Hegel: Afterimages of Nature
摘要
This chapter reinterprets Hegel’s paradigm of recognition through the lens of his aesthetics. While Hegel’s emphasis on socio-historical mediation provides a compelling model of recognition, its limitation lies in treating nature as a passive object of labor and mastery. His philosophy of art, however, offers a corrective. If, as the Fichte chapter has argued, judgment is embodied and perception historically mediated, then aesthetics becomes indispensable for recognition extended to nature. Perception of the natural world is never immediate but always refracted through aesthetic forms—painting, photography, film, or digital media—which reshape how nature is encountered and disclosed within relations of recognition. Central to this analysis is Hegel’s concept of “semblance of animation,” whereby art brings sensible elements of nature to life in ways that demand a response. Through semblance, indifferent objects become ends in themselves, resisting instrumentalization and appearing as bearers of expressive significance. Thus, semblance emerges not as illusion but as a mode of truth, raising deeper epistemological and ontological questions about the truth-content of art and nature.