
SCIENCE OF LOGIC
IN THIRTEEN WEBPAGE PARTS
(PAGE FIVE)
PART FIVE
Translated by A. V. Miller George Allen &
Unwin, 1969
IN THIRTEEN WEB-PAGE PARTS - PAGE FIVE
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.
Subjective Logic
or
The Doctrine of the NotionForeword§ 1277
This part of the logic which contains the
Doctrine of the Notion and constitutes the
third part of the whole, is also issued under
the particular title System of Subjective
Logic, for the convenience of those friends
of this science who are accustomed to take
a greater interest in the matters here treated
and included in the scope of logic commonly
so called, than in the further logical topics
treated in the first two parts. For these
earlier parts I could claim the indulgence
of fair-minded critics on account of the
scant preliminary studies in this field which
could have afforded me a support, material,
and a guiding thread. In the case of the
present part, I may claim their indulgence
rather for the opposite reason; for the logic
of the Notion, a completely ready-made and
solidified, one may say, ossified material
is already to hand, and the problem is to
render this material fluid and to re-kindle
the spontaneity of the Notion in such dead
matter. If the building of a new city in
a waste land is attended with difficulties,
yet there is no shortage of materials; but
the abundance of materials presents all the
more obstacles of another kind when the task
is to remodel an ancient city, solidly built,
and maintained in continuous possession and
occupation. Among other things one must resolve
to make no use at all of much material that
has hitherto been highly esteemed.
§ 1278
But above all, the grandeur of the
subject
matter may be advanced as an excuse
for the
imperfect execution. For what subject
matter
can cognition have that is more sublime
than
truth itself! Yet the doubt whether
it is
not just this subject matter that requires
an excuse may occur to us if we recall
the
sense in which Pilate put the question,
What
is truth? In the words of the poet:
'With
the courtier's mien that purblind yet
smiling
condemns the cause of the earnest soul.'
Pilate's question bears the meaning
- which
may be regarded as an element in good
manners
- together with a reminder of it, that
the
aim of attaining truth is, as everyone
knows,
something given up and long since set
aside,
and that the unattainableness of truth
is
recognised even among professional
philosophers
and logicians. But if the question
that religion
raises as to the value of things, insights,
and actions - a question which in its
import
has a like meaning - is once more vindicating
its claims in our days, then philosophy
must
surely hope that it will no longer
be thought
so strange if it, too, in its immediate
domain
once more asserts its true aim, and,
after
having lapsed into the manner and method
of other sciences and their renunciation
of the claim to truth, strives to rise
again
to that aim. In respect of this attempt,
it is not, strictly speaking, permissible
to offer any apology; but in respect
of the
execution, I may plead in excuse that
my
official duties and other personal
circumstances
allowed me but scattered hours of labour
at a science that demands and deserves
undistracted
and undivided exertion.
Nuremberg, July 21, 1816
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Notion in General § 1279
What the nature of the Notion is, can
no
more be stated offhand than can the
Notion
of any other object. It might perhaps
seem
that, in order to state the Notion
of an
object, the logical element were presupposed
and that therefore this could not in
turn
have something else for its presupposition,
nor be deduced; just as in geometry
logical
propositions as applied to magnitude
and
employed in that science, are premised
in
the form of axioms, determinations
of cognition
that have not been and cannot be deduced.
Now although it is true that the Notion
is
to be regarded, not merely as a subjective
presupposition but as the absolute
foundation,
yet it can be so only in so far as
it has
made itself the foundation. Abstract
immediacy
is no doubt a first; yet in so far
as it
is abstract it is, on the contrary
mediated,
and therefore if it is to be grasped
in its
truth its foundation must first be
sought.
Hence this foundation, though indeed
an immediate,
must have made itself immediate through
the
sublation of mediation.
§ 1280
From this aspect the Notion is to be regarded
in the first instance simply as the third
to being and essence, to the immediate and
to reflection. Being and essence are so far
the moments of its becoming; but it is their
foundation and truth as the identity in which
they are submerged and contained. They are
contained in it because it is their result,
but no longer as being and essence. That
determination they possess only in so far
as they have not withdrawn into this their
unity.
§ 1281
Objective logic therefore, which treats
of
being and essence constitutes properly
the
genetic exposition of the Notion. More
precisely,
substance is already real essence,
or essence
in so far as it is united with being
and
has entered into actuality. Consequently,
the Notion has substance for its immediate
presupposition; what is implicit in
substance
is manifested in the Notion. Thus the
dialectical
movement of substance through causality
and
reciprocity is the immediate genesis
of the
Notion, the exposition of the process
of
its becoming. But the significance
of its
becoming, as of every becoming is that
it
is the reflection of the transient
into its
ground and that the at first apparent
other
into which the former has passed constitutes
its truth. Accordingly the Notion is
the
truth of substance; and since substance
has
necessity for its specific mode of
relationship,
freedom reveals itself as the truth
of necessity
and as the mode of relationship proper
to
the Notion.
§ 1282
The progressive determination of substance
necessitated by its own nature, is
the positing
of what is in and for itself. Now the
Notion
is that absolute unity of being and
reflection
in which being is in and for itself
only
in so far as it is no less reflection
or
positedness, and positedness is no
less being
that is in and for itself. This abstract
result is elucidated by the exposition
of
its concrete genesis; that exposition
contains
the nature of the Notion whose treatment
it must have preceded. The chief moments
of this exposition (which has been
given
in detail in the Second Book of the
Objective
Logic) can therefore only be briefly
summarised
here.
§ 1283
Substance is the absolute, the actuality
that is in and for itself in itself
as the
simple identity of possibility and
actuality,
absolute essence containing all actuality
and possibility within itself; and
for itself,
being this identity as absolute power
or
purely self-related negativity. The
movement
of substantiality posited by these
moments
consists in the following stages:
§ 1284
1. Substance, as absolute power or
self-related
negativity, differentiates itself into
a
relationship in which what were at
first
only simple moments are substances
and original
presuppositions. Their specific relationship
is that of a passive substance, of
the original
immediacy of the simple inwardness
or in-
itself which, powerless to posit itself,
is only an original positedness and
of an
active substance, the self-related
negativity
which as such has posited itself in
the form
of an other and relates itself to this
other.
This other is simply the passive substance
which the active substance through
its own
originative power has presupposed for
itself
as condition. This presupposing is
to be
understood in the sense that the movement
of substance itself is, in the first
instance,
under the form of one of the moments
of its
Notion, the in-itself, and the determinateness
of one of the substances standing in
relationship
is also the determinateness of this
relationship
itself.
§ 1285
2. The other moment is being-for-self,
which
means that the power posits itself
as self-related
negativity, thereby sublating again
what
was presupposed. The active substance
is
the cause; it acts, that is, it now
posits,
whereas previously it only presupposed;
so
that (a) to the power is now added
the illusory
show of power, to the positedness the
illusory
show of positedness. What in the presupposition
was original, becomes in causality,
through
the relation to an other, what it is
in itself;
the cause produces an effect, and that,
too,
in another substance; it is now power
in
relation to an other and thus appears
as
a cause, but is a cause only in virtue
of
this appearing. (b) The effect enters
the
passive substance, whereby it now also
appears
as a positedness, but is a passive
substance
only as such positedness.
§ 1286
3. But there is still more present
in this
than only this appearance, namely:
(a) the
cause acts on the passive substance
and alters
its determination; but this is positedness,
there is nothing else in it to alter;
the
other determination, however, that
it receives
is causality; the passive substance
therefore
becomes cause, power and activity:
(b) the
effect is posited in it by the cause;
but
that which is posited by the cause
is the
cause itself which, in acting, is identical
with itself; it is this that puts itself
in the place of the passive substance.
Similarly,
with regard to the active substance,
(a)
the action is the translation of the
cause
into the effect, into the other of
the cause,
into positedness, and (b) the cause
reveals
itself in the effect as what it is;
the effect
is identical with the cause, is not
an other-;
thus the cause in acting reveals the
posited
being as that which the cause essentially
is. Each side, therefore, in both its
identical
and negative relation to the other
becomes
the opposite of itself, so that the
other,
and therefore also each, remains identical
with itself. But the identical and
the negative
relations are both one and the same;
substance
is self-identical only in its opposite
and
this constitutes the absolute identity
of
the substances posited as a duality.
Active
substance, through the act of positing
itself
as the opposite of itself, an act which
is
at the same time the sublating of its
presupposed
otherness, of passive substance, is
manifested
as cause or originative substantiality.
Conversely,
through being acted on, posited being
is
manifested as posited, the negative
as negative,
and therefore passive substance as
self-related
negativity, the cause meeting in this
other
simply and solely with its own self.
Through
this positing, then, the presupposed
or implicit
originativeness becomes explicit or
for itself;
yet this being that is in and for itself
is such only in so far as this positing
is
equally a sublating of what was presupposed;
in other words absolute substance has
returned
to itself and so become absolute, only
out
of and in its positedness. Hence this
reciprocity
is the appearance that again sublates
itself,
the revelation that the illusory being
of
causality in which the cause appears
as cause,
is illusory being. This infinite reflection-into-self,
namely, that being is in and for itself
only
in so far as it is posited, is the
consummation
of substance. But this consummation
is no
longer substance itself but something
higher,
the Notion, the subject. The transition
of
the relation of substantiality takes
place
through its own immanent necessity
and is
nothing more than the manifestation
of itself,
that the Notion is its truth, and that
freedom
is the truth of necessity.
§ 1287
I have already mentioned in the Second
Book
of the Objective Logic that the philosophy
which adopts the standpoint of substance
and stops there is the system of Spinoza.
I also indicated there the defect of
that
system alike as to form and to matter.
But
the refutation of the system is another
matter.
With respect to the refutation of a
philosophical
system I have elsewhere also made the
general
observation that one must get rid of
the
erroneous idea of regarding the system
as
out and out false, as if the true system
by contrast were only opposed to the
false.
The context itself in which Spinoza's
system
here finds mention provides the true
standpoint
of the system and the question whether
it
is true or false. The relation of substance
resulted from the nature of essence;
this
relation and its exposition as a developed
totality in a system is, therefore,
a necessary
standpoint assumed by the absolute.
Such
a standpoint, therefore, is not to
be regarded
as an opinion, a subjective, arbitrary
way
of thinking of an individual, as an
aberration
of speculation; on the contrary, speculative
thinking in the course of its progress
finds
itself necessarily occupying that standpoint
and to that extent the system is perfectly
true; but it is not the highest standpoint.
Yet this does not mean that the system
can
be regarded as false, as requiring
and being
capable of refutation; on the contrary,
the
only thing about it to be considered
false
is its claim to be the highest standpoint.
Consequently, the true system cannot
have
the relation to it of being merely
opposed
to it; for if this were so, the system,
as
this opposite, would itself be one-sided.
On the contrary, the true system as
the higher,
must contain the subordinate system
within
itself.
§ 1288
Further, the refutation must not come from
outside, that is, it must not proceed from
assumptions lying outside the system in question
and inconsistent with it. The system need
only refuse to recognise those assumptions;
the defect is a defect only for him who starts
from the requirements and demands based on
those assumptions.
Thus it has been said that for anyone
who
does not presuppose as an established
fact
the freedom and self-subsistence of
the self-conscious
subject there cannot be any refutation
of
Spinozism. Besides, a standpoint so
lofty
and so intrinsically rich as the relation
of substance, far from ignoring those
assumptions
even contains them: one of the attributes
of Spinoza's substance is thinking.
On the
contrary, Spinozism knows how to resolve
and assimilate the determinations in
which
these assumptions conflict with it,
so that
they appear in the system, but in the
modifications
appropriate to it. The nerve, therefore,
of the external refutation consists
solely
in clinging stubbornly to the antitheses
of these assumptions, for example,
to the
absolute self-subsistence of the thinking
individual as against the form of thought
posited in absolute substance as identical
with extension. The genuine refutation
must
penetrate the opponent's stronghold
and meet
him on his own ground; no advantage
is gained
by attacking him somewhere else and
defeating
him where he is not. The only possible
refutation
of Spinozism must therefore consist,
in the
first place, in recognising its standpoint
as essential and necessary and then
going
on to raise that standpoint to the
higher
one through its own immanent dialectic.
The
relationship of substance considered
simply
and solely in its own intrinsic nature
leads
on to its opposite, to the Notion.
The exposition
of substance (contained in the last
book)
which leads on to the Notion is, therefore,
the sole and genuine refutation of
Spinozism.
It is the unveiling of substance, and
this
is the genesis of the Notion, the chief
moments
of which have been brought together
above.
The unity of substance is its relation
of
necessity; but this unity is only an
inner
necessity; in positing itself through
the
moment of absolute negativity it becomes
a manifested or posited identity, and
thereby
the freedom which is the identity of
the
Notion. The Notion, the totality resulting
from the reciprocal relation, is the
unity
of the two substances standing in that
relation;
but in this unity they are now free,
for
they no longer possess their identity
as
something blind, that is to say, as
something
merely inner; on the contrary, the
substances
now have essentially the status of
an illusory
being, of being moments of reflection,
whereby
each is no less immediately united
with its
other or its positedness and each contains
its positedness within itself, and
consequently
in its other is posited as simply and
solely
identical with itself.
§ 1289
With the Notion, therefore, we have
entered
the realm of freedom. Freedom belongs
to
the Notion because that identity which,
as
absolutely determined, constitutes
the necessity
of substance, is now also sublated
or is
a positedness, and this positedness
as self-related
is simply that identity. The mutual
opacity
of the substances standing in the causal
relationship has vanished and become
a self-transparent
clarity, for the originality of their
self-subsistence
has passed into a positedness; the
original
substance is original in that it is
only
the cause of itself, and this is substance
raised to the freedom of the Notion.
§ 1290
This at once provides us with a more
precise
determination of mediately the Notion.
Because
being that is in and for itself is
immediately
a positedness, the Notion in its simple
self-relation
is an absolute determinateness which,
however,
as purely self-related is no less immediately
a simple identity. But this self- relation
of the determinateness as the union
of itself
with itself is equally the negation
of the
determinateness, and the Notion as
this equality
with itself is the universal. But this
identity
has equally the determination of negativity;
it is the negation or determinateness
which
is self-related; thus the Notion is
the individual.
Each of them, the universal and the
individual,
is the totality, each contains within
itself
the determination of the other and
therefore
these totalities are one and one only,
just
as this unity is the differentiation
of itself
into the free illusion of this duality
-
of a duality which, in the difference
of
the individual and the universal, appears
as a complete opposition, yet an opposition
which is so entirely illusory that
in thinking
and enunciating the one, the other
also is
immediately thought and enunciated.
§ 1291
The foregoing is to be regarded as
the Notion
of the Notion. It may seem to differ
from
what is elsewhere understood by 'notion'
and in that case we might be asked
to indicate
how that which we have here found to
be the
Notion is contained in other conceptions
or explanations. On the one hand, however,
there can be no question of a confirmation
based on the authority of the ordinary
understanding
of the term; in the science of the
Notion
its content and character can be guaranteed
solely by the immanent deduction which
contains
its genesis and which already lies
behind
us. On the other hand, the Notion as
here
deduced must, of course, be recognisable
in principle in what is elsewhere presented
as the concept of the Notion. But it
is not
so easy to discover what others have
said
about the nature of the Notion. For
in the
main they do not concern themselves
at all
with the question, presupposing that
everyone
who uses the word automatically knows
what
it means. Latterly, one could have
felt all
the more relieved from any need to
trouble
about the Notion since, just as it
was the
fashion for a while to say everything
bad
about the imagination, and then the
memory,
so in philosophy it became the habit
some
time ago, a habit which in some measure
still
exists, to heap every kind of slander
on
the Notion, on what is supreme in thought,
while the incomprehensible and non-comprehension
are, on the contrary, regarded as the
pinnacle
of science and morality. I will confine
myself
here to a remark which may help one
to grasp
the notions here developed and may
make it
easier to find one's bearings in them.
The
Notion, when it has developed into
a concrete
existence that is itself free, is none
other
than the I or pure self-consciousness.
True,
I have notions, that is to say, determinate
notions; but the I is the pure Notion
itself
which, as Notion, has come into existence.
When, therefore, reference is made
to the
fundamental determinations which constitute
the nature of the I, we may presuppose
that
the reference is to something familiar,
that
is, a commonplace of our ordinary thinking.
But the I is, first, this pure self-related
unity, and it is so not immediately
but only
as making abstraction from all determinateness
and content and withdrawing into the
freedom
of unrestricted equality with itself.
As
such it is universality; a unity that
is
unity with itself only through its
negative
attitude, which appears as a process
of abstraction,
and that consequently contains all
determinedness
dissolved in it. Secondly, the I as
self-related
negativity is no less immediately individuality
or is absolutely determined, opposing
itself
to all that is other and excluding
it - individual
personality. This absolute universality
which
is also immediately an absolute individualisation,
and an absolutely determined being,
which
is a pure positedness and is this absolutely
determined being it only through its
unity
with the positedness, this constitutes
the
nature of the I - as well as of the
Notion;
neither the one nor the other can be
truly
comprehended unless the two indicated
moments
are grasped at the same time both in
their
abstraction and also in their perfect
unity.
§ 1292
When one speaks in the ordinary way of the
understanding possessed by the I, one understands
thereby a faculty or property which stands
in the same relation to the I as the property
of a thing does to the thing itself, that
is, to an indeterminate substrate that is
not the genuine ground and the determinant
of its property. According to this conception
I possess notions and the Notion, just as
I also possess a coat, complexion, and other
external properties.
§ 1293
Now Kant went beyond this external relation
of the understanding, as the faculty of notions
and of the Notion itself, to the I. It is
one of the profoundest and truest insights
to be found in the Critique of Pure Reason
that the unity which constitutes the nature
of the Notion is recognised as the original
synthetic unity of apperception, as unity
of the I think, or of self-consciousness.
This proposition constitutes the so-called
transcendental deduction of the categories;
but this has always been regarded as one
of the most difficult parts of the Kantian
philosophy, doubtless for no other reason
than that it demands that we should go beyond
the mere representation of the relation in
which the I stands to the understanding,
or notions stand to a thing and its properties
and accidents, and advance to the thought
of that relation. An object, says Kant, is
that in the notion of which the manifold
of a given intuition is unified. But all
unifying of representations demands a unity
of consciousness in the synthesis of them.
Consequently it is this unity of consciousness
which alone constitutes the connection of
the representations with the object and therewith
their objective validity and on which rests
even the possibility of the understanding.
Kant distinguishes this unity from the subjective
unity of consciousness, the unity of representation
whereby I am conscious of a manifold as either
simultaneous or successive, this being dependent
on empirical conditions. On the other hand,
the principles of the objective determination
of notions are, he says, to be derived solely
from the principle of the transcendental
unity of apperception. Through the categories
which are these objective determinations,
the manifold of given representations is
so determined as to be brought into the unity
of consciousness. According to this exposition,
the unity of the notion is that whereby something
is not a mere mode of feeling, an intuition,
or even a mere representation, but is an
object, and this objective unity is the unity
of the ego with itself. In point of fact,
the comprehension of an object consists in
nothing else than that the ego makes it its
own, pervades it and brings it into its own
form, that is, into the universality that
is immediately a determinateness, or a determinateness
that is immediately universality. As intuited
or even in ordinary conception, the object
is still something external and alien. When
it is comprehended, the being-in-and-for-self
which it possesses in intuition and pictorial
thought is transformed into a positedness;
the I in thinking it pervades it.
§ 1294
But it is only as it is in thought
that the
object is truly in and for itself;
in intuition
or ordinary conception it is only an
Appearance.
Thought sublates the immediacy with
which
the object at first confronts us and
thus
converts the object into a positedness;
but
this its positedness is its being-in-and-for-self,
or its objectivity. The object therefore
has its objectivity in the Notion and
this
is the unity of self-consciousness
into which
it has been received; consequently
its objectivity,
or the Notion, is itself none other
than
the nature of self-consciousness, has
no
other moments or determinations than
the
I itself.
§ 1295
Thus we are justified by a cardinal
principle
of the Kantian philosophy in referring
to
the nature of the I in order to learn
what
the Notion is. But conversely, it is
necessary
for this purpose to have grasped the
Notion
of the I as stated above. If we cling
to
the mere representation of the I as
it floats
before our ordinary consciousness,
then the
I is only the simple thing, also called
soul,
in which the Notion inheres as a possession
or property. This representation which
makes
no attempt to comprehend either the
I or
the Notion cannot serve to facilitate
or
bring nearer the comprehension of the
Notion.
§ 1296
The Kantian exposition cited above
contains
two other features which concern the
Notion
and necessitate some further observations
In the first place, the stage of the
understanding
is supposed to be preceded by the stages
of feeling and intuition, and it is
an essential
proposition of the Kantian transcendental
philosophy that without intuitions
notions
are empty and are valid solely as relations
of the manifold given by intuition.
Secondly,
the Notion has been declared to be
the objective
element of knowledge, and as such,
the truth.
But on the other hand, the Notion is
taken
as something merely subjective from
which
we cannot extract reality, by which
is to
be understood objectivity, since reality
is contrasted with subjectivity; and,
in
general, the Notion and the logical
element
are declared to be something merely
formal
which, since it abstracts from the
content,
does not contain truth.
§ 1297
Now, in the first place, as regards
the relation
of the understanding or the Notion
to the
stages presupposed by it, the form
of these
stages is determined by the particular
science
under consideration. In our science,
that
of pure logic, these stages are being
and
essence. In psychology the antecedent
stages
are feeling and intuition, and then
ideation
generally. In the phenomenology of
spirit,
which is the doctrine of consciousness,
the
ascent to the understanding is through
the
stages of sensuous consciousness and
then
perception. Kant presupposes only feeling
and intuition. How incomplete to begin
with
this scale of stages is is revealed
by the
fact that he himself adds as an appendix
to the transcendental logic or doctrine
of
the understanding a treatise on the
concepts
of reflection a sphere lying between
intuition
and the understanding or being and
the Notion.
§ 1298
About these stages themselves it must be
remarked, first of all, that the forms of
intuition, ideation and the like belong to
the self-conscious spirit which, as such,
does not fall to be considered in the science
of logic. It is true that the pure determinations
of being, essence and the Notion constitute
the ground plan and the inner simple framework
of the forms of the spirit; spirit as intuiting
and also as sensuous consciousness is in
the form of immediate being; and, similarly,
spirit as ideating and as perceiving has
risen from being to the stage of essence
or reflection. But these concrete forms as
little concern the science of logic as do
the concrete forms assumed by the logical
categories in nature, which would be space
and time, then space and time self-filled
with a content as inorganic nature, and lastly,
organic nature.
§ 1299
Similarly here, too, the Notion is to be
regarded not as the act of the self-conscious
understanding, not as the subjective understanding,
but as the Notion in its own absolute character
which constitutes a stage of nature as well
as of spirit. Life, or organic nature, is
the stage of nature at which the Notion emerges,
but as blind, as unaware of itself and unthinking;
the Notion that is self-conscious and thinks
pertains solely to spirit. But the logical
form of the Notion is independent of its
non-spiritual, and also of its spiritual,
shapes. The necessary premonition on this
point has already been given in the Introduction.
It is a point that must not wait to be established
within logic itself but must be cleared up
before that science is begun.
§ 1300
Now whatever may be the forms of the
stages
which precede the Notion, we come secondly
to the relation in which the Notion
is thought
to these forms. The conception of this
relation
both in ordinary psychology and in
the Kantian
transcendental philosophy is that the
empirical
material, the manifold of intuition
and representation,
first exists on its own account, and
that
then the understanding approaches it,
brings
unity into it and by abstraction raises
it
to the form of universality. The understanding
is in this way an intrinsically empty
form
which, on the one hand, obtains a reality
through the said given content and,
on the
other hand, abstracts from that content,
that is to say, lets it drop as something
useless, but useless only for the Notion.
In both these actions the Notion is
not the
independent factor, not the essential
and
true element of the prior given material;
on the contrary, it is the material
that
is regarded as the absolute reality,
which
cannot be extracted from the Notion.
§ 1301
Now it must certainly be admitted that the
Notion as such is not yet complete, but must
rise to the Idea which alone is the unity
of the Notion and reality; and this must
be shown in the sequel to be the spontaneous
outcome of the nature of the Notion itself.
For the reality which the Notion gives itself
must not be received by it as something external
but must, in accordance with the requirement
of the science, be derived from the Notion
itself. But the truth is that it is not the
material given by intuition and representation
that ought to be vindicated as the real in
contrast to the Notion. People often say,
'It is only a notion,' contrasting the notion
not only with the Idea but with sensuous,
spatial and temporal, palpable reality as
something more excellent than the Notion;
and then the abstract is held to be of less
account than the concrete because it lacks
so much of this kind of material. In this
view, to abstract means to select from the
concrete object for our subjective purposes
this or that mark without thereby detracting
from the worth and status of the many other
properties and features left out of account;
on the contrary, these as real retain their
validity completely unimpaired, only they
are left yonder, on the other side; thus
it is only the inability of the understanding
to assimilate such wealth that compels it
to content itself with the impoverished abstraction.
Now to regard the given material of intuition
and the manifold of representation as the
real in contrast to what is thought, to the
Notion, is a view, the abandonment of which
is not only a condition of philosophising
but is already presupposed by religion; for
how can there be any need for religion, how
can religion have any meaning, if the fleeting
and superficial phenomena of the world of
sensuous particulars are still regarded as
the truth? But philosophy gives a reasoned
insight into the true state of the case with
regard to the reality of sensuous being;
it assumes the stages of feeling and intuition
as precedent to the understanding in so far
as they are conditions of its genesis, but
only in the sense that it is conditioned
by their reality. Abstract thinking, therefore,
is not to be regarded as a mere setting aside
of the sensuous material, the reality of
which is not thereby impaired; rather is
it the sublating and reduction of that material
as mere phenomenal appearance to the essential,
which is manifested only in the Notion.
§ 1302
Of course, if what is taken up into
the Notion
from the concrete phenomenon is to
serve
only as a mark or sign, it certainly
may
be any mere random sensuous particular
determination
of the object, selected from the others
on
the basis of any random external interest
and of a similar kind and nature as
the rest.
§ 1303
A capital misunderstanding which prevails
on this point is that the natural principle
or the beginning which forms the starting
point in the natural evolution or in
the
history of the developing individual,
is
regarded as the truth, and the first
in the
Notion. Now in the order of nature,
intuition
or being are undoubtedly first, or
are the
condition for the Notion, but they
are not
on that account the absolutely unconditioned;
on the contrary, their reality is sublated
in the Notion and with it, too, the
illusory
show they possessed of being the conditioning
reality. When it is a question, not
of truth
but merely of history, as in pictorial
and
phenomenal thinking, we need not of
course
go beyond merely narrating that we
start
with feelings and intuitions and that
from
the manifold of these the understanding
extracts
a universality or an abstraction and
naturally
requires for this purpose the said
substrate
of feelings and intuitions which, in
this
process of abstraction, remains for
representation
in the same complete reality with which
it
first presented itself. But philosophy
is
not meant to be a narration of happenings
but a cognition of what is true in
them,
and further, on the basis of this cognition,
to comprehend that which, in the narrative,
appears as a mere happening.
§ 1304
If the superficial conception of what
the
Notion is, leaves all manifoldness
outside
the Notion and attributes to the latter
only
the form of abstract universality or
the
empty identity of reflection, we can
at once
appeal to the fact that quite apart
from
the view here propounded, the statement
or
definition of a notion expressly includes
not only the genus, which itself is,
properly
speaking, more than a purely abstract
universality,
but also the specific determinateness.
If
one would but reflect attentively on
the
meaning of this fact, one would see
that
differentiation must be regarded as
an equally
essential moment of the Notion. Kant
has
introduced this consideration by the
extremely
important thought that there are synthetic
judgements a priori. This original
synthesis
of apperception is one of the most
profound
principles for speculative development;
it
contains the beginning of a true apprehension
of the nature of the Notion and is
completely
opposed to that empty identity or abstract
universality which is not within itself
a
synthesis. The further development,
however,
does not fulfil the promise of the
beginning.
The very expression synthesis easily
recalls
the conception of an external unity
and a
mere combination of entities that are
intrinsically
separate. Then, again, the Kantian
philosophy
has not got beyond the psychological
reflex
of the Notion and has reverted once
more
to the assertion that the Notion is
permanently
conditioned by a manifold of intuition.
It
has declared intellectual cognition
and experience
to be a phenomenal content, not because
the
categories themselves are only finite
but,
on the ground of a psychological idealism,
because they are merely determinations
originating
in self-consciousness. It is in keeping
with
this standpoint, too, that the Notion
without
the manifold of intuition is again
declared
to be empty and devoid of content despite
the fact that it is a synthesis a priori;
as such, it surely does contain determinateness
and difference within itself. Moreover,
since
the determinateness is that of the
Notion
and therefore absolute determinateness,
individuality,
the Notion is the ground and source
of all
finite determinateness and manifoldness.
§ 1305
The merely formal position that the
Notion
holds as understanding is fully confirmed
in the Kantian exposition of what reason
is. In reason, the highest stage of
thought,
one ought to have expected the Notion
to
lose the conditionedness in which it
still
appears at the stage of understanding
and
to attain to perfect truth. But this
expectation
is disappointed. For Kant defines the
relation
of reason to the categories as merely
dialectical
and, indeed, takes the result of this
dialectic
to be the infinite nothing - just that
and
nothing more.
§ 1306
Consequently, the infinite unity of
reason,
too, is still deprived of the synthesis,
and with it the beginning referred
to above
of a speculative, truly infinite Notion;
reason becomes the familiar, wholly
formal,
merely regulative unity of the systematic
employment of the understanding. It
is declared
to be an abuse when logic, which is
supposed
to be merely a canon of judgment, is
regarded
as an organon for the production of
objective
insights. The notions of reason in
which
we could not but have an intimation
of a
higher power and a profounder significance,
no longer possess a constitutive character
as do the categories, they are mere
Ideas;
certainly, we are quite at liberty
to use
them, but by these intelligible entities
in which all truth should be completely
revealed,
we are to understand nothing more than
hypotheses,
and to ascribe absolute truth to them
would
be the height of caprice and foolhardiness,
for they do not occur in any experience.
Would one ever have thought that philosophy
would deny truth to intelligible entities
because they lack the spatial and temporal
material of the sensuous world?
§ 1307
Directly connected with this is the question
of the point of view from which the Notion
and the character of logic generally are
to be considered, a question on which the
Kantian philosophy holds the same view as
is commonly taken: that is to say, in what
relation do the Notion and the science of
the Notion stand to truth itself. We have
already quoted from the Kantian deduction
of the categories that according to it the
object, as that in which the manifold of
intuition is unified, is this unity solely
through the unity of self-consciousness.
Here, therefore, the objectivity of thought
is specifically enunciated, an identity of
Notion and thing, which is truth. In the
same way, it is also commonly admitted that
when thinking appropriates a given object,
this thereby suffers an alteration and is
changed from something sensuous to something
thought; and yet that not only is the essential
nature of the object not affected by this
alteration but that it is only in its Notion
that it is in its truth, whereas in the immediacy
in which it is given it is only appearance
and a contingency; that the cognition that
truly comprehends the object is the cognition
of it as it is in and for itself, and that
the Notion is its very objectivity.
§ 1308
But, on the other hand, it is equally maintained
that we cannot after all, know things as
they truly are in themselves and that truth
is inaccessible to the cognitive powers of
reason; that the aforesaid truth which consists
in the unity of the object and the Notion
is, after all, only Appearance, and this
time, again on the ground that the content
is only the manifold of intuition. On this
point we have already remarked that, on the
contrary, it is precisely in the Notion that
this manifoldness, in so far as it pertains
to intuition in contrast to the Notion, is
sublated and that through the Notion the
object is reduced to its non-contingent essential
nature. The latter enters into the sphere
of Appearance and for that very reason the
Appearance is not devoid of essential being,
but is a manifestation of essence. But the
completely liberated manifestation of essence
is the Notion
§ 1309
These propositions of which we here
remind
the reader are not dogmatic assertions,
for
the reason that they are results that
have
issued from the entire immanent development
of essence. The present standpoint
to which
this development has led is that the
form
of the absolute which is higher than
being
and essence is the Notion. Regarded
from
this aspect, the Notion has subjugated
being
and essence, which from other starting
points
include also feeling and intuition
and representation,
and which appeared as its antecedent
conditions,
and has proved itself to be their unconditioned
ground. There now remains the second
aspect,
to the treatment of which this Third
Book
of the Logic is devoted, namely the
exposition
of how the Notion builds up in and
from itself
the reality that has vanished in it.
It has
therefore been freely admitted that
the cognition
that stops short at the Notion purely
as
such, is still incomplete and has only
as
yet arrived at abstract truth. But
its incompleteness
does not lie in its lack of that presumptive
reality given in feeling and intuition
but
rather in the fact that the Notion
has not
yet given itself a reality of its own,
a
reality produced from its own resources.
The demonstrated absoluteness of the
Notion
relatively to the material of experience
and, more exactly, to the categories
and
concepts of reflection, consists in
this,
that this material as it appears apart
from
and prior to the Notion has no truth;
this
it has solely in its ideality or its
identity
with the Notion. The derivation of
the real
from it if we want to call it derivation,
consists in the first place essentially
in
this, that the Notion in its formal
abstraction
reveals itself as incomplete and through
its own immanent dialectic passes over
into
reality; but it does not fall back
again
onto a ready-made reality confronting
it
and take refuge in something which
has shown
itself to be the unessential element
of Appearance
because, having looked around for something
better, it has failed to find it; on
the
contrary, it produces the reality from
its
own resources. It will always stand
out as
a marvel how the Kantian philosophy
recognised
the relation of thought to sensuous
reality,
beyond which it did not advance, as
only
a relative relation of mere Appearance,
and
perfectly well recognised and enunciated
a higher unity of both in the Idea
in general
and, for example, in the Idea of an
intuitive
understanding, and yet stopped short
at this
relative relation and the assertion
that
the Notion is and remains utterly separate
from reality thus asserting as truth
what
it declared to be finite cognition,
and denouncing
as an unjustified extravagance and
a figment
of thought what it recognised as truth
and
of which it established the specific
notion.
§ 1310
Since it is primarily logic and not
science
generally with whose relation to truth
we
are here concerned, it must further
be conceded
that logic as the formal science cannot
and
should not contain that reality which
is
the content of the further parts of
philosophy,
namely, the philosophical sciences
of nature
and of spirit. These concrete sciences
do,
of course, present themselves in a
more real
form of the Idea than logic does; but
this
is not by turning back again to the
reality
abandoned by the consciousness which
has
risen above its mode as Appearance
to the
level of science, nor by reverting
to the
use of forms such as the categories
and concepts
of reflection, whose finitude and untruth
have been demonstrated in the logic.
On the
contrary, logic exhibits the elevation
of
the Idea to that level from which it
becomes
the creator of nature and passes over
to
the form of a concrete immediacy whose
Notion,
however, breaks up this shape again
in order
to realise itself as concrete spirit.
As
contrasted with these concrete sciences
(although
these have and retain as their inner
formative
principle that same logical element,
or the
Notion, which had served is their archetype),
logic is of course a formal science;
but
it is the science of the absolute form
which
is within itself a totality and contains
the pure Idea of truth itself. This
absolute
form has in its own self its content
or reality;
the Notion, not being a trivial, empty
identity,
possesses in its moment of negativity
or
of absolute determining, the differentiated
determinations; the content is simply
and
solely these determinations of the
absolute
form and nothing else a content posited
by
the absolute form itself and consequently
also adequate to it. For this reason,
this
form is of quite another nature than
logical
form is ordinarily taken to be. It
is already
on its own account truth, since this
content
is adequate to its form, or the reality
to
its Notion; and it is the pure truth
because
the determinations of the content do
not
yet have the form of an absolute otherness
or of absolute immediacy. When Kant,
in connection
with logic comes to discuss the old
and famous
question: what is truth? he first of
all
presents to the reader as a triviality
the
explanation of the term as the agreement
of cognition with its object a definition
of great, indeed of supreme, value.
If we
remember this definition in connection
with
the fundamental assertion of transcendental
idealism, that reason as cognitive
is incapable
of apprehending things-in- themselves,
that
reality lies absolutely outside the
Notion,
then it is at once evident that a reason
such as this which is unable to put
itself
in agreement with its object, the things-in-themselves,
and things-in-themselves that are not
in
agreement with the Notion of reason,
the
Notion that is not in agreement with
reality,
and a reality that does not agree with
the
Notion, are untrue conceptions. If
Kant had
considered the Idea of an intuitive
understanding
in the light of the above definition
of truth,
he would have treated that Idea which
expresses
the required agreement, not as a figment
of thought but rather as the truth.
§ 1311
'What we require to know' Kant goes
on to
say, 'is a universal and sure criterion
of
any cognition whatever; it would be
such
a criterion as would be valid for all
cognitions
without distinction of their objects;
but
since with such a criterion abstraction
would
be made from all content of the cognition
(relation to its object) and truth
concerns
precisely this content, it would be
quite
impossible and absurd to ask for a
mark of
the truth of this content of cognitions.'
Here, the usual conception of the formal
function of logic is expressed very
definitely
and the argument adduced has a very
convincing
air. But first of all it is to be observed
that it usually happens with such formal
ratiocination that it forgets in its
discourse
the very point on which it has based
its
argument and of which it is speaking.
It
is alleged that it would be absurd
to ask
for the criterion of the truth of the
content
of cognition; but according to the
definition
it is not the content that constitutes
the
truth, but the agreement of the content
with
the Notion. A content such as is here
spoken
of, without the Notion, is something
notionless,
and hence without essential being;
certainly
we cannot ask for the criterion of
the truth
of such a content, but for the very
opposite
reason; not, that is, because the content,
as something notionless, is not the
required
agreement, but simply because it cannot
be
anything more than a mere truthless
opinion.
Let us leave on one side the content
which
causes the confusion here the confusion
into
which formalism falls whenever it sets
out
to explain something and which makes
it say
the opposite of what it intends and
let us
stop at the abstract view that logic
is only
formal and, in fact, abstracts from
all content;
we then have a one- sided cognition
which
is not to contain any object, an empty,
blank
form which therefore is no more an
agreement
for an agreement essentially requires
two
terms then it is truth. In the a priori
synthesis
of the Notion, Kant possessed a higher
principle
in which a duality in a unity could
be cognised,
a cognition, therefore, of what is
required
for truth; but the material of sense,
the
manifold of intuition, was too strong
for
him and he was unable to get away from
it
to a consideration of the Notion and
the
categories in and for themselves and
to a
speculative method of philosophising.
§ 1312
Logic being the science of the absolute form,
this formal science, in order to be true,
must possess in its own self a content adequate
to its form; and all the more, since the
formal element of logic is the pure form,
and therefore the truth of logic must be
the pure truth itself. Consequently this
formal science must be regarded as possessing
richer determinations and a richer content
and as being infinitely more potent in its
influence on the concrete than is usually
supposed. The laws of logic by themselves
(not counting the heterogeneous accretions
of applied logic and the rest of the psychological
and anthropological material) are commonly
restricted, apart from the law of contradiction,
to some meagre propositions concerning the
conversion of judgements and the forms of
syllogisms. Even here the forms which come
up for treatment as well as their further
modifications are only, as it were, historically
taken up; they are not subjected to criticism
to determine whether they are in and for
themselves true. Thus, for example, the form
of the positive judgement is accepted as
something perfectly correct in itself, the
question whether such a judgement is true
depending solely on the content. Whether
this form is in its own self a form of truth,
whether the proposition it enunciates, the
individual is a universal, is not inherently
dialectical, is a question that no one thinks
of investigating. It is straightway assumed
that this judgement is, on its own account,
capable of containing truth and that the
proposition enunciated by any positive judgement
is true, although it is directly evident
that it lacks what is required by the definition
of truth, namely, the agreement of the Notion
and its object; if the predicate, which here
is the universal, is taken as the Notion,
and the subject, which is the individual,
is taken as the object, then the one does
not agree with the other. But if the abstract
universal which is the predicate falls short
of constituting a Notion, for a Notion certainly
implies something more, and if, too, a subject
of this kind is not yet much more than a
grammatical one, how should the judgement
possibly contain truth seeing that either
its Notion and object do not agree, or it
lacks both Notion and object? On the contrary,
then, what is impossible and absurd is to
attempt to grasp the truth in such forms
as the positive judgement and the judgement
generally. Just as the Kantian philosophy
did not consider the categories in and for
themselves but declared them to be finite
determinations incapable of containing truth,
on the wrong ground that they are subjective
forms of self-consciousness, still less did
that philosophy subject to criticism the
forms of the Notion which are the content
of ordinary logic; on the contrary, it has
adopted a portion of them, namely, the functions
of judgement, for the determination of the
categories and accepted them as valid presuppositions.
Even if we are to see in logical forms nothing
more than formal functions of thought, they
would for that very reason be worthy of investigation
to ascertain how far, on their own account,
they correspond to the truth. A logic that
does not perform this task can at most claim
the value of a descriptive natural history
of the phenomena of thinking just as they
occur. It is an infinite merit of Aristotle,
one that must fill us with the highest admiration
for the powers of that genius, that he was
the first to undertake this description.
It is necessary however to go further and
to ascertain both the systematic connection
of these forms and their value.
Division § 1313
The foregoing consideration of the
Notion
shows it to be the unity of being and
essence.
Essence is the first negation of being,
which
has thereby become illusory being;
the Notion
is the second negation or the negation
of
this negation, and is therefore being
once
more, but being that has been restored
as
the infinite mediation and negativity
of
being within itself. Consequently,
being
and essence in the Notion no longer
have
the same determination that they had
as being
and essence, nor are they merely in
a unity
such that each has an illusory being
in the
other. Therefore the Notion does not
differentiate
itself into these determinations. It
is the
truth of the relationship of substance
in
which being and essence achieve the
fulfilment
of their self-subsistence and their
determination
through each other. The truth of substantiality
proved to be the substantial identity
which
is no less a positedness and only as
such
is substantial identity. The positedness
is a determinate being and differentiation;
consequently, in the Notion, being-in-and-for-itself
has attained a true and adequate reality,
for the positedness is itself being-in-and-for-itself.
This positedness constitutes the difference
of the Notion within itself; because
the
positedness is immediately being-in-and-for-itself,
the different moments of the Notion
are themselves
the whole Notion, universal in their
determinateness
and identical with their negation.
§ 1314
This, now, is the very Notion of the
Notion.
But it is as yet only its Notion; or,
this
Notion is itself only the Notion. Because
it is equally being-in-and-for-self
and also
a positedness, or the absolute substance
that manifests the necessity of distinct
substances as an identity, this identity
must itself posit what it is. The moments
of the movement of the relationship
of substantiality
through which the Notion has come to
be and
the reality thereby exhibited are still
only
in transition into the Notion; this
reality
does not yet possess the determination
of
being the Notion's own, self-evolved
determination;
it fell in the sphere of necessity;
but the
Notion's own determination can only
be the
result of its free determining, a determinate
being in which the Notion is identical
with
itself, its moments also being Notions
and
posited by the Notion itself.
§ 1315
At first, therefore, the Notion is
only in
itself or implicitly the truth; because
it
is only something inner, it is equally
only
outer.
It is at first simply an immediate
and in
this guise its moments have the form
of immediate,
fixed determinations. It appears as
the determinate
Notion, as the sphere of the mere understanding.
Because this form of immediacy is still
inadequate
to the nature of the Notion, for this
is
free, being in relation only with itself,
it is an external form in which the
Notion
cannot count as a being-in-and-for-self,
but only as something posited or subjective.
The Notion in the guise of immediacy
constitutes
the point of view for which the Notion
is
a subjective thinking, a reflection
external
to the subject matter. This stage,
therefore,
constitutes subjectivity, or the formal
Notion.
Its externality is manifested in the
fixed
being of its determinations each of
which
appears independently as an isolated,
qualitative
something which is only externally
related
to its other. But the identity of the
Notion,
which is precisely their inner or subjective
essence, sets them dialectically in
movement,
with the result that their separatedness
vanishes and with it the separation
of the
Notion from the object, and there emerges
as their truth the totality which is
the
objective Notion.
§ 1316
Secondly, the Notion in its objectivity
is
the subject matter in and for itself.
Through
its necessary, progressive determination
the formal Notion makes itself its
subject
matter and in this way is rid of the
relation
of subjectivity and externality to
the object.
Or, conversely, objectivity is the
real Notion
that has emerged from its inwardness
and
passed over into determinate being.
In this
identity with the object, the Notion
thus
has a free determinate being of its
own.
But this freedom is still only an immediate,
not yet a negative, freedom. As one
with
the object, the Notion is submerged
in it;
its distinct moments are objective
existences
in which it is itself again only the
inner.
As the soul [Seele] of objective reality
it must give itself the form of subjectivity
which, as formal Notion, belonged to
it immediately;
thus, in the form of the free Notion,
a form
which in objectivity it still lacked,
it
opposes itself to that objectivity
and in
so doing makes the identity with it
which,
as objective Notion it possesses in
and for
itself, also a posited identity.
§ 1317
In this consummation in which it has
the
form of freedom even in its objectivity,
the adequate Notion is the Idea. Reason,
which is the sphere of the Idea, is
the self-revealed
truth in which the Notion possesses
the realisation
that is wholly adequate to it, and
is free,
inasmuch as it cognises this its objective
world in its subjectivity and its subjectivity
in its objective world.
Subjectivity - next section
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