Half Hour Hegel: Phenomenology of Spirit (Absolute Knowing, 806-807)

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In this 375th video in the series on G.W.F. Hegel's great early work, the Phenomenology of Spirit, we continue our study of the final section of the work, "Absolute Knowing". I read and comment on paragraphs 806-807 of the text here.

[more information to be added here in the near future]

In this video series, I will be working through the entire Phenomenology, paragraph by paragraph -- for each one, first reading the paragraph, and then commenting on what Hegel is doing, referencing, discussing, etc. in that paragraph.

This series is designed to provide an innovative digital resource that will assist students, lifelong learners, professionals, and even other philosophers in studying this classic work by Hegel for generations to come.

My videos are used by students, lifelong learners, other professors, and professionals to learn more about topics, texts, and thinkers in philosophy, religious studies, literature, social-political theory, critical thinking, and communications. These include college and university classes, British A-levels preparation, and Indian civil service (IAS) examination preparation

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#Hegel #Phenomenology #Philosophy #Idealism #German #Dialectic #Spirit #Absolute #Knowledge #History
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One more video then I can finally tell my friends I understand the phenomenology!!!

Nah im joshing

hopscotchoblivion
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Saw an intro video of yours, from 9 yrs ago. Rn from 2 days ago. now this feels reverant if that's a perfect way to put it.

Yohanryan
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I am confused about the (it seems to me) obvious parralel here between the The Absolute Knowing of the Phenomenology and The Absolute Idea of the Science of Logic. The self-knowing Spirit of the Phenomenology externalizes its self as time and its being as space, becoming nature. The Absolute Idea releases itself into space and time, into immediate being as nature. The Phenomenology and the Logic seem to overlap (not just here, but here most obviously), rather than the Phenomenology being a mere preliminary to the Logic.

g.boychev