Spirit Direct
The German Idealist G.W.F. Hegel revolutionized the concept with Geist —usually translated as “Spirit” or “Mind.” For Hegel, Spirit is not an otherworldly ghost but the very structure of reality coming to self-consciousness through history, art, religion, and philosophy. Spirit is the movement of the individual recognizing themselves in the other, and humanity recognizing itself as free.
Later, phenomenologist Maurice Merleau-Ponty rejected Cartesian dualism but retained a place for spirit as the “invisible” dimension of the visible world—the meaning that emerges from, but is not reducible to, neurons and molecules. Here, spirit becomes the phenomenon of significance itself. spirit
In classical theism (Christianity, Islam, Judaism), Spirit (often capitalized as Holy Spirit or divine spirit) is a hypostasis of God—the active, creative force in the world (Genesis 1:2: “The Spirit of God was hovering over the waters”). Simultaneously, spirit denotes the immortal human soul, that which survives bodily death. The German Idealist G
Contemporary positive psychology has reclaimed “spirituality” as a measurable variable correlated with well-being, resilience, and lower rates of depression. Researchers define it operationally as “the search for the sacred” or “a sense of connection to something larger than oneself.” In this frame, spirit does not require a deity—it requires transcendence of the ego . Simultaneously, spirit denotes the immortal human soul, that
Materialists (e.g., Daniel Dennett) argue that “spirit” is a user-illusion generated by neural complexity. Talk of spirit, they claim, explains nothing and obscures real causal mechanisms (dopamine, oxytocin, collective behavior algorithms).
The Elusive Thread: A Multidisciplinary Exploration of “Spirit”




