作者popandy (pop)
看板W-Philosophy
標題Re: 最近在唸黑格爾
時間Thu Oct 30 10:42:30 2003
※ 引述《resurgam (寧靜海)》之銘言:
: 我其實是唸英文系,不是哲學系,
: 但是因為文學批評會上到一些西方哲學的東西,
: 所以慢慢開始接觸一些西方哲學思潮。
: 最近在唸黑格爾時遇到很大的困難,
: 我們唸的是一篇 "Phenomenology of Spirit"--The Master-Slave Dialectic
: (不知道中文是怎麼翻的)
: 它一開始提到所謂self-consciousness 跟 otherness 關係到底是怎樣的一個情況阿?
: 嗯...我用的書是 The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism
: 黑格爾這篇在630頁
: 不曉得有沒有人也看過這本書呢?
以下摘自The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
G.W.F. Hegel (1770-1831)
Social and Political Thought
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/h/hegelsoc.htm
The Phenomenology of Spirit
The Phenomenology of Spirit (Die Phanomenologie des Geistes), published in
1807, is Hegel's first major comprehensive philosophical work. …………
One of the most widely discussed places in the Phenomenology is the chapter
on "The Truth of Self-Certainty" which includes a subsection on
"Independence and Dependence of Self-Consciousness: Lordship and Bondage."
This section treats of the (somewhat misleadingly named) "master/slave"
struggle which is taken by some, especially the Marxian-inspired, as a paradigm
of all forms of social conflict, in particular the struggle between social
classes. It is clear that Hegel intended the scenario to typify certain
features of the struggle for recognition (Anerkennung) overall, be it social,
personal, etc. The conflict between master and slave (which shall be
referred to hereafter as lord and bondsman as more in keeping with
Hegel's own terminology and the intended generic meaning) is one in which
the historical themes of dominance and obedience, dependence and independence,
etc., are philosophically introduced. Although this specific dialectic
of struggle occurs only at the earliest stages of self-consciousness, it
nonetheless sets up the main problematic for achieving realized
self-consciousness–the gaining of self-recognition through the recognition
of and by another, through mutual recognition.
According to Hegel, the relationship between self and otherness is
the fundamental defining characteristic of human awareness and activity,
being rooted as it is in the emotion of desire for objects as well as in
the estrangement from those objects, which is part of the primordial human
experience of the world. The otherness that consciousness experiences as
a barrier to its goal is the external reality of the natural and social world,
which prevents individual consciousness from becoming free and independent.
However, that otherness cannot be abolished or destroyed, without destroying
oneself, and so ideally there must be reconciliation between self and other
such that consciousness can "universalize" itself through the other.
In the relation of dominance and subservience between two consciousnesses,
say lord and bondsman, the basic problem for consciousness is the overcoming
of its otherness, or put positively, the achieving of integration with itself.
The relation between lord and bondsman leads to a sort of provisional,
incomplete resolution of the struggle for recognition between distinct
consciousnesses.
Hegel asks us to consider how a struggle between two distinct consciousnesses,
let us say a violent "life-or-death" struggle, would lead to one consciousness
surrendering and submitting to the other out of fear of death. Initially, the
consciousness that becomes lord or master proves its freedom through
willingness to risk its life and not submit to the other out of fear of death,
and thus not identify simply with its desire for life and physical being.
Moreover, this consciousness is given acknowledgement of its freedom through
the submission and dependence of the other, which turns out paradoxically to
be a deficient recognition in that the dominant one fails to see a reflection
of itself in the subservient one. Adequate recognition requires a mirroring of
the self through the other, which means that to be successful it must be
mutual. In the ensuing relationship of lordship and bondage, furthermore,
the bondsman through work and discipline (motivated by fear of dying at the
hands of the master or lord) transforms his subservience into a mastery over
his environment, and thus achieves a measure of independence. In objectifying
himself in his environment through his labor the bondsman in effect realizes
himself, with his transformed environment serving as a reflection of his
inherently self-realizing activity. Thus, the bondsman gains a measure of
independence in his subjugation out of fear of death. In a way, the lord
represents death as the absolute subjugator, since it is through fear of
this master, of the death that he can impose, that the bondsman in his
acquiescence and subservience is placed into a social context of work and
discipline. Yet despite, or more properly, because of this subjection the
bondsman is able to attain a measure of independence by internalizing and
overcoming those limitations which must be dealt with if he is to
produce efficiently. However, this accomplishment, the self-determination
of the bondsman, is limited and incomplete because of the asymmetry that
remains in his relation to the lord. Self-consciousness is still fragmented,
i.e., the objectification through labor that the bondsman experiences does
not coincide with the consciousness of the lord whose sense of self is not
through labor but through power over the bondsman and enjoyment of the fruits
of the bondsman's labor. Only in a realm of ethical life can self-determination
be fully self-conscious to the extent that universal freedom is reflected in
the life of each individual member of society
Thus, in the Phenomenology consciousness must move on through the phases of
Stoicism, Skepticism, and the Unhappy Consciousness before engaging in the
self-articulation of Reason, and it is not until the section
"Objective Spirit: The Ethical Order" that the full universalization of
self-consciousness is in principle to be met with. Here we find a shape of
human existence where all men work freely, serving the needs of the whole
community rather than of masters, and subject only to the "discipline of
reason." This mode of ethical life, typified in ancient Greek democracy,
also eventually disintegrates, as is expressed in the conflict between
human and divine law and the tragic fate that is the outcome of this conflict
illustrated in the story of Antigone. However, the ethical life described
here is still in its immediacy and is therefore at a level of abstractness
that falls short of the mediation of subjectivity and universality which
is provided spiritually in revealed Christianity and politically
in the modern state, which purportedly provides a solution to human conflict
arising from the struggle for recognition. In any case, the rest of the
Phenomenology is devoted to examinations of culture (including enlightenment
and revolution), morality, religion, and finally, Absolute Knowing.
…………
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