CFP Fichte-Studien (2026): Fichte and/or Hegel. Differences, Similarities, Possible Dialogues

Deadline: 31.05.2026

Fichte and/or Hegel.
Differences, Similarities, Possible Dialogues
Eds. Gesa Wellmann, Gregor Schäfer

Situated in the constellation of post-Kantian philosophy, Fichte’s Wissenschaftslehre and Hegel’s
absolute idealism certainly belong to the most elaborated systematic conceptions of the epoch of
Classical German Philosophy. Marking the bifurcation of two distinctive ways after Kant, up to our
very present, Fichte and Hegel are often interpreted as two alternatives between which one would have
to choose: Whilst, from a Fichtean perspective, Hegel’s speculative philosophy may be rejected as a
metaphysics that disregards the strict criteria of transcendental foundation, from a Hegelian
perspective, Fichte’s transcendental idealism may be seen as just a link in the genealogy between Kant
and Hegel that, in a limited way, indeed may have its legitimacy, but that, at the same time, also should
be overcome at the end. These settings, however, tend to oversee the much more complex ongoing
dynamics and possible connections in the tension-filled process between Fichte and Hegel. One
hereby should not only take into consideration that Hegel’s critique of Fichte – as outlined starting
from Hegel’s Difference between Fichte’s and Schelling’s System of Philosophy (1801) and, as a
critique of the Kantian-Fichtean conception of right and morality, the Essay on Natural Law (1802/03)
– points to Fichte’s early Jena period. A critical re-evaluation of Fichte’s entire philosophical work,
including his later Berlin period – with its more and more relevant emphasis on the terminology of the
absolute instead of that of the I’s subjectivity as well as on intersubjectivity – never has taken place
from Hegel’s part. It also is worth noting that Fichte’s critique of objective idealism focuses on early
Schelling (who, at this time, was accompanied by Hegel). However, from its part as well it has never
had the opportunity to criticize Hegel’s mature overall conception, which was developped only after
Fichte’s death in 1814. Notwithstanding its rejection of subjective idealism, it is characteristic for
Hegel’s absolute idealism that, in it, subjectivity and finitude – as ascribed to Fichte’s position – are
not just overcome, but play a constitutive role as a persistent moment without which speculative
infinity could not be thought at all. Furthermore, Hegel’s turn towards a speculative logic, with all the
differences hereby at stake, indeed shares many motives and concerns with Fichte’s particular
conception of transcendental logic as the critique of a merely formal and static logic. And for both of
them, in their practical philosophy, the overcoming of a formalist morality towards a concrete material
ethics, combined with the systematic relevance of a philosophy of history, becomes more and more
central after 1800. Even if a closer reading of this consellation, finally, must re-confirm a profound
difference between the two conceptions – of Hegel’s speculative logic and ethical conception on the
one hand, of Fichte’s transcendental philosophy and the pertinent role of the moral ‘Ought’ and a more
utopian dimension in his practical philosophy (as harshly criticized by Hegel) on the other hand –, it
surely can provide a much more specified, subtle, and complex picture. According to this, Fichte and
Hegel may not that much operate as the representatives of two fix positions but rather as the
participants of an ongoing dynamic project – constitutive for the entire epoch of Classical German
Philosophy and the common problems and questions it faces – full of tensions, convergences, and
possible bridges
Against this background, the present special issue of the journal Fichte-Studien is interested in
approaches that critically re-examine the connections between Fichte and Hegel both in their
differences and in their similarities and possible dialogues.

Proposals for papers may include (but do not have to be limited to) the following topics:
– Re-examinations of Fichte’s and Hegel’s overall systematic conceptions and frameworks of
transcendental idealism/logic and speculative idealism/logic as well as of the differences
and/or similarities between specific portions and concepts in them – such as
(transcendental/logical) subjectivity, the status of the absolute and the idea (resp. ideality) in
both conceptions, or the understanding of system/systematicity, method, nature, or religion.
– Re-examinations of the status of reality/the real in both conceptions, resp. of the relationships
between idealism and realism at stake.
– Comparisons between Fichte’s and Hegel’s practical philosophy with regard to their, in each
case, constitutive systematic functions – i.e., the fundamental role of praxis – and both to their
differences and common interests – such as the status of morality, ethics, practical reason, and
ideality, the struggle for a material ethics and a philosophy of history in its systematic
relevance, or the concerns with other practical issues such as the French Revolution and its
contradictory process and global impacts (including, particularly, its impacts on Germany),
economy, political acting/subjectivation, or the problem of war and peace.
– Settings that relate the process between Fichte and Hegel to other important figures of
Classical German Philosophy – such as Kant, Schelling, or Jacobi.
– Propositions for how we should deal with the constellation between Fichte and Hegel with
regard to our own present – both in its theoretical and practical debates and challenges – and
for what actually could be the critical potential and relevance of this constellation.

Submission deadline for articles: 31.05.2026

Stylesheet and submission details:
http://www.fichte-gesellschaft.org/fichte-studien/

Publication of accepted articles: Winter 2026

Information contact:
gesa.wellmann@uni-oldenburg.de
gregor.schaefer@unibas.ch

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