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This brilliant study of the stages in the mind's necessary progress from immediate sense-consciousness to the position of a scientific philosophy includes an introductory essay and a paragraph-by-paragraph analysis of the text to help the reader understand this most difficult and most influential of Hegel's works. Review: Intime - Good Review: Book binding and hardcover is quite thick and slightly covers the text. - First the product has damaged corners and the plastic covering at the hinges comes off .The binding is quite rigid and creates page alignment issues and does not allow much fluidness as you might see in other good paperbacks. But overall it can be used for long and has good quality paper (thick) and sewn binding that has long life span .
| Best Sellers Rank | #209,527 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #6,268 in Classic Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 768 Reviews |
P**H
Intime
Good
K**I
Book binding and hardcover is quite thick and slightly covers the text.
First the product has damaged corners and the plastic covering at the hinges comes off .The binding is quite rigid and creates page alignment issues and does not allow much fluidness as you might see in other good paperbacks. But overall it can be used for long and has good quality paper (thick) and sewn binding that has long life span .
G**S
Very ugly cover
The cover is an unpleasant shade of very vibrant yellow that hurts to look at. The paper quality is extremely thin as well. Shame a book I was looking forward to so much has such a Vomit inducing cover. 3 ☆s only because the typograhy is somewhat decent. I've read the e book version of this translation and I'd prefer that over this despite my penchant for physical copies of books. Make of that what you will.
V**D
Meh
Meh
A**I
Hegel: the great and powerful
A phenomenal book with insights to intellectually growing of one spirit. Hegel really put his effort in contradicting his own work in every other passage and makes it impossible to understand to what he really meant. His insights on consciousness and being with this and now, leaves the whole epoch of general curiosity in a form of dialect which presumably his greatest work.
G**A
It is a classic
Congratulations to bring this book to wider pablic
R**N
Word of Advice
I have absolutely no problem with this translation of Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. What I do have a problem with—and why I’m giving this product a three-star rating—is the printing quality. It feels cheaply produced, and the hardcover edition is generally very low quality. When my copy arrived, it was already in somewhat damaged condition. That’s partly to be expected, since I bought it secondhand from the marketplace listed as ‘very good’ condition. But looking at the book, it seems like a structural issue with the binding itself, not just wear from this particular copy. At the normal price—around €30–€35—I don’t think it’s worth buying. For that amount of money, I’d recommend the Cambridge edition in paperback instead. It’s better printed and also has a more up-to-date translation.
陽**子
原文に即した英訳版
精神現象学の邦訳を、より理解するために英訳版を二冊参考にしています。ひとつはJ・B・Baillieです。バイリーの訳はどちらかというと現代英語的な感じで、これはこれで文意がとりやすいので悪くはないと思いますが、原書に忠実という点になると、やや古典的な英文ながらこのMillerの本を推薦したいと思います。ドイツ語版で勉強するのがベストでしょうが、邦訳と対称しながら読むときにその正確さを実感します。パラグラフごとに番号がつけてあり、さらに巻末にはAnalysis(分析)として、訳者による要約的なコメントがパラグラフごとに付けられているという点でも充実していると思います。
S**0
Abandon Hope all ye who Enter Here
Are you sick of the feeling that you're beginning to grasp the nature of reality? If your answer is "yes," then this book is for you! Have you found yourself thinking: "the world makes sense, I totally get it now." Well, my dear sweet summer child, you get nothing. Yes, nothing. My man Hegel here is going to shatter all the things you hold as true and good into tiny little shards of your broken dreams. "What's this master-slave dialectic? I've read so much about?" you ask. Again, I don't mean to shatter your already delicate disposition, but the 'master-slave dialectic' is your life--in case I'm not being clear, you're the slave, Donny Lord-Emperor Cheeto is one of the lords. Remember Marx? Yeah, Marx was Hegel's boy. Freud? Yeah, that's Hegel too. <Insert a Literary Theorist or Philosopher's Name Here> is drawing his/her/xer/they inspiration directly from the work of Hegel. "Wow, that's incredible," you say. "I'm going to read this book right now!" So... here's the problem. Hegel is freaking hard, like FREAKING hard. I'd start with Kojeve's "Introduction to the Reading of Hegel." And, before you ask, yes, there is a book about learning how to read Hegel. Many smart people have spent their whole lives trying to dig meaning from Hegel's prosaic prose, most of them fail. Best of luck my young padawan, you're going to need it. May the fourth be with you.
J**S
Hegel's Still Image of the Turning World
In the summer of 1806, as Napoleon Bonaparte was crushing the Prussians at the Battle of Jena, nearby at the University of Jena, Georg Hegel was finishing one of the greatest philosophical meditations in the Western canon, his Phenomenology of Spirit (Geistes)(1807). In the grand tradition of Augustine, Descartes, Hume, and Kant, Hegel sought to ground all knowledge in the certainty of careful introspection into the contents of consciousness and the Absolute Spirit that he discovered as a result. For some 50 years, his Phenomenology and later works dominated Western philosophical thought. Then Darwin published his Origin of Species, and for a half century Hegel’s dominance vanished. If there are no hard borders to the various species, then there are no essences attached to them. If species evolve through the crucible of natural selection, then humans have evolved, and human minds have evolved also. So human concepts about our world don’t reflect timeless, immutable essences. And phenomenological analysis of our consciousness of these concepts and mental contents can’t reveal the timeless essence of human consciousness. However, as the 1800’s came to a close, Darwinian science had yet to be matched with Mendelian genetics and eventually with Francis Crick’s discovery of the structure of DNA, so until then there was a sense among many philosophers that the Darwinian experiment had reached a blind alley in terms of providing an empirical basis for explaining the human mind, and thus that the Hegelian-based introspective methods of investigating the mind should be adopted again. Accordingly, interest in Hegel’s work was revived through the influence of the Englishman Francis Bradley (Appearance and Reality, 1893) and the Germans Edmund Husserl (Ideas, 1913) and Martin Heidegger (Being and Time, 1927), among others. Such contemporary Anglo-American philosophers as John Searle, Wilfrid Sellars, Noam Chomsky, Jerry Fodor and many others roughly follow this theme of using introspection to analyze human thinking and consciousness. It is illuminating to go back to the source of this traditional analysis – Hegel’s Phenomenology – to uncover the philosophical basis for this certainty among many that only the ‘first-person point of view’ is valid as an analysis of mind. Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit is beautifully written, as are all really great philosophical works; however, the elegance of Hegel’s language and the confident tone of his argumentation belie the difficulty of penetrating his work. A.V. Miller’s translation, on its own merits, is very readable, and J. N. Findlay’s Foreword is indeed helpful, but close reading of Hegel requires use of ‘companion’ works to assist the non-specialist reader. In the late 1940’s, as Francis Crick was beginning to perform his X-ray experiments to determine the crystalline structure of DNA, and as Alan Turing was formulating his thought experiment for determining whether a computing machine could exhibit intelligence, Martin Heidegger gave a series of lectures to his students on Hegel’s Phenomenology, published in 1950 in German and in 1970 in English under the title “Hegel’s Concept of Experience.” It’s an English translation of Hegel’s Introduction (by K. R. Dove) with line-by-line commentary by Heidegger on each short section of the Introduction, and it shows Heidegger’s scrupulous adherence to Hegel’s philosophical analysis of mind. Be forewarned: Heidegger can be as obtuse as Hegel in his ‘hermeneutical’ commentary on Hegel’s Introduction (e.g., “Unconditional self-awareness, being the subjectiveness of the subject, is the absoluteness of the Absolute.” Heidegger, pg. 34). Heidegger says at the start of his explication of Hegel’s Introduction, “’Experience’ states what ‘Phenomenology’ is.” Hegel begins his Introduction with the pronouncement that “one must first come to an understanding concerning the nature of knowledge before taking up the real subject matter, namely, the actual knowledge of what truly is.” He shortly thereafter follows with, “Natural consciousness will show itself to be merely the Concept of knowledge, or unreal knowledge. . . this road is the conscious insight into the untruth of phenomenal knowledge. . .” The first step of this process is to take “the abstract determinations of knowledge and truth [as they] are called to mind as they exist in consciousness.” This process is a “dialectical movement, which consciousness exercises on itself—on its knowledge as well as its subject—[and] is, in so far as the new, true object emerges to consciousness as the result of it, precisely that which is called experience.” Heidegger comments, “Philosophy now is unconditional knowledge within the knowledge of self-certainty.” Another useful guide to Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit is Gadamer’s Hegel’s Dialectic (1976), which is an English translation by Christopher Smith of five essays penned by Gadamer in the 1960’s and published in the original German in 1971. Gadamer holds that Hegel’s deep theme in the Phenomenology is to treat self-consciousness, “not as something previously given, but as something to be specifically demonstrated as the truth in all consciousness.” Gadamer claims that, to accomplish this task, Hegel ‘demonstrates’ the conversion of consciousness into consciousness-of-itself. Gadamer shows that Hegel’s demonstration of the ‘doubling back’ of self-consciousness into itself is “not self-consciousness as an individual point,” but rather a ‘spirit-world.’ Hegel first shows the initial state of this universal spirt-world is that of ‘Perception,’ i.e., the ‘immediate dependency’ of consciousness on sense data (the “sense certainty” that a thing has qualities such as whiteness, hardness). Hegel then shows that this universal spirit-world transitions to the higher state of consciousness of ‘Understanding,’ i.e., to knowledge of a universe of objects standing in ‘force relationships’ to each other. “What exists are forces and their interplay.” This supersensible residual world is the ‘inverted world’ that is hidden behind the world of appearances. It is what remains after the world of constant changes disappears from consciousness. Hegel says, “The supersensible world is thus a tranquil realm of laws” – beyond the perceived world, but present in it as “its immediate, still image.” This universal spirit-world is the product of Hegel’s ‘dialectic of self-consciousness.’ It is the still image of constant change. This true spirit-world is not in opposition to the world of appearance. The true, supersensible world contains both aspects, it maintains itself in infinite change, it is continually differentiating itself from itself. It is consciousness of itself as infinite differentiation.
R**X
Perfecto
Llegó rápido y en excelentes condiciones, recomendadisimo!
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