Hegel's Understanding: Absence, Accident, Alienated

Virgil Lualhati McCorgray

Abstract


This essay is an exegetical work, the primary intention of which is to present and interpret Hegel’s notion of the “understanding” in the first chapter of his Phenomenology of Spirit. The presentation and interpretation at hand takes as its starting point the work of Slavoj Žižek, who the author feels has begun a new and exciting era of scholarship on Hegel. The overall aim of the essay is modest: to develop the Žižekian reading of Hegel at the micro level. My thesis is that Hegel’s initial development of the “understanding” demonstrates how, from the very first, subjectivity grabs a hold on the incompleteness of reality—a notion that is essential to Žižek’s work. Specifically, I show that the understanding realizes itself, against its will, as an accident of the world, upon which it previously depended for its illusory neutrality. The first chapter of the Phenomenology culminates in the problem of consciousness confronting itself as an accident. Ultimately, I show how Hegel’s accidentality of consciousness, since it is determined by the world, coincides with Žižek’s teaching about the identity of the subject precariously established on the incompleteness of reality.


Keywords


Philosophy; Žižek; Hegel; Consciousness; Phenomenology; Ontological Incompleteness

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References


Hegel, G. F. (1983). Hegel and the human spirit: A translation of the Jena lectures on the philosophy of spirit (1805-6) with commentary (1302639659 958581919 L. Rauch, Ed.). Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.

Hegel, G. F. (2018). The Phenomenology of Spirit (1266366227 935842350 T. Pinkard, Trans.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press

Kant, I. (2009). The Critique of Pure Reason (1211567028 902799451 P. Guyer & 1211567029 902799451 A. W. Wood, Eds.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Žižek, S. (2013). Less than nothing: Hegel and the shadow of dialectical materialism. London, UK: Verso.

Žižek, S. (2018). Žižek's jokes: (did you hear the one about Hegel and negation?) (1266445334 935891796 A. Mortensen, Ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.


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