There is no denying that, despite everything that can be said about the conclusions drawn by Hegel, his understanding of the component and guiding processes of reality, in other words his dialectic, is one of impressive lucidity and acuity. Because wherever we turn our eyes, an in-depth examination will show that an effective historical action will necessarily give rise to its antithesis and have a result that is different from its intention. This dynamic, which is sometimes very difficult to understand, remarkably equates the fatal presence of the unpredictable, and forces us to always keep it in mind in any process. Getting used to the ambiguous and the complex is, in short, getting closer to reality.