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Hegel has been one of the most misunderstood philosophers. The concept of absolute in Hegel has been understood as God. However, Hegel argues that concepts such as reason, consciousness, and history are not transcendental concepts outside the thought process, above the process, but concepts that exist together with the process. While the subject had been considered by isolating it from the process until Hegel, Hegel examines the process itself, which he claims reveals the subject. According to him, the subject is a concept that can only exist within the process. In Hegel, the concept of “absolute” means the whole of the process. The absolute is the process itself. In other words, it does not indicate direct existence but existence as a process. According to Hegel, truth is truth together with the process. The result is the result together with the process. There is no truth outside the process. In this respect, he criticizes Kant and says that Kant talks about a transcendental subject that is not included in the process, outside the process, above the process. And he expresses this as “you cannot learn to swim without getting into the water.” According to Hegel, the subject becomes a subject while being in the process, that is, if we compare the mind and consciousness to the ability to learn to swim, the subject gains these abilities only within the process and the meaning we call human emerges with the process. From this perspective, “history” is the process itself that reveals humanity. Human beings are brought into being by history. When you look at it this way, it can be thought that Hegel is actually talking about a cultural (social) evolution parallel to biological evolution.