"Hegel's philosophy was taught in the German universities, and had the approval of the Prussian throne. Frederick William III regarded it as a very excellent philosophy — in fact, an intellectual bulwark of the crown. He reached that complacent conclusion in a very simple way. Hegel said: "All that is real is reasonable, and all that is reasonable is real." The Emperor interpreted this as follows: All that exists is real, therefore reasonable, therefore right. As Alexander Pope, the English poet, put it, "Whatever is, is right." As this seemed to be a philosophical justification of police-government, the censorship, and the star-chamber, the Hegelian philosophy flourished under royal patronage."
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Academics from GermanyLogicians from GermanyTheologians from GermanyPhilosophers from GermanyHistorians from Germany
Original Language: English
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Sources
Arthur M. Lewis, Ten blind leaders of the blind 1910 p. 105
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Georg_Wilhelm_Friedrich_Hegel
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Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
1770 – 1831
deutscher Philosoph
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