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Klappentext In this 1821 classic, Hegel applies his most important concept -- the dialectics -- to law, rights, morality, the family, economics, and the state. The philosopher defines universal right as the synthesis between the thesis of an individual acting in accordance with the law and the occasional conflict of an antithetical desire to follow private convictions. Inhaltsverzeichnis Translator's PrefaceAuthor's PrefaceIntroduction. Conception of the Philosophy of Right, Conception of the Will, of Freedom, and of RightDivision of the WorkFirst Part: Abstract Right: §§34-104.First Section. Property A. Possession B. Use C. RelinquishmentTransition from Property to ContractSecond Section. ContractThird Section. Wrong A. Unpremeditated (Civil) Wrong B. Fraud C. Violence and CrimeTransition from Right to MoralitySecond Part: Morality: §§105-141.First Section. Purpose and ResponsibilitySecond Section. Intention and Well-beingThird Section. The Good and ConscienceMoral Forms of Evil. Hypocrisy, Probability, Good Intention, Conviction, IronyTransition from Morality to the Ethical SystemThird Part: Ethical Observance: §§142-360.First Section. The Family A. Marriage B. Family Means C. Education of Children and Disruption of the Family Transition of the Family into the Civic CommunitySecond Section. The Civic Community A. The System of Wants a. Want and its Satisfaction b. Labour c. Wealth and the Classes or Estates B. Administration of Justice a. Right as Law b. Law as Established c. The Court C. Police and the Corporation a. The Police b. The CorporationThird Section. The State A. Constitutional Law I. The State Constitution a. The Prince b. The Executive c. The Legislature II. Foreign Polity B. International Law C. World-historyIndex of WordsIndex of Subjects