000 a
999 _c33176
_d33176
008 240611b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780197663134
082 _a193
_bPIN
100 _aPinkard, Terry P.
245 _aHegel's Phenomenology of spirit : a guide
260 _bOxford University Press,
_c2023
_aNew York :
300 _axxv,342 p. ;
_bill.,
_c21 cm
365 _b35.00
_c$
_d86.70
490 _aOxford guides to philosophy
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
520 _aHegel begins the book by stating why prefaces to this kind of work cannot really be written. The reason is that in this kind of book, there can be no preannounced lesson to be learned, and the idea is that whatever it is that one learns, one has to learn it for oneself in going through the model cases laid out in the book. He says that in fact everything hangs on apprehending and expressing the true not merely as substance but also equally as subject. That "subject" is said to be "pure negativity," which estranges itself and then restores itself. As it moves in that field of estrangement and restoration, it comes to understand that the true (what it seeks) is the whole and that it only comes into view as a result of what the book investigates.
650 _aPhilosophy
650 _aSelf-Consciousness
650 _aSelf-Sufficiency
650 _aFreedom
650 _aReason
650 _aSpirit
650 _aFaith
650 _aSouls
650 _aReligion
650 _aAbsolute knowing
942 _2ddc
_cBK