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In this episode, I reflect on finally sitting down and slowly working through Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit, which has felt a little like wading into a vast, dark ocean. Near the end of the Preface, I came across a passage where Hegel warns against retreating into private feeling, into the “oracle” within, as if truth could simply be possessed inwardly without the hard human work of reason, communication, and shared agreement.
Around the same time, I was watching a documentary on Miss Cleo, the famous TV psychic from the 1990s, and I couldn’t stop thinking about the strange connection between Hegel’s critique of private certainty and the cultural seduction of psychic revelation. This episode brings those two threads together: Hegel’s insistence that humanity lives in the commonality of consciousness, and the danger of anyone who claims private access to truth in ways that bypass evidence, accountability, and the shared world.
This is an episode about reason, universality, politics, manipulation, charisma, feeling, and why our deepest humanity is not found in simply staying inside what we privately feel, but in the difficult and necessary labor of making ourselves intelligible to one another.
By Quique Autrey5
1515 ratings
In this episode, I reflect on finally sitting down and slowly working through Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit, which has felt a little like wading into a vast, dark ocean. Near the end of the Preface, I came across a passage where Hegel warns against retreating into private feeling, into the “oracle” within, as if truth could simply be possessed inwardly without the hard human work of reason, communication, and shared agreement.
Around the same time, I was watching a documentary on Miss Cleo, the famous TV psychic from the 1990s, and I couldn’t stop thinking about the strange connection between Hegel’s critique of private certainty and the cultural seduction of psychic revelation. This episode brings those two threads together: Hegel’s insistence that humanity lives in the commonality of consciousness, and the danger of anyone who claims private access to truth in ways that bypass evidence, accountability, and the shared world.
This is an episode about reason, universality, politics, manipulation, charisma, feeling, and why our deepest humanity is not found in simply staying inside what we privately feel, but in the difficult and necessary labor of making ourselves intelligible to one another.

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