L'attività Intersoggettiva E La Cosa Stessa Nella "fenomenologia Dello Spirito": Due Letture A Confronto
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to compare two different interpretations of the figure “the action of each and everyone” as put forth by Hegel in the Phenomenology of Spirit; in the passage of his work where this figure is described, the intersubjectity of the Spirit arises from the dynamics of human action. I will examine Herbert Marcuse’s and Jean Hyppolite’s understanding of this figure; the former’s is contained in Marcuse’s license work Hegel’s Ontology and the Foundation of a Theory of Historicity. In this work, Marcuse explains Hegel’s figure starting from the concept of life and from a heideggerianand an aristotelian perspective; he also appeals to the categories of possibility andreality; Hyppolite’s understanding ofthe Hegelian figure is exposed in the well-knowncommentary Genesis and structure of the Phenomenology of Spirit Hegels, and it appearsto be existentialist in kind. Therefore, in my analysis I will compare these differentunderstandings of the same figure, and I will sketch these authors’ philosophical thesesand positions by explaining the points they share and the differences in theirinterpretations. For this reason elements crucial to my analysis will be the structure ofaction as a circle, the conceptof individuality, the element of the light, the process ofproduction of a work, the intersubjective dimension and the “thing itself” as one of theincarnations of the spirit