This article lays out Hegel’s account of the ‘I’. The ‘I’ does not have a higher universality outside of it. Unlike the genus in the animal kingdom, spirit is not a genus that determines the individual ‘I’ externally. In this sense, the ‘I’ is its own genus. The ‘I’ is abstract in not being identical with anything particular. It is concrete in only having this freedom from the particular within particularization. The ‘I’ is, thus, concrete universality. Drawing from Hegel’s remarks on the ‘I’ in the Phenomenology of Spirit and the Science of Logic, I investigate this peculiar character of the ‘I’. Finally, I discuss how this character of the ‘I’ rules out naturalism and the hermeneutics of suspicion.
DAS ICH ALS GATTUNG SEINER SELBST
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Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Verifiche
Volume
53
Issue Number
1-2
Start Page
77
Last Page
95
Date Published
07/2025
ISSN Number
0391-4186
Serial Article Number
5
Section
Special Section