I don't see any reason for anyone other than Hegel scholars to read Hegel.
Even if you think it is inconsequential rubbish, which most people do, reading Hegel as an important figure in German Idealism is helpful, especially with regards to how he takes up and transforms Kant.
The thing is, people who say "Hegel doesn't make any sense" just didn't understand it, or simply didn't read more than a few pages (most often the case). That's not fair to Hegel. He wasn't one of if not the most reknowned philosopher in his time and place for no reason; he was a major heavyweight. He makes perfect sense, in fact the whole point of his project is to clear away abstractions and formalities and construct an internally consistent, logical behemoth of a worldview. It's really quite impressive even if it is literary and "untestable" or whatever else people say about it. (In fact that's kinda not the point.)
Now, the fact that he makes sense is not to his credit necessarily, since he writes with the sole intention of making sense. He makes so much "sense," in fact, that it becomes almost meaningless, and you can spin all kinds of super-relativist or postmodern interpretations off of it. Hegel himself, however, was a conservative Christian. And there is something to be said about how he resolves a lot of problems in classical philosophy, ingeniously if not conclusively.
All in all though, tackling the Phenomenology of the Spirit (many big thinkers of the 20th century failed, judging by their obvious misaccusations towards Hegel resulting from clearly not having read past the introduction) or Science of Logic is a fruitful task for any philosopher, I think. Reading someone else's interpretation of him does NOT count, since he is notoriously misread, blamed for things he didn't say, and sometimes there are "accounts" of Hegel that are not really his work, but notes of his students. There are entire books about Hegel by big authors that get basic pillars of his philosophy flat wrong. It's really appalling how much he is abused in this manner, and he ends up getting tossed out as garbage based on all of these secondhand accounts.
/rant about pet philosopher
Eran of Arcadia said:
I read Shadow Puppets and am in the beginning of Shadow of the Giant.
Julian Delphiki said:
Good choices . A War of Gifts: An Ender Story & Ender in Exile are still not available on my libraries.
Orson Scott Card and the Ender's series (both branches of it) are awesome. I want to check out Alvin Maker when I have the time, any opinions?