
SCIENCE OF LOGIC
IN THIRTEEN WEBPAGE PARTS
(PAGE SIX)
PART SIX
Translated by A. V. Miller George Allen &
Unwin, 1969
IN THIRTEEN WEB-PAGE PARTS -
PAGE
SIX
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.
The Doctrine of the Notion
Section One: Subjectivity§ 1318
The Notion is, in the first instance,
formal,
the Notion in its beginning or the
immediate
Notion. In the immediate unity, its
difference
or positedness is itself at first simple
and only an illusory being [Schein],
so that
the moments of the difference are immediately
the totality of the Notion and are
simply
the Notion as such.
§ 1319
Secondly, however, because it is absolute
negativity, it sunders itself and posits
itself as the negative or as the other
of
itself; and further, because as yet
it is
only the immediate Notion, this positing
or differentiation is characterised
by the
fact that the moments become indifferent
to one another and each becomes for
itself;
in this partition, its unity is still
only
an external connection. As such connection
of its moments, which are posited as
self-subsistent
and indifferent, it is Judgment.
§ 1320
Thirdly, though the judgment does contain
the unity of the Notion that has vanished
into its self-subsistent moments, yet
this
unity is not posited. It becomes so
through
the dialectical movement of the judgment,
through which it has become the Syllogism,
the Notion posited in its completeness;
for
in the syllogism there is posited not
only
the moments of the Notion as self-subsistent
extremes, but also their mediating
unity.
§ 1321
But since this unity itself as the
unifying
middle, and the moments as self-subsistent
extremes, are in the first instance
immediately
opposed to one another, this contradictory
relationship that occurs in the formal
syllogism
sublates itself, and the completeness
of
the Notion passes over into the unity
of
the totality, the subjectivity of the
Notion
into its Objectivity.
Chapter 1 The Notion § 1322
Understanding is the term usually employed
to express the faculty of notions;
as so
used, it is distinguished from the
faculty
of judgment and the faculty of syllogisms,
of the formal reason But it is with
reason
that it is especially contrasted; in
that
case, however, it does not signify
the faculty
of the notion in general, but of determinate
notions, and the idea prevails that
the notion
is only a determinate notion. When
the understanding
in this signification is distinguished
from
the formal faculty of judgment and
from the
formal reason, it is to be taken as
the faculty
of the single determinate notion. For
the
judgment and the syllogism or reason
are,
as formal, only a product of the understanding
since they stand under the form of
the abstract
determinateness of the Notion. Here,
however,
the Notion emphatically does not rank
as
something merely abstractly determinate;
consequently, the understanding is
to be
distinguished from reason only in the
sense
that the former is merely the faculty
of
the notion in general.
§ 1323
This universal Notion, which we have
now
to consider here, contains the three
moments:
universality, particularity and individuality.
The difference and the determinations
which
the Notion gives itself in its distinguishing,
constitute the side which was previously
called positedness. As this is identical
in the Notion with being-in-and-for-self,
each of these moments is no less the
whole
Notion than it is a determinate Notion
and
a determination of the Notion.
§ 1324
In the first instance, it is the pure
Notion
or the determination of universality.
But
the pure or universal Notion is also
only
a determinate or particular Notion,
which
takes its place alongside other Notions.
Because the Notion is a totality, and
therefore
in its universality or pure identical
self-relation
is essentially a determining and a
distinguishing,
it therefore contains within itself
the standard
by which this form of its self-identity,
in pervading and embracing all the
moments,
no less immediately determines itself
to
be only the universal over against
the distinguishedness
of the moments.
Secondly, the Notion is thereby posited
as
this particular or determinate Notion,
distinct
from others.
Thirdly, individuality is the Notion
reflecting
itself out of the difference into absolute
negativity. This is, at the same time,
the
moment in which it has passed out of
its
identity into its otherness, and becomes
the judgment.
A The Universal Notion § 1325
The pure Notion is the absolutely infinite,
unconditioned and free. It is here,
at the
outset of the discussion which has
the Notion
for its content, that we must look
back once
more at its genesis. Essence is the
outcome
of being, and the Notion, the outcome
of
essence, therefore also of being. But
this
becoming has the significance of a
self-repulsion,
so that it is rather the outcome which
is
the unconditioned and original. Being,
in
its transition into essence, has become
an
illusory being or a positedness, and
becoming
or transition into an other has become
a
positing; and conversely, the positing
or
reflection of essence has sublated
itself
and has restored itself as a being
that is
not posited, that is original. The
Notion
is the interfusion of these moments,
namely,
qualitative and original being is such
only
as a positing, only as a return-into-self,
and this pure reflection-into-self
is a sheer
becoming-other or determinateness which,
consequently, is no less an infinite,
self-relating
determinateness.
§ 1326
Thus the Notion is, in the first instance,
the absolute self-identity that is
such only
as the negation of negation or as the
infinite
unity of the negativity with itself.
This
pure relation of the Notion to itself,
which
is this relation by positing itself
through
the negativity, is the universality
of the
Notion.
§ 1327
As universality is the utterly simple
determination,
it does not seem capable of any explanation;
for an explanation must concern itself
with
definitions and distinctions and must
apply
predicates to its object, and to do
this
to what is simple, would alter rather
than
explain it. But the simplicity which
constitutes
the very nature of the universal is
such
that, through absolute negativity,
it contains
within itself difference and determinateness
in the highest degree. Being is simple
as
immediate being; for that reason it
is only
something meant or intended and we
cannot
say of it what it is; therefore, it
is one
with its other, with non- being. Its
Notion
is just this, to be a simplicity that
immediately
vanishes in its opposite; it is becoming.
The universal, on the contrary, is
that simplicity
which, because it is the Notion, no
less
possesses within itself the richest
content.
§ 1328
First, therefore, it is the simple
relation
to itself; it is only within itself.
Secondly,
however, this identity is within itself
absolute
mediation, but it is not something
mediated.
The universal that is mediated, namely,
the
abstract universal that is opposed
to the
particular and the individual, this
will
be discussed later when we are dealing
with
the specific notion. Yet even the abstract
universal involves this, that in order
to
obtain it we are required to leave
out other
determinations of the concrete. These
determinations,
simply as such, are negations; equally,
too,
the omitting of them is a negating.
So that
even with the abstraction, we have
the negation
of the negation. But this double negation
is conceived of as though it were external
to the abstraction, as though not only
were
the other omitted properties of the
concrete
distinct from the one retained, which
is
the content of the abstract universal,
but
also as though this operation of omitting
the other properties and retaining
the one
were a process outside the properties
themselves.
To such an externality in face of that
movement,
the universal has not yet determined
itself;
it is still within itself that absolute
mediation
which is, precisely, the negation of
the
negation or absolute negativity.
§ 1329
By virtue of this original unity it
follows,
in the first place, that the first
negative,
or the determination, is not a limitation
for the universal which, on the contrary,
maintains itself therein and is positively
identical with itself. The categories
of
being were, as Notions, essentially
these
identities of the determinations with
themselves
in their limitation or otherness; but
this
identity was only in itself the Notion;
it
was not yet manifested. Consequently,
the
qualitative determination as such was
lost
in its other and had for its truth
a determination
distinct from itself. The universal,
on the
contrary, even when it posits itself
in a
determination, remains therein what
it is.
It is the soul [Seele] of the concrete
which
it indwells, unimpeded and equal to
itself
in the manifoldness and diversity of
the
concrete. It is not dragged into the
process
of becoming, but continues itself through
that process undisturbed and possesses
the
power of unalterable, undying self-preservation.
§ 1330
But even so, it does not merely show,
or
have an illusory being, in its other,
like
the determination of reflection; this,
as
a correlate, is not merely self-related
but
is a positive relating of itself to
its other
in which it manifests itself; but,
in the
first instance, it only shows in it,
and
this illusory being of each in the
other,
or their reciprocal determining, along
with
their self-dependence, has the form
of an
external act. The universal, on the
contrary,
is posited as the essential being of
its
determination, as the latter's own
positive
nature. For the determination that
constitutes
its negative is, in the Notion, simply
and
solely a positedness; in other words,
it
is, at the same time, essentially only
the
negative of the negative, and is only
as
this identity of the negative with
itself,
which is the universal. Thus the universal
is also the substance of its determinations;
but in such wise that what was a contingency
for substance, is the Notion's own
self-mediation,
its own immanent reflection. But this
mediation
which, in the first instance, raises
contingency
to necessity, is the manifested relation;
the Notion is not the abyss of formless
substance,
or necessity as the inner identity
of things
or states distinct from, and limiting,
one
another; on the contrary, as absolute
negativity,
it is the shaper and creator, and because
the determination is not a limitation
but
is just as much utterly sublated, or
posited,
the illusory being is now manifestation,
the manifestation of the identical.
§ 1331
The universal is therefore free power;
it
is itself and takes its other within
its
embrace, but without doing violence
to it;
on the contrary, the universal is,
in its
other, in peaceful communion with itself.
We have called it free power, but it
could
also be called free love and boundless
blessedness,
for it bears itself towards its other
as
towards its own self; in it, it has
returned
to itself.
§ 1332
We have just mentioned determinateness,
although
the Notion, being as yet only the universal
and only self-identical, has not yet
advanced
to that stage. However, we cannot speak
of
the universal apart from determinateness
which to be more precise is particularity
and individuality, for the universal,
in
its absolute negativity, contains determinateness
in and for itself. The determinateness,
therefore,
is not introduced from outside when
we speak
of it in connection with the universal.
As
negativity in general or in accordance
with
the first, immediate negation, the
universal
contains determinateness generally
as particularity;
as the second negation, that is, as
negation
of the negation, it is absolute determinateness
or individuality and concreteness.
The universal
is thus the totality of the Notion;
it is
a concrete, and far from being empty,
it
has through its Notion a content, and
a content
in which it not only maintains itself
but
one which is its own and immanent in
it.
We can, indeed, abstract from the content:
but in that case we do not obtain the
universal
of the Notion but only the abstract
universal,
which is an isolated, imperfect moment
of
the Notion and has no truth.
§ 1333
More precisely, the universal shows
itself
as this totality as follows. In so
far as
it contains determinateness, it is
not merely
the first negation, but also the reflection
of this negation into itself. Taken
expressly
with this first negation, it is a particular,
and it is as such that we are soon
to consider
it; but in this determinateness it
is essentially
still a universal; this side we have
here
still to consider. For determinateness,
being
in the Notion, is the total reflection,
the
two-fold illusory being which on the
one
hand has an illusory reference outwards,
the reflection-into-other, and on the
other
hand has an illusory reference inwards,
the
reflection-into-self. The former reflection
involves distinction from an other;
from
this standpoint, the universal possesses
a particularity which has its resolution
in a higher universal. Now even though
it
is merely a relative universal, it
does not
lose its character of universal; it
preserves
itself in its determinateness, not
merely
as though in its connection with the
determinateness
it remained indifferent to it - for
then
it would be merely compounded with
it but
so that it is what we have just called
the
illusory reference inwards. The determinateness,
as determinate Notion, is bent back
into
itself out of the externality; it is
the
Notion's own immanent character, which
is
an essential character by virtue of
the fact
that, in being taken up into the universality
and pervaded by it, it equally pervades
the
universality, being of like compass
and identical
with it; it is the character that belongs
to the genus as the determinateness
that
is not separated from the universal.
Accordingly,
the limitation is not outward-going
but positive,
for the Notion, through its universality,
stands in free relation to itself.
Thus even
the determinate Notion remains within
itself
infinitely free Notion.
§ 1334
But in regard to the other side, in
which
the genus is limited by its specific
character,
it has been observed that this, as
a lower
genus, has its resolution in a higher
universal.
The latter, in its turn, can also be
grasped
as genus but as a more abstract one;
but
it always pertains only to that side
of the
determinate Notion which has a reference
outwards. The truly higher universal
is that
in which this outward-going side is
taken
back into the universal, the second
negation,
in which the determinateness is present
simply
as posited or as illusory being. Life,
ego,
spirit, absolute Notion, are not universals
merely in the sense of higher genera,
but
are concretes whose determinatenesses,
too,
are not species or lower genera but
genera
which, in their reality, are absolutely
self-contained
and self-fulfilled. In so far as life,
ego,
finite spirit are, as they certainly
are,
also only determinate Notions, their
absolute
resolution is in that universal which
as
truly absolute Notion is to be grasped
as
the Idea of infinite spirit, whose
posited
being is infinite, transparent reality
wherein
it contemplates its creation, and in
this
creation its own self.
§ 1335
The true, infinite universal which,
in itself,
is as much particularity as individuality,
we have next to consider as particularity.
It determines itself freely; the process
by which it makes itself finite is
not a
transition, for this occurs only in
the sphere
of being; it is creative power as the
absolute
negativity which relates itself to
its own
self. As such, it differentiates itself
internally,
and this is a determining, because
the differentiation
is one with the universality. Accordingly,
the universal is a process in which
it posits
the differences themselves as universal
and
self-related. They thereby become fixed,
isolated differences. The isolated
subsistence
of the finite which earlier was determined
as its being-for-self, and also as
thinghood,
as substance, is, in its truth universality,
the form with which the infinite Notion
clothes
its differences - a form that is, in
fact,
one of its own differences. Herein
consists
the creative power of the Notion, a
power
which is to be comprehended only in
this,
the Notion's innermost core.
B The Particular Notion § 1336
Determinateness as such belongs to
being
and the qualitative sphere; as determinateness
of the Notion it is particularity.
It is
not a limit, as though it were related
to
an other beyond it; on the contrary,
as we
have just seen, it is the native, immanent
moment of the universal; in particularity,
therefore, the universal is not in
the presence
of an other, but simply of itself.
The particular contains universality,
which
constitutes its substance; the genus
is unaltered
in its species, and the species are
not different
from the universal but only from one
another.
The particular has one and the same
universality
as the other particulars to which it
is related.
At the same time, by virtue of the
identity
of the particulars with the universal,
their
diversity is, as such, universal; it
is totality.
The particular, therefore, not only
contains
the universal but through its determinateness
also exhibits it; consequently, the
universal
constitutes a sphere that must exhaust
the
particular. This totality appears,
in so
far as the determinateness of the particular
is taken as mere diversity, as completeness.
In this respect, species are complete
simply
because there are no more of them.
There
is no inner standard or principle that
could
apply to them, simply because diversity
is
the difference without unity in which
the
universality, which in its own self
is absolute
unity, is a merely external reflection
and
an unrestricted, contingent completeness.
But diversity passes over into opposition,
into an immanent relation of the diverse
moments. Particularity, however, because
it is universality, is this immanent
relation,
not through a transition, but in and
for
itself; it is in its own self totality
and
simple determinateness, essentially
a principle.
It has no other determinateness than
that
posited by the universal itself and
resulting
from the universal in the following
manner.
The particular is the universal itself,
but
it is its difference or relation to
an other,
its illusory reference outwards [sein
Scheinen
nach aussen]; but there is no other
present
from which the particular could be
distinguished,
except the universal itself. The universal
determines itself, and so is itself
the particular;
the determinateness is its difference;
it
is distinguished only from its own
self.
Therefore its species are only (a)
the universal
itself, and (b) the particular. The
universal
as the Notion is itself and its opposite,
and this again is the universal itself
as
its posited determinateness; it embraces
its opposite and in it is in union
with itself.
Thus it is the totality and principle
of
its diversity, which is determined
wholly
and solely by the universal itself.
Therefore there is no other true logical
classification than this, that the
Notion
sets itself on one side as immediate
indeterminate
universality; this very indeterminateness
constitutes its determinateness or
makes
it a particular. Each of them is the
particular
and is therefore co-ordinate with the
other.
Each of them as a particular is also
determinate
as against the universal, and in so
far can
be said to be subordinate to it. But
even
this universal, as against which the
particular
is determined, is for that reason itself
merely one of the opposed sides. For
if we
speak of two opposed sides, we must
supplement
this by saying that it is not merely
together
that they constitute the particular
- as
if they were alike in being particulars
only
for external reflection - but rather
that
their determinateness over against
one another
is at the same time essentially only
one
determinateness, the negativity, which
in
the universal is simple.
Difference, as it shows itself here,
is in
its Notion and therefore in its truth.
All
previous difference has this unity
in principle
(im Begriffe). As immediate difference
in
the sphere of being, it is limit of
an other;
in reflection it is relative and posited
as essentially relating itself to its
other;
here therefore the unity of the Notion
begins
to be posited, but at first it is only
illusory
being in an other. The true meaning
and resolution
of these determinations is just this,
that
they attain to their Notion, their
truth;
being, determinate being, something,
or whole
and parts, etc. substance and accidents,
cause and effect, are by themselves
[merely]
thought-determinations; but they are
grasped
as determinate Notions when each is
cognized
in unity with its other or opposite
determination.
Whole and parts, cause and effect,
for example,
are not as yet different terms determined
as particulars relatively to each other,
because although in themselves they
constitute
one Notion, their unity has not yet
reached
the form of universality; thus the
difference,
too, which is in these relationships,
has
not as yet the form of being one determinateness.
Cause and effect, for example, are
not two
different Notions, but only one determinate
Notion, and causality, like every Notion,
is a simple Notion.
With respect to completeness, we have
seen
that the determinate side of particularity
is complete in the difference of the
universal
and the particular, and that these
two alone
constitute the particular species.
In nature,
of course, there are to be found more
than
two species in a genus, just as between
these
many species there cannot exist the
relationship
we have just indicated. This is the
impotence
of nature, that it cannot adhere to
and exhibit
the strictness of the Notion and runs
wild
in this blind irrational [begrifflos]
multiplicity.
We can wonder at nature's manifold
genera
and species and the endless diversity
of
her formations, for wonderment is unreasoning
and its object the irrational. Nature,
because
it is the self-externality of the Notion,
is free to indulge itself in this variety,
just as spirit, too, even though it
possesses
the Notion in the shape of the Notion,
engages
in pictorial thinking and runs riot
in its
endless variety. The manifold natural
genera
or species must not be esteemed as
anything
more than the capricious fancies of
spirit
in its representations. Both indeed
show
traces and inklings of the Notion on
all
sides, but do not present a faithful
copy
of it because they are the side of
its free
self-externality. The Notion is absolute
power just because it can freely abandon
its difference to the shape of self-subsistent
diversity, outer necessity, contingency,
caprice, opinion, which however must
not
be taken for more than the abstract
aspect
of nothingness.
We have seen that the determinateness
of
the particular is simple as principle,
but
it is also simple as moment of the
totality
- as a determinateness opposed to the
other
determinateness. The Notion, in determining
or distinguishing itself, is negatively
directed
against its unity and gives itself
the form
of one of its ideal moments, that of
being:
as a determinate Notion, it has a determinate
Being in general. But this Being no
longer
signifies bare immediacy but Universality
- immediacy which through absolute
mediation
is equal to itself and equally contains
the
other moment, essential being or reflection.
This Universality with which the determinate
moment is clothed is abstract Universality.
The particular has Universality within
it
as its essential being; but, in so
far as
the determinateness of the difference
is
posited, and thereby has Being, Universality
is a form assumed by the difference,
and
the determinateness as such is the
content.
The Universality becomes form in so
far as
the difference is present as the essential
moment, just as, on the contrary, in
the
purely universal it is present only
as absolute
negativity, not as difference which
posited
as such. ©
§ 1337
Now determinateness, it is true, is
the abstract,
as against the other, determinateness;
but
this other is only universality itself
which
is, therefore, also abstract, and the
determinateness
of the Notion, or particularity, is
again
nothing more than a determinate universality.
In this, the Notion is outside itself;
since
it is the Notion that is here outside
itself,
the abstract universal contains all
the moments
of the Notion. It is (a) universality,
(b)
determinateness, (c) the simple unity
of
both; but this unity is immediate,
and therefore
particularity is not present as totality.
In itself it is also this totality
and mediation;
it is essentially an exclusive relation
to
an other, or sublation of the negation,
namely,
of the other determinateness - an other,
however, that exists only in imagination,
for it vanishes immediately and shows
itself
to be the same as its supposed other.
Therefore,
what makes this universality abstract
is
that the mediation is only a condition
or
is not posited in the universality
itself.
Because it is not posited, the unity
of the
abstract universality has the form
of immediacy,
and the content has the form of indifference
to its universality, for the content
is not
present as the totality which is the
universality
of absolute negativity. Hence the abstract
universal is, indeed, the Notion, yet
it
is without the Notion; it is the Notion
that
is not posited as such.
When people talk of the determinate
Notion,
what is usually meant is merely such
an abstract
universal. Even by notion as such,
what is
generally understood is only this notion
that is no Notion, and the understanding
denotes the faculty of such notions.
Demonstration
appertains to this understanding in
so far
as it progresses by notions, that is
to say,
merely by determinations. Such a progression
by notions, therefore, does not get
beyond
finitude and necessity; for it, the
highest
is the negative infinite, the abstraction
of the supreme being [des höchsten
Wesen],
which is itself the determinateness
of indeterminateness.
Absolute substance, too, though it
is not
this empty abstraction - from the point
of
view of its content it is rather the
totality
- is nevertheless abstract because
it lacks
the absolute form; its inmost truth
is not
constituted by the Notion; true, it
is the
identity of universality and particularity,
or of thought and asunderness, yet
this identity
is not the determinateness of the Notion;
on the contrary, outside substance
there
is an understanding - and just because
it
is outside it, a contingent understanding
- in which and for which substance
is present
in various attributes and modes.
Moreover, abstraction is not empty
as it
is usually said to be; it is the determinate
Notion and has some determinateness
or other
for its content. Even the supreme being,
the pure abstraction, has, as already
remarked,
the determinateness of indeterminateness;
but indeterminateness is a determinateness,
because it is supposed to stand opposed
to
the determinate. But the enunciation
of what
it is, itself sublates what it is supposed
to be; it is enunciated as one with
determinateness,
and in this way, out of the abstraction
is
established its truth and the Notion.
But
every determinate Notion is, of course,
empty
in so far as it does not contain the
totality,
but only a one-sided determinateness.
Even
when it has some other concrete content,
for example man, the state, animal,
etc.,
it still remains an empty Notion, since
its
determinateness is not the principle
of its
differences; a principle contains the
beginning
and the essential nature of its development
and realization; any other determinateness
of the notion, however, is sterile.
To reproach
the Notion generally with being empty,
is
to misjudge that absolute determinateness
of the Notion which is the difference
of
the Notion and the only true content
in the
element of the Notion.
§ 1338
Connected with the above is the reason
why
latterly the Understanding has been
so lightly
esteemed and ranked as inferior to
Reason;
it is the fixity which it imparts to
the
determinatenesses, and hence to finite
determinations.
This fixity consists in the form of
abstract
Universality which has just been considered:
through it they become immutable. For
qualitative
determinateness, and also determinations
of reflection, are essentially limited,
and,
through their limitation, have a relation
to their other; hence the necessity
of transition
and passing away. But universality
which
they possess in the understanding gives
them
the form of reflection-into-self by
which
they are freed from the relation-to-other
and have become imperishable. Now though
in the pure Notion this eternity belongs
to its nature, yet its abstract determinations
are eternal essentialities only in
respect
of their form; but their content is
at variance
with this form; therefore they are
not truth,
or imperishable. Their content is at
variance
with the form, because it is not determinateness
itself as universal; that is, it is
not totality
of the Notion's difference, or not
itself
the whole form; but the form of the
limited
understanding is itself the imperfect
form,
namely, abstract universality. But
further,
we must recognise the infinite force
of the
understanding in splitting the concrete
into
abstract determinatenesses and plumbing
the
depth of difference, the force that
at the
same time is alone the power that effects
their transition.
The concrete of intuition is a totality,
but a sensuous one - a real material
which
has an indifferent, sundered existence
in
space and time; but surely this absence
of
unity in the manifold, where it is
the content
of intuition, ought not to be counted
to
it for merit and superiority over intellectual
existence. The mutability that it exhibits
in intuition already points to the
universal;
yet all that it brings to view is merely
another, equally mutable, material;
therefore,
only the same thing again, not the
universal
which should appear and take its place.
But
least of all in sciences such as geometry
and arithmetic, should we count it
as a merit
that their material involves an intuitive
element, or imagine that their propositions
are established on it. On the contrary,
it
is on account of that element that
the material
of such sciences is of an inferior
nature;
the intuition of figures or numbers
does
not procure a scientific knowledge
of them;
only thinking about them can do this.
But
if by intuition we are to understand
not
merely the element of sense but the
objective
totality, then it is an intellectual
intuition;
that is to say, intuition has for its
object
not the external side of existence,
but what
existence holds of imperishable reality
and
truth-reality, only in so far as it
is essentially
in the Notion and determined by it,
the Idea,
whose more precise nature has to reveal
itself
at a later stage. The advantage which
intuition
as such is supposed to have over the
Notion
is external reality, the Notionless
element,
which first receives a value through
the
Notion.
Since, therefore, understanding exhibits
the infinite force which determines
the universal,
or conversely, imparts through the
form of
Universality a fixity and subsistence
to
the determinateness that is in and
for itself
transitory; then it is not the fault
of understanding
if no further progress is made beyond
this
point. It is a subjective impotence
of reason
which adopts these determinatenesses
in their
fixity, and which is unable to bring
them
back to their unity through the dialectical
force opposed to this abstract universality,
in other words, through their own peculiar
nature or through their Notion. The
understanding
does indeed give them, so to speak,
a rigidity
of being such as they do not possess
in the
sphere of quality and the sphere of
reflection;
but at the same time it spiritually
impregnates
them and so sharpens them, that just
at this
extreme point alone they acquire the
capability
to dissolve themselves and pass over
into
their opposite. The highest maturity,
the
highest stage, which anything can attain
is that in which its downfall begins.
The
fixity of the determinateness into
which
the understanding seems to run, the
form
of the imperishable, is that of self-relating
universality. But this belongs properly
to
the Notion; and consequently in this
universality
is to be found expressed, and infinitely
close at hand, the dissolution of the
finite.
This Universality directly refutes
the determinateness
of the finite and expresses its incongruity
with the universality. Or rather, the
adequacy
of the finite is already to hand; the
abstract
determinate is posited as one with
the universality,
and for that very reason is posited
as not
for itself - for then it would only
be a
determinate - but only as unity of
itself
and the universal, that is, as Notion.
©
Therefore the usual practice of separating
understanding and reason is, from every
point
of view, to be rejected. When the Notion
is regarded as irrational, this should
be
interpreted rather as an incapacity
of reason
to recognize itself in the Notion.
The determinate
and abstract Notion is the condition,
or
rather an essential moment of reason;
it
is form spiritually impregnated, in
which
the finite, through the universality
in which
it relates itself to itself, spontaneously
catches fire, posits itself as dialectical
and thereby is the beginning of the
manifestation
of reason.
In the foregoing, the determinate Notion
has been presented in its truth, and
therefore
it only remains to indicate what it
is as
already posited therein. Difference,
which
is an essential moment of the Notion
though
not yet posited as such in the pure
universal,
receives its due in the determinate
Notion.
Determinateness in the form of universality
is linked with the universal to form
a simple
determination; this determinate universal
is the self-related determinateness;
it is
the determinate determinateness or
absolute
negativity posited for itself. But
the self-related
determinateness is individuality. Just
as
universality is immediately in and
for itself
already particularity, so too particularity
is immediately in and for itself also
individuality;
this individuality is, in the first
instance,
to be regarded as the third moment
of the
Notion, in so far as we hold on to
its opposition
to the two other moments, but it is
also
to be considered as the absolute return
of
the Notion into itself, and at the
same time
as the posited loss of itself.
Remark. Universality, particularity,
and
individuality are, according to the
foregoing
exposition, the three determinate Notions,
that is, if one insists on counting
them.
We have already shown that number is
an unsuitable
form in which to hold Notional determinations;
but for the determinations of the Notion
itself it is unsuitable in the highest
degree;
number, since it has the unit [das
Eins]
for its principle, converts them as
counted
into completely isolated and mutually
indifferent
determinations. We have seen from the
foregoing
that the truth is that the different
determinate
Notions, far from falling apart into
number,
are simply only one and the same Notion.
In the customary treatment of logic
hitherto,
various classifications and species
of notions
occur. We are at once struck by the
inconsequential
way in which the species of notions
are introduced:
there are, in respect of quantity,
quality,
etc., the following notions. There
are, expresses
no other justification than that we
find
such species already to hand and they
present
themselves empirically. In this way,
we obtain
an empirical logic - an odd science
this,
an irrational cognition of the rational.
In proceeding thus, logic sets a very
bad
example of obedience to its own precepts;
it permits itself for its own purpose
to
do the opposite of what it prescribes
as
a rule, namely that notions should
be deduced,
and scientific propositions (therefore
also
the proposition: there are such and
such
species of notions) should be proved.
In
this matter, the Kantian philosophy
commits
a further inconsequence: it borrows
the categories,
as so- called root notions, for the
transcendental
logic, from the subjective logic in
which
they were adopted empirically. Since
it admits
the latter fact, it is hard to see
why transcendental
logic resolves to borrow from such
a science
instead of directly resorting to experience.
To cite some details of this, notions
are
mainly classified according to their
clearness,
into clear and obscure, distinct and
indistinct,
adequate and inadequate. To these we
can
also add complete, profuse, [überfliessend]
notions and suchlike superfluities.
As regards
the classification by clearness, it
is readily
seen that this standpoint and its related
distinctions are taken from psychological,
not from logical, determinations. The
so-called
clear notion is supposed to suffice
for distinguishing
one object from another; but this is
not
yet a notion, it is nothing more than
a subjective
representation. What an obscure notion
is
must be left to itself, for otherwise
it
would not be an obscure but a distinct
notion.
The distinct notion is supposed to
be one
whose marks can be indicated. As such
it
is, strictly speaking, the determinate
notion.
The mark, if it is taken in its correct
meaning,
is none other than the determinateness
or
the simple content of the notion, in
so far
as it is distinguished from the form
of universality.
But the mark, in the first instance,
does
not have quite this preciser meaning
but
is in general merely a determination
whereby
a third something takes note of an
object,
or the notion; it can therefore be
a very
contingent circumstance. In general
it expresses
not so much the immanence and essential
nature
of the determination as its relation
to an
understanding external to it. If this
is
really an understanding, it has the
notion
before it and distinguishes this only
and
solely by what is in the notion. But
if the
mark is supposed to be distinct from
the
notion, then it is a sign or some other
determination
which belongs to the representation
of the
thing, not to its notion. What the
indistinct
notion may be, can be passed over as
superfluous.
But the adequate notion is something
higher;
what it really implies is the agreement
of
the Notion with reality, which is not
the
Notion as such but the Idea.
If the mark of the distinct notion
were really
supposed to be the determination of
the notion
itself, logic would find itself in
difficulty
over the simple notions which, according
to another classification, are opposed
to
compound. For if a true, that is an
immanent,
mark of the simple notion were to be
indicated,
we should not be regarding it as simple;
but in so far as no mark was given,
it would
not be a distinct notion. But here,
now,
the clear notion helps out, Unity,
reality,
and suchlike determinations are supposed
to be simple notions, probably only
because
logicians were unable to discover their
specific
nature and contented themselves with
having
merely a clear notion of them, that
is, no
notion at all. Definition, that is,
the statement
of the notion, in general demands the
statement
of the genus and the specific difference.
Therefore it presents the notion, not
as
something simple, but in two countable
components.
Yet surely no one will for that reason
suppose
such notion to be a compound. The simple
notion seems to suggest abstract simplicity,
a unity which does not contain within
itself
difference and determinateness and
which
therefore, too, is not the unity that
belongs
to the Notion. In so far as an object
is
present in ordinary thinking, especially
in memory, or even as an abstract thought
determination, it can be quite simple.
Even
the object that is richest in content,
such
as, for example, spirit, nature, the
world,
even God, when uncomprehendingly taken
up
into the simple representation of the
equally
simple expression: spirit, nature,
the world,
God, is doubtless something simple
at which
consciousness can stop short without
going
on to pick out its peculiar determination
or its mark. But the objects of consciousness
should not remain simple, should not
remain
such representations or abstract thought
determinations; on the contrary, they
should
be comprehended, that is to say, their
simplicity
should be determined with their inner
difference.
The compound notion, however, is a
contradiction
in terms. We can, of course, have a
notion
of something composite; but a compound
notion
would be something worse than materialism,
which assumes only the substance of
the soul
to be composite, yet none the less
takes
thought to be simple. Uneducated reflection
first stumbles on the idea of composition,
because it is the completely external
relation,
the worst form in which anything can
be considered;
even the lowest natures must be an
inner
unity. That the form of the untruest
existence
should be assigned, above all, to the
ego,
to the Notion, that is something we
should
not have expected and that can only
be described
as inept and barbarous.
Further, notions are divided mainly
into
contrary and contradictory. If, in
our treatment
of the notion, we are supposed to state
what
determinate notions there are, then
we must
adduce all possible determinations
- for
all determinations are notions, consequently
determinate notions - and all the categories
of being as well as all determinations
of
essence, would have to be adduced under
the
species of notions. just as in the
text-books
of logic - to - to a greater or lesser
degree,
according to the whim of the author
- it
is related that there are affirmative,
negative,
identical, conditional, necessary notions,
and so on. As the nature of the Notion
itself
has progressed beyond all such determinations
and therefore these, if adduced in
connexion
with the Notion, occur out of their
proper
place, they only admit of superficial
definitions
and appear at this stage devoid of
all interest.
At the basis of contrary and contradictory
notions - a distinction to which particular
attention is paid here - lies the reflective
determination of diversity and opposition.
They are regarded as two particular
species,
that is, each as firmly fixed on its
own
account and indifferent to the other,
without
any thought of the dialectic and the
inner
nullity of these differences - as though
what is contrary must not equally be
determined
as contradictory. The nature and the
essential
transition of the forms of reflection
which
they express have been considered in
their
proper place. In the Notion, identity
has
developed into universality, difference
into
particularity, opposition, which withdraws
into the ground, into individuality.
In these
forms, those categories of reflection
are
present as they are in their Notion.
The
universal has proved itself to be not
only
the identical, but at the same time
the different
or contrary as against the particular
and
individual, and in addition, also to
be opposed
to them or contradictory; in this opposition,
however, it is identical with them
and is
their true ground in which they are
sublated.
The same holds good of particularity
and
individuality which are likewise the
totality
of the determinations of reflection.
A further classification of notions
is into
subordinate and coordinate - a distinction
which approaches more closely to the
determination
of the Notion, namely, the relationship
of
universality and particularity, where
these
terms, too, have been mentioned in
passing.
Only it is customary to regard them
likewise
as completely rigid relationships and
from
this point of view to put forward a
number
of sterile propositions about them.
The most
prolix discussion on this point concerns
again the relation of contrariety and
contradiction
to subordination and co-ordination.
Since
the judgment is the relation of determinate
Notions, it is only at that stage that
the
true relationship will come to view.
That
fashion of comparing these determinations
without a thought for their dialectic
or
for the progressive alteration of their
determination,
or rather for the conjunction of opposed
determinations present in them, makes
the
whole consideration of what is concordant
or not concordant in them - as though
the
concord or discord were something separate
and permanent - into something merely
sterile
and meaningless.
The great Euler, who displayed an infinitely
fertile and acute mind in seizing and
combining
the deeper relations of algebraic magnitudes,
the dry, prosaic Lambert in particular,
and
others, have attempted to construct
a notation
for this class of relation between
determinations
of the Notion by lines, figures and
the like,
the general intention being to elevate,
or
rather in fact to degrade, the logical
modes
of relation to a calculus. The utter
futility
of even attempting a notation is at
once
apparent when one compares the nature
of
the sign and what it is supposed to
signify.
The determinations of the Notion, universality,
particularity and individuality, are
certainly
diverse, as are lines, or the letters
of
algebra; further, they are also opposed,
and to this extent would also admit
of the
signs plus and minus. But they themselves,
and above all their relations - even
if one
stops at subsumption and inherence
- are
in their essential nature entirely
different
from letters and lines and their relationships,
the equality or difference of magnitude,
the plus and minus, or a superimposition
of lines, or their joining to form
angles
and the dispositions of spaces enclosed
by
them. It is characteristic of such
objects
that, in contrast to determinations
of the
Notion, they are mutually external,
and have
a fixed character. Now when Notions
are so
taken that they correspond to such
signs,
they cease to be Notions. Their determinations
are not inert entities like numbers
and lines
whose relation does not itself belong
to
them; they are living movements; the
distinguished
determinateness of the one side is
immediately
internal to the other side too. What
would
be a complete contradiction in the
case of
numbers and lines is essential to the
nature
of the Notion. Higher mathematics,
which
also goes on to the infinite and allows
itself
contradictions, can no longer employ
its
usual signs for representing such determinations.
To denote the conception - which is
still
very far from being a Notion - of the
infinite
approximation of two ordinates, or
in equating
a curve with an infinite number of
infinitesimal
straight lines, all it does is to draw
two
straight lines apart from each other
and
to make the straight lines approach
the curve
but remain distinct from it; for the
infinite,
which is here the point of interest,
it refers
us to pictorial thinking.
What has misled logicians into this
attempt
is primarily the quantitative relationship
in which universality, particularity
and
individuality are supposed to stand
to one
another; the universal means, more
extensive
than the particular and the individual,
and
the particular means, more extensive
than
the individual. The Notion is the most
concrete
and richest determination because it
is the
ground and the totality of the preceding
determinations, of the categories of
being
and of the determinations of reflection;
these, therefore, are certainly also
present
in it. But its nature is completely
misunderstood
when they are retained in it in their
former
abstraction, when the wider extent
of the
universal is taken to mean that it
is something
more or a greater quantum than the
particular
and the individual. As absolute ground,
it
is the possibility of quantity, but
equally
so of quality, that is, its determinations
are just as much qualitatively distinct;
therefore they are taken in direct
opposition
to their truth when they are posited
under
the form of quantity alone. Thus, too,
the
determination of reflection is a correlate
in which its opposite has an illusory
being
[scheint]; it is not in an external
relationship
like a quantum. But the Notion is more
than
all this; its determinations are determinate
Notions, are themselves essentially
the totality
of all determinations. It is therefore
quite
inappropriate for the purpose of grasping
such an inner totality, to seek to
apply
numerical and spatial relationships
in which
all determinations fall asunder; on
the contrary,
they are the last and worst medium
which
could be employed. Natural relationships
such as magnetism, or colour relations,
would
be infinitely higher and truer symbols
for
the purpose. Since man has in language
a
means of designation peculiar to Reason,
it is an idle fancy to search for a
less
perfect mode of representation to plague
oneself with. It is essentially only
spirit
that can comprehend the Notion as Notion;
for this is not merely the property
of spirit
but spirit's pure self. It is futile
to seek
to fix it by spatial figures and algebraic
signs for the purpose of the outer
eye and
an uncomprehending, mechanical mode
of treatment
such as a calculus. In fact, anything
else
which might be supposed to serve as
a symbol
can at most, like symbols for the nature
of God, evoke intimations and echoes
of the
Notion; if, however, one should seriously
propose to employ them for expressing
and
cognizing the Notion, then the external
nature
of all symbols is inadequate to the
task;
the truth about the relationship is
rather
the converse, namely, that what in
symbols
is an echo of a higher determination,
is
only truly known through the Notion
and can
be approximated to the Notion only
by separating
off the sensuous, unessential part
that was
meant to express it.
C The Individual § 1339
Individuality, as we have seen, is
already
posited by particularity; this is determinate
universality and therefore self-related
determinateness,
the determinate determinate.
1. In the first instance, therefore,
individuality
appears as the reflection of the Notion
out
of its determinateness into itself.
It is
the self-mediation of the Notion in
so far
as its otherness has made itself into
an
other again, whereby the Notion has
reinstated
itself as self-identical, but in the
determination
of absolute negativity. The negative
in the
universal whereby this is a particular,
was
defined above as a two-fold illusory
being:
in so far as the negative is an illusory
being within the universal, the particular
remains a universal; through the reference
of the illusory being outwards it is
a determinate;
the return of this side into the universal
is two-fold: either through abstraction
which
lets drop the particular and rises
to the
higher and the highest genus, or else
through
the individuality to which the universal
in the determinateness itself descends.
Here
is where the false path branches off
and
abstraction strays from the highway
of the
Notion and forsakes the truth. Its
higher
and highest universal to which it raises
itself is only the surface, which becomes
ever more destitute of content; the
individuality
it despises is the profundity in which
the
Notion seizes itself and is posited
as Notion.
©
§ 1340
Universality and particularity appeared,
on the one hand, as moments of the
becoming
of individuality. But it has already
been
shown that they are in themselves the
total
Notion, and consequently in individuality
do not pass over into an other, but
that
in individuality there is only posited
that
they are in and for themselves. The
universal
is in and for itself because it is
in its
own self absolute mediation, self-reference
only as absolute negativity. It is
an abstract
universal in so far as this sublating
is
an external act and so a dropping of
the
determinateness.
§ 1341
Life, Spirit, God - the pure Notion
itself,
are beyond the grasp of abstraction,
because
it deprives its products of singularity,
of the principle of individuality and
personality,
and so arrives at nothing but universalities
devoid of life and spirit, colour and
content.
§ 1342
Yet the unity of the Notion is so indissoluble
that even these products of abstraction,
though they are supposed to drop individuality
are, on the contrary, individuals themselves.
Abstraction raises the concrete into
universality
in which, however, the universal is
grasped
only as a determinate universality;
and this
is precisely the individuality that
has shown
itself to be self-related determinateness.
Abstraction, therefore, is a sundering
of
the concrete and an isolating of its
determinations;
through it only single properties and
moments
are seized; for its product must contain
what it is itself. But the difference
between
this individuality of its products
and the
Notion's individuality is that, in
the former,
the individual as content and the universal
as form are distinct from one another
- just
because the former is not present as
absolute
form, as the Notion itself, or the
latter
is not present as the totality of form.
However
this more detailed consideration shows
that
the abstract product itself is a unity
of
the individual content and abstract
universality,
and is, therefore, a concrete - and
the opposite
of what it aims to be.
§ 1343
For the same reason the particular,
because
it is only the determinate universal,
is
also an individual, and conversely
the individual,
because it is the determinate universal,
is just as much a particular. If we
stick
to this abstract determinateness, then
the
Notion has the three particular determinations,
the universal, the particular, and
the individual;
whereas previously we had given only
the
universal and the particular as the
species
of the particular. Since individuality
is
the return of the Notion, as negative,
into
itself, this very return from the abstraction
which, strictly speaking, is sublated
in
the return, can be placed along with
the
others as an indifferent moment and
counted
with them.
If individuality is reckoned as one
of the
particular determinations of the Notion,
then particularity is the totality
which
embraces them all; precisely in being
this
totality it is the concretion of them
or
individuality itself. But it is also
the
concrete in accordance with its aspect,
noted
above, of determinate universality;
as such
it is the immediate unity in which
none of
these moments is posited as distinct
or as
the determinant, and in this form it
will
constitute the middle term of the formal
syllogism.
It is self-evident that each determination
made in the preceding exposition of
the Notion
has immediately dissolved itself and
lost
itself in its other. Each distinction
is
confounded in the very attempt to isolate
and fix it. Only mere representational
thinking,
for which abstraction has isolated
them,
is capable of holding the universal,
particular
and individual rigidly apart; in this
way
they can be counted, and for a further
distinction
such thinking holds to the completely
external
one of being, namely, quantity, which
is
nowhere less appropriate than here.
In individuality,
the true relationship mentioned above,
the
inseparability of the Notion's determinations
is posited; for as negation of the
negation
it contains their opposition and at
the same
time contains it in its ground or unity,
the effected coincidence of each with
its
other. As this reflection is in its
very
own nature universality, it is essentially
the negativity of the Notion's determinations,
but not merely as if it were a third
something
distinct from them; on the contrary,
it is
now posited that posited being [Gesetztsein]
is being-in-and-for-itself; that is,
that
each of the determinations pertaining
to
the difference is itself the totality.
The
return of the determinate Notion into
itself
means that it has the determination
of being,
in its determinateness, the whole Notion.
2. But Individuality is not only the
return
of the Notion into itself; but immediately
its loss. Through individuality, where
the
Notion is internal to itself, it becomes
external to itself and enters into
actuality.
Abstraction which, as the soul of individuality
is the relation of the negative to
the negative;
and, as we have shown not external
to the
universal and the particular but immanent
in them; and through it they are concrete,
content, an individual. But as this
negativity,
individuality is the determinate determinateness,
is differentiation as such; through
this
reflection of the difference into itself,
the difference becomes fixed; it is
only
through individuality that the determining
of the particular takes place, for
individuality
is that abstraction which simply as
individuality,
is now posited abstraction.
§ 1344
The individual, therefore, as self-related
negativity, is immediate identity of
the
negative with itself; it is a being-for-self.
Or it is the abstraction that determines
the Notion, according to its ideal
moment
of being, as an immediate. In this
way, the
individual is a qualitative one or
this.
With this quality it is, first, repulsion
of itself from itself, whereby the
many other
ones are presupposed; secondly, it
is now
a negative relation towards these presupposed
others; and, the individual is in so
far
exclusive.
§ 1345
Universality, when related to these
individuals
as indifferent ones - and related to
them
it must be because it is a moment of
the
Notion of individuality - is merely
their
common element. When one understands
by the
universal, that which is common to
several
individuals, one is starting from the
indifferent
subsistence of these individuals and
confounding
the immediacy of being with the determination
of the Notion. The lowest possible
conception
of the universal in its connection
with the
individual is this external relation
of it
as merely a common element. ©
The individual, which in the sphere
of reflection
exists as a this, does not have the
exclusive
relation to another one which belongs
to
qualitative being-for-self. This, as
the
one reflected into itself, is for itself
and without repulsion; or repulsion
in this
reflection is one with abstraction
and is
the reflecting mediation which attaches
to
the this in such wise that the this
is a
posited immediacy pointed out by someone
external to it. The this is; it is
immediate;
but it is only this in so far as it
is pointed
out. The 'pointing out' is the reflecting
movement which collects itself inwardly
and
posits immediacy, but as a self-external
immediacy. Now the individual is certainly
a this, as the immediate restored out
of
mediation; but it does not have the
mediation
outside it - it is itself a repelling
separation,
posited abstraction, yet in its very
act
of separating, it is a positive relation.
This act of abstraction by the individual,
being the reflection of the difference
into
itself, is first a positing of the
differentiated
moments as self-subsistent and reflected-into-self.
They immediately are; but further,
this sundering
is reflection as such, the illusory
being
of the one in the other; thus they
stand
in essential relation. Further, the
individuals
are not merely inertly present in relation
to one another; such plurality belongs
to
being; the individuality, in positing
itself
as determinate, posits itself not in
an external
difference but in the difference of
the Notion.
It therefore excludes the universal
from
itself; yet since this is a moment
of individuality,
the universal is equally essentially
related
to it.
The Notion, as this relation of its
self-subsistent
determinations, has lost itself; for
as such
it is no longer their posited unity,
and
they are no longer present as moments,
as
the illusory being, of the Notion,
but as
subsistent in and for themselves. As
individuality,
the Notion in its determinateness returns
into itself, and therewith the determinate
moment has itself become a totality.
Its
return into itself is therefore the
absolute,
original partition of itself, or, in
other
words, it is posited as judgment.
Chapter 2 The Judgment § 1346
The judgment is the determinateness
of the
Notion posited in the Notion itself.
The
Notion's determinations, or what we
have
seen to be the same thing, the determinate
Notions, have already been considered
on
their own; but this consideration was
more
a subjective reflection or subjective
abstraction.
But the Notion is itself this abstractive
process, the opposing of its determinations
is its own determining activity. The
judgment
is this positing of the determinate
Notions
by the Notion itself. Judging is thus
another
function than comprehension, or rather
it
is the other function of the Notion
as the
determining of the Notion by itself,
and
the further progress of the judgment
into
the diversity of judgments is the progressive
determination of the Notion. What kinds
of
determinate Notions there are, and
how these
determinations of the Notion are arrived
at, has to reveal itself in the judgment.
§ 1347
The judgment can therefore be called
the
proximate realisation of the Notion,
inasmuch
as reality denotes in general entry
into
existence as a determinate being. More
precisely,
the nature of this realisation has
presented
itself in such a manner that, on the
one
hand, the moments of the Notion through
its
reflection-into-self or its individuality
are self-subsistent totalities, while
on
the other hand the unity of the Notion
is
their relation. The determinations
reflected
into themselves are determinate totalities,
no less essentially in their indifferent
and disconnected subsistence as through
their
reciprocal mediation with one another.
The
determining itself is only totality
in that
it contains these totalities and their
connection.
This totality is the judgment. It contains,
therefore, first, the two self-subsistents
which are called subject and predicate.
What
each is cannot yet really be said;
they are
still indeterminate, for it is only
through
the judgment that they are to be determined.
The judgment, being the Notion as determinate,
the only distinction present is the
general
one that the judgment contains the
determinate
Notion over against the still indeterminate
Notion. The subject can therefore,
in the
first instance, be taken in relation
to the
predicate as the individual over against
the universal, or even as the particular
over against the universal, or as the
individual
over against the particular; so far,
they
confront each other only in general,
as the
more determinate and the more universal.
§ 1348
It is therefore appropriate and necessary
to have these names, subject and predicate
for the determinations of the judgment;
as
names, they are something indeterminate
that
still awaits its determination, and
are,
therefore, no more than names. It is
partly
for this reason that the Notion determinations
themselves could not be used for the
two
sides of the judgment; but a stronger
reason
is because the nature of the Notion
determination
is emphatically to be, not something
abstract
and fixed, but to have and to posit
its opposite
within it; since the sides of the judgment
are themselves Notions and therefore
the
totality of its determinations, each
side
must run through all these determinations
and exhibit them within itself, whether
in
abstract or concrete form. Now in order
to
fix the sides of the judgment in a
general
way when their determination is altered,
those names are most serviceable which
remain
the same throughout the alteration.
The name
however stands over against the matter
in
hand or the Notion; this distinction
presents
itself in the judgment as such; now
the subject
is in general the determinate, and
is therefore
more that which immediately is, whereas
the
predicate expresses the universal,
the essential
nature or the Notion; therefore the
subject
as such is, in the first instance,
only a
kind of name; for what it is is first
enunciated
by the predicate which contains being
in
the sense of the Notion. In the question:
what is this? or: what kind of a plant
is
this? what is often understood by the
being
enquired after, is merely the name,
and when
this is learned one is satisfied and
now
knows what the thing is. This is being
in
the sense of the subject. But the Notion,
or at least the essence and the universal
in general, is first given by the predicate,
and it is this that is asked for in
the sense
of the judgment. Consequently, God,
spirit,
nature, or whatever it may be, is as
the
subject of a judgment at first only
the name;
what such a subject is as regards its
Notion
is first enunciated in the predicate.
When
enquiry is made as to the kind of predicate
belonging to such subject, the act
of judgment
necessarily implies an underlying Notion.
But this Notion is first enunciated
by the
predicate itself. Properly speaking,
therefore,
it is the mere general idea that constitutes
the presupposed meaning of the subject
and
that leads to the naming of it; and
in doing
this it is contingent and a historical
fact,
what is, or is not, to be understood
by a
name. So many disputes about whether
a predicate
does or does not belong to a certain
subject
are therefore nothing more than verbal
disputes,
because they start from the form above
mentioned;
what lies at the base is so far nothing
more
than the name.
§ 1349
We have now to examine, secondly, how
the
relation of subject and predicate in
the
judgment is determined and how subject
and
predicate themselves are at first determined
through this very relation. The judgment
has in general for its sides totalities
which
to begin with are essentially self-subsistent.
The unity of the Notion is, therefore,
at
first only a relation of self-subsistents;
not as yet the concrete and pregnant
unity
that has returned into itself from
this reality,
but only a unity outside which the
self-subsistent
sides persist as extremes that are
not sublated
in it. Now consideration of the judgment
can begin from the original unity of
the
Notion, or from the self-subsistence
of the
extremes. The judgment is the self-diremption
of the Notion; this unity is, therefore,
the ground from which the consideration
of
the judgment in accordance with its
true
objectivity begins. It is thus the
original
division [Teilung] of what is originally
one; thus the word Urteil refers to
what
judgment is in and for itself. But
regarded
from the side of externality, the Notion
is present in the judgment as Appearance,
since its moments therein attain self-subsistence,
and it is on this external side that
ordinary
thinking tends to fasten.
§ 1350
From this subjective standpoint, then,
subject
and predicate are considered to be
complete,
each on its own account, apart from
the other:
the subject as an object that would
exist
even if it did not possess this predicate;
the predicate as a universal determination
that would exist even if it did not
belong
to this subject. From this standpoint,
the
act of judgment involves the reflection,
whether this or that predicate which
is in
someone's head can and should be attached
to the object which exists on its own
account
outside; the very act of judging consists
in this, that only through it is a
predicate
combined with a subject, so that, if
this
combination did not take place, each
on its
own would still remain what it is,
the latter
an existent object, the former an idea
in
someone's head. The predicate which
is attached
to the subject should, however, also
belong
to it, that is, be in and for itself
identical
with it. Through this significance
of attachment,
the subjective meaning of judgment
and the
indifferent, outer subsistence of subject
and predicate are sublated again: this
action
is good; the copula indicates that
the predicate
belongs to the being of the subject
and is
not merely externally combined with
it. In
the grammatical sense, that subjective
relationship
in which one starts from the indifferent
externality of the subject and predicate
has its complete validity; for it is
words
that are here externally combined.
We may
take this opportunity of remarking,
too,
that though a proposition has a subject
and
predicate in the grammatical sense,
this
does not make it a judgment. The latter
requires
that the predicate be related to the
subject
as one Notion determination to another,
and
therefore as a universal to a particular
or individual. If a statement about
a particular
subject only enunciates something individual,
then this is a mere proposition, For
example,
'Aristotle died at the age of 73, in
the
fourth year of the 115th Olympiad,'
is a
mere proposition, not a judgment. It
would
partake of the nature of a judgment
only
if doubt had been thrown on one of
the circumstances,
the date of the death, or the age of
that
philosopher, and the given figures
had been
asserted on the strength of some reason
or
other. In that case, these figures
would
be taken as something universal, as
time
that still subsists apart from this
particular
content of the death of Aristotle,
whether
as time filled with some other content,
or
even as empty time. Similarly, the
news that
my friend N. has died is a proposition;
and
it would be a judgment only if there
were
a question whether he was really dead
or
only in a state of catalepsy.
§ 1351
In the usual way of defining the judgment
we may indeed accept the indeterminate
expression
connection for the external copula,
as also
that the connected terms are at least
supposed
to be notions. But in other respects
this
definition is superficial in the extreme:
not only, for example, that in the
disjunctive
judgment more than two so-called notions
are connected, but rather that the
definition
is far better than its subject matter;
for
it is not notions at all that are meant,
hardly determinations of the Notion,
but
really only determinations of representational
thought; it was remarked in connection
with
the Notion in general and the determinate
Notion, that what is usually so named
by
no means deserves the name of Notion;
where
then should Notions come from in the
case
of the judgment? Above all, in this
definition
the essential feature of the judgment,
namely,
the difference of its determinations,
is
passed over; still less does it take
into
account the relationship of the judgment
to the Notion.
§ 1352
As regards the further determination
of the
subject and predicate, we have remarked
that
it is really in the judgment first
that they
have to receive their determination.
Since
the judgment is the posited determinateness
of the Notion, this determinateness
possesses
the said differences immediately and
abstractly
as individuality and universality.
But in
so far as the judgment is in general
the
determinate being or otherness of the
Notion
which has not yet restored itself to
the
unity whereby it is as Notion, there
emerges
also-the determinateness which is notionless,
the opposition of being and reflection
or
the in-itself. But since the Notion
constitutes
the essential ground of the judgment,
these
determinations are at least indifferent
to
the extent that when one belongs to
the subject
and the other to the predicate, the
converse
relationship equally holds good. The
subject
as the individual appears, in the first
instance,
as that which simply is or is for itself
in accordance with the specific determinateness
of the individual - as an actual object,
even though it be only an object in
representational
thought - as for example bravery, right,
agreement, etc. - on which judgment
is being
made. The predicate, on the other hand,
as
the universal, appears as this reflection
on the object, or rather as the object's
reflection into itself, which goes
beyond
that immediacy and sublates the determinatenesses
in their form of mere being; that is,
it
is the object's in-itself. In this
way, one
starts from the individual as the first,
the immediate, and it is raised by
the judgment
into universality, just as, conversely,
the
universal that is only in itself descends
in the individual into determinate
being
or becomes a being that is for itself.
§ 1353
This signification of the judgment
is to
be taken as its objective meaning,
and at
the same time as the truth of the earlier
forms of the transition. In the sphere
of
being, the object becomes and others
itself,
the finite perishes or goes under in
the
infinite; in the sphere of Existence,
the
object issues from its ground into
Appearance
and falls to the ground, the accident
manifests
the wealth of substance as well as
its power;
in being, there is transition into
an other,
in essence, reflected being in an other
by
which the necessary relation is revealed.
This movement of transition and reflection
has now passed over into the original
partition
of the Notion which, while bringing
back
the individual to the in-itself of
its universality,
equally determines the universal as
something
actual. These two acts are one and
the same
process in which individuality is posited
in its reflection-into-self, and the
universal
as determinate.
§ 1354
But now this objective signification
equally
implies that the said differences,
in reappearing
in the determinateness of the Notion,
are
at the same time posited only as Appearances,
that is, that they are not anything
fixed,
but apply just as much to the one Notion
determination as to the other. The
subject
is, therefore, just as much to be taken
as
the in-itself, and the predicate, on
the
other hand, as determinate being. The
subject
without predicate is what the thing
without
qualities, the thing-in-itself is in
the
sphere of Appearance - an empty, indeterminate
ground; as such, it is the Notion enclosed
within itself, which only receives
a differentiation
and determinateness in the predicate;
the
predicate therefore constitutes the
side
of the determinate being of the subject.
Through this determinate universality
the
subject stands in relation to an externality,
is open to the influence of other things
and thereby becomes actively opposed
to them.
What is there comes forth from its
being-within-self
and enters into the universal element
of
connection and relationship, into the
negative
connections and the interplay of actuality,
which is a continuation of the individual
into other individuals and therefore
universality.
§ 1355
The identity just demonstrated, namely,
that
the determination of the subject equally
applies to the predicate and vice versa,
is not, however, something only for
us; it
is not merely in itself, but is also
posited
in the judgment; for the judgment is
the
connection of the two; the copula expresses
that the subject is the predicate.
The subject
is the specific determinateness, and
the
predicate is this posited determinateness
of the subject; the subject is determined
only in its predicate, or, only in
the predicate
is it a subject; in the predicate it
has
returned into itself and is therein
the universal.
Now in so far as the subject is the
self-
subsistent, this identity has the relationship
that the predicate does not possess
a self-subsistence
of its own, but has its subsistence
only
in the subject; it inheres in the subject.
Since the predicate is thus distinct
from
the subject, it is only an isolated
determinateness
of the latter, only one of its properties;
while the subject itself is the concrete,
the totality of manifold determinatenesses,
just as the predicate contains one;
it is
the universal.
§ 1356
But on the other hand the predicate,
too,
is a self-subsistent universality and
the
subject, conversely, only a determination
of it. Looked at this way, the predicate
subsumes the subject; individuality
and particularity
are not for themselves, but have their
essence
and substance in the universal. The
predicate
expresses the subject in its Notion;
the
individual and the particular are contingent
determinations in the subject; it is
their
absolute possibility. When in the case
of
subsumption one thinks of an external
connection
of subject and predicate and the subject
is conceived of as a self-subsistent
something,
the subsumption refers to the subjective
act of judgment above-mentioned in
which
one starts from the self-subsistence
of both
subject and predicate. From this standpoint
subsumption is only the application
of the
universal to a particular or an individual,
which is placed under the universal
in accordance
with a vague idea that it is of inferior
quality.
§ 1357
When the identity of subject and predicate
are so taken that at one time one Notion
determination applies to the former
and the
other to the latter, and at another
time
the converse equally holds good, then
the
identity is as yet still only an implicit
one; on account of the self-subsistent
diversity
of the two sides of the judgment, their
posited
unity also has these two sides, in
the first
instance as different. But differenceless
identity really constitutes the true
relation
of the subject to the predicate. The
Notion
determination is itself essentially
relation
for it is a universal; therefore the
same
determinations possessed by the subject
and
predicate are also possessed by their
relation
itself. The relation is universal,
for it
is the positive identity of the two,
of subject
and predicate; but it is also determinate,
for the determinateness of the predicate
is that of the subject; further, it
is also
individual, for in it the self-subsistent
extremes are sublated as in their negative
unity. However, in the judgment this
identity
is not as yet posited; the copula is
present
as the still indeterminate relation
of being
as such: A is B; for in the judgment,
the
self-subsistence of the Notion determinatenesses
or the extremes, is the reality which
the
Notion has within it. If the is of
the copula
were already posited as the above determinate
and pregnant unity of subject and predicate,
as their Notion, it would already be
the
syllogism.
§ 1358
To restore this identity of the Notion,
or
rather to posit it, is the goal of
the movement
of the judgment. What is already present
in the judgment is, on the one hand,
the
self-subsistence of subject and predicate,
but also their mutually opposed determinateness,
and on the other hand their none the
less
abstract relation. What the judgment
enunciates
to start with is that the subject is
the
predicate; but since the predicate
is supposed
not to be what the subject is, we are
faced
with a contradiction which must resolve
itself,
pass over into a result. Or rather,
since
subject and predicate are in and for
themselves
the totality of the Notion, and the
judgment
is the reality of the Notion, its forward
movement is only a development; there
is
already present in it what comes forth
from
it, so that proof is merely an exposition,
a reflection as a positing of that
which
is already present in the extremes
of the
judgment; but even this positing itself
is
already present; it is the relation
of the
extremes.
§ 1359
The judgment in its immediacy is in
the first
instance the judgment of existence;
its subject
is immediately an abstract individual
which
simply is, and the predicate is an
immediate
determinateness or property of the
subject,
an abstract universal.
This qualitative character of subject
and
predicate being sublated, the determination
of the one is reflected, to begin with,
in
the other; the judgment is now, secondly,
the judgment of reflection.
But this more external conjunction
passes
over into the essential identity of
a substantial,
necessary connection; as such it is,
thirdly,
the judgment of necessity.
Fourthly, since in this essential identity
the difference of subject and predicate
has
become a form, the judgment becomes
subjective;
it contains the opposition of the Notion
and its reality and the equation of
the two;
it is the judgment of the Notion.
This emergence of the Notion establishes
the transition of the Judgment into
the syllogism.
A. THE JUDGMENT OF EXISTENCE § 1360
In the subjective judgment we want
to see
one and the same object double, first
in
its individual actuality, and then
in its
essential identity or in its Notion:
the
individual raised into its universality,
or, what is the same thing, the universal
individualised into its actuality.
In this
way the judgment is truth: for it is
the
agreement of the Notion and reality.
But
this is not the nature of the judgment
at
first; for at first it is immediate,
since
as yet no reflection and movement of
the
determinations has appeared in it.
This immediacy
makes the first judgment a judgment
of existence;
it can also be called the qualitative
judgment,
but only in so far as quality does
not apply
only to the determinateness of being
but
also includes the abstract universality
which,
on account of its simplicity, likewise
has
the form of immediacy.
§ 1361
The judgment of existence is also the
judgment
of inherence; because it is in the
form of
immediacy, and because the subject
as distinguished
from the predicate is the immediate,
and
consequently the primary and essential
feature
in a judgment of this kind, the predicate
has the form of a non-self-subsistent
determination
that has its foundation in the subject.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Positive Judgment
(b) The Negative Judgment
(c) The Infinite Judgment
B. THE JUDGMENT OF REFLECTION § 1387
In the judgment that has now arisen,
the
subject is an individual as such; and
similarly
the universal is no longer an abstract
universality
or a single property, but is posited
as a
universal that has gathered itself
together
into a unity through the relation of
distinct
terms; or, regarding it from the point
of
view of the content of various determinations
in general, as the taking together
of various
properties and existences. If examples
are
to be given of predicates of judgments
of
reflection, they must be of another
kind
than for judgments of existence. It
is in
the judgment of reflection that we
first
have, strictly speaking, a determinate
content,
that is, a content as such; for the
content
is the form determination which is
reflected
into identity as distinct from the
form in
so far as this is a distinct determinateness
- as it still is in the judgment. In
the
judgment of existence the content is
merely
an immediate, or abstract, indeterminate
content. The following may therefore
serve
as examples of judgments of reflection:
man
is mortal, things are perishable, this
thing
is useful, harmful; hardness, elasticity
of bodies, happiness, etc. are predicates
of this peculiar kind. They express
an essential
determination, but one which is in
a relationship
or is a unifying universality.
§ 1388
This universality, which will further
determine
itself in the movement of the judgment
of
reflection, is still distinct from
the universality
of the Notion as such; true, it is
no longer
the abstract universality of the qualitative
judgment, but it still possesses a
relation
to the immediate from which it proceeds
and
has the latter as the basis of its
negativity.
The Notion determines the existent,
in the
first instance, to determinations of
relation,
to self-continuities in the diverse
multiplicity
of concrete existence-yet in such a
manner
that the genuine universal, though
it is
the inner essence of that multiplicity,
is
still in the sphere of Appearance,
and this
relative nature-or even the mark-of
this
multiplicity is still not the moment
of being-in-and-for-self
of the latter.
§ 1389
It may suggest itself to define the
judgment
of reflection as a judgment of quantity,
just as the judgment of existence was
also
defined as qualitative judgment. But
just
as immediacy in the latter was not
merely
an immediacy which simply is, but one
which
was essentially also mediated and abstract,
so here, too, that sublated immediacy
is
not merely sublated quality, and therefore
not merely quantity; on the contrary,
just
as quality is the most external immediacy,
so is quantity, in the same way, the
most
external determination belonging to
mediation.
§ 1390
Further, as regards the determination
as
it appears in its movement in the judgment
of reflection, it should be remarked
that
in the judgment of existence the movement
of the determination showed itself
in the
predicate, because this judgment was
in the
determination of immediacy and the
subject
consequently appeared as the basis.
For a
similar reason, in the judgment of
reflection,
the onward movement of determining
runs its
course in the subject, because this
judgment
has for its determination the reflected
in-itself.
Here therefore the essential element
is the
universal or the predicate; hence it
constitutes
the basis by which, and in accordance
with
which, the subject is to be measured
and
determined. However, the predicate
also receives
a further determination through the
further
development of the form of the subject;
but
this occurs indirectly, whereas the
development
of the subject is, for the reason stated,
a direct advance.
§ 1391
As regards the objective signification
of
the judgment, the individual, through
its
universality, enters into existence,
but
in an essential determination of relationship,
in an essentiality which maintains
itself
throughout the multiplicity of the
world
of Appearance; the subject is supposed
to
be determinate in and for itself; this
determinateness
it possesses in its predicate. The
individual,
on the other hand, is reflected into
this
its predicate which is its universal
essence;
the subject is in so far a concrete
existence
in the world of Appearance. The predicate
in this judgment no longer inheres
in the
subject; it is rather the implicit
being
under which this individual is subsumed
as
an accidental. If the judgments of
existence
may also be defined as judgments of
inherence,
judgments of reflection are, on the
contrary,
judgments of subsumption.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Singular Judgment
(b) The Particular Judgment
(c) The Universal Judgment
C. THE JUDGMENT OF NECESSITY § 1405
The determination to which universality
has
advanced is, as we have seen, the universality
which is in and for itself or objective,
to which in the sphere of essence substantiality
corresponds. It is distinguished from
the
latter in that it belongs to the Notion
and
is therefore not merely the inner but
also
the posited necessity of its determinations;
or, in other words, the difference
is immanent
in it, whereas substance has its difference
only in its accidents, but not as principle
within itself.
§ 1406
Now in the judgment, this objective
universality
is posited; first, therefore, with
this its
essential determinateness as immanent
in
it, secondly, with its determinateness
distinguished
from it as particularity, of which
this universality
constitutes the substantial basis.
In this
way it is determined as genus and species.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Categorical Judgment
(b) The Hypothetical Judgment
(c) The Disjunctive Judgment
D. THE JUDGMENT OF THE NOTION § 1417
The ability to form judgments of existence
such as 'the rose is red', 'snow is
white',
and so forth, will hardly count as
evidence
of great powers of judgment. The judgments
of reflection are rather propositions;
in
the judgment of necessity the object
appears,
it is true, in its objective universality,
but it is only in the judgment now
to be
considered that its relation to the
Notion
is found. In this judgment the Notion
is
laid down as the basis, and since it
is in
relation to the object, it is an ought-to-be
to which the reality may or may not
be adequate.
Therefore it is only a judgment of
this kind
that contains a true appreciation;
the predicates
good, bad, true, beautiful, correct,
etc.
express that the thing is measured
against
its universal Notion as the simply
presupposed
ought-to-be and is, or is not, in agreement
with it.
§ 1418
The judgment of the Notion has been
called
the judgment of modality and it has
been
regarded as containing that form of
the relationship
between subject and predicate which
is found
in an external understanding, and to
be concerned
with the value of the copula only in
relation
to thinking.
§ 1419
According to this view, the problematical
judgment is one where the affirmation
or
denial is taken as optional or possible;
the assertoric, where it is taken as
true,
that is as actual; and the apodeictic,
where
it is taken as necessary. It is easy
to see
why it is so natural in the case of
this
judgment to step out of the sphere
of judgment
itself and to regard its determination
as
something merely subjective. For here
it
is the Notion, or the subjective, that
reappears
in the judgment and stands in relationship
to an external actuality. But this
subjectivity
is not to be confused with external
reflection,
which of course is also something subjective,
but in a different sense from the Notion
itself; on the contrary, the Notion
that
re-emerges from the disjunctive judgment
is the opposite of a mere contingent
mode.
The earlier judgments are in this sense
merely
subjective, for they are based on an
abstraction
and one-sidedness in which the Notion
is
lost. The judgment of the Notion, on
the
contrary, is objective and the truth
as against
those earlier judgments, just because
it
has for its basis the Notion, not the
Notion
in external reflection or in relation
to
a subjective, that is contingent, thinking,
but the Notion in its determinateness
as
Notion.
§ 1420
In the disjunctive judgment the Notion
was
posited as identity of the universal
nature
with its particularisation; consequently
the relation of the judgment was cancelled.
This concretion of universality and
particularisation
is, at first, a simple result; it has
now
to develop itself further into totality,
since the moments which it contains
are at
first swallowed up in it and as yet
do not
confront one another in determinate
self-subsistence.
The defect of the result may also be
more
definitely expressed by saying that
in the
disjunctive judgment, although objective
universality has completed itself in
its
particularisation, yet the negative
unity
of the latter merely returns into the
former
and has not yet determined itself to
the
third moment, that of individuality.
Yet
in so far as the result itself is negative
unity, it is indeed already this individuality;
but as such it is only this one determinateness,
which has now to posit its negativity,
sunder
itself into the extremes and in this
way
finally develop into the syllogism.
§ 1421
The proximate diremption of this unity
is
the judgment in which it is posited
first
as subject, as an immediate individual,
and
then as predicate, as the determinate
relation
of its moments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Assertoric Judgment
(b) The Problematic Judgment
(c) The Apodetic Judgment
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
§ 1431
This judgment, then, is truly objective;
or it is the truth of the judgment
in general.
Subject and predicate correspond to
each
other and have the same content, and
this
content is itself the posited concrete
universality;
it contains, namely, the two moments,
the
objective universal or the enus, and
the
individualised universal. Here, therefore,
we have the universal which is itself
and
continues itself through its opposite
and
is a universal only as unity with this
opposite.
A universal of this kind, such as the
predicate
good, suitable, correct, etc., is based
on
an ought-to-be and at the same time
contains
the correspondence of existence to
that ought-to-be;
it is not this ought-to-be or the genus
by
itself, but this correspondence that
is the
universality which constitutes the
predicate
of the apodeictic judgment.
§ 1432
The subject likewise contains these
two moments
in immediate unity as the fact. But
it is
the truth of the fact that it is internally
split into what it ought-to-be and
what it
is; this is the absolute judgment on
all
actuality. It is because this original
partition,
which is the omnipotence of the Notion,
is
just as much a return into its unity
and
an absolute relation of the ought-to-be
and
being to each other that makes what
is actual
into a fact; its inner relation, this
concrete
identity, constitutes the soul of the
fact.
§ 1433
The transition from the immediate simplicity
of the fact to the correspondence which
is
the determinate relation of its ought-to-be
and its being - or the copula - is
now seen,
on closer examination, to lie in the
particular
determinateness of the fact. The genus
is
the universal in and for itself, which
as
such appears as the unrelated; while
the
determinateness is that which in that
universal
is reflected into itself, yet at the
same
time is reflected into an other. The
judgment
therefore has its ground in the constitution
of the subject and thereby is apodeictic.
Hence we now have before us the determinate
and fulfilled copula, which formerly
consisted
in the abstract 'is', but has now further
developed itself into ground in general.
It appears at first as an immediate
determinateness
in the subject, but it is no less the
relation
to the predicate which has no other
content
than this very correspondence, or the
relation
of the subject to the universality.
§ 1434
Thus the form of the judgment has perished;
first because subject and predicate
are in
themselves the same content; secondly
because
the subject through its determinateness
points
beyond itself and relates itself to
the predicate;
but also, thirdly, this relating has
passed
over into the predicate, alone. constitutes
its content, and is thus the posited
relation,
or the judgment itself. Thus the concrete
identity of the Notion which was the
result
of the disjunctive judgment and which
constitutes
the inner basis of the Notion judgment
-
which identity was at first posited
only
in the predicate - is now restored
in the
whole.
§ 1435
If we examine the positive element
of this
result which effects the transition
of the
judgment into another form, we find,
as we
have seen, that subject and predicate
in
the apodeictic judgment are each the
whole
Notion. The unity of the Notion as
the determinateness
constituting the copula that relates
them,
is at the same time distinct from them.
At
first, it stands only on the other
side of
the subject as the latter's immediate
constitution.
But since it is essentially that which
relates
subject and predicate, it is not merely
such
immediate constitution but the universal
that permeates both subject and predicate.
While subject and predicate have the
same
content, the form relation, on the
other
hand, is posited through this determinateness,
determinateness as a universal or particularity.
Thus it contains within itself the
two form
determinations of the extremes and
is the
determinate relation of subject and
predicate;
it is the fulfilled copula of the judgment,
the copula pregnant with content, the
unity
of the Notion that has re-emerged from
the
judgment in which it was lost in the
extremes.
Through this impregnation of the copula
the
judgment has become the syllogism.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Highlighted text is Lenin's underlining.
The ® accesses Lenin's annotations;
© accesses
annotations by C L R James.
The Syllogism - next section
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1318
The Notion is, in the first instance,
formal,
the Notion in its beginning or the
immediate
Notion. In the immediate unity, its
difference
or positedness is itself at first simple
and only an illusory being [Schein],
so that
the moments of the difference are immediately
the totality of the Notion and are
simply
the Notion as such.
§ 1319
Secondly, however, because it is absolute
negativity, it sunders itself and posits
itself as the negative or as the other
of
itself; and further, because as yet
it is
only the immediate Notion, this positing
or differentiation is characterised
by the
fact that the moments become indifferent
to one another and each becomes for
itself;
in this partition, its unity is still
only
an external connection. As such connection
of its moments, which are posited as
self-subsistent
and indifferent, it is Judgment.
§ 1320
Thirdly, though the judgment does contain
the unity of the Notion that has vanished
into its self-subsistent moments, yet
this
unity is not posited. It becomes so
through
the dialectical movement of the judgment,
through which it has become the Syllogism,
the Notion posited in its completeness;
for
in the syllogism there is posited not
only
the moments of the Notion as self-subsistent
extremes, but also their mediating
unity.
§ 1321
But since this unity itself as the
unifying
middle, and the moments as self-subsistent
extremes, are in the first instance
immediately
opposed to one another, this contradictory
relationship that occurs in the formal
syllogism
sublates itself, and the completeness
of
the Notion passes over into the unity
of
the totality, the subjectivity of the
Notion
into its Objectivity.
Chapter 1 The Notion § 1322
Understanding is the term usually employed
to express the faculty of notions;
as so
used, it is distinguished from the
faculty
of judgment and the faculty of syllogisms,
of the formal reason But it is with
reason
that it is especially contrasted; in
that
case, however, it does not signify
the faculty
of the notion in general, but of determinate
notions, and the idea prevails that
the notion
is only a determinate notion. When
the understanding
in this signification is distinguished
from
the formal faculty of judgment and
from the
formal reason, it is to be taken as
the faculty
of the single determinate notion. For
the
judgment and the syllogism or reason
are,
as formal, only a product of the understanding
since they stand under the form of
the abstract
determinateness of the Notion. Here,
however,
the Notion emphatically does not rank
as
something merely abstractly determinate;
consequently, the understanding is
to be
distinguished from reason only in the
sense
that the former is merely the faculty
of
the notion in general.
§ 1323
This universal Notion, which we have
now
to consider here, contains the three
moments:
universality, particularity and individuality.
The difference and the determinations
which
the Notion gives itself in its distinguishing,
constitute the side which was previously
called positedness. As this is identical
in the Notion with being-in-and-for-self,
each of these moments is no less the
whole
Notion than it is a determinate Notion
and
a determination of the Notion.
§ 1324
In the first instance, it is the pure
Notion
or the determination of universality.
But
the pure or universal Notion is also
only
a determinate or particular Notion,
which
takes its place alongside other Notions.
Because the Notion is a totality, and
therefore
in its universality or pure identical
self-relation
is essentially a determining and a
distinguishing,
it therefore contains within itself
the standard
by which this form of its self-identity,
in pervading and embracing all the
moments,
no less immediately determines itself
to
be only the universal over against
the distinguishedness
of the moments.
Secondly, the Notion is thereby posited
as
this particular or determinate Notion,
distinct
from others.
Thirdly, individuality is the Notion
reflecting
itself out of the difference into absolute
negativity. This is, at the same time,
the
moment in which it has passed out of
its
identity into its otherness, and becomes
the judgment.
A The Universal Notion § 1325
The pure Notion is the absolutely infinite,
unconditioned and free. It is here,
at the
outset of the discussion which has
the Notion
for its content, that we must look
back once
more at its genesis. Essence is the
outcome
of being, and the Notion, the outcome
of
essence, therefore also of being. But
this
becoming has the significance of a
self-repulsion,
so that it is rather the outcome which
is
the unconditioned and original. Being,
in
its transition into essence, has become
an
illusory being or a positedness, and
becoming
or transition into an other has become
a
positing; and conversely, the positing
or
reflection of essence has sublated
itself
and has restored itself as a being
that is
not posited, that is original. The
Notion
is the interfusion of these moments,
namely,
qualitative and original being is such
only
as a positing, only as a return-into-self,
and this pure reflection-into-self
is a sheer
becoming-other or determinateness which,
consequently, is no less an infinite,
self-relating
determinateness.
§ 1326
Thus the Notion is, in the first instance,
the absolute self-identity that is
such only
as the negation of negation or as the
infinite
unity of the negativity with itself.
This
pure relation of the Notion to itself,
which
is this relation by positing itself
through
the negativity, is the universality
of the
Notion.
§ 1327
As universality is the utterly simple
determination,
it does not seem capable of any explanation;
for an explanation must concern itself
with
definitions and distinctions and must
apply
predicates to its object, and to do
this
to what is simple, would alter rather
than
explain it. But the simplicity which
constitutes
the very nature of the universal is
such
that, through absolute negativity,
it contains
within itself difference and determinateness
in the highest degree. Being is simple
as
immediate being; for that reason it
is only
something meant or intended and we
cannot
say of it what it is; therefore, it
is one
with its other, with non- being. Its
Notion
is just this, to be a simplicity that
immediately
vanishes in its opposite; it is becoming.
The universal, on the contrary, is
that simplicity
which, because it is the Notion, no
less
possesses within itself the richest
content.
§ 1328
First, therefore, it is the simple
relation
to itself; it is only within itself.
Secondly,
however, this identity is within itself
absolute
mediation, but it is not something
mediated.
The universal that is mediated, namely,
the
abstract universal that is opposed
to the
particular and the individual, this
will
be discussed later when we are dealing
with
the specific notion. Yet even the abstract
universal involves this, that in order
to
obtain it we are required to leave
out other
determinations of the concrete. These
determinations,
simply as such, are negations; equally,
too,
the omitting of them is a negating.
So that
even with the abstraction, we have
the negation
of the negation. But this double negation
is conceived of as though it were external
to the abstraction, as though not only
were
the other omitted properties of the
concrete
distinct from the one retained, which
is
the content of the abstract universal,
but
also as though this operation of omitting
the other properties and retaining
the one
were a process outside the properties
themselves.
To such an externality in face of that
movement,
the universal has not yet determined
itself;
it is still within itself that absolute
mediation
which is, precisely, the negation of
the
negation or absolute negativity.
§ 1329
By virtue of this original unity it
follows,
in the first place, that the first
negative,
or the determination, is not a limitation
for the universal which, on the contrary,
maintains itself therein and is positively
identical with itself. The categories
of
being were, as Notions, essentially
these
identities of the determinations with
themselves
in their limitation or otherness; but
this
identity was only in itself the Notion;
it
was not yet manifested. Consequently,
the
qualitative determination as such was
lost
in its other and had for its truth
a determination
distinct from itself. The universal,
on the
contrary, even when it posits itself
in a
determination, remains therein what
it is.
It is the soul [Seele] of the concrete
which
it indwells, unimpeded and equal to
itself
in the manifoldness and diversity of
the
concrete. It is not dragged into the
process
of becoming, but continues itself through
that process undisturbed and possesses
the
power of unalterable, undying self-preservation.
§ 1330
But even so, it does not merely show,
or
have an illusory being, in its other,
like
the determination of reflection; this,
as
a correlate, is not merely self-related
but
is a positive relating of itself to
its other
in which it manifests itself; but,
in the
first instance, it only shows in it,
and
this illusory being of each in the
other,
or their reciprocal determining, along
with
their self-dependence, has the form
of an
external act. The universal, on the
contrary,
is posited as the essential being of
its
determination, as the latter's own
positive
nature. For the determination that
constitutes
its negative is, in the Notion, simply
and
solely a positedness; in other words,
it
is, at the same time, essentially only
the
negative of the negative, and is only
as
this identity of the negative with
itself,
which is the universal. Thus the universal
is also the substance of its determinations;
but in such wise that what was a contingency
for substance, is the Notion's own
self-mediation,
its own immanent reflection. But this
mediation
which, in the first instance, raises
contingency
to necessity, is the manifested relation;
the Notion is not the abyss of formless
substance,
or necessity as the inner identity
of things
or states distinct from, and limiting,
one
another; on the contrary, as absolute
negativity,
it is the shaper and creator, and because
the determination is not a limitation
but
is just as much utterly sublated, or
posited,
the illusory being is now manifestation,
the manifestation of the identical.
§ 1331
The universal is therefore free power;
it
is itself and takes its other within
its
embrace, but without doing violence
to it;
on the contrary, the universal is,
in its
other, in peaceful communion with itself.
We have called it free power, but it
could
also be called free love and boundless
blessedness,
for it bears itself towards its other
as
towards its own self; in it, it has
returned
to itself.
§ 1332
We have just mentioned determinateness,
although
the Notion, being as yet only the universal
and only self-identical, has not yet
advanced
to that stage. However, we cannot speak
of
the universal apart from determinateness
which to be more precise is particularity
and individuality, for the universal,
in
its absolute negativity, contains determinateness
in and for itself. The determinateness,
therefore,
is not introduced from outside when
we speak
of it in connection with the universal.
As
negativity in general or in accordance
with
the first, immediate negation, the
universal
contains determinateness generally
as particularity;
as the second negation, that is, as
negation
of the negation, it is absolute determinateness
or individuality and concreteness.
The universal
is thus the totality of the Notion;
it is
a concrete, and far from being empty,
it
has through its Notion a content, and
a content
in which it not only maintains itself
but
one which is its own and immanent in
it.
We can, indeed, abstract from the content:
but in that case we do not obtain the
universal
of the Notion but only the abstract
universal,
which is an isolated, imperfect moment
of
the Notion and has no truth.
§ 1333
More precisely, the universal shows
itself
as this totality as follows. In so
far as
it contains determinateness, it is
not merely
the first negation, but also the reflection
of this negation into itself. Taken
expressly
with this first negation, it is a particular,
and it is as such that we are soon
to consider
it; but in this determinateness it
is essentially
still a universal; this side we have
here
still to consider. For determinateness,
being
in the Notion, is the total reflection,
the
two-fold illusory being which on the
one
hand has an illusory reference outwards,
the reflection-into-other, and on the
other
hand has an illusory reference inwards,
the
reflection-into-self. The former reflection
involves distinction from an other;
from
this standpoint, the universal possesses
a particularity which has its resolution
in a higher universal. Now even though
it
is merely a relative universal, it
does not
lose its character of universal; it
preserves
itself in its determinateness, not
merely
as though in its connection with the
determinateness
it remained indifferent to it - for
then
it would be merely compounded with
it but
so that it is what we have just called
the
illusory reference inwards. The determinateness,
as determinate Notion, is bent back
into
itself out of the externality; it is
the
Notion's own immanent character, which
is
an essential character by virtue of
the fact
that, in being taken up into the universality
and pervaded by it, it equally pervades
the
universality, being of like compass
and identical
with it; it is the character that belongs
to the genus as the determinateness
that
is not separated from the universal.
Accordingly,
the limitation is not outward-going
but positive,
for the Notion, through its universality,
stands in free relation to itself.
Thus even
the determinate Notion remains within
itself
infinitely free Notion.
§ 1334
But in regard to the other side, in
which
the genus is limited by its specific
character,
it has been observed that this, as
a lower
genus, has its resolution in a higher
universal.
The latter, in its turn, can also be
grasped
as genus but as a more abstract one;
but
it always pertains only to that side
of the
determinate Notion which has a reference
outwards. The truly higher universal
is that
in which this outward-going side is
taken
back into the universal, the second
negation,
in which the determinateness is present
simply
as posited or as illusory being. Life,
ego,
spirit, absolute Notion, are not universals
merely in the sense of higher genera,
but
are concretes whose determinatenesses,
too,
are not species or lower genera but
genera
which, in their reality, are absolutely
self-contained
and self-fulfilled. In so far as life,
ego,
finite spirit are, as they certainly
are,
also only determinate Notions, their
absolute
resolution is in that universal which
as
truly absolute Notion is to be grasped
as
the Idea of infinite spirit, whose
posited
being is infinite, transparent reality
wherein
it contemplates its creation, and in
this
creation its own self.
§ 1335
The true, infinite universal which,
in itself,
is as much particularity as individuality,
we have next to consider as particularity.
It determines itself freely; the process
by which it makes itself finite is
not a
transition, for this occurs only in
the sphere
of being; it is creative power as the
absolute
negativity which relates itself to
its own
self. As such, it differentiates itself
internally,
and this is a determining, because
the differentiation
is one with the universality. Accordingly,
the universal is a process in which
it posits
the differences themselves as universal
and
self-related. They thereby become fixed,
isolated differences. The isolated
subsistence
of the finite which earlier was determined
as its being-for-self, and also as
thinghood,
as substance, is, in its truth universality,
the form with which the infinite Notion
clothes
its differences - a form that is, in
fact,
one of its own differences. Herein
consists
the creative power of the Notion, a
power
which is to be comprehended only in
this,
the Notion's innermost core.
B The Particular Notion § 1336
Determinateness as such belongs to
being
and the qualitative sphere; as determinateness
of the Notion it is particularity.
It is
not a limit, as though it were related
to
an other beyond it; on the contrary,
as we
have just seen, it is the native, immanent
moment of the universal; in particularity,
therefore, the universal is not in
the presence
of an other, but simply of itself.
The particular contains universality,
which
constitutes its substance; the genus
is unaltered
in its species, and the species are
not different
from the universal but only from one
another.
The particular has one and the same
universality
as the other particulars to which it
is related.
At the same time, by virtue of the
identity
of the particulars with the universal,
their
diversity is, as such, universal; it
is totality.
The particular, therefore, not only
contains
the universal but through its determinateness
also exhibits it; consequently, the
universal
constitutes a sphere that must exhaust
the
particular. This totality appears,
in so
far as the determinateness of the particular
is taken as mere diversity, as completeness.
In this respect, species are complete
simply
because there are no more of them.
There
is no inner standard or principle that
could
apply to them, simply because diversity
is
the difference without unity in which
the
universality, which in its own self
is absolute
unity, is a merely external reflection
and
an unrestricted, contingent completeness.
But diversity passes over into opposition,
into an immanent relation of the diverse
moments. Particularity, however, because
it is universality, is this immanent
relation,
not through a transition, but in and
for
itself; it is in its own self totality
and
simple determinateness, essentially
a principle.
It has no other determinateness than
that
posited by the universal itself and
resulting
from the universal in the following
manner.
The particular is the universal itself,
but
it is its difference or relation to
an other,
its illusory reference outwards [sein
Scheinen
nach aussen]; but there is no other
present
from which the particular could be
distinguished,
except the universal itself. The universal
determines itself, and so is itself
the particular;
the determinateness is its difference;
it
is distinguished only from its own
self.
Therefore its species are only (a)
the universal
itself, and (b) the particular. The
universal
as the Notion is itself and its opposite,
and this again is the universal itself
as
its posited determinateness; it embraces
its opposite and in it is in union
with itself.
Thus it is the totality and principle
of
its diversity, which is determined
wholly
and solely by the universal itself.
Therefore there is no other true logical
classification than this, that the
Notion
sets itself on one side as immediate
indeterminate
universality; this very indeterminateness
constitutes its determinateness or
makes
it a particular. Each of them is the
particular
and is therefore co-ordinate with the
other.
Each of them as a particular is also
determinate
as against the universal, and in so
far can
be said to be subordinate to it. But
even
this universal, as against which the
particular
is determined, is for that reason itself
merely one of the opposed sides. For
if we
speak of two opposed sides, we must
supplement
this by saying that it is not merely
together
that they constitute the particular
- as
if they were alike in being particulars
only
for external reflection - but rather
that
their determinateness over against
one another
is at the same time essentially only
one
determinateness, the negativity, which
in
the universal is simple.
Difference, as it shows itself here,
is in
its Notion and therefore in its truth.
All
previous difference has this unity
in principle
(im Begriffe). As immediate difference
in
the sphere of being, it is limit of
an other;
in reflection it is relative and posited
as essentially relating itself to its
other;
here therefore the unity of the Notion
begins
to be posited, but at first it is only
illusory
being in an other. The true meaning
and resolution
of these determinations is just this,
that
they attain to their Notion, their
truth;
being, determinate being, something,
or whole
and parts, etc. substance and accidents,
cause and effect, are by themselves
[merely]
thought-determinations; but they are
grasped
as determinate Notions when each is
cognized
in unity with its other or opposite
determination.
Whole and parts, cause and effect,
for example,
are not as yet different terms determined
as particulars relatively to each other,
because although in themselves they
constitute
one Notion, their unity has not yet
reached
the form of universality; thus the
difference,
too, which is in these relationships,
has
not as yet the form of being one determinateness.
Cause and effect, for example, are
not two
different Notions, but only one determinate
Notion, and causality, like every Notion,
is a simple Notion.
With respect to completeness, we have
seen
that the determinate side of particularity
is complete in the difference of the
universal
and the particular, and that these
two alone
constitute the particular species.
In nature,
of course, there are to be found more
than
two species in a genus, just as between
these
many species there cannot exist the
relationship
we have just indicated. This is the
impotence
of nature, that it cannot adhere to
and exhibit
the strictness of the Notion and runs
wild
in this blind irrational [begrifflos]
multiplicity.
We can wonder at nature's manifold
genera
and species and the endless diversity
of
her formations, for wonderment is unreasoning
and its object the irrational. Nature,
because
it is the self-externality of the Notion,
is free to indulge itself in this variety,
just as spirit, too, even though it
possesses
the Notion in the shape of the Notion,
engages
in pictorial thinking and runs riot
in its
endless variety. The manifold natural
genera
or species must not be esteemed as
anything
more than the capricious fancies of
spirit
in its representations. Both indeed
show
traces and inklings of the Notion on
all
sides, but do not present a faithful
copy
of it because they are the side of
its free
self-externality. The Notion is absolute
power just because it can freely abandon
its difference to the shape of self-subsistent
diversity, outer necessity, contingency,
caprice, opinion, which however must
not
be taken for more than the abstract
aspect
of nothingness.
We have seen that the determinateness
of
the particular is simple as principle,
but
it is also simple as moment of the
totality
- as a determinateness opposed to the
other
determinateness. The Notion, in determining
or distinguishing itself, is negatively
directed
against its unity and gives itself
the form
of one of its ideal moments, that of
being:
as a determinate Notion, it has a determinate
Being in general. But this Being no
longer
signifies bare immediacy but Universality
- immediacy which through absolute
mediation
is equal to itself and equally contains
the
other moment, essential being or reflection.
This Universality with which the determinate
moment is clothed is abstract Universality.
The particular has Universality within
it
as its essential being; but, in so
far as
the determinateness of the difference
is
posited, and thereby has Being, Universality
is a form assumed by the difference,
and
the determinateness as such is the
content.
The Universality becomes form in so
far as
the difference is present as the essential
moment, just as, on the contrary, in
the
purely universal it is present only
as absolute
negativity, not as difference which
posited
as such. ©
§ 1337
Now determinateness, it is true, is
the abstract,
as against the other, determinateness;
but
this other is only universality itself
which
is, therefore, also abstract, and the
determinateness
of the Notion, or particularity, is
again
nothing more than a determinate universality.
In this, the Notion is outside itself;
since
it is the Notion that is here outside
itself,
the abstract universal contains all
the moments
of the Notion. It is (a) universality,
(b)
determinateness, (c) the simple unity
of
both; but this unity is immediate,
and therefore
particularity is not present as totality.
In itself it is also this totality
and mediation;
it is essentially an exclusive relation
to
an other, or sublation of the negation,
namely,
of the other determinateness - an other,
however, that exists only in imagination,
for it vanishes immediately and shows
itself
to be the same as its supposed other.
Therefore,
what makes this universality abstract
is
that the mediation is only a condition
or
is not posited in the universality
itself.
Because it is not posited, the unity
of the
abstract universality has the form
of immediacy,
and the content has the form of indifference
to its universality, for the content
is not
present as the totality which is the
universality
of absolute negativity. Hence the abstract
universal is, indeed, the Notion, yet
it
is without the Notion; it is the Notion
that
is not posited as such.
When people talk of the determinate
Notion,
what is usually meant is merely such
an abstract
universal. Even by notion as such,
what is
generally understood is only this notion
that is no Notion, and the understanding
denotes the faculty of such notions.
Demonstration
appertains to this understanding in
so far
as it progresses by notions, that is
to say,
merely by determinations. Such a progression
by notions, therefore, does not get
beyond
finitude and necessity; for it, the
highest
is the negative infinite, the abstraction
of the supreme being [des höchsten
Wesen],
which is itself the determinateness
of indeterminateness.
Absolute substance, too, though it
is not
this empty abstraction - from the point
of
view of its content it is rather the
totality
- is nevertheless abstract because
it lacks
the absolute form; its inmost truth
is not
constituted by the Notion; true, it
is the
identity of universality and particularity,
or of thought and asunderness, yet
this identity
is not the determinateness of the Notion;
on the contrary, outside substance
there
is an understanding - and just because
it
is outside it, a contingent understanding
- in which and for which substance
is present
in various attributes and modes.
Moreover, abstraction is not empty
as it
is usually said to be; it is the determinate
Notion and has some determinateness
or other
for its content. Even the supreme being,
the pure abstraction, has, as already
remarked,
the determinateness of indeterminateness;
but indeterminateness is a determinateness,
because it is supposed to stand opposed
to
the determinate. But the enunciation
of what
it is, itself sublates what it is supposed
to be; it is enunciated as one with
determinateness,
and in this way, out of the abstraction
is
established its truth and the Notion.
But
every determinate Notion is, of course,
empty
in so far as it does not contain the
totality,
but only a one-sided determinateness.
Even
when it has some other concrete content,
for example man, the state, animal,
etc.,
it still remains an empty Notion, since
its
determinateness is not the principle
of its
differences; a principle contains the
beginning
and the essential nature of its development
and realization; any other determinateness
of the notion, however, is sterile.
To reproach
the Notion generally with being empty,
is
to misjudge that absolute determinateness
of the Notion which is the difference
of
the Notion and the only true content
in the
element of the Notion.
§ 1338
Connected with the above is the reason
why
latterly the Understanding has been
so lightly
esteemed and ranked as inferior to
Reason;
it is the fixity which it imparts to
the
determinatenesses, and hence to finite
determinations.
This fixity consists in the form of
abstract
Universality which has just been considered:
through it they become immutable. For
qualitative
determinateness, and also determinations
of reflection, are essentially limited,
and,
through their limitation, have a relation
to their other; hence the necessity
of transition
and passing away. But universality
which
they possess in the understanding gives
them
the form of reflection-into-self by
which
they are freed from the relation-to-other
and have become imperishable. Now though
in the pure Notion this eternity belongs
to its nature, yet its abstract determinations
are eternal essentialities only in
respect
of their form; but their content is
at variance
with this form; therefore they are
not truth,
or imperishable. Their content is at
variance
with the form, because it is not determinateness
itself as universal; that is, it is
not totality
of the Notion's difference, or not
itself
the whole form; but the form of the
limited
understanding is itself the imperfect
form,
namely, abstract universality. But
further,
we must recognise the infinite force
of the
understanding in splitting the concrete
into
abstract determinatenesses and plumbing
the
depth of difference, the force that
at the
same time is alone the power that effects
their transition.
The concrete of intuition is a totality,
but a sensuous one - a real material
which
has an indifferent, sundered existence
in
space and time; but surely this absence
of
unity in the manifold, where it is
the content
of intuition, ought not to be counted
to
it for merit and superiority over intellectual
existence. The mutability that it exhibits
in intuition already points to the
universal;
yet all that it brings to view is merely
another, equally mutable, material;
therefore,
only the same thing again, not the
universal
which should appear and take its place.
But
least of all in sciences such as geometry
and arithmetic, should we count it
as a merit
that their material involves an intuitive
element, or imagine that their propositions
are established on it. On the contrary,
it
is on account of that element that
the material
of such sciences is of an inferior
nature;
the intuition of figures or numbers
does
not procure a scientific knowledge
of them;
only thinking about them can do this.
But
if by intuition we are to understand
not
merely the element of sense but the
objective
totality, then it is an intellectual
intuition;
that is to say, intuition has for its
object
not the external side of existence,
but what
existence holds of imperishable reality
and
truth-reality, only in so far as it
is essentially
in the Notion and determined by it,
the Idea,
whose more precise nature has to reveal
itself
at a later stage. The advantage which
intuition
as such is supposed to have over the
Notion
is external reality, the Notionless
element,
which first receives a value through
the
Notion.
Since, therefore, understanding exhibits
the infinite force which determines
the universal,
or conversely, imparts through the
form of
Universality a fixity and subsistence
to
the determinateness that is in and
for itself
transitory; then it is not the fault
of understanding
if no further progress is made beyond
this
point. It is a subjective impotence
of reason
which adopts these determinatenesses
in their
fixity, and which is unable to bring
them
back to their unity through the dialectical
force opposed to this abstract universality,
in other words, through their own peculiar
nature or through their Notion. The
understanding
does indeed give them, so to speak,
a rigidity
of being such as they do not possess
in the
sphere of quality and the sphere of
reflection;
but at the same time it spiritually
impregnates
them and so sharpens them, that just
at this
extreme point alone they acquire the
capability
to dissolve themselves and pass over
into
their opposite. The highest maturity,
the
highest stage, which anything can attain
is that in which its downfall begins.
The
fixity of the determinateness into
which
the understanding seems to run, the
form
of the imperishable, is that of self-relating
universality. But this belongs properly
to
the Notion; and consequently in this
universality
is to be found expressed, and infinitely
close at hand, the dissolution of the
finite.
This Universality directly refutes
the determinateness
of the finite and expresses its incongruity
with the universality. Or rather, the
adequacy
of the finite is already to hand; the
abstract
determinate is posited as one with
the universality,
and for that very reason is posited
as not
for itself - for then it would only
be a
determinate - but only as unity of
itself
and the universal, that is, as Notion.
©
Therefore the usual practice of separating
understanding and reason is, from every
point
of view, to be rejected. When the Notion
is regarded as irrational, this should
be
interpreted rather as an incapacity
of reason
to recognize itself in the Notion.
The determinate
and abstract Notion is the condition,
or
rather an essential moment of reason;
it
is form spiritually impregnated, in
which
the finite, through the universality
in which
it relates itself to itself, spontaneously
catches fire, posits itself as dialectical
and thereby is the beginning of the
manifestation
of reason.
In the foregoing, the determinate Notion
has been presented in its truth, and
therefore
it only remains to indicate what it
is as
already posited therein. Difference,
which
is an essential moment of the Notion
though
not yet posited as such in the pure
universal,
receives its due in the determinate
Notion.
Determinateness in the form of universality
is linked with the universal to form
a simple
determination; this determinate universal
is the self-related determinateness;
it is
the determinate determinateness or
absolute
negativity posited for itself. But
the self-related
determinateness is individuality. Just
as
universality is immediately in and
for itself
already particularity, so too particularity
is immediately in and for itself also
individuality;
this individuality is, in the first
instance,
to be regarded as the third moment
of the
Notion, in so far as we hold on to
its opposition
to the two other moments, but it is
also
to be considered as the absolute return
of
the Notion into itself, and at the
same time
as the posited loss of itself.
Remark. Universality, particularity,
and
individuality are, according to the
foregoing
exposition, the three determinate Notions,
that is, if one insists on counting
them.
We have already shown that number is
an unsuitable
form in which to hold Notional determinations;
but for the determinations of the Notion
itself it is unsuitable in the highest
degree;
number, since it has the unit [das
Eins]
for its principle, converts them as
counted
into completely isolated and mutually
indifferent
determinations. We have seen from the
foregoing
that the truth is that the different
determinate
Notions, far from falling apart into
number,
are simply only one and the same Notion.
In the customary treatment of logic
hitherto,
various classifications and species
of notions
occur. We are at once struck by the
inconsequential
way in which the species of notions
are introduced:
there are, in respect of quantity,
quality,
etc., the following notions. There
are, expresses
no other justification than that we
find
such species already to hand and they
present
themselves empirically. In this way,
we obtain
an empirical logic - an odd science
this,
an irrational cognition of the rational.
In proceeding thus, logic sets a very
bad
example of obedience to its own precepts;
it permits itself for its own purpose
to
do the opposite of what it prescribes
as
a rule, namely that notions should
be deduced,
and scientific propositions (therefore
also
the proposition: there are such and
such
species of notions) should be proved.
In
this matter, the Kantian philosophy
commits
a further inconsequence: it borrows
the categories,
as so- called root notions, for the
transcendental
logic, from the subjective logic in
which
they were adopted empirically. Since
it admits
the latter fact, it is hard to see
why transcendental
logic resolves to borrow from such
a science
instead of directly resorting to experience.
To cite some details of this, notions
are
mainly classified according to their
clearness,
into clear and obscure, distinct and
indistinct,
adequate and inadequate. To these we
can
also add complete, profuse, [überfliessend]
notions and suchlike superfluities.
As regards
the classification by clearness, it
is readily
seen that this standpoint and its related
distinctions are taken from psychological,
not from logical, determinations. The
so-called
clear notion is supposed to suffice
for distinguishing
one object from another; but this is
not
yet a notion, it is nothing more than
a subjective
representation. What an obscure notion
is
must be left to itself, for otherwise
it
would not be an obscure but a distinct
notion.
The distinct notion is supposed to
be one
whose marks can be indicated. As such
it
is, strictly speaking, the determinate
notion.
The mark, if it is taken in its correct
meaning,
is none other than the determinateness
or
the simple content of the notion, in
so far
as it is distinguished from the form
of universality.
But the mark, in the first instance,
does
not have quite this preciser meaning
but
is in general merely a determination
whereby
a third something takes note of an
object,
or the notion; it can therefore be
a very
contingent circumstance. In general
it expresses
not so much the immanence and essential
nature
of the determination as its relation
to an
understanding external to it. If this
is
really an understanding, it has the
notion
before it and distinguishes this only
and
solely by what is in the notion. But
if the
mark is supposed to be distinct from
the
notion, then it is a sign or some other
determination
which belongs to the representation
of the
thing, not to its notion. What the
indistinct
notion may be, can be passed over as
superfluous.
But the adequate notion is something
higher;
what it really implies is the agreement
of
the Notion with reality, which is not
the
Notion as such but the Idea.
If the mark of the distinct notion
were really
supposed to be the determination of
the notion
itself, logic would find itself in
difficulty
over the simple notions which, according
to another classification, are opposed
to
compound. For if a true, that is an
immanent,
mark of the simple notion were to be
indicated,
we should not be regarding it as simple;
but in so far as no mark was given,
it would
not be a distinct notion. But here,
now,
the clear notion helps out, Unity,
reality,
and suchlike determinations are supposed
to be simple notions, probably only
because
logicians were unable to discover their
specific
nature and contented themselves with
having
merely a clear notion of them, that
is, no
notion at all. Definition, that is,
the statement
of the notion, in general demands the
statement
of the genus and the specific difference.
Therefore it presents the notion, not
as
something simple, but in two countable
components.
Yet surely no one will for that reason
suppose
such notion to be a compound. The simple
notion seems to suggest abstract simplicity,
a unity which does not contain within
itself
difference and determinateness and
which
therefore, too, is not the unity that
belongs
to the Notion. In so far as an object
is
present in ordinary thinking, especially
in memory, or even as an abstract thought
determination, it can be quite simple.
Even
the object that is richest in content,
such
as, for example, spirit, nature, the
world,
even God, when uncomprehendingly taken
up
into the simple representation of the
equally
simple expression: spirit, nature,
the world,
God, is doubtless something simple
at which
consciousness can stop short without
going
on to pick out its peculiar determination
or its mark. But the objects of consciousness
should not remain simple, should not
remain
such representations or abstract thought
determinations; on the contrary, they
should
be comprehended, that is to say, their
simplicity
should be determined with their inner
difference.
The compound notion, however, is a
contradiction
in terms. We can, of course, have a
notion
of something composite; but a compound
notion
would be something worse than materialism,
which assumes only the substance of
the soul
to be composite, yet none the less
takes
thought to be simple. Uneducated reflection
first stumbles on the idea of composition,
because it is the completely external
relation,
the worst form in which anything can
be considered;
even the lowest natures must be an
inner
unity. That the form of the untruest
existence
should be assigned, above all, to the
ego,
to the Notion, that is something we
should
not have expected and that can only
be described
as inept and barbarous.
Further, notions are divided mainly
into
contrary and contradictory. If, in
our treatment
of the notion, we are supposed to state
what
determinate notions there are, then
we must
adduce all possible determinations
- for
all determinations are notions, consequently
determinate notions - and all the categories
of being as well as all determinations
of
essence, would have to be adduced under
the
species of notions. just as in the
text-books
of logic - to - to a greater or lesser
degree,
according to the whim of the author
- it
is related that there are affirmative,
negative,
identical, conditional, necessary notions,
and so on. As the nature of the Notion
itself
has progressed beyond all such determinations
and therefore these, if adduced in
connexion
with the Notion, occur out of their
proper
place, they only admit of superficial
definitions
and appear at this stage devoid of
all interest.
At the basis of contrary and contradictory
notions - a distinction to which particular
attention is paid here - lies the reflective
determination of diversity and opposition.
They are regarded as two particular
species,
that is, each as firmly fixed on its
own
account and indifferent to the other,
without
any thought of the dialectic and the
inner
nullity of these differences - as though
what is contrary must not equally be
determined
as contradictory. The nature and the
essential
transition of the forms of reflection
which
they express have been considered in
their
proper place. In the Notion, identity
has
developed into universality, difference
into
particularity, opposition, which withdraws
into the ground, into individuality.
In these
forms, those categories of reflection
are
present as they are in their Notion.
The
universal has proved itself to be not
only
the identical, but at the same time
the different
or contrary as against the particular
and
individual, and in addition, also to
be opposed
to them or contradictory; in this opposition,
however, it is identical with them
and is
their true ground in which they are
sublated.
The same holds good of particularity
and
individuality which are likewise the
totality
of the determinations of reflection.
A further classification of notions
is into
subordinate and coordinate - a distinction
which approaches more closely to the
determination
of the Notion, namely, the relationship
of
universality and particularity, where
these
terms, too, have been mentioned in
passing.
Only it is customary to regard them
likewise
as completely rigid relationships and
from
this point of view to put forward a
number
of sterile propositions about them.
The most
prolix discussion on this point concerns
again the relation of contrariety and
contradiction
to subordination and co-ordination.
Since
the judgment is the relation of determinate
Notions, it is only at that stage that
the
true relationship will come to view.
That
fashion of comparing these determinations
without a thought for their dialectic
or
for the progressive alteration of their
determination,
or rather for the conjunction of opposed
determinations present in them, makes
the
whole consideration of what is concordant
or not concordant in them - as though
the
concord or discord were something separate
and permanent - into something merely
sterile
and meaningless.
The great Euler, who displayed an infinitely
fertile and acute mind in seizing and
combining
the deeper relations of algebraic magnitudes,
the dry, prosaic Lambert in particular,
and
others, have attempted to construct
a notation
for this class of relation between
determinations
of the Notion by lines, figures and
the like,
the general intention being to elevate,
or
rather in fact to degrade, the logical
modes
of relation to a calculus. The utter
futility
of even attempting a notation is at
once
apparent when one compares the nature
of
the sign and what it is supposed to
signify.
The determinations of the Notion, universality,
particularity and individuality, are
certainly
diverse, as are lines, or the letters
of
algebra; further, they are also opposed,
and to this extent would also admit
of the
signs plus and minus. But they themselves,
and above all their relations - even
if one
stops at subsumption and inherence
- are
in their essential nature entirely
different
from letters and lines and their relationships,
the equality or difference of magnitude,
the plus and minus, or a superimposition
of lines, or their joining to form
angles
and the dispositions of spaces enclosed
by
them. It is characteristic of such
objects
that, in contrast to determinations
of the
Notion, they are mutually external,
and have
a fixed character. Now when Notions
are so
taken that they correspond to such
signs,
they cease to be Notions. Their determinations
are not inert entities like numbers
and lines
whose relation does not itself belong
to
them; they are living movements; the
distinguished
determinateness of the one side is
immediately
internal to the other side too. What
would
be a complete contradiction in the
case of
numbers and lines is essential to the
nature
of the Notion. Higher mathematics,
which
also goes on to the infinite and allows
itself
contradictions, can no longer employ
its
usual signs for representing such determinations.
To denote the conception - which is
still
very far from being a Notion - of the
infinite
approximation of two ordinates, or
in equating
a curve with an infinite number of
infinitesimal
straight lines, all it does is to draw
two
straight lines apart from each other
and
to make the straight lines approach
the curve
but remain distinct from it; for the
infinite,
which is here the point of interest,
it refers
us to pictorial thinking.
What has misled logicians into this
attempt
is primarily the quantitative relationship
in which universality, particularity
and
individuality are supposed to stand
to one
another; the universal means, more
extensive
than the particular and the individual,
and
the particular means, more extensive
than
the individual. The Notion is the most
concrete
and richest determination because it
is the
ground and the totality of the preceding
determinations, of the categories of
being
and of the determinations of reflection;
these, therefore, are certainly also
present
in it. But its nature is completely
misunderstood
when they are retained in it in their
former
abstraction, when the wider extent
of the
universal is taken to mean that it
is something
more or a greater quantum than the
particular
and the individual. As absolute ground,
it
is the possibility of quantity, but
equally
so of quality, that is, its determinations
are just as much qualitatively distinct;
therefore they are taken in direct
opposition
to their truth when they are posited
under
the form of quantity alone. Thus, too,
the
determination of reflection is a correlate
in which its opposite has an illusory
being
[scheint]; it is not in an external
relationship
like a quantum. But the Notion is more
than
all this; its determinations are determinate
Notions, are themselves essentially
the totality
of all determinations. It is therefore
quite
inappropriate for the purpose of grasping
such an inner totality, to seek to
apply
numerical and spatial relationships
in which
all determinations fall asunder; on
the contrary,
they are the last and worst medium
which
could be employed. Natural relationships
such as magnetism, or colour relations,
would
be infinitely higher and truer symbols
for
the purpose. Since man has in language
a
means of designation peculiar to Reason,
it is an idle fancy to search for a
less
perfect mode of representation to plague
oneself with. It is essentially only
spirit
that can comprehend the Notion as Notion;
for this is not merely the property
of spirit
but spirit's pure self. It is futile
to seek
to fix it by spatial figures and algebraic
signs for the purpose of the outer
eye and
an uncomprehending, mechanical mode
of treatment
such as a calculus. In fact, anything
else
which might be supposed to serve as
a symbol
can at most, like symbols for the nature
of God, evoke intimations and echoes
of the
Notion; if, however, one should seriously
propose to employ them for expressing
and
cognizing the Notion, then the external
nature
of all symbols is inadequate to the
task;
the truth about the relationship is
rather
the converse, namely, that what in
symbols
is an echo of a higher determination,
is
only truly known through the Notion
and can
be approximated to the Notion only
by separating
off the sensuous, unessential part
that was
meant to express it.
C The Individual § 1339
Individuality, as we have seen, is
already
posited by particularity; this is determinate
universality and therefore self-related
determinateness,
the determinate determinate.
1. In the first instance, therefore,
individuality
appears as the reflection of the Notion
out
of its determinateness into itself.
It is
the self-mediation of the Notion in
so far
as its otherness has made itself into
an
other again, whereby the Notion has
reinstated
itself as self-identical, but in the
determination
of absolute negativity. The negative
in the
universal whereby this is a particular,
was
defined above as a two-fold illusory
being:
in so far as the negative is an illusory
being within the universal, the particular
remains a universal; through the reference
of the illusory being outwards it is
a determinate;
the return of this side into the universal
is two-fold: either through abstraction
which
lets drop the particular and rises
to the
higher and the highest genus, or else
through
the individuality to which the universal
in the determinateness itself descends.
Here
is where the false path branches off
and
abstraction strays from the highway
of the
Notion and forsakes the truth. Its
higher
and highest universal to which it raises
itself is only the surface, which becomes
ever more destitute of content; the
individuality
it despises is the profundity in which
the
Notion seizes itself and is posited
as Notion.
©
§ 1340
Universality and particularity appeared,
on the one hand, as moments of the
becoming
of individuality. But it has already
been
shown that they are in themselves the
total
Notion, and consequently in individuality
do not pass over into an other, but
that
in individuality there is only posited
that
they are in and for themselves. The
universal
is in and for itself because it is
in its
own self absolute mediation, self-reference
only as absolute negativity. It is
an abstract
universal in so far as this sublating
is
an external act and so a dropping of
the
determinateness.
§ 1341
Life, Spirit, God - the pure Notion
itself,
are beyond the grasp of abstraction,
because
it deprives its products of singularity,
of the principle of individuality and
personality,
and so arrives at nothing but universalities
devoid of life and spirit, colour and
content.
§ 1342
Yet the unity of the Notion is so indissoluble
that even these products of abstraction,
though they are supposed to drop individuality
are, on the contrary, individuals themselves.
Abstraction raises the concrete into
universality
in which, however, the universal is
grasped
only as a determinate universality;
and this
is precisely the individuality that
has shown
itself to be self-related determinateness.
Abstraction, therefore, is a sundering
of
the concrete and an isolating of its
determinations;
through it only single properties and
moments
are seized; for its product must contain
what it is itself. But the difference
between
this individuality of its products
and the
Notion's individuality is that, in
the former,
the individual as content and the universal
as form are distinct from one another
- just
because the former is not present as
absolute
form, as the Notion itself, or the
latter
is not present as the totality of form.
However
this more detailed consideration shows
that
the abstract product itself is a unity
of
the individual content and abstract
universality,
and is, therefore, a concrete - and
the opposite
of what it aims to be.
§ 1343
For the same reason the particular,
because
it is only the determinate universal,
is
also an individual, and conversely
the individual,
because it is the determinate universal,
is just as much a particular. If we
stick
to this abstract determinateness, then
the
Notion has the three particular determinations,
the universal, the particular, and
the individual;
whereas previously we had given only
the
universal and the particular as the
species
of the particular. Since individuality
is
the return of the Notion, as negative,
into
itself, this very return from the abstraction
which, strictly speaking, is sublated
in
the return, can be placed along with
the
others as an indifferent moment and
counted
with them.
If individuality is reckoned as one
of the
particular determinations of the Notion,
then particularity is the totality
which
embraces them all; precisely in being
this
totality it is the concretion of them
or
individuality itself. But it is also
the
concrete in accordance with its aspect,
noted
above, of determinate universality;
as such
it is the immediate unity in which
none of
these moments is posited as distinct
or as
the determinant, and in this form it
will
constitute the middle term of the formal
syllogism.
It is self-evident that each determination
made in the preceding exposition of
the Notion
has immediately dissolved itself and
lost
itself in its other. Each distinction
is
confounded in the very attempt to isolate
and fix it. Only mere representational
thinking,
for which abstraction has isolated
them,
is capable of holding the universal,
particular
and individual rigidly apart; in this
way
they can be counted, and for a further
distinction
such thinking holds to the completely
external
one of being, namely, quantity, which
is
nowhere less appropriate than here.
In individuality,
the true relationship mentioned above,
the
inseparability of the Notion's determinations
is posited; for as negation of the
negation
it contains their opposition and at
the same
time contains it in its ground or unity,
the effected coincidence of each with
its
other. As this reflection is in its
very
own nature universality, it is essentially
the negativity of the Notion's determinations,
but not merely as if it were a third
something
distinct from them; on the contrary,
it is
now posited that posited being [Gesetztsein]
is being-in-and-for-itself; that is,
that
each of the determinations pertaining
to
the difference is itself the totality.
The
return of the determinate Notion into
itself
means that it has the determination
of being,
in its determinateness, the whole Notion.
2. But Individuality is not only the
return
of the Notion into itself; but immediately
its loss. Through individuality, where
the
Notion is internal to itself, it becomes
external to itself and enters into
actuality.
Abstraction which, as the soul of individuality
is the relation of the negative to
the negative;
and, as we have shown not external
to the
universal and the particular but immanent
in them; and through it they are concrete,
content, an individual. But as this
negativity,
individuality is the determinate determinateness,
is differentiation as such; through
this
reflection of the difference into itself,
the difference becomes fixed; it is
only
through individuality that the determining
of the particular takes place, for
individuality
is that abstraction which simply as
individuality,
is now posited abstraction.
§ 1344
The individual, therefore, as self-related
negativity, is immediate identity of
the
negative with itself; it is a being-for-self.
Or it is the abstraction that determines
the Notion, according to its ideal
moment
of being, as an immediate. In this
way, the
individual is a qualitative one or
this.
With this quality it is, first, repulsion
of itself from itself, whereby the
many other
ones are presupposed; secondly, it
is now
a negative relation towards these presupposed
others; and, the individual is in so
far
exclusive.
§ 1345
Universality, when related to these
individuals
as indifferent ones - and related to
them
it must be because it is a moment of
the
Notion of individuality - is merely
their
common element. When one understands
by the
universal, that which is common to
several
individuals, one is starting from the
indifferent
subsistence of these individuals and
confounding
the immediacy of being with the determination
of the Notion. The lowest possible
conception
of the universal in its connection
with the
individual is this external relation
of it
as merely a common element. ©
The individual, which in the sphere
of reflection
exists as a this, does not have the
exclusive
relation to another one which belongs
to
qualitative being-for-self. This, as
the
one reflected into itself, is for itself
and without repulsion; or repulsion
in this
reflection is one with abstraction
and is
the reflecting mediation which attaches
to
the this in such wise that the this
is a
posited immediacy pointed out by someone
external to it. The this is; it is
immediate;
but it is only this in so far as it
is pointed
out. The 'pointing out' is the reflecting
movement which collects itself inwardly
and
posits immediacy, but as a self-external
immediacy. Now the individual is certainly
a this, as the immediate restored out
of
mediation; but it does not have the
mediation
outside it - it is itself a repelling
separation,
posited abstraction, yet in its very
act
of separating, it is a positive relation.
This act of abstraction by the individual,
being the reflection of the difference
into
itself, is first a positing of the
differentiated
moments as self-subsistent and reflected-into-self.
They immediately are; but further,
this sundering
is reflection as such, the illusory
being
of the one in the other; thus they
stand
in essential relation. Further, the
individuals
are not merely inertly present in relation
to one another; such plurality belongs
to
being; the individuality, in positing
itself
as determinate, posits itself not in
an external
difference but in the difference of
the Notion.
It therefore excludes the universal
from
itself; yet since this is a moment
of individuality,
the universal is equally essentially
related
to it.
The Notion, as this relation of its
self-subsistent
determinations, has lost itself; for
as such
it is no longer their posited unity,
and
they are no longer present as moments,
as
the illusory being, of the Notion,
but as
subsistent in and for themselves. As
individuality,
the Notion in its determinateness returns
into itself, and therewith the determinate
moment has itself become a totality.
Its
return into itself is therefore the
absolute,
original partition of itself, or, in
other
words, it is posited as judgment.
Chapter 2 The Judgment § 1346
The judgment is the determinateness
of the
Notion posited in the Notion itself.
The
Notion's determinations, or what we
have
seen to be the same thing, the determinate
Notions, have already been considered
on
their own; but this consideration was
more
a subjective reflection or subjective
abstraction.
But the Notion is itself this abstractive
process, the opposing of its determinations
is its own determining activity. The
judgment
is this positing of the determinate
Notions
by the Notion itself. Judging is thus
another
function than comprehension, or rather
it
is the other function of the Notion
as the
determining of the Notion by itself,
and
the further progress of the judgment
into
the diversity of judgments is the progressive
determination of the Notion. What kinds
of
determinate Notions there are, and
how these
determinations of the Notion are arrived
at, has to reveal itself in the judgment.
§ 1347
The judgment can therefore be called
the
proximate realisation of the Notion,
inasmuch
as reality denotes in general entry
into
existence as a determinate being. More
precisely,
the nature of this realisation has
presented
itself in such a manner that, on the
one
hand, the moments of the Notion through
its
reflection-into-self or its individuality
are self-subsistent totalities, while
on
the other hand the unity of the Notion
is
their relation. The determinations
reflected
into themselves are determinate totalities,
no less essentially in their indifferent
and disconnected subsistence as through
their
reciprocal mediation with one another.
The
determining itself is only totality
in that
it contains these totalities and their
connection.
This totality is the judgment. It contains,
therefore, first, the two self-subsistents
which are called subject and predicate.
What
each is cannot yet really be said;
they are
still indeterminate, for it is only
through
the judgment that they are to be determined.
The judgment, being the Notion as determinate,
the only distinction present is the
general
one that the judgment contains the
determinate
Notion over against the still indeterminate
Notion. The subject can therefore,
in the
first instance, be taken in relation
to the
predicate as the individual over against
the universal, or even as the particular
over against the universal, or as the
individual
over against the particular; so far,
they
confront each other only in general,
as the
more determinate and the more universal.
§ 1348
It is therefore appropriate and necessary
to have these names, subject and predicate
for the determinations of the judgment;
as
names, they are something indeterminate
that
still awaits its determination, and
are,
therefore, no more than names. It is
partly
for this reason that the Notion determinations
themselves could not be used for the
two
sides of the judgment; but a stronger
reason
is because the nature of the Notion
determination
is emphatically to be, not something
abstract
and fixed, but to have and to posit
its opposite
within it; since the sides of the judgment
are themselves Notions and therefore
the
totality of its determinations, each
side
must run through all these determinations
and exhibit them within itself, whether
in
abstract or concrete form. Now in order
to
fix the sides of the judgment in a
general
way when their determination is altered,
those names are most serviceable which
remain
the same throughout the alteration.
The name
however stands over against the matter
in
hand or the Notion; this distinction
presents
itself in the judgment as such; now
the subject
is in general the determinate, and
is therefore
more that which immediately is, whereas
the
predicate expresses the universal,
the essential
nature or the Notion; therefore the
subject
as such is, in the first instance,
only a
kind of name; for what it is is first
enunciated
by the predicate which contains being
in
the sense of the Notion. In the question:
what is this? or: what kind of a plant
is
this? what is often understood by the
being
enquired after, is merely the name,
and when
this is learned one is satisfied and
now
knows what the thing is. This is being
in
the sense of the subject. But the Notion,
or at least the essence and the universal
in general, is first given by the predicate,
and it is this that is asked for in
the sense
of the judgment. Consequently, God,
spirit,
nature, or whatever it may be, is as
the
subject of a judgment at first only
the name;
what such a subject is as regards its
Notion
is first enunciated in the predicate.
When
enquiry is made as to the kind of predicate
belonging to such subject, the act
of judgment
necessarily implies an underlying Notion.
But this Notion is first enunciated
by the
predicate itself. Properly speaking,
therefore,
it is the mere general idea that constitutes
the presupposed meaning of the subject
and
that leads to the naming of it; and
in doing
this it is contingent and a historical
fact,
what is, or is not, to be understood
by a
name. So many disputes about whether
a predicate
does or does not belong to a certain
subject
are therefore nothing more than verbal
disputes,
because they start from the form above
mentioned;
what lies at the base is so far nothing
more
than the name.
§ 1349
We have now to examine, secondly, how
the
relation of subject and predicate in
the
judgment is determined and how subject
and
predicate themselves are at first determined
through this very relation. The judgment
has in general for its sides totalities
which
to begin with are essentially self-subsistent.
The unity of the Notion is, therefore,
at
first only a relation of self-subsistents;
not as yet the concrete and pregnant
unity
that has returned into itself from
this reality,
but only a unity outside which the
self-subsistent
sides persist as extremes that are
not sublated
in it. Now consideration of the judgment
can begin from the original unity of
the
Notion, or from the self-subsistence
of the
extremes. The judgment is the self-diremption
of the Notion; this unity is, therefore,
the ground from which the consideration
of
the judgment in accordance with its
true
objectivity begins. It is thus the
original
division [Teilung] of what is originally
one; thus the word Urteil refers to
what
judgment is in and for itself. But
regarded
from the side of externality, the Notion
is present in the judgment as Appearance,
since its moments therein attain self-subsistence,
and it is on this external side that
ordinary
thinking tends to fasten.
§ 1350
From this subjective standpoint, then,
subject
and predicate are considered to be
complete,
each on its own account, apart from
the other:
the subject as an object that would
exist
even if it did not possess this predicate;
the predicate as a universal determination
that would exist even if it did not
belong
to this subject. From this standpoint,
the
act of judgment involves the reflection,
whether this or that predicate which
is in
someone's head can and should be attached
to the object which exists on its own
account
outside; the very act of judging consists
in this, that only through it is a
predicate
combined with a subject, so that, if
this
combination did not take place, each
on its
own would still remain what it is,
the latter
an existent object, the former an idea
in
someone's head. The predicate which
is attached
to the subject should, however, also
belong
to it, that is, be in and for itself
identical
with it. Through this significance
of attachment,
the subjective meaning of judgment
and the
indifferent, outer subsistence of subject
and predicate are sublated again: this
action
is good; the copula indicates that
the predicate
belongs to the being of the subject
and is
not merely externally combined with
it. In
the grammatical sense, that subjective
relationship
in which one starts from the indifferent
externality of the subject and predicate
has its complete validity; for it is
words
that are here externally combined.
We may
take this opportunity of remarking,
too,
that though a proposition has a subject
and
predicate in the grammatical sense,
this
does not make it a judgment. The latter
requires
that the predicate be related to the
subject
as one Notion determination to another,
and
therefore as a universal to a particular
or individual. If a statement about
a particular
subject only enunciates something individual,
then this is a mere proposition, For
example,
'Aristotle died at the age of 73, in
the
fourth year of the 115th Olympiad,'
is a
mere proposition, not a judgment. It
would
partake of the nature of a judgment
only
if doubt had been thrown on one of
the circumstances,
the date of the death, or the age of
that
philosopher, and the given figures
had been
asserted on the strength of some reason
or
other. In that case, these figures
would
be taken as something universal, as
time
that still subsists apart from this
particular
content of the death of Aristotle,
whether
as time filled with some other content,
or
even as empty time. Similarly, the
news that
my friend N. has died is a proposition;
and
it would be a judgment only if there
were
a question whether he was really dead
or
only in a state of catalepsy.
§ 1351
In the usual way of defining the judgment
we may indeed accept the indeterminate
expression
connection for the external copula,
as also
that the connected terms are at least
supposed
to be notions. But in other respects
this
definition is superficial in the extreme:
not only, for example, that in the
disjunctive
judgment more than two so-called notions
are connected, but rather that the
definition
is far better than its subject matter;
for
it is not notions at all that are meant,
hardly determinations of the Notion,
but
really only determinations of representational
thought; it was remarked in connection
with
the Notion in general and the determinate
Notion, that what is usually so named
by
no means deserves the name of Notion;
where
then should Notions come from in the
case
of the judgment? Above all, in this
definition
the essential feature of the judgment,
namely,
the difference of its determinations,
is
passed over; still less does it take
into
account the relationship of the judgment
to the Notion.
§ 1352
As regards the further determination
of the
subject and predicate, we have remarked
that
it is really in the judgment first
that they
have to receive their determination.
Since
the judgment is the posited determinateness
of the Notion, this determinateness
possesses
the said differences immediately and
abstractly
as individuality and universality.
But in
so far as the judgment is in general
the
determinate being or otherness of the
Notion
which has not yet restored itself to
the
unity whereby it is as Notion, there
emerges
also-the determinateness which is notionless,
the opposition of being and reflection
or
the in-itself. But since the Notion
constitutes
the essential ground of the judgment,
these
determinations are at least indifferent
to
the extent that when one belongs to
the subject
and the other to the predicate, the
converse
relationship equally holds good. The
subject
as the individual appears, in the first
instance,
as that which simply is or is for itself
in accordance with the specific determinateness
of the individual - as an actual object,
even though it be only an object in
representational
thought - as for example bravery, right,
agreement, etc. - on which judgment
is being
made. The predicate, on the other hand,
as
the universal, appears as this reflection
on the object, or rather as the object's
reflection into itself, which goes
beyond
that immediacy and sublates the determinatenesses
in their form of mere being; that is,
it
is the object's in-itself. In this
way, one
starts from the individual as the first,
the immediate, and it is raised by
the judgment
into universality, just as, conversely,
the
universal that is only in itself descends
in the individual into determinate
being
or becomes a being that is for itself.
§ 1353
This signification of the judgment
is to
be taken as its objective meaning,
and at
the same time as the truth of the earlier
forms of the transition. In the sphere
of
being, the object becomes and others
itself,
the finite perishes or goes under in
the
infinite; in the sphere of Existence,
the
object issues from its ground into
Appearance
and falls to the ground, the accident
manifests
the wealth of substance as well as
its power;
in being, there is transition into
an other,
in essence, reflected being in an other
by
which the necessary relation is revealed.
This movement of transition and reflection
has now passed over into the original
partition
of the Notion which, while bringing
back
the individual to the in-itself of
its universality,
equally determines the universal as
something
actual. These two acts are one and
the same
process in which individuality is posited
in its reflection-into-self, and the
universal
as determinate.
§ 1354
But now this objective signification
equally
implies that the said differences,
in reappearing
in the determinateness of the Notion,
are
at the same time posited only as Appearances,
that is, that they are not anything
fixed,
but apply just as much to the one Notion
determination as to the other. The
subject
is, therefore, just as much to be taken
as
the in-itself, and the predicate, on
the
other hand, as determinate being. The
subject
without predicate is what the thing
without
qualities, the thing-in-itself is in
the
sphere of Appearance - an empty, indeterminate
ground; as such, it is the Notion enclosed
within itself, which only receives
a differentiation
and determinateness in the predicate;
the
predicate therefore constitutes the
side
of the determinate being of the subject.
Through this determinate universality
the
subject stands in relation to an externality,
is open to the influence of other things
and thereby becomes actively opposed
to them.
What is there comes forth from its
being-within-self
and enters into the universal element
of
connection and relationship, into the
negative
connections and the interplay of actuality,
which is a continuation of the individual
into other individuals and therefore
universality.
§ 1355
The identity just demonstrated, namely,
that
the determination of the subject equally
applies to the predicate and vice versa,
is not, however, something only for
us; it
is not merely in itself, but is also
posited
in the judgment; for the judgment is
the
connection of the two; the copula expresses
that the subject is the predicate.
The subject
is the specific determinateness, and
the
predicate is this posited determinateness
of the subject; the subject is determined
only in its predicate, or, only in
the predicate
is it a subject; in the predicate it
has
returned into itself and is therein
the universal.
Now in so far as the subject is the
self-
subsistent, this identity has the relationship
that the predicate does not possess
a self-subsistence
of its own, but has its subsistence
only
in the subject; it inheres in the subject.
Since the predicate is thus distinct
from
the subject, it is only an isolated
determinateness
of the latter, only one of its properties;
while the subject itself is the concrete,
the totality of manifold determinatenesses,
just as the predicate contains one;
it is
the universal.
§ 1356
But on the other hand the predicate,
too,
is a self-subsistent universality and
the
subject, conversely, only a determination
of it. Looked at this way, the predicate
subsumes the subject; individuality
and particularity
are not for themselves, but have their
essence
and substance in the universal. The
predicate
expresses the subject in its Notion;
the
individual and the particular are contingent
determinations in the subject; it is
their
absolute possibility. When in the case
of
subsumption one thinks of an external
connection
of subject and predicate and the subject
is conceived of as a self-subsistent
something,
the subsumption refers to the subjective
act of judgment above-mentioned in
which
one starts from the self-subsistence
of both
subject and predicate. From this standpoint
subsumption is only the application
of the
universal to a particular or an individual,
which is placed under the universal
in accordance
with a vague idea that it is of inferior
quality.
§ 1357
When the identity of subject and predicate
are so taken that at one time one Notion
determination applies to the former
and the
other to the latter, and at another
time
the converse equally holds good, then
the
identity is as yet still only an implicit
one; on account of the self-subsistent
diversity
of the two sides of the judgment, their
posited
unity also has these two sides, in
the first
instance as different. But differenceless
identity really constitutes the true
relation
of the subject to the predicate. The
Notion
determination is itself essentially
relation
for it is a universal; therefore the
same
determinations possessed by the subject
and
predicate are also possessed by their
relation
itself. The relation is universal,
for it
is the positive identity of the two,
of subject
and predicate; but it is also determinate,
for the determinateness of the predicate
is that of the subject; further, it
is also
individual, for in it the self-subsistent
extremes are sublated as in their negative
unity. However, in the judgment this
identity
is not as yet posited; the copula is
present
as the still indeterminate relation
of being
as such: A is B; for in the judgment,
the
self-subsistence of the Notion determinatenesses
or the extremes, is the reality which
the
Notion has within it. If the is of
the copula
were already posited as the above determinate
and pregnant unity of subject and predicate,
as their Notion, it would already be
the
syllogism.
§ 1358
To restore this identity of the Notion,
or
rather to posit it, is the goal of
the movement
of the judgment. What is already present
in the judgment is, on the one hand,
the
self-subsistence of subject and predicate,
but also their mutually opposed determinateness,
and on the other hand their none the
less
abstract relation. What the judgment
enunciates
to start with is that the subject is
the
predicate; but since the predicate
is supposed
not to be what the subject is, we are
faced
with a contradiction which must resolve
itself,
pass over into a result. Or rather,
since
subject and predicate are in and for
themselves
the totality of the Notion, and the
judgment
is the reality of the Notion, its forward
movement is only a development; there
is
already present in it what comes forth
from
it, so that proof is merely an exposition,
a reflection as a positing of that
which
is already present in the extremes
of the
judgment; but even this positing itself
is
already present; it is the relation
of the
extremes.
§ 1359
The judgment in its immediacy is in
the first
instance the judgment of existence;
its subject
is immediately an abstract individual
which
simply is, and the predicate is an
immediate
determinateness or property of the
subject,
an abstract universal.
This qualitative character of subject
and
predicate being sublated, the determination
of the one is reflected, to begin with,
in
the other; the judgment is now, secondly,
the judgment of reflection.
But this more external conjunction
passes
over into the essential identity of
a substantial,
necessary connection; as such it is,
thirdly,
the judgment of necessity.
Fourthly, since in this essential identity
the difference of subject and predicate
has
become a form, the judgment becomes
subjective;
it contains the opposition of the Notion
and its reality and the equation of
the two;
it is the judgment of the Notion.
This emergence of the Notion establishes
the transition of the Judgment into
the syllogism.
A. THE JUDGMENT OF EXISTENCE § 1360
In the subjective judgment we want
to see
one and the same object double, first
in
its individual actuality, and then
in its
essential identity or in its Notion:
the
individual raised into its universality,
or, what is the same thing, the universal
individualised into its actuality.
In this
way the judgment is truth: for it is
the
agreement of the Notion and reality.
But
this is not the nature of the judgment
at
first; for at first it is immediate,
since
as yet no reflection and movement of
the
determinations has appeared in it.
This immediacy
makes the first judgment a judgment
of existence;
it can also be called the qualitative
judgment,
but only in so far as quality does
not apply
only to the determinateness of being
but
also includes the abstract universality
which,
on account of its simplicity, likewise
has
the form of immediacy.
§ 1361
The judgment of existence is also the
judgment
of inherence; because it is in the
form of
immediacy, and because the subject
as distinguished
from the predicate is the immediate,
and
consequently the primary and essential
feature
in a judgment of this kind, the predicate
has the form of a non-self-subsistent
determination
that has its foundation in the subject.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Positive Judgment
(b) The Negative Judgment
(c) The Infinite Judgment
B. THE JUDGMENT OF REFLECTION § 1387
In the judgment that has now arisen,
the
subject is an individual as such; and
similarly
the universal is no longer an abstract
universality
or a single property, but is posited
as a
universal that has gathered itself
together
into a unity through the relation of
distinct
terms; or, regarding it from the point
of
view of the content of various determinations
in general, as the taking together
of various
properties and existences. If examples
are
to be given of predicates of judgments
of
reflection, they must be of another
kind
than for judgments of existence. It
is in
the judgment of reflection that we
first
have, strictly speaking, a determinate
content,
that is, a content as such; for the
content
is the form determination which is
reflected
into identity as distinct from the
form in
so far as this is a distinct determinateness
- as it still is in the judgment. In
the
judgment of existence the content is
merely
an immediate, or abstract, indeterminate
content. The following may therefore
serve
as examples of judgments of reflection:
man
is mortal, things are perishable, this
thing
is useful, harmful; hardness, elasticity
of bodies, happiness, etc. are predicates
of this peculiar kind. They express
an essential
determination, but one which is in
a relationship
or is a unifying universality.
§ 1388
This universality, which will further
determine
itself in the movement of the judgment
of
reflection, is still distinct from
the universality
of the Notion as such; true, it is
no longer
the abstract universality of the qualitative
judgment, but it still possesses a
relation
to the immediate from which it proceeds
and
has the latter as the basis of its
negativity.
The Notion determines the existent,
in the
first instance, to determinations of
relation,
to self-continuities in the diverse
multiplicity
of concrete existence-yet in such a
manner
that the genuine universal, though
it is
the inner essence of that multiplicity,
is
still in the sphere of Appearance,
and this
relative nature-or even the mark-of
this
multiplicity is still not the moment
of being-in-and-for-self
of the latter.
§ 1389
It may suggest itself to define the
judgment
of reflection as a judgment of quantity,
just as the judgment of existence was
also
defined as qualitative judgment. But
just
as immediacy in the latter was not
merely
an immediacy which simply is, but one
which
was essentially also mediated and abstract,
so here, too, that sublated immediacy
is
not merely sublated quality, and therefore
not merely quantity; on the contrary,
just
as quality is the most external immediacy,
so is quantity, in the same way, the
most
external determination belonging to
mediation.
§ 1390
Further, as regards the determination
as
it appears in its movement in the judgment
of reflection, it should be remarked
that
in the judgment of existence the movement
of the determination showed itself
in the
predicate, because this judgment was
in the
determination of immediacy and the
subject
consequently appeared as the basis.
For a
similar reason, in the judgment of
reflection,
the onward movement of determining
runs its
course in the subject, because this
judgment
has for its determination the reflected
in-itself.
Here therefore the essential element
is the
universal or the predicate; hence it
constitutes
the basis by which, and in accordance
with
which, the subject is to be measured
and
determined. However, the predicate
also receives
a further determination through the
further
development of the form of the subject;
but
this occurs indirectly, whereas the
development
of the subject is, for the reason stated,
a direct advance.
§ 1391
As regards the objective signification
of
the judgment, the individual, through
its
universality, enters into existence,
but
in an essential determination of relationship,
in an essentiality which maintains
itself
throughout the multiplicity of the
world
of Appearance; the subject is supposed
to
be determinate in and for itself; this
determinateness
it possesses in its predicate. The
individual,
on the other hand, is reflected into
this
its predicate which is its universal
essence;
the subject is in so far a concrete
existence
in the world of Appearance. The predicate
in this judgment no longer inheres
in the
subject; it is rather the implicit
being
under which this individual is subsumed
as
an accidental. If the judgments of
existence
may also be defined as judgments of
inherence,
judgments of reflection are, on the
contrary,
judgments of subsumption.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Singular Judgment
(b) The Particular Judgment
(c) The Universal Judgment
C. THE JUDGMENT OF NECESSITY § 1405
The determination to which universality
has
advanced is, as we have seen, the universality
which is in and for itself or objective,
to which in the sphere of essence substantiality
corresponds. It is distinguished from
the
latter in that it belongs to the Notion
and
is therefore not merely the inner but
also
the posited necessity of its determinations;
or, in other words, the difference
is immanent
in it, whereas substance has its difference
only in its accidents, but not as principle
within itself.
§ 1406
Now in the judgment, this objective
universality
is posited; first, therefore, with
this its
essential determinateness as immanent
in
it, secondly, with its determinateness
distinguished
from it as particularity, of which
this universality
constitutes the substantial basis.
In this
way it is determined as genus and species.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Categorical Judgment
(b) The Hypothetical Judgment
(c) The Disjunctive Judgment
D. THE JUDGMENT OF THE NOTION § 1417
The ability to form judgments of existence
such as 'the rose is red', 'snow is
white',
and so forth, will hardly count as
evidence
of great powers of judgment. The judgments
of reflection are rather propositions;
in
the judgment of necessity the object
appears,
it is true, in its objective universality,
but it is only in the judgment now
to be
considered that its relation to the
Notion
is found. In this judgment the Notion
is
laid down as the basis, and since it
is in
relation to the object, it is an ought-to-be
to which the reality may or may not
be adequate.
Therefore it is only a judgment of
this kind
that contains a true appreciation;
the predicates
good, bad, true, beautiful, correct,
etc.
express that the thing is measured
against
its universal Notion as the simply
presupposed
ought-to-be and is, or is not, in agreement
with it.
§ 1418
The judgment of the Notion has been
called
the judgment of modality and it has
been
regarded as containing that form of
the relationship
between subject and predicate which
is found
in an external understanding, and to
be concerned
with the value of the copula only in
relation
to thinking.
§ 1419
According to this view, the problematical
judgment is one where the affirmation
or
denial is taken as optional or possible;
the assertoric, where it is taken as
true,
that is as actual; and the apodeictic,
where
it is taken as necessary. It is easy
to see
why it is so natural in the case of
this
judgment to step out of the sphere
of judgment
itself and to regard its determination
as
something merely subjective. For here
it
is the Notion, or the subjective, that
reappears
in the judgment and stands in relationship
to an external actuality. But this
subjectivity
is not to be confused with external
reflection,
which of course is also something subjective,
but in a different sense from the Notion
itself; on the contrary, the Notion
that
re-emerges from the disjunctive judgment
is the opposite of a mere contingent
mode.
The earlier judgments are in this sense
merely
subjective, for they are based on an
abstraction
and one-sidedness in which the Notion
is
lost. The judgment of the Notion, on
the
contrary, is objective and the truth
as against
those earlier judgments, just because
it
has for its basis the Notion, not the
Notion
in external reflection or in relation
to
a subjective, that is contingent, thinking,
but the Notion in its determinateness
as
Notion.
§ 1420
In the disjunctive judgment the Notion
was
posited as identity of the universal
nature
with its particularisation; consequently
the relation of the judgment was cancelled.
This concretion of universality and
particularisation
is, at first, a simple result; it has
now
to develop itself further into totality,
since the moments which it contains
are at
first swallowed up in it and as yet
do not
confront one another in determinate
self-subsistence.
The defect of the result may also be
more
definitely expressed by saying that
in the
disjunctive judgment, although objective
universality has completed itself in
its
particularisation, yet the negative
unity
of the latter merely returns into the
former
and has not yet determined itself to
the
third moment, that of individuality.
Yet
in so far as the result itself is negative
unity, it is indeed already this individuality;
but as such it is only this one determinateness,
which has now to posit its negativity,
sunder
itself into the extremes and in this
way
finally develop into the syllogism.
§ 1421
The proximate diremption of this unity
is
the judgment in which it is posited
first
as subject, as an immediate individual,
and
then as predicate, as the determinate
relation
of its moments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Assertoric Judgment
(b) The Problematic Judgment
(c) The Apodetic Judgment
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
§ 1431
This judgment, then, is truly objective;
or it is the truth of the judgment
in general.
Subject and predicate correspond to
each
other and have the same content, and
this
content is itself the posited concrete
universality;
it contains, namely, the two moments,
the
objective universal or the enus, and
the
individualised universal. Here, therefore,
we have the universal which is itself
and
continues itself through its opposite
and
is a universal only as unity with this
opposite.
A universal of this kind, such as the
predicate
good, suitable, correct, etc., is based
on
an ought-to-be and at the same time
contains
the correspondence of existence to
that ought-to-be;
it is not this ought-to-be or the genus
by
itself, but this correspondence that
is the
universality which constitutes the
predicate
of the apodeictic judgment.
§ 1432
The subject likewise contains these
two moments
in immediate unity as the fact. But
it is
the truth of the fact that it is internally
split into what it ought-to-be and
what it
is; this is the absolute judgment on
all
actuality. It is because this original
partition,
which is the omnipotence of the Notion,
is
just as much a return into its unity
and
an absolute relation of the ought-to-be
and
being to each other that makes what
is actual
into a fact; its inner relation, this
concrete
identity, constitutes the soul of the
fact.
§ 1433
The transition from the immediate simplicity
of the fact to the correspondence which
is
the determinate relation of its ought-to-be
and its being - or the copula - is
now seen,
on closer examination, to lie in the
particular
determinateness of the fact. The genus
is
the universal in and for itself, which
as
such appears as the unrelated; while
the
determinateness is that which in that
universal
is reflected into itself, yet at the
same
time is reflected into an other. The
judgment
therefore has its ground in the constitution
of the subject and thereby is apodeictic.
Hence we now have before us the determinate
and fulfilled copula, which formerly
consisted
in the abstract 'is', but has now further
developed itself into ground in general.
It appears at first as an immediate
determinateness
in the subject, but it is no less the
relation
to the predicate which has no other
content
than this very correspondence, or the
relation
of the subject to the universality.
§ 1434
Thus the form of the judgment has perished;
first because subject and predicate
are in
themselves the same content; secondly
because
the subject through its determinateness
points
beyond itself and relates itself to
the predicate;
but also, thirdly, this relating has
passed
over into the predicate, alone. constitutes
its content, and is thus the posited
relation,
or the judgment itself. Thus the concrete
identity of the Notion which was the
result
of the disjunctive judgment and which
constitutes
the inner basis of the Notion judgment
-
which identity was at first posited
only
in the predicate - is now restored
in the
whole.
§ 1435
If we examine the positive element
of this
result which effects the transition
of the
judgment into another form, we find,
as we
have seen, that subject and predicate
in
the apodeictic judgment are each the
whole
Notion. The unity of the Notion as
the determinateness
constituting the copula that relates
them,
is at the same time distinct from them.
At
first, it stands only on the other
side of
the subject as the latter's immediate
constitution.
But since it is essentially that which
relates
subject and predicate, it is not merely
such
immediate constitution but the universal
that permeates both subject and predicate.
While subject and predicate have the
same
content, the form relation, on the
other
hand, is posited through this determinateness,
determinateness as a universal or particularity.
Thus it contains within itself the
two form
determinations of the extremes and
is the
determinate relation of subject and
predicate;
it is the fulfilled copula of the judgment,
the copula pregnant with content, the
unity
of the Notion that has re-emerged from
the
judgment in which it was lost in the
extremes.
Through this impregnation of the copula
the
judgment has become the syllogism.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Highlighted text is Lenin's underlining.
The ® accesses Lenin's annotations;
© accesses
annotations by C L R James.
The Syllogism - next section
Hegel-by-HyperText Home Page @ marxists.org§
1318
The Notion is, in the first instance,
formal,
the Notion in its beginning or the
immediate
Notion. In the immediate unity, its
difference
or positedness is itself at first simple
and only an illusory being [Schein],
so that
the moments of the difference are immediately
the totality of the Notion and are
simply
the Notion as such.
§ 1319
Secondly, however, because it is absolute
negativity, it sunders itself and posits
itself as the negative or as the other
of
itself; and further, because as yet
it is
only the immediate Notion, this positing
or differentiation is characterised
by the
fact that the moments become indifferent
to one another and each becomes for
itself;
in this partition, its unity is still
only
an external connection. As such connection
of its moments, which are posited as
self-subsistent
and indifferent, it is Judgment.
§ 1320
Thirdly, though the judgment does contain
the unity of the Notion that has vanished
into its self-subsistent moments, yet
this
unity is not posited. It becomes so
through
the dialectical movement of the judgment,
through which it has become the Syllogism,
the Notion posited in its completeness;
for
in the syllogism there is posited not
only
the moments of the Notion as self-subsistent
extremes, but also their mediating
unity.
§ 1321
But since this unity itself as the
unifying
middle, and the moments as self-subsistent
extremes, are in the first instance
immediately
opposed to one another, this contradictory
relationship that occurs in the formal
syllogism
sublates itself, and the completeness
of
the Notion passes over into the unity
of
the totality, the subjectivity of the
Notion
into its Objectivity.
Chapter 1 The Notion § 1322
Understanding is the term usually employed
to express the faculty of notions;
as so
used, it is distinguished from the
faculty
of judgment and the faculty of syllogisms,
of the formal reason But it is with
reason
that it is especially contrasted; in
that
case, however, it does not signify
the faculty
of the notion in general, but of determinate
notions, and the idea prevails that
the notion
is only a determinate notion. When
the understanding
in this signification is distinguished
from
the formal faculty of judgment and
from the
formal reason, it is to be taken as
the faculty
of the single determinate notion. For
the
judgment and the syllogism or reason
are,
as formal, only a product of the understanding
since they stand under the form of
the abstract
determinateness of the Notion. Here,
however,
the Notion emphatically does not rank
as
something merely abstractly determinate;
consequently, the understanding is
to be
distinguished from reason only in the
sense
that the former is merely the faculty
of
the notion in general.
§ 1323
This universal Notion, which we have
now
to consider here, contains the three
moments:
universality, particularity and individuality.
The difference and the determinations
which
the Notion gives itself in its distinguishing,
constitute the side which was previously
called positedness. As this is identical
in the Notion with being-in-and-for-self,
each of these moments is no less the
whole
Notion than it is a determinate Notion
and
a determination of the Notion.
§ 1324
In the first instance, it is the pure
Notion
or the determination of universality.
But
the pure or universal Notion is also
only
a determinate or particular Notion,
which
takes its place alongside other Notions.
Because the Notion is a totality, and
therefore
in its universality or pure identical
self-relation
is essentially a determining and a
distinguishing,
it therefore contains within itself
the standard
by which this form of its self-identity,
in pervading and embracing all the
moments,
no less immediately determines itself
to
be only the universal over against
the distinguishedness
of the moments.
Secondly, the Notion is thereby posited
as
this particular or determinate Notion,
distinct
from others.
Thirdly, individuality is the Notion
reflecting
itself out of the difference into absolute
negativity. This is, at the same time,
the
moment in which it has passed out of
its
identity into its otherness, and becomes
the judgment.
A The Universal Notion § 1325
The pure Notion is the absolutely infinite,
unconditioned and free. It is here,
at the
outset of the discussion which has
the Notion
for its content, that we must look
back once
more at its genesis. Essence is the
outcome
of being, and the Notion, the outcome
of
essence, therefore also of being. But
this
becoming has the significance of a
self-repulsion,
so that it is rather the outcome which
is
the unconditioned and original. Being,
in
its transition into essence, has become
an
illusory being or a positedness, and
becoming
or transition into an other has become
a
positing; and conversely, the positing
or
reflection of essence has sublated
itself
and has restored itself as a being
that is
not posited, that is original. The
Notion
is the interfusion of these moments,
namely,
qualitative and original being is such
only
as a positing, only as a return-into-self,
and this pure reflection-into-self
is a sheer
becoming-other or determinateness which,
consequently, is no less an infinite,
self-relating
determinateness.
§ 1326
Thus the Notion is, in the first instance,
the absolute self-identity that is
such only
as the negation of negation or as the
infinite
unity of the negativity with itself.
This
pure relation of the Notion to itself,
which
is this relation by positing itself
through
the negativity, is the universality
of the
Notion.
§ 1327
As universality is the utterly simple
determination,
it does not seem capable of any explanation;
for an explanation must concern itself
with
definitions and distinctions and must
apply
predicates to its object, and to do
this
to what is simple, would alter rather
than
explain it. But the simplicity which
constitutes
the very nature of the universal is
such
that, through absolute negativity,
it contains
within itself difference and determinateness
in the highest degree. Being is simple
as
immediate being; for that reason it
is only
something meant or intended and we
cannot
say of it what it is; therefore, it
is one
with its other, with non- being. Its
Notion
is just this, to be a simplicity that
immediately
vanishes in its opposite; it is becoming.
The universal, on the contrary, is
that simplicity
which, because it is the Notion, no
less
possesses within itself the richest
content.
§ 1328
First, therefore, it is the simple
relation
to itself; it is only within itself.
Secondly,
however, this identity is within itself
absolute
mediation, but it is not something
mediated.
The universal that is mediated, namely,
the
abstract universal that is opposed
to the
particular and the individual, this
will
be discussed later when we are dealing
with
the specific notion. Yet even the abstract
universal involves this, that in order
to
obtain it we are required to leave
out other
determinations of the concrete. These
determinations,
simply as such, are negations; equally,
too,
the omitting of them is a negating.
So that
even with the abstraction, we have
the negation
of the negation. But this double negation
is conceived of as though it were external
to the abstraction, as though not only
were
the other omitted properties of the
concrete
distinct from the one retained, which
is
the content of the abstract universal,
but
also as though this operation of omitting
the other properties and retaining
the one
were a process outside the properties
themselves.
To such an externality in face of that
movement,
the universal has not yet determined
itself;
it is still within itself that absolute
mediation
which is, precisely, the negation of
the
negation or absolute negativity.
§ 1329
By virtue of this original unity it
follows,
in the first place, that the first
negative,
or the determination, is not a limitation
for the universal which, on the contrary,
maintains itself therein and is positively
identical with itself. The categories
of
being were, as Notions, essentially
these
identities of the determinations with
themselves
in their limitation or otherness; but
this
identity was only in itself the Notion;
it
was not yet manifested. Consequently,
the
qualitative determination as such was
lost
in its other and had for its truth
a determination
distinct from itself. The universal,
on the
contrary, even when it posits itself
in a
determination, remains therein what
it is.
It is the soul [Seele] of the concrete
which
it indwells, unimpeded and equal to
itself
in the manifoldness and diversity of
the
concrete. It is not dragged into the
process
of becoming, but continues itself through
that process undisturbed and possesses
the
power of unalterable, undying self-preservation.
§ 1330
But even so, it does not merely show,
or
have an illusory being, in its other,
like
the determination of reflection; this,
as
a correlate, is not merely self-related
but
is a positive relating of itself to
its other
in which it manifests itself; but,
in the
first instance, it only shows in it,
and
this illusory being of each in the
other,
or their reciprocal determining, along
with
their self-dependence, has the form
of an
external act. The universal, on the
contrary,
is posited as the essential being of
its
determination, as the latter's own
positive
nature. For the determination that
constitutes
its negative is, in the Notion, simply
and
solely a positedness; in other words,
it
is, at the same time, essentially only
the
negative of the negative, and is only
as
this identity of the negative with
itself,
which is the universal. Thus the universal
is also the substance of its determinations;
but in such wise that what was a contingency
for substance, is the Notion's own
self-mediation,
its own immanent reflection. But this
mediation
which, in the first instance, raises
contingency
to necessity, is the manifested relation;
the Notion is not the abyss of formless
substance,
or necessity as the inner identity
of things
or states distinct from, and limiting,
one
another; on the contrary, as absolute
negativity,
it is the shaper and creator, and because
the determination is not a limitation
but
is just as much utterly sublated, or
posited,
the illusory being is now manifestation,
the manifestation of the identical.
§ 1331
The universal is therefore free power;
it
is itself and takes its other within
its
embrace, but without doing violence
to it;
on the contrary, the universal is,
in its
other, in peaceful communion with itself.
We have called it free power, but it
could
also be called free love and boundless
blessedness,
for it bears itself towards its other
as
towards its own self; in it, it has
returned
to itself.
§ 1332
We have just mentioned determinateness,
although
the Notion, being as yet only the universal
and only self-identical, has not yet
advanced
to that stage. However, we cannot speak
of
the universal apart from determinateness
which to be more precise is particularity
and individuality, for the universal,
in
its absolute negativity, contains determinateness
in and for itself. The determinateness,
therefore,
is not introduced from outside when
we speak
of it in connection with the universal.
As
negativity in general or in accordance
with
the first, immediate negation, the
universal
contains determinateness generally
as particularity;
as the second negation, that is, as
negation
of the negation, it is absolute determinateness
or individuality and concreteness.
The universal
is thus the totality of the Notion;
it is
a concrete, and far from being empty,
it
has through its Notion a content, and
a content
in which it not only maintains itself
but
one which is its own and immanent in
it.
We can, indeed, abstract from the content:
but in that case we do not obtain the
universal
of the Notion but only the abstract
universal,
which is an isolated, imperfect moment
of
the Notion and has no truth.
§ 1333
More precisely, the universal shows
itself
as this totality as follows. In so
far as
it contains determinateness, it is
not merely
the first negation, but also the reflection
of this negation into itself. Taken
expressly
with this first negation, it is a particular,
and it is as such that we are soon
to consider
it; but in this determinateness it
is essentially
still a universal; this side we have
here
still to consider. For determinateness,
being
in the Notion, is the total reflection,
the
two-fold illusory being which on the
one
hand has an illusory reference outwards,
the reflection-into-other, and on the
other
hand has an illusory reference inwards,
the
reflection-into-self. The former reflection
involves distinction from an other;
from
this standpoint, the universal possesses
a particularity which has its resolution
in a higher universal. Now even though
it
is merely a relative universal, it
does not
lose its character of universal; it
preserves
itself in its determinateness, not
merely
as though in its connection with the
determinateness
it remained indifferent to it - for
then
it would be merely compounded with
it but
so that it is what we have just called
the
illusory reference inwards. The determinateness,
as determinate Notion, is bent back
into
itself out of the externality; it is
the
Notion's own immanent character, which
is
an essential character by virtue of
the fact
that, in being taken up into the universality
and pervaded by it, it equally pervades
the
universality, being of like compass
and identical
with it; it is the character that belongs
to the genus as the determinateness
that
is not separated from the universal.
Accordingly,
the limitation is not outward-going
but positive,
for the Notion, through its universality,
stands in free relation to itself.
Thus even
the determinate Notion remains within
itself
infinitely free Notion.
§ 1334
But in regard to the other side, in
which
the genus is limited by its specific
character,
it has been observed that this, as
a lower
genus, has its resolution in a higher
universal.
The latter, in its turn, can also be
grasped
as genus but as a more abstract one;
but
it always pertains only to that side
of the
determinate Notion which has a reference
outwards. The truly higher universal
is that
in which this outward-going side is
taken
back into the universal, the second
negation,
in which the determinateness is present
simply
as posited or as illusory being. Life,
ego,
spirit, absolute Notion, are not universals
merely in the sense of higher genera,
but
are concretes whose determinatenesses,
too,
are not species or lower genera but
genera
which, in their reality, are absolutely
self-contained
and self-fulfilled. In so far as life,
ego,
finite spirit are, as they certainly
are,
also only determinate Notions, their
absolute
resolution is in that universal which
as
truly absolute Notion is to be grasped
as
the Idea of infinite spirit, whose
posited
being is infinite, transparent reality
wherein
it contemplates its creation, and in
this
creation its own self.
§ 1335
The true, infinite universal which,
in itself,
is as much particularity as individuality,
we have next to consider as particularity.
It determines itself freely; the process
by which it makes itself finite is
not a
transition, for this occurs only in
the sphere
of being; it is creative power as the
absolute
negativity which relates itself to
its own
self. As such, it differentiates itself
internally,
and this is a determining, because
the differentiation
is one with the universality. Accordingly,
the universal is a process in which
it posits
the differences themselves as universal
and
self-related. They thereby become fixed,
isolated differences. The isolated
subsistence
of the finite which earlier was determined
as its being-for-self, and also as
thinghood,
as substance, is, in its truth universality,
the form with which the infinite Notion
clothes
its differences - a form that is, in
fact,
one of its own differences. Herein
consists
the creative power of the Notion, a
power
which is to be comprehended only in
this,
the Notion's innermost core.
B The Particular Notion § 1336
Determinateness as such belongs to
being
and the qualitative sphere; as determinateness
of the Notion it is particularity.
It is
not a limit, as though it were related
to
an other beyond it; on the contrary,
as we
have just seen, it is the native, immanent
moment of the universal; in particularity,
therefore, the universal is not in
the presence
of an other, but simply of itself.
The particular contains universality,
which
constitutes its substance; the genus
is unaltered
in its species, and the species are
not different
from the universal but only from one
another.
The particular has one and the same
universality
as the other particulars to which it
is related.
At the same time, by virtue of the
identity
of the particulars with the universal,
their
diversity is, as such, universal; it
is totality.
The particular, therefore, not only
contains
the universal but through its determinateness
also exhibits it; consequently, the
universal
constitutes a sphere that must exhaust
the
particular. This totality appears,
in so
far as the determinateness of the particular
is taken as mere diversity, as completeness.
In this respect, species are complete
simply
because there are no more of them.
There
is no inner standard or principle that
could
apply to them, simply because diversity
is
the difference without unity in which
the
universality, which in its own self
is absolute
unity, is a merely external reflection
and
an unrestricted, contingent completeness.
But diversity passes over into opposition,
into an immanent relation of the diverse
moments. Particularity, however, because
it is universality, is this immanent
relation,
not through a transition, but in and
for
itself; it is in its own self totality
and
simple determinateness, essentially
a principle.
It has no other determinateness than
that
posited by the universal itself and
resulting
from the universal in the following
manner.
The particular is the universal itself,
but
it is its difference or relation to
an other,
its illusory reference outwards [sein
Scheinen
nach aussen]; but there is no other
present
from which the particular could be
distinguished,
except the universal itself. The universal
determines itself, and so is itself
the particular;
the determinateness is its difference;
it
is distinguished only from its own
self.
Therefore its species are only (a)
the universal
itself, and (b) the particular. The
universal
as the Notion is itself and its opposite,
and this again is the universal itself
as
its posited determinateness; it embraces
its opposite and in it is in union
with itself.
Thus it is the totality and principle
of
its diversity, which is determined
wholly
and solely by the universal itself.
Therefore there is no other true logical
classification than this, that the
Notion
sets itself on one side as immediate
indeterminate
universality; this very indeterminateness
constitutes its determinateness or
makes
it a particular. Each of them is the
particular
and is therefore co-ordinate with the
other.
Each of them as a particular is also
determinate
as against the universal, and in so
far can
be said to be subordinate to it. But
even
this universal, as against which the
particular
is determined, is for that reason itself
merely one of the opposed sides. For
if we
speak of two opposed sides, we must
supplement
this by saying that it is not merely
together
that they constitute the particular
- as
if they were alike in being particulars
only
for external reflection - but rather
that
their determinateness over against
one another
is at the same time essentially only
one
determinateness, the negativity, which
in
the universal is simple.
Difference, as it shows itself here,
is in
its Notion and therefore in its truth.
All
previous difference has this unity
in principle
(im Begriffe). As immediate difference
in
the sphere of being, it is limit of
an other;
in reflection it is relative and posited
as essentially relating itself to its
other;
here therefore the unity of the Notion
begins
to be posited, but at first it is only
illusory
being in an other. The true meaning
and resolution
of these determinations is just this,
that
they attain to their Notion, their
truth;
being, determinate being, something,
or whole
and parts, etc. substance and accidents,
cause and effect, are by themselves
[merely]
thought-determinations; but they are
grasped
as determinate Notions when each is
cognized
in unity with its other or opposite
determination.
Whole and parts, cause and effect,
for example,
are not as yet different terms determined
as particulars relatively to each other,
because although in themselves they
constitute
one Notion, their unity has not yet
reached
the form of universality; thus the
difference,
too, which is in these relationships,
has
not as yet the form of being one determinateness.
Cause and effect, for example, are
not two
different Notions, but only one determinate
Notion, and causality, like every Notion,
is a simple Notion.
With respect to completeness, we have
seen
that the determinate side of particularity
is complete in the difference of the
universal
and the particular, and that these
two alone
constitute the particular species.
In nature,
of course, there are to be found more
than
two species in a genus, just as between
these
many species there cannot exist the
relationship
we have just indicated. This is the
impotence
of nature, that it cannot adhere to
and exhibit
the strictness of the Notion and runs
wild
in this blind irrational [begrifflos]
multiplicity.
We can wonder at nature's manifold
genera
and species and the endless diversity
of
her formations, for wonderment is unreasoning
and its object the irrational. Nature,
because
it is the self-externality of the Notion,
is free to indulge itself in this variety,
just as spirit, too, even though it
possesses
the Notion in the shape of the Notion,
engages
in pictorial thinking and runs riot
in its
endless variety. The manifold natural
genera
or species must not be esteemed as
anything
more than the capricious fancies of
spirit
in its representations. Both indeed
show
traces and inklings of the Notion on
all
sides, but do not present a faithful
copy
of it because they are the side of
its free
self-externality. The Notion is absolute
power just because it can freely abandon
its difference to the shape of self-subsistent
diversity, outer necessity, contingency,
caprice, opinion, which however must
not
be taken for more than the abstract
aspect
of nothingness.
We have seen that the determinateness
of
the particular is simple as principle,
but
it is also simple as moment of the
totality
- as a determinateness opposed to the
other
determinateness. The Notion, in determining
or distinguishing itself, is negatively
directed
against its unity and gives itself
the form
of one of its ideal moments, that of
being:
as a determinate Notion, it has a determinate
Being in general. But this Being no
longer
signifies bare immediacy but Universality
- immediacy which through absolute
mediation
is equal to itself and equally contains
the
other moment, essential being or reflection.
This Universality with which the determinate
moment is clothed is abstract Universality.
The particular has Universality within
it
as its essential being; but, in so
far as
the determinateness of the difference
is
posited, and thereby has Being, Universality
is a form assumed by the difference,
and
the determinateness as such is the
content.
The Universality becomes form in so
far as
the difference is present as the essential
moment, just as, on the contrary, in
the
purely universal it is present only
as absolute
negativity, not as difference which
posited
as such. ©
§ 1337
Now determinateness, it is true, is
the abstract,
as against the other, determinateness;
but
this other is only universality itself
which
is, therefore, also abstract, and the
determinateness
of the Notion, or particularity, is
again
nothing more than a determinate universality.
In this, the Notion is outside itself;
since
it is the Notion that is here outside
itself,
the abstract universal contains all
the moments
of the Notion. It is (a) universality,
(b)
determinateness, (c) the simple unity
of
both; but this unity is immediate,
and therefore
particularity is not present as totality.
In itself it is also this totality
and mediation;
it is essentially an exclusive relation
to
an other, or sublation of the negation,
namely,
of the other determinateness - an other,
however, that exists only in imagination,
for it vanishes immediately and shows
itself
to be the same as its supposed other.
Therefore,
what makes this universality abstract
is
that the mediation is only a condition
or
is not posited in the universality
itself.
Because it is not posited, the unity
of the
abstract universality has the form
of immediacy,
and the content has the form of indifference
to its universality, for the content
is not
present as the totality which is the
universality
of absolute negativity. Hence the abstract
universal is, indeed, the Notion, yet
it
is without the Notion; it is the Notion
that
is not posited as such.
When people talk of the determinate
Notion,
what is usually meant is merely such
an abstract
universal. Even by notion as such,
what is
generally understood is only this notion
that is no Notion, and the understanding
denotes the faculty of such notions.
Demonstration
appertains to this understanding in
so far
as it progresses by notions, that is
to say,
merely by determinations. Such a progression
by notions, therefore, does not get
beyond
finitude and necessity; for it, the
highest
is the negative infinite, the abstraction
of the supreme being [des höchsten
Wesen],
which is itself the determinateness
of indeterminateness.
Absolute substance, too, though it
is not
this empty abstraction - from the point
of
view of its content it is rather the
totality
- is nevertheless abstract because
it lacks
the absolute form; its inmost truth
is not
constituted by the Notion; true, it
is the
identity of universality and particularity,
or of thought and asunderness, yet
this identity
is not the determinateness of the Notion;
on the contrary, outside substance
there
is an understanding - and just because
it
is outside it, a contingent understanding
- in which and for which substance
is present
in various attributes and modes.
Moreover, abstraction is not empty
as it
is usually said to be; it is the determinate
Notion and has some determinateness
or other
for its content. Even the supreme being,
the pure abstraction, has, as already
remarked,
the determinateness of indeterminateness;
but indeterminateness is a determinateness,
because it is supposed to stand opposed
to
the determinate. But the enunciation
of what
it is, itself sublates what it is supposed
to be; it is enunciated as one with
determinateness,
and in this way, out of the abstraction
is
established its truth and the Notion.
But
every determinate Notion is, of course,
empty
in so far as it does not contain the
totality,
but only a one-sided determinateness.
Even
when it has some other concrete content,
for example man, the state, animal,
etc.,
it still remains an empty Notion, since
its
determinateness is not the principle
of its
differences; a principle contains the
beginning
and the essential nature of its development
and realization; any other determinateness
of the notion, however, is sterile.
To reproach
the Notion generally with being empty,
is
to misjudge that absolute determinateness
of the Notion which is the difference
of
the Notion and the only true content
in the
element of the Notion.
§ 1338
Connected with the above is the reason
why
latterly the Understanding has been
so lightly
esteemed and ranked as inferior to
Reason;
it is the fixity which it imparts to
the
determinatenesses, and hence to finite
determinations.
This fixity consists in the form of
abstract
Universality which has just been considered:
through it they become immutable. For
qualitative
determinateness, and also determinations
of reflection, are essentially limited,
and,
through their limitation, have a relation
to their other; hence the necessity
of transition
and passing away. But universality
which
they possess in the understanding gives
them
the form of reflection-into-self by
which
they are freed from the relation-to-other
and have become imperishable. Now though
in the pure Notion this eternity belongs
to its nature, yet its abstract determinations
are eternal essentialities only in
respect
of their form; but their content is
at variance
with this form; therefore they are
not truth,
or imperishable. Their content is at
variance
with the form, because it is not determinateness
itself as universal; that is, it is
not totality
of the Notion's difference, or not
itself
the whole form; but the form of the
limited
understanding is itself the imperfect
form,
namely, abstract universality. But
further,
we must recognise the infinite force
of the
understanding in splitting the concrete
into
abstract determinatenesses and plumbing
the
depth of difference, the force that
at the
same time is alone the power that effects
their transition.
The concrete of intuition is a totality,
but a sensuous one - a real material
which
has an indifferent, sundered existence
in
space and time; but surely this absence
of
unity in the manifold, where it is
the content
of intuition, ought not to be counted
to
it for merit and superiority over intellectual
existence. The mutability that it exhibits
in intuition already points to the
universal;
yet all that it brings to view is merely
another, equally mutable, material;
therefore,
only the same thing again, not the
universal
which should appear and take its place.
But
least of all in sciences such as geometry
and arithmetic, should we count it
as a merit
that their material involves an intuitive
element, or imagine that their propositions
are established on it. On the contrary,
it
is on account of that element that
the material
of such sciences is of an inferior
nature;
the intuition of figures or numbers
does
not procure a scientific knowledge
of them;
only thinking about them can do this.
But
if by intuition we are to understand
not
merely the element of sense but the
objective
totality, then it is an intellectual
intuition;
that is to say, intuition has for its
object
not the external side of existence,
but what
existence holds of imperishable reality
and
truth-reality, only in so far as it
is essentially
in the Notion and determined by it,
the Idea,
whose more precise nature has to reveal
itself
at a later stage. The advantage which
intuition
as such is supposed to have over the
Notion
is external reality, the Notionless
element,
which first receives a value through
the
Notion.
Since, therefore, understanding exhibits
the infinite force which determines
the universal,
or conversely, imparts through the
form of
Universality a fixity and subsistence
to
the determinateness that is in and
for itself
transitory; then it is not the fault
of understanding
if no further progress is made beyond
this
point. It is a subjective impotence
of reason
which adopts these determinatenesses
in their
fixity, and which is unable to bring
them
back to their unity through the dialectical
force opposed to this abstract universality,
in other words, through their own peculiar
nature or through their Notion. The
understanding
does indeed give them, so to speak,
a rigidity
of being such as they do not possess
in the
sphere of quality and the sphere of
reflection;
but at the same time it spiritually
impregnates
them and so sharpens them, that just
at this
extreme point alone they acquire the
capability
to dissolve themselves and pass over
into
their opposite. The highest maturity,
the
highest stage, which anything can attain
is that in which its downfall begins.
The
fixity of the determinateness into
which
the understanding seems to run, the
form
of the imperishable, is that of self-relating
universality. But this belongs properly
to
the Notion; and consequently in this
universality
is to be found expressed, and infinitely
close at hand, the dissolution of the
finite.
This Universality directly refutes
the determinateness
of the finite and expresses its incongruity
with the universality. Or rather, the
adequacy
of the finite is already to hand; the
abstract
determinate is posited as one with
the universality,
and for that very reason is posited
as not
for itself - for then it would only
be a
determinate - but only as unity of
itself
and the universal, that is, as Notion.
©
Therefore the usual practice of separating
understanding and reason is, from every
point
of view, to be rejected. When the Notion
is regarded as irrational, this should
be
interpreted rather as an incapacity
of reason
to recognize itself in the Notion.
The determinate
and abstract Notion is the condition,
or
rather an essential moment of reason;
it
is form spiritually impregnated, in
which
the finite, through the universality
in which
it relates itself to itself, spontaneously
catches fire, posits itself as dialectical
and thereby is the beginning of the
manifestation
of reason.
In the foregoing, the determinate Notion
has been presented in its truth, and
therefore
it only remains to indicate what it
is as
already posited therein. Difference,
which
is an essential moment of the Notion
though
not yet posited as such in the pure
universal,
receives its due in the determinate
Notion.
Determinateness in the form of universality
is linked with the universal to form
a simple
determination; this determinate universal
is the self-related determinateness;
it is
the determinate determinateness or
absolute
negativity posited for itself. But
the self-related
determinateness is individuality. Just
as
universality is immediately in and
for itself
already particularity, so too particularity
is immediately in and for itself also
individuality;
this individuality is, in the first
instance,
to be regarded as the third moment
of the
Notion, in so far as we hold on to
its opposition
to the two other moments, but it is
also
to be considered as the absolute return
of
the Notion into itself, and at the
same time
as the posited loss of itself.
Remark. Universality, particularity,
and
individuality are, according to the
foregoing
exposition, the three determinate Notions,
that is, if one insists on counting
them.
We have already shown that number is
an unsuitable
form in which to hold Notional determinations;
but for the determinations of the Notion
itself it is unsuitable in the highest
degree;
number, since it has the unit [das
Eins]
for its principle, converts them as
counted
into completely isolated and mutually
indifferent
determinations. We have seen from the
foregoing
that the truth is that the different
determinate
Notions, far from falling apart into
number,
are simply only one and the same Notion.
In the customary treatment of logic
hitherto,
various classifications and species
of notions
occur. We are at once struck by the
inconsequential
way in which the species of notions
are introduced:
there are, in respect of quantity,
quality,
etc., the following notions. There
are, expresses
no other justification than that we
find
such species already to hand and they
present
themselves empirically. In this way,
we obtain
an empirical logic - an odd science
this,
an irrational cognition of the rational.
In proceeding thus, logic sets a very
bad
example of obedience to its own precepts;
it permits itself for its own purpose
to
do the opposite of what it prescribes
as
a rule, namely that notions should
be deduced,
and scientific propositions (therefore
also
the proposition: there are such and
such
species of notions) should be proved.
In
this matter, the Kantian philosophy
commits
a further inconsequence: it borrows
the categories,
as so- called root notions, for the
transcendental
logic, from the subjective logic in
which
they were adopted empirically. Since
it admits
the latter fact, it is hard to see
why transcendental
logic resolves to borrow from such
a science
instead of directly resorting to experience.
To cite some details of this, notions
are
mainly classified according to their
clearness,
into clear and obscure, distinct and
indistinct,
adequate and inadequate. To these we
can
also add complete, profuse, [überfliessend]
notions and suchlike superfluities.
As regards
the classification by clearness, it
is readily
seen that this standpoint and its related
distinctions are taken from psychological,
not from logical, determinations. The
so-called
clear notion is supposed to suffice
for distinguishing
one object from another; but this is
not
yet a notion, it is nothing more than
a subjective
representation. What an obscure notion
is
must be left to itself, for otherwise
it
would not be an obscure but a distinct
notion.
The distinct notion is supposed to
be one
whose marks can be indicated. As such
it
is, strictly speaking, the determinate
notion.
The mark, if it is taken in its correct
meaning,
is none other than the determinateness
or
the simple content of the notion, in
so far
as it is distinguished from the form
of universality.
But the mark, in the first instance,
does
not have quite this preciser meaning
but
is in general merely a determination
whereby
a third something takes note of an
object,
or the notion; it can therefore be
a very
contingent circumstance. In general
it expresses
not so much the immanence and essential
nature
of the determination as its relation
to an
understanding external to it. If this
is
really an understanding, it has the
notion
before it and distinguishes this only
and
solely by what is in the notion. But
if the
mark is supposed to be distinct from
the
notion, then it is a sign or some other
determination
which belongs to the representation
of the
thing, not to its notion. What the
indistinct
notion may be, can be passed over as
superfluous.
But the adequate notion is something
higher;
what it really implies is the agreement
of
the Notion with reality, which is not
the
Notion as such but the Idea.
If the mark of the distinct notion
were really
supposed to be the determination of
the notion
itself, logic would find itself in
difficulty
over the simple notions which, according
to another classification, are opposed
to
compound. For if a true, that is an
immanent,
mark of the simple notion were to be
indicated,
we should not be regarding it as simple;
but in so far as no mark was given,
it would
not be a distinct notion. But here,
now,
the clear notion helps out, Unity,
reality,
and suchlike determinations are supposed
to be simple notions, probably only
because
logicians were unable to discover their
specific
nature and contented themselves with
having
merely a clear notion of them, that
is, no
notion at all. Definition, that is,
the statement
of the notion, in general demands the
statement
of the genus and the specific difference.
Therefore it presents the notion, not
as
something simple, but in two countable
components.
Yet surely no one will for that reason
suppose
such notion to be a compound. The simple
notion seems to suggest abstract simplicity,
a unity which does not contain within
itself
difference and determinateness and
which
therefore, too, is not the unity that
belongs
to the Notion. In so far as an object
is
present in ordinary thinking, especially
in memory, or even as an abstract thought
determination, it can be quite simple.
Even
the object that is richest in content,
such
as, for example, spirit, nature, the
world,
even God, when uncomprehendingly taken
up
into the simple representation of the
equally
simple expression: spirit, nature,
the world,
God, is doubtless something simple
at which
consciousness can stop short without
going
on to pick out its peculiar determination
or its mark. But the objects of consciousness
should not remain simple, should not
remain
such representations or abstract thought
determinations; on the contrary, they
should
be comprehended, that is to say, their
simplicity
should be determined with their inner
difference.
The compound notion, however, is a
contradiction
in terms. We can, of course, have a
notion
of something composite; but a compound
notion
would be something worse than materialism,
which assumes only the substance of
the soul
to be composite, yet none the less
takes
thought to be simple. Uneducated reflection
first stumbles on the idea of composition,
because it is the completely external
relation,
the worst form in which anything can
be considered;
even the lowest natures must be an
inner
unity. That the form of the untruest
existence
should be assigned, above all, to the
ego,
to the Notion, that is something we
should
not have expected and that can only
be described
as inept and barbarous.
Further, notions are divided mainly
into
contrary and contradictory. If, in
our treatment
of the notion, we are supposed to state
what
determinate notions there are, then
we must
adduce all possible determinations
- for
all determinations are notions, consequently
determinate notions - and all the categories
of being as well as all determinations
of
essence, would have to be adduced under
the
species of notions. just as in the
text-books
of logic - to - to a greater or lesser
degree,
according to the whim of the author
- it
is related that there are affirmative,
negative,
identical, conditional, necessary notions,
and so on. As the nature of the Notion
itself
has progressed beyond all such determinations
and therefore these, if adduced in
connexion
with the Notion, occur out of their
proper
place, they only admit of superficial
definitions
and appear at this stage devoid of
all interest.
At the basis of contrary and contradictory
notions - a distinction to which particular
attention is paid here - lies the reflective
determination of diversity and opposition.
They are regarded as two particular
species,
that is, each as firmly fixed on its
own
account and indifferent to the other,
without
any thought of the dialectic and the
inner
nullity of these differences - as though
what is contrary must not equally be
determined
as contradictory. The nature and the
essential
transition of the forms of reflection
which
they express have been considered in
their
proper place. In the Notion, identity
has
developed into universality, difference
into
particularity, opposition, which withdraws
into the ground, into individuality.
In these
forms, those categories of reflection
are
present as they are in their Notion.
The
universal has proved itself to be not
only
the identical, but at the same time
the different
or contrary as against the particular
and
individual, and in addition, also to
be opposed
to them or contradictory; in this opposition,
however, it is identical with them
and is
their true ground in which they are
sublated.
The same holds good of particularity
and
individuality which are likewise the
totality
of the determinations of reflection.
A further classification of notions
is into
subordinate and coordinate - a distinction
which approaches more closely to the
determination
of the Notion, namely, the relationship
of
universality and particularity, where
these
terms, too, have been mentioned in
passing.
Only it is customary to regard them
likewise
as completely rigid relationships and
from
this point of view to put forward a
number
of sterile propositions about them.
The most
prolix discussion on this point concerns
again the relation of contrariety and
contradiction
to subordination and co-ordination.
Since
the judgment is the relation of determinate
Notions, it is only at that stage that
the
true relationship will come to view.
That
fashion of comparing these determinations
without a thought for their dialectic
or
for the progressive alteration of their
determination,
or rather for the conjunction of opposed
determinations present in them, makes
the
whole consideration of what is concordant
or not concordant in them - as though
the
concord or discord were something separate
and permanent - into something merely
sterile
and meaningless.
The great Euler, who displayed an infinitely
fertile and acute mind in seizing and
combining
the deeper relations of algebraic magnitudes,
the dry, prosaic Lambert in particular,
and
others, have attempted to construct
a notation
for this class of relation between
determinations
of the Notion by lines, figures and
the like,
the general intention being to elevate,
or
rather in fact to degrade, the logical
modes
of relation to a calculus. The utter
futility
of even attempting a notation is at
once
apparent when one compares the nature
of
the sign and what it is supposed to
signify.
The determinations of the Notion, universality,
particularity and individuality, are
certainly
diverse, as are lines, or the letters
of
algebra; further, they are also opposed,
and to this extent would also admit
of the
signs plus and minus. But they themselves,
and above all their relations - even
if one
stops at subsumption and inherence
- are
in their essential nature entirely
different
from letters and lines and their relationships,
the equality or difference of magnitude,
the plus and minus, or a superimposition
of lines, or their joining to form
angles
and the dispositions of spaces enclosed
by
them. It is characteristic of such
objects
that, in contrast to determinations
of the
Notion, they are mutually external,
and have
a fixed character. Now when Notions
are so
taken that they correspond to such
signs,
they cease to be Notions. Their determinations
are not inert entities like numbers
and lines
whose relation does not itself belong
to
them; they are living movements; the
distinguished
determinateness of the one side is
immediately
internal to the other side too. What
would
be a complete contradiction in the
case of
numbers and lines is essential to the
nature
of the Notion. Higher mathematics,
which
also goes on to the infinite and allows
itself
contradictions, can no longer employ
its
usual signs for representing such determinations.
To denote the conception - which is
still
very far from being a Notion - of the
infinite
approximation of two ordinates, or
in equating
a curve with an infinite number of
infinitesimal
straight lines, all it does is to draw
two
straight lines apart from each other
and
to make the straight lines approach
the curve
but remain distinct from it; for the
infinite,
which is here the point of interest,
it refers
us to pictorial thinking.
What has misled logicians into this
attempt
is primarily the quantitative relationship
in which universality, particularity
and
individuality are supposed to stand
to one
another; the universal means, more
extensive
than the particular and the individual,
and
the particular means, more extensive
than
the individual. The Notion is the most
concrete
and richest determination because it
is the
ground and the totality of the preceding
determinations, of the categories of
being
and of the determinations of reflection;
these, therefore, are certainly also
present
in it. But its nature is completely
misunderstood
when they are retained in it in their
former
abstraction, when the wider extent
of the
universal is taken to mean that it
is something
more or a greater quantum than the
particular
and the individual. As absolute ground,
it
is the possibility of quantity, but
equally
so of quality, that is, its determinations
are just as much qualitatively distinct;
therefore they are taken in direct
opposition
to their truth when they are posited
under
the form of quantity alone. Thus, too,
the
determination of reflection is a correlate
in which its opposite has an illusory
being
[scheint]; it is not in an external
relationship
like a quantum. But the Notion is more
than
all this; its determinations are determinate
Notions, are themselves essentially
the totality
of all determinations. It is therefore
quite
inappropriate for the purpose of grasping
such an inner totality, to seek to
apply
numerical and spatial relationships
in which
all determinations fall asunder; on
the contrary,
they are the last and worst medium
which
could be employed. Natural relationships
such as magnetism, or colour relations,
would
be infinitely higher and truer symbols
for
the purpose. Since man has in language
a
means of designation peculiar to Reason,
it is an idle fancy to search for a
less
perfect mode of representation to plague
oneself with. It is essentially only
spirit
that can comprehend the Notion as Notion;
for this is not merely the property
of spirit
but spirit's pure self. It is futile
to seek
to fix it by spatial figures and algebraic
signs for the purpose of the outer
eye and
an uncomprehending, mechanical mode
of treatment
such as a calculus. In fact, anything
else
which might be supposed to serve as
a symbol
can at most, like symbols for the nature
of God, evoke intimations and echoes
of the
Notion; if, however, one should seriously
propose to employ them for expressing
and
cognizing the Notion, then the external
nature
of all symbols is inadequate to the
task;
the truth about the relationship is
rather
the converse, namely, that what in
symbols
is an echo of a higher determination,
is
only truly known through the Notion
and can
be approximated to the Notion only
by separating
off the sensuous, unessential part
that was
meant to express it.
C The Individual § 1339
Individuality, as we have seen, is
already
posited by particularity; this is determinate
universality and therefore self-related
determinateness,
the determinate determinate.
1. In the first instance, therefore,
individuality
appears as the reflection of the Notion
out
of its determinateness into itself.
It is
the self-mediation of the Notion in
so far
as its otherness has made itself into
an
other again, whereby the Notion has
reinstated
itself as self-identical, but in the
determination
of absolute negativity. The negative
in the
universal whereby this is a particular,
was
defined above as a two-fold illusory
being:
in so far as the negative is an illusory
being within the universal, the particular
remains a universal; through the reference
of the illusory being outwards it is
a determinate;
the return of this side into the universal
is two-fold: either through abstraction
which
lets drop the particular and rises
to the
higher and the highest genus, or else
through
the individuality to which the universal
in the determinateness itself descends.
Here
is where the false path branches off
and
abstraction strays from the highway
of the
Notion and forsakes the truth. Its
higher
and highest universal to which it raises
itself is only the surface, which becomes
ever more destitute of content; the
individuality
it despises is the profundity in which
the
Notion seizes itself and is posited
as Notion.
©
§ 1340
Universality and particularity appeared,
on the one hand, as moments of the
becoming
of individuality. But it has already
been
shown that they are in themselves the
total
Notion, and consequently in individuality
do not pass over into an other, but
that
in individuality there is only posited
that
they are in and for themselves. The
universal
is in and for itself because it is
in its
own self absolute mediation, self-reference
only as absolute negativity. It is
an abstract
universal in so far as this sublating
is
an external act and so a dropping of
the
determinateness.
§ 1341
Life, Spirit, God - the pure Notion
itself,
are beyond the grasp of abstraction,
because
it deprives its products of singularity,
of the principle of individuality and
personality,
and so arrives at nothing but universalities
devoid of life and spirit, colour and
content.
§ 1342
Yet the unity of the Notion is so indissoluble
that even these products of abstraction,
though they are supposed to drop individuality
are, on the contrary, individuals themselves.
Abstraction raises the concrete into
universality
in which, however, the universal is
grasped
only as a determinate universality;
and this
is precisely the individuality that
has shown
itself to be self-related determinateness.
Abstraction, therefore, is a sundering
of
the concrete and an isolating of its
determinations;
through it only single properties and
moments
are seized; for its product must contain
what it is itself. But the difference
between
this individuality of its products
and the
Notion's individuality is that, in
the former,
the individual as content and the universal
as form are distinct from one another
- just
because the former is not present as
absolute
form, as the Notion itself, or the
latter
is not present as the totality of form.
However
this more detailed consideration shows
that
the abstract product itself is a unity
of
the individual content and abstract
universality,
and is, therefore, a concrete - and
the opposite
of what it aims to be.
§ 1343
For the same reason the particular,
because
it is only the determinate universal,
is
also an individual, and conversely
the individual,
because it is the determinate universal,
is just as much a particular. If we
stick
to this abstract determinateness, then
the
Notion has the three particular determinations,
the universal, the particular, and
the individual;
whereas previously we had given only
the
universal and the particular as the
species
of the particular. Since individuality
is
the return of the Notion, as negative,
into
itself, this very return from the abstraction
which, strictly speaking, is sublated
in
the return, can be placed along with
the
others as an indifferent moment and
counted
with them.
If individuality is reckoned as one
of the
particular determinations of the Notion,
then particularity is the totality
which
embraces them all; precisely in being
this
totality it is the concretion of them
or
individuality itself. But it is also
the
concrete in accordance with its aspect,
noted
above, of determinate universality;
as such
it is the immediate unity in which
none of
these moments is posited as distinct
or as
the determinant, and in this form it
will
constitute the middle term of the formal
syllogism.
It is self-evident that each determination
made in the preceding exposition of
the Notion
has immediately dissolved itself and
lost
itself in its other. Each distinction
is
confounded in the very attempt to isolate
and fix it. Only mere representational
thinking,
for which abstraction has isolated
them,
is capable of holding the universal,
particular
and individual rigidly apart; in this
way
they can be counted, and for a further
distinction
such thinking holds to the completely
external
one of being, namely, quantity, which
is
nowhere less appropriate than here.
In individuality,
the true relationship mentioned above,
the
inseparability of the Notion's determinations
is posited; for as negation of the
negation
it contains their opposition and at
the same
time contains it in its ground or unity,
the effected coincidence of each with
its
other. As this reflection is in its
very
own nature universality, it is essentially
the negativity of the Notion's determinations,
but not merely as if it were a third
something
distinct from them; on the contrary,
it is
now posited that posited being [Gesetztsein]
is being-in-and-for-itself; that is,
that
each of the determinations pertaining
to
the difference is itself the totality.
The
return of the determinate Notion into
itself
means that it has the determination
of being,
in its determinateness, the whole Notion.
2. But Individuality is not only the
return
of the Notion into itself; but immediately
its loss. Through individuality, where
the
Notion is internal to itself, it becomes
external to itself and enters into
actuality.
Abstraction which, as the soul of individuality
is the relation of the negative to
the negative;
and, as we have shown not external
to the
universal and the particular but immanent
in them; and through it they are concrete,
content, an individual. But as this
negativity,
individuality is the determinate determinateness,
is differentiation as such; through
this
reflection of the difference into itself,
the difference becomes fixed; it is
only
through individuality that the determining
of the particular takes place, for
individuality
is that abstraction which simply as
individuality,
is now posited abstraction.
§ 1344
The individual, therefore, as self-related
negativity, is immediate identity of
the
negative with itself; it is a being-for-self.
Or it is the abstraction that determines
the Notion, according to its ideal
moment
of being, as an immediate. In this
way, the
individual is a qualitative one or
this.
With this quality it is, first, repulsion
of itself from itself, whereby the
many other
ones are presupposed; secondly, it
is now
a negative relation towards these presupposed
others; and, the individual is in so
far
exclusive.
§ 1345
Universality, when related to these
individuals
as indifferent ones - and related to
them
it must be because it is a moment of
the
Notion of individuality - is merely
their
common element. When one understands
by the
universal, that which is common to
several
individuals, one is starting from the
indifferent
subsistence of these individuals and
confounding
the immediacy of being with the determination
of the Notion. The lowest possible
conception
of the universal in its connection
with the
individual is this external relation
of it
as merely a common element. ©
The individual, which in the sphere
of reflection
exists as a this, does not have the
exclusive
relation to another one which belongs
to
qualitative being-for-self. This, as
the
one reflected into itself, is for itself
and without repulsion; or repulsion
in this
reflection is one with abstraction
and is
the reflecting mediation which attaches
to
the this in such wise that the this
is a
posited immediacy pointed out by someone
external to it. The this is; it is
immediate;
but it is only this in so far as it
is pointed
out. The 'pointing out' is the reflecting
movement which collects itself inwardly
and
posits immediacy, but as a self-external
immediacy. Now the individual is certainly
a this, as the immediate restored out
of
mediation; but it does not have the
mediation
outside it - it is itself a repelling
separation,
posited abstraction, yet in its very
act
of separating, it is a positive relation.
This act of abstraction by the individual,
being the reflection of the difference
into
itself, is first a positing of the
differentiated
moments as self-subsistent and reflected-into-self.
They immediately are; but further,
this sundering
is reflection as such, the illusory
being
of the one in the other; thus they
stand
in essential relation. Further, the
individuals
are not merely inertly present in relation
to one another; such plurality belongs
to
being; the individuality, in positing
itself
as determinate, posits itself not in
an external
difference but in the difference of
the Notion.
It therefore excludes the universal
from
itself; yet since this is a moment
of individuality,
the universal is equally essentially
related
to it.
The Notion, as this relation of its
self-subsistent
determinations, has lost itself; for
as such
it is no longer their posited unity,
and
they are no longer present as moments,
as
the illusory being, of the Notion,
but as
subsistent in and for themselves. As
individuality,
the Notion in its determinateness returns
into itself, and therewith the determinate
moment has itself become a totality.
Its
return into itself is therefore the
absolute,
original partition of itself, or, in
other
words, it is posited as judgment.
Chapter 2 The Judgment § 1346
The judgment is the determinateness
of the
Notion posited in the Notion itself.
The
Notion's determinations, or what we
have
seen to be the same thing, the determinate
Notions, have already been considered
on
their own; but this consideration was
more
a subjective reflection or subjective
abstraction.
But the Notion is itself this abstractive
process, the opposing of its determinations
is its own determining activity. The
judgment
is this positing of the determinate
Notions
by the Notion itself. Judging is thus
another
function than comprehension, or rather
it
is the other function of the Notion
as the
determining of the Notion by itself,
and
the further progress of the judgment
into
the diversity of judgments is the progressive
determination of the Notion. What kinds
of
determinate Notions there are, and
how these
determinations of the Notion are arrived
at, has to reveal itself in the judgment.
§ 1347
The judgment can therefore be called
the
proximate realisation of the Notion,
inasmuch
as reality denotes in general entry
into
existence as a determinate being. More
precisely,
the nature of this realisation has
presented
itself in such a manner that, on the
one
hand, the moments of the Notion through
its
reflection-into-self or its individuality
are self-subsistent totalities, while
on
the other hand the unity of the Notion
is
their relation. The determinations
reflected
into themselves are determinate totalities,
no less essentially in their indifferent
and disconnected subsistence as through
their
reciprocal mediation with one another.
The
determining itself is only totality
in that
it contains these totalities and their
connection.
This totality is the judgment. It contains,
therefore, first, the two self-subsistents
which are called subject and predicate.
What
each is cannot yet really be said;
they are
still indeterminate, for it is only
through
the judgment that they are to be determined.
The judgment, being the Notion as determinate,
the only distinction present is the
general
one that the judgment contains the
determinate
Notion over against the still indeterminate
Notion. The subject can therefore,
in the
first instance, be taken in relation
to the
predicate as the individual over against
the universal, or even as the particular
over against the universal, or as the
individual
over against the particular; so far,
they
confront each other only in general,
as the
more determinate and the more universal.
§ 1348
It is therefore appropriate and necessary
to have these names, subject and predicate
for the determinations of the judgment;
as
names, they are something indeterminate
that
still awaits its determination, and
are,
therefore, no more than names. It is
partly
for this reason that the Notion determinations
themselves could not be used for the
two
sides of the judgment; but a stronger
reason
is because the nature of the Notion
determination
is emphatically to be, not something
abstract
and fixed, but to have and to posit
its opposite
within it; since the sides of the judgment
are themselves Notions and therefore
the
totality of its determinations, each
side
must run through all these determinations
and exhibit them within itself, whether
in
abstract or concrete form. Now in order
to
fix the sides of the judgment in a
general
way when their determination is altered,
those names are most serviceable which
remain
the same throughout the alteration.
The name
however stands over against the matter
in
hand or the Notion; this distinction
presents
itself in the judgment as such; now
the subject
is in general the determinate, and
is therefore
more that which immediately is, whereas
the
predicate expresses the universal,
the essential
nature or the Notion; therefore the
subject
as such is, in the first instance,
only a
kind of name; for what it is is first
enunciated
by the predicate which contains being
in
the sense of the Notion. In the question:
what is this? or: what kind of a plant
is
this? what is often understood by the
being
enquired after, is merely the name,
and when
this is learned one is satisfied and
now
knows what the thing is. This is being
in
the sense of the subject. But the Notion,
or at least the essence and the universal
in general, is first given by the predicate,
and it is this that is asked for in
the sense
of the judgment. Consequently, God,
spirit,
nature, or whatever it may be, is as
the
subject of a judgment at first only
the name;
what such a subject is as regards its
Notion
is first enunciated in the predicate.
When
enquiry is made as to the kind of predicate
belonging to such subject, the act
of judgment
necessarily implies an underlying Notion.
But this Notion is first enunciated
by the
predicate itself. Properly speaking,
therefore,
it is the mere general idea that constitutes
the presupposed meaning of the subject
and
that leads to the naming of it; and
in doing
this it is contingent and a historical
fact,
what is, or is not, to be understood
by a
name. So many disputes about whether
a predicate
does or does not belong to a certain
subject
are therefore nothing more than verbal
disputes,
because they start from the form above
mentioned;
what lies at the base is so far nothing
more
than the name.
§ 1349
We have now to examine, secondly, how
the
relation of subject and predicate in
the
judgment is determined and how subject
and
predicate themselves are at first determined
through this very relation. The judgment
has in general for its sides totalities
which
to begin with are essentially self-subsistent.
The unity of the Notion is, therefore,
at
first only a relation of self-subsistents;
not as yet the concrete and pregnant
unity
that has returned into itself from
this reality,
but only a unity outside which the
self-subsistent
sides persist as extremes that are
not sublated
in it. Now consideration of the judgment
can begin from the original unity of
the
Notion, or from the self-subsistence
of the
extremes. The judgment is the self-diremption
of the Notion; this unity is, therefore,
the ground from which the consideration
of
the judgment in accordance with its
true
objectivity begins. It is thus the
original
division [Teilung] of what is originally
one; thus the word Urteil refers to
what
judgment is in and for itself. But
regarded
from the side of externality, the Notion
is present in the judgment as Appearance,
since its moments therein attain self-subsistence,
and it is on this external side that
ordinary
thinking tends to fasten.
§ 1350
From this subjective standpoint, then,
subject
and predicate are considered to be
complete,
each on its own account, apart from
the other:
the subject as an object that would
exist
even if it did not possess this predicate;
the predicate as a universal determination
that would exist even if it did not
belong
to this subject. From this standpoint,
the
act of judgment involves the reflection,
whether this or that predicate which
is in
someone's head can and should be attached
to the object which exists on its own
account
outside; the very act of judging consists
in this, that only through it is a
predicate
combined with a subject, so that, if
this
combination did not take place, each
on its
own would still remain what it is,
the latter
an existent object, the former an idea
in
someone's head. The predicate which
is attached
to the subject should, however, also
belong
to it, that is, be in and for itself
identical
with it. Through this significance
of attachment,
the subjective meaning of judgment
and the
indifferent, outer subsistence of subject
and predicate are sublated again: this
action
is good; the copula indicates that
the predicate
belongs to the being of the subject
and is
not merely externally combined with
it. In
the grammatical sense, that subjective
relationship
in which one starts from the indifferent
externality of the subject and predicate
has its complete validity; for it is
words
that are here externally combined.
We may
take this opportunity of remarking,
too,
that though a proposition has a subject
and
predicate in the grammatical sense,
this
does not make it a judgment. The latter
requires
that the predicate be related to the
subject
as one Notion determination to another,
and
therefore as a universal to a particular
or individual. If a statement about
a particular
subject only enunciates something individual,
then this is a mere proposition, For
example,
'Aristotle died at the age of 73, in
the
fourth year of the 115th Olympiad,'
is a
mere proposition, not a judgment. It
would
partake of the nature of a judgment
only
if doubt had been thrown on one of
the circumstances,
the date of the death, or the age of
that
philosopher, and the given figures
had been
asserted on the strength of some reason
or
other. In that case, these figures
would
be taken as something universal, as
time
that still subsists apart from this
particular
content of the death of Aristotle,
whether
as time filled with some other content,
or
even as empty time. Similarly, the
news that
my friend N. has died is a proposition;
and
it would be a judgment only if there
were
a question whether he was really dead
or
only in a state of catalepsy.
§ 1351
In the usual way of defining the judgment
we may indeed accept the indeterminate
expression
connection for the external copula,
as also
that the connected terms are at least
supposed
to be notions. But in other respects
this
definition is superficial in the extreme:
not only, for example, that in the
disjunctive
judgment more than two so-called notions
are connected, but rather that the
definition
is far better than its subject matter;
for
it is not notions at all that are meant,
hardly determinations of the Notion,
but
really only determinations of representational
thought; it was remarked in connection
with
the Notion in general and the determinate
Notion, that what is usually so named
by
no means deserves the name of Notion;
where
then should Notions come from in the
case
of the judgment? Above all, in this
definition
the essential feature of the judgment,
namely,
the difference of its determinations,
is
passed over; still less does it take
into
account the relationship of the judgment
to the Notion.
§ 1352
As regards the further determination
of the
subject and predicate, we have remarked
that
it is really in the judgment first
that they
have to receive their determination.
Since
the judgment is the posited determinateness
of the Notion, this determinateness
possesses
the said differences immediately and
abstractly
as individuality and universality.
But in
so far as the judgment is in general
the
determinate being or otherness of the
Notion
which has not yet restored itself to
the
unity whereby it is as Notion, there
emerges
also-the determinateness which is notionless,
the opposition of being and reflection
or
the in-itself. But since the Notion
constitutes
the essential ground of the judgment,
these
determinations are at least indifferent
to
the extent that when one belongs to
the subject
and the other to the predicate, the
converse
relationship equally holds good. The
subject
as the individual appears, in the first
instance,
as that which simply is or is for itself
in accordance with the specific determinateness
of the individual - as an actual object,
even though it be only an object in
representational
thought - as for example bravery, right,
agreement, etc. - on which judgment
is being
made. The predicate, on the other hand,
as
the universal, appears as this reflection
on the object, or rather as the object's
reflection into itself, which goes
beyond
that immediacy and sublates the determinatenesses
in their form of mere being; that is,
it
is the object's in-itself. In this
way, one
starts from the individual as the first,
the immediate, and it is raised by
the judgment
into universality, just as, conversely,
the
universal that is only in itself descends
in the individual into determinate
being
or becomes a being that is for itself.
§ 1353
This signification of the judgment
is to
be taken as its objective meaning,
and at
the same time as the truth of the earlier
forms of the transition. In the sphere
of
being, the object becomes and others
itself,
the finite perishes or goes under in
the
infinite; in the sphere of Existence,
the
object issues from its ground into
Appearance
and falls to the ground, the accident
manifests
the wealth of substance as well as
its power;
in being, there is transition into
an other,
in essence, reflected being in an other
by
which the necessary relation is revealed.
This movement of transition and reflection
has now passed over into the original
partition
of the Notion which, while bringing
back
the individual to the in-itself of
its universality,
equally determines the universal as
something
actual. These two acts are one and
the same
process in which individuality is posited
in its reflection-into-self, and the
universal
as determinate.
§ 1354
But now this objective signification
equally
implies that the said differences,
in reappearing
in the determinateness of the Notion,
are
at the same time posited only as Appearances,
that is, that they are not anything
fixed,
but apply just as much to the one Notion
determination as to the other. The
subject
is, therefore, just as much to be taken
as
the in-itself, and the predicate, on
the
other hand, as determinate being. The
subject
without predicate is what the thing
without
qualities, the thing-in-itself is in
the
sphere of Appearance - an empty, indeterminate
ground; as such, it is the Notion enclosed
within itself, which only receives
a differentiation
and determinateness in the predicate;
the
predicate therefore constitutes the
side
of the determinate being of the subject.
Through this determinate universality
the
subject stands in relation to an externality,
is open to the influence of other things
and thereby becomes actively opposed
to them.
What is there comes forth from its
being-within-self
and enters into the universal element
of
connection and relationship, into the
negative
connections and the interplay of actuality,
which is a continuation of the individual
into other individuals and therefore
universality.
§ 1355
The identity just demonstrated, namely,
that
the determination of the subject equally
applies to the predicate and vice versa,
is not, however, something only for
us; it
is not merely in itself, but is also
posited
in the judgment; for the judgment is
the
connection of the two; the copula expresses
that the subject is the predicate.
The subject
is the specific determinateness, and
the
predicate is this posited determinateness
of the subject; the subject is determined
only in its predicate, or, only in
the predicate
is it a subject; in the predicate it
has
returned into itself and is therein
the universal.
Now in so far as the subject is the
self-
subsistent, this identity has the relationship
that the predicate does not possess
a self-subsistence
of its own, but has its subsistence
only
in the subject; it inheres in the subject.
Since the predicate is thus distinct
from
the subject, it is only an isolated
determinateness
of the latter, only one of its properties;
while the subject itself is the concrete,
the totality of manifold determinatenesses,
just as the predicate contains one;
it is
the universal.
§ 1356
But on the other hand the predicate,
too,
is a self-subsistent universality and
the
subject, conversely, only a determination
of it. Looked at this way, the predicate
subsumes the subject; individuality
and particularity
are not for themselves, but have their
essence
and substance in the universal. The
predicate
expresses the subject in its Notion;
the
individual and the particular are contingent
determinations in the subject; it is
their
absolute possibility. When in the case
of
subsumption one thinks of an external
connection
of subject and predicate and the subject
is conceived of as a self-subsistent
something,
the subsumption refers to the subjective
act of judgment above-mentioned in
which
one starts from the self-subsistence
of both
subject and predicate. From this standpoint
subsumption is only the application
of the
universal to a particular or an individual,
which is placed under the universal
in accordance
with a vague idea that it is of inferior
quality.
§ 1357
When the identity of subject and predicate
are so taken that at one time one Notion
determination applies to the former
and the
other to the latter, and at another
time
the converse equally holds good, then
the
identity is as yet still only an implicit
one; on account of the self-subsistent
diversity
of the two sides of the judgment, their
posited
unity also has these two sides, in
the first
instance as different. But differenceless
identity really constitutes the true
relation
of the subject to the predicate. The
Notion
determination is itself essentially
relation
for it is a universal; therefore the
same
determinations possessed by the subject
and
predicate are also possessed by their
relation
itself. The relation is universal,
for it
is the positive identity of the two,
of subject
and predicate; but it is also determinate,
for the determinateness of the predicate
is that of the subject; further, it
is also
individual, for in it the self-subsistent
extremes are sublated as in their negative
unity. However, in the judgment this
identity
is not as yet posited; the copula is
present
as the still indeterminate relation
of being
as such: A is B; for in the judgment,
the
self-subsistence of the Notion determinatenesses
or the extremes, is the reality which
the
Notion has within it. If the is of
the copula
were already posited as the above determinate
and pregnant unity of subject and predicate,
as their Notion, it would already be
the
syllogism.
§ 1358
To restore this identity of the Notion,
or
rather to posit it, is the goal of
the movement
of the judgment. What is already present
in the judgment is, on the one hand,
the
self-subsistence of subject and predicate,
but also their mutually opposed determinateness,
and on the other hand their none the
less
abstract relation. What the judgment
enunciates
to start with is that the subject is
the
predicate; but since the predicate
is supposed
not to be what the subject is, we are
faced
with a contradiction which must resolve
itself,
pass over into a result. Or rather,
since
subject and predicate are in and for
themselves
the totality of the Notion, and the
judgment
is the reality of the Notion, its forward
movement is only a development; there
is
already present in it what comes forth
from
it, so that proof is merely an exposition,
a reflection as a positing of that
which
is already present in the extremes
of the
judgment; but even this positing itself
is
already present; it is the relation
of the
extremes.
§ 1359
The judgment in its immediacy is in
the first
instance the judgment of existence;
its subject
is immediately an abstract individual
which
simply is, and the predicate is an
immediate
determinateness or property of the
subject,
an abstract universal.
This qualitative character of subject
and
predicate being sublated, the determination
of the one is reflected, to begin with,
in
the other; the judgment is now, secondly,
the judgment of reflection.
But this more external conjunction
passes
over into the essential identity of
a substantial,
necessary connection; as such it is,
thirdly,
the judgment of necessity.
Fourthly, since in this essential identity
the difference of subject and predicate
has
become a form, the judgment becomes
subjective;
it contains the opposition of the Notion
and its reality and the equation of
the two;
it is the judgment of the Notion.
This emergence of the Notion establishes
the transition of the Judgment into
the syllogism.
A. THE JUDGMENT OF EXISTENCE § 1360
In the subjective judgment we want
to see
one and the same object double, first
in
its individual actuality, and then
in its
essential identity or in its Notion:
the
individual raised into its universality,
or, what is the same thing, the universal
individualised into its actuality.
In this
way the judgment is truth: for it is
the
agreement of the Notion and reality.
But
this is not the nature of the judgment
at
first; for at first it is immediate,
since
as yet no reflection and movement of
the
determinations has appeared in it.
This immediacy
makes the first judgment a judgment
of existence;
it can also be called the qualitative
judgment,
but only in so far as quality does
not apply
only to the determinateness of being
but
also includes the abstract universality
which,
on account of its simplicity, likewise
has
the form of immediacy.
§ 1361
The judgment of existence is also the
judgment
of inherence; because it is in the
form of
immediacy, and because the subject
as distinguished
from the predicate is the immediate,
and
consequently the primary and essential
feature
in a judgment of this kind, the predicate
has the form of a non-self-subsistent
determination
that has its foundation in the subject.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Positive Judgment
(b) The Negative Judgment
(c) The Infinite Judgment
B. THE JUDGMENT OF REFLECTION § 1387
In the judgment that has now arisen,
the
subject is an individual as such; and
similarly
the universal is no longer an abstract
universality
or a single property, but is posited
as a
universal that has gathered itself
together
into a unity through the relation of
distinct
terms; or, regarding it from the point
of
view of the content of various determinations
in general, as the taking together
of various
properties and existences. If examples
are
to be given of predicates of judgments
of
reflection, they must be of another
kind
than for judgments of existence. It
is in
the judgment of reflection that we
first
have, strictly speaking, a determinate
content,
that is, a content as such; for the
content
is the form determination which is
reflected
into identity as distinct from the
form in
so far as this is a distinct determinateness
- as it still is in the judgment. In
the
judgment of existence the content is
merely
an immediate, or abstract, indeterminate
content. The following may therefore
serve
as examples of judgments of reflection:
man
is mortal, things are perishable, this
thing
is useful, harmful; hardness, elasticity
of bodies, happiness, etc. are predicates
of this peculiar kind. They express
an essential
determination, but one which is in
a relationship
or is a unifying universality.
§ 1388
This universality, which will further
determine
itself in the movement of the judgment
of
reflection, is still distinct from
the universality
of the Notion as such; true, it is
no longer
the abstract universality of the qualitative
judgment, but it still possesses a
relation
to the immediate from which it proceeds
and
has the latter as the basis of its
negativity.
The Notion determines the existent,
in the
first instance, to determinations of
relation,
to self-continuities in the diverse
multiplicity
of concrete existence-yet in such a
manner
that the genuine universal, though
it is
the inner essence of that multiplicity,
is
still in the sphere of Appearance,
and this
relative nature-or even the mark-of
this
multiplicity is still not the moment
of being-in-and-for-self
of the latter.
§ 1389
It may suggest itself to define the
judgment
of reflection as a judgment of quantity,
just as the judgment of existence was
also
defined as qualitative judgment. But
just
as immediacy in the latter was not
merely
an immediacy which simply is, but one
which
was essentially also mediated and abstract,
so here, too, that sublated immediacy
is
not merely sublated quality, and therefore
not merely quantity; on the contrary,
just
as quality is the most external immediacy,
so is quantity, in the same way, the
most
external determination belonging to
mediation.
§ 1390
Further, as regards the determination
as
it appears in its movement in the judgment
of reflection, it should be remarked
that
in the judgment of existence the movement
of the determination showed itself
in the
predicate, because this judgment was
in the
determination of immediacy and the
subject
consequently appeared as the basis.
For a
similar reason, in the judgment of
reflection,
the onward movement of determining
runs its
course in the subject, because this
judgment
has for its determination the reflected
in-itself.
Here therefore the essential element
is the
universal or the predicate; hence it
constitutes
the basis by which, and in accordance
with
which, the subject is to be measured
and
determined. However, the predicate
also receives
a further determination through the
further
development of the form of the subject;
but
this occurs indirectly, whereas the
development
of the subject is, for the reason stated,
a direct advance.
§ 1391
As regards the objective signification
of
the judgment, the individual, through
its
universality, enters into existence,
but
in an essential determination of relationship,
in an essentiality which maintains
itself
throughout the multiplicity of the
world
of Appearance; the subject is supposed
to
be determinate in and for itself; this
determinateness
it possesses in its predicate. The
individual,
on the other hand, is reflected into
this
its predicate which is its universal
essence;
the subject is in so far a concrete
existence
in the world of Appearance. The predicate
in this judgment no longer inheres
in the
subject; it is rather the implicit
being
under which this individual is subsumed
as
an accidental. If the judgments of
existence
may also be defined as judgments of
inherence,
judgments of reflection are, on the
contrary,
judgments of subsumption.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Singular Judgment
(b) The Particular Judgment
(c) The Universal Judgment
C. THE JUDGMENT OF NECESSITY § 1405
The determination to which universality
has
advanced is, as we have seen, the universality
which is in and for itself or objective,
to which in the sphere of essence substantiality
corresponds. It is distinguished from
the
latter in that it belongs to the Notion
and
is therefore not merely the inner but
also
the posited necessity of its determinations;
or, in other words, the difference
is immanent
in it, whereas substance has its difference
only in its accidents, but not as principle
within itself.
§ 1406
Now in the judgment, this objective
universality
is posited; first, therefore, with
this its
essential determinateness as immanent
in
it, secondly, with its determinateness
distinguished
from it as particularity, of which
this universality
constitutes the substantial basis.
In this
way it is determined as genus and species.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Categorical Judgment
(b) The Hypothetical Judgment
(c) The Disjunctive Judgment
D. THE JUDGMENT OF THE NOTION § 1417
The ability to form judgments of existence
such as 'the rose is red', 'snow is
white',
and so forth, will hardly count as
evidence
of great powers of judgment. The judgments
of reflection are rather propositions;
in
the judgment of necessity the object
appears,
it is true, in its objective universality,
but it is only in the judgment now
to be
considered that its relation to the
Notion
is found. In this judgment the Notion
is
laid down as the basis, and since it
is in
relation to the object, it is an ought-to-be
to which the reality may or may not
be adequate.
Therefore it is only a judgment of
this kind
that contains a true appreciation;
the predicates
good, bad, true, beautiful, correct,
etc.
express that the thing is measured
against
its universal Notion as the simply
presupposed
ought-to-be and is, or is not, in agreement
with it.
§ 1418
The judgment of the Notion has been
called
the judgment of modality and it has
been
regarded as containing that form of
the relationship
between subject and predicate which
is found
in an external understanding, and to
be concerned
with the value of the copula only in
relation
to thinking.
§ 1419
According to this view, the problematical
judgment is one where the affirmation
or
denial is taken as optional or possible;
the assertoric, where it is taken as
true,
that is as actual; and the apodeictic,
where
it is taken as necessary. It is easy
to see
why it is so natural in the case of
this
judgment to step out of the sphere
of judgment
itself and to regard its determination
as
something merely subjective. For here
it
is the Notion, or the subjective, that
reappears
in the judgment and stands in relationship
to an external actuality. But this
subjectivity
is not to be confused with external
reflection,
which of course is also something subjective,
but in a different sense from the Notion
itself; on the contrary, the Notion
that
re-emerges from the disjunctive judgment
is the opposite of a mere contingent
mode.
The earlier judgments are in this sense
merely
subjective, for they are based on an
abstraction
and one-sidedness in which the Notion
is
lost. The judgment of the Notion, on
the
contrary, is objective and the truth
as against
those earlier judgments, just because
it
has for its basis the Notion, not the
Notion
in external reflection or in relation
to
a subjective, that is contingent, thinking,
but the Notion in its determinateness
as
Notion.
§ 1420
In the disjunctive judgment the Notion
was
posited as identity of the universal
nature
with its particularisation; consequently
the relation of the judgment was cancelled.
This concretion of universality and
particularisation
is, at first, a simple result; it has
now
to develop itself further into totality,
since the moments which it contains
are at
first swallowed up in it and as yet
do not
confront one another in determinate
self-subsistence.
The defect of the result may also be
more
definitely expressed by saying that
in the
disjunctive judgment, although objective
universality has completed itself in
its
particularisation, yet the negative
unity
of the latter merely returns into the
former
and has not yet determined itself to
the
third moment, that of individuality.
Yet
in so far as the result itself is negative
unity, it is indeed already this individuality;
but as such it is only this one determinateness,
which has now to posit its negativity,
sunder
itself into the extremes and in this
way
finally develop into the syllogism.
§ 1421
The proximate diremption of this unity
is
the judgment in which it is posited
first
as subject, as an immediate individual,
and
then as predicate, as the determinate
relation
of its moments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Assertoric Judgment
(b) The Problematic Judgment
(c) The Apodetic Judgment
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
§ 1431
This judgment, then, is truly objective;
or it is the truth of the judgment
in general.
Subject and predicate correspond to
each
other and have the same content, and
this
content is itself the posited concrete
universality;
it contains, namely, the two moments,
the
objective universal or the enus, and
the
individualised universal. Here, therefore,
we have the universal which is itself
and
continues itself through its opposite
and
is a universal only as unity with this
opposite.
A universal of this kind, such as the
predicate
good, suitable, correct, etc., is based
on
an ought-to-be and at the same time
contains
the correspondence of existence to
that ought-to-be;
it is not this ought-to-be or the genus
by
itself, but this correspondence that
is the
universality which constitutes the
predicate
of the apodeictic judgment.
§ 1432
The subject likewise contains these
two moments
in immediate unity as the fact. But
it is
the truth of the fact that it is internally
split into what it ought-to-be and
what it
is; this is the absolute judgment on
all
actuality. It is because this original
partition,
which is the omnipotence of the Notion,
is
just as much a return into its unity
and
an absolute relation of the ought-to-be
and
being to each other that makes what
is actual
into a fact; its inner relation, this
concrete
identity, constitutes the soul of the
fact.
§ 1433
The transition from the immediate simplicity
of the fact to the correspondence which
is
the determinate relation of its ought-to-be
and its being - or the copula - is
now seen,
on closer examination, to lie in the
particular
determinateness of the fact. The genus
is
the universal in and for itself, which
as
such appears as the unrelated; while
the
determinateness is that which in that
universal
is reflected into itself, yet at the
same
time is reflected into an other. The
judgment
therefore has its ground in the constitution
of the subject and thereby is apodeictic.
Hence we now have before us the determinate
and fulfilled copula, which formerly
consisted
in the abstract 'is', but has now further
developed itself into ground in general.
It appears at first as an immediate
determinateness
in the subject, but it is no less the
relation
to the predicate which has no other
content
than this very correspondence, or the
relation
of the subject to the universality.
§ 1434
Thus the form of the judgment has perished;
first because subject and predicate
are in
themselves the same content; secondly
because
the subject through its determinateness
points
beyond itself and relates itself to
the predicate;
but also, thirdly, this relating has
passed
over into the predicate, alone. constitutes
its content, and is thus the posited
relation,
or the judgment itself. Thus the concrete
identity of the Notion which was the
result
of the disjunctive judgment and which
constitutes
the inner basis of the Notion judgment
-
which identity was at first posited
only
in the predicate - is now restored
in the
whole.
§ 1435
If we examine the positive element
of this
result which effects the transition
of the
judgment into another form, we find,
as we
have seen, that subject and predicate
in
the apodeictic judgment are each the
whole
Notion. The unity of the Notion as
the determinateness
constituting the copula that relates
them,
is at the same time distinct from them.
At
first, it stands only on the other
side of
the subject as the latter's immediate
constitution.
But since it is essentially that which
relates
subject and predicate, it is not merely
such
immediate constitution but the universal
that permeates both subject and predicate.
While subject and predicate have the
same
content, the form relation, on the
other
hand, is posited through this determinateness,
determinateness as a universal or particularity.
Thus it contains within itself the
two form
determinations of the extremes and
is the
determinate relation of subject and
predicate;
it is the fulfilled copula of the judgment,
the copula pregnant with content, the
unity
of the Notion that has re-emerged from
the
judgment in which it was lost in the
extremes.
Through this impregnation of the copula
the
judgment has become the syllogism.
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1318
The Notion is, in the first instance,
formal,
the Notion in its beginning or the
immediate
Notion. In the immediate unity, its
difference
or positedness is itself at first simple
and only an illusory being [Schein],
so that
the moments of the difference are immediately
the totality of the Notion and are
simply
the Notion as such.
§ 1319
Secondly, however, because it is absolute
negativity, it sunders itself and posits
itself as the negative or as the other
of
itself; and further, because as yet
it is
only the immediate Notion, this positing
or differentiation is characterised
by the
fact that the moments become indifferent
to one another and each becomes for
itself;
in this partition, its unity is still
only
an external connection. As such connection
of its moments, which are posited as
self-subsistent
and indifferent, it is Judgment.
§ 1320
Thirdly, though the judgment does contain
the unity of the Notion that has vanished
into its self-subsistent moments, yet
this
unity is not posited. It becomes so
through
the dialectical movement of the judgment,
through which it has become the Syllogism,
the Notion posited in its completeness;
for
in the syllogism there is posited not
only
the moments of the Notion as self-subsistent
extremes, but also their mediating
unity.
§ 1321
But since this unity itself as the
unifying
middle, and the moments as self-subsistent
extremes, are in the first instance
immediately
opposed to one another, this contradictory
relationship that occurs in the formal
syllogism
sublates itself, and the completeness
of
the Notion passes over into the unity
of
the totality, the subjectivity of the
Notion
into its Objectivity.
Chapter 1 The Notion § 1322
Understanding is the term usually employed
to express the faculty of notions;
as so
used, it is distinguished from the
faculty
of judgment and the faculty of syllogisms,
of the formal reason But it is with
reason
that it is especially contrasted; in
that
case, however, it does not signify
the faculty
of the notion in general, but of determinate
notions, and the idea prevails that
the notion
is only a determinate notion. When
the understanding
in this signification is distinguished
from
the formal faculty of judgment and
from the
formal reason, it is to be taken as
the faculty
of the single determinate notion. For
the
judgment and the syllogism or reason
are,
as formal, only a product of the understanding
since they stand under the form of
the abstract
determinateness of the Notion. Here,
however,
the Notion emphatically does not rank
as
something merely abstractly determinate;
consequently, the understanding is
to be
distinguished from reason only in the
sense
that the former is merely the faculty
of
the notion in general.
§ 1323
This universal Notion, which we have
now
to consider here, contains the three
moments:
universality, particularity and individuality.
The difference and the determinations
which
the Notion gives itself in its distinguishing,
constitute the side which was previously
called positedness. As this is identical
in the Notion with being-in-and-for-self,
each of these moments is no less the
whole
Notion than it is a determinate Notion
and
a determination of the Notion.
§ 1324
In the first instance, it is the pure
Notion
or the determination of universality.
But
the pure or universal Notion is also
only
a determinate or particular Notion,
which
takes its place alongside other Notions.
Because the Notion is a totality, and
therefore
in its universality or pure identical
self-relation
is essentially a determining and a
distinguishing,
it therefore contains within itself
the standard
by which this form of its self-identity,
in pervading and embracing all the
moments,
no less immediately determines itself
to
be only the universal over against
the distinguishedness
of the moments.
Secondly, the Notion is thereby posited
as
this particular or determinate Notion,
distinct
from others.
Thirdly, individuality is the Notion
reflecting
itself out of the difference into absolute
negativity. This is, at the same time,
the
moment in which it has passed out of
its
identity into its otherness, and becomes
the judgment.
A The Universal Notion § 1325
The pure Notion is the absolutely infinite,
unconditioned and free. It is here,
at the
outset of the discussion which has
the Notion
for its content, that we must look
back once
more at its genesis. Essence is the
outcome
of being, and the Notion, the outcome
of
essence, therefore also of being. But
this
becoming has the significance of a
self-repulsion,
so that it is rather the outcome which
is
the unconditioned and original. Being,
in
its transition into essence, has become
an
illusory being or a positedness, and
becoming
or transition into an other has become
a
positing; and conversely, the positing
or
reflection of essence has sublated
itself
and has restored itself as a being
that is
not posited, that is original. The
Notion
is the interfusion of these moments,
namely,
qualitative and original being is such
only
as a positing, only as a return-into-self,
and this pure reflection-into-self
is a sheer
becoming-other or determinateness which,
consequently, is no less an infinite,
self-relating
determinateness.
§ 1326
Thus the Notion is, in the first instance,
the absolute self-identity that is
such only
as the negation of negation or as the
infinite
unity of the negativity with itself.
This
pure relation of the Notion to itself,
which
is this relation by positing itself
through
the negativity, is the universality
of the
Notion.
§ 1327
As universality is the utterly simple
determination,
it does not seem capable of any explanation;
for an explanation must concern itself
with
definitions and distinctions and must
apply
predicates to its object, and to do
this
to what is simple, would alter rather
than
explain it. But the simplicity which
constitutes
the very nature of the universal is
such
that, through absolute negativity,
it contains
within itself difference and determinateness
in the highest degree. Being is simple
as
immediate being; for that reason it
is only
something meant or intended and we
cannot
say of it what it is; therefore, it
is one
with its other, with non- being. Its
Notion
is just this, to be a simplicity that
immediately
vanishes in its opposite; it is becoming.
The universal, on the contrary, is
that simplicity
which, because it is the Notion, no
less
possesses within itself the richest
content.
§ 1328
First, therefore, it is the simple
relation
to itself; it is only within itself.
Secondly,
however, this identity is within itself
absolute
mediation, but it is not something
mediated.
The universal that is mediated, namely,
the
abstract universal that is opposed
to the
particular and the individual, this
will
be discussed later when we are dealing
with
the specific notion. Yet even the abstract
universal involves this, that in order
to
obtain it we are required to leave
out other
determinations of the concrete. These
determinations,
simply as such, are negations; equally,
too,
the omitting of them is a negating.
So that
even with the abstraction, we have
the negation
of the negation. But this double negation
is conceived of as though it were external
to the abstraction, as though not only
were
the other omitted properties of the
concrete
distinct from the one retained, which
is
the content of the abstract universal,
but
also as though this operation of omitting
the other properties and retaining
the one
were a process outside the properties
themselves.
To such an externality in face of that
movement,
the universal has not yet determined
itself;
it is still within itself that absolute
mediation
which is, precisely, the negation of
the
negation or absolute negativity.
§ 1329
By virtue of this original unity it
follows,
in the first place, that the first
negative,
or the determination, is not a limitation
for the universal which, on the contrary,
maintains itself therein and is positively
identical with itself. The categories
of
being were, as Notions, essentially
these
identities of the determinations with
themselves
in their limitation or otherness; but
this
identity was only in itself the Notion;
it
was not yet manifested. Consequently,
the
qualitative determination as such was
lost
in its other and had for its truth
a determination
distinct from itself. The universal,
on the
contrary, even when it posits itself
in a
determination, remains therein what
it is.
It is the soul [Seele] of the concrete
which
it indwells, unimpeded and equal to
itself
in the manifoldness and diversity of
the
concrete. It is not dragged into the
process
of becoming, but continues itself through
that process undisturbed and possesses
the
power of unalterable, undying self-preservation.
§ 1330
But even so, it does not merely show,
or
have an illusory being, in its other,
like
the determination of reflection; this,
as
a correlate, is not merely self-related
but
is a positive relating of itself to
its other
in which it manifests itself; but,
in the
first instance, it only shows in it,
and
this illusory being of each in the
other,
or their reciprocal determining, along
with
their self-dependence, has the form
of an
external act. The universal, on the
contrary,
is posited as the essential being of
its
determination, as the latter's own
positive
nature. For the determination that
constitutes
its negative is, in the Notion, simply
and
solely a positedness; in other words,
it
is, at the same time, essentially only
the
negative of the negative, and is only
as
this identity of the negative with
itself,
which is the universal. Thus the universal
is also the substance of its determinations;
but in such wise that what was a contingency
for substance, is the Notion's own
self-mediation,
its own immanent reflection. But this
mediation
which, in the first instance, raises
contingency
to necessity, is the manifested relation;
the Notion is not the abyss of formless
substance,
or necessity as the inner identity
of things
or states distinct from, and limiting,
one
another; on the contrary, as absolute
negativity,
it is the shaper and creator, and because
the determination is not a limitation
but
is just as much utterly sublated, or
posited,
the illusory being is now manifestation,
the manifestation of the identical.
§ 1331
The universal is therefore free power;
it
is itself and takes its other within
its
embrace, but without doing violence
to it;
on the contrary, the universal is,
in its
other, in peaceful communion with itself.
We have called it free power, but it
could
also be called free love and boundless
blessedness,
for it bears itself towards its other
as
towards its own self; in it, it has
returned
to itself.
§ 1332
We have just mentioned determinateness,
although
the Notion, being as yet only the universal
and only self-identical, has not yet
advanced
to that stage. However, we cannot speak
of
the universal apart from determinateness
which to be more precise is particularity
and individuality, for the universal,
in
its absolute negativity, contains determinateness
in and for itself. The determinateness,
therefore,
is not introduced from outside when
we speak
of it in connection with the universal.
As
negativity in general or in accordance
with
the first, immediate negation, the
universal
contains determinateness generally
as particularity;
as the second negation, that is, as
negation
of the negation, it is absolute determinateness
or individuality and concreteness.
The universal
is thus the totality of the Notion;
it is
a concrete, and far from being empty,
it
has through its Notion a content, and
a content
in which it not only maintains itself
but
one which is its own and immanent in
it.
We can, indeed, abstract from the content:
but in that case we do not obtain the
universal
of the Notion but only the abstract
universal,
which is an isolated, imperfect moment
of
the Notion and has no truth.
§ 1333
More precisely, the universal shows
itself
as this totality as follows. In so
far as
it contains determinateness, it is
not merely
the first negation, but also the reflection
of this negation into itself. Taken
expressly
with this first negation, it is a particular,
and it is as such that we are soon
to consider
it; but in this determinateness it
is essentially
still a universal; this side we have
here
still to consider. For determinateness,
being
in the Notion, is the total reflection,
the
two-fold illusory being which on the
one
hand has an illusory reference outwards,
the reflection-into-other, and on the
other
hand has an illusory reference inwards,
the
reflection-into-self. The former reflection
involves distinction from an other;
from
this standpoint, the universal possesses
a particularity which has its resolution
in a higher universal. Now even though
it
is merely a relative universal, it
does not
lose its character of universal; it
preserves
itself in its determinateness, not
merely
as though in its connection with the
determinateness
it remained indifferent to it - for
then
it would be merely compounded with
it but
so that it is what we have just called
the
illusory reference inwards. The determinateness,
as determinate Notion, is bent back
into
itself out of the externality; it is
the
Notion's own immanent character, which
is
an essential character by virtue of
the fact
that, in being taken up into the universality
and pervaded by it, it equally pervades
the
universality, being of like compass
and identical
with it; it is the character that belongs
to the genus as the determinateness
that
is not separated from the universal.
Accordingly,
the limitation is not outward-going
but positive,
for the Notion, through its universality,
stands in free relation to itself.
Thus even
the determinate Notion remains within
itself
infinitely free Notion.
§ 1334
But in regard to the other side, in
which
the genus is limited by its specific
character,
it has been observed that this, as
a lower
genus, has its resolution in a higher
universal.
The latter, in its turn, can also be
grasped
as genus but as a more abstract one;
but
it always pertains only to that side
of the
determinate Notion which has a reference
outwards. The truly higher universal
is that
in which this outward-going side is
taken
back into the universal, the second
negation,
in which the determinateness is present
simply
as posited or as illusory being. Life,
ego,
spirit, absolute Notion, are not universals
merely in the sense of higher genera,
but
are concretes whose determinatenesses,
too,
are not species or lower genera but
genera
which, in their reality, are absolutely
self-contained
and self-fulfilled. In so far as life,
ego,
finite spirit are, as they certainly
are,
also only determinate Notions, their
absolute
resolution is in that universal which
as
truly absolute Notion is to be grasped
as
the Idea of infinite spirit, whose
posited
being is infinite, transparent reality
wherein
it contemplates its creation, and in
this
creation its own self.
§ 1335
The true, infinite universal which,
in itself,
is as much particularity as individuality,
we have next to consider as particularity.
It determines itself freely; the process
by which it makes itself finite is
not a
transition, for this occurs only in
the sphere
of being; it is creative power as the
absolute
negativity which relates itself to
its own
self. As such, it differentiates itself
internally,
and this is a determining, because
the differentiation
is one with the universality. Accordingly,
the universal is a process in which
it posits
the differences themselves as universal
and
self-related. They thereby become fixed,
isolated differences. The isolated
subsistence
of the finite which earlier was determined
as its being-for-self, and also as
thinghood,
as substance, is, in its truth universality,
the form with which the infinite Notion
clothes
its differences - a form that is, in
fact,
one of its own differences. Herein
consists
the creative power of the Notion, a
power
which is to be comprehended only in
this,
the Notion's innermost core.
B The Particular Notion § 1336
Determinateness as such belongs to
being
and the qualitative sphere; as determinateness
of the Notion it is particularity.
It is
not a limit, as though it were related
to
an other beyond it; on the contrary,
as we
have just seen, it is the native, immanent
moment of the universal; in particularity,
therefore, the universal is not in
the presence
of an other, but simply of itself.
The particular contains universality,
which
constitutes its substance; the genus
is unaltered
in its species, and the species are
not different
from the universal but only from one
another.
The particular has one and the same
universality
as the other particulars to which it
is related.
At the same time, by virtue of the
identity
of the particulars with the universal,
their
diversity is, as such, universal; it
is totality.
The particular, therefore, not only
contains
the universal but through its determinateness
also exhibits it; consequently, the
universal
constitutes a sphere that must exhaust
the
particular. This totality appears,
in so
far as the determinateness of the particular
is taken as mere diversity, as completeness.
In this respect, species are complete
simply
because there are no more of them.
There
is no inner standard or principle that
could
apply to them, simply because diversity
is
the difference without unity in which
the
universality, which in its own self
is absolute
unity, is a merely external reflection
and
an unrestricted, contingent completeness.
But diversity passes over into opposition,
into an immanent relation of the diverse
moments. Particularity, however, because
it is universality, is this immanent
relation,
not through a transition, but in and
for
itself; it is in its own self totality
and
simple determinateness, essentially
a principle.
It has no other determinateness than
that
posited by the universal itself and
resulting
from the universal in the following
manner.
The particular is the universal itself,
but
it is its difference or relation to
an other,
its illusory reference outwards [sein
Scheinen
nach aussen]; but there is no other
present
from which the particular could be
distinguished,
except the universal itself. The universal
determines itself, and so is itself
the particular;
the determinateness is its difference;
it
is distinguished only from its own
self.
Therefore its species are only (a)
the universal
itself, and (b) the particular. The
universal
as the Notion is itself and its opposite,
and this again is the universal itself
as
its posited determinateness; it embraces
its opposite and in it is in union
with itself.
Thus it is the totality and principle
of
its diversity, which is determined
wholly
and solely by the universal itself.
Therefore there is no other true logical
classification than this, that the
Notion
sets itself on one side as immediate
indeterminate
universality; this very indeterminateness
constitutes its determinateness or
makes
it a particular. Each of them is the
particular
and is therefore co-ordinate with the
other.
Each of them as a particular is also
determinate
as against the universal, and in so
far can
be said to be subordinate to it. But
even
this universal, as against which the
particular
is determined, is for that reason itself
merely one of the opposed sides. For
if we
speak of two opposed sides, we must
supplement
this by saying that it is not merely
together
that they constitute the particular
- as
if they were alike in being particulars
only
for external reflection - but rather
that
their determinateness over against
one another
is at the same time essentially only
one
determinateness, the negativity, which
in
the universal is simple.
Difference, as it shows itself here,
is in
its Notion and therefore in its truth.
All
previous difference has this unity
in principle
(im Begriffe). As immediate difference
in
the sphere of being, it is limit of
an other;
in reflection it is relative and posited
as essentially relating itself to its
other;
here therefore the unity of the Notion
begins
to be posited, but at first it is only
illusory
being in an other. The true meaning
and resolution
of these determinations is just this,
that
they attain to their Notion, their
truth;
being, determinate being, something,
or whole
and parts, etc. substance and accidents,
cause and effect, are by themselves
[merely]
thought-determinations; but they are
grasped
as determinate Notions when each is
cognized
in unity with its other or opposite
determination.
Whole and parts, cause and effect,
for example,
are not as yet different terms determined
as particulars relatively to each other,
because although in themselves they
constitute
one Notion, their unity has not yet
reached
the form of universality; thus the
difference,
too, which is in these relationships,
has
not as yet the form of being one determinateness.
Cause and effect, for example, are
not two
different Notions, but only one determinate
Notion, and causality, like every Notion,
is a simple Notion.
With respect to completeness, we have
seen
that the determinate side of particularity
is complete in the difference of the
universal
and the particular, and that these
two alone
constitute the particular species.
In nature,
of course, there are to be found more
than
two species in a genus, just as between
these
many species there cannot exist the
relationship
we have just indicated. This is the
impotence
of nature, that it cannot adhere to
and exhibit
the strictness of the Notion and runs
wild
in this blind irrational [begrifflos]
multiplicity.
We can wonder at nature's manifold
genera
and species and the endless diversity
of
her formations, for wonderment is unreasoning
and its object the irrational. Nature,
because
it is the self-externality of the Notion,
is free to indulge itself in this variety,
just as spirit, too, even though it
possesses
the Notion in the shape of the Notion,
engages
in pictorial thinking and runs riot
in its
endless variety. The manifold natural
genera
or species must not be esteemed as
anything
more than the capricious fancies of
spirit
in its representations. Both indeed
show
traces and inklings of the Notion on
all
sides, but do not present a faithful
copy
of it because they are the side of
its free
self-externality. The Notion is absolute
power just because it can freely abandon
its difference to the shape of self-subsistent
diversity, outer necessity, contingency,
caprice, opinion, which however must
not
be taken for more than the abstract
aspect
of nothingness.
We have seen that the determinateness
of
the particular is simple as principle,
but
it is also simple as moment of the
totality
- as a determinateness opposed to the
other
determinateness. The Notion, in determining
or distinguishing itself, is negatively
directed
against its unity and gives itself
the form
of one of its ideal moments, that of
being:
as a determinate Notion, it has a determinate
Being in general. But this Being no
longer
signifies bare immediacy but Universality
- immediacy which through absolute
mediation
is equal to itself and equally contains
the
other moment, essential being or reflection.
This Universality with which the determinate
moment is clothed is abstract Universality.
The particular has Universality within
it
as its essential being; but, in so
far as
the determinateness of the difference
is
posited, and thereby has Being, Universality
is a form assumed by the difference,
and
the determinateness as such is the
content.
The Universality becomes form in so
far as
the difference is present as the essential
moment, just as, on the contrary, in
the
purely universal it is present only
as absolute
negativity, not as difference which
posited
as such. ©
§ 1337
Now determinateness, it is true, is
the abstract,
as against the other, determinateness;
but
this other is only universality itself
which
is, therefore, also abstract, and the
determinateness
of the Notion, or particularity, is
again
nothing more than a determinate universality.
In this, the Notion is outside itself;
since
it is the Notion that is here outside
itself,
the abstract universal contains all
the moments
of the Notion. It is (a) universality,
(b)
determinateness, (c) the simple unity
of
both; but this unity is immediate,
and therefore
particularity is not present as totality.
In itself it is also this totality
and mediation;
it is essentially an exclusive relation
to
an other, or sublation of the negation,
namely,
of the other determinateness - an other,
however, that exists only in imagination,
for it vanishes immediately and shows
itself
to be the same as its supposed other.
Therefore,
what makes this universality abstract
is
that the mediation is only a condition
or
is not posited in the universality
itself.
Because it is not posited, the unity
of the
abstract universality has the form
of immediacy,
and the content has the form of indifference
to its universality, for the content
is not
present as the totality which is the
universality
of absolute negativity. Hence the abstract
universal is, indeed, the Notion, yet
it
is without the Notion; it is the Notion
that
is not posited as such.
When people talk of the determinate
Notion,
what is usually meant is merely such
an abstract
universal. Even by notion as such,
what is
generally understood is only this notion
that is no Notion, and the understanding
denotes the faculty of such notions.
Demonstration
appertains to this understanding in
so far
as it progresses by notions, that is
to say,
merely by determinations. Such a progression
by notions, therefore, does not get
beyond
finitude and necessity; for it, the
highest
is the negative infinite, the abstraction
of the supreme being [des höchsten
Wesen],
which is itself the determinateness
of indeterminateness.
Absolute substance, too, though it
is not
this empty abstraction - from the point
of
view of its content it is rather the
totality
- is nevertheless abstract because
it lacks
the absolute form; its inmost truth
is not
constituted by the Notion; true, it
is the
identity of universality and particularity,
or of thought and asunderness, yet
this identity
is not the determinateness of the Notion;
on the contrary, outside substance
there
is an understanding - and just because
it
is outside it, a contingent understanding
- in which and for which substance
is present
in various attributes and modes.
Moreover, abstraction is not empty
as it
is usually said to be; it is the determinate
Notion and has some determinateness
or other
for its content. Even the supreme being,
the pure abstraction, has, as already
remarked,
the determinateness of indeterminateness;
but indeterminateness is a determinateness,
because it is supposed to stand opposed
to
the determinate. But the enunciation
of what
it is, itself sublates what it is supposed
to be; it is enunciated as one with
determinateness,
and in this way, out of the abstraction
is
established its truth and the Notion.
But
every determinate Notion is, of course,
empty
in so far as it does not contain the
totality,
but only a one-sided determinateness.
Even
when it has some other concrete content,
for example man, the state, animal,
etc.,
it still remains an empty Notion, since
its
determinateness is not the principle
of its
differences; a principle contains the
beginning
and the essential nature of its development
and realization; any other determinateness
of the notion, however, is sterile.
To reproach
the Notion generally with being empty,
is
to misjudge that absolute determinateness
of the Notion which is the difference
of
the Notion and the only true content
in the
element of the Notion.
§ 1338
Connected with the above is the reason
why
latterly the Understanding has been
so lightly
esteemed and ranked as inferior to
Reason;
it is the fixity which it imparts to
the
determinatenesses, and hence to finite
determinations.
This fixity consists in the form of
abstract
Universality which has just been considered:
through it they become immutable. For
qualitative
determinateness, and also determinations
of reflection, are essentially limited,
and,
through their limitation, have a relation
to their other; hence the necessity
of transition
and passing away. But universality
which
they possess in the understanding gives
them
the form of reflection-into-self by
which
they are freed from the relation-to-other
and have become imperishable. Now though
in the pure Notion this eternity belongs
to its nature, yet its abstract determinations
are eternal essentialities only in
respect
of their form; but their content is
at variance
with this form; therefore they are
not truth,
or imperishable. Their content is at
variance
with the form, because it is not determinateness
itself as universal; that is, it is
not totality
of the Notion's difference, or not
itself
the whole form; but the form of the
limited
understanding is itself the imperfect
form,
namely, abstract universality. But
further,
we must recognise the infinite force
of the
understanding in splitting the concrete
into
abstract determinatenesses and plumbing
the
depth of difference, the force that
at the
same time is alone the power that effects
their transition.
The concrete of intuition is a totality,
but a sensuous one - a real material
which
has an indifferent, sundered existence
in
space and time; but surely this absence
of
unity in the manifold, where it is
the content
of intuition, ought not to be counted
to
it for merit and superiority over intellectual
existence. The mutability that it exhibits
in intuition already points to the
universal;
yet all that it brings to view is merely
another, equally mutable, material;
therefore,
only the same thing again, not the
universal
which should appear and take its place.
But
least of all in sciences such as geometry
and arithmetic, should we count it
as a merit
that their material involves an intuitive
element, or imagine that their propositions
are established on it. On the contrary,
it
is on account of that element that
the material
of such sciences is of an inferior
nature;
the intuition of figures or numbers
does
not procure a scientific knowledge
of them;
only thinking about them can do this.
But
if by intuition we are to understand
not
merely the element of sense but the
objective
totality, then it is an intellectual
intuition;
that is to say, intuition has for its
object
not the external side of existence,
but what
existence holds of imperishable reality
and
truth-reality, only in so far as it
is essentially
in the Notion and determined by it,
the Idea,
whose more precise nature has to reveal
itself
at a later stage. The advantage which
intuition
as such is supposed to have over the
Notion
is external reality, the Notionless
element,
which first receives a value through
the
Notion.
Since, therefore, understanding exhibits
the infinite force which determines
the universal,
or conversely, imparts through the
form of
Universality a fixity and subsistence
to
the determinateness that is in and
for itself
transitory; then it is not the fault
of understanding
if no further progress is made beyond
this
point. It is a subjective impotence
of reason
which adopts these determinatenesses
in their
fixity, and which is unable to bring
them
back to their unity through the dialectical
force opposed to this abstract universality,
in other words, through their own peculiar
nature or through their Notion. The
understanding
does indeed give them, so to speak,
a rigidity
of being such as they do not possess
in the
sphere of quality and the sphere of
reflection;
but at the same time it spiritually
impregnates
them and so sharpens them, that just
at this
extreme point alone they acquire the
capability
to dissolve themselves and pass over
into
their opposite. The highest maturity,
the
highest stage, which anything can attain
is that in which its downfall begins.
The
fixity of the determinateness into
which
the understanding seems to run, the
form
of the imperishable, is that of self-relating
universality. But this belongs properly
to
the Notion; and consequently in this
universality
is to be found expressed, and infinitely
close at hand, the dissolution of the
finite.
This Universality directly refutes
the determinateness
of the finite and expresses its incongruity
with the universality. Or rather, the
adequacy
of the finite is already to hand; the
abstract
determinate is posited as one with
the universality,
and for that very reason is posited
as not
for itself - for then it would only
be a
determinate - but only as unity of
itself
and the universal, that is, as Notion.
©
Therefore the usual practice of separating
understanding and reason is, from every
point
of view, to be rejected. When the Notion
is regarded as irrational, this should
be
interpreted rather as an incapacity
of reason
to recognize itself in the Notion.
The determinate
and abstract Notion is the condition,
or
rather an essential moment of reason;
it
is form spiritually impregnated, in
which
the finite, through the universality
in which
it relates itself to itself, spontaneously
catches fire, posits itself as dialectical
and thereby is the beginning of the
manifestation
of reason.
In the foregoing, the determinate Notion
has been presented in its truth, and
therefore
it only remains to indicate what it
is as
already posited therein. Difference,
which
is an essential moment of the Notion
though
not yet posited as such in the pure
universal,
receives its due in the determinate
Notion.
Determinateness in the form of universality
is linked with the universal to form
a simple
determination; this determinate universal
is the self-related determinateness;
it is
the determinate determinateness or
absolute
negativity posited for itself. But
the self-related
determinateness is individuality. Just
as
universality is immediately in and
for itself
already particularity, so too particularity
is immediately in and for itself also
individuality;
this individuality is, in the first
instance,
to be regarded as the third moment
of the
Notion, in so far as we hold on to
its opposition
to the two other moments, but it is
also
to be considered as the absolute return
of
the Notion into itself, and at the
same time
as the posited loss of itself.
Remark. Universality, particularity,
and
individuality are, according to the
foregoing
exposition, the three determinate Notions,
that is, if one insists on counting
them.
We have already shown that number is
an unsuitable
form in which to hold Notional determinations;
but for the determinations of the Notion
itself it is unsuitable in the highest
degree;
number, since it has the unit [das
Eins]
for its principle, converts them as
counted
into completely isolated and mutually
indifferent
determinations. We have seen from the
foregoing
that the truth is that the different
determinate
Notions, far from falling apart into
number,
are simply only one and the same Notion.
In the customary treatment of logic
hitherto,
various classifications and species
of notions
occur. We are at once struck by the
inconsequential
way in which the species of notions
are introduced:
there are, in respect of quantity,
quality,
etc., the following notions. There
are, expresses
no other justification than that we
find
such species already to hand and they
present
themselves empirically. In this way,
we obtain
an empirical logic - an odd science
this,
an irrational cognition of the rational.
In proceeding thus, logic sets a very
bad
example of obedience to its own precepts;
it permits itself for its own purpose
to
do the opposite of what it prescribes
as
a rule, namely that notions should
be deduced,
and scientific propositions (therefore
also
the proposition: there are such and
such
species of notions) should be proved.
In
this matter, the Kantian philosophy
commits
a further inconsequence: it borrows
the categories,
as so- called root notions, for the
transcendental
logic, from the subjective logic in
which
they were adopted empirically. Since
it admits
the latter fact, it is hard to see
why transcendental
logic resolves to borrow from such
a science
instead of directly resorting to experience.
To cite some details of this, notions
are
mainly classified according to their
clearness,
into clear and obscure, distinct and
indistinct,
adequate and inadequate. To these we
can
also add complete, profuse, [überfliessend]
notions and suchlike superfluities.
As regards
the classification by clearness, it
is readily
seen that this standpoint and its related
distinctions are taken from psychological,
not from logical, determinations. The
so-called
clear notion is supposed to suffice
for distinguishing
one object from another; but this is
not
yet a notion, it is nothing more than
a subjective
representation. What an obscure notion
is
must be left to itself, for otherwise
it
would not be an obscure but a distinct
notion.
The distinct notion is supposed to
be one
whose marks can be indicated. As such
it
is, strictly speaking, the determinate
notion.
The mark, if it is taken in its correct
meaning,
is none other than the determinateness
or
the simple content of the notion, in
so far
as it is distinguished from the form
of universality.
But the mark, in the first instance,
does
not have quite this preciser meaning
but
is in general merely a determination
whereby
a third something takes note of an
object,
or the notion; it can therefore be
a very
contingent circumstance. In general
it expresses
not so much the immanence and essential
nature
of the determination as its relation
to an
understanding external to it. If this
is
really an understanding, it has the
notion
before it and distinguishes this only
and
solely by what is in the notion. But
if the
mark is supposed to be distinct from
the
notion, then it is a sign or some other
determination
which belongs to the representation
of the
thing, not to its notion. What the
indistinct
notion may be, can be passed over as
superfluous.
But the adequate notion is something
higher;
what it really implies is the agreement
of
the Notion with reality, which is not
the
Notion as such but the Idea.
If the mark of the distinct notion
were really
supposed to be the determination of
the notion
itself, logic would find itself in
difficulty
over the simple notions which, according
to another classification, are opposed
to
compound. For if a true, that is an
immanent,
mark of the simple notion were to be
indicated,
we should not be regarding it as simple;
but in so far as no mark was given,
it would
not be a distinct notion. But here,
now,
the clear notion helps out, Unity,
reality,
and suchlike determinations are supposed
to be simple notions, probably only
because
logicians were unable to discover their
specific
nature and contented themselves with
having
merely a clear notion of them, that
is, no
notion at all. Definition, that is,
the statement
of the notion, in general demands the
statement
of the genus and the specific difference.
Therefore it presents the notion, not
as
something simple, but in two countable
components.
Yet surely no one will for that reason
suppose
such notion to be a compound. The simple
notion seems to suggest abstract simplicity,
a unity which does not contain within
itself
difference and determinateness and
which
therefore, too, is not the unity that
belongs
to the Notion. In so far as an object
is
present in ordinary thinking, especially
in memory, or even as an abstract thought
determination, it can be quite simple.
Even
the object that is richest in content,
such
as, for example, spirit, nature, the
world,
even God, when uncomprehendingly taken
up
into the simple representation of the
equally
simple expression: spirit, nature,
the world,
God, is doubtless something simple
at which
consciousness can stop short without
going
on to pick out its peculiar determination
or its mark. But the objects of consciousness
should not remain simple, should not
remain
such representations or abstract thought
determinations; on the contrary, they
should
be comprehended, that is to say, their
simplicity
should be determined with their inner
difference.
The compound notion, however, is a
contradiction
in terms. We can, of course, have a
notion
of something composite; but a compound
notion
would be something worse than materialism,
which assumes only the substance of
the soul
to be composite, yet none the less
takes
thought to be simple. Uneducated reflection
first stumbles on the idea of composition,
because it is the completely external
relation,
the worst form in which anything can
be considered;
even the lowest natures must be an
inner
unity. That the form of the untruest
existence
should be assigned, above all, to the
ego,
to the Notion, that is something we
should
not have expected and that can only
be described
as inept and barbarous.
Further, notions are divided mainly
into
contrary and contradictory. If, in
our treatment
of the notion, we are supposed to state
what
determinate notions there are, then
we must
adduce all possible determinations
- for
all determinations are notions, consequently
determinate notions - and all the categories
of being as well as all determinations
of
essence, would have to be adduced under
the
species of notions. just as in the
text-books
of logic - to - to a greater or lesser
degree,
according to the whim of the author
- it
is related that there are affirmative,
negative,
identical, conditional, necessary notions,
and so on. As the nature of the Notion
itself
has progressed beyond all such determinations
and therefore these, if adduced in
connexion
with the Notion, occur out of their
proper
place, they only admit of superficial
definitions
and appear at this stage devoid of
all interest.
At the basis of contrary and contradictory
notions - a distinction to which particular
attention is paid here - lies the reflective
determination of diversity and opposition.
They are regarded as two particular
species,
that is, each as firmly fixed on its
own
account and indifferent to the other,
without
any thought of the dialectic and the
inner
nullity of these differences - as though
what is contrary must not equally be
determined
as contradictory. The nature and the
essential
transition of the forms of reflection
which
they express have been considered in
their
proper place. In the Notion, identity
has
developed into universality, difference
into
particularity, opposition, which withdraws
into the ground, into individuality.
In these
forms, those categories of reflection
are
present as they are in their Notion.
The
universal has proved itself to be not
only
the identical, but at the same time
the different
or contrary as against the particular
and
individual, and in addition, also to
be opposed
to them or contradictory; in this opposition,
however, it is identical with them
and is
their true ground in which they are
sublated.
The same holds good of particularity
and
individuality which are likewise the
totality
of the determinations of reflection.
A further classification of notions
is into
subordinate and coordinate - a distinction
which approaches more closely to the
determination
of the Notion, namely, the relationship
of
universality and particularity, where
these
terms, too, have been mentioned in
passing.
Only it is customary to regard them
likewise
as completely rigid relationships and
from
this point of view to put forward a
number
of sterile propositions about them.
The most
prolix discussion on this point concerns
again the relation of contrariety and
contradiction
to subordination and co-ordination.
Since
the judgment is the relation of determinate
Notions, it is only at that stage that
the
true relationship will come to view.
That
fashion of comparing these determinations
without a thought for their dialectic
or
for the progressive alteration of their
determination,
or rather for the conjunction of opposed
determinations present in them, makes
the
whole consideration of what is concordant
or not concordant in them - as though
the
concord or discord were something separate
and permanent - into something merely
sterile
and meaningless.
The great Euler, who displayed an infinitely
fertile and acute mind in seizing and
combining
the deeper relations of algebraic magnitudes,
the dry, prosaic Lambert in particular,
and
others, have attempted to construct
a notation
for this class of relation between
determinations
of the Notion by lines, figures and
the like,
the general intention being to elevate,
or
rather in fact to degrade, the logical
modes
of relation to a calculus. The utter
futility
of even attempting a notation is at
once
apparent when one compares the nature
of
the sign and what it is supposed to
signify.
The determinations of the Notion, universality,
particularity and individuality, are
certainly
diverse, as are lines, or the letters
of
algebra; further, they are also opposed,
and to this extent would also admit
of the
signs plus and minus. But they themselves,
and above all their relations - even
if one
stops at subsumption and inherence
- are
in their essential nature entirely
different
from letters and lines and their relationships,
the equality or difference of magnitude,
the plus and minus, or a superimposition
of lines, or their joining to form
angles
and the dispositions of spaces enclosed
by
them. It is characteristic of such
objects
that, in contrast to determinations
of the
Notion, they are mutually external,
and have
a fixed character. Now when Notions
are so
taken that they correspond to such
signs,
they cease to be Notions. Their determinations
are not inert entities like numbers
and lines
whose relation does not itself belong
to
them; they are living movements; the
distinguished
determinateness of the one side is
immediately
internal to the other side too. What
would
be a complete contradiction in the
case of
numbers and lines is essential to the
nature
of the Notion. Higher mathematics,
which
also goes on to the infinite and allows
itself
contradictions, can no longer employ
its
usual signs for representing such determinations.
To denote the conception - which is
still
very far from being a Notion - of the
infinite
approximation of two ordinates, or
in equating
a curve with an infinite number of
infinitesimal
straight lines, all it does is to draw
two
straight lines apart from each other
and
to make the straight lines approach
the curve
but remain distinct from it; for the
infinite,
which is here the point of interest,
it refers
us to pictorial thinking.
What has misled logicians into this
attempt
is primarily the quantitative relationship
in which universality, particularity
and
individuality are supposed to stand
to one
another; the universal means, more
extensive
than the particular and the individual,
and
the particular means, more extensive
than
the individual. The Notion is the most
concrete
and richest determination because it
is the
ground and the totality of the preceding
determinations, of the categories of
being
and of the determinations of reflection;
these, therefore, are certainly also
present
in it. But its nature is completely
misunderstood
when they are retained in it in their
former
abstraction, when the wider extent
of the
universal is taken to mean that it
is something
more or a greater quantum than the
particular
and the individual. As absolute ground,
it
is the possibility of quantity, but
equally
so of quality, that is, its determinations
are just as much qualitatively distinct;
therefore they are taken in direct
opposition
to their truth when they are posited
under
the form of quantity alone. Thus, too,
the
determination of reflection is a correlate
in which its opposite has an illusory
being
[scheint]; it is not in an external
relationship
like a quantum. But the Notion is more
than
all this; its determinations are determinate
Notions, are themselves essentially
the totality
of all determinations. It is therefore
quite
inappropriate for the purpose of grasping
such an inner totality, to seek to
apply
numerical and spatial relationships
in which
all determinations fall asunder; on
the contrary,
they are the last and worst medium
which
could be employed. Natural relationships
such as magnetism, or colour relations,
would
be infinitely higher and truer symbols
for
the purpose. Since man has in language
a
means of designation peculiar to Reason,
it is an idle fancy to search for a
less
perfect mode of representation to plague
oneself with. It is essentially only
spirit
that can comprehend the Notion as Notion;
for this is not merely the property
of spirit
but spirit's pure self. It is futile
to seek
to fix it by spatial figures and algebraic
signs for the purpose of the outer
eye and
an uncomprehending, mechanical mode
of treatment
such as a calculus. In fact, anything
else
which might be supposed to serve as
a symbol
can at most, like symbols for the nature
of God, evoke intimations and echoes
of the
Notion; if, however, one should seriously
propose to employ them for expressing
and
cognizing the Notion, then the external
nature
of all symbols is inadequate to the
task;
the truth about the relationship is
rather
the converse, namely, that what in
symbols
is an echo of a higher determination,
is
only truly known through the Notion
and can
be approximated to the Notion only
by separating
off the sensuous, unessential part
that was
meant to express it.
C The Individual § 1339
Individuality, as we have seen, is
already
posited by particularity; this is determinate
universality and therefore self-related
determinateness,
the determinate determinate.
1. In the first instance, therefore,
individuality
appears as the reflection of the Notion
out
of its determinateness into itself.
It is
the self-mediation of the Notion in
so far
as its otherness has made itself into
an
other again, whereby the Notion has
reinstated
itself as self-identical, but in the
determination
of absolute negativity. The negative
in the
universal whereby this is a particular,
was
defined above as a two-fold illusory
being:
in so far as the negative is an illusory
being within the universal, the particular
remains a universal; through the reference
of the illusory being outwards it is
a determinate;
the return of this side into the universal
is two-fold: either through abstraction
which
lets drop the particular and rises
to the
higher and the highest genus, or else
through
the individuality to which the universal
in the determinateness itself descends.
Here
is where the false path branches off
and
abstraction strays from the highway
of the
Notion and forsakes the truth. Its
higher
and highest universal to which it raises
itself is only the surface, which becomes
ever more destitute of content; the
individuality
it despises is the profundity in which
the
Notion seizes itself and is posited
as Notion.
©
§ 1340
Universality and particularity appeared,
on the one hand, as moments of the
becoming
of individuality. But it has already
been
shown that they are in themselves the
total
Notion, and consequently in individuality
do not pass over into an other, but
that
in individuality there is only posited
that
they are in and for themselves. The
universal
is in and for itself because it is
in its
own self absolute mediation, self-reference
only as absolute negativity. It is
an abstract
universal in so far as this sublating
is
an external act and so a dropping of
the
determinateness.
§ 1341
Life, Spirit, God - the pure Notion
itself,
are beyond the grasp of abstraction,
because
it deprives its products of singularity,
of the principle of individuality and
personality,
and so arrives at nothing but universalities
devoid of life and spirit, colour and
content.
§ 1342
Yet the unity of the Notion is so indissoluble
that even these products of abstraction,
though they are supposed to drop individuality
are, on the contrary, individuals themselves.
Abstraction raises the concrete into
universality
in which, however, the universal is
grasped
only as a determinate universality;
and this
is precisely the individuality that
has shown
itself to be self-related determinateness.
Abstraction, therefore, is a sundering
of
the concrete and an isolating of its
determinations;
through it only single properties and
moments
are seized; for its product must contain
what it is itself. But the difference
between
this individuality of its products
and the
Notion's individuality is that, in
the former,
the individual as content and the universal
as form are distinct from one another
- just
because the former is not present as
absolute
form, as the Notion itself, or the
latter
is not present as the totality of form.
However
this more detailed consideration shows
that
the abstract product itself is a unity
of
the individual content and abstract
universality,
and is, therefore, a concrete - and
the opposite
of what it aims to be.
§ 1343
For the same reason the particular,
because
it is only the determinate universal,
is
also an individual, and conversely
the individual,
because it is the determinate universal,
is just as much a particular. If we
stick
to this abstract determinateness, then
the
Notion has the three particular determinations,
the universal, the particular, and
the individual;
whereas previously we had given only
the
universal and the particular as the
species
of the particular. Since individuality
is
the return of the Notion, as negative,
into
itself, this very return from the abstraction
which, strictly speaking, is sublated
in
the return, can be placed along with
the
others as an indifferent moment and
counted
with them.
If individuality is reckoned as one
of the
particular determinations of the Notion,
then particularity is the totality
which
embraces them all; precisely in being
this
totality it is the concretion of them
or
individuality itself. But it is also
the
concrete in accordance with its aspect,
noted
above, of determinate universality;
as such
it is the immediate unity in which
none of
these moments is posited as distinct
or as
the determinant, and in this form it
will
constitute the middle term of the formal
syllogism.
It is self-evident that each determination
made in the preceding exposition of
the Notion
has immediately dissolved itself and
lost
itself in its other. Each distinction
is
confounded in the very attempt to isolate
and fix it. Only mere representational
thinking,
for which abstraction has isolated
them,
is capable of holding the universal,
particular
and individual rigidly apart; in this
way
they can be counted, and for a further
distinction
such thinking holds to the completely
external
one of being, namely, quantity, which
is
nowhere less appropriate than here.
In individuality,
the true relationship mentioned above,
the
inseparability of the Notion's determinations
is posited; for as negation of the
negation
it contains their opposition and at
the same
time contains it in its ground or unity,
the effected coincidence of each with
its
other. As this reflection is in its
very
own nature universality, it is essentially
the negativity of the Notion's determinations,
but not merely as if it were a third
something
distinct from them; on the contrary,
it is
now posited that posited being [Gesetztsein]
is being-in-and-for-itself; that is,
that
each of the determinations pertaining
to
the difference is itself the totality.
The
return of the determinate Notion into
itself
means that it has the determination
of being,
in its determinateness, the whole Notion.
2. But Individuality is not only the
return
of the Notion into itself; but immediately
its loss. Through individuality, where
the
Notion is internal to itself, it becomes
external to itself and enters into
actuality.
Abstraction which, as the soul of individuality
is the relation of the negative to
the negative;
and, as we have shown not external
to the
universal and the particular but immanent
in them; and through it they are concrete,
content, an individual. But as this
negativity,
individuality is the determinate determinateness,
is differentiation as such; through
this
reflection of the difference into itself,
the difference becomes fixed; it is
only
through individuality that the determining
of the particular takes place, for
individuality
is that abstraction which simply as
individuality,
is now posited abstraction.
§ 1344
The individual, therefore, as self-related
negativity, is immediate identity of
the
negative with itself; it is a being-for-self.
Or it is the abstraction that determines
the Notion, according to its ideal
moment
of being, as an immediate. In this
way, the
individual is a qualitative one or
this.
With this quality it is, first, repulsion
of itself from itself, whereby the
many other
ones are presupposed; secondly, it
is now
a negative relation towards these presupposed
others; and, the individual is in so
far
exclusive.
§ 1345
Universality, when related to these
individuals
as indifferent ones - and related to
them
it must be because it is a moment of
the
Notion of individuality - is merely
their
common element. When one understands
by the
universal, that which is common to
several
individuals, one is starting from the
indifferent
subsistence of these individuals and
confounding
the immediacy of being with the determination
of the Notion. The lowest possible
conception
of the universal in its connection
with the
individual is this external relation
of it
as merely a common element. ©
The individual, which in the sphere
of reflection
exists as a this, does not have the
exclusive
relation to another one which belongs
to
qualitative being-for-self. This, as
the
one reflected into itself, is for itself
and without repulsion; or repulsion
in this
reflection is one with abstraction
and is
the reflecting mediation which attaches
to
the this in such wise that the this
is a
posited immediacy pointed out by someone
external to it. The this is; it is
immediate;
but it is only this in so far as it
is pointed
out. The 'pointing out' is the reflecting
movement which collects itself inwardly
and
posits immediacy, but as a self-external
immediacy. Now the individual is certainly
a this, as the immediate restored out
of
mediation; but it does not have the
mediation
outside it - it is itself a repelling
separation,
posited abstraction, yet in its very
act
of separating, it is a positive relation.
This act of abstraction by the individual,
being the reflection of the difference
into
itself, is first a positing of the
differentiated
moments as self-subsistent and reflected-into-self.
They immediately are; but further,
this sundering
is reflection as such, the illusory
being
of the one in the other; thus they
stand
in essential relation. Further, the
individuals
are not merely inertly present in relation
to one another; such plurality belongs
to
being; the individuality, in positing
itself
as determinate, posits itself not in
an external
difference but in the difference of
the Notion.
It therefore excludes the universal
from
itself; yet since this is a moment
of individuality,
the universal is equally essentially
related
to it.
The Notion, as this relation of its
self-subsistent
determinations, has lost itself; for
as such
it is no longer their posited unity,
and
they are no longer present as moments,
as
the illusory being, of the Notion,
but as
subsistent in and for themselves. As
individuality,
the Notion in its determinateness returns
into itself, and therewith the determinate
moment has itself become a totality.
Its
return into itself is therefore the
absolute,
original partition of itself, or, in
other
words, it is posited as judgment.
Chapter 2 The Judgment § 1346
The judgment is the determinateness
of the
Notion posited in the Notion itself.
The
Notion's determinations, or what we
have
seen to be the same thing, the determinate
Notions, have already been considered
on
their own; but this consideration was
more
a subjective reflection or subjective
abstraction.
But the Notion is itself this abstractive
process, the opposing of its determinations
is its own determining activity. The
judgment
is this positing of the determinate
Notions
by the Notion itself. Judging is thus
another
function than comprehension, or rather
it
is the other function of the Notion
as the
determining of the Notion by itself,
and
the further progress of the judgment
into
the diversity of judgments is the progressive
determination of the Notion. What kinds
of
determinate Notions there are, and
how these
determinations of the Notion are arrived
at, has to reveal itself in the judgment.
§ 1347
The judgment can therefore be called
the
proximate realisation of the Notion,
inasmuch
as reality denotes in general entry
into
existence as a determinate being. More
precisely,
the nature of this realisation has
presented
itself in such a manner that, on the
one
hand, the moments of the Notion through
its
reflection-into-self or its individuality
are self-subsistent totalities, while
on
the other hand the unity of the Notion
is
their relation. The determinations
reflected
into themselves are determinate totalities,
no less essentially in their indifferent
and disconnected subsistence as through
their
reciprocal mediation with one another.
The
determining itself is only totality
in that
it contains these totalities and their
connection.
This totality is the judgment. It contains,
therefore, first, the two self-subsistents
which are called subject and predicate.
What
each is cannot yet really be said;
they are
still indeterminate, for it is only
through
the judgment that they are to be determined.
The judgment, being the Notion as determinate,
the only distinction present is the
general
one that the judgment contains the
determinate
Notion over against the still indeterminate
Notion. The subject can therefore,
in the
first instance, be taken in relation
to the
predicate as the individual over against
the universal, or even as the particular
over against the universal, or as the
individual
over against the particular; so far,
they
confront each other only in general,
as the
more determinate and the more universal.
§ 1348
It is therefore appropriate and necessary
to have these names, subject and predicate
for the determinations of the judgment;
as
names, they are something indeterminate
that
still awaits its determination, and
are,
therefore, no more than names. It is
partly
for this reason that the Notion determinations
themselves could not be used for the
two
sides of the judgment; but a stronger
reason
is because the nature of the Notion
determination
is emphatically to be, not something
abstract
and fixed, but to have and to posit
its opposite
within it; since the sides of the judgment
are themselves Notions and therefore
the
totality of its determinations, each
side
must run through all these determinations
and exhibit them within itself, whether
in
abstract or concrete form. Now in order
to
fix the sides of the judgment in a
general
way when their determination is altered,
those names are most serviceable which
remain
the same throughout the alteration.
The name
however stands over against the matter
in
hand or the Notion; this distinction
presents
itself in the judgment as such; now
the subject
is in general the determinate, and
is therefore
more that which immediately is, whereas
the
predicate expresses the universal,
the essential
nature or the Notion; therefore the
subject
as such is, in the first instance,
only a
kind of name; for what it is is first
enunciated
by the predicate which contains being
in
the sense of the Notion. In the question:
what is this? or: what kind of a plant
is
this? what is often understood by the
being
enquired after, is merely the name,
and when
this is learned one is satisfied and
now
knows what the thing is. This is being
in
the sense of the subject. But the Notion,
or at least the essence and the universal
in general, is first given by the predicate,
and it is this that is asked for in
the sense
of the judgment. Consequently, God,
spirit,
nature, or whatever it may be, is as
the
subject of a judgment at first only
the name;
what such a subject is as regards its
Notion
is first enunciated in the predicate.
When
enquiry is made as to the kind of predicate
belonging to such subject, the act
of judgment
necessarily implies an underlying Notion.
But this Notion is first enunciated
by the
predicate itself. Properly speaking,
therefore,
it is the mere general idea that constitutes
the presupposed meaning of the subject
and
that leads to the naming of it; and
in doing
this it is contingent and a historical
fact,
what is, or is not, to be understood
by a
name. So many disputes about whether
a predicate
does or does not belong to a certain
subject
are therefore nothing more than verbal
disputes,
because they start from the form above
mentioned;
what lies at the base is so far nothing
more
than the name.
§ 1349
We have now to examine, secondly, how
the
relation of subject and predicate in
the
judgment is determined and how subject
and
predicate themselves are at first determined
through this very relation. The judgment
has in general for its sides totalities
which
to begin with are essentially self-subsistent.
The unity of the Notion is, therefore,
at
first only a relation of self-subsistents;
not as yet the concrete and pregnant
unity
that has returned into itself from
this reality,
but only a unity outside which the
self-subsistent
sides persist as extremes that are
not sublated
in it. Now consideration of the judgment
can begin from the original unity of
the
Notion, or from the self-subsistence
of the
extremes. The judgment is the self-diremption
of the Notion; this unity is, therefore,
the ground from which the consideration
of
the judgment in accordance with its
true
objectivity begins. It is thus the
original
division [Teilung] of what is originally
one; thus the word Urteil refers to
what
judgment is in and for itself. But
regarded
from the side of externality, the Notion
is present in the judgment as Appearance,
since its moments therein attain self-subsistence,
and it is on this external side that
ordinary
thinking tends to fasten.
§ 1350
From this subjective standpoint, then,
subject
and predicate are considered to be
complete,
each on its own account, apart from
the other:
the subject as an object that would
exist
even if it did not possess this predicate;
the predicate as a universal determination
that would exist even if it did not
belong
to this subject. From this standpoint,
the
act of judgment involves the reflection,
whether this or that predicate which
is in
someone's head can and should be attached
to the object which exists on its own
account
outside; the very act of judging consists
in this, that only through it is a
predicate
combined with a subject, so that, if
this
combination did not take place, each
on its
own would still remain what it is,
the latter
an existent object, the former an idea
in
someone's head. The predicate which
is attached
to the subject should, however, also
belong
to it, that is, be in and for itself
identical
with it. Through this significance
of attachment,
the subjective meaning of judgment
and the
indifferent, outer subsistence of subject
and predicate are sublated again: this
action
is good; the copula indicates that
the predicate
belongs to the being of the subject
and is
not merely externally combined with
it. In
the grammatical sense, that subjective
relationship
in which one starts from the indifferent
externality of the subject and predicate
has its complete validity; for it is
words
that are here externally combined.
We may
take this opportunity of remarking,
too,
that though a proposition has a subject
and
predicate in the grammatical sense,
this
does not make it a judgment. The latter
requires
that the predicate be related to the
subject
as one Notion determination to another,
and
therefore as a universal to a particular
or individual. If a statement about
a particular
subject only enunciates something individual,
then this is a mere proposition, For
example,
'Aristotle died at the age of 73, in
the
fourth year of the 115th Olympiad,'
is a
mere proposition, not a judgment. It
would
partake of the nature of a judgment
only
if doubt had been thrown on one of
the circumstances,
the date of the death, or the age of
that
philosopher, and the given figures
had been
asserted on the strength of some reason
or
other. In that case, these figures
would
be taken as something universal, as
time
that still subsists apart from this
particular
content of the death of Aristotle,
whether
as time filled with some other content,
or
even as empty time. Similarly, the
news that
my friend N. has died is a proposition;
and
it would be a judgment only if there
were
a question whether he was really dead
or
only in a state of catalepsy.
§ 1351
In the usual way of defining the judgment
we may indeed accept the indeterminate
expression
connection for the external copula,
as also
that the connected terms are at least
supposed
to be notions. But in other respects
this
definition is superficial in the extreme:
not only, for example, that in the
disjunctive
judgment more than two so-called notions
are connected, but rather that the
definition
is far better than its subject matter;
for
it is not notions at all that are meant,
hardly determinations of the Notion,
but
really only determinations of representational
thought; it was remarked in connection
with
the Notion in general and the determinate
Notion, that what is usually so named
by
no means deserves the name of Notion;
where
then should Notions come from in the
case
of the judgment? Above all, in this
definition
the essential feature of the judgment,
namely,
the difference of its determinations,
is
passed over; still less does it take
into
account the relationship of the judgment
to the Notion.
§ 1352
As regards the further determination
of the
subject and predicate, we have remarked
that
it is really in the judgment first
that they
have to receive their determination.
Since
the judgment is the posited determinateness
of the Notion, this determinateness
possesses
the said differences immediately and
abstractly
as individuality and universality.
But in
so far as the judgment is in general
the
determinate being or otherness of the
Notion
which has not yet restored itself to
the
unity whereby it is as Notion, there
emerges
also-the determinateness which is notionless,
the opposition of being and reflection
or
the in-itself. But since the Notion
constitutes
the essential ground of the judgment,
these
determinations are at least indifferent
to
the extent that when one belongs to
the subject
and the other to the predicate, the
converse
relationship equally holds good. The
subject
as the individual appears, in the first
instance,
as that which simply is or is for itself
in accordance with the specific determinateness
of the individual - as an actual object,
even though it be only an object in
representational
thought - as for example bravery, right,
agreement, etc. - on which judgment
is being
made. The predicate, on the other hand,
as
the universal, appears as this reflection
on the object, or rather as the object's
reflection into itself, which goes
beyond
that immediacy and sublates the determinatenesses
in their form of mere being; that is,
it
is the object's in-itself. In this
way, one
starts from the individual as the first,
the immediate, and it is raised by
the judgment
into universality, just as, conversely,
the
universal that is only in itself descends
in the individual into determinate
being
or becomes a being that is for itself.
§ 1353
This signification of the judgment
is to
be taken as its objective meaning,
and at
the same time as the truth of the earlier
forms of the transition. In the sphere
of
being, the object becomes and others
itself,
the finite perishes or goes under in
the
infinite; in the sphere of Existence,
the
object issues from its ground into
Appearance
and falls to the ground, the accident
manifests
the wealth of substance as well as
its power;
in being, there is transition into
an other,
in essence, reflected being in an other
by
which the necessary relation is revealed.
This movement of transition and reflection
has now passed over into the original
partition
of the Notion which, while bringing
back
the individual to the in-itself of
its universality,
equally determines the universal as
something
actual. These two acts are one and
the same
process in which individuality is posited
in its reflection-into-self, and the
universal
as determinate.
§ 1354
But now this objective signification
equally
implies that the said differences,
in reappearing
in the determinateness of the Notion,
are
at the same time posited only as Appearances,
that is, that they are not anything
fixed,
but apply just as much to the one Notion
determination as to the other. The
subject
is, therefore, just as much to be taken
as
the in-itself, and the predicate, on
the
other hand, as determinate being. The
subject
without predicate is what the thing
without
qualities, the thing-in-itself is in
the
sphere of Appearance - an empty, indeterminate
ground; as such, it is the Notion enclosed
within itself, which only receives
a differentiation
and determinateness in the predicate;
the
predicate therefore constitutes the
side
of the determinate being of the subject.
Through this determinate universality
the
subject stands in relation to an externality,
is open to the influence of other things
and thereby becomes actively opposed
to them.
What is there comes forth from its
being-within-self
and enters into the universal element
of
connection and relationship, into the
negative
connections and the interplay of actuality,
which is a continuation of the individual
into other individuals and therefore
universality.
§ 1355
The identity just demonstrated, namely,
that
the determination of the subject equally
applies to the predicate and vice versa,
is not, however, something only for
us; it
is not merely in itself, but is also
posited
in the judgment; for the judgment is
the
connection of the two; the copula expresses
that the subject is the predicate.
The subject
is the specific determinateness, and
the
predicate is this posited determinateness
of the subject; the subject is determined
only in its predicate, or, only in
the predicate
is it a subject; in the predicate it
has
returned into itself and is therein
the universal.
Now in so far as the subject is the
self-
subsistent, this identity has the relationship
that the predicate does not possess
a self-subsistence
of its own, but has its subsistence
only
in the subject; it inheres in the subject.
Since the predicate is thus distinct
from
the subject, it is only an isolated
determinateness
of the latter, only one of its properties;
while the subject itself is the concrete,
the totality of manifold determinatenesses,
just as the predicate contains one;
it is
the universal.
§ 1356
But on the other hand the predicate,
too,
is a self-subsistent universality and
the
subject, conversely, only a determination
of it. Looked at this way, the predicate
subsumes the subject; individuality
and particularity
are not for themselves, but have their
essence
and substance in the universal. The
predicate
expresses the subject in its Notion;
the
individual and the particular are contingent
determinations in the subject; it is
their
absolute possibility. When in the case
of
subsumption one thinks of an external
connection
of subject and predicate and the subject
is conceived of as a self-subsistent
something,
the subsumption refers to the subjective
act of judgment above-mentioned in
which
one starts from the self-subsistence
of both
subject and predicate. From this standpoint
subsumption is only the application
of the
universal to a particular or an individual,
which is placed under the universal
in accordance
with a vague idea that it is of inferior
quality.
§ 1357
When the identity of subject and predicate
are so taken that at one time one Notion
determination applies to the former
and the
other to the latter, and at another
time
the converse equally holds good, then
the
identity is as yet still only an implicit
one; on account of the self-subsistent
diversity
of the two sides of the judgment, their
posited
unity also has these two sides, in
the first
instance as different. But differenceless
identity really constitutes the true
relation
of the subject to the predicate. The
Notion
determination is itself essentially
relation
for it is a universal; therefore the
same
determinations possessed by the subject
and
predicate are also possessed by their
relation
itself. The relation is universal,
for it
is the positive identity of the two,
of subject
and predicate; but it is also determinate,
for the determinateness of the predicate
is that of the subject; further, it
is also
individual, for in it the self-subsistent
extremes are sublated as in their negative
unity. However, in the judgment this
identity
is not as yet posited; the copula is
present
as the still indeterminate relation
of being
as such: A is B; for in the judgment,
the
self-subsistence of the Notion determinatenesses
or the extremes, is the reality which
the
Notion has within it. If the is of
the copula
were already posited as the above determinate
and pregnant unity of subject and predicate,
as their Notion, it would already be
the
syllogism.
§ 1358
To restore this identity of the Notion,
or
rather to posit it, is the goal of
the movement
of the judgment. What is already present
in the judgment is, on the one hand,
the
self-subsistence of subject and predicate,
but also their mutually opposed determinateness,
and on the other hand their none the
less
abstract relation. What the judgment
enunciates
to start with is that the subject is
the
predicate; but since the predicate
is supposed
not to be what the subject is, we are
faced
with a contradiction which must resolve
itself,
pass over into a result. Or rather,
since
subject and predicate are in and for
themselves
the totality of the Notion, and the
judgment
is the reality of the Notion, its forward
movement is only a development; there
is
already present in it what comes forth
from
it, so that proof is merely an exposition,
a reflection as a positing of that
which
is already present in the extremes
of the
judgment; but even this positing itself
is
already present; it is the relation
of the
extremes.
§ 1359
The judgment in its immediacy is in
the first
instance the judgment of existence;
its subject
is immediately an abstract individual
which
simply is, and the predicate is an
immediate
determinateness or property of the
subject,
an abstract universal.
This qualitative character of subject
and
predicate being sublated, the determination
of the one is reflected, to begin with,
in
the other; the judgment is now, secondly,
the judgment of reflection.
But this more external conjunction
passes
over into the essential identity of
a substantial,
necessary connection; as such it is,
thirdly,
the judgment of necessity.
Fourthly, since in this essential identity
the difference of subject and predicate
has
become a form, the judgment becomes
subjective;
it contains the opposition of the Notion
and its reality and the equation of
the two;
it is the judgment of the Notion.
This emergence of the Notion establishes
the transition of the Judgment into
the syllogism.
A. THE JUDGMENT OF EXISTENCE § 1360
In the subjective judgment we want
to see
one and the same object double, first
in
its individual actuality, and then
in its
essential identity or in its Notion:
the
individual raised into its universality,
or, what is the same thing, the universal
individualised into its actuality.
In this
way the judgment is truth: for it is
the
agreement of the Notion and reality.
But
this is not the nature of the judgment
at
first; for at first it is immediate,
since
as yet no reflection and movement of
the
determinations has appeared in it.
This immediacy
makes the first judgment a judgment
of existence;
it can also be called the qualitative
judgment,
but only in so far as quality does
not apply
only to the determinateness of being
but
also includes the abstract universality
which,
on account of its simplicity, likewise
has
the form of immediacy.
§ 1361
The judgment of existence is also the
judgment
of inherence; because it is in the
form of
immediacy, and because the subject
as distinguished
from the predicate is the immediate,
and
consequently the primary and essential
feature
in a judgment of this kind, the predicate
has the form of a non-self-subsistent
determination
that has its foundation in the subject.
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(a) The Positive Judgment
(b) The Negative Judgment
(c) The Infinite Judgment
B. THE JUDGMENT OF REFLECTION § 1387
In the judgment that has now arisen,
the
subject is an individual as such; and
similarly
the universal is no longer an abstract
universality
or a single property, but is posited
as a
universal that has gathered itself
together
into a unity through the relation of
distinct
terms; or, regarding it from the point
of
view of the content of various determinations
in general, as the taking together
of various
properties and existences. If examples
are
to be given of predicates of judgments
of
reflection, they must be of another
kind
than for judgments of existence. It
is in
the judgment of reflection that we
first
have, strictly speaking, a determinate
content,
that is, a content as such; for the
content
is the form determination which is
reflected
into identity as distinct from the
form in
so far as this is a distinct determinateness
- as it still is in the judgment. In
the
judgment of existence the content is
merely
an immediate, or abstract, indeterminate
content. The following may therefore
serve
as examples of judgments of reflection:
man
is mortal, things are perishable, this
thing
is useful, harmful; hardness, elasticity
of bodies, happiness, etc. are predicates
of this peculiar kind. They express
an essential
determination, but one which is in
a relationship
or is a unifying universality.
§ 1388
This universality, which will further
determine
itself in the movement of the judgment
of
reflection, is still distinct from
the universality
of the Notion as such; true, it is
no longer
the abstract universality of the qualitative
judgment, but it still possesses a
relation
to the immediate from which it proceeds
and
has the latter as the basis of its
negativity.
The Notion determines the existent,
in the
first instance, to determinations of
relation,
to self-continuities in the diverse
multiplicity
of concrete existence-yet in such a
manner
that the genuine universal, though
it is
the inner essence of that multiplicity,
is
still in the sphere of Appearance,
and this
relative nature-or even the mark-of
this
multiplicity is still not the moment
of being-in-and-for-self
of the latter.
§ 1389
It may suggest itself to define the
judgment
of reflection as a judgment of quantity,
just as the judgment of existence was
also
defined as qualitative judgment. But
just
as immediacy in the latter was not
merely
an immediacy which simply is, but one
which
was essentially also mediated and abstract,
so here, too, that sublated immediacy
is
not merely sublated quality, and therefore
not merely quantity; on the contrary,
just
as quality is the most external immediacy,
so is quantity, in the same way, the
most
external determination belonging to
mediation.
§ 1390
Further, as regards the determination
as
it appears in its movement in the judgment
of reflection, it should be remarked
that
in the judgment of existence the movement
of the determination showed itself
in the
predicate, because this judgment was
in the
determination of immediacy and the
subject
consequently appeared as the basis.
For a
similar reason, in the judgment of
reflection,
the onward movement of determining
runs its
course in the subject, because this
judgment
has for its determination the reflected
in-itself.
Here therefore the essential element
is the
universal or the predicate; hence it
constitutes
the basis by which, and in accordance
with
which, the subject is to be measured
and
determined. However, the predicate
also receives
a further determination through the
further
development of the form of the subject;
but
this occurs indirectly, whereas the
development
of the subject is, for the reason stated,
a direct advance.
§ 1391
As regards the objective signification
of
the judgment, the individual, through
its
universality, enters into existence,
but
in an essential determination of relationship,
in an essentiality which maintains
itself
throughout the multiplicity of the
world
of Appearance; the subject is supposed
to
be determinate in and for itself; this
determinateness
it possesses in its predicate. The
individual,
on the other hand, is reflected into
this
its predicate which is its universal
essence;
the subject is in so far a concrete
existence
in the world of Appearance. The predicate
in this judgment no longer inheres
in the
subject; it is rather the implicit
being
under which this individual is subsumed
as
an accidental. If the judgments of
existence
may also be defined as judgments of
inherence,
judgments of reflection are, on the
contrary,
judgments of subsumption.
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(a) The Singular Judgment
(b) The Particular Judgment
(c) The Universal Judgment
C. THE JUDGMENT OF NECESSITY § 1405
The determination to which universality
has
advanced is, as we have seen, the universality
which is in and for itself or objective,
to which in the sphere of essence substantiality
corresponds. It is distinguished from
the
latter in that it belongs to the Notion
and
is therefore not merely the inner but
also
the posited necessity of its determinations;
or, in other words, the difference
is immanent
in it, whereas substance has its difference
only in its accidents, but not as principle
within itself.
§ 1406
Now in the judgment, this objective
universality
is posited; first, therefore, with
this its
essential determinateness as immanent
in
it, secondly, with its determinateness
distinguished
from it as particularity, of which
this universality
constitutes the substantial basis.
In this
way it is determined as genus and species.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Categorical Judgment
(b) The Hypothetical Judgment
(c) The Disjunctive Judgment
D. THE JUDGMENT OF THE NOTION § 1417
The ability to form judgments of existence
such as 'the rose is red', 'snow is
white',
and so forth, will hardly count as
evidence
of great powers of judgment. The judgments
of reflection are rather propositions;
in
the judgment of necessity the object
appears,
it is true, in its objective universality,
but it is only in the judgment now
to be
considered that its relation to the
Notion
is found. In this judgment the Notion
is
laid down as the basis, and since it
is in
relation to the object, it is an ought-to-be
to which the reality may or may not
be adequate.
Therefore it is only a judgment of
this kind
that contains a true appreciation;
the predicates
good, bad, true, beautiful, correct,
etc.
express that the thing is measured
against
its universal Notion as the simply
presupposed
ought-to-be and is, or is not, in agreement
with it.
§ 1418
The judgment of the Notion has been
called
the judgment of modality and it has
been
regarded as containing that form of
the relationship
between subject and predicate which
is found
in an external understanding, and to
be concerned
with the value of the copula only in
relation
to thinking.
§ 1419
According to this view, the problematical
judgment is one where the affirmation
or
denial is taken as optional or possible;
the assertoric, where it is taken as
true,
that is as actual; and the apodeictic,
where
it is taken as necessary. It is easy
to see
why it is so natural in the case of
this
judgment to step out of the sphere
of judgment
itself and to regard its determination
as
something merely subjective. For here
it
is the Notion, or the subjective, that
reappears
in the judgment and stands in relationship
to an external actuality. But this
subjectivity
is not to be confused with external
reflection,
which of course is also something subjective,
but in a different sense from the Notion
itself; on the contrary, the Notion
that
re-emerges from the disjunctive judgment
is the opposite of a mere contingent
mode.
The earlier judgments are in this sense
merely
subjective, for they are based on an
abstraction
and one-sidedness in which the Notion
is
lost. The judgment of the Notion, on
the
contrary, is objective and the truth
as against
those earlier judgments, just because
it
has for its basis the Notion, not the
Notion
in external reflection or in relation
to
a subjective, that is contingent, thinking,
but the Notion in its determinateness
as
Notion.
§ 1420
In the disjunctive judgment the Notion
was
posited as identity of the universal
nature
with its particularisation; consequently
the relation of the judgment was cancelled.
This concretion of universality and
particularisation
is, at first, a simple result; it has
now
to develop itself further into totality,
since the moments which it contains
are at
first swallowed up in it and as yet
do not
confront one another in determinate
self-subsistence.
The defect of the result may also be
more
definitely expressed by saying that
in the
disjunctive judgment, although objective
universality has completed itself in
its
particularisation, yet the negative
unity
of the latter merely returns into the
former
and has not yet determined itself to
the
third moment, that of individuality.
Yet
in so far as the result itself is negative
unity, it is indeed already this individuality;
but as such it is only this one determinateness,
which has now to posit its negativity,
sunder
itself into the extremes and in this
way
finally develop into the syllogism.
§ 1421
The proximate diremption of this unity
is
the judgment in which it is posited
first
as subject, as an immediate individual,
and
then as predicate, as the determinate
relation
of its moments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Assertoric Judgment
(b) The Problematic Judgment
(c) The Apodetic Judgment
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§ 1431
This judgment, then, is truly objective;
or it is the truth of the judgment
in general.
Subject and predicate correspond to
each
other and have the same content, and
this
content is itself the posited concrete
universality;
it contains, namely, the two moments,
the
objective universal or the enus, and
the
individualised universal. Here, therefore,
we have the universal which is itself
and
continues itself through its opposite
and
is a universal only as unity with this
opposite.
A universal of this kind, such as the
predicate
good, suitable, correct, etc., is based
on
an ought-to-be and at the same time
contains
the correspondence of existence to
that ought-to-be;
it is not this ought-to-be or the genus
by
itself, but this correspondence that
is the
universality which constitutes the
predicate
of the apodeictic judgment.
§ 1432
The subject likewise contains these
two moments
in immediate unity as the fact. But
it is
the truth of the fact that it is internally
split into what it ought-to-be and
what it
is; this is the absolute judgment on
all
actuality. It is because this original
partition,
which is the omnipotence of the Notion,
is
just as much a return into its unity
and
an absolute relation of the ought-to-be
and
being to each other that makes what
is actual
into a fact; its inner relation, this
concrete
identity, constitutes the soul of the
fact.
§ 1433
The transition from the immediate simplicity
of the fact to the correspondence which
is
the determinate relation of its ought-to-be
and its being - or the copula - is
now seen,
on closer examination, to lie in the
particular
determinateness of the fact. The genus
is
the universal in and for itself, which
as
such appears as the unrelated; while
the
determinateness is that which in that
universal
is reflected into itself, yet at the
same
time is reflected into an other. The
judgment
therefore has its ground in the constitution
of the subject and thereby is apodeictic.
Hence we now have before us the determinate
and fulfilled copula, which formerly
consisted
in the abstract 'is', but has now further
developed itself into ground in general.
It appears at first as an immediate
determinateness
in the subject, but it is no less the
relation
to the predicate which has no other
content
than this very correspondence, or the
relation
of the subject to the universality.
§ 1434
Thus the form of the judgment has perished;
first because subject and predicate
are in
themselves the same content; secondly
because
the subject through its determinateness
points
beyond itself and relates itself to
the predicate;
but also, thirdly, this relating has
passed
over into the predicate, alone. constitutes
its content, and is thus the posited
relation,
or the judgment itself. Thus the concrete
identity of the Notion which was the
result
of the disjunctive judgment and which
constitutes
the inner basis of the Notion judgment
-
which identity was at first posited
only
in the predicate - is now restored
in the
whole.
§ 1435
If we examine the positive element
of this
result which effects the transition
of the
judgment into another form, we find,
as we
have seen, that subject and predicate
in
the apodeictic judgment are each the
whole
Notion. The unity of the Notion as
the determinateness
constituting the copula that relates
them,
is at the same time distinct from them.
At
first, it stands only on the other
side of
the subject as the latter's immediate
constitution.
But since it is essentially that which
relates
subject and predicate, it is not merely
such
immediate constitution but the universal
that permeates both subject and predicate.
While subject and predicate have the
same
content, the form relation, on the
other
hand, is posited through this determinateness,
determinateness as a universal or particularity.
Thus it contains within itself the
two form
determinations of the extremes and
is the
determinate relation of subject and
predicate;
it is the fulfilled copula of the judgment,
the copula pregnant with content, the
unity
of the Notion that has re-emerged from
the
judgment in which it was lost in the
extremes.
Through this impregnation of the copula
the
judgment has become the syllogism.
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