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Product Description Hegel thinks that the most important event in human history - the single biggest thing that ever happened to us - is the extended transition from long-standing traditional forms of life to distinctively modern ones. The great thinkers of the Enlightenment, and in particular the philosophers in the canonical tradition that leads from Descartes to Kant, worked out ideas that articulate the characteristically modern understanding both of our cognitive, practical, and political activity, and of the world we know about and act in and on. But Hegel was the first to see modernity whole; the first to see those new Enlightenment modes of understanding as of a piece with the massive rolling changes in social, political, and economic institutions that gave rise to them and to which they gave voice, the first to see the Enlightenment as the form of consciousness and self-consciousness appropriate to a new world and a new way of being in the world. About the Author Robert Brandom, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Fellow of the Center for the Philosophy of Science at University of Pittsburgh, Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Fellow of the British Academy.Dr. Brandom earned his B.A. from Yale University and received his Ph.D. from Princeton University, supervised by Richard Rorty and David Lewis. Dr. Brandom works extensively on the philosophy of language, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of logic, on German idealism and neo-pragmatism, and on Wilfrid Sellars.