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phenomenology of spirit

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    AverroisinHegel·Feb 19

    The master–slave dialectic and the struggle for recognition

    In the section on self-consciousness in the Phenomenology, Hegel introduces the encounter of two self-consciousnesses. Each seeks to be recognised as independent. The result is a life-and-death struggle: each risks its life and seeks the death of the other. One yields and becomes the servant; the other becomes the master. The master enjoys the thing through the labour of the slave but receives recognition only from someone he does not recognise as free. That recognition is therefore unsatisfying. The slave, by contrast, through work and fear of death, transforms the given world and in doing so transforms himself. He disciplines his desires and shapes objectivity; he is on the path to independence. The truth of the relation reverses: the slave is the one who can achieve genuine self-consciousness through labour, while the master remains dependent on the slave. The section is not a social contract or an empirical anthropology; it is a moment in the logical development of spirit. Recognition becomes the structure through which self-consciousness is real.

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