Hostname: page-component-7dd5485656-gs9qr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-11-02T10:07:42.906Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Work, Bad Infinity and Habit: A Hegelian Approach to Sustainability and Freedom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2025

Tatiana Llaguno
Affiliation:
Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, Spaintatiana.llaguno@upf.edu
Lisa Herzog
Affiliation:
University of Groningen, The Netherlandsl.m.herzog@rug.nl

Abstract

What can a Hegelian perspective contribute to addressing the ecological crisis? This paper argues that, for Hegel, a transformative yet sustainable relation with nature is a requirement for a free form of life. Drawing on both the Phenomenology of Spirit and the Philosophy of Right, it contends that Hegel’s notions of work, bad infinity and habit help us understand how societies become entrenched in unsustainable practices. At the same time, by pointing to the notion of limit, these concepts illuminate what an alternative form of life could look like. Modern subjective and objective structures that resemble a ‘bad infinity’—in the sense of an imperative of endless wealth accumulation—come at the cost of human and non-human nature. To respond to this, work must be reoriented toward social needs, mutual recognition and cooperation. However, achieving this vision requires more than individual moral commitments; it demands the transformations of sedimented habits, socio-economic relationships and their material expressions.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Hegel Society of Great Britain.

I. Introduction

How can Hegelian philosophy contribute to the defence of environmental sustainability as a normative requirement for a free form of life? First, we argue that Hegel’s thought offers valuable resources because it acknowledges the constitutive role of nature and the possibility of freedom only on the condition of the maintenance (rather than the abstract destruction) of life. Second, we claim that Hegel provides useful tools for understanding, on the one hand, what goes wrong in our relationship with nature when it is seen merely as an external resource to be exploited, and on the other, what it would take to transform this relation. We thus contribute to the growing literature that connects Hegelian thought and questions of environmental sustainability, with a specific focus on his notions of bad infinity, habit and the role of human work.Footnote 1

‘Sustainability’ has famously been defined, by the 1987 UN Brundtland Commission, as ‘meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs’ (World Commission on Environment and Development 1987). This definition may seem problematically modest, as well as anthropocentric, but it is nonetheless very powerful when brought in contrast with current economic practices. At the very least, living up to it requires respect for ‘planetary boundaries’ (Rockström et al. Reference Rockström2009; Steffen et al. Reference Steffen2015), and thus a very different relation to nature than our current one.Footnote 2 Our view is that a sustainable relationship to nature requires, in specific senses, an end to the irrational exploitation of resources, such as agricultural practices that exhaust or erode the soil rather than preserving it for future harvests; and more broadly, an end to the self-reproducing and accumulative logic of capital. An important caveat is that Hegel himself did not use the term ‘sustainability’. Rather than imposing an anachronistic reading, our aim is to draw on fundamental Hegelian concepts that may nonetheless point us in that direction.

In the first part, we introduce the idea that, for Hegel, self-conscious subjects always have an objective dimension and are irremediably attached to life, with their bodies and external nature being a constitutive condition of their free personality (Nuzzo Reference Nuzzo and Williams2001). While, in order to be free, subjects need to negate their immediate relation to life, they cannot negate life in toto. The negation in which they need to engage is a negation of themselves as immediately natural and naturalized beings, not of nature as such. We then show that, for Hegel, work—the activity through which individuals begin their conscious transformation of nature—holds a central role in fulfilling this task, by igniting an awareness of our simultaneous dependence on, and independence from, nature. But while Hegel’s view of work and nature affirms the need to transform nature rather than leave it untouched, it is equally true that such transformation must occur under specific conditions, that is, that transformative duties must be constrained by additional preservative duties (Stone Reference Stone2002). Through a reading of the Phenomenology, we argue that this requirement follows from Hegel’s own definition of work as ‘desire held in check’.

In the second part, we explore what these fundamental insights about the relation between nature and freedom imply for Hegel’s practical philosophy. We suggest that the Hegelian notions of bad infinity and habit illuminate key aspects of the environmental crisis. In particular, continuing the discussion of work, we argue that our growth-driven socio-economic system exemplifies a bad infinity and undermines the subjective appropriation of our own objectivity. It impedes both the self-conscious and sustainable appropriation of nature and, in doing so, violates fundamental Hegelian requirements of freedom. We finally propose that the notion of habit, which unites subjective and objective dimensions, helps explain why it has proven so difficult to address the problem of nature’s destruction, showing the limits to moral appeals. Drawing on Hegel’s critique of Kantian morality—a model that a considerable part of environmental philosophy, focused on attitudinal and individual changes rather than structural ones has followed—we highlight the Hegelian need for norms that can actually be inhabited (Lumsden Reference Lumsden2018). As Hegel demonstrates in the Philosophy of Right, both abstract right and morality are dependent on ethical life. As a consequence, normative change requires more than the positing of a new set of values: it requires engaging with the limits imposed by sedimented social practices and institutions, including those of work.

Before we proceed, a quick word on terminology: throughout the paper, we use the words nature and life interchangeably. However, it is worth noting that the two hold slightly different meanings in Hegel’s philosophy. In the Encyclopaedia, Hegel defines nature as ‘the Idea in the form of otherness’ and adds that ‘externality constitutes the specific character in which Nature, as Nature, exists’ (Enc: §247).Footnote 3 Life, however, is ‘[t]he real totality of body as the infinite process in which individuality determines itself to particularity or finitude, and equally negates this and returns into itself […], an ideality which is fulfilled [erfüllt], and as self-related negative unity, has essentially developed the nature of self and become subjective’ (Enc: §337). Life is nature overcoming its externality; it is a higher development in which subjectivity begins to emerge. For our purposes however—namely, a deployment of Hegelian philosophy in response to the environmental crisis—nature and life are used interchangeably to refer to non-human nature.

II. Preserving and transforming nature

(I) The sustainability provision

Mobilizing Hegelian philosophy for thinking about environmental problems might seem counterintuitive at first glance, given its widespread—but ultimately misguided—reputation as a philosophy of subjectivity. Yet, interpreters that ascribe a Promethean position to Hegel ‘surreptitiously presuppose an ideological notion of the “subject”’ (Nancy Reference Nancy2002: 5) and forget his acceptance of ‘the turn to the subject, but not the foundationalist metaphysics of subjectivity’ (Williams Reference Williams1992: 102, 142). Hegel presents no solipsistic subjectivity but a socially interactive paradigm: for him, self-conscious subjects emerge only through their relations with others, through ‘the assumption of a position in a social space’ (Pinkard Reference Pinkard1996: 7). But if the role of the social is acknowledged by many readers of Hegel (e.g., Pippin Reference Pippin1989; Hardimon Reference Hardimon1994; Williams Reference Williams1997), the role of the natural world is more controversial. Nevertheless, as Sedgwick underlines, Hegel criticizes metaphysicians of subjectivity not only because they present reason as limited and our form of knowledge as deficient but also because they portray it as abstract, especially when ‘the science of subjectivity’ overrides ‘the science of nature’ (2012: 94). Hegel holds that the two form a continuum and cannot be fully separated.

For that reason, Hegel’s philosophy is understood by many commentators as having a naturalist basis. To be sure, not all readers of Hegel agree with such a characterization (see Gardner Reference Gardner and Hammer2007; Reference Gardner and Stone2011), and the exact contours of Hegel’s naturalism are highly disputed. While we will not dwell on this debate, we take it that, at the very least, Hegel’s commitments are strong enough to describe his position as ‘broadly naturalistic’—a term that Alison Stone (Reference Stone2013) uses to situate Hegel’s complex views on the continuities and discontinuities between philosophy and science (see also Illetterati Reference Illetterati2020). In presenting our case for a Hegelian approach to sustainability, we equally agree with Renault when he asserts that one reason for Hegel’s contemporary relevance is his way of ‘retaining the primacy of the social without falling in the traps of antinaturalism’ (2012: 248).

The relevance of Hegelian philosophy to the debate on environmental sustainability has recently been underscored by authors such as Alison Stone, Wendell Kisner and Klaus Vieweg. However, none of them gives significant attention to Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit—the text pivotal to our argument about the concurrent transformation and preservation of nature, and the role of work in this process. Stone argues for the presence of ‘a critical and protoenvironmentalist strain of thought’ within Hegel’s work (Reference Stone2005: 170). Nevertheless, she deems Hegel’s philosophical framework as ultimately internally inconsistent. These inconsistencies arise, according to Stone, where despite his view on nature as having an intrinsic value, he maintains that humans have no duties of respect or preservation towards natural entities—only a positive duty to transform them without restraint (Reference Stone2005: 153).Footnote 4 As a response, Stone argues that Hegel’s ‘transformative duties’ must be constrained by ‘preservative duties’. Individuals who ‘persist in irrationally destroying nature’s order’, inevitably fail ‘to act rationally and so renege on their duty, or do wrong, by Hegel’s standards’ (Reference Stone2002: 257).

Wendell Kisner argues that Hegel’s category of life, as presented in the Science of Logic, ‘provides ontological grounds for the recognition of living species along with their various ecosystems as the proper objects of ethical regard for environmental ethics’ (2008: 1). However, like Stone, Kisner maintains that Hegel overlooks the implications of his own thought when, in the Philosophy of Right, he seconds the possibility of humans subsuming external nature under the right of personhood. For Kisner, Hegel ‘should have been ‘more attentive to the ontological development he had himself articulated’ (2008: 54), wherein any form of life treated in a thing-like manner is denied its status as a living being. Kisner concludes that to achieve an ‘environmental Sittlichkeit’ (2008: 16), a true understanding of the life-form is needed.

For Klaus Vieweg, Hegel, despite providing ‘no developed concept of sustainability’, was capable of sketching ‘substantial outlines of this key issue of 21st century life’ (Reference Vieweg2020: 90). In particular, Vieweg identifies two central concepts in Hegel’s practical philosophy: care (Sorge) and forethought (Vorsorge), which culminate in the notion of ‘appropriate appropriation’ (Reference Vieweg2020: 85). The latter establishes a differentiation between natural things based on their position ‘in the natural realm, in the infinite variety of the qualitative nature of objects and the diversity of subjective aims’ (2020: 89). Entities such as ‘air, water, animals [and] ecological systems’ (2020: 86) are deemed preconditions for human life, and consequently, should be treated distinctly in discussions of property.Footnote 5 For instance, external goods rationally necessary for life’s continuation should be subject to ‘strict public supervision and control and must largely be withheld from profit-making interests’ (2020: 95).

Distinct from what Stone, Kisner and Vieweg have done, we will defend the Hegelian requirement of sustainability via a reading of the Phenomenology of Spirit, specifically his discussion of the life and death struggle and of lordship and bondage. We believe that the seed of a Hegelian environmental ethics can already be found in this text, where a fundamental relation is established between the preservation of life, the role of work and the attainment of freedom.

(II) The vital lesson of the life-and-death struggle and the role of work

One of the purposes of the Phenomenology is to show that both theoretical and practical consciousness can end up trapped in claims of self-sufficiency. But in the same way that self-sufficiency proved unstable for consciousness in its attempt to know the world, it will prove unstable for self-consciousness in its attempt to know itself. As Stern asserts, the ‘practical attitude can also be developed one-sidedly’, especially when it seeks to ‘master the natural world’ (Reference Stern2013: 82). But in which sense would mastering the natural world imply a one-sided development of self-consciousness? And how could this one-sidedness be overcome?

By the end of Hegel’s reflections on self-consciousness, we learn that if theoretical consciousness attributes a putative independence to the object, practical consciousness—that is, self-consciousness as desire—seeks to deny it. Desire is the ‘movement of consciousness which does not respect being but negates it’ (Hyppolite Reference Hyppolite1974: 159). However, by searching for certainty of itself in the destruction of the object’s independence, self-consciousness discovers itself as a structurally dependent desiring logic. As Butler maintains, ‘a destructive agent has no identity without a world to be destroyed; thus, this being who, convinced of his exile from Life, endeavours to destroy all living things, ends up paradoxically dramatizing his essential dependence on the world of the living’ (1999: 38). Indeed, self-consciousness does not present itself as an ‘inert tautology of I=I’ but as ‘engaged in a debate with the world’, a world that is constantly disappearing but whose presence and vanishing become essential for self-consciousness to pose itself (Hyppolite Reference Hyppolite1974: 159). Thus, by asserting its independence from nature, self-consciousness reveals its profound dependence on it—but it is precisely through desire that self-consciousness will bring about, in a practical manner, ‘the unity with the world that consciousness could only effect theoretically and inadvertently’ (Butler Reference Butler1999: 33).

Self-consciousness will eventually notice that its dependence on determinate objects does not satisfy its desire, that the latter cannot be attained through the constant negation of living things. In Hegel’s famous words, ‘self-consciousness achieves its satisfaction only in another self-consciousness’ (PS: ¶175). Hence, self-consciousness is, in Hegel, a practical achievement that has itself as its object but that depends on the encounter with living others to actualize itself. In order for me to become a self-determining subject, ‘subject of my desires’ rather than ‘subject to my desires’ (Pippin Reference Pippin2011: 32), I must be faced by another self-consciousness capable of exercising ‘the negation within itself’ (PS: ¶175). As Suther claims (Reference Suther2025), the initial difficulty for self-consciousness is to overcome the alienation of mind from life—an intra-subjective form of alienation that is only later superseded by another intra-subjective form of alienation; that of mind from mind, characteristic of the master-slave relationship.

Importantly, entering the realm of Spirit through the encounter with another self-consciousness does not entail the abandonment of the natural realm. On the contrary, we are constantly reminded of the co-constitution of the natural and spiritual realms (see Bernstein Reference Bernstein2023: Ch.4). As has been recently argued, Hegel can be interpreted as endorsing a constitutive model of rationality, wherein ‘rationality does not just subsume and transform the function of our lower-order animal capacities but is constitutive of those capacities as capacities’ (Suther Reference Suther2025).Footnote 6 Similarly, according to Schuringa, Hegel’s well-known assertion in the Encyclopaedia that spirit is the ‘truth’ of nature (Enc: §251) does not merely suggest that spirit is always already natural, but rather that ‘in remedying nature’s deficiencies, spirit does not leave nature behind but realizes that which nature only attempts to be’ (2022: 502). The natural world is not abandoned or merely transformed, but rather actualized in a higher form within the spiritual realm.

The life-and-death-struggle makes this last point even more evident. With it, Hegel ‘introduces into the conditions of the “satisfaction” of any self-relating another self-consciousness, an object that cannot merely be destroyed or negated in the furtherance of life without the original self-consciousness losing its confirming or satisfying moment’ (Pippin Reference Pippin2011: 37). At first, it seems counterintuitive for Hegel to introduce—right after admitting that subjects must ‘recognize themselves as mutually recognizing one another’ (PS: ¶184)—the need for a life-and-death struggle. Two negations occur with this confrontation: the negation of my own dependence on life—I must demonstrate that I am not ‘attached to any specific existence, not to the individuality common to existence as such, that is not attached to life’—as well as the negation of the life of the other—I must seek ‘the other’s death’, for I cannot value the other more than myself (PS: ¶187).

At first sight, with these assertions, Hegel does not appear as a fierce defender of our dependence on the natural world. But it is precisely at this point that his position is of utmost relevance. The passages on risking the other’s and one’s own life do not negate our condition as natural beings, but rather describe the transition from life as an ‘immediate unity’, to life as a ‘reflected unity’ (PS: ¶171). In other words, these passages describe the co-constitution of life and freedom. As Brandom claims, the moment of risking one’s life corresponds to an ‘initial transition from being merely a living organism, belonging to the realm of Nature, to being a denizen of the realm of Spirit’ (Reference Brandom2007: 130). We must commit to our condition as natural beings, but in a self-reflective manner (see also Khurana Reference Khurana and Khurana2013). It is through this life-and-death struggle that we can finally put an end to a conception of ourselves ‘as extremes wanting to be for themselves, or to have an existence on their own’ (PS: ¶188). What the struggle shows is not the truth of life in the absolute detachment from the natural world, but the truth of freedom in the maintenance of life. This becomes clearer when Hegel argues that ‘this trial by death, however, does away with the truth which was supposed to issue from it, and so, too, with the certainty of self generally’ (PS: ¶188). Wanting to radically separate themselves from one another and from life, subjects paradoxically collapse ‘into a lifeless unity which is split into lifeless, merely immediate, unopposed extremes’, incapable of reciprocally and consciously giving and receiving, left free but ‘only indifferently like things’ (PS: ¶188). The dependent side of human life is not disregarded but made constitutive to the independent side.

Tellingly, and despite death being the greatest determinate negation, Hegel calls the lethal result of the struggle ‘abstract’. He claims that this is ‘an abstract negation, not the negation coming from consciousness, which supersedes in such a way as to preserve and maintain what is superseded, and consequently survives its own supersession’ (PS: ¶188). The key here is that self-consciousness is on a quest for its own certainty and that in destroying the conditions of possibility of its own existence, it also destroys the conditions of possibility of its own certainty. As Pippin puts it, the subject realizes that ‘it is not rational to do that which makes it unlikely that [she] can continue as a rational agent’ (Reference Pippin1989: 161). Self-consciousness is thus profoundly dependent: not only on its environment and on the survival of another self-consciousness capable of granting recognition, but most importantly, on the conscious acknowledgment of such dependence. In short, what Hegel claims is that to become self-determining, free subjects rely on the active recognition of, and the practical commitment to, their dependence on life, both human and non-human. Our first glimpse of the Notion of Spirit is meant to teach us much more than we might initially think. As Ikäheimo explains, spirit is merely a ‘title-word for the human life-form’, characterized by both subjective and objective moments forming an integral whole, by a view of recognition as ‘a self-transcendence and inclusion of otherness’, and by a form of freedom that not only cannot abstract from but must reconcile with what determines it (2022: 44).

The first subject to do so is the slave. This subject submits to ‘the fear of death, the absolute Lord’ (PS: ¶194) and shows his essential nature to be not ‘for itself’ but rather ‘for another’ (PS: ¶189). The slave’s attachment to life puts him in a weaker position with respect to the lord, who interposes the slave between the thing and himself. But ultimately, in Hegel’s story, lordship and bondage show their essential natures to be ‘the reverse of what [they] want to be’ (PS: ¶193). The lord turns out to be dependent and the slave independent, and what leads to this difference between them is the concept of work.

Work, our conscious transformation of nature,Footnote 7 appears at this moment as that through which ‘the bondsman becomes conscious of what he truly is’ (PS: ¶195). Through work, the subject shapes things, and in doing so, her individuality finally flourishes, objectivizes itself, and acquires a permanence outside itself. In this particular way, the conscious transformation of nature becomes the starting point of human freedom. However, Hegel immediately acknowledges that this positive moment is accompanied by a negative one. In working, the slave not only acquires a much-needed sense of independence, he also ‘posits himself as a negative in the permanent order of things’ (PS: ¶196). This self-understanding as a negative force is fundamental to become someone ‘for himself, someone existing on his own account’ (PS: ¶196). For that reason, Hegel writes, ‘through this rediscovery of himself by himself, the bondsman realizes that it is precisely in his work wherein he seemed to have only an alienated existence that he acquires a mind on his own’ (PS: ¶196).

Our claim, however, is that only a sustainable form of work opens the door to a Hegelian actualization of freedom. Although Hegel emphasizes the role that transforming nature plays in the achievement of freedom, he has already given us sufficient reason not to interpret this as an unqualified right—life must be preserved. But there is more: the negative force that the slave discovers in himself must learn to limit itself. In fact, work is defined by Hegel as ‘desire held in check’ (PS: ¶195). We suggest reading this claim in the following way: by itself, desire is a form of Hegelian bad infinity—one that knows no limits and is never satisfied. However, humans are not doomed to constant dissatisfaction; work, as an activity in which desire becomes self-conscious can liberate it from mere repetition. It does so by inserting a notion of limit: by giving form, direction, permanence, work channels desire into a productive and transformative force rather than an endlessly consuming one. Work counters the logic of bad infinity and produces a practical, socially mediated notion of limit.

Nature cannot be exhausted because life remains a necessary condition for our development as self-conscious beings. Its role is not accessory or secondary but constitutive: without life, without the realization that life must be preserved, there is no road to freedom. We cannot search a total negation of nature—our own and that around us—or base our practices on an inattentiveness to nature’s needs. At the same time, we cannot remain indifferent to life—such is the one-sided position (that Hegel also problematizes) in which the slave ends up when he embraces a Stoic worldview, which enables him to retreat to ‘pure thought’ only at the cost of negating the world. Neither escapism or indifference, nor unlimited domination can enable freedom; for Hegel, only a sustainable, limited and limiting transformation of nature can do so.

III. From ‘selfishness of desire’ to ‘care and acquisition for a communal purpose’

(I) Bad infinity at work

We now turn to some key elements in his later, practical philosophy. We argue that the latter also provides a fruitful framework for grasping the environmental problems of modern societies. But first, a word of caution. Hegel could not have anticipated the developments of twentieth- and twenty-first-century capitalism and the magnitude of our current ecological crisis. Although almost all commentators acknowledge that there are internal tensions in his account of ‘ethical life’, there is substantial disagreement about how solvable these tensions are. While some believe he conceptualized a pre-capitalist economy (Herzog Reference Herzog2013: 56), others imply that he gives too much space to individual freedom and thereby cannot reconcile modern subjectivity and objective spirit (Bernstein Reference Bernstein, Moyar, Walsh and Rand2022: esp. 140). Yet others argue that Hegel’s economic system needs to be understood as subsumed under a strong state (McGowan Reference McGowan2021: esp. 245; Baumann Reference Baumann2022). And let us also note that of course many other views presented in the Philosophy of Right—e.g., his views on gender relations, the lack of democratic participation and the unresolved problem of the rabble (Ruda Reference Ruda2011; Zambrana Reference Zambrana2021; McGowan Reference McGowan2021: 243–44)—raise serious questions about the extent to which his account can be understood as presenting a reconciliation with reality (Hardimon Reference Hardimon1994), even on the standards of his own time.Footnote 8

Nonetheless, we think that there are conceptual resources in Hegel’s mature thought that are useful for thinking about alternatives to what, we will argue, can be grasped as the ‘bad infinity’ characteristic of the current economic system. In discussing them, we continue the line that we have identified in the Phenomenology, namely to ask how freedom is possible neither by destroying nature, nor by avoiding any interference with it, but by a mediated relationship in which its ineliminable role for human freedom is recognized. The Philosophy of Right expands Hegel’s account, started in the Phenomenology, of how freedom is possible for the finite, bodily, social creatures that human beings are (PR: §142). We will argue that despite not directly addressing the question of a sustainable relation to external nature, Hegel’s conception of habit, and his understanding of work as not directed towards a ‘bad infinity’ of endless growth but towards the achievement of social recognition and of forms of cooperation that guarantee socio-natural reproduction, contain interesting possibilities for thinking about free and sustainable life forms.Footnote 9

This strategy may seem surprising at first glance. As Lumsden puts it: ‘The Philosophy of Right cannot locate us in external nature, it can only account for our hold over it’ (Reference Lumsden2021: 107). Nature only plays a role as the ‘external sphere’ into which individual freedom needs to be translated in the form of property, for the person to ‘have being as Idea’ (PR: §41). Hegel does mention the ‘tilling of the soil, the cultivation of plants, and the domestication, feeding, and conservation of animals’ as well as the use of ‘raw materials or the forces of nature’ for the production of goods (PR: §56). He even briefly discusses ‘self-renewing products’ and holds that for such products, the use needs to ‘limit itself with a view to safeguarding that renewal’ (PR: §60), which points to an awareness of the need for sustainability in areas in which such ‘renewal’ plays a role. With regard to agriculture, he speaks of ‘not just indeterminate exploitation, but formation of an objective kind’ (PR: §203), which also refers to a long-term, stable social formation. And of course, his view of property is not a pre-social one, but one in which it is social recognition that ultimately secures property rights. These social structures can also impose limits, for instance, when someone’s life is at stake (PR: §127 H). As Khurana underlines, Hegel seems to be concerned not just with ‘sheer biological existence’ but with all necessary means for a ‘specific civic form of life’ and for ‘sustainable living conditions’ (Reference Khurana, Moyar, Walsh and Rand2022: 160). And yet, Hegel’s tendency seems to be to treat nature as raw material for human work (PR: §196), and property as something that, if limited, is so for the sake of human beings rather than for the sake of preserving nature.

Nevertheless, we argue that Hegel’s mature thought contains other valuable ideas—one of them being the notion of ‘bad infinity’. According to Hegel, a ‘bad infinity’ is an infinity that is understood as ‘the other’ of finitude. This leads to an ‘indeterminate emptiness’ without any qualitative distinctions and any chance of returning to its origins (Zambrana Reference Zambrana2015: 61). What a bad infinity lacks is any rational internalization of limits. This notion seems applicable to the strive for profits that characterizes the mode of production and consumption in the system of needs. Indeed, commentators have understood the capitalist growth imperative—which, on a Marxist understanding, functions not only via consumption or status-seeking, as in Hegel, but via the pressure to generate profits on the side of capital—as an instance of the Hegelian notion of a bad infinity (McNally Reference McNally, Albritton and Simoulidis2003; Arthur Reference Arthur2004; Neuhouser Reference Neuhouser2023). This seems plausible given its nature as an ‘unending process, one that can never arrive at its destination, precisely because this destination is logically impossible—because the infinite posited as the not-finite can never be encountered through the labour of knowing the finite’ (McNally Reference McNally, Albritton and Simoulidis2003: 3).

As Arthur notes, ‘capital is a bottomless sink of value and always demands more’ (Reference Arthur2004: 146). Consequently, it evolves into a process without any natural endpoint, relentlessly pushing back all limits or boundaries it encounters, all while disregarding its own dependence on the natural conditions that it continually destroys. As ecological economists have long criticized, these economic systems (as well as the theories that they are based on, i.e., neoclassical economics) neglect the fact that all social systems depend on bio-geophysical conditions (e.g., Martinez-Alier Reference Martinez-Alier2002: Ch.2). As long as nature stays a mere resource for the growth imperative of capital, the ‘planetary boundaries’ (Rockström et al. Reference Rockström2009) will continue to be violated. And as a part of this relentless strive for higher profits, the exploitation of not just external but also inner nature takes place, in the sense of the physiological and psychological energies of individuals (Fracchia Reference Fracchia2008). For Neuhouser, the notion of bad infinity enables us to identify ‘structural similarities’ between the notion of capital and the life processes themselves (Reference Neuhouser2023: 59). The crucial distinction lies in the fact that, unlike ‘mere reproduction’, capital’s circulation is driven by the pursuit of ‘continual increase’. This renders it more analogous to unhealthy life processes with cancerous-like tendencies, where growth is perceived as a logic of ‘quantitative increase’ rather than ‘the development of new or enhanced capacities’ (Neuhouser Reference Neuhouser2023: 65).

Indeed, current economic systems are built on a strong imperative to grow in terms of GDP, which goes hand in hand with a consumerist culture that also suggests an ‘ever more’ for individuals (Jackson Reference Jackson2009; Hickel Reference Hickel2021). This seems, at first glance, also to be Hegel’s understanding of the ‘system of needs’, in which the appropriation and use of natural materials is combined with ‘subjective need’ (PR: §189). Human needs differ from animal needs in that they are not restricted to natural necessities, because ‘judgment’ and ‘opinion’, as well as ‘representational thought’ co-determine them (PR: §190, §194). This leads to their ‘multiplication’ (PR: §190), in a process of ‘infinite increase in dependence and want’ (PR: §195). As McGowan notes, Hegel here uses the notion of ‘comfort’ (PR: §191 H), which is insatiable (Reference McGowan2021: 238). In fact, Hegel takes over ideas from ‘Smith, Say, and Ricardo’ (PR: §189) in what Feltham (Reference Feltham2021: 69) describes as ‘an undigested import from early political economy’ that stands in no connection to his own Philosophy of Nature.

To that extent, Hegel seems to also take over from the political economists the endorsement of economic growth and the lack of awareness of the embeddedness of the economy in bio-geophysical systems.Footnote 10 Nevertheless, and especially in one remarkable passage, Hegel criticized a kind of ‘consumerism’ avant la lettre, namely when speaking about an individual who works in ‘trade’ but is not a member of a corporation. Such an individual is ‘without the honour of belonging to an estate’ and ‘his isolation reduces him to the selfish aspect of his trade’, while ‘his livelihood and satisfaction lack stability’ (PR: §253). This is why such an individual ‘will try to gain recognition through the external manifestations of success in his trade, and these are without limit’ (PR: §253). Again, what fails here is the emergence of a sense of limit—precisely what, as we have already seen, should be introduced by the activity of work. The members of corporations receive recognition from their fellow members, while individuals without corporate membership try to achieve it through a limitless striving for profits and ever higher levels of consumption, which, again, very much resembles Hegel’s notion of bad infinity (see also Schmidt am Busch Reference Schmidt am Busch2011: Ch.5; Muller Reference Muller2002: 158–59). This notion thus helps describe why, instead of being oriented towards human needs and the preservation of nature, our economic system pushes towards the exhaustion of both human and non-human nature. This analysis also leads to serious questions about the possibility of ‘capitalist production [becoming] sustainable one day’ (Saito Reference Saito2017: 132; see also Buller Reference Buller2022; Christophers Reference Christophers2024).

(II) Transforming unethical habits

The second theoretical resource we focus on, and which will allow a deeper understanding of the ‘bad infinity’ of capitalist growth but also potential ways of overcoming it, is Hegel’s notion of ‘habit’. Together with his notion of work, which similarly contributes to an understanding of a sustainable relationship between humans and nature, ‘habit’ describes his attempt to find a relation to one’s inner nature that enables freedom. In Ethical life, ‘the habit of the ethical appears as a second nature’ (PR: §151), thus making it a matter of concrete social institutions and practices rather than abstract principles. In the Philosophy of Mind, Hegel defines habit as ‘the soul thus mak[ing] itself into abstract universal being, and reduc[ing] the particularity of feelings (of consciousness too) to a determination in it that just is’ (Enc: §410). Through ‘repetition’ and ‘practice’, feelings are turned into ‘possessions’ that the soul is ‘not interested in or occupied with’, thereby opening up opportunities for ‘other activity and occupations’ (Enc: §410, for a discussion see, e.g., Novakovic Reference Novakovic2017: Ch.1). Habits are a ‘second nature’, as Hegel writes with reference to Aristotle (Ferrarin Reference Ferrarin2001), allowing us to hold emotions or spontaneous bodily needs in check and to focus on physical or mental activities. The bodily existence of human beings, as part of the natural world, cannot be denied, but by shaping it into a second nature, it can become an enabling condition for pursuits of the free human will.

And yet, habits also contain an element of unfreedom because they function in a mechanical way. Hegel calls this a ‘formal’ unfreedom, which is compatible with the ‘content’ of the habit—if it is a ‘habit of right in general, of the ethical’—being the content of freedom (Enc: §410R). Commentators disagree about the extent to which this makes Hegel’s notion of habit ‘paradoxical’ (on the latter, see Menke Reference Menke2013; see also Furlotte Reference Furlotte2021: 141 and Zantvoort Reference Zantvoort, Chotaš and Matějčková2020: 39–45). Novakovic seems right, however, when she insists that habit is not ‘blind’ for Hegel, but compatible with ongoing reflections on principles, because this is what makes it possible for habits to be understood as morally good, showing Hegel’s ‘enduring Kantian commitments’ (2017: 25). There is certainly a risk of habits becoming too blind and mechanical (see PR: §268 H; Novakovic Reference Novakovic2017: 16, 64–68), but it is not a necessity. Thus, while Hegel criticizes Kantian morality as one-sided, because it focuses on abstract moral imperatives, he nonetheless retains a reflective Kantian moment in his development of ‘ethical life’, in which the abstract moral principles become the concrete imperatives stemming from social roles and relations.

For Hegel, habits are always part of social forms of life—and the point of ‘ethical life’ is, of course, that individuals are embedded in forms of life that they can rationally endorse, being at home in them and therefore enabling, rather than restricting, their freedom (PR: §151; see also Novakovic Reference Novakovic2017: 38–45). In ethical life, second nature is stabilized in processes of mutual recognition between individuals, and this recognition is in turn made ‘real’ in ‘a second nature that is both subjective and objective’ (Testa Reference Testa2009: 348). Novakovic reads the ‘ethical disposition’ that connects individuals to ethical life as a ‘form of whole-hearted identification’, that leads to an integration of the relevant principles into an agent’s ‘sense of who she is’, becoming not a limitation, but a condition, of her freedom (Novakovic Reference Novakovic2017: 52; italics in the original).

But just as individual habits can become mechanical, forms of life can also become irrational and inert and yet remain stable precisely because they have become sedimented in social habits and institutions (and arguably, also in material infrastructures such as the structure of cities, etc.) (Jaeggi Reference Jaeggi2018: 74). ‘Failed and failing form(s) of life may linger a very long time’, as Bernstein puts it (Reference Bernstein, Moyar, Walsh and Rand2022: 126). Lumsden in fact uses Hegel’s notion of habit and ethical life for exploring why ‘normative change is so difficult’ (Reference Lumsden2018: 31) and why modern societies fail to respond to the challenges of climate change. The ‘naturalistic features’ of habit prevent change and mere appeals to moral reasons cannot do enough to challenge them. In Lumsden’s reading, the Philosophy of Right captures precisely the kind of one-sided relationship to nature that has shaped modernity, namely as something ‘we seize, impose on or mark’ (Reference Lumsden2021: 107). Apparently, the habits of modern life are not sufficiently reflective to respond to the new reasons that environmental science has provided, by changing towards a less resource-intense, sustainable, mode of living and producing.

In fact, one might ask whether the role of privileged citizens, who use up a far greater share of natural resources (in particular through CO2 emissions) than is generalizable, behave in a way that is comparable to the ‘rabble’—not in the sense of poverty, but in the sense of an ‘inward rebellion’ (PR: §244 G) akin to the one the affluent show in Hegel’s analysis, this time against the natural limits of our planet and therefore against the conditions of possibility of society as whole. If Zambrana describes the rabble as representing an ‘interruption of the productivity and reproduction of Sittlichkeit’ (Reference Zambrana2021: 4), it seems plausible to draw a connection to forms of consumption (private jets, etc.) that undermine the long-term viability of peaceful social life in a healthy natural environment. Arguably, our form of life, and in particular certain social groups, are stuck in ‘bad habits’ of overproduction and overconsumption that violate planetary boundaries and thus make a rational reconciliation with one’s physical finitude and one’s social nature impossible.

This analysis helps diagnose the current problems and points towards possible solutions, based on a Hegelian rather than a Kantian approach: what needs to change are not just abstract principles, but the social practices, institutions and habits that constitute our ethical life, as well as the patterns of recognition that go with them. While Hegel himself does not offer a comprehensive and detailed answer (and when he does, it remains unsatisfactory), he points towards interesting directions. Unsurprisingly, one way in which he does so refers to social recognition. We argue, following Neuhouser’s perspective, that for such recognition to occur, a critique of the spurious infinity of the capitalist mode of production is necessary. This infinity, which ultimately ‘eludes the conscious control’ of the individuals involved, calls for scrutiny because economic relations, as ‘social activities of human subjects’, warrant assessment based on ‘standards of freedom appropriate to spiritual phenomena standard of self-conscious agency’ (Neuhouser Reference Neuhouser2023: 66, 69).

At the objective level, Hegel partly solves this problem by suggesting a model in which some degree of conscious coordination takes place, between the corporations and the state, supported by the police as a regulatory force that reins in the free play of markets (PR: §§230–49). At the subjective level, Hegel addresses the potential lack of social recognition by advancing a notion of work—to take place within the corporations—quite different from capitalist notions of work, and which points, instead, to earlier religious traditions in which work was understood as a ‘calling’ (Herzog Reference Herzog2013: 75). This continues the line from the Phenomenology, in which work also played a crucial role in the process of mediating nature and freedom, to the Philosophy of Right, where it arguably plays a similar role.Footnote 11

Hegel closely connects habit, limits and work: ‘Practical education through work consists in the self-perpetuating need and habit of being occupied in one way or another, in the limitation of one’s activity to suit both the nature of the material in question and, in particular, the arbitrary will of others, and in a habit, acquired through this discipline, of objective activity and universally appliable skills’ (PR: §197; see also Zambrana Reference Zambrana2021: 10). At the same time, work also connects individuals to the material world (e.g., Ver Eecke Reference Ver Eecke and Maker1987: 145). And while the opening passages of the system of needs may suggest that work is subjected to a ‘bad infinity’, the passages on the corporations paint a different picture: through them, individuals are precisely freed from the unlimited desire for recognition that those without corporate membership experience. Presumably, what Hegel here describes is the shift from a ‘bad infinity’ to a ‘true infinity’; finally, finitude and infinity are dialectically reconciled rather than absolutely opposed (Zambrana Reference Zambrana2015: 64).

What difference does the membership in a corporation make? For Hegel, individuals need to ‘attain actuality’ by entering into ‘determinate particularity’, limiting themselves ‘exclusively to one of the particular spheres of need’ (PR: §207). They need to choose a social role in the sphere of divided labour. They become a member of an occupational group, in which they have the ‘honour of [their] estate’ and ‘gain recognition in [their] own eyes and in the eyes of others’ (PR: §207). Through occupational membership, which Hegel calls a ‘second family’ (PR: §252), individuals acquire a social identity and a social safety net that assures them that their physical needs will be met. This social identity comes with recognition: ‘the two [i.e., livelihood and capability] are also recognized, so that the member of a corporation has no need to demonstrate his competence and his regular income and means of support—i.e., the fact that he is somebody—by any further external evidence’ (PR: §253). In other words, a member of a corporation does precisely not need to strive for recognition by external proofs of success such as high levels of consumption. The corporations ‘ensure that the economy is not directed at maximizing growth and affording the few the chance to accumulate extreme wealth, but rather that society as a whole enjoys the ‘security of a smoothly continuing profit’ and everyone is guaranteed their ‘livelihood’, as Houlgate puts it (Reference Houlgate, Moyar, Walsh and Rand2022: 285). Instead of individual self-interest, it is the sense of working together, on the basis of a shared understanding of what makes someone a ‘master’ of a trade (PR: §252), that motivates the members of corporations. They share a certain lifestyle, which means that their consumption levels are regulated by the community’s norms, rather than by a competitive rat race in which individuals try to outcompete each other. This argument—that work should happen in social communities in which individuals receive recognition from others, such that pressures towards consumerist behaviour are reduced—is one of the points that can be salvaged from Hegel’s thought. Because ‘work is the human way of adapting to the environment, by adapting the environment to human needs’, (Deranty Reference Deranty2024: 294) the social conditions under which such adaptation takes place are of paramount importance.

The second point to be salvaged from the Hegelian account pertains to the social organization of work, which must be done with the ultimate purpose of reconciling our status as natural beings with our status as free subjects, permitting a free and sustainable reproduction, for both human and non-human nature. Of course, this argument raises as many questions as it answers. Commentators have pointed out that the precise shape of the corporations is unclear, with Hegel sometimes suggesting geographically (rather than professionally) organized communities (Schmidt am Busch Reference Schmidt am Busch2011: 233–34). It is also not obvious how exactly they can coexist with the ‘subjective freedom’ that Hegel describes in the ‘system of needs’ (Herzog Reference Herzog2013; Houlgate Reference Houlgate, Moyar, Walsh and Rand2022). Hegel himself raises the possibility that a corporation can ‘become ossified and set in its ways, and decline into a miserable guild system’ (PR: §255H)—and we might add, can themselves embody unsustainable habits.Footnote 12

He recommends ‘the higher supervision of the state’ as an antidote (PR: §255H), but this again leads to further questions about the nature of the state, which we here cannot enter into. Finally, it is debatable how a generalized social recognition could take place, what it would imply in terms of the distribution of labour and on how flexible the latter would be (for a discussion see, e.g., Kandiyali Reference Kandiyali2020). The key question, however, is how such forms of work, which would function as an antidote against the ‘bad infinity’ of endless profit seeking and the search for ever higher levels of consumption, can become part of a broader ‘ethical life’ that reconciles itself to the limits of its external environment. Modern societies have hollowed out or completely destroyed many solidaristic organizations—for example, unions—that could be understood as functional successors of the Hegelian corporations (see, e.g., Heartfield Reference Heartfield2006). In other cases, they have been arguably co-opted into the capitalist drive for profit at the expense of external nature (and of non-organized labour elsewhere in the world). Work of the kind that Hegel imagined in the corporations seems to exist, at best, in pockets of public or civil society institutions that enjoy some degree of protection from competitive pressures, or in alternative communities experimenting with practices of subsistence. Rethinking and reorganizing work, and thereby reining in the ‘bad infinity’ to which most forms of work are currently subjected, would, arguably, require massive shifts in the power relations between workers and employers, and between the economic and the political sphere. At the very least, it would require remembering that Hegel’s critique of markets is ‘a structural one’, rather than one focused solely on ‘the attitudes or behaviour of individuals within the market’ (Baumann Reference Baumann2022: 28).

Nonetheless, we think that Hegel provides an interesting model of relating to one’s work and to external nature, in ways that avoid the logic of bad infinity. It provides inspiration for thinking about ways of organizing societies in which the interdependence and social cooperation behind the modern division of labour is kept up, and yet the growth imperative is superseded. It thus overcomes the charge, sometimes raised against critics of capitalist growth, that they would want to peddle a naïve primitivism in which the achievements of modern life would ultimately have to be given up and humans would end up being less free on all counts (e.g., Terzi Reference Terzi2022: Ch.3). Just as Hegel does not think that humans could or should leave nature untouched, he does not seem to seek an economic system in which there would be no progress in the sense of technological improvements or better ways of organizing the division of labour. What his proposal might allow is to embed such a form of progress into a macro-economically stable system, in the sense that the use of natural resources is limited to the carrying capacity of a healthy ecosystem and climate, as defenders of post-growth have long argued (e.g., Daly Reference Daly2014). As it currently exists, our mode of production is unsustainable and negatively impacts our relationship to work itself. ‘If work is necessary in the sense that it is what helps sustain the lifeworld in its flows and with it the lives of its members’, says Deranty, ‘then work that is organized in such a way that it undermines the natural preconditions of the lifeworld is in direct contradiction with its primary necessity’ (Reference Deranty2024: 334).

IV. Conclusion

In this paper, we have drawn on Hegel’s early and mature thought to address the challenge of overcoming the limitless exploitation of nature in ways that remain compatible with freedom. In fact, what becomes clear from Hegel’s account is that human freedom is possible only on the condition of a sustainable interaction with non-human nature. We have argued that, for Hegel, freedom needs to be reconciled with both internal and external nature, which should be recognized not as limits to freedom but as its conditions of possibility. Work—the conscious transformation of the environment and of ourselves—is precisely the first practical activity in which individuals engage that teaches the necessity of integrating limits, and how, by doing so, more rather than less freedom is achieved. But work can also go awry. Modern capitalist societies have subordinated the inescapable necessity of free social (re)production to ‘the reductio ad necessitam of the quest for abstract value’ (Deranty Reference Deranty2024: 331). Reversing this logic requires overcoming the pattern of a ‘bad infinity’ that characterizes modern socio-economic relations, and that manifests itself in their unreflective and limitless striving for ever-more production and consumption.

Importantly, and as Lumsden (Reference Lumsden2018) has also argued, the Hegelian perspective helps explain that a focus on attitudinal change, based purely on insight into moral principles, is insufficient for turning from unsustainable to sustainable forms of life. What needs to change are the habits, the patterns of recognition, forms of work, and ultimately the entire form of life with its sedimented structures. If forms of life ‘are always at once given and made’ (Jaeggi Reference Jaeggi2018: 74), this raises further questions about the possibility of bringing about such change. For answering them, the question about the reflective dimension of habit, which Novakovic (Reference Novakovic2017) has masterfully discussed, is crucial: to what extent can human individuals—and also human societies as a whole—break through the mechanistic nature of their habits and ways of life, to reflect on their compatibility with the ethical principles of freedom and sustainability?

Hegel’s arguments cannot offer us institutional blueprints for today’s challenges. But as we hope to have shown, one can find in his texts a subtle and nuanced attitude towards nature that can inspire today’s discussions. Hegel fully accepts the human dependence on nature, and yet wants to provide an account of freedom that allows for a respectful and transformative relation to it. His translation of this figure of thought into a socio-economic system that is meant to realize human freedom, as part of ethical life, reveals the various tensions and dilemmas between which such an account needs to find its way.Footnote 13

Footnotes

1 One might also ask whether Hegel’s philosophy offers resources to go further, e.g., in the direction of a multi-species perspective on nature. For reasons of space, however, we cannot address this question.

2 As Saito (Reference Saito2024) explains, even Rockström himself, previously optimistic about achieving climate goals through green growth within planetary boundaries, nowadays deems this idea unrealistic. In a 2019 newspaper ‘Green Growth Is Wishful Thinking: We Must Act’, Rockström asserts that society must choose between continued economic growth and limiting global temperature rise to under 34.7°F. For a recent summary of the discussion about growth see also Susskind Reference Susskind2024.

3 Abbreviations used:

Enc = Hegel, Philosophy of Nature: Part Two of the Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical Sciences (1830), trans. A. V. Miller (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004); Philosophy of Mind, ed. M. Inwood (Oxford: Clarendon, 2007).

PR = Hegel, Elements of the Philosophy of Right, trans. H. B. Nisbet (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991).

PS = Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit, trans. A. V. Miller (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1977).

4 According to Stone’s reading, humans acquire such duty first, in Hegel’s ‘account of the desire to destroy and consume natural entities’ presented in the Phenomenology, and in his explanation of the institution of private property in the Philosophy of Right. As we hope to show, more needs to be said about role’s work in holding desire ‘in check’.

5 Vieweg defends a reading of Hegel in which ‘the making-one’s-own of the natural should be brought into a rational unity with the leaving alone of the natural, the letting-it-be-so’ (Reference Vieweg2020: 94). For a discussion of the need of both reappropriation and releasement to overcome alienation from nature, see Llaguno Reference Llaguno2023.

6 In his reading of Hegel, Suther (Reference Suther2025) contrasts his constitutive model of rationality (CMR) with the transformative model of rationality (TMR) commonly found in the literature. Schuringa likewise addresses the limitations of the transformativist position, arguing that it ‘suffers deficiencies that Hegel’s account is of the right shape to remedy’ (see Schuringa Reference Schuringa2022: 506).

7 According to Monferrand, work is one of the two forms of our socialization of nature, the other being language (Reference Monferrand2020: 76).

8 For Zambrana (Reference Zambrana2021), Hegel’s notion of the rabble is racialized and connected to his Eurocentric views, which makes them even more problematic. For reasons of scope, we cannot discuss this dimension of Hegel’s work here, but we take it that the notions we will discuss in what follows do not, per se, contain racial dimensions, even though historical instantiations of them of course can.

9 We cannot engage, for reasons of space, on how one would have to modify Hegel’s account to do justice to both productive and reproductive work; for a discussion of the problem of the gendered division of labour in Hegel, see e.g., Novakovic Reference Novakovic, Moyar, Walsh and Rand2022; Llaguno (Reference Llaguno, Bernard, Jovićević and Kochforthcoming).

10 To be sure, even Adam Smith, while endorsing growth, had considered the future possibility of a non-growing economy (for a discussion see Herzog Reference Herzog2016), and J. S. Mill—a few decades later—famously theorized a ‘stationary state’ (1994: 126–29).

11 In what follows, we focus on work in the corporations, but it is noteworthy that the way in which Hegel conceptualizes the agricultural estate and the estate of civil servants (PR: §§202–208) functions in a similar way; in them, individuals are presumably not even tempted to pursue unlimited profits or consumption, as is the case in the ‘formal estate’ of ‘trade and industry’ (PR: §202, §204; see also §250).

12 Take for instance the case of academics, who tend to travel more than is environmentally sustainable (we thank an anonymous reviewer for suggesting this example to us). For such cases, our Hegelian approach provides at least a diagnosis: what needs to change are the structures of mutual recognition (which, arguably, keep academics flying more than they would otherwise want, because there is a high premium on being ‘internationally visible’). It is also worth noting that academia is deeply embedded in competitive market structures—most acutely, for those not yet in permanent positions. In so far as this is the case, behaviour that resembles a ‘bad infinity’ should not be surprising. A stronger commitment to sustainable forms of work on the part of leading figures of the profession, but most importantly, stable working conditions with a stronger emphasis on collaboration rather than competition probably offer the best way forward to reduce the CO2 emissions of academics.

13 For their thoughtful questions and comments, we are grateful to the participants at the Grundlegung colloquium at the Department of Ethics, Social and Political Philosophy, University of Groningen; the symposium The Concept of Nature in German Idealism at VU Amsterdam; and the UK Kant Society & Hegel Society of Great Britain Annual Conference, Kant and Hegel on Nature, held at the University of Oxford. We also wish to thank the anonymous reviewers for their constructive feedback. This research was supported by the 2021 Humanities Ammodo Science Award.

References

Arthur, C. (2004), The New Dialectic and Marx’s Capital. Leiden: Brill.10.1163/9789047402886CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumann, C. (2022), ‘Hegel on Market Laws and External Teleology’, Hegel Bulletin 44:1: 2745.10.1017/hgl.2022.24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, J. M. (2022), ‘A Withering of the Rose in the Cross of the Present: The Logical Structure of Liberal Capitalism’s Destruction of Ethical Life’, in Moyar, D., Walsh, K. Padgett and Rand, S. (eds.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right: Critical Perspectives on Freedom and History. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bernstein, R. J. (2023), The Vicissitudes of Nature: From Spinoza to Freud. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Brandom, R. B. (2007), ‘The Structure of Desire and Recognition: Self-Consciousness and Self-Constitution’, Philosophy & Social Criticism 33:1: .10.1177/0191453707071389CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buller, A. (2022), The Value of a Whale: On the Illusions of Green Capitalism. Manchester: Manchester University Press.10.7765/9781526166036CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (1999), Subjects of Desire: Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Christophers, B. (2024), The Price is Wrong: Why Capitalism Won’t Save the Planet. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Daly, H. E. (2014), From Economic Growth to a Steady-State Economy. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Deranty, J.-P. (2024), The Case for Work. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/oso/9780192887146.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feltham, O. (2021), ‘From the Split Between Society and Nature Towards a Concept of Socio-Natural Ropes’, Crisis and Critique 8:2: 6889.Google Scholar
Ferrarin, A. (2001), Hegel and Aristotle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511498107CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fracchia, J. (2008), ‘The Capitalist Labour-Process and the Body in Pain: The Corporeal Depths of Marx’s Concept of Immiseration’, Historical Materialism 16:4: 3566.10.1163/156920608X357729CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Furlotte, W. (2021), The Problem of Nature in Hegel’s Final System. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Gardner, S. (2007), ‘The Limits of Naturalism And The Metaphysics Of German Idealism’, in Hammer, E. (ed.), German Idealism: Contemporary Perspectives. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Gardner, S. (2011), ‘Idealism and Naturalism in the Nineteenth Century’, in Stone, A. (ed.), The Edinburgh Critical History of Nineteenth-Century Philosophy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Hardimon, M. O. (1994), Hegel’s Social Philosophy: The Project of Reconciliation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511624773CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heartfield, J. (2006), The ‘Death of the Subject’ Explained. London: BookSurge Publishing.Google Scholar
Herzog, L. (2013), Inventing the Market. Smith, Hegel, and Political Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199674176.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herzog, L. (2016), ‘The Normative Stakes of Economic Growth. Why Adam Smith does not rely on ‘trickle down’’, Journal of Politics 78:1: 5062.10.1086/683428CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickel, J. (2021), Less is More. How Degrowth Will Save The World. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Houlgate, S. (2022), ‘Civil Society and Its Discontents: Hegel and the Problem of Poverty’, in Moyar, D., Walsh, K. Padgett and Rand, S. (eds.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right: Critical Perspectives on Freedom and History. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hyppolite, J. (1974), Genesis and Structure of Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Evanston: Northwestern University Press.Google Scholar
Ikäheimo, H. (2022), ‘“Spirit”—or the Self-Creating Life-Form of Persons and Its Constitutive Limits’, in Kolman, V. and Matějčková, T. (eds.), Perspectives on the Self: Reflexivity in the Humanities. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Illetterati, L. (2020), ‘Nature’s Externality: Hegel’s Non-Naturalistic Naturalism’, Problemi 58:4: 5171.Google Scholar
Jackson, T. (2009), Prosperity Without Growth: Economics for a Finite Planet. New York: Routledge.10.4324/9781849774338CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jaeggi, R. (2018), Critiques of Forms of Life. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Kandiyali, J. (2020), ‘The Importance of Others: Marx on Unalienated Production’, Ethics 130:4: .Google Scholar
Khurana, T. (2013), ‘Life and Autonomy: Forms of Self-Determination in Kant and Hegel’, in Khurana, T. (ed.), The Freedom of Life: Hegelian Perspectives. Berlin: August.Google Scholar
Khurana, T. (2022), ‘True Right Against Formal Right: The Body of Right and the Limits of Property’, in Moyar, D., Walsh, K. Padgett and Rand, S. (eds.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right: Critical Perspectives on Freedom and History. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kisner, W. (2008–09), ‘A Species-Based Environmental Ethic in Hegel’s Logic of Life’, The Owl of Minerva 40:.Google Scholar
Llaguno, T. (2023), ‘Releasement and Reappropriation: A Structural-Ethical Response to the Environmental Crisis’, Environmental Values 32:4: 493506.10.3197/096327123X16759401706506CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Llaguno, T. (forthcoming), ‘Socialize All Labour: A Hegelian-Feminist Defense of Family Abolition’, in Bernard, G., Jovićević, B. and Koch, K. (eds.), Hegel and Feminism. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Lumsden, S. (2018), ‘Ecological Crisis and the Problem of How to Inhabit a Norm’, Ethics and the Environment 23:1: 2948.10.2979/ethicsenviro.23.1.03CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lumsden, S. (2021), ‘The Problem of Nature in Hegel’s Philosophy of Right’, Hegel Bulletin 42:1: 96113.10.1017/hgl.2020.34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martinez-Alier, J. (2002), The Environmentalism of the Poor. A Study of Ecological Conflicts and Valuation. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.10.4337/9781843765486CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGowan, T. (2021), ‘The State of Capital: Hegel’s Critique of Bourgeois Society’, Crisis and Critique 8:2: .Google Scholar
McNally, D. (2003), ‘Beyond the False Infinity of Capital: Dialectics and Self-Mediation in Marx’s Theory of Freedom’, in Albritton, R. and Simoulidis, J. (eds.), New Dialectics and Political Economy. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Menke, C. (2013), ‘Hegel’s Theory of Second Nature: The “Lapse” of Spirit’, Symposium 17: 3149.10.5840/symposium20131713CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mill, J. S. (1994), Principles of Political Economy and Chapters on Socialism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Monferrand, F. (2020), ‘Hegel et la socialisation de la nature: Travail, langage et nature dans les «philosophies de l’esprit» d’Iéna’, Travailler 43: 2333.10.3917/trav.043.0023CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muller, J. Z. (2002), The Mind and the Market. Capitalism in Western Thought. New York: Anchor.Google Scholar
Nancy, J.-L. (2002), Hegel: The Restlessness of the Negative. Minneapolis: University Of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Neuhouser, F. (2023), Diagnosing Social Pathology: Rousseau, Hegel, Marx, and Durkheim. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Novakovic, A. (2017), Hegel on Second Nature in Ethical Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/9781316809723CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Novakovic, A. (2022), ‘No Utopia: Hegel on the Gendered Division of Labor’, in Moyar, D., Walsh, K. Padgett, and Rand, S. (eds.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right: Critical Perspectives on Freedom and History. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nuzzo, A. (2001), ‘Freedom in the Body: The Body as Subject of Rights and Object of Property in Hegel’s Abstract Right’’, in Williams, R. (ed.), Beyond Liberalism and Communitarianism: Studies in Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. Albany: SUNY.Google Scholar
Pinkard, T. (1996), Hegel’s Phenomenology: The Sociality of Reason. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pippin, R. B. (1989), Hegel’s Idealism: The Satisfactions of Self-Consciousness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511621109CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pippin, R. B. (2011), Hegel on Self-Consciousness: Desire and Death in the Phenomenology of Spirit. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Renault, E. (2012), ‘The Naturalistic Side of Hegel’s Pragmatism’, Critical Horizons 13:2: .10.1558/crit.v13i2.244CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rockström, J., et al. (2009), ‘A safe operating space for humanity’, Nature 461:7263: .10.1038/461472aCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ruda, F. (2011), Hegel’s Rabble: An Investigation into Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. London: Continuum.Google Scholar
Saito, K. (2017), Karl Marx’s Ecosocialism: Capital, Nature and the Unfinished Critique of Political Economy. New York: Monthly Review.10.2307/j.ctt1gk099mCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saito, K. (2024), Slow Down: The Degrowth Manifesto. New York: Astra House.Google Scholar
Schmidt am Busch, H.-C. (2011), ‘Anerkennung’ als Prinzip der kritischen Theorie. Berlin: De Gruyter.10.1515/9783110255676CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schuringa, C. (2022), ‘Hegel on spirited animals’, Philosophy 97:4: 485508.10.1017/S0031819122000274CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedgwick, S. (2012), Hegel’s Critique of Kant: From Dichotomy to Identity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199698363.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steffen, W., et al. (2015), ‘Planetary Boundaries: Guiding Human Development on a Changing Planet’, Science 347:6223: .10.1126/science.1259855CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stern, R. (2013), The Routledge Guidebook to Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. London: Routledge.10.4324/9780203094198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, A. (2002), ‘Ethical Implications of Hegel’s Philosophy of Nature’, British Journal for the History of Philosophy 10:2: .10.1080/09608780210123364CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, A. (2005), Petrified Intelligence: Nature in Hegel’s Philosophy. Albany: SUNY.Google Scholar
Stone, A. (2013), ‘Hegel, Naturalism and the Philosophy of Nature’, Hegel Bulletin 34:1: 5978.10.1017/hgl.2013.2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Susskind, D. (2024), Growth. A Reckoning. London: Penguin.10.4159/9780674297050CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suther, J. (2025), ‘The Desire for Desire: Hegel’s Constitutive Model of Rationality in Chapter IV’, European Journal of Philosophy.10.1111/ejop.13053CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Terzi, A. (2022), Growth for Good. Reshaping Capitalism to Save Humanity from Climate Catastrophe. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Testa, I. (2009), ‘Second Nature and Recognition: Hegel and the Social Space’, Critical Horizons 10:3: .10.1558/crit.v10i3.341CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ver Eecke, W. (1987), ‘Hegel on Freedom, Economics, and the State’, in Maker, W. (ed.), Hegel on Economics and Freedom. Macon GA: Mercer University Press.Google Scholar
Vieweg, K. (2020), The Idealism of Freedom: For a Hegelian Turn in Philosophy. Leiden: Brill.10.1163/9789004429277CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, R. (1997), Hegel’s Ethics of Recognition. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Williams, R. (1992), Recognition: Fichte and Hegel on the Other. Albany: SUNY.Google Scholar
World Commission on Environment and Development (1987), Our Common Future. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Zambrana, R. (2015), Hegel's Theory of Intelligibility. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.10.7208/chicago/9780226280257.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zambrana, R. (2021), ‘Bad Habits: Habit, Idleness, and Race in Hegel’, Hegel Bulletin 42:1: 118.10.1017/hgl.2021.1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zantvoort, B. (2020), ‘Slaves to Habit: The Positivity of Modern Ethical Life’, in Chotaš, J. and Matějčková, T. (eds.), An Ethical Modernity? Hegel’s Concept of Ethical Life Today. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar