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022_000076/0000

On the Concept of Alien

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Auteur
Zoltán Gyenge
Field of science
Filozófia, filozófiatörténet / Philosophy, history of philosophy (13033)
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000076/0055
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Page 56 [56]
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The other is different as a result of distinction, but the alienated can also be myself. Why? Because I can be alienated not only from others, but also from myself. In The Phenomenology of Spirit, which I quoted earlier, Hegel accurately describes the process by which consciousness slowly recognizes, through its sensory-perception, that its other is not independent of it, not a stranger, but itself, its own, which is nothing but knowledge of itself through the other. In the last pages of the chapter on consciousness, he reveals the essence of the whole process: in cognition, the cognizer and the cognized are present as two extremes, and the mediating element (the middle) coincides as a result of the phenomenon (Erscheinung = Er-scheinen, that which emerges is the self itself; the way the two extremes disappear is the way the mediating center does. Raised above perception, consciousness exhibits itself as merged with the supersensible world through the mediating middle of appearance through which it gazes into this background. The two extremes, the one of the purely inner, the other of the inner gazing into the purely inner, have now merged together, and just as they have vanished as extremes, the mediating middle, as something other than these extremes, has also vanished. The curtain is therefore lifted away from the inner, and what is present is the gazing of the inner into the inner, the gazing of the non-distinguished “like pole,” which repels itself from itself, positing itself as a distinguished inner, but for which there is present just as immediately the non-difference of both of them, self-consciousness. It turns out that behind the so-called curtain, which is supposed to hide what is inner, there is nothing to be seen if we ourselves do not go behind it, and one can see something behind the curtain only if there is something behind the curtain to be seen. However, at the same time it turns out that one cannot without any more fuss go straightway behind the curtain, for this knowing of the truth of the representation of appearance and of appearance’s inner is itself only the result of a complex movement, through which the modes of consciousness that go from meaning something, then to perceiving, and then to the understanding itself all vanish. It likewise

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