Abstract
Hegel´s social and political thought has been often been interpreted as a defense of
authoritarian statism against modern individualism. In this paper I claim, on the contrary,
that the value and dignity of the individual is the conclusion of Hegel´s philosophical
anthropology and, thus, the principle and foundation of his entire political philosophy.
The value and dignity of the individual rely, more precisely, on her freedom of selfdetermination.
The different forms of personal interaction that Hegel develops in his
philosophy of Right are thus those that offer the condition of possibility for the exercise
of the freedom of self-determination of each individual. Freedom as the capacity to
determine oneself does not imply, however, that the goal of human action should be
that each individual does whatever she wants. Common good is not the necessary result
of the sum of all the actions of the individuals in order to obtain their private well-being;
precisely because that is not the case, the common good must be a goal in itself and
there must exist a specific organization that takes it as its own goal, namely the State.
Indeed, the whole meaning of the State is for Hegel to guarantee that all individuals in
society become effectively autonomous agents and can exert their capacity of selfdetermination.