This book tackles what is far and away the most controversial and uniformly rejected aspect of Hegel’s philosophy, his claim about the rationality, even the necessity, of the course of human history. Terry Pinkard has written both an extremely accessible and lucid book, as well as one that offers the sophisticated philosophical reader a number of fascinating and important animadversions on the issues motivating Hegel’s philosophy of history. This is clearly the product of a scholar’s lifelong work. It is philosophically provocative and valuable.