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# Foucault’s Hegel Thesis: The “Tragic Destiny” of Life and the “Being-There” of Consciousness

Roberts-Garratt, O. (2024). Foucault’s Hegel Thesis: The “Tragic Destiny” of Life and the “Being-There” of Consciousness. *Foucault Studies*, (36), 443–469.

doi.org/10.22439/fs.i36.7227

In this paper, I offer an intellectual-historical reading of ’s unpublished master’s thesis. In contrast with other recent scholarship on the pre-1961 period of Foucault’s career, the purpose of this paper is to grapple with the philosophical content of this thesis on its own terms, distinguishing it as far as possible from his mature work. This allows forgotten concepts to re-emerge in the course of reading the text and for a novel engagement with such neglected facets of Foucault’s oeuvre. Indeed, the key concept which I argue emerges from Foucault’s early thesis is that of as the être-la of thought. By closely following Foucault’s Husserlian reading of , and his response to ’s paradoxes of phenomenology, it is possible to see how briefly lands upon a novel kind of scepticism about the reality of history and minds. In the same way, I will also show why Foucault was unable to fully develop or commit to these sceptical positions during this part of his career. The article concludes by briefly suggesting contrasts between my reading of this early text and the way Foucault’s oeuvre is more generally understood.

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