Hegel Mastery and Servitude2
Hegel Mastery and Servitude2
Hegel Mastery and Servitude2
180. It must sublate its otherness. This is the sublation of that first two
sided ambiguity and is for that reason itself a second two-sided ambiguity.
First, it must set out to sublate the other self-sufficient essence in order
as a result to become certain of itself as the essence through having sublated
the other. Second, it thereby sets out to sublate itself, for this other is
itself.
183. The doing thus carries not only a double-edged sense inasmuch as it is
a doing directed as much towards itself as it is directed towards the other,
but also inasmuch as it is just as much inseparably the doing of one as well
as the doing of the other.
184. In this movement we see the process repeat itself which had been
exhibited as the play of forces in consciousness. What existed for us in
that process is here for the extremes themselves. The mediating middle is
self-consciousness, which disintegrates into the extremes, and each extreme
term is this exchange of its own determinateness and the absolute transition
into what is its opposite. However, as consciousness, it does indeed get
outside of itself ,8 but in its being-outside-of-itself, it is at the same
time kept back within itself. It is for itself, and its self-externality is
for it. It is for consciousness that it immediately is and is not another
consciousness. Likewise, this other is only for itself as it sublates itself
as existing-for-itself, and it is for itself only in the being-for-itself of
the other. Each is the mediating middle to the other, through which each
mediates itself with itself and integrates itself with itself. Each is, to
itself, and in that of the other, an essence immediately existing for itself
which at the same time is for itself in that way only through this mediation.
They recognize themselves as mutually recognizing each other.
185. This pure concept of recognition, the pure concept of the doubling of
self-consciousness in its unity, is itself now up for examination according
to how its process appears for self-consciousness. It will first of all
exhibit the aspect of inequality between both of them, or the mediating middle
breaking apart into the extremes, which are, as extremes, opposed to each
other, and of which one is only recognized while the other only recognizes.
190. The master is consciousness existing for itself. However, the master is
no longer consciousness existing for itself only as the concept of such a
consciousness. Rather, it is consciousness existing for itself which is
mediated with itself through another consciousness, namely, through another
whose essence includes its being synthetically combined with self-sufficient
being, or with thinghood itself. The master relates himself to both of these
moments, to a thing as such, the object of desire, and to the consciousness
for which thinghood is essential; while (a) the master is, as the concept of
self-consciousness, the immediate relation of being-for-itself, but (b)
henceforth is at the same time as mediation, or as a being-for-itself that
is for itself only through another, the master in that way relates himself
(a) immediately to both, and (b) mediately to each through the other. The
master relates himself to the servant mediately through self-sufficient
being, for it is on this very point that the servant is held fast. It is his
chain, the one he could not ignore in the struggle, and for that reason he
proved himself to be non-self-sufficient and to have his self-sufficiency in
the shape of thinghood. However, the master is the power over this being, for
he has proved in the struggle that to him it only counted as a negative.
While he is the power over this being, this being, however, is the power over
the other, so that the master thus has within this syllogism the other as
subordinate to him. The master likewise relates himself to the thing mediately
through the servant. The servant, as self-consciousness itself, relates
himself negatively to the thing and sublates the thing. However, at the same
time the thing is for him self-sufficient, and, for that reason, he cannot
through his negating be over and done with it, cannot have eliminated it; or,
the servant only processes it. On the other hand, to the master, the immediate
relation comes to be through this mediation as the pure negation of the thing,
or as the consumption of the thing. Where desire had failed, the master now
succeeds in being over and done with the thing, and he achieves satisfaction
in his consumption of it. On account of the thing’s self-sufficiency, desire
did not achieve this much, but the master, who has interposed the servant
between the thing and himself, as a result only links up with the non-self-
sufficiency of the thing and simply consumes it. He leaves the aspect of its
self-sufficiency in the care of the servant, who works on the thing.
191. For the master, it is in these two moments that his recognition comes
about through another consciousness, since the latter consciousness posits
itself as inessential within those moments, first of all by working on the
thing, and second of all by his dependence on a determinate existence.
In both moments, he cannot achieve mastery over existence and achieve absolute
negation. This moment of recognition is present here such that the
other consciousness sublates itself as being-for-itself, and it thereby
itself does what the first does to it. This is just as much the case for the
other moment. What the second self-consciousness does is the first’s own
doing, for what the servant does is really the master’s doing. The latter is
only being-for-itself, the essence; he is the pure negative power for which
the thing is nothing, and he is thus the pure essential doing in this
relationship. However, the servant is not a pure but rather an inessential
doing. However, what prevents this from being genuine recognition is the
moment where what the master does with regard to the other, he also does with
regard to himself, and where what the servant does with regard to himself,
he also is supposed to do with regard to the other. As a result, a form of
recognition has arisen that is one-sided and unequal.
192. The inessential consciousness is therein for the master the object which
constitutes the truth of his certainty of himself. However, it is clear
that this object does not correspond to its concept, but rather that the
object in which the master has achieved his mastery has become, to the master,
something entirely different from a self-sufficient consciousness. It is not
a self-sufficient consciousness which is for him but above all a nonself-
sufficient consciousness. His certainty is therefore not that of being-
foritself as the truth; instead, his truth is the inessential consciousness
and the inessential doing of that inessential consciousness.
193. The truth of the self-sufficient consciousness is thus the servile
consciousness. To be sure, this consciousness admittedly first appears
external to itself14 and not as the truth of self-consciousness. However, in
the way that mastery showed that its essence is the inversion of what mastery
wants to be, so too in its consummation will servitude become instead the
opposite of what it immediately is. As a consciousness forced back into
itself, it will take the inward turn15 and convert itself into true self-
sufficiency.
196. However, what the formative activity means is not only that the serving
consciousness as pure being-for-itself becomes, to itself, an existing
being within that formative activity. It also has the negative meaning of the
first moment, that of fear. For in forming the thing, his own negativity, or
his being-for-itself, only as a result becomes an object to himself in that
he sublates the opposed existing form. However, this objective negative is
precisely the alien essence before which he trembled, but now he destroys
this alien negative and posits himself as such a negative within the element
of continuance. He thereby becomes for himself an existing being-for-itself.
Being-for itself in the master is to the servant another, or it is only for
him. In fear, being-for-itself is in its own self. In culturally formative
activity,19 being-for-itself becomes for him his own being for-itself, and
he attains the consciousness that he himself is in and for himself. As a
result, the form, by being posited as external, becomes to him not something
other than himself, for his pure being-for-itself is that very form, which
to him therein becomes the truth. Therefore, through this retrieval, he comes
to acquire through himself a mind of his own, and he does this precisely in
the work in which there had seemed to be only some outsider’s mind. – For
this reflection, the two moments of fear and service, as well as the moments
of culturally formative activity are both necessary, and both are necessary
in a universal way. Without the discipline of service and obedience, fear is
mired in formality and does not diffuse itself over the conscious actuality
of existence. Without culturally formative activity, fear remains inward and
mute, and consciousness will not become for it [consciousness] itself.20 If
consciousness engages in formative activity without that first, absolute
fear, then it has a mind of its own which is only vanity, for its form, or
its negativity, is not negativity in itself, and his formative activity thus
cannot to himself give him the consciousness of himself as consciousness of
the essence. If he has not been tried and tested by absolute fear but only
by a few anxieties, then the negative essence will have remained an
externality to himself, and his substance will not have been infected all the
way through by it. While not each and every one of the ways in which his
natural consciousness was brought to fulfillment was shaken to the core, he
is still attached in himself to determinate being. His having a mind of his
own is then only stubbornness, a freedom that remains bogged down within the
bounds of servility. To the servile consciousness, pure form can as little
become the essence as can the pure form – when it is taken as extending itself
beyond the singular individual– be a universal culturally formative activity,
an absolute concept. Rather, the form is a skill which, while it has dominance
over some things, has dominance over neither the universal power nor the
entire objective essence.