“This wonderfully clear and exciting book of philosophy is the best book ever written on Hegel’s Logic in any language I know.”
— Terry Pinkard, Georgetown University
“In this fascinating reading of Hegel’s The Science of Logic, Robert Pippin gives us much to ponder—not least how it might be possible to see Hegel’s position as a fusion of Kantian idealism and Aristotelian metaphysics. Pippin’s defense of this view displays all the dialectical skills of the master himself, and will bring fresh life to the debates concerning how this text is to be read.”
— Robert Stern, The University of Sheffield
“Hegel’s Realm of Shadows makes an impressive original contribution by showing that Hegel’s philosophy is a systematically lively alternative to the approaches of Kant, Fichte, Frege or Wittgenstein. By addressing how The Science of Logic establishes the autonomy of thought and showing that freedom shapes everything in Hegel’s philosophy, Pippin impressively demonstrates the actuality and vitality of Hegel’s philosophy.”
— Michael Quante, University of Münster
“To his numerous and enormously influential studies of important aspects of Hegel’s philosophy, Pippin adds another work that is bound to shape our understanding of what for Hegel forms the heart of his philosophy, namely, the Logic. It brilliantly illustrates Pippin’s extraordinary Hegel scholarship. It is also remarkably readable and so will be of interest not only to philosophers and philosophy students, but to a wider audience as well.”
— Rolf-Peter Horstmann, Humboldt University of Berlin
“With Hegel’s Realm of Shadows the analytic, American interpretation of Hegel has come full circle. . . . There is no doubt that Pippin’s interpretation is a feat in both Hegel and Kant scholarship.”
— British Journal for the History of Philosophy
“With Hegel’s Realm of Shadows, Pippin not only makes another invaluable contribution to Hegel scholarship; he changes the world—if only a little bit—by helping us to understand how we ought to understand ourselves.”
— Jensen Suther, Radical Philosophy
“Since the publication of his Hegel's Idealism thirty years ago, Pippin has offered one of the clearest and most insightful (though always controversial) interpretations of Hegel's philosophical project, one that places him intelligibly within the post-Kantian context but also gives him a contemporary voice. This book represents Pippin's most sustained engagement with The Science of Logic, a text that has remained at the center of his interpretation from the outset. . . . The book develops Pippin's earlier views in interesting ways, without departing from them substantially. It may surprise some that he asks that we see his Hegel's metaphysics as just as Aristotelian as it is Kantian. Moreover, Pippin repudiates his earlier characterization of Hegel as a 'conceptual scheme idealist.' The book will doubtless attract (and deserves) critical attention, but it is a valuable contribution to a belated reception of Hegel's Logic.”
— W. Clar Wolf, Review of Metaphysics
“Impressive. . . . What is beyond doubt is that Pippin's new book is one of the most important works on Hegel's Logic in any language and deserves to be studied closely by scholars and students worldwide.”
— Stephen Houlgate, Journal of the History of Philosophy
“Pippin’s work is an indispensable starting point for any engagement today with Hegel and German Idealism. His approach is unmatched when it comes to refusing to skip over or look away from the need to recover philosophical arguments, while actually finding arguments that could support the kind of unified philosophical system for which Hegel and the German Idealists aim. But the very success of Pippin’s work has also opened new possibilities for a competing kind of approach, emphasizing a metaphilosophical priority of metaphysics, to attempt a similar combination of virtues, creating in turn new challenges for Pippin’s approach.”
— James Kreines, Claremont McKenna College, Australasian Philosophical Review
“If the productivity of a volume is measured by the issues it raises, this is doubtless the case with the thought-provoking contribution of Pippin, which will be an inescapable reference for all future readings of the Science of Logic, no matter their metaphysical commitment.”
— Giulia Bernard, Università degli Studi di Padova – Ruhr-Universität Bochum, UNIVERSA. Recensioni di filosofia
"Désormais, il sera difficile d'aborder la SL ou de la commenter sans s'expliquer avec les thèses fortes que ce gran livre articule."
— Jean Françoise Kervégan, Archives de Philosophie