Hegelian idealism is also known as German idealism. Key contributors include Georg Wilhelm Heigl, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, and Friedrich Schelling.
Hegelian Idealism is most commonly referred to as Absolute Idealism. Hegel brought back Aristotle's teachings in which was stated that thought and it's object are identical in what is free from matter.
An anti-Hegelian is a person who opposes Hegelian philosophy.
Hegelian Idealism was an organic dialectic, i.e. a wholism based on the notion that the world and indeed history is created as a series of distinct logical steps, one based upon another, and that each logical step provides a synthesis of the previous steps. Hegelian dialectics involved a rejection of platonic idealism. Existentialism and Phenomenology were a dissatisfaction over this rejection of idealism as being unjustified rather than erroneous. The notion of dialectic simply stated the idealism as a logical mode, and didn't deal with the problem of the logical structure of reality as it exists, merely as it was hypothesised to exists. There is thus, a lack of connectedness with existence in Hegelian dialectics. Both Existentialism and Phenomenology were phenomenologies, though the latter was nominally 'existential phenomenology'. This differenence in the two being multifaceted, but focussed on the assertion by existentialism that existence precedes essence. Phenomenology by contrast, and as a broader notion than existentialism makes the argument that there is no quantitative distinction between object relationships, but that they spread within planes. As a historicism, Kierkegaard can be argued to be the earliest Existentialist, with Satre being its forceful advocate. The historical drive from Hegelian Idealism is then the dissatisfaction with pure or idealised forms of logic, and the argument for a phenomeno-logic, i.e. of one resting in the plane of the subject. There was simply no credibility to Hegelian dialectical reasoning as subjective to such reasoning was almost a mentalism of Hegel's plant of reality. Phenomenology and existential phenomenology offered the ability to base arguments as to reality into that reality. The mode of subjectivity was a device that connected the system of non-definable object relations into reality. Well that's my opinion, but all opinions differ. I hope that helps, Brian H.
one of the key contributors of philosophy of mind was Leibinz.
what is new idealism?
Idealism is a philosophical perspective that emphasizes the primacy of ideas, consciousness, or the mind in shaping reality. It posits that the material world is either dependent on or secondary to the mental realm. Key characteristics of idealism include the belief in the existence of non-material entities, the importance of subjective experience, and the notion that reality is fundamentally mental or spiritual in nature. Various forms of idealism, such as subjective, objective, and transcendental idealism, explore these concepts in different ways.
Idealism
Plato is the founder of idealism
Your idealism is refreshing!
Absolute idealism is the philosophy which affirms that fundamental reality is an all-embracing spiritual unity.
Purposeful idealism is when you are in pursuit of a higher cause, a noble cause. Naive idealism has no purpose other than to satisfy a person mindset.
This process is enhanced by the person's ethical idealism.