Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) is a world-famous thinker, one of the creators of German classical philosophy. “Philosophy of Spirit,” being an independent work, is the final part of Hegel’s “Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences.” This work reveals the German philosopher’s teachings about the human being, human consciousness, and types of its activity, and consists of three sections: on subjective spirit (anthropology, phenomenology, psychology), on objective spirit (law, morality, the state), and on absolute spirit (art, religion, philosophy) as the highest stage of self-knowledge of the “absolute idea.”