Introduction: The Problem of a Philosophical Rendering of Nature and Hegel’s Philosophy of the Real; Part I: ‘Gleaming leprosy in the sky’; 1. The ‘Non-Whole’ of Hegelian Nature: Extrinsicality and the Problems of Sickness and Death; 2. The Instability of Space-Time and the Contingency of Necessity; 3. The Problem of Nature’s Spurious Infinite within the Register of Animal Life; 4. Assimilation and the Problems of Sex, Violence, and Sickness unto Death; Part II: Spirit’s Birth from within the Bio-Material World; 5. The Other Hegel: The Anthropology and Spirit’s Birth from within the Bio-Material World; 6. Embodiment: Spirit, Material–Maternal Dependence, and the Problem of the in utero; 7. The Nightmare of Reason and Regression into the Night of the World; 8. Treatment as (re-)Habituation: From Psychopathology to (re-)Actualised Subjectivity; Part III: The Problem of Surplus Repressive Punishment; 9. An Introduction to the Problem of Surplus Repressive Punishment; 10. Abstract Right: Natural Immediacy within the Matrices of Personhood; 11. Crime, the Negation of Right, and the Problem of European Colonial Consciousness; 12. Surplus Repressive Punishment and Spirit’s Regressive (de-)Actualisation; Conclusion: Freedom within Two Natures, or, the Nature–Spirit Dialectic in the Final System; Bibliography; Index.