The “Struggle for Recognition” and the Thematization of Intersubjectivity

Although Hegel’s concept of recognition and its significance for the account of intersubjectivity became a central topic for many recent publications of Hegel scholars, there is a noticeable deficiency in literature discussing this problematic on the material of Hegel’s Philosophy of Spirit. In cont...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEssays on Hegel's Philosophy of Subjective Spirit pp. 139 - 154
Main Author Bykova, Marina F
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published United States State University of New York Press 2013
SUNY Press
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Summary:Although Hegel’s concept of recognition and its significance for the account of intersubjectivity became a central topic for many recent publications of Hegel scholars, there is a noticeable deficiency in literature discussing this problematic on the material of Hegel’s Philosophy of Spirit. In contrast to the vast amount of publications on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit of 1807, a good portion of which deals exclusively with questions of intersubjectivity and recognition, there are only a few—mostly dating back to 80th–90th—investigations into the conceptual role of intersubjectivity in the mature Philosophy of Subjective Spirit. Furthermore, the authors of those
ISBN:9781438444451
1438444451
DOI:10.1515/9781438444468-011