Reid, Jeffrey2018-05-182018-05-182003Clio 32.4 (summer 2003) pp. 457-720884-2043http://hdl.handle.net/10393/37727https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-21991Hegel’s critique of Schleiermacher involves Hegel’s attempt to resolve, through an historical account, what was a deeply felt and determining dilemma of the time: how to reconcile Enlightenment reason with dogmatic faith. This account sees Schleiermacher’s theology of feeling as the contemporary, dangerous manifestation of both currents, in their unreconciled, non-systematic and indeed, anti-systematic forms. Hegel’s grasp of this contemporary culture of feeling, with its contradictory roots in empiricism and skepticism, can be understood as a critique of the postmodern world, as it is portrayed in writers such as F. Lyotard, J. Baudrillard and G. Lipovetsky.enHegelSchleiermacherfeelingironypostmodernityromanticismHegel on Schleiermacher and PostmodernityArticle