State power possesses an inherent dialectic of good and evil, rooted in the fundamental tension between the asymmetrical nature of the master-slave relationship and the ethical pursuit of symmetrical recognition. This paper depicts this dialectical process as a movement: it begins with the false harmony of Substantive Good, subsequently falls into the evil of a Bad Infinite stalemate where antagonism becomes ontological, and then attempts to achieve an ideal formal reconciliation in Noble Consciousness. However, this formal recognition, lacking material support, is ultimately doomed to alienate into a new round of false harmony. To break this cycle of good and evil, this paper argues for internalizing substantive recognition based on production relations as a necessary moment in the dialectic of state power, thereby transcending abstract ethical reconciliation. This framework, which is both diagnostic and normative, not only penetrates the antagonistic pathology of contemporary politics but also reconstructs the standard of a “good” state as a fundamental shift from Bildung-Formal Recognition to Production-Substantive Recognition.
Zhu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.