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I dated my preface to Hegel's Development I: Toward the Sunlight for Hegel's two hundredth birthday. These ‘Night Thoughts’ following just ten years later, are signed and sealed as the year in which we shall observe the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of his death begins. The decade of gestation has involved much hard study, and continual revision of positions previously adopted. The writing has stretched out over two sabbatical years with a seven-year interval between them. I have tried hard to maintain both the consistency and the clarity of my presentation, but I can scarcely dare to hope that I have succeeded perfectly.
When I began this book almost none of the (quite voluminous) surviving essays and manuscripts from Hegel's Jena years had been translated into English; and there has been almost no serious critical discussion of any of this material in English, since the days of Stirling and Baillie (who did not have most of the documents). Even Charles Taylor leaps straight from the Frankfurt years to the Phenomenology. Only T. M. Knox, Z. A. Pelczynski, Shlomo Avineri, R. Plant, and, most recently, Bernard Cullen, have shown any consciousness that something important happened in the interim. (Also we do now have in translation, the major works of two French and one German pioneer in the field, Kojève, Hyppolite, and Lukács.)
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