoint of what we might call the question of knowledge. Hegel, of course, had no “theory of knowledge” in the narrow and abstract sense in which it has come to be understood since Locke and Kant. “The examination of knowledge,” he holds, “can only be carried out by an act of knowledge,” and “to seek to know before we know is as absurd as the wise resolution of Scholasticus, not to venture into the water until he had learned to swim.”
While Hegel wrote no treatise exclusively devoted to epistemology, his entire philosophy is nonetheless a many-faceted theory of truth, and thus the title – Beyond Epistemology – is meant to suggest a return to the classical meaning and relation of the terms episteme and logos.
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