Hegel wrote this classic as an introduction to a series of lectures on the Philosophy of History -- a novel concept in the early nineteenth century.
The notion that reason rules the world, he concludes, is both necessary to the practice of philosophic History and a conclusion drawn from that practice..
Hegel argues that all of History is caused and guided by a rational process, and God\'s seemingly unknowable plan is rendered intelligible through philosophy.
Reason rules history, he asserts, through its infinite freedom (being self-sufficient, it depends on nothing beyond its own laws and conclusions) and power (through which it forms its own laws).
Eschewing the methods of original History (written during the period in question) and reflective History (written after the period has passed), Hegel embraces philosophic history, which employs a priori philosophical thought to interpret History as a rational process.
The author himself appears to have regarded this book as a popular introduction to his Philosophy as a whole, and it remains the most readable and accessible of all his philosophical writings.
He reveals philosophical theory as neither an accident nor an artificial construct, but as an exemplar of its age, fashioned by its antecedents and contemporary circumstances, and serving as a model for the future.
With this work, he created the History of Philosophy as a scientific study.
Hegel wrote this classic as an introduction to a series of lectures on the Philosophy of History -- a novel concept in the early nineteenth century