“Phenomenology of Spirit” and the Hegelian Triad

Authors

  • Ruiyan Hu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54691/bcpep.v7i.2607

Keywords:

Hegel; Triad; Dialectical Stages; Negation; Phenomenology of Spirit; History; Kant; Theories of Knowledge.

Abstract

The Phenomenology of Spirit summarizes Hegel's previous philosophical research and announces the outline of the future philosophy. Phenomenology of Spirit is the science of mental reality, which reduces the whole diversity of life and history to the relation of "consciousness" to "object" and inverts this relation to explain the mental movement and history of human beings. The Phenomenology of Spirit is not only an original work among all Hegel's works, but it is also one of the original works of the whole Western philosophy. This paper shows that Hegel, however, insists on the consistency of the development of thought and focuses on the study of appearances and the pure process of knowing.

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References

Hegel, G., Pinkard, T., & Baur, M. (2018). The phenomenology of spirit (p. 468). Cambridge University Press.

Hegel, G. (1995). Lectures on the history of philosophy (p. 57, 429). Oxford University Press.

Hegel, G., Brinkmann, K., & Dahlstrom, D. (2015). Encyclopedia of the philosophical sciences in basic outline (pp. 125-131). Cambridge University Press.

Hegel, G., Brown, R., & Hodgson, P. (2011). Lectures on the philosophy of world history (pp. 79-80). Clarendon.

Hegel, G., Nisbet, H., & W. Wood, A. (2003). Elements of the Philosophy of Right (pp. 70). Cambridge University Press.

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Published

2022-11-07

How to Cite

Hu, R. (2022). “Phenomenology of Spirit” and the Hegelian Triad. BCP Education & Psychology, 7, 53-56. https://doi.org/10.54691/bcpep.v7i.2607