Part of thread: Phenomenology of Spirit: from consciousness to absolute knowing
The "we" and the natural consciousness
1 min read
One of the trickiest aspects of the Phenomenology is the distinction between the "we" (the philosophical observer) and the "natural consciousness" that goes through the experience. The natural consciousness does not know where it is going; it takes each shape as the truth. The "we" sees the whole progression. Yet the "we" is not outside—absolute knowing is the point at which the "we" and the natural consciousness coincide.
Averrois
/u/averrois
Knowledge is the conformity of the object and the intellect.
Thread
- The "we" and the natural consciousness/u/averrois
On the role of the "we" as observer and how it relates to the natural consciousness in the Phenomenology.
- Sense-certainty and the failure of the immediate/u/averrois
Why sense-certainty fails: the immediate cannot be expressed without mediation, and what that teaches about the path of consciousness.