導(dǎo)讀 Preface on Scientific Knowledge Introduction Part One Consciousness I. Certainty at the Level of Sense-Experience—The "This", and "Meaning" II. Perception: Or Things and Their Deceptiveness III. Force and Understanding—The World of Appearance and the Supersensible World Part Two Self-Consciousness IV. The Truth Which Conscious Certainty of Self Realizes A. Independence and Dependence of Self-Consciousness: Lordship and Bondage B. Freedom of Self-Consciousness: Stoicism, Scepticism, and the Unhappy Consciousness Part Three Reason V. Reason's Certainty and Reason's Truth A. Observation as a Process of Reason a(1). Observation of Nature a(2). Observation of Organic Nature b. Observation of Self-Consciousness in its Pure Form and in Its Relation to External Reality—Logical and Psychological Laws c. Observation of the Relation of Self-Consciousness to Its Immediate Actuality—Physiognomy and Phrenology B. The Realization of Rational Self-Consciousness through Its Own Activity a. Pleasure and Necessity b. The Law of the Heart, and the Frenzy of Self-Conceit c. Virtue and the Course of the World C. Individuality, Which Takes Itself to Be Real in and for Itself a. Self-Conscious Individuals Associated as a Community of Animals, and the Deception Thence Arising—The Real Fact b. Reason as Lawgiver