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Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Difference between revisions - Wikipedia

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Difference between revisions

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Many sympathetic commentators have argued that this is surely one of the most imaginative and poetic conceptions ever to have occurred to any philosopher. Kaufmann even argues that the parallel between Hegel's ''Phenomenology'' and [[Dante]]'s journey "through hell and purgatory to the blessed vision meets the eye." He also makes a comparison with [[Goethe]]'s [[Faust]] claiming that "two quotations from ‘The First Part of the Tragedy’ could have served Hegel as mottoes." The first of these passages (lines 1770-75) Kaufmann argues Hegel knew from ''Faust: A Fragment'' (1790)":
 
<blockquote> And what is portioned out to all mankind,
I shall enjoy deep in myself, contain
Within my spirit summit and abyss,
Pile onWithin my breastspirit their agonysummit and blissabyss,
Pile on my breast their agony and bliss,
And thus let my own self grow into theirs, unfettered<ref>''Faust'' cited in Kaufmann, ''Hegel: A Reinterpretation'', Anchor Books, p.118</ref></blockquote>
 
though Kaufmann argues that Hegel would "scarcely have added, like Faust":