Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was a German philosopher. He was the last of the great system-builders in Western philosophy. He was born on 27 August 1770 in Stuttgart in southern Germany. His father was a civil servant. His mother taught him Latin before he started school but died when he was eleven. He had one sister, Christiane, who became very close to him. Hegel studied philosophy and theology at the University of Tübingen. There he became friends with two other young men who would become famous: the poet Friedrich Hölderlin and the philosopher Friedrich Schelling. The three were excited by the French Revolution, which broke out in 1789 when Hegel was nineteen. For years Hegel struggled to find an academic post. He worked as a private tutor in Switzerland, then in Frankfurt. In 1801 he became an unpaid lecturer at the University of Jena. There he wrote his first major book, the Phenomenology of Spirit. He famously finished the manuscript on the same day Napoleon's army arrived in the city in October 1806. The book was published in 1807. Hegel's career then bounced around. He worked as a newspaper editor in Bamberg, then as a high school principal in Nuremberg. He married Marie von Tucher in 1811. In 1816 he became a professor at Heidelberg, then at Berlin from 1818. By the 1820s he was the most famous philosopher in Germany. His lectures filled large halls. He died of illness, possibly cholera, on 14 November 1831 in Berlin, aged 61.
Hegel matters for three reasons. First, he developed one of the most ambitious philosophical systems in Western history. He tried to fit logic, nature, mind, history, art, religion, and politics into one connected vision. He believed reality was rational and that history showed the gradual self-knowledge of something he called Spirit (Geist in German). His system is famously difficult, but its scope is unmatched. Whatever students think of his answers, the questions he asked still shape modern philosophy.
Second, his idea of dialectic changed how thinkers approach history and ideas. Hegel argued that ideas develop through conflict and resolution. A position calls forth its opposite. Out of the clash, a new and richer position emerges. This new position then meets its own opposite, and the process continues. The pattern is sometimes summarised as 'thesis, antithesis, synthesis', though Hegel himself rarely used those exact words. The dialectical way of thinking has shaped everything from history and politics to literary criticism. Karl Marx took it and turned it upside down to build his own theory of social change.
Third, his influence is everywhere in modern thought, even on people who reject him. Marx, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre, Beauvoir, and the Frankfurt School all defined themselves partly against Hegel. Frantz Fanon used Hegel's analysis of master and servant to think about colonial relationships. Judith Butler wrote her doctorate on Hegel. Modern political thought, especially debates about recognition and identity, runs back through him. He is the giant whose shadow modern philosophy still works in.
For a first introduction, Peter Singer's Hegel: A Very Short Introduction is reliable and accessible. Frederick Beiser's Hegel (Routledge) is slightly fuller and clear. Stephen Houlgate's An Introduction to Hegel: Freedom, Truth and History is a strong scholarly introduction. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Hegel is rigorous and free online. For Hegel's life and times, Terry Pinkard's biography Hegel: A Biography is excellent.
For deeper reading, Hegel's own Phenomenology of Spirit is the major text but very difficult; readers usually need a guide like Robert Stern's Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Hegel and the Phenomenology of Spirit. Charles Taylor's Hegel (1975) remains a major scholarly study.
The Satisfactions of Self-Consciousness is influential. For Hegel's political philosophy, the Philosophy of Right (1821) is essential, with Allen Wood's edition recommended.
The Sociality of Reason is a strong sustained reading.
Hegel said history follows the formula thesis, antithesis, synthesis.
Hegel almost never used those exact words. The formula was popularised by other writers, especially Heinrich Moritz Chalybäus, after Hegel's death. Hegel's actual dialectic is more flexible and complicated. He preferred richer descriptions involving his special term Aufhebung, which means both cancelling and preserving at once. The simple formula gets the spirit roughly right but misses the texture. Students who repeat 'thesis, antithesis, synthesis' as Hegel's view are repeating a popular summary, not Hegel's own thinking.
Hegel was a fascist or proto-Nazi.
This claim, made most strongly by Karl Popper in The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945), is rejected by most current scholars as too sweeping. Hegel did praise the modern state and admired the Prussian government of his time. He was not, however, a nationalist in the modern racist sense. He believed in universal human freedom. Some later thinkers, especially in the 1930s, did appropriate parts of Hegel for nationalist purposes, but this was a serious distortion. Reading Hegel as a fascist also makes it impossible to understand why Marx, Beauvoir, Fanon, and many other left-wing thinkers found him so useful.
Hegel believed the world was just a product of mind.
Hegel is called an 'idealist', but his idealism is not the simple view that nothing exists outside the mind. He thought reality and rationality were deeply linked, but he took the natural world seriously and wrote a whole Philosophy of Nature. His idealism is closer to the view that mind and world develop together, neither reducible to the other. Reading him as a thinker who denied the reality of physical things misses what he actually said. Modern scholars increasingly read Hegel as offering a sophisticated middle position between simple materialism and simple idealism.
Hegel is too obscure to be useful for ordinary students.
His writing is genuinely hard, but his core ideas are not beyond serious students who get good help. Concepts like recognition, dialectic, and the master-servant relationship can be introduced clearly and have practical use. Modern guides by writers like Charles Taylor, Robert Pippin, Terry Pinkard, and Stephen Houlgate make Hegel accessible. Avoiding him because he is difficult means missing one of the most important thinkers in modern philosophy. The difficulty is real; the reward is also real.
For research-level engagement, the multi-volume Cambridge edition of Hegel's works is the standard scholarly resource in English. H. S. Harris's two-volume Hegel's Ladder is the most thorough English-language commentary on the Phenomenology. Robert Brandom's A Spirit of Trust offers a major contemporary pragmatist reading. Klaus Vieweg's recent biographical and philosophical work in German has reshaped Hegel studies. For the political afterlife, Karl Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemies (volume 2) gives the famous attack; Walter Kaufmann's Hegel: A Reinterpretation gives the careful rebuttal. The journal Hegel-Studien publishes ongoing international scholarship.
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