
SCIENCE OF LOGIC
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Wissenschaft der Logik (1812-1816)
Translated by A. V. Miller George Allen &
Unwin, 1969 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 Absolute Idea
The Absolute Idea § 1781
The absolute Idea has turned out to
be the
identity of the theoretical and the
practical
Idea. Each of these by itself is still
one-sided,
possessing the Idea only as a sought
for
beyond and an unattained goal; each,
therefore,
is a synthesis of endeavour, and has,
but
equally has not, the Idea in it; each
passes
from one thought to the other without
bringing
the two together, and so remains fixed
in
their contradiction. The absolute Idea,
as
the rational Notion that in its reality
meets
only with itself, is by virtue of this
immediacy
of its objective identity, on the one
hand
the return to life; but it has no less
sublated
this form of its immediacy, and contains
within itself the highest degree of
opposition.
The Notion is not merely soul but free
subjective
Notion that is for itself and therefore
possesses
personality - the practical, objective
Notion
determined in and for itself which,
as person,
is impenetrable atomic individuality,
but
explicitly universality and cognition,
and
in its other has its own objectivity
for
its object. All else is error, confusion,
opinion, endeavour, caprice and transitoriness;
the absolute Idea alone is being, imperishable
life, self-knowing truth, and is all
truth.
§ 1782
It is the sole subject matter and content
of philosophy. Since it contains all
determinations
within it, and its essential nature
is to
return to itself through its self-
determination
or particularisation, it has various
shapes,
and the business of philosophy is to
cognise
it in these. Nature and spirit are
in general
different modes of presenting its existence,
art and religion its different modes
of apprehending
itself and giving itself an adequate
existence.
Philosophy has the same content and
the same
end as art and religion; but it is
the highest
mode of apprehending the absolute idea,
because
its mode is the highest mode, the Notion.
Hence it embraces those shapes of real
and
ideal finitude as well as of infinitude
and
cognition of these particular modes
is now
the further business of the particular
philosophical
sciences.
§ 1783
The logical aspect of the absolute
Idea may
also be called a mode of it; but whereas
mode signifies a particular kind, a
determinateness
of form, the logical aspect, on the
contrary,
is the universal mode in which all
particular
modes are sublated and enfolded. The
logical
Idea os the Idea itself in its pure
essence,
the Idea enclosed in simple identity
within
its Notion prior to its immediate reflection
in a form-determinateness.
Hence logic exhibits the self-movement
of
the absolute Idea only as original
word,
which is an outwardising or utterance,
but
an utterance that in being has immediately
vanished again as something outer;
the Idea
is, therefore, only in this self-determination
of apprehending itself; it is in pure
thought,
in which difference is not yet otherness,
but is and remains perfectly transparent
to itself. Thus the logical Idea has
itself
as the infinite form for its content
- form
which constitutes the opposite to content
to this extent that the content is
the form-determination
withdrawn into itself and sublated
in the
identity in such a manner that this
concrete
identity stands opposed to the identity
explicated
as form; the content has the shape
of an
other and a datum as against the form
which
as such stands simply in relation,
and its
determinateness is at the same time
posited
as an illusory being. More exactly,
the determination
is its own completed totality, the
pure Notion.
Now the determinateness of the Idea
and the
entire course followed by this determinateness
has constituted the subject matter
of the
science of logic, from which course
the absolute
Idea itself has issued into an existence
of its own; but the nature of this
existence
has shown itself to be this, that determinateness
does not have the shape of content,
but exists
wholly as form, and that accordingly
the
Idea is the absolutely universal Idea.
Therefore
what remains to be considered here
is not
a content as such, but the universal
aspect
of its form - that is, the method.
§ 1784
Method may appear at first as the mere
manner
peculiar to the process of cognition,
and
as a matter of fact it has the nature
of
such. But the peculiar manner, as method,
is not merely a modality of being determined
in and for itself; it is a modality
of cognition,
and as such is posited as determined
by the
Notion and as form, in so far as the
form
is the soul of all objectivity and
all otherwise
determined content has its truth in
the form
alone.
If the content again is assumed as
given
to the method and of a peculiar nature
of
its own, then in such a determination
method,
as with the logical element in general,
is
a merely external form. Against this
however
we can appeal not only to the fundamental
Notion of the science of logic; its
entire
course, in which all possible shapes
of a
given content and of objects came up
for
consideration, has demonstrated their
transition
and untruth; also that not merely was
it
impossible for a given object to be
the foundation
to which the absolute form stood in
a merely
external and contingent relationship
but
that, on the contrary, the absolute
form
has proved itself to be the absolute
foundation
and ultimate truth. From this course
the
method has emerged as the self-knowing
Notion
that has itself, as the absolute, both
subjective
and objective, for its subject matter,
consequently
as the pure correspondence of the Notion
and its reality, as a concrete that
is the
Notion itself.
§ 1785
Accordingly, what is to be considered
here
as method is only the movement of the
Notion
itself, the nature of which movement
has
already been cognised; but first, there
is
now the added significance that the
Notion
is everything, and its movement is
the universal
absolute activity, the self-determining
and
self- realising movement. The method
is therefore
to be recognised as the unrestrictedly
universal,
internal and external mode; and as
the absolutely
infinite force, to which no object,
presenting
itself as something external, remote
from
and independent of reason, could offer
resistance
or be of a particular nature in opposition
to it, or could not be penetrated by
it.
It is therefore soul and substance,
and anything
whatever is comprehended and known
in its
truth only when it is completely subjugated
to the method; it is the method proper
to
every subject matter because its activity
is the Notion. This is also the truer
meaning
if its universality; according to the
universality
of reflection it is regarded merely
as the
method for everything; but according
to the
universality of the Idea, it is both
the
manner peculiar to cognition, to the
subjectively
selfknowing Notion, and also the objective
manner, or rather the substantiality,
of
things - that is of Notions, in so
far as
they appear primarily to representation
and
reflection as others. It is therefore
not
only the highest force, or rather the
sole
and absolute force of reason, but also
its
supreme and sole urge to find and cognise
itself by means of itself in everything.
Here, secondly, is indicated the difference
of the method from the Notion as such,
the
particular aspect of the method. The
Notion,
when it was considered by itself, appeared
in its immediacy; the reflection, or
the
Notion that considered it, fell within
our
knowing.
The method is this knowing itself,
for which
the Notion is not merely the subject
matter,
but knowing's own subjective act, the
instrument
and means of the cognising activity,
distinguished
from that activity, but only as the
activity's
own essentiality. In the cognition
of enquiry,
the method likewise occupies the position
of an instrument, of a means standing
on
the subjective side by which this side
relates
itself to the object. In this syllogism
the
subject is one extreme and the object
the
other, and the former by means of its
method
unites with the latter, but in doing
so it
does not unite with itself. The extremes
remain diverse because subject, method,
and
object are not posited as the one identical
Notion; the syllogism is therefore
still
the formal syllogism; the premises
in which
the subject posits the form on its
side as
its method is an immediate determination,
and therefore contains the determinations
of form, as we have seen, of definition,
division, and so forth, as facts found
existing
in the subject. In true cognition on
the
contrary, the method is not merely
an aggregate
of certain determinations, but the
Notion
that is determined in and for itself;
and
the Notion is the middle term only
because
it has equally the significance of
the objective,
and consequently in the conclusion
the objective
does not merely attain an external
determinateness
by means of the method, but is posited
in
its identity with the subjective Notion.
§ 1786
1. Thus what constitute the method
are the
determinations of the Notion itself
and their
relations, which we have now to consider
in their significance as determinations
of
the method. In doing so we must first
begin
with the beginning. Of the beginning
we have
already spoken at the beginning of
the Logic
itself, and also above, when dealing
with
subjective cognition, and we have shown
that,
if it is not made arbitrarily and with
a
categorical unconsciousness, it may
indeed
seem to involve a number of difficulties
but nevertheless is of an extremely
simple
nature. Because it is the beginning,
its
content is an immediate, but an immediate
that has the significance and form
of abstract
universality. Be it otherwise a content
of
being, or of essence, or of the Notion,
it
is as an immediate something assumed,
found
already in existence, assertorical.
But first
of all it is not an immediate of sensuous
intuition or of representation, but
of thinking,
which on account of its immediacy may
also
be called a supersensuous inner intuition.
The immediate of sensuous intuition
is a
manifold and an individual. But cognition
is thinking by means of notions, and
therefore
its beginning also is only in the element
of thought - it is a simple and a universal.
This form has already been discussed
under
definition. At the beginning of finite
cognition
universality is likewise recognised
as an
essential determination, but it is
taken
as a determination of thought and of
Notion
only in opposition to being. In point
of
fact this first universality is an
immediate
one, and for that reason has equally
the
significance of being; for being is
precisely
this abstract relation-to-self. Being
requires
no further derivation, as though it
belonged
to the abstract product of definition
only
because it is taken from sensuous intuition
or elsewhere, and in so far as it is
pointed
out to us. This pointing out and derivation
is a matter of mediation, which is
more than
a mere beginning, and is a mediation
of a
kind that does not belong to a comprehension
by means of thinking, but is the elevation
of ordinary thinking, of the empirical
and
ratiocinative consciousness, to the
standpoint
of thought. According to the current
opposition
of thought or concept and being it
is regarded
as an important truth that no being
belongs
as yet to the former, taken on its
own, and
that the latter has a ground of its
own that
is independent of thought. But the
simple
determination of being is in itself
so meagre
that, if only for that reason, there
is no
need to make much fuss about it; the
universal
is immediately itself this immediate,
since
as abstract it also is merely the abstract
relation-to-self, which is being. As
a matter
of fact, the demand that being should
be
exhibited for us to see has a further,
inner
meaning involving more than this abstract
determination; what is meant by it
is in
general the demand for the realisation
of
the Notion, which realisation does
not lie
in the beginning itself, but is rather
the
goal and the task of the entire further
development
of cognition. Further, since the content
of the beginning is supposed to be
justified
and authenticated as something true
or correct
by its being pointed out in inner or
outer
perception, it is no longer the form
of universality
as such that is meant, but its determinateness,
of which we shall need to speak presently.
The authentication of the determinate
content
with which the beginning is made seems
to
lie behind it; but in fact it is to
be considered
as an advance, that is, if it belongs
to
philosophical cognition.
§ 1787
Hence the beginning has for the method
no
other determinateness than that of
being
simple and universal; this is itself
the
determinateness by reason of which
it is
deficient. Universality is the pure
simple
Notion, and the method, as consciousness
of the Notion, knows that universality
is
only a moment and that in it the Notion
is
not yet determined in and for itself.
But
with this consciousness that would
carry
the beginning further only for the
sake of
the method, the method would be a formal
affair, something posited in external
reflection.
Since however it is the objective immanent
form, the immediate of the beginning
must
be in its own self deficient and endowed
with the urge to carry itself further.
But
in the absolute method the universal
has
the value not of a mere abstraction
but of
the objective universal, that is, the
universal
that is in itself the concrete totality,
though that totality is not yet posited,
is not yet for itself. Even the abstract
universal as such, considered in its
Notion,
that is in its truth, is not merely
the simple,
but as abstract is already posited
as infected
with a negation. For this reason too
there
is nothing, whether in actuality or
in thought,
that is as simple and as abstract as
is commonly
imagined. A simple thing of this kind
is
a mere presumption that has its ground
solely
in the unconsciousness of what is actually
present. Above, that with which the
beginning
is made was determined as the immediate;
the immediacy of the universal is the
same
thing that is here expressed as the
in-itself
that is without a being-for-self. Hence
it
may indeed be said that every beginning
must
be made with the absolute, just as
all advance
is merely the exposition of it, in
so far
as its in-itself is the Notion. But
because
the absolute is at first only in itself
it
equally is not the absolute nor the
posited
Notion, and also not the Idea; for
what characterises
these is precisely the fact that in
them
the in-itself is only an abstract,
one-sided
moment. Hence the advance is not a
kind of
superfluity; this it would be if that
with
which the beginning is made were in
truth
already the absolute; the advance consists
rather in the universal determining
itself
and being for itself the universal,
that
is, equally an individual and a subject.
Only in its consummation is it the
absolute.
§ 1788
It is to be recalled that the beginning,
which is in itself a concrete totality,
may
as beginning also be free and its immediacy
have the determination of an external
existence;
the germ of the living being and the
subjective
end in general have proved themselves
to
be such beginnings and therefore both
are
themselves urges.
The non-spiritual and inanimate, on
the contrary,
are the Notion only as real possibility;
cause is the highest stage in which
the concrete
Notion, as a beginning in the sphere
of necessity
has an immediate existence; but it
is not
yet a subject that maintains itself
as such
even in its actual realisation. The
sun,
for example, and in general all inanimate
things, are determinate concrete existences
in which real possibility remains an
inner
totality and the moments of the totality
are not posited in subjective form
in them
and, in so far as they realise themselves,
attain an existence by means of other
corporeal
individuals.
§ 1789
2. The concrete totality which makes
the
beginning contains as such within itself
the beginning of the advance and development.
As concrete, it is differentiated within
itself: but by reason of its first
immediacy
the first differentiated determinations
are
in the first instance merely a diversity.
The immediate, however, as self-related
universality,
as subject, is also the unity of these
diverse
determinations. This reflection is
the first
stage of the movement onwards - the
emergence
of real difference, judgment, the process
of determining in general. The essential
point is that the absolute method finds
and
cognises the determination of the universal
within the latter itself. The procedure
of
the finite cognition of the understanding
here is to take up again, equally externally,
what it has left out in its creation
of the
universal by a process of abstraction.
The absolute method, on the contrary,
does
not behave like external reflection
but takes
the determinate element from its own
subject
matter, since it is itself that subject
matter's
immanent principle and soul. This is
what
Plato demanded of cognition, that it
should
consider things in and for themselves,
that
is, should consider them partly in
their
universality, but also that it should
not
stray away from them catching at circumstances,
examples and comparisons, but should
keep
before it solely the things themselves
and
bring before consciousness what is
immanent
in them.
§ 1790
The method of absolute cognition is
to this
extent analytic. That it finds the
further
determination of its initial universal
simply
and solely in that universal, is the
absolute
objectivity of the Notion, of which
objectivity
the method is the certainty. But the
method
is no less synthetic, since its subject
matter,
determined immediately as a simple
universal,
by virtue of the determinateness which
it
possesses in its very immediacy and
universality,
exhibits itself as an other. This relation
of differential elements which the
subject
matter thus is within itself, is however
no longer the same thing as is meant
by synthesis
in finite cognition; the mere fact
of the
subject matter's no less analytic determination
in general, that the relation is relation
within the Notion, completely distinguishes
it from the latter synthesis.
§ 1791
This no less synthetic than analytic
moment
of judgment, by which the universal
of the
beginning of its own accord determines
itself
as the other of itself, is to be named
the
dialectical moment. ®
Dialectic is one of those ancient sciences
that have been most misunderstood in
the
metaphysics of the moderns, as well
as by
popular philosophy in general, ancient
and
modern alike. Diogenes Laertius says
of Plato
that, just as Thales was the founder
of natural
philosophy and Socrates of moral philosophy,
so Plato was the founder of the third
science
pertaining to philosophy, namely, dialectic
- a service which the ancient world
esteemed
his highest, but which often remains
quite
overlooked by those who have most to
say
about him. Dialectic has often been
regarded
as an art, as though it rested on a
subjective
talent and did not belong to the objectivity
of the Notion. The shape it takes and
the
result it reaches in Kantian philosophy
have
already been pointed out in the specific
examples of the Kantian view of it.
It must
be regarded as a step of infinite importance
that dialectic is once more recognised
as
necessary to reason, although the result
to be drawn from it must be the opposite
of that arrived at by Kant.
§ 1792
Besides the fact that dialectic is
generally
regarded as contingent, it usually
takes
the following more precise form. It
is shown
that there belongs to some subject
matter
or other, for example the world, motion,
point, and so on, some determination
or other,
for example (taking the objects in
the order
named), finite in space or time, presence
in this place, absolute negation of
space;
but further, that with equal necessity
the
opposite determination also belongs
to the
subject matter, for example, infinity
in
space and time, non-presence in this
place,
relation to space and so spatiality.
The
older Eleatic school directed its dialectic
chiefly against motion. Plato frequently
against the general ideas and notions
of
his time, especially those of the Sophists,
but also against the pure categories
and
the determinations of reflection; the
more
cultivated scepticism of a later period
extended
it not only to the immediate so-called
facts
of consciousness and maxims of common
life,
but also to all the notions of science.
§ 1793
Now the conclusion drawn from dialectic
of
this kind is in general the contradiction
and nullity of the assertion made.
But this
conclusion can be drawn in either of
two
senses either in the objective sense,
that
the subject matter which in such a
manner
contradicts itself cancels itself out
and
is null and void - this was, for example,
the conclusion of the Eleatics, according
to which truth was denied, for example,
to
the world, to motion, to the point;
or in
the subjective sense, that cognition
is defective.
One way of understanding the latter
sense
of the conclusion is that it is only
this
dialectic that imposes on us the trick
of
an illusion. This is the common view
of so-called
sound common sense which takes its
stand
on the evidence of the senses and on
customary
conceptions and judgments. Sometimes
it takes
this dialectic lightly, as when Diogenes
the cynic exposes the hollowness of
the dialectic
of motion by silently walking up and
down;;
but often it flies into a passion,
seeing
it in perhaps a piece of sheer foolery,
or,
when morally important objects are
concerned,
an outrage that tries to unsettle what
is
essentially established and teaches
how to
supply wickedness with grounds. This
is the
view expressed in the Socratic dialectic
against that of the Sophists, and this
is
the indignation which, turned in the
opposite
direction, cost even Socrates his life.
The
vulgar refutation that opposes to thinking,
as did Diogenes, sensuous consciousness
and
imagines that in the latter it possesses
the truth, must be left to itself;
but in
so far as dialectic abrogates moral
determinations,
we must have confidence in reason that
it
will know how to restore them again,
but
restore them in their truth and in
the consciousness
of their right, though also of their
limitations.
Or again, the conclusion of subjective
nullity
may mean that it does not affect dialectic
itself, but rather the cognition against
which it is directed and in the view
of scepticism
and likewise of the Kantian philosophy,
cognition
in general.
§ 1794
The fundamental prejudice in this matter
is that dialectic has only a negative
result,
a point which will presently be more
precisely
defined. First of all as regards the
above-mentioned
form in which dialectic is usually
presented,
it is to be observed that according
to that
form the dialectic and its result affect
the subject matter under consideration
or
else subjective cognition, and declare
either
the latter or the subject matter to
be null
and void, while on the other hand the
determinations
exhibited in the subject matter as
in a third
thing receive no attention and are
presupposed
as valid on their own account.
It is an infinite merit of the Kantian
Philosophy
to have drawn attention to this uncritical
procedure and by so doing to have given
the
impetus to the restoration of logic
and dialectic
in the sense of the examination of
the determinations
of thought in and for themselves. The
subject
matter kept apart from thinking and
the Notion,
is an image or even a name; it is in
the
determinations of thought and the Notion
that it is what it is. Therefore these
determinations
are in fact the sole thing that matters;
they are the true subject matter and
content
of reason, and anything else that one
understands
by subject matter and content in distinction
from them as value only through them
and
in them. It must not therefore be considered
the fault of a subject matter or of
cognition
that these determinations, through
their
constitution and an external connection,
show themselves dialectical. On that
assumption,
the subject matter or the cognition
is represented
as a subject into which the determinations
in the form of predicates, properties,
self-subsistent
universals, are introduced in such
a manner
that, fixed and correct as they are
by themselves,
they are brought into dialectical relationships
and contradiction only by extraneous
and
contingent connection in and by a third
thing.
This kind of external and fixed subject
of
imagination and understanding and these
abstract
determinations, far from meriting the
status
of ultimates, of secure and permanent
substrates,
are rather to be regarded as themselves
immediate,
as just that kind of presupposed and
initial
immediate that, as was shown above,
must
in its own essential nature [in and
for itself]
submit to dialectic, because it is
to be
taken as in itself the Notion.
Thus all the oppositions that are assumed
as fixed, as for example finite and
infinite,
individual and universal, are not in
contradiction
through, say, an external connection;
on
the contrary, as an examination of
their
nature has shown, they are in and for
themselves
a transition; the synthesis and the
subject
in which they appear is the product
of their
Notion's own reflection. If a consideration
that ignores the Notion stops short
at their
external relationship, isolates them
and
leaves them as fixed presuppositions,
it
is the Notion, on the contrary, that
keeps
them steadily in view, moves them as
their
soul and brings out their dialectic.
§ 1795
Now this is the very standpoint indicated
above from which a universal first,
considered
in and for itself, shows itself to
be the
other of itself.
Taken quite generally, this determination
can be taken to mean that what is at
first
immediate now appears as mediated,
related
to an other, or that the universal
appears
as a particular. Hence the second term
that
has thereby come into being is the
negative
of the first, and if we anticipate
the subsequent
progress, the first negative. The immediate,
from this negative side, has been extinguished
in the other, but the other is essentially
not the empty negative, the nothing,
that
is taken to be the usual result of
dialectic;
rather is it the other of the first,
the
negative of the immediate; it is therefore
determined as the mediated
- contains in general the determination
of
the first within itself. Consequently
the
first is essentially preserved and
retained
even in the other. To hold fast to
the positive
in its negative, in the content of
the presupposition,
in the result, this is the most important
feature in rational cognition; at the
same
time only the simplest reflection is
needed
to convince one of the absolute truth
and
necessity of this requirement and so
far
as examples of the proof of this are
concerned,
the whole of logic consists solely
of such.
®
§ 1796
Accordingly, what we now have before
us is
the mediated, which to begin with,
or, if
it is likewise taken immediately, is
also
a simple determination; for as the
first
has been extinguished in it, only the
second
is present. Now since the first also
is contained
in the second, and the latter is the
truth
of the former, this unity can be expressed
as a proposition in which the immediate
is
put as subject, and the mediated as
its predicate;
for example, the finite, one is infinite,
one is many, the individual is the
universal.
However, the inadequate form of such
propositions
is at once obvious. In treating of
the judgment
it has been shown that its form in
general,
and most of all the immediate form
of the
positive judgment, is incapable of
holding
within its grasp speculative determinations
and truth. The direct supplement to
it, the
negative judgment, would at least have
to
be added as well. In the judgment the
first,
as subject, has the illusory show of
a self-dependent
subsistence, whereas it is sublated
in its
predicate as in its other; this negation
is indeed contained in the content
of the
above propositions, but their positive
form
contradicts the content; consequently
what
is contained in them is not posited
- which
would be precisely the purpose of employing
a proposition.
§ 1797
The second determination, the negative
or
mediated, is at the same time also
the mediating
determination. It may be taken in the
first
instance as a simple determination,
but in
its truth it is a relation or relationship;
for it is the negative, but the negative
of the positive, and includes the positive
within itself. It is therefore the
other,
but not the other of something to which
it
is indifferent - in that case it would
not
be an other, nor a relation or relationship
- rather it is the other in its own
self,
the other of an other; therefore it
includes
its own other within it and is consequently
as contradiction, the posited dialectic
of
itself. Because the first or the immediate
is implicitly the Notion, and consequently
is also only implicitly the negative,
the
dialectical moment with it consists
in positing
in it the difference that it implicitly
contains.
The second, on the contrary, is itself
the
determinate moment, the difference
or relationship;
therefore with it the dialectical moment
consists in positing the unity that
is contained
in it. ®
§ 1798
If then the negative, the determinate,
relationship,
judgment, and all the determinations
falling
under this second moment do not at
once appear
on their own account as contradiction
and
as dialectical. this is solely the
fault
of a thinking that does not bring its
thoughts
together. For the material, the opposed
determinations
in one relation, is already posited
and at
hand for thought. But formal thinking
makes
identity its law, and allows the contradictory
content before it to sink into the
sphere
of ordinary conception, into space
and time,
in which the contradictories are held
asunder
in juxtaposition and temporal succession
and so come before consciousness without
reciprocal contact. ®
On this point, formal thinking lays
down
for its principle that contradiction
is unthinkable:
but as a matter of fact the thinking
of contradiction
is the essential moment of the Notion.
Formal
thinking does in fact think contradiction,
only it at once looks away from it,
and in
saying that it is unthinkable it merely
passes
over from it into abstract negation.
§ 1799
Now the negativity just considered
constitutes
the turning point of the movement of
the
Notion. It is the simple point of the
negative
relation to self, the innermost source
of
all activity of all animate and spiritual
self-movement, the dialectical soul
that
everything true possesses and through
which
alone it is true; for on this subjectivity
alone rests the sublating of the opposition
between the Notion and reality, and
the unity
that is truth. The second negative,
the negative
of the negative, at which we have arrived,
is this sublating of the contradiction,
but
just as little as the contradiction
is it
an act of external reflection, but
rather
the innermost, most objective moment
of life
and spirit through which a subject,
a person,
a free being, exists. ®
§ 1800
The relation of the negative to itself
is
to be regarded as the second premise
of the
whole syllogism. If the terms analytic
and
synthetic are employed as opposites,
the
first premise may be regarded as the
analytic
moment, for in it the immediate stands
in
immediate relationship to its other
and therefore
passes over, or rather has passed over,
into
it - although this relation, as already
remarked,
is also synthetic, precisely because
that
into which it passes over is its other.
The
second premise here under consideration
may
be defined as synthetic, since it is
the
relation of the differentiated term
as such
to the term from which it is differentiated.
Just as the first premise is the moment
of
universality and communication, so
the second
is determined by individuality, which
in
its relation to its other is primarily
exclusive,
for itself, and different. The negative
appears
as the mediating element, since it
includes
within it itself and the immediate
whose
negation it is. So far as these two
determinations
are taken in some relationship or other
as
externally related, the negative is
only
the formal mediating element; but as
absolute
negativity the negative moment of absolute
mediation is the unity which is subjectivity
and soul.
§ 1801
In this turning point of the method,
the
course of cognition at the same time
returns
into itself. As self-sublating contradiction
this negativity is the restoration
of the
first immediacy, of simple universality;
for the other of the other, the negative
of the negative, is immediately the
positive,
the identical, the universal. If one
insists
on counting, this second immediate
is, in
the course of the method as a whole,
the
third term to the first immediate and
the
mediated. It is also, however, the
third
term to the first or formal negative
and
to absolute negativity or the second
negative;
now as the first negative is already
the
second term, the term reckoned as third
can
also be reckoned as fourth, and instead
of
a triplicity, the abstract form may
be taken
as a quadruplicity; in this way, the
negative
or the difference is counted as a duality.
The third or fourth is in general the
unity
of the first and second moments, of
the immediate
and the mediated. ® That it is this
unity,
as also that the whole form of the
method
is a triplicity, is, it is true, merely
the
superficial external side of the mode
of
cognition; but to have demonstrated
even
this, and that too in a more specific
application
- for it is well known that the abstract
number form itself was advanced at
quite
an early period, but, in the absence
of the
Notion, without result - must also
be regarded
as an infinite merit of the Kantian
philosophy.
®
§ 1802
The syllogism, which is threefold,
has always
been recognised as the universal form
of
reason; but for one thing it counted
generally
for a quite external form that did
not determine
the nature of the content, and for
another
thing, since it progresses in the formal
sense merely in the understanding's
determination
of identity, it lacks the essential
dialectical
moment of negativity; yet this moment
enters
into the triplicity of determinations
because
the third is the unity of the first
two,
and these, since they are different,
can
be in the unity only as sublated determinations.
Formalism has, it is true, also taken
possession
of triplicity and adhered to its empty
schema;
the shallow ineptitude and barrenness
of
modern philosophic construction so-called,
that consists in nothing but fastening
this
schema on to everything without Notion
and
immanent determination and employing
it for
an external arrangement, has made the
said
form tedious and given it a bad name.
Yet
the triteness of this use of it cannot
detract
from its inner worth and we must always
value
highly the discovery of the shape of
the
rational, even though it was at first
uncomprehended.
®
§ 1803
Now more precisely the third is the
immediate,
but the immediate resulting from sublation
of mediation, the simple resulting
from sublation
of difference, the positive resulting
from
sublation of the negative, the Notion
that
has realised itself by means of its
otherness
and by the sublation of this reality
has
become united with itself, and has
restored
its absolute reality, its simple relation
to itself. This result is therefore
the truth.
It is equally immediacy and mediation;
but
such forms of judgment as: the third
is immediacy
and mediation, or it is the unity of
them,
are not capable of grasping it; for
it is
not a quiescent third, but, precisely
as
this unity, is self-mediating movement
and
activity. As that with which we began
was
the universal, so the result is the
individual,
the concrete, the subject; what the
former
is in itself the latter is now equally
for
itself, the universal is posited in
the subject.
The first two moments of the triplicity
are
abstract, untrue moments which for
that very
reason are dialectical, and through
this
their negativity make themselves into
the
subject. The Notion itself is for us,
in
the first instance, alike the universal
that
is in itself, and the negative that
is for
itself, and also the third, that which
is
both in and for itself, the universal
that
runs through all the moments of the
syllogism,
but the third is the conclusion, in
which
the Notion through its negativity is
mediated
with itself and thereby posited for
itself
as the universal and the identity of
its
moments.
§ 1804
Now this result, as the whole that
has withdrawn
into and is identical with itself,
has given
itself again the form of immediacy.
Hence
it is now itself the same thing as
the starting-point
had determined itself to be. As simple
self-relation
it is a universal, and in this universality,
the negativity that constituted its
dialectic
and mediation has also collapsed into
simple
determinateness which can again be
a beginning.
It may seem at first sight that this
cognition
of the result is an analysis of it
and therefore
must again dissect these determinations
and
the process by which it has come into
being
and been examined. But if the treatment
of
the subject matter is actually carried
out
in this analytic manner, it belongs
to that
stage of the Idea considered above,
to the
cognition of enquiry, which merely
states
of its subject matter what is, but
not the
necessity of its concrete identity
and the
Notion of it. But though the method
of truth
which comprehends the subject matter
is,
as we have shown, itself analytic,
for it
remains entirely within the Notion,
yet it
is equally synthetic, for through the
Notion
the subject matter is determined dialectically
and as an other. On the new foundation
constituted
by the result as the fresh subject
matter,
the method remains the same as with
the previous
subject matter. The difference is concerned
solely with the relationship of the
foundation
as such; true, it is now likewise a
foundation,
but its immediacy is only a form, since
it
was a result as well; hence its determinateness
as content is no longer something merely
picked up, but something deduced and
proved.
§ 1805
It is here that the content of cognition
as such first enters into the circle
of consideration,
since, as deduced, it now belongs to
the
method. The method itself by means
of this
moment expands itself into a system.
At first
the beginning had to be, for the method,
wholly indeterminate in respect of
content;
to this extent it appears as the merely
formal
soul, for and by which the beginning
was
determined simply and solely in regard
to
its form, namely, as the immediate
and the
universal. Through the movement we
have indicated,
the subject matter has obtained for
itself
a determinateness that is a content,
because
the negativity that has withdrawn into
simplicity
is the sublated form, and as simple
determinateness
stands over against its development,
and
first of all over against its very
opposition
to universality.
§ 1806
Now as this determinateness is the
proximate
truth of the indeterminate beginning,
it
condemns the latter as something imperfect,
as well as the method itself that,
in starting
from that beginning, was merely formal.
This
can be expressed as the now specific
demand
that the beginning, since it is itself
a
determinate relatively to the determinateness
of the result, shall be taken not as
an immediate
but as something mediated and deduced.
This
may appear as the demand for an infinite
retrogression in proof and deduction;
just
as from the fresh beginning that has
been
obtained, a result likewise emerges
from
the method in its course, so that the
advance
equally rolls onwards to infinity.
§ 1807
It has been shown a number of times
that
the infinite progress as such belongs
to
reflection that is without the Notion;
the
absolute method, which has the Notion
for
its soul and content, cannot lead into
that.
At first sight, even such beginnings
as being,
essence, universality, seem to be of
such
a kind as to possess the complete universality
and absence of content demanded for
a wholly
formal beginning, as it is supposed
to be,
and therefore, as absolutely first
beginnings,
demand and admit of no further regress.
As
they are pure relations to self, immediate
and indeterminate, they do not of course
possess within themselves the difference
which in any other kind of beginning,
is
directly posited between the universality
of its form and its content. But it
is the
very indeterminateness which the above
logical
beginnings have for their sole content
that
constitutes their determinateness;
this consists,
namely, in their negativity as sublated
mediation;
the particularity of this gives even
their
indeterminateness a particularity by
which
being, essence, and universality are
distinguished
from one another. The determinateness
then
which belongs to them if they are taken
by
themselves is their immediate determinateness,
just as much as the determinateness
of any
other kind of content, and therefore
requires
a deduction; for the method it is a
matter
of indifference whether the determinateness
be taken as determinateness of form
or of
content. That a content has been determined
by the first of its results is not
in fact
for the method, the beginning of a
new mode;
the method remains neither more nor
less
formal than before. For since it is
the absolute
form, the Notion that knows itself
and everything
as Notion, there is no content that
could
stand over against it and determine
it to
be a one-sided external form.
§ 1808
Consequently, just as the absence of
content
in the above beginnings does not make
them
absolute beginnings, so too it is not
the
content as such that could lead the
method
into the infinite progress forwards
or backwards.
From one aspect, the determinateness
which
the method creates for itself in its
result
is the moment by means of which the
method
is self-mediation and converts the
immediate
beginning into something mediated.
But conversely,
it is through the determinateness that
this
mediation of the method runs its course;
it returns through a content as through
an
apparent other of itself to its beginning
in such a manner that not only does
it restore
that beginning - as a determinate beginning
however - but the result is no less
the sublated
determinateness, and so too the restoration
of the first immediacy in which it
began.
This it accomplishes as a system of
totality.
We have still to consider it in this
determination.
§ 1809
We have shown that the determinateness
which
was a result is itself, by virtue of
the
form of simplicity into which it has
withdrawn,
a fresh beginning; as this beginning
is distinguished
from its predecessor precisely by that
determinateness,
cognition rolls onwards from content
to content
First of all, this advance is determined
as beginning from simple determinatenesses
the succeeding ones becoming ever richer
and more concrete. For the result contains
its beginning and its course has enriched
it by a fresh determinateness. The
universal
constitutes the foundation; the advance
is
therefore not to be taken as a flowing
from
one other to the next other. In the
absolute
method the Notion maintains itself
in its
otherness. the universal in its particularisation,
in judgment and reality; at each stage
of
its further determination it raises
the entire
mass of its preceding content, and
by its
dialectical advance it not only does
not
lose anything or leave anything behind,
but
carries along with it all it has gained,
and inwardly enriches and consolidates
itself.
®
§ 1810
This expansion may be regarded as the
moment
of content, and in the whole as the
first
premise; the universal is communicated
to
the wealth of content, immediately
maintained
in it. But the relationship has also
its
second, negative or dialectical side.
The
enrichment proceeds in the necessity
of the
Notion, it is held by it, and each
determination
is a reflection-into-self. Each new
stage
of forthgoing, that is, of further
determination,
is also a withdrawal inwards, and the
greater
extension is equally a higher intensity.
§ 1811
The richest is therefore the most concrete
and most subjective and that which
withdraws
itself into the simplest depth is the
mightiest
and most all-embracing. ® The highest;
most
concentrated point is the pure personality
which, solely through the absolute
dialectic
which is its nature, no less embraces
and
holds everything within itself, because
it
makes itself the supremely free - the
simplicity
which is the first immediacy and universality.
§ 1812
It is in this manner that each step
of the
advance in the process of further determination,
while getting further away from the
indeterminate
beginning is also getting back nearer
to
it, and that therefore, what at first
sight
may appear to be different, the retrogressive
grounding of the beginning, and the
progressive
further determining of it, coincide
and are
the same. The method, which thus winds
itself
into a circle, cannot anticipate in
a development
in time that the beginning is, as such,
already
something derived; it is sufficient
for the
beginning in its immediacy that it
is simple
universality. In being that, it has
its complete
condition; and there is no need to
deprecate
the fact that it may only be accepted
provisionally
and hypothetically. Whatever objections
to
it might be raised - say, the limitations
of human knowledge, the need to examine
critically
the instrument of cognition before
starting
to deal with the subject matter - are
themselves
presuppositions, which as concrete
determinations
involve the demand for their mediation
and
proof. Since therefore they possess
no formal
advantage over the beginning with the
subject
matter against which they protest,
but on
the contrary themselves require deduction
on account of their more concrete content,
their claim to prior consideration
must be
treated as an empty presumption. They
have
an untrue content, for they convert
what
we know to be finite and untrue into
something
incontestable and absolute, namely,
a limited
cognition determined as form and instrument
relatively to its content; this untrue
cognition
is itself also the form, the process
of seeking
grounds, that is retrogressive.. The
method
of truth, too, knows the beginning
to be
incomplete, because it is a beginning;
but
at the same time it knows this incompleteness
to be a necessity, because truth only
comes
to be itself through negativity of
immediacy.
§ 1813
The impatience at insists merely on
getting
beyond the determinate - whether called
beginning,
object, the finite, or in whatever
other
form it be taken - and finding itself
immediately
in the absolute, has before it as cognition
nothing but the empty negative, the
abstract
infinite; in other words, a presumed
absolute,
that is presumed because it is not
posited,
not grasped; grasped it can only be
through
the mediation of cognition, of which
the
universal and immediate is a moment,
but
the truth itself resides only in the
extended
course of the process and in the conclusion.
To meet the subjective needs of unfamiliarity
and its impatience, a survey of the
whole
may of course be given in advance -
by a
division for reflection which, after
the
manner of finite cognition, specifies
the
particular of the universal as something
already there and to be awaited in
the course
of the science. Yet this affords us
nothing
more than a picture for ordinary thinking;
for the genuine transition from the
universal
to the particular and to the whole
that is
determined in and for itself, in which
whole
that first universal itself according
to
its true determination is again a moment,
is alien to the above manner of division,
and is alone the mediation of the science
itself.
§ 1814
By virtue of the nature of the method
just
indicated, the science exhibits itself
as
a circle returning upon itself, the
end being
wound back into the beginning, the
simple
ground, by the mediation; this circle
is
moreover a circle of circles, for each
individual
member as ensouled by the method is
reflected
into itself, so that in returning into
the
beginning it is at the same time the
beginning
of a new member. Links of this chain
are
the individual sciences [of logic,
nature
and spirit], each of which has an antecedent
and a successor - or, expressed more
accurately,
has only the antecedent and indicates
its
successor in its conclusion. ®
§ 1815
Thus then logic, too, in the absolute
Idea,
has withdrawn into that same simple
unity
which its beginning is; the pure immediacy
of being in which at first every determination
appears to be extinguished or removed
by
abstraction, is the Idea that has reached
through mediation, that is, through
the sublation
of mediation, a likeness correspondent
to
itself. The method is the Pure Notion
that
relates itself only to itself; it is
therefore
the simple self-relation that is being.
But
now it is also fulfilled being, the
Notion
that comprehends itself, being as the
concrete
and so absolutely intensive totality.
In
conclusion, there remains only this
to be
said about this Idea, that in it, first,
the science of logic has grasped its
own
Notion.
§ 1816
In the sphere of being, the beginning
of
its content, its Notion appears as
a knowing
in a subjective reflection external
to that
content. But in the Idea of absolute
cognition
the Notion has become the Idea's own
content.
The Idea is itself the pure Notion
that has
itself for subject matter and which,
in running
itself as subject matter through the
totality
of its determinations, develops itself
into
the whole of its reality, into the
system
of the science [of logic], and concludes
by apprehending this process of comprehending
itself, thereby superseding its standing
as content and subject matter and cognising
the Notion of the science.
Secondly, this Idea is still logical,
it
is enclosed within pure thought and
is the
science only of the divine Notion.
True,
the systematic exposition is itself
a realisation
of the Idea but confined within the
same
sphere. Because the pure Idea of cognition
is so far confined within subjectivity,
it
is the urge to sublate this, and pure
truth
as the last result becomes also the
beginning
of another sphere and science. It only
remains
here to indicate this transition. ®
§ 1817
The Idea, namely, in positing itself
as absolute
unity of the pure Notion and its reality
and thus contracting itself into the
immediacy
of being, is the totality in this form
-
nature. ®
But this determination has not issued
from
a process of becoming, nor is it a
transition,
as when above, the subjective Notion
in its
totality becomes objectivity, and the
subjective
end becomes life. On the contrary,
the pure
Idea in which the determinateness or
reality
of the Notion is itself raised into
Notion,
is an absolute liberation for which
there
is no longer any immediate determination
that is not equally posited and itself
Notion;
in this freedom, therefore, no transition
takes place; the simple being to which
the
Idea determines itself remains perfectly
transparent to it and is the Notion
that,
in its determination, abides with itself.
The passage is therefore to be understood
here rather in this manner, that the
Idea
freely releases itself in its absolute
self-assurance
and inner poise. By reason of this
freedom,
the form of its determinateness is
also utterly
free - the externality of space and
time
existing absolutely on its own account
without
the moment of subjectivity. In so far
as
this externality presents itself only
in
the abstract immediacy of being and
is apprehended
from the standpoint of consciousness,
it
exists as mere objectivity and external
life;
but in the Idea it remains essentially
and
actually [in and for itself] the totality
of the Notion, and science in the relationship
to nature of divine cognition.
But in this next resolve of the pure
Idea
to determine itself as external Idea,
it
thereby only posits for itself the
mediation
out of which the Notion ascends as
a free
Existence that has withdrawn into itself
from exteranlity, that completes its
self-liberation
in the science of spirit, and that
finds
the supreme Notion of itself in the
science
of logic as the self-comprehending
pure Notion.
THE END
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