VOLUME I PAGE Translator's Introduction; PREFACE ON SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE IN GENERAL; INTRODUCTION; (INTENTION AND METHOD OF THE ARGUMENT OF THE PHENOMENOLOGY) A. CONSCIOUSNESS . I. SENSE-CERTAINTY, OR THE THIS AND MEANING [1. The object of sense-certainty. 2. The subject of sense-certainty. 3. The concrete experience of sense-certainty]. II. PERCEPTION : OR THINGS AND THE DECEPTIVENESS OF PERCEPTUAL EXPERIENCE [1. The notion of a thing. 2. The contradictoriness of the perception of things. 3. The transition to unconditioned universality and the sphere of Understanding]. III. FORCE AND UNDERSTANDING; APPEARANCE AND THE SUPERSENSIBLE WORLD [1. Force and the play of forces. 2. The inner realm. B. SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS IV. THE TRUE NATURE OF SELF-CERTAINTY A. Independence and Dependence of Self-consciousness: Lordship and Bondage B. Freedom of Self-consciousness : Stoicism, Scepticism, and the Unhappy Consciousness C. [CONCRETE MIND] V. CERTAINTY AND TRUTH OF REASON 3. Empty or subjective Idealism : its Knowledge].[2] Observation of organic existence (3. The inner and the outer as constituting an organic individual form. [3. Observation of nature as an organic whole].Logical and Psychological laws 1. Laws of thought. 2. Psychological laws. 3. The law of individuality 1. The physiognomic significance of organs. 2. This significance is manifold and diverse. 3. Phrenology. B. Realisation of rational self-consciousness through itself 1. The immediate direction of the movement of self-consciousness : the sphere of the Ethical Order. 2. The converse process involved in this movement: the essential nature of Morality C. Individuality, which takes itself to be real in and for itself
G.W.F. Hegel. Translated by J. Ballie Kings Collge, Aberdeen.