The Phenomenology of Spirit  

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-{{Template}}+{{Template}}[[Hegel]]'s work '''''Phänomenologie des Geistes''''' ([[1807]]) is called '''''The Phenomenology of Spirit''''' or '''''The Phenomenology of Mind''''' in [[English language|English]]; the [[German language|German]] word ''[[Geist]]'' has connotations of both [[spirit]] and [[mind]] in [[English language|English]]. It is one of Hegel's most important [[philosophy|philosophical]] works; he himself regarded it as the foundation of his later works. Roughly taking the form of a [[Bildungsroman]], it explores the nature and development of its protagonist--mind/spirit--showing how it evolves through a process of internal contradiction and development from the most primitive aspect of sense-perception through all of the forms of [[Subjectivity|subjective]] and [[Objectivity (philosophy)|objective]] mind, including art, religion, and philosophy, to absolute knowledge that comprehends this entire developmental process as part of itself. Thus it also lays out an entire system of [[metaphysics]], [[ethics]], and [[political philosophy]].
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Hegel's work Phänomenologie des Geistes (1807) is called The Phenomenology of Spirit or The Phenomenology of Mind in English; the German word Geist has connotations of both spirit and mind in English. It is one of Hegel's most important philosophical works; he himself regarded it as the foundation of his later works. Roughly taking the form of a Bildungsroman, it explores the nature and development of its protagonist--mind/spirit--showing how it evolves through a process of internal contradiction and development from the most primitive aspect of sense-perception through all of the forms of subjective and objective mind, including art, religion, and philosophy, to absolute knowledge that comprehends this entire developmental process as part of itself. Thus it also lays out an entire system of metaphysics, ethics, and political philosophy.




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