Schatz, Timothy2021-07-012021-07-012021-05-16https://hdl.handle.net/1794/26377The quintessential characterization of Hegel's philosophy is that of a circle. In the context of his Phenomenology of Spirit, this means a kind of unity or semblance thereof between sensuous-certainty and absolute knowing. In this paper, I demonstrate the aforementioned unity through a reading of the section on sensuous- certainty, one which is mediated by the work of Jean Hyppolite and Jay Bernstein. Through this approach, I highlight several issues of metaphysical importance, viz., space, time, object, and subject, at the beginning of Hegel's text, as well as delineating an underlying ethical matter of responsibility vis-à-vis the capacity to remember.en-USCreative Commons BYGeorg Wilhelm Friedrich HegelJean HyppoliteJay BernsteinPhenomenology of Spiritsensuous-certaintyabsolute knowingethicsmemoryAn Investigation into the Systematic Meaning of Sensuous-Certainty in HegelArticle10.5399/uo/exanimo.1.1.5