- The Oxford Handbook of Hegel
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Citations and Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Chronology of Hegel’s Life
- Introduction
- Hegel’s First System Program and the Task of Philosophy
- Hegel’s Jena Practical Philosophy
- Consciousness and the Criterion of Knowledge in the <i>Phenomenology of Spirit</i>
- Self-Consciousness in the <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Reason, Self-Transcendence, and Modernity in Hegel’s <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Spirit in the <i>Phenomenology of Spirit</i>
- Religion, Art, and the Emergence of Absolute Spirit in the <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Absolute Knowledge and the Ethical Conclusion of the <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Hegel on Logic as Metaphysics
- Self-Determination and Ideality in Hegel’s Logic of Being
- The Logic of Essence as Internal Reflection
- From Actuality to Concept in Hegel’s <i>Logic</i>
- Subjectivity in Hegel’s <i>Logic</i>
- From Objectivity to the Absolute Idea in Hegel’s <i>Logic</i>
- Hegel’s <i>Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in Outline</i>
- Hegel’s Vorbegriff to the <i>Encyclopedia Logic</i> and Its Context
- Hegel’s <i>Philosophy of Nature</i>
- Hegel’s Anthropology
- Hegel’s Psychology
- Hegel’s Philosophy of Law
- Hegel’s Philosophy of Action
- Hegel’s Moral Philosophy
- Hegel’s Liberal, Social, and ‘Ethical’ State
- Hegel’s Philosophy of History as the Metaphysics of Agency
- Hegel’s Philosophy of Art
- Feeling, Representation, and Practice in Hegel’s <i>Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion</i>
- Hegel’s Lectures on the History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy
- Hegel’s Lectures on the History of Modern Philosophy
- Marx and Hegel
- The American Reception of Hegel (1830–1930)
- Hegel and Twentieth-Century French Philosophy
- Hegel and the Frankfurt School
- Hegel’s Revival in Analytic Philosophy
- Liberalism and Recognition
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
Hegel wrote in The Science of Logic that the deduction of the concept of science was accomplished at the end of the Phenomenology of Spirit in ‘Absolute Knowledge.’ This chapter links the deduction claim to the metaphor of a ladder to science that Hegel discusses in the Phenomenology Preface, and to the sublation of the form of objectivity that is the focus of ‘Absolute Knowledge.’ It argues that this reconciliation of self-consciousness with objectivity coincides with the task of unifying the theoretical and practical domains. Once one appreciates that Hegel’s goal is such a unification, one can see why he holds that the agent of conscience is already quite close to possessing absolute knowledge. The agent’s knowledge in deliberation, together with the agent’s relation to other agents in the process of recognizing action on conscience, has the same conceptual form as the complete theoretical object, the expanded version of the Concept, or inferential objectivity.
Keywords: Hegel, phenomenology, knowledge, absolute, recognition, conscience
Dean Moyar is Associate Professor of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University, where he has taught since 2002. He is the author of Hegel’s Conscience, and the editor of The Routledge Companion to Nineteenth Century Philosophy. His work focuses on the development of post-Kantian idealism, especially in Fichte and Hegel, and on contemporary debates about practical reason and the foundations of the liberal political order.
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- The Oxford Handbook of Hegel
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Citations and Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Chronology of Hegel’s Life
- Introduction
- Hegel’s First System Program and the Task of Philosophy
- Hegel’s Jena Practical Philosophy
- Consciousness and the Criterion of Knowledge in the <i>Phenomenology of Spirit</i>
- Self-Consciousness in the <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Reason, Self-Transcendence, and Modernity in Hegel’s <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Spirit in the <i>Phenomenology of Spirit</i>
- Religion, Art, and the Emergence of Absolute Spirit in the <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Absolute Knowledge and the Ethical Conclusion of the <i>Phenomenology</i>
- Hegel on Logic as Metaphysics
- Self-Determination and Ideality in Hegel’s Logic of Being
- The Logic of Essence as Internal Reflection
- From Actuality to Concept in Hegel’s <i>Logic</i>
- Subjectivity in Hegel’s <i>Logic</i>
- From Objectivity to the Absolute Idea in Hegel’s <i>Logic</i>
- Hegel’s <i>Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in Outline</i>
- Hegel’s Vorbegriff to the <i>Encyclopedia Logic</i> and Its Context
- Hegel’s <i>Philosophy of Nature</i>
- Hegel’s Anthropology
- Hegel’s Psychology
- Hegel’s Philosophy of Law
- Hegel’s Philosophy of Action
- Hegel’s Moral Philosophy
- Hegel’s Liberal, Social, and ‘Ethical’ State
- Hegel’s Philosophy of History as the Metaphysics of Agency
- Hegel’s Philosophy of Art
- Feeling, Representation, and Practice in Hegel’s <i>Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion</i>
- Hegel’s Lectures on the History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy
- Hegel’s Lectures on the History of Modern Philosophy
- Marx and Hegel
- The American Reception of Hegel (1830–1930)
- Hegel and Twentieth-Century French Philosophy
- Hegel and the Frankfurt School
- Hegel’s Revival in Analytic Philosophy
- Liberalism and Recognition
- Index