16th International Summer School in German Philosophy: God and the Absolute in German Idealism
Poppelsdorfer Allee 28
Bonn
Germany
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Towards the beginning of his Encylopaedia Logic, Hegel states that ‘logical determinations in general, can be regarded as the definitions of the absolute, as metaphysical definitions of God’ (§85). And accordingly, he often suggests that cognition of the absolute gives us knowledge of God. This position implies at least three claims: First, that there is a distinct, philosophical form of cognition; second, that the object of this cognition is the ‘absolute’; and third, that the ‘absolute’ is what we do – or should – understand by ‘God’. But how exactly are these claims to be understood and what justifies them? And how do we get from Kant’s identification of the ‘Ideal’ of pure reason, an object that would bring reason’s demand for the ‘unconditioned’ to rest, with God and his denial that we can have theoretical knowledge of this object, to Hegel’s assertions? In this year’s summer school, we will be addressing these questions via close readings of selected texts from Kant, Hegel, Schelling and Fichte.
Discussion sessions will be led by:
- Markus Gabriel (University of Bonn)
- Karl Schafer (UT Austin)
- Nicholas Stang (University of Toronto)
Keynote speakers will include:
- Maya Krishnan (University of Chicago)
- Violetta Waibel (University of Vienna)
- Axel Hutter (LMU)
If you are a graduate student (MA or doctoral candidate) who would like to participate in the summer school, please send a short CV and brief statement of interest (max. 1 page) combined into one document to Alex Englander: [email protected] ( https://www.izph.de/16th-international-summer-school-in-german-philosophy-god-and-the-absolute-in-german-idealism/
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June 30, 2026, 12:00am CET
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