Abstract
In this paper, I discuss Karen Ng's reconstruction of Hegel's concept of life. On Ng's account, Hegel's conception of life
has a remarkable double role to play: Life is both the proper object of judgment as well as a fundamental characterization
of the activity of the judging subject. In a first step, I highlight the insight that Ng's account sheds on the internal connection of life and self-consciousness and the peculiar normativity of life. In a second step, I raise three concerns about Ng's strong focus on the logical notion of life which she characterizes as non-empirical and a priori. I argue that in
order to uncover the full significance of the notion of life for Hegel we have to turn to his Philosophy of Nature and Spirit.