True Sacrifice On Hegel's Présentation of Self-Consciousness
Апстракт
The paper provides a modest reading of Hegel’s treatment of self-consciousness in his Phenomenology of Spirit and tries to present it as an integral part of the overall project of the experience of consciousness leading from understanding to reason. Its immediate objective is, it is argued, to think the independence and dependence, that is the pure and empirical I within the same unity of self-consciousness. This implies a double movement offinding a proper existence for the pure I and at the same time a breaking down of the empirical I’s attachment to particularity. It is argued that the Hegelian struggle for recognition intends to show how the access to reason demands the subject’s renunciation of its attachment to particularity, that is to sacrifice not only its bare life but every thing indeed, including its particular identity, and yet, to go on living.
Кључне речи:
Hegel, Georg Vilhelm Fridrih / phenomenology of spirit / self-consciousness / desire / recognitionИзвор:
Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society, 2015, 830-851Издавач:
- Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju
Институција/група
IFDTTY - JOUR AU - Kobe, Zdravko PY - 2015 UR - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/316 AB - The paper provides a modest reading of Hegel’s treatment of self-consciousness in his Phenomenology of Spirit and tries to present it as an integral part of the overall project of the experience of consciousness leading from understanding to reason. Its immediate objective is, it is argued, to think the independence and dependence, that is the pure and empirical I within the same unity of self-consciousness. This implies a double movement offinding a proper existence for the pure I and at the same time a breaking down of the empirical I’s attachment to particularity. It is argued that the Hegelian struggle for recognition intends to show how the access to reason demands the subject’s renunciation of its attachment to particularity, that is to sacrifice not only its bare life but every thing indeed, including its particular identity, and yet, to go on living. PB - Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju T2 - Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society T1 - True Sacrifice On Hegel's Présentation of Self-Consciousness SP - 830 EP - 851 DO - 10.2298/FID1504830K ER -
@article{ editor = "Jovanov, Rastko", author = "Kobe, Zdravko", year = "2015", abstract = "The paper provides a modest reading of Hegel’s treatment of self-consciousness in his Phenomenology of Spirit and tries to present it as an integral part of the overall project of the experience of consciousness leading from understanding to reason. Its immediate objective is, it is argued, to think the independence and dependence, that is the pure and empirical I within the same unity of self-consciousness. This implies a double movement offinding a proper existence for the pure I and at the same time a breaking down of the empirical I’s attachment to particularity. It is argued that the Hegelian struggle for recognition intends to show how the access to reason demands the subject’s renunciation of its attachment to particularity, that is to sacrifice not only its bare life but every thing indeed, including its particular identity, and yet, to go on living.", publisher = "Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju", journal = "Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society", title = "True Sacrifice On Hegel's Présentation of Self-Consciousness", pages = "830-851", doi = "10.2298/FID1504830K" }
Jovanov, R.,& Kobe, Z.. (2015). True Sacrifice On Hegel's Présentation of Self-Consciousness. in Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society Beograd : Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju., 830-851. https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1504830K
Jovanov R, Kobe Z. True Sacrifice On Hegel's Présentation of Self-Consciousness. in Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society. 2015;:830-851. doi:10.2298/FID1504830K .
Jovanov, Rastko, Kobe, Zdravko, "True Sacrifice On Hegel's Présentation of Self-Consciousness" in Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society (2015):830-851, https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1504830K . .