I will answer from a metaphysical standpoint since I do not believe that a metaphysically neutral standpoint on the world is possible. Within God, there is no gap between his essence and his existence; his concept and his existence do not deviate; to be a finite human being is to be composite, and this implies that his essence and existence can come apart. The goodness of human beings is present within them, but as an ideal. The concrete existence of human beings within nature is the opposite of this ideal; it is selfish and self-seeking. This deviation from oneself is unfreedom and evil. The return back to one’s true nature requires moulding one’s own existence in the image of the ideal that truly represents our inherent nature. This leads to the paradox — how can one make oneself? How can one have oneself as a result since it presupposes some distance from one’s own self? How can one become oneself? One line of thought against this possibility is that a human being’s concrete ex...
Philosophy has never been of interest to the masses, nor do people ever understand what it really is. As Cicero said: “Philosophy is content to have but few judges, and flies from the mob deliberately; by the mob itself philosophy is both envied and distrusted. So that if someone wanted to cry down philosophy as a whole, they could do it with the support of the people.” Plato believed that one must not study dialectics till one reaches a mature age of 30 and has learnt all requisite subsidiary sciences, or else the study of dialectics would lead to nihilism. Despite this philosophy, it has, to a great extent, lost the limited influence and respect it once had. The reason for this is that philosophy, as Hegel points out, has the same content as religion, but while religion seeks to understand its subject matter through representations and images, philosophy has a rational form; it seeks to study this content through pure thought. Philosophy seeks to understand everything by tracing it b...