cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/24744108
I see what the cartoon says (from Introducing Hegel), but would like to hear more about recognition.
Much to reflect upon! Thanks to @Slab_Bulkhead@lemmy.world (you aren’t by any chance serving on the Southern Sun at the moment, are you?) and @zedcell@lemmygrad.ml.
Hegel’s concept of “recognition” (or Anerkennung in German) is central to his philosophy, especially in his ‘Phenomenology of Spirit’. It refers to the process by which individuals come to see themselves as self-conscious and free through the recognition of others. For Hegel, self-consciousness is not something an individual can achieve in isolation; it requires acknowledgment from another self-conscious being.
Hegel argues that human self-consciousness is inherently relational. A person does not come to understand themselves simply by introspection. Instead, they need to be recognized by another self-conscious being. This recognition affirms their own existence as a self-conscious subject.
Hegel ultimately sees genuine self-consciousness as arising from a form of mutual recognition, where two or more individuals acknowledge each other’s autonomy and subjectivity. This process allows individuals to overcome alienation, as each person is not merely an isolated subject, but is recognized by others as a free and self-conscious being.
Recognition is also crucial in Hegel’s views on ethics and society. For him, the state and social institutions are vehicles through which mutual recognition can be institutionalized. The individual’s freedom is realized not in isolation but through participation in these social structures, where recognition is an ongoing process. This can be seen as laying the groundwork for later political theories, including Marx’s ideas about class struggles and emancipation.
I think it’s recognition as an equal being on equal footing worthy of equal respect, not as an object of domination. In that equality the master can recognise themselves unalienated, and see themselves as a person worthy of respect in their own right. What worth is the respect gained from a slave who you dominate mentally and physically? It’s an incomplete recognition in its own right that doesn’t see the master as the full human they are as well.
Losurdo’s “Class Struggle” talks a lot about the multiplicity of class struggles through this lense.
Happy to be corrected on the above by any Hegel pros.