CONCEPT
The Owl of Minerva
Hegel's metaphor for philosophy's retrospective character — the owl spreads its wings only with the falling of dusk — naming the gap between the urgency of action in a transforming world and the retrospective character of comprehension.
'The owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the falling of dusk.' This sentence, from the Preface to the Philosophy of Right, is perhaps the most quoted in the entire Hegelian corpus, and almost always cited without full understanding of what it claims. Minerva's owl is the symbol of philosophical wisdom. The owl flies at dusk — after the day has completed, when the events of the day have already unfolded. Hegel's claim is that philosophy arrives too late to prescribe to the world what it should be. Philosophy can only comprehend what a form of life has already become, after that form has reached its mature development and begun to pass away. 'The grey in grey that philosophy paints cannot rejuvenate an aging form of life; it can only allow it to be known.' This is not a failure of philosophy — it is philosophy's specific, distinctive mode of understanding. But it creates a structural difficulty
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