The Necessity of Freedom in Hegel's Turn Between Logic and History explores Hegel's claim that freedom is not just an abstract ideal but a necessary foundation for philosophy itself. This collection of essays examines how Hegel's system connects logic, history, and rationality, shaping the meaning of historical development through the actualization of conceptual necessity.Hegel s philosophical position is unique in the tradition of German idealism in its insistence that freedom is a necessity that permeates and grounds philosophy as a system. The contributions in this collection, as a result, work in the intersections between the philosophy of right, logic, phenomenology, history, and aesthetics to demonstrate this realization. Bringing together leading scholars, this volume investigates key dimensions of Hegel s thought: Stephen Houlgate, Michael Quante, and Angelica Nuzzo on the philosophy of right; Iain Macdonald and Nahum Brown on the science of logic; Alberto Siani, Jennifer Bates, and Jim Vernon on the phenomenology of spirit; Jeffrey Reid and Timothy Brownlee on the philosophy of history and aesthetics; and John McCumber, Ian Balfour, and Rebecca Comay on Hegel and the French Revolution.Through close textual analysis, this volume illuminates how Hegel s dialectic rejects atomistic individualism, instead emphasizing the subject s role in actualizing political rationality. This collection offers fresh insights into Hegel s enduring relevance in philosophy, history, and political thought.