>>25991274Right hegelians can theoretically exist, but empirically, they don't; which is not for no reason.
G. F. W. Hegel's 'Phenomenology of Spirit' is a magic book. Understand now what is meant by what is said here; it is not a book about magic, the book itself is a magic spell; and the reader the target.
In the deployment of such a thing by a sorcerer up to no good, there are in fact two acts of creation. Most people tend to notice, and spend their attention on, the later, most visible act, where the conjurer puts forth a system who's entailments or effects might advance some aim of his - but it is the first and less visible act that is the true lynchpin; the creation of another construct to begin with, deliberately flawed, which the writer surreptitiously calls reality as such, the flaws, defects, or shortcomings in which, they expose or point out, naturally implying their later construct.
The sorcerer is perfectly fine with your rejecting or quibbling with the second creation, as long as you credulously accept the first, which in large part was the real aim all along. Eg, "I might disagree with his solutions, but his analysis of the problem was good".