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dc.contributor.authorMatikiūnas, Audrius
dc.date.accessioned2021-05-03T08:07:22Z
dc.date.available2021-05-03T08:07:22Z
dc.date.issued2007
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.mruni.eu/handle/007/17407
dc.description.abstractG. W. F. Hegel is one of the most famous philosophers of idealistic trend who developed a blanket philosophical system. His philosophical synthesis took up and combined two trends of thought and nature – expressiveness and freedom. Those to trends were developed in late – eighteen – century Germany. G. W. F. Hegel built his theory on those two tendencies and tried to create his personal one by combining man and the universe by putting humans bind between them. That was a challenge and G. W. F. Hegel overcame that and constructed his blanket philosophical system that was one on hand romantic protest against the ideas of Enlightenment but on the other hand it was a system because of the role of the mind. Modern society is based on the ideas of the Enlightenment. Because of that the ideas G. W. F. Hegel couldn’t be implemented in the life of the contemporary man and it can’t be used in the romantic protest against the reality because these ideas are not based on the protest and confrontation.en
dc.language.isolten
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessen
dc.titleG.V.F. Hėgelio filosofija ir šiuolaikinis žmogusen
dc.title.alternativeG.W.F. Hegel and the contemporary manen
dc.typeArticleen
dc.editorial.boardNėraen
dc.identifier.alephelaba:90973720en
dc.publication.sourceMokslinės minties šventė - 2007: studentų tarptautinių mokslinių konferencijų pranešimai, [2007 m. balandžio 19-20 d., Vilnius] / Mykolo Romerio universiteto Studentų mokslinė draugija. ISBN 9789955190592en
dc.subject.facultyTeisės mokyklaen
dc.subject.keywordŠvietimo epochaen
dc.subject.keywordEkspresyvizmasen
dc.subject.keywordRomantizmasen
dc.subject.keywordProtestasen
dc.subject.publicationtypeP2ben
dc.subject.sciencedirection01H - Filosofijaen


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