Hi Nina! Thanks so much for the question. I have to admit I have not yet looked deeply into Hegel, but my sense is that he will provide a bridge between Rousseau and Marx, Feuerbach, and Nietzsche, all of whom see consciousness as changing over time. I started to look into an ancient thread too (Hesiod, Genesis, Lucretius) but haven't finished that thinking yet :) Do you know if Hegel discusses logic in Phenomenology of Spirit?
Thank you! I wondered how this view of logic as not absolute but changing aligns with Hegel and his historical view of the evolution of consciousness.
Hi Nina! Thanks so much for the question. I have to admit I have not yet looked deeply into Hegel, but my sense is that he will provide a bridge between Rousseau and Marx, Feuerbach, and Nietzsche, all of whom see consciousness as changing over time. I started to look into an ancient thread too (Hesiod, Genesis, Lucretius) but haven't finished that thinking yet :) Do you know if Hegel discusses logic in Phenomenology of Spirit?