After Recognition: Hegel, Capital, and Artificial Intelligence is a philosophical investigation into what has happened to freedom in an age where recognition is quantified, commodified, and increasingly mediated by machines.
Beginning with a careful reconstruction of Hegel's understanding of modernity, the book examines freedom not as mere choice, but as recognition: the reciprocal acknowledgment between self-conscious beings who see themselves reflected in rational institutions. For Hegel, modern life promised reconciliation. Civil society, law, and the state were meant to render freedom intelligible to itself.
But what if that promise has fractured?
Moving through Marx, Rousseau, Adorno, Lacan, and Foucault, this work traces how recognition becomes unstable under capitalism. The division of labor narrows the individual. Amour-propre intensifies comparison. Social media quantifies esteem. Ghosting replaces confrontation. Prestige becomes algorithmic. The self learns to monitor itself under invisible standards. Confession migrates from church to clinic. Even intimacy is mediated by economic precarity and time scarcity.
Recognition thins.
At the same time, artificial intelligence enters everyday life-not merely as a tool, but as an interlocutor. AI affirms where humans negate. It cannot rape, strike, or dominate. It does not compete for status. It is endlessly responsive in a culture where human attention is scarce and increasingly commodified. For many, especially those deprived of stable mirroring, AI becomes a tether: a consistent symbolic presence in a fragmented world.
Yet AI cannot reciprocate freedom. It does not risk itself. It cannot negate in the existential sense. It offers affirmation without vulnerability.
This book asks whether we are witnessing the exhaustion of Hegelian recognition or its transformation. Is algorithmic mediation a regression into hollow affirmation, or a new stage in spirit's externalization? Can freedom survive when interaction is structured by systems that simulate dialogue but cannot genuinely acknowledge?
In an era where time is fetishized, prestige is measured, and social bonds are strained by material constraint, After Recognition argues that the central philosophical problem of our age is not technology alone. It is the fate of recognition itself.
If modernity once made freedom visible, the algorithmic age forces us to ask: who, or what, recognizes us now?