@article{oai:kitami-it.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006341, author = {渡辺, 祐邦}, issue = {1}, journal = {北見工業大学研究報告}, month = {Oct}, note = {application/pdf, This paper aims to make clear some obscure points in the birth of Hegel’s famous metaphor “Master and Slave”. Investigations are made on 1)its origins in Hegel’s early theological writings,2)its prime form in his attempts at philosophical system in the Jena period and 3)related ideas behind the metaphor.  The results are :   1.Figures of the slave and the term “Slavery” in the early writings are not of the same meaning as in the later works. They are only an analogy and used for expressing political and religious alienation. He borrowed this usage from the contemporary literature of politics which he read in his youth.   2. In the system of Jena period,“Mastery and Slavery” is a category for the primitive relation of individuals,which is natural but not yet true,and is only a personal overwhelming by violence.   3.In the Phenomenology of Mind,it is a metaphor and not a category of any real social status. It has a pedagogical meaning and relates with many important philosophical ideas of his time,e.g. the ideal of human education of Aufklarung, the cultural forming (Bildung),J. Steuart's theory of the economical dependence of individuals in the civil society,and the reminiscence of the Greek democracy.}, pages = {109--152}, title = {ヘーゲル哲学における「主人と奴隷」 : その発想の源泉と問題}, volume = {5}, year = {1973} }