Hegel’s Phenomenology of Mind
A. Consciousness
I. Sense-Certainty, This, & Meaning
II. Perception, Thing, & Deceptiveness
III. Force & Understanding
B. Self-Consciousness
IV. True Nature of Self-Certainty
A. Lordship & Bondage
B. Unhappy Consciousness
C. Free Concrete Mind
(AA). Reason
V. Certainty & Truth of Reason
A. Observation as Reason
a.
b.
c.
B. Realization of rational self-consciousness
a.
b.
c.
C. Individuality
a.
b.
c.
(BB). Spirit
VI. Spirit
A. Objective Spirit: the Ethical order
a.
b.
c.
B. Culture & civilization
I. World of spirit in self-estrangement
a.
b.
II. Enlightenment
a.
b.
III. Absolute Freedom & Terror
(CC). Religion
VII. Religion in General
A. Natural Religion
B. Religion as Art
a.
b.
c.
C. Revealed Religion
(DD). Absolute Knowledge
VIII.Absolute Knowledge
From Harper & Row’s Torchbooks' edition (1967) of the Phenomenology (1807), translated by J B Baillie (1910), from University of Idaho, Department of Philosophy, thanks to Jean McIntire. § numbers from the Baillie translation have been inserted into the text of the Baillie translation and linked to explanations by J N Findlay. Φ links to original German text: Phänemenologie des Geistes
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