HEGEL PHENOMENOLOGY OF MIND
Born in Stuttgart and educated in Tübingen,
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel devoted his
life wholly to academic pursuits, teaching
at Jena, Nuremberg, Heidelberg, and Berlin.
His Wissenschaft der Logik (Science of Logic) (1812-1816) attributes the unfolding of
concepts of reality in terms of the pattern
of dialectical reasoning (thesis -
antithesis - synthesis) that Hegel believed
to be the only method of progress in human
thought,
G. W F Hegel (1770-1831)
Translated by J. B. Baillie G. W. F. HEGEL
PREFACE
THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF MIND (1807)
Translated by J. B. Baillie
Note: the pagination tracks Harper Torchbooks'
edition of the Phenomenology. This has been
inserted for purposes of cross-reference
only. The numbering and translation of the
Table of Contents were, in the main, taken
from Walter Kaufmann's Hegel: Texts and Commentary
(Doubleday 1965).
Table of Contents
1. Preface: On scientific knowledge (p. 67)
2. The element of truth is the Concept/Notion
(Begriff), and its true form the scientific
system (p. 70)
3. Present position of the spirit (p. 71)
4. The principle is not the completion; against
formalism (p. 76)
5. The absolute is subject -- (p. 80)
6. -- and what this is (p. 80)
7. The element of knowledge (p. 86)
8. The ascent into this is the Phenomenology
of Spirit (p. 88)
9. The transformation of the notion and the
familiar into thought -- (p. 91)
10. -- and this into the Concept/Notion (p.
94)
11. In what way the Phenomenology of the
Spirit is negative or contains what is false
(p. 97)
12. Historical and mathematical truth (p.
100)
13. The nature of philosophical truth and
its method (p. 105)
14. Against schematizing formalism (p. 107)
15. The demands of the study of philosophy
(p. 116)
16. Argumentative thinking in its negative
attitude -- (p. 117)
17. -- in its positive attitude; its subject
(p. 118)
18. Natural philosophizing as healthy common
sense and as genius (p. 125)
19. Conclusion: the author's relation to
the public (p. 128)
PREFACE: ON SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
In the case of a philosophical work it seems
not only superfluous, but, in view of the
nature of philosophy, even inappropriate
and misleading to begin, as writers usually
do in a preface, by explaining the end the
author had in mind, the circumstances which
gave rise to the work, and the relation in
which the writer takes it to stand to other
treatises on the same subject, written by
his predecessors or his contemporaries. For
whatever it might be suitable to state about
philosophy in a preface - say, an historical
sketch of the main drift and point of view,
the general content and results, a string
of desultory assertions and assurances about
the truth - this cannot be accepted as the
form and manner in which to expound philosophical
truth.
Moreover, because philosophy has its being
essentially in the element of that universality
which encloses the particular within it,
the end or final result seems, in the case
of philosophy more than in that of other
sciences, to have absolutely expressed the
complete fact itself in its very nature;
contrasted with that the mere process of
bringing it to light would seem, properly
speaking, to have no essential significance.
On the other hand, in the general idea of
e. g. anatomy - the knowledge of the parts
of the body regarded as lifeless - we are
quite sure we do not possess the objective
concrete fact, the actual content of the
science, but must, over and above, be concerned
with particulars. Further, in the case of
such a collection of items of knowledge,
which has no real right to the name of science,
any talk about purpose and suchlike generalities
is not commonly very different from the descriptive
and superficial way in which the contents
of the science these nerves and muscles,
etc.-are themselves spoken of. In philosophy,
on the other hand, it would at once be felt
incongruous were such a [68] method made
use of and yet shown by philosophy itself
to be incapable of grasping the truth.
In the same way too, by determining the relation
which a philosophical work professes to have
to other treatises on the same subject, an
extraneous interest is introduced, and obscurity
is thrown over the point at issue in the
knowledge of the truth. The more the ordinary
mind takes the opposition between true and
false to be fixed, the more is it accustomed
to expect either agreement or contradiction
with a given philosophical system, and only
to see reason for the one or the other in
any explanatory statement concerning such
a system. It does not conceive the diversity
of philosophical systems as the progressive
evolution of truth; rather, it sees only
contradiction in that variety. The bud disappears
when the blossom breaks through, and we might
say that the former is refuted by the latter;
in the same way when the fruit comes, the
blossom may be explained to be a false form
of the plant's existence, for the fruit appears
as its true nature in place of the blossom.
These stages are not merely differentiated;
they supplant one another as being incompatible
with one another. But the ceaseless activity
of their own inherent nature makes them at
the same time moments of an organic unity,
where they not merely do not contradict one
another, but where one is as necessary as
the other; and this equal necessity of all
moments constitutes alone and thereby the
life of the whole. But contradiction as between
philosophical systems is not wont to be conceived
in this way; on the other hand, the mind
perceiving the contradiction does not commonly
know how to relieve it or keep it free from
its onesidedness, and to recognize in what
seems conflicting and inherently antagonistic
the presence of mutually necessary moments.
The demand for such explanations, as also
the attempts to satisfy this demand, very
easily, pass for [69] the essential business
philosophy has to undertake. Where could
the inmost truth of a philosophical work
be found better expressed than in its purposes
and results? and in what way could these
be more definitely known than through their
distinction from what is produced during
the same period by others working in the
same field? If, however, such procedure is
to pass for more than the beginning of knowledge,
if it is to pass for actually knowing, then
we must, in point of fact, look on it as
a device for avoiding the real business at
issue, an attempt to combine the appearance
of being in earnest and taking trouble about
the subject with an actual neglect of the
subject altogether. For the real subject-matter
is not exhausted in its purpose, but in working
the matter out; nor is the mere result attained
the concrete whole itself, but the result
along with the process of arriving at it.
The purpose of itself is a lifeless universal,
just as the general drift is a mere activity
in a certain direction, which is still without
its concrete realization; and the naked result
is the corpse of the system which has left
its guiding tendency behind it. Similarly,
the distinctive difference of anything is
rather the boundary, the limit, of the subject;
it is found at that point where the subject-matter
stops, or it is what this subject-matter
is not. To trouble oneself in this fashion
with the purpose and results, and again with
the differences, the positions taken up and
judgments passed by one thinker and another,
is therefore an easier task than perhaps
it seems. For instead of laying hold of the
matter in hand, a procedure of that kind
is all the while away from the subject altogether.
Instead of dwelling within it and becoming
absorbed by it, knowledge of that sort is
always grasping at something else; such knowledge,
instead keeping to the subject-matter and
giving itself up to it, never gets away from
itself. The easiest thing of all is to pass
[70] judgments on what has a solid substantial
content; it is more difficult to grasp it,
and most of all difficult to do both together
and produce the systematic exposition of
it.
The beginning of culture and of the struggle
to pass out of the unbroken immediacy of
naive Psychical life has always to be made
by acquiring knowledge of universal principles
and points of view, by striving, in the first
instance, to work up simply to the thought
of the subject-matter in general, not forgetting
at the same time to give reasons for supporting
it or refuting it, to apprehend the concrete
riches and fullness contained in its various
determinate qualities, and to know how to
furnish a coherent, orderly account of it
and a responsible judgment upon it. This
beginning of mental cultivation will, however,
very soon make way for the earnestness of
actual life in all its fullness, which leads
to a living experience of the subject-matter
itself; and when, in addition, conceptual
thought strenuously penetrates to the very
depths of its meaning, such knowledge and
style of judgment will keep their clue place
in everyday thought and conversation.
2. The element of truth is the Concept/Notion
(Begriff), and its true form the scientific
system
The systematic development of truth in scientific
form can alone be the true shape in which
truth exists. To help to bring philosophy
nearer to the form of science-that goal where
it can lay aside the name of love of knowledge
and be actual knowledge-that is what I have
set before me. The inner necessity that knowledge
should be science lies in its very nature;
and the adequate and sufficient explanation
for this lies simply and solely in the systematic
exposition Of philosophy itself. The external
necessity, however, so far as this is apprehended
in a universal way, and apart from the accident
of the personal element and the particular
occasioning influences affecting the individual,
is the same as the internal: it lies in the
form and shape in which the process of time
presents the [71] existence of its moments.
To show that the time process does raise
philosophy to the level of scientific system
would, therefore, be the only true justification
of the attempts which aim at proving that
philosophy must assume this character; because
the temporal process would thus bring out
and lay bare the necessity of it, nay, more,
would at the same time be carrying out that
very aim itself.
When we state the true form of truth to be
its scientific character-or, what is the
same thing, when it is maintained that truth
finds the medium of its existence in notions
or conceptions alone-I know that this seems
to contradict an idea with all its consequences
which makes great pretensions and has gained
widespread acceptance and conviction at the
present time. A word of explanation concerning
this contradiction seems, therefore, not
out of place, even though at this stage it
can amount to no more than a dogmatic assurance
exactly like the view we are opposing. If,
that is to say, truth exists merely in what,
or rather exists merely as what, is called
at one time intuition, at another immediate
knowledge of the Absolute, Religion, Being-not
being in the centre of divine love, but the
very Being of this centre, of the Absolute
itself-from that point of view it is rather
the opposite of the notional or conceptual
form which would be required for systematic
philosophical exposition. The Absolute on
this view is not to be grasped in conceptual
form, but felt, intuited; it is not its conception,
but the feeling of it and intuition of it
that are to have the say and find expression.
3. Present position of the spirit
If we consider the appearance of a claim
like this in its more general setting, and
look at the level which the self-conscious
mind at present occupies, we shall find that
self-consciousness has got beyond the sub-
[72] stantial fullness of life, which it
used to carry on in the element of thought-beyond
the state of immediacy of belief, beyond
the satisfaction and security arising from
the assurance which consciousness possessed
of being reconciled with ultimate reality
and with its all. pervading presence, within
as well as without. Self-conscious mind has
not merely passed beyond that to the opposite
extreme of insubstantial reflection of self
into self, but beyond this too. It has not
merely lost its essential and concrete life,
it is also conscious of this loss and of
the transitory finitude characteristic of
its content. Turning away from the husks
it has to feed on, and confessing that it
lies in wickedness and sin, it reviles itself
for so doing, and now desires from philosophy
not so much to bring it to a knowledge of
what it is, as to obtain once again through
philosophy the restoration of that sense
of solidity and substantiality of existence
it has lost. Philosophy is thus expected
not so much to meet this want by opening
up the compact solidity of substantial existence,
and bringing this to the light and level
of self-consciousness -is not so much to
bring chaotic conscious life back to the
orderly ways of thought, and the simplicity
of the notion, as to run together what thought
has divided asunder suppress the notion with
its distinctions, and restore the feeling
of existence. What it wants from philosophy
is not so much insight as edification. The
beautiful the holy, the eternal, religion,
love-these are the bait required to awaken
the desire to bite: not the notion, but ecstasy,
not the march of cold necessity in the subject-matter,
but ferment and enthusiasm-these are to be
the ways by which the wealth of the concrete
substance is to be stored and increasingly
extended.
With this demand there goes the strenuous
effort, almost perfervidly zealous in its
activity, to rescue [73] mankind from being
sunken in what is sensuous, vulgar, and of
fleeting importance, and to raise men's eyes
to the stars; as if men had quite forgotten
the divine, and were on the verge of finding
satisfaction, like worms, in mud and water.
Time was when man had a heaven, decked and
fitted out with endless wealth of thoughts
and pictures. The significance of all that
is, lay in the thread of light by which it
was attached to heaven; instead of dwelling
in the present as it is here and now, the
eye glanced away over the present to the
Divine, away, so to say, to a present that
lies beyond. The mind's gaze had to be directed
under compulsion to what is earthly, and
kept fixed there; and it has needed a long
time to introduce that clearness, which only
celestial realities had, into the crassness
and confusion shrouding the sense of things
,earthly, and to make attention to the immediate
present as such, which was called Experience,
of interest and of value. Now we have apparently
the need for the opposite of all this; man's
mind and interest are so deeply rooted in
the earthly that we require a like power
to have them raised above that level. His
spirit shows such poverty of nature that
it seems to long for the mere pitiful feeling
of the divine in the abstract, and to get
refreshment from that, like a wanderer in
the desert craving for the merest mouthful
of water. By the little which can thus satisfy
the needs of the human spirit we can measure
the extent of its loss.
This easy contentment in receiving, or stinginess
in giving, does not suit the character of
science. The man who only seeks edification,
who wants to envelop in mist the manifold
diversity of his earthly existence and thought,
and craves after the vague enjoyment of this
vague and indeterminate Divinity-he may look
where he likes to find this: he will easily
find for himself the means to procure something
he can rave [74] over and puff himself up
withal. But philosophy must beware of wishing
to be edifying.
Still less must this kind of contentment,
which holds science in contempt, take upon
itself to claim that raving obscurantism
of this sort is something higher than science.
These apocalyptic utterances pretend to occupy
the very centre and the deepest depths; they
look askance at all definiteness and preciseness
meaning; and they deliberately hold back
from conceptual thinking and the constraining
necessities of thought, as being the sort
of reflection which, they say, can only feel
at home in the sphere of finitude. But just
as the-re is a breadth which is emptiness,
there is a depth which is empty too: as we
may have an extension of substance which
overflows into finite multiplicity without
the power of keeping the manifold together,
in the same way we may have an insubstantial
intensity which, keeping itself in as mere
force without actual expression, is no better
than superficiality. The force of mind is
only as great as its expression; its depth
only as deep as its power to expand and lose
itself when spending and giving out its substance.
Moreover, when this unreflective emotional
knowledge makes a pretence of having immersed
its own very self in the depths of the absolute
Being, and of philosophizing in all holiness
and truth, it hides from itself the fact
that instead of devotion to God, it rather,
by this contempt for all measurable precision
and definiteness, simply attests in its own
case the fortuitous character of its content,
and in the other endows God with its own
caprice. When such minds commit themselves
to the unrestrained ferment of sheer emotion,
they think that, by putting a veil over self-consciousness,
and surrendering all understanding, they
are thus God's beloved ones to whom He gives
His wisdom in sleep. This is the reason,
too, that in point of fact, [75] what they
do conceive and bring forth in sleep is dreams.
For the rest it is not difficult to see that
our epoch is a birth-time, and a period of
transition. The spirit of man has broken
with the old order of things hitherto prevailing,
and with the old ways of thinking, and is
in the mind to let them all sink into the
depths of the past and to set about its own
transformation. It is indeed never at rest,
but carried along the stream of progress
ever onward. But it is here as in the case
of the birth of a child; after a long period
of nutrition in silence, the continuity of
the gradual growth in size, of quantitative
change, is suddenly cut short by the first
breath drawn-there is a break in the process,
a qualitative change and the child is born.
In like manner the spirit of the time, growing
slowly and quietly ripe for the new form
it is to assume, disintegrates one fragment
after another of the structure of its previous
world. That it is tottering to its fall is
indicated only by symptoms here and there.
Frivolity and again ennui, which are spreading
in the established order of things, the undefined
foreboding of something unknown-all these
betoken that there is something else approaching.
This gradual crumbling to pieces, which did
not alter the general look and aspect of
the whole, is interrupted by the sunrise,
which, in a flash and at a single stroke,
brings to -view the form and structure of
the new world.
But this new world is perfectly realized
just as little as the new-born child; and
it is essential to bear this in mind. It
comes on the stage to begin with in its immediacy,
in its bare generality. A building is not
finished when its foundation is laid; and
just as little, is the attainment of a general
notion of a whole the whole itself. When
we want to see an oak with all its vigour
of trunk, its spreading branches, and mass
of foliage, we are not satisfied to be shown
an acorn [76] instead. In the same way science,
the crowning glory of a spiritual world,
is not found complete in its initial stages.
The beginning of the new spirit is the outcome
of a widespread revolution in manifold forms
of spiritual culture; it is the reward which
comes after a chequered and devious course
of development, and after much struggle and
effort. It is a whole which, after running
its course and laying bare all its content,
returns again to itself ; it is the resultant
abstract notion of the whole. But the actual
realization of this abstract whole is only
found when those previous shapes and forms,
which are now reduced to ideal moments of
the whole, are developed anew again, but
developed and shaped within this new medium,
and with the meaning they have thereby acquired.
4. The principle is not the completion; against
formalism
While the new world makes its first appearance
merely in general outline, merely as a whole
lying concealed and hidden within a bare
abstraction, the wealth of the bygone life,
on the other hand, is still consciously present
in recollection. Consciousness misses in
the new form the detailed expanse of content;
but still more the developed expression of
form by which distinctions are definitely
determined and arranged in their precise
relations. Without this last feature science
has no general intelligibility, and has the
appearance of being an esoteric possession
of a few individuals--an esoteric possession,
because in the first instance it is only
the essential principle or notion of science,
only its inner nature that is to be found;
and a possession of few individuals, because,
at its first appearance, its content is not
elaborated and expanded in detail, and thus
its existence is turned into something particular.
Only what is perfectly determinate in form
is at the same time exoteric, comprehensible,
and capable of being learned and possessed
by everybody. Intelligibility is the form
in which science is offered to everyone,
and is the open road to it made plain for
[77] all. To reach rational knowledge by
our intelligence is the just demand of the
mind which comes to science. For intelligence,
understanding (Verstand), is thinking, pure
activity of the self in general; and what
is intelligible
(Verständige) is something from the first
familiar and common to the scientific and
unscientific mind alike, enabling the unscientific
mind to enter the domain of science.
Science, at its commencement, when as yet
it has reached neither detailed completeness
nor perfection of form, is exposed to blame
on that account. But it would be as unjust
to suppose this blame to attach to its essential
nature, as it is inadmissible not to be ready
to recognize the demand for that further
development in fuller detail. In the contrast
and opposition between these two aspects
(the initial and the developed stages of
science) seems to lie the critical knot which
scientific culture at present struggles to
loosen, and about which so far it is not
very clear. One side parades the wealth of
its material and the intelligibility of its
ideas; the other pours contempt at any rate
on the latter, and makes a parade of the
immediate intuitive rationality and divine
quality of its content. Although the first
is reduced to silence, perhaps by the inner
force of truth alone, perhaps, too, by the
noisy bluster of the other side, and even
though having regard to the reason and nature
of the case it did feel overborne, yet it
does not therefore feel satisfied as regards
those demands for greater development; for
those demands are just, but still unfulfilled.
Its silence is due only in part to the victory
of the other side; it is half due to that
weariness and indifference which are usually
the consequence when expectations are being
constantly awakened by promises which are
not followed up by performance.
The other side no doubt at times makes an
easy [78] enough matter of having a vast
expanse of content. They haul on to their
territory a lot of material, that, namely,
which is already familiar and arranged ill
order; and since they are concerned more
especially about what is exceptional, strange,
and curious, they seem all the more to be
in possession of the rest, which knowledge
in its own way was finished and done with,
as well as to have control over what was
unregulated and disorderly. Hence everything
appears brought within the compass of the
Absolute Idea, which seems thus to be recognized
in everything, and to have succeeded in becoming
a system in extenso of scientific knowledge.
But if we look more closely at this expanded
system we find that it has not been reached
by one and the same principle taking shape
in diverse ways; it is the shapeless repetition
of one and the same idea, which is applied
in an external fashion to different material,
the wearisome reiteration of it keeping up
the semblance of diversity. The Idea, which
by itself is no doubt the truth, really never
gets any farther than just where it began,
as long as the development of it consists
in nothing else than such a repetition of
the same formula. If the knowing subject
carries round everywhere the one inert abstract
form, taking up in external fashion whatever
material comes his way, and dipping it into
this element, then this comes about as near
to fulfilling what is wanted - viz. a self-origination
of the wealth of detail, and a self-determining
distinction of shapes and forms-as any chance
fancies about the content in question. It
is rather a monochrome formalism, which only
arrives at distinction in the matter it has
to deal with, because this is already prepared
and well known.
This monotonousness and abstract universality
are maintained to be the Absolute. This formalism
insists that to be dissatisfied therewith
argues an incapacity to grasp the standpoint
of the Absolute, and keep a [79] firm hold
on it. If it was once the case that the bare
possibility of thinking of something in some
other fashion was sufficient to refute a
given idea, and the naked possibility, the
bare general thought, possessed and passed
for the entire substantive value of actual
knowledge; similarly we find here all the
value ascribed to the general idea in this
bare form without concrete realization; and
we see here, too, the style and method of
speculative contemplation identified with
dissipating and. resolving what is determinate
and distinct, or rather with hurling it down,
without more ado and without any justification,
into the abyss of vacuity. To consider any
specific fact as it is in the Absolute, consists
here in nothing else than saying about it
that, while it is now doubtless spoken of
as something specific, yet in the Absolute,
in the abstract identity A = A, there is
no such thing at all, for everything is there
all one. To pit this single assertion, that
"in the Absolute all is one", against
the organized whole of determinate and complete
knowledge, or of knowledge which at least
aims at and demands complete development-to
give out its Absolute as the night in which,
as we say, all cows are black-that is the
very naïveté of emptiness of knowledge.
The formalism which has been deprecated and
despised by recent philosophy, and which
has arisen once more in philosophy itself,
will not disappear from science, even though
its inadequacy is known and felt, till the
knowledge of absolute reality has become
quite clear as to what its own true nature
consists in. Having in mind that the general
idea of what is to be done, if it precedes
the attempt to carry it out, facilitates
the comprehension of this process, it is
worth while to indicate here some rough idea
of it, with the hope at the same time that
this will give us the opportunity to set
aside certain forms whose habitual presence
is a hindrance in the way of speculative
knowledge. [80]
5. The absolute is subject --
In my view-a view which the developed exposition
of the system itself can alone justify-everything
depends on grasping and expressing the ultimate
truth not as Substance but as Subject as
well. At the same time we must note that
concrete substantiality implicates and involves
the universal or the immediacy of knowledge
itself, as well as that immediacy which is
being, or immediacy qua object for knowledge.
If the generation which heard God spoken
of as the One Substance was shocked and revolted
by such a characterization of his nature,
the reason lay partly in the instinctive
feeling that in such a conception self- consciousness
was simply submerged, and not preserved.
But partly, again, the opposite position,
which maintains thinking to be merely subjective
thinking, abstract universality as such,
is exactly the same bare uniformity, is undifferentiated,
unmoved substantiality. And even if, in the
third place, thought combines with itself
the being of substance, and conceives immediacy
or intuition
(Anschauung) as thinking, it is still a question
whether this intellectual intuition does
not fall back into that inert, abstract simplicity,
and exhibit and expound reality itself in
an unreal manner.
6. -- and what this is
The living substance, further, is that being
which is truly subject, or, what is the same
thing, is truly realized and actual (wirklich)
solely in the process of positing itself,
or in mediating with its own self its transitions
from one state or position to the opposite.
As subject it is pure and simple negativity,
and just on that account a process of splitting
up what is simple and undifferentiated, a
process of duplicating and setting factors
in opposition, which [process] in turn is
the negation of this indifferent diversity
and of the opposition of factors it entails.
True reality is merely this process of reinstating
self-identity, of reflecting [81] into its
own self in and from its other, and is not
an original and primal unity as such, not
an immediate unity as such. It is the process
of its own becoming, the circle which presupposes
its end as its purpose, and has its end for
its beginning; it becomes concrete and actual
only by being carried out, and by the end
it involves.
The life of God and divine intelligence,
then, can, if we like, be spoken of as love
disporting with itself; but this idea falls
into edification, and even sinks into insipidity,
if it lacks the seriousness, the suffering,
the patience, and the labour of the negative.
Per se the divine life is no doubt undisturbed
identity and oneness with itself, which finds
no serious obstacle in otherness and estrangement,
and none in the surmounting of this estrangement.
But this "per se" is abstract generality,
where we abstract from its real nature, which
consists in its being objective. to itself,
conscious of itself on its own account (für
sich zu sein); and where consequently we
neglect altogether the self-movement which
is the formal character of its activity.
If the form is declared to correspond to
the essence, it is just for that reason a
misunderstanding to suppose that knowledge
can be content with the "per se",
the essence, but can do without the form,
that the absolute principle, or absolute
intuition, makes the carrying out of the
former, or the development of the latter,
needless. Precisely because the form is as
necessary to the essence as the essence to
itself, absolute reality must not be conceived
of and expressed as essence alone, i. e.
as immediate substance, or as pure self-intuition
of the Divine, but as form also, and with
the entire wealth of the developed form.
Only then is it grasped and expressed as
really actual.
The truth is the whole. The whole, however,
is merely the essential nature reaching its
completeness through the process of its own
development. Of the Absolute [82] it must
be said that it is essentially a result,
that only at the end is it what it is in
very truth; and just in that consists its
nature, which is to be actual, subject, or
self-becoming, self-development. Should it
appear contradictory to say that the Absolute
has to be conceived essentially as a result,
a little consideration will set this appearance
of contradiction in its true light. The beginning,
the principle, or the Absolute, as at first
or immediately expressed, is merely the universal.
If we say "all animals", that does
not pass for zoology; for the same reason
we see at once that the words absolute, divine,
eternal, and so on do not express what is
implied in them; and only mere words like
these, in point of fact, express intuition
as the immediate. Whatever is more than a
word like that, even the mere transition
to a proposition, is a form of mediation,
contains a process towards another state
from which we must return once more. It is
this process of mediation, however, that
is rejected with horror, as if absolute knowledge
were being surrendered when more is made
of mediation than merely the assertion that
it is nothing absolute, and does not exist
in the Absolute.
This horrified rejection of mediation, however,
arises as a fact from want of acquaintance
with its nature, and with the nature of absolute
knowledge itself. For mediating is nothing
but self-identity working itself out through
an active self-directed process; or, in other
words, it is reflection into self, the aspect
in which the ego is for itself, objective
to itself. It is pure negativity, or, reduced
to its utmost abstraction, the process of
bare and simple becoming. The ego, or becoming
in general, this process of mediating, is,
because of its being simple, just immediacy
coming to be, and is immediacy itself. We
misconceive therefore the nature of reason
if we exclude reflection or mediation from
ultimate truth., and do not take it to be
a [83] positive moment of the Absolute. It
is reflection which constitutes truth the
final result, and yet at the same time does
away with the contrast between result and
the process of arriving at it. For this process
is likewise simple, and therefore not distinct
from the form of truth, which consists in
appearing as simple in the result; it is
indeed just this restoration and return to
simplicity. While the embryo is certainly,
in itself, implicitly a human being, it is
not so explicitly, it is not by itself a
human being (für sich); man is explicitly
man only in the form of developed and cultivated
reason, which has made itself to be what
it is implicitly. Its actual reality is first
found here. But this result arrived at is
itself simple immediacy; for it is self conscious
freedom, which is at one with itself, and
has not set aside the opposition it involves
and left it there, but has made its account
with it and become reconciled to it.
What has been said may also be expressed
by saying that reason is purposive activity.
The exaltation of so-called nature at the
expense of thought misconceived, and more
especially the rejection of external purposiveness,
have brought the idea of purpose in general
into disrepute. All the same, in the sense
in which Aristotle, too, characterizes nature
as purposive activity, purpose is the immediate,
the undisturbed, the unmoved which is self-moving;
as such it is subject. Its power of moving,
taken abstractly, is its existence for itself,
or pure negativity. The result is the same
as the beginning solely because the beginning
is purpose. Stated otherwise, what is actual
and concrete is the same as its inner principle
or notion simply because the immediate qua
purpose contains within it the self or pure
actuality. The realized purpose, or concrete
actuality, is movement and development unfolded.
But this very unrest is the self; and it
is one and the same with that immediacy and
simplicity characteristic of the begin- [84]
ning just for the reason that it is the result,
and has returned upon itself-while this latter
again is just the self, and the self is self-referring
and self-relating identity and simplicity.
The need to think of the Absolute as subject,
has led men to make use of statements like
"God is the eternal", the "moral
order of the world", or "love",
etc. In such propositions the truth is just
barely stated to be Subject, but not set
forth as the process of reflectively mediating
itself with itself. In a proposition of that
kind we begin with the word God. By itself
this is a meaningless sound, a mere name;
the predicate says afterwards what it is,
gives it content and meaning: the empty beginning
becomes real knowledge only when we thus
get to the end of the statement. So far as
that goes, why not speak alone of the eternal,
of the moral order of the world, etc., or,
like the ancients, of pure conceptions such
as being, the one, etc., i. e. of what gives
the meaning without adding the meaningless
sound at all? But this word just indicates
that it is not a being or essence or universal
in general that is put forward, but something
reflected into self, a subject. Yet at the
same time this acceptance of the Absolute
as Subject is merely anticipated, not really
affirmed. The subject is taken to be a fixed
point, and to it as their support the predicates
are attached, by a process falling within
the individual knowing about it, but not
looked upon as belonging to the point of
attachment itself; only by such a process,
however, could the content be presented as
subject. Constituted as it is, this process
cannot belong to the subject; but when that
point of support is fixed to start with,
this process cannot be otherwise constituted,
it can only be external. The anticipation
that the Absolute is subject is therefore
not merely not the realization of this conception;
it even makes realization impossible. For
it makes out the notion to be a static [85]
point, while its actual reality is self-movement,
self-activity.
Among the many consequences that follow from
what has been said, it is of importance to
emphasize this, that knowledge is only real
and can only be set forth fully in the form
of science, in the form of system; and further,
that a so-called fundamental proposition
or first principle of philosophy, even if
it is true, is yet none the less false just
because and in so far as it is merely a fundamental
proposition, merely a first principle. It
is for that reason easily refuted. The refutation
consists in bring out its defective character,
and it is defective because it is merely
the universal, merely a principle, the beginning.
If the refutation is complete and thorough,
it is derived and developed from the nature
of the principle itself, and not accomplished
by bringing in from elsewhere other counter
assurances and chance fancies. It would be
strictly the development of the principle.
and thus the completion of its deficiency,
were it not that it misunderstands its own
purport by taking account solely of the negative
aspect of what it seeks to do, and is not
conscious of the positive character of its
process and result. The really positive working
out of the beginning is at the same time
just as much the very reverse, it is a negative
attitude towards the principle we start from,
negative, that is to say, of its one-sided
form, which consists in being primarily immediate,
a mere purpose. It may therefore be regarded
as a refutation of what constitutes the basis
of the system; but more correctly it should
be looked at as a demonstration that the
basis or principle of the system is in point
of fact merely its beginning.
That the truth is only realized in the form
of system, that substance is essentially
subject, is expressed in the idea which represents
the Absolute as Spirit
(Geist) - the grandest conception of all,
and one which is due [86] to modern times
and its religion. Spirit is alone Reality.
It is the inner being of the world, that
which essentially is, and is per se; it assumes
objective, determinate form, and enters into
relations with itself-it is externality (otherness),
and exists for self; yet, in this determination,
and in its otherness, it is still one with
itself-it is self-contained and self-complete,
in itself and for itself at once. This self-
containedness, however, is first something
known by us, it is implicit in its nature
(an sich); it is Substance spiritual. It
has to become self-contained for itself,
on its own account; it must be knowledge
of spirit, and must be consciousness of itself
as spirit. This means, it must be presented
to itself as an object, but at the same time
straightway annul and transcend this objective
form; it must be its own object in which
it finds itself reflected. So far as its
spiritual content is produced by its own
activity, it is only we [the thinkers] who
know spirit to be for itself, to be objective
to itself; but in so far as spirit knows
itself to be for itself, then this self-production,
the pure notion, is the sphere and element
in which its objectification takes effect,
and where it gets its existential form. In
this way it is in its existence aware of
itself as an object in which its own self
is reflected. Mind, which, when thus developed,
knows itself to be mind, is science. Science
is its realization, and the kingdom it sets
up for itself in its own native element.
7. The element of knowledge
A self having knowledge purely of itself
in the absolute antithesis of itself, this
pure ether as such, is the very soil where
science flourishes, is knowledge in universal
form. The beginning of philosophy presupposes
or demands from consciousness that it should
feel at home in this element. But this element
only attains its perfect meaning and acquires
transparency through the process of gradually
developing it. It is pure spirituality as
the universal which assumes the shape of
simple immediacy; and this simple element,
existing [87] as such, is the field of science,
is thinking, which can be only in mind. Because
this medium, this immediacy of mind, is the
mind's substantial nature in general, it
is the transfigured essence, reflection which
itself is simple, which is aware of itself
as immediacy; it is being, which is reflection
into itself. Science on its side requires
the individual self-consciousness to have
risen into this high ether, in order to be
able to live with science, and in science,
and really to feel alive there. Conversely
the individual has the right to demand that
science shall hold the ladder to help him
to get at least as far as this position,
shall show him that he has in himself this
ground to stand on. His right rests on his
absolute independence, which he knows he
possesses in every type and phase of knowledge;
for in every phase, whether recognized by
science or not, and whatever be the content,
his right as an individual is the absolute
and final form, i. e. he is the immediate
certainty of self, and thereby is unconditioned
being, were this expression preferred. If
the position taken up by consciousness, that
of knowing about objective things as opposed
to itself, and about itself as opposed to
them, is held by science to be the very opposite
of what science is: if, when in knowing it
keeps within itself and never goes beyond
itself, science holds this state to be rather
the loss of mind altogether-on the other
hand the element in which science consists
is looked at by consciousness as a remote
and distant region, in which consciousness
is no longer in possession of itself. Each
of these two sides takes the other to be
the perversion of the truth. For the naïve
consciousness, to give itself up completely
and straight away to science is to make an
attempt, induced by some unknown influence,
all at once to walk on its head. The compulsion
to take up this attitude and move about in
this position, is a constraining force it
is urged to fall in with, without ever being
prepared for it and [88] with no apparent
necessity for doing so. Let science be per
se what it likes, in its relation to naïve
immediate self-conscious life it presents
the appearance of being a reversal of the
latter; or, again, because naïve self-consciousness
finds the principle of its reality in the
certainty of itself, science bears the character
of unreality, since consciousness "for
itself" is a state quite outside of
science. Science has for that reason to combine
that other element of self-certainty with
its own, or rather to show that the other
element belongs to itself, and how it does
so. When devoid of that sort of reality,
science is merely the content of mind qua
something implicit or potential (an sich);
purpose, which at the start is no more than
something internal; not spirit, but at first
merely spiritual substance. This implicit
moment (Ansich) has to find external expression,
and become objective on its own account.
This means nothing else than that this moment
has to establish self-consciousness as one
with itself.
8. The ascent into this is the Phenomenology
of Spirit
It is this process by which science in general
comes about, this gradual development of
knowing, that is set forth here in the Phenomenology
of Mind. Knowing, as it is found at the start,
mind in its immediate and primitive stage,
is without the essential nature of mind,
is sense-consciousness. To reach the stage
of genuine knowledge, or produce the element
where science is found-the pure conception
of science itself-a long and laborious journey
must be undertaken. This process towards
science, as regards the content it will bring
to light and the forms it will assume in
the course of its progress, will not be what
is primarily imagined by leading the unscientific
consciousness up to the level of science:
it will be something different, too, from
establishing and laying the foundations of
science; and anyway something else than the
sort of [89] ecstatic enthusiasm which starts
straight off with absolute knowledge, as
if shot out of a pistol, and makes short
work of other points of view simply by explaining
that it is to take no notice of them.
The task of conducting the individual mind
from its unscientific standpoint to that
of science had to be taken in its general
sense; we had to contemplate the formative
development (Bildung) of the universal [or
general] individual, of self-conscious spirit.
As to the relation between these two [the
particular and general individual], every
moment, as it gains concrete form and its
own proper shape and appearance, finds a
place in the life of the universal individual.
The particular individual is incomplete mind,
a concrete shape in whose existence, taken
as a whole, one determinate characteristic
predominates, while the others are found
only in blurred outline. In that mind which
stands higher than another the lower concrete
form of existence has sunk into an obscure
moment; what was formerly an objective fact
(die Sache selbst) is now only a single trace:
its definite shape has been veiled, and become
simply a piece of shading. The individual,
whose substance is mind at the higher level,
passes through these past forms, much in
the way that one who takes up a higher science
goes through those preparatory forms of knowledge,
which he has long made his own, in order
to call up their content before him; he brings
back the recollection of them without stopping
to fix his interest upon them. The particular
individual, so far as content is concerned,
has also to go through the stages through
which the general mind has passed, but as
shapes once assumed by mind and now laid
aside, as stages of a road which has been
worked over and levelled out. Hence it is
that, in the case of various kinds of knowledge,
we find that what in former days occupied
the energies of men of mature mental ability
sinks to the level of information, [90] exercises,
and even pastimes, for children; and in this
educational progress we can see the history
of the world's culture delineated in faint
outline. This bygone mode of existence has
already become an acquired possession of
the general mind, which constitutes the substance
of the individual, and, by thus appearing
externally to him, furnishes his inorganic
nature. In this respect culture or development
of mind (Bildung), regarded from the side
of the individual, consists in his acquiring
what lies at his hand ready for him, in making
its inorganic nature organic to himself,
and taking possession of it for himself.
Looked at, however, from the side of universal
mind qua general spiritual substance, culture
means nothing else than that this substance
gives itself its own self-consciousness,
brings about its own inherent process and
its own reflection into self.
Science lays before us the morphogenetic
process of this cultural development in all
its detailed fullness and necessity, and
at the same time shows it to be something
that has already sunk into the mind as a
moment of its being and become a possession
of mind. The goal to be reached is the mind's
insight into what knowing is. Impatience
asks for the impossible, wants to reach the
goal without the means of getting there.
The length of the journey has to be borne
with, for every moment is necessary; and
again we must halt at every stage, for each
is itself a complete individual form, and
is fully and finally considered only so far
as its determinate character is taken and
dealt with as a rounded and concrete whole,
or only so far as the whole is looked at
in the light of the special and peculiar
character which this determination gives
it. Because the substance of individual mind,
nay, more, because the universal mind at
work in the world (Weltgeist), has had the
patience to go through these forms in the
long stretch of time's extent, and to take
[91] upon itself the prodigious labour of
the world's history, where it bodied forth
in each form the entire content of itself,
as each is capable of presenting it; and
because by nothing less could that all-pervading
mind ever manage to become conscious of what
itself is-for that reason, the individual
mind, in the nature of the case, cannot expect
by less toil to grasp what its own substance
contains. All the same, its task has meanwhile
been made much lighter, because this has
historically been implicitly (an sich) accomplished,
the content is one where reality is already
cancelled for spiritual possibilities, where
immediacy has been overcome and brought under
the control of reflection, the various forms
and shapes have been already reduced to their
intellectual abbreviations, to determinations
of thought
(Gedankenbestimmung) pure and simple. Being
now a thought, the content is the property
of the substance of mind; existence has no
more to be changed into the form of what
is inherent and implicit (Ansichseins), but
only the implicit-no longer merely something
primitive, nor lying hidden within existence,
but already present as a recollection-into
the form of what is explicit, of what is
objective to self (Fürsichseins).
9. The transformation of the notion and the
familiar into thought --
We have to state more exactly the way this
is done. At the point at which we here take
up this movement, we are spared, in connexion
with the whole, the process of cancelling
and transcending the stage of mere existence.
This process has already taken place. What
is still to be done and needs a higher kind
of transformation, is to transcend the forms
as ideally presented and made familiar to
our minds. By that previous negative process,
existence, having been withdrawn into the
mind's substance, is, in the first instance,
transferred to the life of self only in an
immediate way. The property the self has
thereby acquired, has still the same character
of uncomprehended immediacy, of passive indifference,
which existence itself had; [92] existence
has in this way merely passed into the form
of an ideal presentation. At the same time,
by so doing, it is something familiar to
us, something "well-known", something
which the existent mind has finished and
done with, and hence takes no more to do
with and no further interest in. While the
activity that is done with the existent is
itself merely the process of the particular
mind, of mind which is not comprehending
itself, on the other hand, knowledge is directed
against this ideal presentation which has
hereby arisen, against this "being-familiar"
and "well-known"; it is an action
of universal mind, the concern of thought.
What is "familiarly known" is not
properly known, just for the reason that
it is "familiar". When engaged
in the process of knowing, it is the commonest
form of self-deception, and a deception of
other people as well, to assume something
to be familiar, and give assent to it on
that very account. Knowledge of that sort,
with all its talk, never gets from the spot,
but has no idea that this is the case. Subject
and object, and so on, God, nature, understanding,
sensibility, etc., are uncritically presupposed
as familiar and something valid, and become
fixed points from which to start and to which
to return. The process of knowing flits between
these secure points, and in consequence goes
on merely along the surface. Apprehending
and proving consist similarly in seeing whether
every one finds what is said corresponding
to his idea too, whether it is familiar and
seems to him so and so or not.
Analysis of an idea, as it used to be carried
out, did in fact consist in nothing else
than doing away with its character of familiarity.
To break up an idea into its ultimate elements
means returning upon its moments, which at
least do not have the form of the given idea
when found, but are the immediate property
of the self. Doubtless this analysis only
arrives at thoughts which are themselves
familiar elements, fixed inert [93] determinations.
But what is thus separated, and in a sense
is unreal, is itself an essential moment;
for just because the concrete fact is self-divided,
and turns into unreality, it is something
self-moving, self- active. The action of
separating the elements is the exercise of
the force of Understanding, the most astonishing
and greatest of all powers, or rather the
absolute power. The circle, which is self-enclosed
and at rest, and, qua substance, holds its
own moments, is an immediate relation, the
immediate, continuous relation of elements
with their unity, and hence arouses no sense
of wonderment. But that an accident as such,
when out loose from its containing circumference,--that
what is bound and held by something else
and actual only by being connected with it,--should
obtain an existence all its own, gain freedom
and independence on its own account-this
is the portentous power of the negative;
it is the energy of thought, of pure ego.
Death, as we may call that unreality, is
the most terrible thing, and to keep and
hold fast what is dead demands the greatest
force of all. Beauty, powerless and helpless,
hates understanding, because the latter exacts
from it what it cannot perform. But the life
of mind is not one that shuns death, and
keeps clear of destruction; it endures death
and in death maintains its being. It only
wins to its truth when it finds itself utterly
torn asunder. It is this mighty power, not
by being a positive which turns away from
the negative, as when we say of anything
it is nothing or it is false, and, being
then done with it, pass off to something
else: on the contrary, mind is this power
only by looking the negative in the face,
and dwelling with it. This dwelling beside
it is the magic power that converts the negative
into being. That power is just what we spoke
of above as subject, which by giving determinateness
a place in its substance, cancels abstract
immediacy, [94] i. e. immediacy which merely
is, and, by so doing, becomes the true substance,
becomes being or immediacy that does not
have mediation outside it, but is this mediation
itself.
10. -- and this into the Concept/Notion
This process of making what is objectively
presented a possession of pure self-consciousness,
of raising it to the level of universality
in general, is merely one aspect of mental
development; spiritual evolution is not yet
completed. The manner of study in ancient
times is distinct from that of the modem
world, in that the former consisted in the
cultivation and perfecting of the natural
mind. Testing life carefully at all points,
philosophizing about everything it came across,
the former created an experience permeated
through and through by universals. In modem
times, however, an individual finds the abstract
form ready made. In straining to grasp it
and make it his own, he rather strives to
bring forward the inner meaning alone, without
any process of mediation; the production
of the universal is abridged, instead of
the universal arising out of the manifold
detail of concrete existence. Hence nowadays
the task before us consists not so much in
getting the individual clear of the stage
of sensuous immediacy, and making him a substance
that thinks and is grasped in terms of thought,
but rather the very opposite: it consists
in actualizing the universal, and giving
it spiritual vitality, by the process of
breaking down and superseding fixed and determinate
thoughts. But it is much more difficult to
make fixed and definite thoughts fuse with
one another and form a continuous whole than
to bring sensuous existence into this state.
The reason lies in what was said before.
Thought determinations get their substance
and the element of their existence from the
ego, the power of the negative, or pure reality;
while determinations of sense find this in
impotent abstract immediacy, in mere being
as such. Thoughts become fluent and inter-
[95] fuse, when thinking pure and simple,
this inner immediacy, knows itself as a moment,
when pure certainty of self abstracts from
itself. It does not "abstract"
in the sense of getting away from itself
and setting itself on one side, but of surrendering
the fixed quality of its self- affirmation,
and giving up both the fixity of the purely
concrete-which is the ego as contrasted with
the variety of its content-and the fixity
of all those distinctions [the various thought-functions,
principles, etc.] which are present in the
element of pure thought and share that absoluteness
of the ego. In virtue of this process pure
thoughts become notions, concepts, and are
then what they are in truth, self-moving
functions, circles, are what their substance
consists in, are spiritual entities.
This movement of the spiritual entities constitutes
the nature of scientific procedure in general.
Looked at as the concatenation of their content,
this movement is the necessitated development
and expansion of that content into an organic
systematic whole. By this movement, too,
the road, which leads to the notion of knowledge,
becomes itself likewise a necessary and complete
evolving process (Werden). This preparatory
stage thus ceases to consist of casual philosophical
reflections, referring to objects here and
there, to processes and thoughts of the undeveloped
mind as chance may direct; and it does not
try to establish the truth by miscellaneous
ratiocinations, inferences, and consequences
drawn from circumscribed thoughts. The road
to science, by the very movement of the notion
itself, will compass the entire objective
world of conscious life in its rational necessity.
Further, a systematic exposition like this
constitutes the first part of science, because
the positive existence of mind, qua primary
and ultimate, is nothing but the immediate
aspect of mind, the beginning; the [96] beginning,
but not yet its return to itself. The characteristic
feature distinguishing this part of science
[Phenomenology] from the others is the element
of positive immediate existence. The mention
of this distinction leads us to discuss certain
established ideas that usually come to notice
in this connexion.
The mind's immediate existence, conscious
life, has two aspects--cognition and objectivity
which is opposed to or negative of the subjective
function of knowing. Since it is in the medium
of consciousness that mind is developed and
brings out its various moments, this opposition
between the factors of conscious life is
found at each stage in the evolution of mind,
and all the various moments appear as modes
or forms (Gestalten) of consciousness. The
scientific statement of the course of this
development is a science of the experience
through which consciousness passes; the substance
and its process are considered as the object
of consciousness. Consciousness knows and
comprehends nothing but what falls within
its experience; for what is found in experience
is merely spiritual substance, and, moreover,
object of its self. Mind, however, becomes
object, for it consists in the process of
becoming an other to itself, i. e. an object
for its own self, and in transcending this
otherness. And experience is called this
very process by which the element that is
immediate, unexperienced, i. e. abstract-whether
it be in the form of sense or of a bare thought--externalizes
itself, and then comes back to itself from
this state of estrangement, and by so doing
is at length set forth in its concrete nature
and real truth, and becomes too a possession
of consciousness.
The dissimilarity which obtains in consciousness
between the ego and the substance constituting
its object, is their inner distinction, the
factor of negativity in general. We may regard
it as the defect of [97] both opposites,
but it is their very soul, their moving spirit.
It was on this account that certain thinkers
long ago took the void to be the principle
of movement, when they conceived the moving
principle to be the negative element, though
they had not as yet thought of it as self.
While this negative factor appears in the
first instance as a dissimilarity, as an
inequality, between ego and object, it is
just as much the inequality of the substance
with itself. What seems to take place outside
it, to be an activity directed against it,
is its own doing, its own activity; and substance
shows that it is in reality subject. When
it has brought out this completely, mind
has made its existence adequate to and one
with its essential nature. Mind is object
to itself just as it is, and the abstract
element of immediacy, of the separation between
knowing and the truth, is overcome. Being
is entirely mediated; it is a substantial
content, that is likewise directly in the
possession of the ego, has the character
of self, is notion. With the attainment of
this the Phenomenology of Mind concludes.
What mind prepares for itself in the course
of its phenomenology is the element of true
knowledge. In this element the moments of
mind are now set out in the form of thought
pure and simple, which knows its object to
be itself. They no longer involve the opposition
between being and knowing; they remain within
the undivided simplicity of the knowing function;
they are the truth in the form of truth,
and their diversity is merely diversity of
the content of truth. The process by which
they are developed into an organically connected
whole is Logic or Speculative Philosophy.
11. In what way the Phenomenology of the
Spirit is negative or contains what is false
Now, because the systematic statement of
the mind's experience embraces merely its
ways of appearing, it may well seem that
the advance from that to the science of ultimate
truth in the form of truth is [98] merely
negative; and we might readily be content
to dispense with the negative process as
something altogether false, and might ask
to be taken straight to the truth at once:
why meddle with what is false at all? The
point formerly raised, that we should have
begun with science at once, may be answered
here by considering the character of negativity
in general regarded as something false. The
usual ideas on this subject particularly
obstruct the approach to the truth. The consideration
of this point will give us an opportunity
to speak about mathematical knowledge, which
non-philosophical knowledge looks upon as
the ideal which philosophy ought to try to
attain, but has so far striven in vain to
reach.
Truth and falsehood as commonly understood
belong to those sharply defined ideas which
claim a completely fixed nature of their
own, one standing in solid isolation on this
side, the other on that, without any community
between them. Against that view it must be
pointed out, that truth is not like stamped
coin that is issued ready from the mint and
so can be taken up and used. Nor, again,
is there something false, any more than there
is something evil. Evil and falsehood are
indeed not so bad as the devil, for in the
form of the devil they get the length of
being particular subjects; qua false and
evil they are merely universals, though they
have a nature of their own with reference
to one another. Falsity (that is what we
are dealing with here) would be otherness,
the negative aspect of the substance, which
[substance], qua content of knowledge, is
truth. But the substance is itself essentially
the negative element, partly as involving
distinction and determination of content,
partly as being a process of distinguishing
pure and simple, i. e. as being self and
knowledge in general. Doubtless we can know
in a way that is false. To know something
falsely means [99] that knowledge is not
adequate to, is not on equal terms with,
its substance. Yet this very dissimilarity
is the process of distinction in general,
the essential moment in knowing. It is, in
fact, out of this active distinction that
its harmonious unity arises, and this identity,
when arrived at, is truth. But it is not
truth in a sense which would involve the
rejection of the discordance, the diversity,
like dross from pure metal; nor, again, does
truth remain detached from diversity, like
a finished article from the instrument that
shapes it. Difference itself continues to
be an immediate element within truth as such,
in the form of the principle of negation,
in the form of the activity of Self. All
the same, we cannot for that reason say that
falsehood is a moment or forms even a constituent
part of truth. That "in every case of
falsity there is something true" is
an expression in which they are taken to
be like oil and water, which do not mix and
are merely united externally. Just in the
interest of their real meaning, precisely
because we want to designate the aspect or
moment of complete otherness, the terms true
and false must no longer be used where their
otherness has been cancelled and superseded.
Just as the expressions "unity of subject
and object", of "finite and infinite",
of "being and thought", etc., are
clumsy when subject and object, etc., are
taken to mean what they are outside their
unity, and are thus in that unity not meant
to be what its very expression conveys; in
the same way falsehood is not, qua false,
any longer a moment of truth.
Dogmatism as a way of thinking, whether in
ordinary knowledge or in the study of philosophy,
is nothing else but the view that truth consists
in a proposition, which is a fixed and final
result, or again which is directly known.
To questions like, "When was Caesar
born?". "How many feet make a furlongs",
etc., a straight answer ought to be given;
just as it is abso- [100] lutely true that
the square of the hypotenuse is equal to
the sum of the squares of the other two sides
of a right-angled triangle. But the nature
of a so-called truth of that sort is different
from the nature of philosophical truth.
12. Historical and mathematical truth
As regards truth in matters of historical
fact-to deal briefly with this subject--so
far as we consider the purely historical
element, it will be readily granted that
they have to do with the sphere of particular
existence, with a content in its contingent
and arbitrary aspects, features that have
no necessity. But even bare truths of the
kind, say, like those mentioned, are impossible
without the activity of self -consciousness.
In order to know any one of them, there has
to be a good deal of comparison, books must
be consulted, or in some way or other inquiry
has to be made. Even in a case of direct
perception, only when we know it along with
the reasons behind it, is it held to be something
of real value; although it is merely the
naked fact itself that we are, properly speaking,
supposed to be concerned about.
As to mathematical truths, we should be still
less inclined to consider anyone a geometer
who had got Euclid's theorems by heart (auswendig)
without knowing the proofs, without, if we
may say so by way of contrast, getting them
into his head (inwendig). Similarly, if anyone
came to know by measuring many right-angled
triangles that their sides are related in
the way everybody knows, we should regard
knowledge so obtained as unsatisfactory.
All the same, while proof is essential in
the case of mathematical knowledge, it still
does not have the significance and nature
of being a moment in the result itself ;
the proof is over when we get the result,
and has disappeared. Qua result the theorem
is, no doubt, one that is seen to be true.
But this eventuality has nothing to do with
its content, but only with its relation to
the knowing [101] subject. The process of
mathematical proof does not belong to the
object; it is a function that takes place
outside the matter in hand. Thus, the nature
of a right-angled triangle does not break
itself up into factors in the manner set
forth in the mathematical construction which
is required to prove the proposition expressing
the relation of its parts. The entire process
of producing the result is an affair of knowledge
which takes its own way of going about it.
In philosophical knowledge, too, the way
existence, qua existence, comes about (Werden)
is different from that whereby the essence
or inner nature of the fact comes into being.
But philosophical knowledge, for one thing,
contains both, while mathematical knowledge
sets forth merely the way an existence comes
about, i. e. the way the nature of the fact
gets to be in the sphere of knowledge as
such. For another thing, too, philosophical
knowledge unites both these particular movements.
The inward rising into being, the process
of substance, is an unbroken transition into
outwardness, into existence or being for
another; and conversely, the coming of existence
into being is withdrawal into the inner essence.
The movement is the twofold process in which
the whole comes to be, and is such that each
at the same time posits the other, and each
on that account has in it both as its two
aspects. Together they make the whole, through
their resolving each other, and making themselves
into moments of the whole.
In mathematical knowledge the insight required
is an external function so far as the subject-matter
dealt with is concerned. It follows that
the actual fact is thereby altered. The means
taken, construction and proof, contain, no
doubt, true propositions; but all the same
we are bound to say that the content is false.
The triangle in the above example is taken
to pieces, and its parts made into other
figures to which the construction in the
triangle gives rise. It is only [102] at
the end that we find again reinstated the
triangle we are really concerned with; it
was lost sight of in the course of the construction,
and was present merely in fragments, that
belonged to other wholes. Thus we find negativity
of content coming in here too, a negativity
which would have to be called falsity, just
as much as in the case of the movement of
the notion where thoughts that are taken
to be fixed pass away and disappear.
The real defect of this kind of knowledge,
however, affects its process of knowing as
much as its material. As to that process,
in the first place we do not see any necessity
in the construction. The necessity does not
arise from the nature of the theorem: it
is imposed; and the injunction to draw just
these lines, an infinite number of others
being equally possible, is blindly acquiesced
in, without our knowing anything further,
except that, as we fondly believe, this will
serve our purpose in producing the proof.
Later on this design then comes out too,
and is therefore merely external in character,
just because it is only after the proof is
found that it comes to be known. In the same
way, again, the proof takes a direction that
begins anywhere we like, without our knowing
as yet what relation this beginning has to
the result to be brought out. In its course,
it takes up certain specific elements and
relations and lets others alone, without
its being directly obvious what necessity
there is in the matter. An external purpose
controls this process.
The evidence peculiar to this defective way
of knowing--an evidence on the strength of
which mathematics plumes itself and proudly
struts before philosophy--rests solely on
the poverty of its purpose and the defectiveness
of its material, and is on that account of
a kind that philosophy must scorn to have
anything to do with. Its purpose or principle
is quantity. This is precisely the relationship
that is non-essential, alien [103] to the
character of the notion. The process of knowledge
goes on, therefore, on the surface, does
not affect the concrete fact itself, does
not touch its inner nature or lotion, and
is hence not a conceptual way of comprehending.
The material which provides mathematics with
these welcome treasures of truth consists
of space and numerical units
(das Eins). Space is that kind of existence
wherein the concrete notion inscribes the
diversity it contains, as in an empty, lifeless
element in which its differences likewise
subsist in passive, lifeless form. What is
concretely actual is not something spatial,
such as is treated of in mathematics. With
unrealities like the things mathematics takes
account of, neither concrete sensuous perception
nor philosophy has anything to do. In an
unreal element of that sort we find, then,
only unreal truth, fixed lifeless propositions.
We can call a halt at any of them; the next
begins of itself de novo, without the first
having led up to the one that follows, and
without any necessary connexion having in
this way arisen from the nature of the subject-matter
itself. So, too--and herein consists the
formal character of mathematical evidence
because of that principle and the element
where it applies, knowledge advances along
the lines of bare equality, of abstract identity.
For what is lifeless, not being self-moved,
does not bring about distinction within its
essential nature; does not attain to essential
opposition or unlikeness; and hence involves
no transition of one opposite element into
its other, no qualitative, immanent movement,
no self-movement, It is quantity, a form
of difference that does not touch the essential
nature, which alone mathematics deals with.
It abstracts from the fact that it is the
notion which separates space into its dimensions,
and determines the connexions between them
and in them. It does not consider, for example,
the relation of line to surface, and when
it compares the diameter of a [104] circle
with its circumference, it runs up against
their incommensurability, i. e. a relation
in terms of the notion, an infinite element,
that escapes mathematical determination.
Immanent or so-called pure mathematics, again,
does not oppose time qua time to space, as
a second subject-matter for consideration.
Applied mathematics, no doubt, treats of
time, as also of motion, and other concrete
things as well; but it picks up from experience
synthetic propositions -- i. e. statements
of their relations, which are determined
by their conceptual nature -- and merely
applies its formulae to those propositions
assumed to start with. That the so-called
proofs of propositions like that concerning
the equilibrium of the lever, the relation
of space and time in gravitation, etc., which
applied mathematics frequently gives, should
be taken and given as proofs, is itself merely
a proof of how great the need is for knowledge
to have a process of proof, seeing that,
even where proof is not to be had, knowledge
yet puts a value on the mere semblance of
it, and gets thereby a certain sense of satisfaction.
A criticism of those proofs would be as instructive
as it would be significant, if the criticism
could strip mathematics of this artificial
finery, and bring out its limitations, and
thence show the necessity for another type
of knowledge.
As to time, which, it is to be presumed,
would, by way of the counterpart to space,
constitute the object-matter of the other
division of pure mathematics, this is the
notion itself in the form of existence. The
principle of quantity, of difference which
is not determined by the notion, and the
principle of equality, of abstract, lifeless
unity, are incapable of dealing with that
sheer restlessness of life and its absolute
and inherent process of differentiation.
It is therefore only in an arrested, paralysed
form, only in the form of the quantitative
unit, that this essentially negative activity
becomes [105] the second object-matter of
this way of knowing, which, itself an external
operation, degrades what is self-moving to
the level of mere matter, in order thus to
get an indifferent, external, lifeless content.
13. The nature of philosophical truth and
its method
Philosophy, on the contrary, does not deal
with a determination that is non-essential,
but with a determination so far as it is
an essential factor. The abstract or unreal
is not its element and content, but the real,
what is self-establishing, has life within
itself, existence in its very notion. It
is the process that creates its own moments
in its course, and goes through them all;
and the whole of this movement constitutes
its positive content and its truth. This
movement includes, therefore, within it the
negative factor as well, the element which
would be named falsity if it could be considered
one from which we had to abstract. The element
that disappears has rather to be looked at
as itself essential, not in the sense of
being something fixed, that has to be cut
off from truth and allowed to lie outside
it, heaven knows where; just as similarly
the truth is not to be held to stand on the
other side as an immovable lifeless positive
element. Appearance is the process of arising
into being and passing away again, a process
that itself does not arise and does not pass
away, but is per se, and constitutes reality
and the life-movement of truth. The truth
is thus the bacchanalian revel, where not
a member is sober; and because every member
no sooner becomes detached than it eo ipso
collapses straightway, the revel is just
as much a state of transparent unbroken calm.
Judged by that movement, the particular shapes
which mind assumes do not indeed subsist
any more than do determinate thoughts or
ideas; but they are, all the same, as much
positive and necessary moments, as negative
and transitory. In the entirety of the movement,
taken as an unbroken quiescent whole, that
which obtains distinctness in the course
of its process and secures specific [106]
existence, is preserved in the form of a
self -recollection, in which existence is
self- knowledge, and self-knowledge, again,
is immediate existence.
It might well seem necessary to state at
the outset the chief points in connexion
with the method of this process, the way
in which science operates. Its nature, however,
is to be found in what has already been said,
while the proper systematic exposition of
it is the special business of Logic, or rather
is Logic itself. For the method is nothing
else than the structure of the whole in its
pure and essential form. In regard, however,
to what has been hitherto currently held
on this point, we must be sensible that the
system of ideas bearing on the question of
philosophical method, belongs also to a stage
of mental culture that has now passed away.
This may perhaps seem somewhat boastful or
revolutionary; and I am far from adopting
an attitude of that sort; but it is significant
that the scientific régime bequeathed by
mathematics--a régime of explanations, divisions,
axioms, an array of theorems, with proofs,
principles, and the consequences and conclusions
drawn from them--all this has already come
to be generally considered as at any rate
out of date. Even though there is no clear
idea why it is unsuitable, yet little or
no use is made of it any longer; and even
though it is not condemned outright, it is
all the same not in favour. And we must be
so far prejudiced in favour of what is excellent
to believe that it can turn itself to practical
account, and make itself acceptable. But
it is not difficult to see that the method
of propounding a proposition, producing reasons
for it and then refuting its opposite by
reasons too, is not the form in which truth
can appear. Truth moves itself by its very
nature; but the method just mentioned is
a form of knowledge external to its material.
Hence it is peculiar to mathematics and must
be left to mathematics, which, as already
indicated, takes for [107] its principle
the relation of quantity, a relation alien
to the notion, and gets its material from
lifeless space, and the equally lifeless
numerical unit. Or, again, such a method,
adopting a freer style, one involving more
of arbitrariness and chance, may have a place
in ordinary life, in a conversation, or in
supplying matter-of-fact instruction for
the satisfaction of curiosity rather than
knowledge, very much as a preface does. In
every-day life the mind finds its content
in different kinds of knowledge, experiences
of various sorts, concrete facts of sense,
thoughts, too, and principles, and, in general,
in whatever lies ready to hand, or passes
for a solid stable entity, or real being.
The mind follows wherever this leads, sometimes
interrupting the connexion by an unrestrained
caprice in dealing with the content, and
takes up the attitude of determining and
handling it in quite an external fashion.
It runs the content back to some touchstone
of certainty or other, even though it be
but the feeling of the moment; and conviction
is satisfied if it reaches some familiar
resting-place.
But when the necessity of the notion banishes
from its realm the loose procedure of the
"raisonnements" of conversation,
as well as the pedantic style of scientific
pomposity, its place, as we have already
mentioned, must not be taken by the disconnected
utterance of presageful surmise and inspiration,
and the arbitrary caprice of prophetic utterance;
for this does not merely despise that particular
form of scientific procedure, but contemns
scientific procedure altogether.
14. Against schematizing formalism
Now that the triplicity, adopted in the system
of Kant--a method rediscovered, to begin
with, by instinctive insight, but left lifeless
and uncomprehended--has been raised to its
significance as an absolute method, true
form is thereby set up in its true content,
and the conception of science has come to
light. But [108] the use this form has been
put to in certain quarters has no right to
the name of science. For we see it there
reduced to a lifeless schema, to nothing
better than a mere shadow, and scientific
organization to a synoptic table. This formalism--about
which we spoke before in general terms, and
whose procedure we wish here to state more
fully--thinks it has comprehended and expressed
the nature and life of a given form when
it proclaims a determination of the schema
to be its predicate. The predicate may be
subjectivity or objectivity, or again magnetism,
electricity, and so on, contraction or expansion,
East or West, and such like--a form of predication
that can be multiplied indefinitely, because
according to this way of working each determination,
each mode, can be applied as a form or schematic
element in the case of every other, and each
will thankfully perform. the same service
for any other. With a circle of reciprocities
of this sort it is impossible to make out
what the real fact in question is, or what
the one or the other is. We find there sometimes
constituents of sense picked up from ordinary
intuition, determinate elements which to
be sure should mean something else than they
say; at other times what is inherently significant,
viz. pure determinations of thought-like
subject, object, substance, cause, universality,
etc.-these are applied just as uncritically
and unreflectingly as in every-day life,
are used much as people employ the terms
strong and weak, expansion and contraction.
As a result that type of metaphysics is as
unscientific as those ideas of sense.
Instead of the inner activity and self-movement
of its own actual life, such a simple determination
of direct intuition (Anschauung) - which
means here sense- knowledge - is predicated
in accordance with a superficial analogy,
and this external and empty application of
the formula is called "construction".
The same thing happens here, however, as
in the case of every kind [109] of formalism.
A man's head must be indeed dull if he could
not in a quarter of an hour get up the theory
that there are enervating, innervating, and
indirectly enervating diseases and as many
cures, and who could not--since not so long
ago instruction of that sort sufficed for
the purpose-in as short a time be turned
from being a man who works by rule of thumb
into a theoretical physician. Formalism in
the case of speculative Philosophy of Nature
(Naturphilosophie) takes the shape of teaching
that understanding is electricity, animals
are nitrogen, or equivalent to South or North
and so on. When it does this, whether as
badly as it is here expressed or even concocted
with more terminology, such forceful procedure
brings and holds together elements to all
appearance far removed from one another;
the violence done to stable inert sense-elements
by connecting them in this way, confers on
them merely the semblance of a conceptual
unity, and spares itself the trouble of doing
what is after all the important thing--expressing
the notion itself, the meaning that underlies
sense-ideas. All this sort of thing may strike
anyone who has no experience with admiration
and wonder. He may be awed by the profound
genius he thinks it displays, and be delighted
at the happy ingenuity of such characterizations,
since they fill the place of the abstract
notion with something tangible and sensuous,
and so make it more pleasing; and he may
congratulate himself on feeling an instinctive
mental affinity for that glorious way of
proceeding. The trick of wisdom of that sort
is as quickly acquired as it is easy to practise.
Its repetition, when once it is familiar,
becomes as boring as the repetition of any
bit of sleight-of-hand once we see through
it. The instrument for producing this monotonous
formalism is no more difficult to handle
than the palette of a painter, on which lie
only two colours, [110] say red and green,
the former for colouring the surface when
we want a historical piece, the latter when
we want a bit of landscape. It would be difficult
to settle which is greater in all this, the
agreeable ease with which everything in heaven
and earth and under the earth is plastered
with that botch of colour, or the conceit
that prides itself on the excellence of its
means for every conceivable purpose; the
one lends support to the other. What results
from the use of this method of sticking on
to everything in heaven and earth, to every
kind of shape and form, natural and spiritual,
the pair of determinations from the general
schema, and filing everything in this manner,
is no less than an "account as clear
as noonday" of the organized whole of
the universe. It is, that is to say, a synoptic
index, like a skeleton with tickets stuck
all over it, or like the rows of boxes kept
shut and labelled in a grocer's stall; and
is as intelligible as either the one or the
other. It has lost hold of the living nature
of concrete fact; just as in the former case
we have merely dry bones with flesh and blood
all gone, and in the latter, there is shut
away in those boxes something equally lifeless
too. We have already remarked that the final
outcome of this style of thinking is, at
the same time, to paint entirely in one kind
of colour; for it turns with contempt from
the distinctions in the schematic table,
looks on them as belonging to the activity
of mere reflection, and lets them drop out
of sight in the void of the Absolute, and
there reinstates pure identity, pure formless
whiteness. Such uniformity of colouring in
the schema with its lifeless determinations,
this absolute identity, and the transition
from one to the other--these are the one
as well as the other, the expression of inert
lifeless understanding, and equally an external
process of knowledge. [111]
Not only can what is excellent not escape
the fate of being thus devitalized and despiritualized
and excoriated of seeing its skin paraded
about by lifeless knowledge and the conceit
such knowledge engenders; but rather, such
a fate lets us realize the power the "excellent"
exercises over the heart (Gemüth), if not
over the mind (Geist). Moreover, we recognize
thereby, too, the constructive unfolding
into universality and determinateness of
form which marks the complete attainment
of excellence, and which alone makes it possible
that this universality can be turned to superficial
uses.
Science can become an organic system only
by the inherent life of the notion. In science
the determinateness, which was taken from
the schema and stuck on to existing facts
in external fashion, is the self directing
inner soul of the concrete content. The movement
of what is partly consists in becoming another
to itself, and thus developing explicitly
into its own immanent content; partly, again,
it takes this evolved content, this existence
it assumes, back into itself, i. e. makes
itself into a moment, and reduces itself
to simple determinateness. In the first stage
of the process negativity lies in the function
of distinguishing and establishing existence;
in this latter return into self, negativity
consists in the bringing about of determinate
simplicity. It is in this way that the content
shows its specific characteristic not to
be received from something else, and stuck
on externally; the content gives itself this
determinate characteristic, appoints itself
of its own initiative to the rank of a moment
and to a place in the whole. The pigeon-holing
process of understanding retains for itself
the necessity and the notion controlling
the content, that which constitutes the concrete
element, the actuality and living process
of the subject-matter which it labels: or
rather, understanding does not retain this
for itself, [112] on the contrary, understanding
fails to know it. For if it had as much insight
as that, it would surely show that it had.
It is not even aware of the need for such
insight; if it were, it would drop its schematizing
process, or at least would no longer be satisfied
to know by way of a mere table of contents.
A table of contents is all that understanding
gives, the content itself it does not furnish
at all.
If the specific determination (say even one
like magnetism) is one that in itself is
concrete or actual, it all the same gets
degraded into something lifeless and inert,
since it is merely predicated of another
existing entity, and not known as an immanent
living principle of this existence; nor is
there any comprehension of how in this entity
its intrinsic and peculiar way of expressing
and producing itself takes effect. This,
the very kernel of the matter, formal understanding
leaves to others to add later on. Instead
of making its way into the inherent content
of the matter in hand, understanding always
takes a survey of the whole, assumes a position
above the particular existence about which
it is speaking, i. e. it does not see it
at all. True scientific knowledge, on the
contrary, demands abandonment to the very
life of the object, or, which means the same
thing, claims to have before it the inner
necessity controlling the object, and to
express this only. Steeping itself in its
object, it forgets to take that general survey,
which is merely a turning of knowledge away
from the content back into itself. But being
sunk into the material in hand, and following
the course that such material takes, true
knowledge returns back into itself, yet not
before the content in its fullness is taken
into itself, is reduced to the simplicity
of being a determinate characteristic, drops
to the level of being one aspect of an existing
entity, and passes over into its higher truth.
By this process the whole as such, surveying
its entire content, itself [113] emerges
out of the wealth wherein its process of
reflection seemed to be lost.
In general, in virtue of the principle that,
as we expressed it before, substance is implicitly
and in itself subject, all content makes
its reflection into itself in its own special
way. The subsistence or substance of anything
that exists is its self-identity; for its
want of identity, or oneness with itself,
would be its dissolution. But self-identity
is pure abstraction; and this is just thinking.
When I say Quality, I state simple determinateness;
by means of its quality one existence is
distinguished from another or is an "existence";
it is for itself, something on its own account,
or subsists with itself because of this simple
characteristic. But by doing so it is essentially
Thought.
Here we find contained the principle that
Being is Thought: here is exercised that
insight which usually tends to deviate from
the ordinary non-conceptual way of speaking
of the identity of thought and being. In
virtue, further, of the fact that subsistence
on the part of what exists is self-identity
or pure abstraction, it is the abstraction
of itself from itself, in other words, is
itself its own want of identity with itself
and dissolution--its own proper inwardness
and retraction into self--its process of
becoming.
Owing, to the nature which being thus has,
and so far as what is has this nature from
the point of view of knowledge, this thinking
is not an activity which treats the content
as something alien and external; it is not
reflection into self away from the content.
Science is not that kind of Idealism which
stepped into the place of the Dogmatism of
mere assertion and took the shape of a Dogmatism
of mere assurance, the Dogmatism of mere
self-certainty. Rather, since knowledge sees
the content go back into its own proper inner
nature, the activity of knowledge is absorbed
in that content--for it (the activity) is
the immanent self of the content [114] --and
is also at the same time returned into itself,
for this activity is pure self-identity in
otherness. In this way the knowing activity
is the artful device which, while seeming
to refrain from activity, looks on and watches
how specific determinateness with its concrete
life, just where it believes it is working
out its own self-preservation and its own
private interest, is, in point of fact, doing
the very opposite, is doing what brings about
its own dissolution and makes itself a moment
in the whole.
While, in the foregoing, the significance
of Understanding was stated from the point
of view of the self-consciousness of substance;
by what has been here stated we can see clearly
its significance from the point of view of
substance qua being. Existence is Quality,
self-identical determinateness, or determinate
simplicity, determinate thought: this is
existence from the point of view of Understanding.
On this account it is <@bl, as Anaxagoras
first thought reality to be. Those who succeeded
him grasped the nature of existence in a
more determinate way as ,\*@l or 4*X"
i.e. as determinate or specific universality,
kind or species. The term species or kind
seems indeed too ordinary and inadequate
for Ideas, for beauty, holiness, eternal,
which are the vogue in these days. As a matter
of fact, however, idea (4*X") means
neither more nor less than kind, species.
But we often find nowadays that a term which
exactly designates a conception is despised
and rejected, and another preferred to it
which hides and obscures the conception,
and thus sounds more edifying, even though
this is merely due to its being expressed
in a foreign language.
Precisely for the reason that existence is
designated a species or kind, it is naked
simple thought: <@bl, simplicity, is substance.
It is on account of its simplicity, its self-identity,
that it appears steady, fixed, and permanent.
But this self-identity is likewise [115]
negativity; hence that fixed and stable existence
carries the process of its own dissolution
within itself. The determinateness appears
at first to be so solely through its relation
to something else; and its process seems
imposed and forced upon it externally. But
its having its own otherness within itself,
and the fact of its being a self-initiated
process--these are implied in the very simplicity
of thought itself. For this is self-moving
thought, thought that distinguishes, is inherent
inwardness, the pure notion. Thus, then,
it is the very nature of understanding to
be a process; and being a process it is Rationality.
In the nature of existence as thus described--to
be its own notion and being in one-- consists
logical necessity in general. This alone
is what is rational, the rhythm of the organic
whole: it is as much knowledge of content
as that content is notion and essential nature.
In other words, this alone is the sphere
and element of speculative thought. The concrete
shape of the content is resolved by its'
own inherent process into a simple determinate
quality. Thereby it is raised to logical
form, and its being and essence coincide;
its concrete existence is merely this process
that takes place, and is eo ipso logical
existence. It is therefore needless to apply
a formal scheme to the concrete content in
an external fashion; the content is in its
very nature a transition into a formal shape,
which, however, ceases to be formalism of
an external kind, because the form is the
indwelling process of the concrete content
itself.
This nature of scientific method, which consists
partly in being inseparable from the content,
and partly in determining the rhythm of its
movement by its own agency, finds, as we
mentioned before, its peculiar systematic
expression in speculative philosophy. What
is here stated describes in effect the essential
principle; but cannot stand for more at this
[116] stage than an assertion or assurance
by way of anticipation. The truth it contains
is not to be found in this exposition, which
is in part historical in character. And just
for that reason, too, it is not in the least
refuted if anyone assures us on the contrary
that this is not so, that the process instead
is here so and so; if ideas we are all used
to, being truths accepted or settled and
familiar to everyone, are brought to mind
and recounted; or, again, if something new
is served up and Guaranteed as coming from
the inner sanctuaries of inspired intuition.
Such a view is bound to meet with opposition.
The first instinctive reaction on the part
of knowing, when offered something that was
unfamiliar, is usually to resist it. It seeks
by that means to save freedom and native
insight, to secure its own inherent authority
against alien authority--for that is the
way anything apprehended for the first time
appears. This attitude is adopted, too, in
order to do away with the semblance of a
kind of disgrace which would lie in the fact
that something has had to be learnt. In like
manner, again, when the unfamiliar or unknown
is received with applause, the reaction is
in the same way an exaltation of freedom
and native authority. It consists in something
analogous to ultra-revolutionary declamation
and action.
15. The demands of the study of philosophy
Hence the important thing for the student
of science is to make himself undergo the
strenuous toil of conceptual reflection,
of thinking in the form of the notion. This
demands concentrated attention on the notion
as such, on simple and ultimate determinations
like being-in-itself, being-for-itself, self-identity,
and so on; for these are elemental, pure,
self-determined functions of a kind we might
call souls, were it not that their conceptual
nature denotes something higher than that
term contains. The interruption by conceptual
thought of the habit of always thinking in
figurative ideas (Vorstellungen) is as annoying
and troublesome to this [117] way of thinking
as to that process of formal intelligence
which in its reasoning rambles about with
no real thoughts to reason with. The former,
the habit, may be called materialized thinking,
a fortuitous mental state, one that is absorbed
in what is material, and hence finds it very
distasteful at once to lift its self clear
of this matter and be with itself alone.
The latter, the process of raisonnement,
is, on the other hand, detachment from all
content, and conceited superiority to it.
What is wanted here is the effort and struggle
to give up this kind of freedom, and instead
of being a merely arbitrary principle directing
the content anyhow, this freedom should sink
into and pervade the content, should let
it be directed and controlled by its own
proper nature, i. e. by the self as its own
self. and should observe this process taking
place. We must abstain from interrupting
the immanent rhythm of the movement of conceptual
thought; we must refrain from arbitrarily
interfering with it, and introducing ideas
and reflections that have been obtained elsewhere.
Restraint of this sort is itself an essential
condition of attending to and getting at
the real nature of the notion.
16. Argumentative thinking in its negative
attitude --
There are two aspects in the case of that
ratiocinative procedure which mark its contrast
from conceptual thinking and call for further
notice. Raisonnement, in the first place,
adopts a negative attitude towards the content
apprehended; knows how to refute it and reduce
it to nothingness. To see what the content
is not is merely a negative process; it is
a dead halt, which does not of itself go
beyond itself, and proceed to a new content;
it has to get hold of something else from
somewhere or other in order to have once
more a content. It is reflection upon and
into the empty ego, the vanity of its own
knowledge. Conceit of this kind brings out
not only that this content is vain and empty,
but also that to see this is itself fatuity
too: for it is negation with no perception
of the positive [118] element within it.
In that this reflection does not even have
its own negativity as its content, it is
not inside actual fact at all, but for ever
away outside it. On that account it imagines
that by asserting mere emptiness it is going
much farther than insight that embraces and
reveals a wealth of content. On the other
hand, in the case of conceptual thinking,
as was above indicated, the negative aspect
falls within the content itself, and is the
positive substance of that content, as well
as being its inherent character and moving
principle as by being the entirety of what
these are. Looked at as a result, it is determinate
specific negation, the negative which is
the outcome of this process, and consequently
is a positive content as well.
17. -- in its positive attitude; its subject
In view of the fact that ratiocinative thinking
has a content, whether of images or thoughts
or a mixture of both, there is another side
to its process which makes conceptual comprehension
difficult for it. The peculiar nature of
this aspect is closely connected with the
essential meaning of the idea above described,
in fact, expresses the idea in the way this
appears as the process of thinking apprehension.
For just as ratiocinative thinking in its
negative reference, which we have been describing,
is nothing but the self into which the content
returns; in the same way, on the other hand,
in its positive cognitive process the self
is an ideally presented subject to which
the content is related as an accident and
predicate. This subject constitutes the basis
to which the content is attached and on which
the process moves to and fro. Conceptual
thinking goes on in quite a different way.
Since the concept or notion is the very self
of the object, manifesting itself as the
development of the object, it is not a quiescent
subject, passively supporting accidents:
it is a self-determining active concept which
takes up its determinations and makes them
its own. In the course of this process that
inert [119] passive subject really disappears;
it enters into the different constituents
and pervades the content; instead of remaining
in inert antithesis to determinateness of
content, it constitutes, in fact, that very
specificity, i. e. the content as differentiated
along with the process of bringing this about.
Thus the solid basis, which ratiocination
found in an inert subject, is shaken to its
foundations, and the only object is this
very movement of the subject. The subject
supplying the concrete filling to its own
content ceases to be something transcending.
this content, and cannot have further predicates
or accidents. Conversely, again, the scattered
diversity of the content is brought under
the control of the self, and so bound together;
the content is not a universal that can be
detached from the subject, and adapted to
several indifferently. Consequently the content
is in truth no longer predicate of the subject;
it is the very substance, is the inmost reality,
and the very principle of what is being considered.
Ideational thinking
(vorstellen), since its nature consists in
dealing with accidents or predicates, and
in exercising the right to transcend them
because they are nothing more than predicates
and accidents--this way of thinking is checked
in its course, since that which has in the
proposition the form of a predicate is itself
the substance of the statement. It is met
by a counter-thrust, as we may say. Starting
from the subject, as if this were a permanent
base on which to proceed, it discovers, by
the predicate being in reality the substance,
that the subject has passed into the predicate,
and has thereby ceased to be subject: and
since in this way what seems to be predicate
has become the entire mass of the content,
whole and complete, thinking cannot wander
and ramble about at will, but is restrained
and controlled by this weight of content.
Usually the subject is first set down as
the fixed and objective self; from this fixed
position the necessary [120] process passes
on to the multiplicity of determinations
or predicates. Here the knowing ego takes
the place of that subject and is the function
of knitting or combining the predicates one
with another, and is the subject holding
them fast. But since the former subject enters
into the determinate constituents themselves,
and is their very life, the subject in the
second case - viz. the knowing subject -
finds that the former, - which it is supposed
to be done with and which it wants to transcend,
in order to return into itself, - is still
there in the predicate: and instead of being
able to be the determining agency in the
process of resolving the predicate - reflectively
deciding whether this or that predicate should
be attached to the former subject - it has
really to deal with the self of the content,
is not allowed to be something on its own
account (für sich), but has to exist along
with this content.
What has been said can be expressed in a
formal manner by saying that the nature of
judgment or the proposition in general, which
involves the distinction of subject and predicate,
is subverted and destroyed by the speculative
judgment; and the identical proposition,
which the former becomes [by uniting subject
and predicate], implies the rejection and
repudiation of the above relation between
subject and predicate. This conflict between
the form of a proposition in general and
the unity of the notion which destroys that
form, is similar to what we find between
metre and accent in the case of rhythm. Rhythm
is the result of what hovers between and
unites both. So in the case of the speculative
or philosophical judgment; the identity of
subject and predicate is not intended to
destroy their distinction, as expressed in
propositional form; their unity is to arise
as a harmony of the elements. The form of
the judgment is the way the specific sense
appears, or is made manifest, the accent
which differentiates the meaning it contains:
[121] that the predicate expresses the substance,
and the subject itself falls within the universal,
is however the unity wherein that accent
dies away.
To explain what has been said by examples
let us take the proposition God is Being.
The predicate is "being": it has
substantive significance, and thus absorbs
the meaning of the subject within it. Being
is meant to be here not predicate but the
essential nature. Thereby, God seems to cease
to be what he was when the proposition was
put forward, viz. a fixed subject. Thinking
[i. e. ordinary reflection], instead of getting
any farther with the transition from subject
to predicate, in reality finds its activity
checked through the loss of the subject,
and it is thrown back on the thought of the
subject because it misses this subject. Or
again, since the predicate has itself been
pronounced to be a subject, to be the being,
to be the essential reality, which exhausts
the nature of the subject, thinking finds
the subject directly present in the predicate
too: and now, instead of having, in the predicate,
gone into itself, and preserved the freedom
characteristic of ratiocination, it is absorbed
in the content all the while, or, at any
rate is required to be so.
Similarly when it is said: "the real
is the universal", the real, qua subject,
passes away in its predicate. The universal
is not only meant to have the significance
of a predicate, as if the proposition stated
that the real is universal: the universal
is meant to express the essential nature
of the real. Thinking therefore loses that
fixed objective basis which it had in the
subject, just as much as in the predicate
it is thrown back on the subject, and therein
returns not into itself but into the subject
underlying the content.
This unaccustomed restraint imposed upon
thought is for the most part the cause of
the complaints concerning the unintelligibility
of philosophical writings, when otherwise
the individual has in him the requisite [122]
mental cultivation for understanding them.
In what has been said we see the reason for
the specific charge often made against them,
that a good deal has to be read repeatedly
before it can be understood--an accusation
which is meant to convey something improper
in the extreme, and one which if granted
to be sound admits of no further reply. It
is obvious from the above what is the state
of the case here. The philosophical proposition,
being a proposition, calls up the accepted
view of the usual relation of subject and
predicate, and suggests the idea of the customary
procedure which takes place in knowledge.
Its philosophical content destroys this way
of proceeding and the ordinary view taken
of this process. The common view discovers
that the statement is intended in another
sense than it is thinking of, and this correction
of its opinion compels knowledge to recur
to the proposition and take it now in some
other sense.
There is a difficulty which might well be
avoided. It consists in mixing up the methods
of procedure followed by speculation and
ratiocination, when what is said of the subject
has at one time the significance of its conceptual
principle, and at another time the meaning
of its predicate or accidental quality. The
one mode of thinking invalidates the other;
and only that philosophical exposition can
manage to become plastic in character which
resolutely sets aside and has nothing to
do with the ordinary way of relating the
parts of a proposition.
As a matter of fact, non-speculative thinking
has its rights too, which are justifiable,
but are disregarded in the speculative way
of stating a proposition. Abolishing the
form of the proposition must not take place
only in an immediate manner, through the
mere content of the proposition. On the contrary,
we must give explicit expression to this
cancelling process; it must be not only that
internal restraining and con- [123] fining
of thought within its own substance; this
turning of the conception back into itself
has to be expressly brought out and stated.
This process, which constitutes what formerly
had to be accomplished by proof, is the internal
dialectical movement of the proposition itself.
This alone is the concrete speculative element,
and only the explicit expression of this
is a speculative systematic exposition. Qua
proposition, the speculative aspect is merely
the internal restriction of thought within
its own substance where the return of the
essential principle into itself is not yet
brought out. Hence we often find philosophical
expositions referring us to the inner intuition,
and thus dispensing with the systematic statement
of the dialectical movement of the proposition,
which is what we wanted all the while. The
proposition ought to express what the truth
is: in its essential nature the truth is
subject: being so, it is merely the dialectical
movement, this self-producing course of activity,
maintaining, its advance by returning back
into itself. In the case of knowledge in
other spheres this aspect of expressly stating
the internal nature of the content is constituted
by proof. When dialectic, however, has been
separated from proof, the idea of philosophical
demonstration as a matter of fact has vanished
altogether.
On this point it may be mentioned that the
dialectical process likewise consists of
parts or elements which are propositions.
The difficulty indicated seems therefore
to recur continually, and seems to be a difficulty
inherent in the nature of the case. This
is like what happens in the ordinary process
of proving anything; the grounds it makes
use of need themselves to be based on other
grounds again, and so on ad infinitum. This
manner of furnishing grounds and conditions,
however, concerns that type of proof from
which the dialectical movement is distinct
and hence belongs to the process of external
knowledge. As to what this [124] movement
is, its element is the bare concept; this
furnishes a content which is through and
through subject impliciter and per se. There
is to be found, therefore, no sort of content
standing in a relation, as it were, to an
underlying subject, and getting its significance
by being attached to this as a predicate.
The proposition as it appears is a mere empty
form.
Apart from the sensuously apprehended or
ideally presented (vorgestellten) self, it
is in the main the mere name qua name which
denotes the subject pure and simple, the
empty unit without any conceptual character.
For this reason it would e. g. be expedient
to avoid the name "God", because
this word is not in its primary use a conception
as well, but the special name of an underlying
subject, its fixed resting-place; while,
on the other hand, being or the one, singleness,
subject, etc., themselves directly indicate
conceptions. Furthermore, if speculative
truths are stated about that subject [God],
even then their content is devoid of the
immanent notion, because that content is
merely present in the form of a passive subject,
and owing to this the speculative truths
easily take on the character of mere edification.
From this side, too, the obstacle, arising
from the habit of putting the speculative
predicate in the form of a proposition, instead
of taking it as an inherent essential conception,
is capable of being made greater or less
by the mere way philosophical truths are
put forward. Philosophical exposition, faithfully
following its insight into the nature of
speculative truth, must retain the dialectical
form, and exclude everything which is not
grasped conceptually and is conception.
Just as much as in the procedure of ratiocination,
the study of philosophy finds obstruction,
too, in the unreasoning conceit that builds
itself on well- established truths, which
the possessor considers he has no need to
return upon and reconsider, but rather takes
[125] to be fundamental, and thinks he can
by means thereof propound as well as decide
and pass sentence. In this regard, it is
especially needful to make once again a serious
business of philosophy. In all spheres of
science, art, skill, and handicraft it is
never doubted that, in order to master them,
a considerable amount of trouble must be
spent in learning and in being trained. As
regards philosophy, on the contrary, there
seems still an assumption prevalent that,
though every one with eyes and fingers is
not on that account in a position to make
shoes if he only has leather and a last,
yet everybody understands how to philosophize
straight away, and pass judgment on philosophy,
simply because he possesses the criterion
for doing so in his natural reason--as if
he did not in the same way possess the standard
for shoemaking too in his own foot. It seems
as if the possession of philosophy lay just
in the want of knowledge and study, as if
philosophy left off where the latter began.
It, is commonly held to be a formal kind
of knowledge devoid of all substantial content.
There is a general failure to perceive that,
in the case of any knowledge, and any science,
what is taken for truth, even as regards
content, can only deserve the name of "truth"
when philosophy has had a hand in its production.
Let the other sciences try as much as they
like to get along by ratiocination or raisonnement
without philosophy, they are unable to keep
alive without it, or to have any spiritual
significance and truth in them.
18. Natural philosophizing as healthy common
sense and as genius
As regards philosophy in its proper and genuine
sense, we find put forward without any hesitation,
as an entirely sufficient equivalent for
the long course of mental discipline--for
that profound and fruitful process through
which the human spirit attains to knowledge--the
direct revelation of the divine and the healthy
common sense of mankind, unconcerned with
and undisciplined by any other knowledge
or by proper [126] philosophical reflection.
These are held to be a good substitute for
real philosophy, much in the way that chicory
is lauded as a substitute for coffee. It
is not a very pleasing spectacle to observe
uncultivated ignorance and crudity of mind,
with neither form nor taste, without the
capacity to concentrate its thoughts on an
abstract proposition, still less on a connected
statement of such propositions, confidently
proclaiming itself to be intellectual freedom
and toleration, and even the inspiration
of genius. This last used once upon a time,
as everyone knows, to be all the vogue in
the case of poetry, as it is now in philosophy.
Instead of poetry, however, the efforts of
this form of inspiration, when it had any
sense at all, resulted in the production
of trivial prose, or, if it went beyond that,
it produced raving harangues. In the same
way here in the case of philosophy; philosophizing
by the light of nature, which thinks itself
too good for conceptual thinking, and, because
of the want of it, takes itself to have direct
intuitive ideas and poetical thoughts,--such
philosophizing trades in arbitrary combinations
of an imagination merely disorganized through
thinking--fictitious creations that are neither
fish nor flesh, neither poetry nor philosophy.
On the other hand again, when instinctive
philosophy follows the more secure course
prescribed by healthy common sense, it treats
us to a rhetorical mélange of commonplace
truths. When it is charged with the triviality
of what it offers, it assures us, in reply,
that the fullness and richness of its meaning
lie deep down in its own heart, and that
others must feel this too, since with such
phrases as the "heart's natural innocence",
"purity of conscience", and so
on, it supposes it has expressed things that
are ultimate and final, to which no one can
take exception, and about which nothing further
can be required. But the very problem in
hand was just that the best must not be left
behind [127] hidden away in secret, but be
brought out of the depths and set forth in
the light of day. It could quite well from
the start have spared itself the trouble
of bringing forward ultimate and final truths
of that sort; they were long since to be
found, say, in the Catechism, in popular
proverbs, etc. It is an easy matter to grasp
such truths in their indefinite and crooked
inaccurate form, and in many cases to point
out that the mind convinced of them is conscious
of the very opposite truths. When it struggles
to get itself out of the mental embarrassment
thereby produced, it will tumble into further
confusion, and possibly burst out with the
assertion that in short and in fine the matter
is settled, the truth is so and so, and anything
else is mere "sophistry"--a password
used by plain common sense against cultivated
critical reason, like the phrase "visionary
dreaming", by which those ignorant of
philosophy sum up its character once for
all. Since the man of common sense appeals
to his feeling, to an oracle within his breast,
he is done with any one who does not agree.
He has just to explain that he has no more
to say to any one who does not find and feel
the same as himself. In other words, he tramples
the roots of humanity underfoot. For the
nature of humanity is to impel men to agree
with one another, and its very existence
lies simply in the explicit realization of
a community of conscious life. What is anti-human,
the condition of mere animals, consists in
keeping within the sphere of feeling pure
and simple, and in being able to communicate
only by way of feeling-states.
When a man asks for a royal road to science,
no more convenient and comfortable way can
be mentioned to him than to put his trust
in "healthy common sense". And
for the rest, to keep abreast of the times
and advance with philosophy, let him read
reviews of philosophical works, and even
go the length of reading the [128] prefaces
and first paragraphs of the works themselves;
for the latter give the general principles
on which everything turns, while the reviews
along with the historical notice provide
over and above the critical judgment and
appreciation, which, being a judgment passed
on the work, goes farther than the work that
is judged. This common way a man can take
in his dressing-gown. But spiritual elation
in the eternal, the sacred, the infinite,
moves along the highway of truth in the robes
of the high priests road that, from the first,
is itself immediate being in its innermost,
the inspiration of profound and original
ideas and flashes of elevated thought. All
the same, those depths do not yet reveal
the well-spring of inner reality; nor, again,
are these sky-rockets the empyrean. True
thoughts and scientific insight can only
be won by the labour of the notion. Conceptions
alone can produce universality in the knowing
process. This universality is critically
developed and completely finished knowledge.
It is not the common indefiniteness and inadequacy
of ordinary intelligence. Nor, again, is
it that extraordinary kind of universality
where the powers and potencies of reason
are spoiled and ruined by genius through
indolence and self- conceit. It is truth
which has successfully reached its own inherent
native form. It is this universality which
is capable of being the property of every
self- conscious reason.
19. Conclusion: the author's relation to
the public
Since I have taken the self-development of
the notion to be the medium wherein science
really exists, and since in those respects
to which I have drawn attention, as well
as in others, current ideas about the nature
of truth and the shape it assumes deviate
from my view, and indeed are quite opposed
to my position, the consideration of this
divergence of view does not seem to promise
well for a favourable reception of an attempt
to expound the system of science in this
sense. In the meantime, I may call to mind
that while e. g. the [129] supreme merit
of Plato's philosophy has sometimes been
held to consist in his myths which are scientifically
valueless, there have also been times, spoken
of even as times of mere sentimental enthusiasm,
when the Aristotelian philosophy has been
respected on account of its speculative depth
of insight, and when the Parmenides of Plato--perhaps
the greatest literary product of ancient
dialectic--has been taken to be the positive
expression of the divine life, the unveiling
and disclosing of its inmost truth. I may
reflect, too, that notwithstanding much cloudy
obscurity which was the product of ecstasy,
this misunderstood ecstasy was in point of
fact meant to be nothing else than the activity
of the pure notion; furthermore, that what
is best in the philosophy of our time takes
its value to lie in its scientific character;
and that, even though others take a different
view, it is only in virtue of its scientific
character that recent philosophy really gains
validity and acceptance. Thus, then, I may
hope too that this attempt to justify the
claim of science to be a conceptual process,
and systematically to develop and present
science in this its own peculiar medium,
will manage to make a way for itself by the
inherent truth of the result accomplished.
We may rest assured that it is the nature
of truth to force its way to recognition
when the time comes, and that it only appears
when its time has come, and hence never appears
too soon, and never finds a public that is
not ripe to receive it. And, further, we
may be sure that the individual thinker requires
this result to take place, in order to give
him confidence in regard to what is no more
as yet than a matter for himself singly and
alone, and in order to find his assurance,
which in the first instance merely belongs
to a particular individual, realized as something
universal. In this connection, however, it
is very often necessary to distinguish the
public from those who take upon themselves
to be its represen- [130] tatives and spokesmen.
The public takes up an attitude in many respects
quite different from the latter, indeed,
even opposed to them. Whereas the public
good-naturedly and generously will rather
take the blame upon itself when a philosophical
work is not quite acceptable or intelligible
to it, these "representatives",
on the contrary, convinced of their own competence,
put all the blame on the authors. The influence
of the work on the public is more silent
than the action of those "representatives",
who are like the dead burying their dead.
While the general level of insight at the
present time is in the main more highly cultivated,
its curiosity more quickened and alert, and
its judgment more swiftly made up and pronounced,
so that the feet of those who will carry
you out are already at the door: at the same
time we have often to distinguish from all
this the slower and more gradual effect which
rectifies the direction of attention caught
and compelled by imposing assurances, corrects,
too, contemptuous censure, and after a little
provides a contemporary audience for one
part, while another after a temporary vogue
finds no audience with posterity any longer.
For the rest, at a time when the universal
nature of spiritual life has become so very
much emphasized and strengthened, and the
mere individual aspect has become, as it
should be, correspondingly a matter of indifference,
when, too, that universal aspect holds, by
the entire range of its substance, the full
measure of the wealth it has built up, and
lays claim to it all, the share in the total
work of mind that falls to the activity of
any particular individual can only be very
small. Because this is so, the individual
must all the more forget himself, as in fact
the very nature of science implies and requires
that he should; and he must, moreover, become
and do what he can. But all the less must
be demanded of him, just as he can expect
the less from himself, and may ask the less
for himself.
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