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Howard P. Kainz (born 1933) is professor emeritus at Marquette University, Milwaukee.He was a recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship for 1977-1978, and Fulbright fellowships in Germany for 1980-1981 and 1987-1988.
The Phenomenology of Spirit (German: Phänomenologie des Geistes) is the most widely discussed philosophical work of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel; its German title can be translated as either The Phenomenology of Spirit or The Phenomenology of Mind. Hegel described the work, published in 1807, as an "exposition of the coming to be of knowledge ...
Henry Harris (Jr.) was born in Brighton, England, to Henry and Amy Harris.He was raised at Perching Manor in Fulking, where his father had farmed since 1920.During the Second World War, his father, a WW1 veteran, was the officer in command of the Fulking platoon of the East Sussex Home Guard, and Henry jr. served as a Private until 1944 when he joined the Royal Signals.
Hegel, Nietzsche and the Criticism of Metaphysics, Cambridge University Press, 1986; An Introduction to Hegel: Freedom, Truth and History, 2nd edition, Blackwell, 2005; The Opening of Hegel's Logic. From Being to Infinity, Purdue University Press, 2006; Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit. A Reader's Guide, Bloomsbury, 2013
Hegel divides his philosophy of the subjective spirit into three parts: anthropology, phenomenology, and psychology. Anthropology "deals with 'soul', which is spirit still mired in nature: all that within us which precedes our self-conscious mind or intellect."
The lord–bondsman dialectic (sometimes translated master–slave dialectic) is a famous passage in Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's The Phenomenology of Spirit.It is widely considered a key element in Hegel's philosophical system, and it has heavily influenced many subsequent philosophers.
This interpretation has been developed through many scholarly articles, and especially through three books: The Self and Its Body in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit, [9] Reading Hegel's Phenomenology, [10] and Infinite Phenomenology: The Lessons of Hegel's Science of Experience. [11]
After graduation he embarked on a serious study of Hegel, teaching himself German in order to read The Phenomenology of Spirit in the original. In 1939 he came out with his own translation and his commentary would later form the basis of the book Genesis and Structure of the Phenomenology of Spirit (published in 1947).