Introduction A.
The Notion of the History of Philosophy.
THE thought which may first occur to
us
in the history of Philosophy, is that
the
subject itself contains an inner contradiction.
For Philosophy aims at understanding
what
is unchangeable, eternal, in and for
itself:
its end is Truth. But history tells
us of
that which has at one time existed,
at another
time has vanished, having been expelled
by
something else. Truth is eternal; it
does
not fall within the sphere of the transient,
and has no history. But if it has a
history,
and as this history is only the representation
of a succession of past forms of knowledge,
the truth is not to be found in it,
for the
truth cannot be what has passed away.
It might be said that all this argument
would affect not only the other sciences,
but in like decree the Christian religion,
and it might be found inconsistent
that a
history of this religion and of the
other
sciences should exist; but it would
be superfluous
further to examine this argument, for
it
is immediately contradicted by the
very fact
that there are such histories. But
in order
to get a better understanding of this
apparent
contradiction, we must distinguish
between
the outward history of a religion or
a science
and the history of the subject itself.
And
then we must take into account that
the history
of Philosophy because of the special
nature
of its subject-matter, is different
from
other histories. It is at once evident
that
the contradiction in question could
not refer
to the outward history, but merely
to the
inward, or that of the content itself.
There
is a history of the spread of Christianity
and of the lives of those who have
avowed
it, and its existence has formed itself
into
that of a Church. This in itself constitutes
an external existence such that being
brought
into contact with temporal affairs
of the
most diverse kind, its lot is a varied
one;
and it essentially possesses a history.
And
of the Christian doctrine it is true
that
it, too, has its history, but it necessarily
soon reached its full development and
attained
to its appointed powers. And this old
creed
has been an acknowledged influence
to every
age, and will still be acknowledged
unchanged
as the Truth, even though this acknowledgment
were become no more than a pretence,
and
the words an empty form. But the history
of this doctrine in its wider sense
includes
two elements: first the various additions
to and deviations from the truth formerly
established, and secondly the combating
of
these errors, the purification of the
principles
that remain from such additions, and
a consequent
return to their first simplicity.
The other sciences, including Philosophy,
have also an external history like
Religion.
Philosophy has a history of its origin,
diffusion,
maturity, decay, revival; a history
of its
teachers, promoters, and of its opponents-often
too, of an outward relation to religion
and
occasionally to the State. This side
of its
history likewise gives occasion to
interesting
questions. Amongst other such, it is
asked
why Philosophy, the doctrine of absolute
Truth, seems to have revealed itself
on the
whole to a small number of individuals,
to
special nations, and how it has limited
itself
to particular periods of time. Similarly
with respect to Christianity, to the
Truth
in a much more universal form than
the philosophical,
a difficulty has been encountered in
respect
to the question whether there is a
contradiction
in the fact that this religion should
have
appeared so late in time, and that
it should
have remained so long and should still
remain
limited to special races of men. But
these
and other similar questions are too
much
a matter of detail to depend merely
on the
general conflict referred to, and when
we
have further touched upon the peculiar
character
of philosophic knowledge, we may go
more
specially into the aspects which relate
to
the external existence and external
history
of Philosophy.
But as regards the comparison between
the
history of Religion and that of Philosophy
as to inner content, there is not in
the
latter as there is in Religion a fixed
and
fundamental truth which, as unchangeable,
is apart from history. The content
of Christianity,
which is Truth, has, however, remained
unaltered
as such, and has therefore little history
or as good as none. (2) Hence in Religion,
on account of its very nature as Christianity,
the conflict referred to disappears.
The
errors and additions constitute no
difficulty.
They are transitory and altogether
historical
in character.
The other sciences, indeed, have also
according
to their content a History, a part
of which
relates to alterations, and the renunciation
of tenets which were formerly current.
But
a great, perhaps the greater, part
of the
history relates to what has proved
permanent,
so that what was new, was not an alteration
on earlier acquisitions, but an addition
to them. These sciences progress through
a process of juxtaposition. It is true
that
in Botany, Mineralogy, and so on, much
is
dependent on what was previously known,
but
by far the greatest part remains stationary
and by means of fresh matter is merely
added
to without itself being affected by
the addition.
With a science like Mathematics, history
has, in the main, only the pleasing
task
of recording further additions. Thus
to take
an example, elementary geometry in
so far
as it was created by Euclid, may from
his
time on be regarded as having no further
history.
The history of Philosophy, on the other
hand, shows neither the motionlessness
of
a complete, simple content, nor altogether
the onward movement of a peaceful addition
of new treasures to those already acquired.
It seems merely to afford the spectacle
of
ever-recurring changes in the whole,
such
as finally are no longer even connected
by
the common aim.
1. COMMON IDEAS REGARDING THE HISTORY
OF
PHILOSOPHY.
At this point appear these ordinary
superficial
ideas regarding the history of Philosophy
which have to be referred to and corrected.
As regards these very current views,
which
are doubtless known to you, gentlemen,
for
indeed they are the reflections most
likely
to occur in one's first crude thoughts
on
a history of Philosophy, I will shortly
explain
what requires explanation, and the
explanation
of the differences in philosophies
will lead
us further into the matter itself.
a. The History of Philosophy as an
accumulation
of Opinions.
History, at the first glance, includes
in
its aim the narration of the accidental
circumstances
of times, of races, and of individuals,
treated
impartially partly as regards their
relation
in time, and partly as to their content.
The appearance of contingency in time-succession
is to be dealt with later on. It is
contingency
of content which is the idea with which
we
have first to deal-the idea of contingent
actions. But thoughts and not external
actions,
or griefs, or joys, form the content
of Philosophy.
Contingent thoughts, however, are nothing
but opinions, and philosophical opinions
are opinions relating to the more special
content of Philosophy, regarding God,
Nature
and Spirit.
Thus we now meet the view very usually
taken
of the history of Philosophy which
ascribes
to it the narration of a number of
philosophical
opinions as they have arisen and manifested
themselves in time. This kind of matter
is
in courtesy called opinions; those
who think
themselves more capable of judging
rightly,
call such a history a display of senseless
follies, or at least of errors made
by men
engrossed in thought and in mere ideas.
This
view is not only held by those who
recognize
their ignorance of Philosophy. Those
who
do this, acknowledge it, because that
ignorance
is, in common estimation, held to be
no obstacle
to giving judgment upon what has to
do with
the subject; for it is thought that
anybody
can form a judgment on its character
and
value without any comprehension of
it whatever.
But the same view is even held by those
who
write or have written on the history
of Philosophy.
This history, considered only as the
enumeration
of various opinions, thus becomes an
idle
tale, or, if you will, an erudite investigation.
For erudition is, in the main, acquaintance
with a number of useless things, that
is
to say, with that which has no intrinsic
interest or value further than being
known.
Yet it is thought that profit is to
be derived
from learning the various opinions
and reflections
of other men. It stimulates the powers
of
thought and also leads to many excellent
reflections; this signifies that now
and
then it occasions an idea and its art
thus
consists in the spinning one opinion
out
of the other.
If the history of Philosophy merely
represented
various opinions in array, whether
they be
of God or of natural and spiritual
things
existent, it would be a most superfluous
and tiresome science, no matter what
advantage
might be brought forward as derived
from
such thought-activity and learning.
What
can be more useless than to learn a
string
of bald opinions, and what more unimportant?
Literary works, being histories of
Philosophy
in the sense that they produce and
treat
the ideas of Philosophy as if they
were opinions,
need be only superficially glanced
at to
find how dry and destitute of interest
everything
about them is.
An opinion is a subjective conception,
an
uncontrolled thought, an idea which
may occur
to me in one direction or in another:
an
opinion is mine, (3) it is in itself
a universal
thought which is existent in and for
itself.
But Philosophy possesses no opinions,
for
there is no such thing as philosophical
opinions.
When we hear a man speaking of philosophical
opinions, even though he be an historian
of philosophy itself, we detect at
once this
want of fundamental education. Philosophy
is the objective science of truth,
it is
science of necessity, conceiving knowledge,
and neither opinion nor the spinning
out
of opinions.
The more precise significance of this
idea
is that we get to know opinions only,
thus
laying emphasis upon the word Opinion.
Now
the direct opposite of opinion is the
Truth;
it is Truth before which mere opinion
pales.
Those who in the history of Philosophy
seek
mere theories, or who suppose that
on the
whole only such are to be found within
it,
also turn aside when that word Truth
confronts
them. Philosophy here encounters opposition
from two different sides. On the one
hand
piety openly declares Reason or Thought
to
be incapable of apprehending what is
true,
and to lead only to the abyss of doubt;
it
declares that independent thought must
be
renounced, and reason held in bounds
by faith
in blind authority, if Truth is to
be reached.
Of the relation existing between Religion
and Philosophy and of its history,
we shall
deal later on. On the other hand, it
is known
just as well, that so-called reason
has maintained
its rights, abandoning faith in mere
authority,
and has endeavoured to make Christianity
rational, so that throughout it is
only my
personal insight and conviction which
obliges
me to make any admissions. But this
affirmation
of the right of reason is turned round
in
an astonishing manner, so that it results
in making knowledge of the truth through
reason an impossibility. This so-called
reason
on the one hand has combated religious
faith
in the name and power of thinking reason,
and at the same time it has itself
turned
against reason and is true reason's
adversary.
Instinct and feeling are maintained
by it
against the true reason, thus making
the
measure of true value the merely subjective-that
is a particular conviction such as
each can
form in and for himself in his subjective
capacity. A personal conviction such
as this
is no more than the particular opinion
that
has become final for men.
If we begin with what meets us in our
very
first conceptions, we cannot neglect
to make
mention of this aspect in the history
of
Philosophy. In its results it permeates
culture
generally, being at once the misconception
and true sign of our times. It is the
principle
through which men mutually understand
and
know each other; an hypothesis whose
value
is established and which is the ground
of
all the other sciences. In theology
it is
not so much the creed of the church
that
passes for Christianity, as that every
one
to a greater or less degree makes a
Christianity
of his own to tally with his conviction.
And in history we often see theology
driven
into acquiring the knowledge of various
opinions
in order that an interest may thus
be furnished
to the science, and one of the first
results
of the attention paid them is the honour
awarded to all convictions, and the
esteem
vouchsafed to what has been constituted
merely
by the individual. The endeavour to
know
the Truth is then of course relinquished.
It is true that personal conviction
is the
ultimate and absolute essential which
reason
and its philosophy, from a subjective
point
of view, demand in knowledge. But there
is
a distinction between conviction when
it,
rests on subjective grounds such as
feelings,
speculations and perceptions, or, speaking
generally, on the particular nature
of the
subject, and when it rests on thought
proceeding
from acquaintance with the Notion and
the
nature of the thing. In the former
case conviction
is opinion.
This opposition between mere opinion
and
truth now sharply defined, we already
recognize
in the culture of the period of Socrates
and Plato-a period of corruption in
Greek
life-as the Platonic opposition between
opinion
(doxa) and Science (episteme). It is
the
same opposition as that which existed
in
the decadence of Roman public and political
life under Augustus, and subsequently
when
Epicureanism and indifference set themselves
up against Philosophy. Under this influence,
when Christ said, "I came into
the world
that I should bear witness unto the
Truth,"
Pilate answered, "What is Truth?"
That was said in a superior way, and
signifies
that this idea of truth is an expedient
which
is obsolete: we have got further, we
know
that there is no longer any question
about
knowing the Truth, seeing that we have
gone
beyond it. Who makes this statement
has gone
beyond it indeed. If this is made our
starting
point in the history of Philosophy,
its whole
significance will consist in finding,
out
the particular ideas of others, each
one
of which is different from the other:
these
individual points of view are thus
foreign
to me: my thinking reason is not free,
nor
is it present in them: for me they
are but
extraneous, dead historic matter, or
so much
empty content, and to satisfy oneself
with
empty vanity is mere subjective vanity
itself.
To the impartial man, the Truth has
always
been a heart-stirring word and one
of great
import. As to the assertion that the
Truth
cannot be known, we shall consider
it more
closely in the history of Philosophy
itself
where it appears. The only thing to
be here
remarked is that if this assumption
be allowed,
as was the case with Tennemann, it
is beyond
conception why anyone should still
trouble
about Philosophy, since each opinion
asserts
falsely in its turn that it has found
the
truth. This immediately recalls to
me the
old belief that Truth consists in knowledge,
but that an individual only knows the
Truth
in so far as he reflects and not as
he walks
and stands: and that the Truth cannot
be
known in immediate apprehension and
perception,
whether it be external and sensuous,
or whether
it be intellectual perception (for
every
perception as a perception is sensuous)
but
only through the labour of thought.
b. Proof of the futility of Philosophical
Knowledge obtained through the History
of
Philosophy itself.
From another point of view another
consequence
ensues from the above conception of
the history
of Philosophy which may at will be
looked
at as an evil or a benefit. In view
of such
manifold opinions and philosophical
systems
so numerous, one is perplexed to know
which
one ought to be accepted. In regard
to the
great matters to which man is attracted
and
a knowledge of which Philosophy would
bestow,
it is evident that the greatest minds
have
erred, because they have been contradicted
by others. "Since, this has been
so
with minds so great, how then can ego
homuncio
attempt to form a judgment?" This
consequence,
which ensues from the diversity in
philosophical
systems, is, as may be supposed, the
evil
in the matter, while at the same time
it
is a subjective good. For this diversity
is the usual plea urged by those who,
with
an air of knowledge, wish to make a
show
of interest in Philosophy, to explain
the
fact that they, with this pretence
of good-will,
and, indeed, with added motive, for
working
at the science, do in fact utterly
neglect
it. But this diversity in philosophical
systems
is far from being merely an evasive
plea.
It has far more weight as a genuine
serious
ground of argument against the zeal
which
Philosophy requires. It justifies its
neglect
and demonstrates conclusively the powerlessness
of the endeavour to attain to philosophic
knowledge of the truth. When it is
admitted
that Philosophy ought to be a real
science,
and one Philosophy must certainly be
the
true, the question arises as to which
Philosophy
it is, and when it can be known. Each
one
asserts its genuineness, each even
gives
different signs and tokens by which
the Truth
can be discovered; sober reflective
thought
must therefore hesitate to give its
judgment.
This, then, is the wider interest which
the history of Philosophy is said to
afford.
Cicero (De natura Deorum I. 8 sq.)
gives
us from this point of view, a most
slovenly
history of philosophic thought on God.
He
puts it in the mouth of an Epicurean,
but
he himself knew of nothing more favourable
to say, and it is thus his own view.
The
Epicurean says that no certain knowledge
has been arrived at. The proof that
the efforts
of philosophy are futile is derived
directly
from the usual superficial view taken
of
its history; the results attendant
on that
history make it appear to be a process
in
which the most various thoughts arise
in
numerous philosophies, each of which
opposes,
contradicts and refutes the other.
This fact,
which cannot be denied, seems to contain
the justification, indeed the necessity
for
applying to Philosophy the words of
Christ,
"Let the dead bury their dead;
arise,
and follow Me." The whole of the
history
of Philosophy becomes a battlefield
covered
with the bones of the dead; it is a
kingdom
not merely formed of dead and lifeless
individuals,
but of refuted and spiritually dead
systems,
since each has killed and buried the
other.
Instead of "Follow thou Me,"
here
then it must indeed be said, "Follow
thine own self "-that is, hold
by thine
own convictions, remain steadfast to
thine
own opinion, why adopt another?
It certainly happens that a new philosophy
makes its appearance, which maintains
the
others to be valueless; and indeed
each one
in turn comes forth at first with the
pretext
that by its means all previous philosophies
not only are refuted, but what in them
is
wanting is supplied, and now at length
the
right one is discovered. But following
upon
what has gone before, it would rather
seem
that other words of Scripture are just
as
applicable to such a philosophy-the
words
which the Apostle Peter spoke to Ananias,
"Behold the feet of them that
shall
carry thee out are at the door."
Behold
the philosophy by which thine own will
be
refuted and displaced shall not tarry
long
as it has not tarried before.
c. Explanatory remarks on the diversity
in Philosophies.
Certainly the fact is sufficiently
well
established that there are and have
been
different philosophies. The Truth is,
however,
one; and the instinct of reason maintains
this irradicable intuition or belief.
It
is said that only one Philosophy can
be true,
and, because philosophies are different,
it is concluded that all others must
be erroneous.
But, in fact, each one in turn gives
every
assurance, evidence and proof of being
the
one and true Philosophy. This is a
common
mode of reasoning and is what seems
in truth
to be the view of sober thought. As
regards
the sober nature of the word at issue-thought-we
can tell from everyday experience that
if
we fast we feel hunger either at once
or
very soon. But sober thought always
has the
fortunate power of not resulting in
hunger
and desire, but of being and remaining
as
it is, content. Hence the thought expressed
in such an utterance reveals the fact
that
it is dead understanding; for it is
only
death which fasts and yet rests satisfied.
But neither physical life nor intellectual
remains content with mere abstention;
as
desire it presses on through hunger
and through
thirst towards Truth, towards knowledge
itself.
It presses on to satisfy this desire
and
does not allow itself to feast and
find sufficiency
in a reflection such as this.
As to this reflection, the next thing
to
be said of it is that however different
the
philosophies have been, they had a
common
bond in that they were Philosophy.
Thus whoever
may have studied or become acquainted
with
a philosophy, of whatever kind, provided
only that it is such, has thereby become
acquainted with Philosophy. That delusive
mode of reasoning which regards diversity
alone, and from doubt of or aversion
to the
particular form in which a Universal
finds
its actuality, will not grasp or even
allow
this universal nature, I have elsewhere
(4)
likened to an invalid recommended by
the
doctor to eat fruit, and who has cherries,
plums or grapes, before him, but who
pedantically
refuses to take anything because no
part
of what is offered him is fruit, some
of
it being cherries, and the rest plums
or
grapes.
But it is really important to have
a deeper
insight into the bearings of this diversity
in the systems of Philosophy. Truth
and Philosophy
known philosophically, make such diversity
appear in another light from that of
abstract
opposition between Truth and Error.
The explanation
of how this comes about will reveal
to us
the significance of the whole history
of
Philosophy. We must make the fact conceivable,
that the diversity and number of philosophies
not only does not prejudice Philosophy
itself,
that is to say the possibility of a
philosophy,
but that such diversity is, and has
been,
absolutely necessary to the existence
of
a science of Philosophy and that it
is essential
to it.
This makes it easy to us to comprehend
the
aim of Philosophy, which is in thought
and
in conception to grasp the Truth, and
not
merely to discover that nothing can
be known,
or that at least temporal, finite truth,
which also is an untruth, can alone
be known
and not the Truth indeed. Further we
find
that in the history of Philosophy we
have
to deal with Philosophy itself. The
facts
within that history are not adventures
and
contain no more romance than does the
history
of the world. They are not a mere collection
of chance events, of expeditions of
wandering
knights, each going about fighting,
struggling
purposelessly, leaving no results to
show
for all his efforts. Nor is it so that
one
thing has been thought out here, another
there, at will; in the activity of
thinking
mind there is real connection, and
what there
takes place is rational. It is with
this
belief in the spirit of the world that
we
must proceed to history, and in particular
to the history of Philosophy.
2. EXPLANATORY REMARKS UPON THE DEFINITION
OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY.
The above statement, that the Truth
is only
one, is still abstract and formal.
In the
deeper sense it is our starting point.
But
the aim of Philosophy is to know this
one
Truth as the immediate source from
which
all else proceeds, both all the laws
of nature
and all the manifestations of life
and consciousness
of which they are mere rejections or
to lead
these laws and manifestations in ways
apparently
contrary, back to that single source,
and
from that source to comprehend them,
which
is to understand their derivation.
Thus what
is most essential is to know that the
single
truth is not merely a solitary, empty
thought,
but one determined within itself. To
obtain
this knowledge we must enter into some
abstract
Notions which, as such, are quite general
and dry, and which are the two principles
of Development and of the Concrete.
We could,
indeed, embrace the whole in the single
principle
of development; if this were clear,
all else
would result and follow of its own
accord.
The product of thinking is the thought;
thought
is, however, still formal; somewhat
more
defined it becomes Notion, and finally
Idea
is Thought in its totality, implicitly
and
explicitly determined. Thus the Idea,
and
it alone is Truth. Now it is essentially
in the nature of the Idea to develop,
and
only through development to arrive
at comprehension
of itself, or to become what it is.
That
the Idea should have to make itself
what
it is, seems like a contradiction;
it may
be said that it is what it is.
a. The Notion of Development.
The idea of development is well known,
but
it is the special characteristic of
Philosophy
to investigate such matters as were
formerly
held as known. What is dealt with or
made
use of without consideration as an
aid to
daily life, is certainly the unknown
to man
unless he be informed in Philosophy.
The
further discussion of this idea belongs
to
the science of Logic.
In order to comprehend what development
is,-what may be called two different
states
must be distinguished. The first is
what
is known as capacity, power, what I
call
being-in-itself (potentia); the second
principle
is that of being-for-itself, actuality
(actus).
If we say, for example, that man is
by nature
rational, we would mean that he has
reason
only inherently or in embryo: in this
sense,
reason, understanding, imagination,
will,
are possessed from birth or even from
the
mother's womb. But while the child
only has
capacities or the actual possibility
of reason,
it is just the same as if he had no
reason;
reason does not yet exist in him since
he
cannot yet do anything rational, and
has
no rational consciousness. Thus what
man
is at first implicitly becomes explicit,
and it is the same with reason. If,
then,
man has actuality on whatever side,
he is
actually rational; and now we come
to reason.
What is the real meaning of this word?
That
which is in itself must become an object,
to mankind, must arrive at consciousness,
thus becoming for man. What has become
an
object to him is the same as what he
is in
himself through the becoming objective
of
this implicit being, man first becomes
for
himself; he is made double, is retained
and
not changed into another. For example,
man
is thinking, and thus he thinks out
thoughts.
In this way it is in thought alone
that thought
is object; reason produces what is
rational:
reason is its own object. The fact
that thought
may also descend to what is destitute
of
reason is a consideration involving
wider
issues, which do not concern us here.
But
even though man, who in himself is
rational,
does not at first seem to have got
further
on since he became rational for himself-what
is implicit having merely retained
itself-the
difference is quite enormous: no new
content
has been produced, and yet this form
of being
for self makes all the difference.
The whole
variation in the development of the
world
in history is founded on this difference.
This alone explains how since all mankind
is naturally rational, and freedom
is the
hypothesis on which this reason rests,
slavery
yet has been, and in part still is,
maintained
by many peoples, and men have remained
contented
under it. The only distinction between
the
Africans and the Asiatics on the one
hand,
and the Greeks, Romans, and moderns
on the
other, is that the latter know and
it is
explicit for them, that they are free,
but
the others are so without knowing that
they
are, and thus without existing as being
free.
This constitutes the enormous difference
in their condition. All knowledge,
and learning,
science, and even commerce have no
other
object than to draw out what is inward
or
implicit and thus to become objective.
Because that which is implicit comes
into
existence, it certainly passes into
change,
yet it remains one and the same, for
the
whole process is dominated by it. The
plant,
for example, does not lose itself in
mere
indefinite change. From the germ much
is
produced when at first nothing was
to be
seen but the whole of what is brought
forth,
if not developed, is yet hidden and
ideally
contained within itself. The principle
of
this projection into existence is that
the
germ cannot remain merely implicit,
but is
impelled towards development, since
it presents
the contradiction of being only implicit
and yet not desiring so to be. But
this coming
without itself has an end in view;
its completion
fully reached, and its previously determined
end is the fruit or produce of the
germ,
which causes a return to the first
condition.
The germ will produce itself alone
and manifest
what is contained in it, so that it
then
may return to itself once more thus
to renew
the unity from which it started. With
nature
it certainly is true that the subject
which
commenced and the matter which forms
the
end are two separate units, as in the
case
of seed and fruit. The doubling process
has
apparently the effect of separating
into
two things that which in content is
the same.
Thus in animal life the parent and
the young
are different individuals although
their
nature is the same.
In Mind it is otherwise: it is consciousness
and therefore it is free, uniting in
itself
the beginning and the end. As with
the germ
in nature, Mind indeed resolves itself
back
into unity after constituting itself
another.
But what is in itself becomes for Mind
and
thus arrives at being for itself. The
fruit
and seed newly contained within it
on the
other hand, do not become for the original
germ, but for us alone; in the case
of Mind
both factors not only are implicitly
the
same in character, but there is a being
for
the other and at the same time a being
for
self. That for which the "other"
is, is the same as that "other;"
and thus alone Mind is at home with
itself
in its "other." The development
of Mind lies in the fact that its going
forth
and separation constitutes its coming
to
itself.
This being-at-home-with-self, or coming-to-self
of Mind may be described as its complete
and highest end: it is this alone that
it
desires and nothing else. Everything
that
from eternity has happened in heaven
and
earth, the life of God and all the
deeds
of time simply are the struggles for
Mind
to know itself, to make itself objective
to itself, to find itself, be for itself,
and finally unite itself to itself;
it is
alienated and divided, but only so
as to
be able thus to find itself and return
to
itself. Only in this manner does Mind
attain
its freedom, for that is free which
is not
connected with or dependent on another.
True
self-possession and satisfaction are
only
to be found in this, and in nothing
else
but Thought does Mind attain this freedom.
In sense-perception, for instance,
and in
feeling, I find myself confined and
am not
free; but I am free when I have a consciousness
of this my feeling. Man has particular
ends
and interests even in will; I am free
indeed
when this is mine. Such ends, however,
always
contain "another," or something
which constitutes for me "another,"
such as desire and impulse. It is in
Thought
alone that all foreign matter disappears
from view, and that Mind is absolutely
free.
All interest which is contained in
the Idea
and in Philosophy is expressed in it.
b. The Notion of the Concrete.
As to development, it may be asked,
what
does develop and what forms the absolute
content? Development is considered
in the
light of a formal process in action
and as
destitute of content. But the act has
no
other end but activity, and through
this
activity the general character of the
content
is already fixed. For being-in-self
and being-for-self
are the moments present in action;
but the
act is the retention of these diverse
elements
within itself. The act thus is really
one,
and it is just this unity of differences
which is the concrete. Not only is
the act
concrete, but also the implicit, which
stands
to action in the relation of subject
which
begins, and finally the product is
just as
concrete as the action or as the subject
which begins. Development in process
likewise
forms the content, the Idea itself;
for this
we must have the one element and then
the
other: both combined will form a unity
as
third, because the one in the other
is at
home with, and not without, itself.
Thus
the Idea is in its content concrete
within
itself, and this in two ways: first
it is
concrete potentially, and then it is
its
interest that what is in itself should
be
there for it.
It is a common prejudice that the science
of Philosophy deals only with abstractions
and empty generalities, and that sense-perception,
our empirical self-consciousness, natural
instinct, and the feelings of everyday
life,
lie, on the contrary, in the region
of the
concrete and the self-determined. As
a matter
of fact, Philosophy is in the region
of thought,
and has therefore to deal with universals;
its content is abstract, but only as
to form
and element. In itself the Idea is
really
concrete, for it is the union of the
different
determinations. It is here that reasoned
knowledge differs from mere knowledge
of
the understanding, and it is the business
of Philosophy, as opposed to understanding,
to show that the Truth or the Idea
does not
consist in empty generalities, but
in a universal;
and that is within itself the particular
and the determined. If the Truth is
abstract
it must be untrue.
Healthy human reason goes out towards
what
is concrete; the reflection of the
understanding
comes first as abstract and untrue,
correct
in theory only, and amongst other things
unpractical. Philosophy is what is
most antagonistic
to abstraction, and it leads back to
the
concrete.
If we unite the Notion of the concrete
with
that of development we have the motion
of
the concrete. Since the implicit is
already
concrete within itself, and we only
set forth
what is implicitly there, the new form
which
now looks different and which was formerly
shut up in the original unity, is merely
distinguished. The concrete must become
for
itself or explicit; as implicit or
potential
it is only differentiated within itself,
not as yet explicitly set forth, but
still
in a state of unity. The concrete is
thus
simple, and yet at the same time differentiated.
This, its inward contradiction, which
is
indeed the impelling force in development,
brings distinction into being. But
thus,
too, its right to be taken back and
reinstated
extends beyond the difference; for
its truth
is only to be found in unity. Life,
both
that which is in Nature and that which
is
of the Idea, of Mind within itself,
is thus
manifested. Were the Idea abstract,
it would
simply be the highest conceivable existence,
and that would be all that could be
said
of it; but such a God is the product
of the
understanding of modern times. What
is true
is rather found in motion, in a process,
however, in which there is rest; difference,
while it lasts, is but a temporary
condition,
through which comes unity, full and
concrete.
We may now proceed to give examples
of sensuous
things, which will help us further
to explain
this Notion of the concrete. Although
the
flower has many qualities, such as
smell,
taste, form, colour, &c., yet it
is one.
None of these qualities could be absent
in
the particular leaf or flower: each
individual
part of the leaf shares alike all the
qualities
of the leaf entire. Gold, similarly
contains
in every particle all its qualities
unseparated
and entire. It is frequently allowed
with
sensuous things that such varied elements
may be joined together, but, in the
spiritual,
differentiation is supposed to involve
opposition.
We do not controvert the fact, or think
it
contradictory, that the smell and taste
of
the flower, although otherwise opposed,
are
yet clearly in one subject; nor do
we place
the one against the other. But the
understanding
and understanding thought find everything
of a different kind, placed in conjunction,
to be incompatible. Matter, for example,
is complex and coherent, or space is
continuous
and uninterrupted. Likewise we may
take separate
points in space and break up matter
dividing
it ever further into infinity. It then
is
said that matter consists of atoms
and points,
and hence is not continuous. Therefore
we
have here the two determinations of
continuity
and of definite points, which understanding
regards as mutually exclusive, combined
in
one. It is said that matter must be
clearly
either continuous or divisible into
points,
but in reality it has both these qualities.
Or when we say of the mind of man that
it
has freedom, the understanding at once
brings
up the other quality, which in this
case
is necessity, saying, that if Mind
is free
it is not in subjection to necessity,
and,
inversely, if its will and thought
are determined
through necessity, it is not free -
the one,
they say, excludes the other. The distinctions
here are regarded as exclusive, and
not as
forming something concrete. But that
which
is true, the Mind, is concrete, and
its attributes
are freedom and necessity. Similarly
the
higher point of view is that Mind is
free
in its necessity, and finds its freedom
in
it alone, since its necessity rests
on its
freedom. But it is more difficult for
us
to show the unity here than in the
case of
natural objects. Freedom can, however,
be
also abstract freedom without necessity,
which false freedom is self-will, and
for
that reason it is self-opposed, unconsciously
limited, an imaginary freedom which
is free
in form alone.
The fruit of development, which comes
third,
is a result of motion, but inasmuch
as it
is merely the result of one stage in
development,
as being last in this stage, it is
both the
starting point and the first in order
in
another such stage. Goethe somewhere
truly
says, "That which is formed ever
resolves
itself back into its elements."
Matter
-which as developed has form- constitutes
once more the material for a new form.
Mind
again takes as its object and applies
its
activity to the Notion in which in
going
within itself, it has comprehended
itself,
which it is in form and being, and
which
has just been separated from it anew.
The
application of thought to this, supplies
it with the form and determination
of thought.
This action thus further forms the
previously
formed, gives it additional determinations,
makes it more determinate in itself,
further
developed and more profound. As concrete,
this activity is a succession of processes
in development which must be represented
not as a straight line drawn out into
vague
infinity, but as a circle returning
within
itself, which, as periphery, has very
many
circles, and whose whole is a large
number
of processes in development turning
back
within themselves.
c. Philosophy as the apprehension of
the
development of the Concrete.
Having thus generally explained the
nature
of the Concrete, I now add as regards
its
import, that the Truth thus determined
within
itself is impelled towards development.
It
is only the living and spiritual which
internally
bestirs and develops itself. Thus the
Idea
as concrete in itself, and self-developing,
is an organic system and a totality
which
contains a multitude of stages and
of moments
in development. Philosophy has now
become
for itself the apprehension of this
development,
and as conceiving Thought, is itself
this
development in Thought. The more progress
made in this development, the more
perfect
is the Philosophy.
This development goes no further out
than
into externality, but the going without
itself
of development also is a going inwards.
That
is to say, the universal Idea continues
to
remain at the foundation and still
is the
all-embracing and unchangeable. While
in
Philosophy the going out of the Idea
in course
of its development is not a chance,
a becoming
"another," but really is
a going
within itself, a self-immersion, the
progress
forward makes the Idea which was previously
general and undetermined, determined
within
itself. Further development of the
Idea or
its further determination is the same
thing
exactly. Depth seems to signify intensiveness,
but in this case the most extensive
is also
the most intensive. The more intensive
is
the Mind, the more extensive is it,
hence
the larger is its embrace. Extension
as development,
is not dispersion or falling asunder,
but
a uniting bond which is the more powerful
and intense as the expanse of that
embraced
is greater in extent and richer. In
such
a case what is greater is the strength
of
opposition and of separation; and the
greater
power overcomes the greater separation.
These are the abstract propositions
regarding
the nature of the Idea and of its development,
and thus within it Philosophy in its
developed
state is constituted: it is one Idea
in its
totality and in all its individual
parts,
like one life in a living being, one
pulse
throbs throughout all its members.
All the
parts represented in it, and their
systematization,
emanate from the one Idea; all these
particulars
are but the mirrors and copies of this
one
life, and have their actuality only
in this
unity. Their differences and their
various
qualities are only the expression of
the
Idea and the form contained within
it. Thus
the Idea is the central point, which
is also
the periphery, the source of light,
which
in all its expansion does not come
without
itself, but remains present and immanent
within itself. Thus it is both the
system
of necessity and its own necessity,
which
also constitutes its freedom.
3. RESULTS OBTAINED WITH RESPECT TO
THE
NOTION OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY.
Thus we see that Philosophy is system
in
development; the history of Philosophy
is
the same; and this is the main point
to be
noted and the first principle to be
dealt
with in this treatise on that history.
In
order to make this evident, the difference
in respect to the possible modes of
manifestation
must first be pointed out. That is
to say,
the progression of the various stages
in
the advance of Thought may occur with
the
consciousness of necessity, in which
case
each in succession deduces itself,
and this
form and this determination can alone
emerge.
Or else it may come about without this
consciousness
as does a natural and apparently accidental
process, so that while inwardly, indeed,
the Notion brings about its result
consistently,
this consistency is not made manifest.
This
is so in nature; in the various stages
of
the development of twigs, leaves, blossom
and fruit, each proceeds for itself,
but
the inward Idea is the directing and
determining
force which governs the progression.
This
is also so with the child whose bodily
powers,
and above all whose intellectual activities,
make their appearance one after the
other,
simply and naturally, so that those
parents
who form such an experience for the
first
time, marvel whence all that is now
showing
itself from within, comes from; for
the whole
of these manifestations merely have
the form
of a succession in time.
The one kind of progression which represents
the deduction of the forms, the necessity
thought out and recognized, of the
determinations,
is the business of Philosophy; and
because
it is the pure Idea which is in question
and not yet its mere particularized
form
as Nature and as Mind, that representation
is, in the main, the business of logical
Philosophy. But the other method, which
represents
the part played by the history of Philosophy,
shows the different Stages and moments
in
development in time, in manner of occurrence,
in particular places, in particular
people
or political circumstances, the complications
arising thus, and, in short, it shows
us
the empirical form. This point of view
is
the only one worthy of this science.
From
the very nature of the subject it is
inherently
the true one, and through the study
of this
history it will be made manifest that
it
actually shows and proves itself so.
Now in reference to this Idea, I maintain
that the sequence in the systems of
Philosophy
in History is similar to the sequence
in
the logical deduction of the Notion
- determinations
in the Idea. I maintain that if the
fundamental
conceptions of the systems appearing
in the
history of Philosophy be entirely divested
of what regards their outward form,
their
relation to the particular and the
like,
the various stages in the determination
of
the Idea are found in their logical
Notion.
Conversely in the logical progression
taken
for itself, there is, so far as its
principal
elements are concerned, the progression
of
historical manifestations; but it is
necessary
to have these pure Notions in order
to know
what the historical form contains.
It may
be thought that Philosophy must have
another
order as to the stages in the Idea
than that
in which these Notions have gone forth
in
time; but in the main the order is
the same.
This succession undoubtedly separates
itself,
on the one hand, into the sequence
in time
of History, and on the other into succession
in the order of ideas. But to treat
more
fully of this last would divert us
too far
from our aim.
I would only remark this, that what
has
been said reveals that the study of
the history
of Philosophy is the study of Philosophy
itself, for, indeed, it can be nothing
else.
Whoever studies the history of sciences
such
as Physics and Mathematics makes himself
acquainted with Physics and Mathematics
themselves.
But in order to obtain a knowledge
of its
progress as the development of the
Idea in
the empirical, external form in which
Philosophy
appears in History, a corresponding
knowledge
of the Idea is absolutely essential,
just
as in judging of human affairs one
must have
a conception of that which is right
and fitting.
Else, indeed, as in so many histories
of
Philosophy, there is presented to the
vision
devoid of idea, only a disarranged
collection
of opinions. To make you acquainted
with
this Idea, and consequently to explain
the
manifestations, is the business of
the history
of Philosophy, and to do this is my
object
in undertaking to lecture on the subject.
Since the observer must bring with
him the
Notion of the subject in order to see
it
in its phenomenal aspect and in order
to
expose the object faithfully to view,
we
need not wonder at there being so many
dull
histories of Philosophy in which the
succession
of its systems are represented simply
as
a number of opinions, errors and freaks
of
thought. They are freaks of thought
which,
indeed, have been devised with a great
pretension
of acuteness and of mental exertion,
and
with everything else which can be said
in
admiration of what, is merely formal.
But,
considering the absence of philosophic
mind
in such historians as these, how should
they
be able to comprehend and represent
the content,
which is reasoned thought?
It is shown from what has been said
regarding
the formal nature of the Idea, that
only
a history of Philosophy thus regarded
as
a system of development in Idea, is
entitled
to the name of Science: a collection
of facts
constitutes no science. Only thus as
a succession
of phenomena established through reason,
and having as content just what is
reason
and revealing it, does this history
show
that it is rational: it shows that
the events
recorded are in reason. How should
the whole
of what has taken place in reason not
itself
be rational? That faith must surely
be the
more reasonable in which chance is
not made
ruler over human affairs, and it is
the business
of Philosophy to recognize that however
much
its own manifestations may be history
likewise,
it is yet determined through the Idea
alone.
Through these general preliminary conceptions
the categories are now determined,
the more
immediate application of which to the
history
of Philosophy we have now to consider.
This
application will bring before us the
most
significant aspects in this history.
a. The development in Time of the various
Philosophies.
The first question which may be asked
in
reference to this history, concerns
that
distinction in regard to the manifestation
of the Idea, which has just been noticed.
It is the question as to how it happens
that
Philosophy appears to be a development
in
time and has a history. The answer
to this
question encroaches on the metaphysics
of
Time, and it would be a digression
from our
object to give here more than the elements
on which the answer rests.
It has been shown above in reference
to
the existence of Mind, that its Being
is
its activity. Nature, on the contrary,
is,
as it is; its changes are thus only
repetitions,
and its movements take the form of
a circle
merely. To express this better, the
activity
of Mind is to know itself. I am, immediately,
but this I am only as a living organism;
as Mind I am only in so far as I know
myself.
Know thyself, the inscription over
the temple
of the oracle at Delphi, is the absolute
command which is expressed by Mind
in its
essential character. But consciousness
really
implies that for myself, I am object
to myself.
In forming this absolute division between
what is mine and myself, Mind constitutes
its existence and establishes itself
as external
to itself. It postulates itself in
the externality
which is just the universal and the
distinctive
form of existence in Nature. But one
of the
forms of externality is Time, and this
form
requires to be farther examined both
in the
Philosophy of Nature and the finite
Mind.
This Being in existence and therefore
Being
in time is a moment not only of the
individual
consciousness, which as such is essentially
finite, but also of the development
of the
philosophical Idea in the element of
Thought.
For the Idea, thought of as being at
rest,
is, indeed, not in Time. To think of
it as
at rest, and to preserve it in the
form of
immediacy is equivalent to its inward
perception.
But the Idea as concrete, is, as has
been
shown, the unity of differences; it
is not
really rest, and its existence is not
really
sense-perception, but as differentiation
within itself and therefore as development,
it comes into existent Being and into
externality
in the element of Thought, and thus
pure
Philosophy appears in thought as a
progressive
existence in time. But this element
of Thought
is itself abstract and is the activity
of
a single consciousness. Mind is, however
not only to be considered as individual,
finite consciousness, but as that Mind
which
is universal and concrete within itself;
this concrete universality, however,
comprehends
all the various sides and modes evolved
in
which it is and becomes object to the
Idea.
Thus Mind's thinking comprehension
of self
is at the same time the progression
of the
total actuality evolved. This progression
is not one which takes its course through
the thought of an individual and exhibits
itself in a single consciousness for
it shows
itself to be universal Mind presenting
itself
in the history of the world in all
the richness
of its form. The result of this development
is that one form, one stage in the
Idea comes
to consciousness in one particular
race,
so that this race and this time expresses
only this particular form, within which
it
constructs its universe and works out
its
conditions. The higher stage, on the
other
hand, centuries later reveals itself
in another
race of people.
Now if we thus grasp the principles
of the
Concrete and of Development, the nature
of
the manifold obtains quite another
signification,
and what is said of the diversity in
philosophies
as if the manifold were fixed and stationary
and composed of what is mutually exclusive,
is at once refuted and relegated to
its proper
place. Such talk is that in which those
who
despise Philosophy think they possess
an
invincible weapon against it, and in
their
truly beggarly pride in their pitiful
representations
of it, they are in perfect ignorance
even
of what they have and what they have
to know
in any meagre ideas attained, such
as in
that of the manifold and diverse. Yet
this
category is one which anybody can understand;
no difficulty is made in regard to
it, for
it is thoroughly known, and those who
use
it think they can do so as being entirely
comprehensible-as a matter of course
they
understand what it is. But those who
believe
the principle of diversity to be one
absolutely
fixed, do not know its nature, or its
dialectic;
the manifold or diverse is in a state
of
flux; it must really be conceived of
as in
the process of development, and as
but a
passing moment. Philosophy in its concrete
Idea is the activity of development
in revealing
the differences which it contains within
itself; these differences are thoughts,
for
we are now speaking of development
in Thought.
In the first place, the differences
which
rest in the Idea are manifested as
thoughts.
Secondly, these distinctions must come
into
existence, one here and the other there;
and in order that they may do this,
they
must be complete, that is, they must
contain
within themselves the Idea in its totality.
The concrete alone as including and
supporting
the distinctions, is the actual; it
is thus,
and thus alone, that the differences
are
in their form entire.
A complete form of thought such as
is here
presented, is a Philosophy. But the
Idea
contains the distinctions in a peculiar
form.
It may be said that the form is indifferent,
and that the content, the Idea, is
the main
consideration; and people think themselves
quite moderate and reasonable when
they state
that the different philosophies all
contain
the Idea, though in different forms,
understanding
by this that these forms are contingent.
But everything hangs on this: these
forms
are nothing else than the original
distinctions
in the Idea itself, which is what it
is only
in them. They are in this way essential
to,
and constitute the content of the Idea,
which
in thus sundering itself, attains to
form.
The manifold character of the principles
which appear, is, however, not accidental,
but necessary: the different forms
constitute
an integral part of the whole form.
They
are the determinations of the original
Idea,
which together constitute the whole;
but
as being outside of one another, their
union
does not take place in them, but in
us, the
observers. Each system is determined
as one,
but it is not a permanent condition
that
the differences are thus mutually exclusive.
The inevitable fate of these determinations
must follow, and that is that they
shall
be drawn together and reduced to elements
or moments. The independent attitude
taken
up by each moment is again laid aside.
After
expansion, contraction follows-the
unity
out of which they first emerged. This
third
may itself be but the beginning of
a farther
development. It may seem as if this
progression
were to go on into infinitude, but
it has
an absolute end in view, which we shall
know
better later on; many turnings are
necessary,
however, before Mind frees itself in
coming
to consciousness.
The temple of self-conscious reason
is to
be considered from this the point of
view
alone worthy of the history of Philosophy.
It is hence rationally built by an
inward
master worker, and not in Solomon's
method,
as freemasons build. The great assumption
that what has taken place on this side,
in
the world, has also done so in conformity
with reason-which is what first gives
the
history of Philosophy its true interest-is
nothing else than trust in Providence,
only
in another form. As the best of what
is in
the world is that which Thought produces,
it is unreasonable to believe that
reason
only is in Nature, and not in Mind.
That
man who believes that what, like the
philosophies,
belongs to the region of mind must
be merely
contingent, is insincere in his belief
in
divine rule, and what he says of it
is but
empty talk.
A long time is undoubtedly required
by Mind
in working out Philosophy, and when
one first
reflects on it, the length of the time
may
seem astonishing, like the immensity
of the
space spoken of in astronomy. But it
must
be considered in regard to the slow
progress
of the world-spirit, that there is
no need
for it to hasten:-"A thousand
years
are in Thy sight as one day."
It has
time enough just because it is itself
outside
of time, because it is eternal. The
fleeting
events of the day pass so quickly that
there
is not time enough for, all that has
to be
done. Who is there who does not die
before
he has achieved his aims? The world-spirit
has time enough, but that is not all.
It
is not time alone which has to be made
use
of in the acquisition of a conception;
much
else is required. The fact that so
many races
and generations are devoted to these
operations
of its consciousness by Mind, and that
the
appearance is so perpetually presented
of
rising up and passing away, concern
it not
at all; it is rich enough for such
displays,
it pursues its work on the largest
possible
scale, and has nations and individuals
enough
and to spare. The saying that Nature
arrives
at its end in the shortest possible
way,
and that this is right, is a trivial
one.
The way shown by mind is indirect,
and accommodates
itself to circumstances. Considerations
of
finite life, such as time, trouble,
and cost,
have no place here. We ought, too,
to feel
no disappointment that particular kinds
of
knowledge cannot yet be attained, or
that
this or that is still absent. In the
history
of the world progression is slow.
b. The application of the foregoing
to the
treatment of Philosophy.
The first result which follows from
what
has been said, is that the whole of
the history
of Philosophy is a progression impelled
by
an inherent necessity, and one which
is implicitly
rational and a priori determined through
its Idea; and this the history of Philosophy
has to exemplify. Contingency must
vanish
on the appearance of Philosophy. Its
history
is just as absolutely determined as
the development
of Notions, and the impelling force
is the
inner dialectic of the forms. The finite
is not true, nor is it what it is to
be-its
determinate nature is bound up with
its existence.
But the inward Idea abolishes these
finite
forms: a philosophy which has not the
absolute
form identical with the content, must
pass
away because its form is not that of
truth.
What follows secondly from what we
have
said, is that every philosophy has
been and
still is necessary. Thus none have
passed
away, but all are affirmatively contained
as elements in a whole. But we must
distinguish
between the particular principle of
these
philosophies as particular, and the
realization
of this principle throughout the whole
compass
of the world. The principles are retained,
the most recent philosophy being the
result
of all preceding, and hence no philosophy
has ever been refuted. What has been
refuted
is not the principle of this philosophy,
but merely the fact that this principle
should
be considered final and absolute in
character.
The atomic philosophy, for example,
has arrived
at the affirmation that the atom is
the absolute
existence, that it is the indivisible
unit
which is also the individual or subject;
seeing, then, that the bare unit also
is
the abstract being-for-self, the Absolute
would be grasped as infinitely many
units.
The atomic theory has been refuted,
and we
are atomists no longer. Mind is certainly
explicitly existent as a unit or atom,
but
that is to attribute to it a barren
character
and qualities incapable of expressing
anything
of its depth. The principle is indeed
retained,
although it is not the absolute in
its entirety.
This same contradiction appears in
all development.
The development of the tree is the
negation
of the germ, and the blossom that of
the
leaves, in so far as that they show
that
these do not form the highest and truest
existence of the tree. Last of all,
the blossom
finds its negation in the fruit. Yet
none
of them can come into actual existence
excepting
as preceded by all the earlier stages.
Our
attitude to a philosophy must thus
contain
an affirmative side and a negative;
when
we take both of these into consideration,
we do justice to a philosophy for the
first
time. We get to know the affirmative
side
later on both in life and in science;
thus
we find it easier to refute than to
justify.
In the third place, we shall limit
ourselves
to the particular consideration of
the principle
itself. Each principle has reigned
for a
certain time, and when the whole system
of
the world has been explained from this
special
form, it is called a philosophical
system.
Its whole theory has certainly to be
learned,
but as long as the principle is abstract
it is not sufficient to embrace the
forms
belonging to our conception of the
world.
The Cartesian principles, for instance,
are
very suitable for application to mechanism,
but for nothing further; their representation
of other manifestations in the world,
such
as those of vegetable and animal nature,
are insufficient, and hence uninteresting.
Therefore we take into consideration
the
principles of these philosophies only,
but
in dealing with concrete philosophies
we
must also regard the chief forms of
their
development and their applications.
The subordinate
philosophies are inconsistent; they
have
had bright glimpses of the truth, which
are,
however, independent of their principles.
This is exemplified in the Timæus of
Plato,
a philosophy of nature, the working
out of
which is empirically very barren because
its principle does not as yet extend
far
enough, and it is not to its principle
that
we owe the deep gleams of thought there
contained.
In the fourth place it follows that
we must
not regard the history of Philosophy
as dealing
with the past, even though it is history.
The scientific products of reason form
the
content of this history, and these
are not
past. What is obtained in this field
of labour
is the True, and, as such, the Eternal;
it
is not what exists now, and not then;
it
is true not only today or tomorrow,
but beyond
all time, and in as far as it is in
time,
it is true always and for every time.
The
bodily forms of those great minds who
are
the heroes of this history, the temporal
existence and outward lives of the
philosophers,
are, indeed, no more, but their works
and
thoughts have not followed suit, for
they
neither conceived nor dreamt of the
rational
import of their works. Philosophy is
not
somnambulism, but is developed consciousness;
and what these heroes have done is
to bring
that which is implicitly rational out
of
the depths of Mind, where it is found
at
first as substance only, or as inwardly
existent,
into the light of day, and to advance
it
into consciousness and knowledge. This
forms
a continuous awakening. Such work is
not
only deposited in the temple of Memory
as
forms of times gone by, but is just
as present
and as living now as at the time of
its production.
The effects produced and work performed
are
not again destroyed or interrupted
by what
succeeds, for they are such that we
must
ourselves be present in them. They
have as
medium neither canvas, paper, marble,
nor
representation or memorial to preserve
them.
These mediums are themselves transient,
or
else form a basis for what is such.
But they
do have Thought, Notion, and the eternal
Being of Mind, which moths cannot corrupt,
nor thieves break through and steal.
The
conquests made by Thought when constituted
into Thought form the very Being of
Mind.
Such knowledge is thus not learning
merely,
or a knowledge of what is dead, buried
and
corrupt: the history of Philosophy
has not
to do with what is gone, but with the
living
present.
c. Further comparison between the History
of Philosophy and Philosophy itself.
We may appropriate to ourselves the
whole
of the riches apportioned out in time:
it
must be shown from the succession in
philosophies
how that succession is the systematization
of the science of Philosophy itself.
But
a distinction is to be noted here:
that which
first commences is implicit, immediate,
abstract,
general-it is what has not yet advanced;
the more concrete and richer comes
later,
and the first is poorer in determinations.
This may appear contrary to one's first
impressions,
but philosophic ideas are often enough
directly
opposed to ordinary ideas, and what
is generally
supposed, is not found to be the case.
It
may be thought that what comes first
must
be the concrete. The child, for instance,
as still in the original totality of
his
nature, is thought to be more concrete
than
the man, hence we imagine the latter
to be
more limited, no longer forming a totality,
but living an abstract life. Certainly
the
man acts in accordance with definite
ends,
not bringing his whole soul and mind
into
a subject, but splitting his life into
a
number of abstract unities. The child
and
the youth, on the contrary, act straight
from the fullness of the heart. Feeling
and
sense-perception come first, thought
last,
and thus feeling appears to us to be
more
concrete than thought, or the activity
of
abstraction and of the universal. In
reality,
it is just the other way. The sensuous
consciousness
is certainly the more concrete, and
if poorer
in thought, at least richer in content.
We
must thus distinguish the naturally
concrete
from the concrete of thought, which
on its
side, again, is wanting in sensuous
matter.
The child is also the most abstract
and the
poorest in thought: as to what pertains
to
nature, the man is abstract, but in
thought
he is more concrete than the child.
Man's
ends and objects are undoubtedly abstract
in general affairs, such as in maintaining
his family or performing his business
duties,
but he contributes to a great objective
organic
whole, whose progress he advances and
directs.
In the acts of a child, on the other
hand,
only a childish and, indeed, momentary
"I,"
and in those of the youth the subjective
constitution or the random aim, form
the
principle of action. It is in this
way that
science is more concrete than sense-perception.
In applying this to the different forms
of Philosophy, it follows in the first
place,
that the earliest philosophies are
the poorest
and the most abstract. In them the
Idea is
least determined; they keep merely
to generalities
not yet realized. This must be known
in order
that we may not seek behind the old
philosophies
for more than we are entitled to find;
thus
we need not require from them determinations
proceeding from a deeper consciousness.
For
instance, it has been asked whether
the philosophy
of Thales is, properly speaking, Theism
or
Atheism, (5) whether he asserted a
personal
God or merely an impersonal, universal
existence.
The question here regards the attribution
of subjectivity to the highest Idea,
the
conception of the Personality of God.
Such
subjectivity as we comprehend it, is
a much
richer, more concentrated, and therefore
much later conception, which need not
be
sought for in distant ages. The Greek
gods
had, indeed, personality in imagination
and
idea like the one God of the Jewish
religion,
but to know what is the mere picture
of fancy,
and what the insight of pure Thought
and
Notion, is quite another thing. If
we take
as basis our own ideas judged by these
deeper
conceptions, an ancient Philosophy
may undoubtedly
be spoken of as Atheism. But this expression
would at the same time be false, for
the
thoughts as thoughts in beginning,
could
not have arrived at the development
which
we have reached.
From this it follows-since the progress
of development is equivalent to further
determination,
and this means further immersion in,
and
a fuller grasp of the Idea itself-that
the
latest, most modern and newest philosophy
is the most developed, richest and
deepest.
In that philosophy everything which
at first
seems to be past and gone must be preserved
and retained, and it must itself be
a mirror
of the whole history. The original
philosophy
is the most abstract, because it is
the original
and has not as yet made any movement
forward;
the last, which proceeds from this
forward
and impelling influence, is the most
concrete.
This, as may at once be remarked, is
no mere
pride in the philosophy of our time,
because
it is in the nature of the whole process
that the more developed philosophy
of a later
time is really the result of the previous
operations of the thinking mind; and
that
it, pressed forwards and onwards from
the
earlier standpoints, has not grown
up on
its own account or in a state of isolation.
It must also be recollected that we
must
not hesitate to say, what is naturally
implied,
that the Idea, as comprehended and
shown
forth in the latest and newest philosophy,
is the most developed, the richest
and deepest.
I call this to remembrance because
the designation,
new or newest of all in reference to
Philosophy,
has become a very common by-word. Those
who
think they express anything by using
such
terms might quite easily render thanks
respecting
any number of philosophies just as
fast as
their inclination directs, regarding
either
every shooting-star and even every
candle-gleam
in the light of a sun, or else calling
every
popular cry a philosophy, and adducing
as
proof that at any rate there are so
many
philosophies that every day one displaces
another. Thus they have the category
in which
they can place any apparently significant
philosophy, and through which they
may at
the same time set it aside; this they
call
a fashion-philosophy.
Scoffer, thou call'st this but a fleeting
phase When the Spirit of Man once again
and
anew, Strives earnestly on, towards
forms
that are higher.
A second consequence has regard to
the treatment
of the older philosophies. Such insight
also
prevents us from ascribing any blame
to the
philosophies when we miss determinations
in them which were not yet present
to their
culture, and similarly it prevents
our burdening
them with deductions and assertions
which
were neither made nor thought of by
them,
though they might correctly enough
allow
themselves to be derived from the thought
of such a philosophy. It is necessary
to
set to work on an historical basis,
and to
ascribe to Philosophy what is immediately
given to us, and that alone. Errors
crop
up here in most histories of Philosophy,
since we may see in them a number of
metaphysical
propositions ascribed to a philosopher
and
given out as an historical statement
of the
views which he has propounded, of which
he
neither thought nor knew a word, and
of which
there is not the slightest trace found
in
history. Thus in Brucker's great History
of Philosophy (Pt. I. pp. 465-478 seq.)
a
list of thirty, forty, or a hundred
theorems
are quoted from Thales and others,
no idea
of which can be traced in history as
having
been present to these philosophers.
There
are also propositions in support of
them
and citations taken from discussions
of a
similar kind with which we may occupy
ourselves
long enough. Brucker's method is to
endow
the single theorem of an ancient philosopher
with all the consequences and premises
which
must, according to the idea of the
Wolffian
Metaphysics, be the premises and conclusions
of that theorem, and thus easily to
produce
a simple, naked fiction as if it were
an
actual historical fact. Thus, according
to
Brucker, Thales said, Ex nihilo fit
nihil,
since he said that water was eternal.
Thus,
too, he was to be counted amongst the
philosophers
who deny creation out of nothing; and
of
this, historically at least, Thales
was ignorant.
Professor Ritter, too, whose history
of Ionic
Philosophy is carefully written, and
who
on the whole is cautious not to introduce
foreign matter, has very possibly ascribed
to Thales more than is found in history.
He says (pp. 12, 13), "Hence we
must
regard the view of nature which we
find in
Thales as dynamic in principle. He
regarded
the world as the all-embracing, living
animal
which has developed from a germ like
every
other animal, and this germ, like that
of
all other animals, is either damp or
water.
Thus the fundamental idea of Thales
is that
the world is a living whole which has
developed
from a germ and carries on its life
as does
an animal, by means of nourishment
suitable
to its nature" (cf. p. 16). This
is
quite a different account from that
of Aristotle,
and none of it is communicated by the
ancients
regarding Thales. The sequence of thought
is evident, but historically it is
not justified.
We ought not by such deductions to
make an
ancient philosophy into something quite
different
from what it originally was.
We are too apt to mould the ancient
philosophers
into our own forms of thought, but
this is
just to constitute the progress of
development;
the difference in times, in culture
and in
philosophies, depends on whether certain
reflections, certain thought determinations,
and certain stages in the Notion have
come
to consciousness, whether a consciousness
has been developed to a particular
point
or not. The history of Philosophy has
simply
to deal with this development and bringing
forth of thought. The determinations
involved
certainly follow from a proposition,
but
whether they are put forth as yet or
not
is quite another thing, and the bringing
forth of the inner content is the only
matter
of importance. We must therefore only
make
use of the words which are actually
literal,
for to use further thought determinations
which do not yet belong to the consciousness
of the philosopher in question, is
to carry
on development. Thus Aristotle states
that
Thales has defined the principle (archi)
of every thing to be water. But Anaximander
first made use of archi, and Thales
thus
did not possess this determination
of thought
at all; he recognized archi as commencement
in time, but not as the fundamental
principle.
Thales did not once introduce the determination
of cause into his philosophy, and first
cause
is a further determination still. There
are
whole nations which have not this conception
at all; indeed it involves a great
step forward
in development. And seeing that difference
in culture on the whole depends on
difference
in the thought determinations which
are manifested,
this must be so still more with respect
to
philosophies.
Now, as in the logical system of thought
each of its forms has its own place
in which
alone it suffices, and this form becomes,
by means of ever-progressing development,
reduced to a subordinate element, each
philosophy
is, in the third place, a particular
stage
in the development of the whole process
and
has its definite place where it finds
its
true value and significance. Its special
character is really to be conceived
of in
accordance with this determination,
and it
is to be considered with respect to
this
position in order that full justice
may be
done to it. On this account nothing
more
must be demanded or expected from it
than
what it actually gives, and the satisfaction
is not to be sought for in it, which
can
only be found in a fuller development
of
knowledge. We must not expect to find
the
questions of our consciousness and
the interest
of the present world responded to by
the
ancients; such questions presuppose
a certain
development in thought. Therefore every
philosophy
belongs to its own time and is restricted
by its own limitations, just because
it is
the manifestation of a particular stage
in
development. The individual is the
offspring
of his people, of his world, whose
constitution
and attributes are alone manifested
in his
form; he may spread himself out as
he will,
he cannot escape out of his time any
more
than out of his skin, for he belongs
to the
one universal Mind which is his substance
and his own existence. How should he
escape
from this? It is the same universal
Mind
that is embraced by thinking Philosophy;
that Philosophy is Mind's thought of
itself
and therefore its determinate and substantial
content. Every philosophy is the philosophy
of its own day, a link in the whole
chain
of spiritual development, and thus
it can
only find satisfaction for the interests
belonging to its own particular time.
On this account an earlier philosophy
does
not give satisfaction to the mind in
which
a deeper conception reigns. What Mind
seeks
for in Philosophy is this conception
which
already constitutes its inward determination
and the root of its existence conceived
of
as object to thought; Mind demands
a knowledge
of itself. But in the earlier philosophy
the Idea is not yet present in this
determinate
character. Hence the philosophy of
Plato
and Aristotle, and indeed all philosophies,
ever live and are present in their
principles,
but Philosophy no longer has the particular
form and aspect possessed by that of
Plato
and of Aristotle. We cannot rest content
with them, and they cannot be revived;
hence
there can be no Platonists, Aristotelians,
Stoics, or Epicureans today. To re-awaken
them would be to try to bring back
to an
earlier stage the Mind of a deeper
culture
and self-penetration. But this cannot
be
the case; it would be an impossibility
and
as great a folly as were a man to wish
to
expend his energies in attaining the
standpoint
of the youth, the youth in endeavouring
to
be the boy or child again; whereas
the man,
the youth, and the child, are all one
and
the same individual. The period of
revival
in the sciences, the new epoch in learning
which took place in the fifteenth and
sixteenth
centuries, began not only with the
revived
study of, but also with the re-animation
of the old philosophies. Marsilius
Ficinus
was a Platonist; an Academy of Platonic
philosophy
was established and installed with
professors
by Cosmos de Medici, and Ficinus was
placed
at the head of it. There were pure
Aristotelians
like Pomponius: Gassendi later on maintained
the Epicurean philosophy, for his philosophy
dealt with Physics after the manner
of the
Epicureans; Lipsius wished to be a
Stoic,
and so on. The sense of opposition
was so
great, ancient philosophy and Christianity
- from or in which no special philosophy
had developed - were so diverse, that
no
philosophy peculiar to itself could
develop
in Christianity. What was or could
be had
as philosophy, either in conformity
with
or in opposition to Christianity, was
a certain
ancient philosophy which was thus taken
up
anew. But mummies when brought amongst
living
beings cannot there remain. Mind had
for
long possessed a more substantial life,
a
more profound Notion of itself, and
hence
its thought had higher needs than such
as
could be satisfied by these philosophies.
A revival such as this is then to be
regarded
only as the transitory period in which
we
learn to know the forms which are implied
and which have gone before, and as
the renewal
of former struggles through the steps
necessary
in development. Such reconstructions
and
repetitions in a distant time of principles
which have become foreign to Mind,
are in
history transitory only, and formed
in a
language which is dead. Such things
are translations
only and not originals, and Mind does
not
find satisfaction excepting in knowledge
of its own origination.
When modern times are in the same way
called
upon to revert to the standpoint of
an ancient
philosophy (as is recommended specially
in
regard to the philosophy of Plato)
in order
to make this a means of escaping from
the
complications and difficulties of succeeding
times, this reversion does not come
naturally
as in the first case. This discreet
counsel
has the same origin as the request
to cultivated
members of society to turn back to
the customs
and ideas of the savages of the North
American
forests, or as the recommendation to
adopt
the religion of Melchisedec which Fichte
(6) has maintained to be the purest
and simplest
possible, and therefore the one at
which
we must eventually arrive. On the one
hand,
in this retrogression the desire for
an origin
and for a fixed point of departure
is unmistakable,
but such must be sought for in thought
and
Idea alone and not in an authoritatively
given form. On the other hand, the
return
of the developed, enriched Mind to
a simplicity
such as this-which means to an abstraction,
an abstract condition or thought is
to be
regarded only as the escape of an incapacity
which cannot enjoy the rich material
of development
which it sees before it, and which
demands
to be controlled and comprehended in
its
very depths by thought, but seeks a
refuge
in fleeing from the difficulty and
in mere
sterility.
From what has been said it is quite
comprehensible
how so many of those who, whether induced
by some special attraction such as
this,
or simply by the fame of a Plato or
ancient
philosophy in general, direct their
way thereto
in order to draw their own philosophy
from
these sources, do not find themselves
satisfied
by the study, and unjustifiably quit
such
altogether. Satisfaction is found in
them
to a certain extent only. We must know
in
ancient philosophy or in the philosophy
of
any given period, what we are going
to look
for. Or at least we must know that
in such
a philosophy there is before us a definite
stage in the development of thought,
and
in it those forms and necessities of
Mind
which lie within the limits of that
stage
alone are brought into existence. There
slumber
in the Mind of modern times ideas more
profound
which require for their awakening other
surroundings
and another present than the abstract,
dim,
grey thought of olden times. In Plato,
for
instance, questions regarding the nature
of freedom, the origin of evil and
of sin,
providence, &c., do not find their
philosophic
answer. On such subjects we certainly
may
in part take the ordinary serious views
of
the present time, and in part philosophically
set their consideration altogether
aside,
or else consider sin and freedom as
something
negative only. But neither the one
plan nor
the other gives freedom to Mind if
such subjects
have once been explicitly for it, and
if
the opposition in self-consciousness
has
given it the power of sinking its interests
therein. The case is similar with regard
to questions regarding the limits of
knowledge,
the opposition between subjectivity
and objectivity
which had not yet come up in Plato's
age.
The independence of the within itself
and
its explicit existence was foreign
to him;
man had not yet gone back within himself,
had not yet set himself forth as explicit.
The subject was indeed the individual
as
free, but as yet he knew himself only
as
in unity with his Being. The Athenian
knew
himself to be free, as such, just as
the
Roman citizen would, as ingenuus. But
the
fact that man is in and for himself
free,
in his essence and as man, free born,
was
known neither by Plato, Aristotle,
Cicero,
nor the Roman legislators, even though
it
is this conception alone which forms
the
source of law. In Christianity the
individual,
personal mind for the first time becomes
of real, infinite and absolute value;
God
wills that all men shall be saved.
It was
in the Christian religion that the
doctrine
was advanced that all men are equal
before
God, because Christ has set them free
with
the freedom of Christianity. These
principles
make freedom independent of any such
things
as birth, standing or culture. The
progress
made through them is enormous, but
they still
come short of this, that to be free
constitutes
the very idea of man. The sense of
this existent
principle has been an active force
for centuries
and centuries, and an impelling power
which
has brought about the most tremendous
revolutions;
but the conception and the knowledge
of the
natural freedom of man is a knowledge
of
himself which is not old.
Note:
1. Zur Philosophie und Geschichte. Pt. V
pp. 184-186. (Edition of 1828, in 12
vols.)
|