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Chapter 9 - Hegel’s Idea of the State

from Part III - Philosophy of Objective Spirit

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 June 2019

Marina F. Bykova
Affiliation:
North Carolina State University
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Summary

Hegel’s philosophy of “subjective spirit” in his Encyclopaedia (1830) shows that the human spirit, when fully developed, takes the form of “free will, which is for itself as free will” (Enc. 3I §481). In his account of “objective spirit” Hegel then shows that the free will – insofar as it is rational, rather than merely arbitrary – conceives of freedom as something both individual and universal. Freedom, for Hegel, belongs to the self-conscious individual; yet at the same time, as the object of a rational will, “freedom and its content … are the universal in itself” (Enc. 3I §485). This means not only that freedom belongs in principle to all self-conscious individuals, but also that it has a rational character of its own that individuals must recognize if they are to be truly free.

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Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit
A Critical Guide
, pp. 186 - 204
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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