Hegel’s assertion that self-consciousness is desire in general stands at a critical point in the Phenomenology, but the concept of desire employed in this identification is obscure. I examine three ways in which Hegel’s concept of desire might be understood and conclude that this concept is closely related to Fichte’s notions of drive and longing. So understood, the concept plays an essential role in Hegel’s non-foundational, non-genetic account of the awareness that individual rational subjects have of themselves. This account, I argue, is part of a larger concern with demonstrating the relation between theoretical and practical capacities of the subject. I also argue that my reading explains Hegel’s emphasis on the figure of the bondsman ...
I provide a close exegetical reading of Hegel\u27s anthropology, his doctrine of the human body an...
This thesis poses two fundamental issues regarding Hegel's philosophy of intersubjectivity. Firstly...
This article clarifies Hegel’s argument in “Force and the Understanding,” in his Phenomenology of Sp...
Hegel’s assertion that self-consciousness is desire in general stands at a critical point in the Phe...
Hegel’s formulation of self-consciousness has decisively influenced modern philosophy’s notion of se...
My dissertation aims to provide a systematic interpretation of one section of Hegel’s Phenomenology ...
This paper approaches Humean accounts of desire from a perspective relatively unexplored in contempo...
This article offers an original contribution to the interpretation of a crucial aspect of Hegel’s ph...
The main objective of this master’s thesis is to analyze the place assigned to the phenomenon of des...
The purpose of this note is to explore briefly the role that a dialectical development of logical un...
The quintessential characterization of Hegel's philosophy is that of a circle. In the context of his...
This thesis analyses the concept of the drives in Hegel's philosophy and seeks to demonstrate the im...
This paper walks through four different approaches to Hegel's notion of Consciousness in the Phenome...
1Hegel speaks of human self-knowledge in terms of “self-elevation” above the singularity of sensatio...
Several commentators have argued that Hegel’s account of ‘self-consciousness’ in Chapter IV of the P...
I provide a close exegetical reading of Hegel\u27s anthropology, his doctrine of the human body an...
This thesis poses two fundamental issues regarding Hegel's philosophy of intersubjectivity. Firstly...
This article clarifies Hegel’s argument in “Force and the Understanding,” in his Phenomenology of Sp...
Hegel’s assertion that self-consciousness is desire in general stands at a critical point in the Phe...
Hegel’s formulation of self-consciousness has decisively influenced modern philosophy’s notion of se...
My dissertation aims to provide a systematic interpretation of one section of Hegel’s Phenomenology ...
This paper approaches Humean accounts of desire from a perspective relatively unexplored in contempo...
This article offers an original contribution to the interpretation of a crucial aspect of Hegel’s ph...
The main objective of this master’s thesis is to analyze the place assigned to the phenomenon of des...
The purpose of this note is to explore briefly the role that a dialectical development of logical un...
The quintessential characterization of Hegel's philosophy is that of a circle. In the context of his...
This thesis analyses the concept of the drives in Hegel's philosophy and seeks to demonstrate the im...
This paper walks through four different approaches to Hegel's notion of Consciousness in the Phenome...
1Hegel speaks of human self-knowledge in terms of “self-elevation” above the singularity of sensatio...
Several commentators have argued that Hegel’s account of ‘self-consciousness’ in Chapter IV of the P...
I provide a close exegetical reading of Hegel\u27s anthropology, his doctrine of the human body an...
This thesis poses two fundamental issues regarding Hegel's philosophy of intersubjectivity. Firstly...
This article clarifies Hegel’s argument in “Force and the Understanding,” in his Phenomenology of Sp...