Erdmann 137
Erdmann 137
Erdmann 137
:00
1C AND METAPHYSICS
OUTLINES
OF
L- VA
O
::
o
u
OUTLINES
OF
BY
BY
B. C. BURT, PH.D.
r,
LONDON
SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO. LIMITED
NEW YORK: MACMILLAN & CO.
1896.
Printed by Co-wan & Co., Limited, Perth.
PREFATORY ESSAY.
a in to
really and truly
science proportion _the (in
the categories receive in it.
direct) recognition which
And for the matter of that it is worthy of being
observed in passing the products of mere fancy
could not exist without a certain basis in the cate
gories.
Thetheoretical proof of the necessity, reality and
the categories has to be given by
great significance of
a special science which takes precisely them for its
subject-matter.
The recognition which the sciences
in general give to the categories, is, for the greater
part, merely practical
and indirect, not theoretical
and direct. Even the sciences of discourse grammar,
philology, rhetoric,
formal logic though containing
of the
categories as some
very distinct implications
a given material in which,
thing distinguishable from
so to say, immersed, and
speaking roughly, they are,
the necessity of study
bringing to clear consciousness
the in and for themselves, do not
categories
ing
their
undertake so to study them, to investigate
relations,
(logical) origin, necessity, validity, organic
and groupings in short, to criticise the categories
"
"
as regards ultimate
is fatally self-contradictory
there is or may be a realm beyond the
reality, that
reach of thought, an unknowable thing-in-itself," and
"
science "
evolution."
The very clearest exhibition possible of the nature of
evolution is, it would seem, to be found in the pro
cess by which (as shown in the present work) thought
by an inherent, natural tendency unfolds from a germ
which is simplicity itself to the highest degree of
complexity or concreteness. Indeed, the concept of an
evolving activity, an activity continually repeating
itself in successively higher powers, each of which
preserves in itself the essential virtue of the one pre
ceding, is an ideal, not an empirical, notion, an object
of pure, speculative thought rather than anything that
can actually be found (except as put there
"
in the
")
mode has
powerful example and influence of Spinoza,
had in philosophical discussion a significa
generally
tion which would make it denote a category of con
denotes in
siderably higher order than that
it
B. C. B.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
PAGE
INTRODUCTION 1-27) (
i
233)
I. FIRST CHAPTER SUBJECTIVITY ( 140-189)
A. THE CONCEPT ( 142-154)
B. THE JUDGMENT ( 155-170)
C. THE SYLLOGISM ( 171-189)
II. SECOND CHAPTER OBJECTIVITY ( 190-210)
A. RELATION OF OBJECTS ( 192-201)
B. SUBJECTIVITY AND OBJECTIVITY ( 2O2-2O6)
C. FINALITY [OR PURPOSIVENESS] ( 207-210)
Hi. THIRD CHAPTER IDEA ( 211-233)
A. THE IMMEDIACY OF THE IDEA ( 213-218)
-
B. THE IDEA AS ESSENTIAL RELATION ( 219-226)
C. THE IDEA AS ABSOLUTE ( 227-233)
OUTLINES
OF
INTRODUCTION.
thing new ;
while recent works represent it as some
thing antiquated. Our introductory remarks, accord
ingly,have to examine not merely the objections that
are usually made to each of these two disciplines, but
also those which are brought against their union.
2. The old (or school) logic which was mostly
t
or also of
styled sometimes the theory of the being,
INTRODUCTION. 3
assertion that it is
possible.
4. Finally, the combination of logic and meta
physics, since the former has thougJit, the latter being,
we suppose that by
something subjective, and, also,
actuality/
1)
These subjective and objective thoughts
INTRODUCTION. 5
( 4) removed.
W Mere reflection upon ideas common to us all,
distinguish
W the true from the untrue categories, as
well as how to discern in what sphere of knowledge
certain categories have validity, in what not/ 2 As )
WA
category may in itself be untrue, and in the
application of such a category the
result of thought
( 2 >0ne
must be false. may, for example, apply to
the spiritual, categories which are correct in the study
(3) If one
of nature and thus the result is inept.
;
souls of actuality."
But they are the mere
souls of actuality, and logic leads, therefore, into a
"realm of Logic is, therefore, not the
shadows."
is termed dogmatism/ 3 )
is the problem of 1
reflection^ which, carried out
but
upon the standpoint of so-called common sense,
also upon that of intellectual intuition, and, finally,
tains several.
2
The age has scarcely passed in
< >
my "Outlines of
speculative thought (cf. Psychology,"
This occurs
122) or where there is comprehension.
when the object is taken first as it is, then as it con
opposites.
object is
rightly taken only when conceived after
wards in a way different from that in which it was
conceived before. But in this it is said that it must
be afterwards other than it was before. This means
that the perception of that contradiction will show
that the object must so alter that it actually becomes
that which it properly is. When this occurs, the
contradiction is resolved. But since an object s
development.
Though a thing is perceived
17. as necessary
only when seized in its development, the converse
does not follow. Even temporal genesis is a develop
ment; it proceeds from a contradiction like that just
indicated ;W but since the contradiction which
mediates the temporal genesis of an object, at least,
may produce
a contradiction where it has in the object no ground :
e.g., wounding
a living organism. (3) This is mis
taken by those who would replace comprehension by
genetic thought. The origin of States has nothing
to do with their notion. Even Aristotle distinguished
the historic origin of the State from its true ground.
The concept of eternity which Spinoza already
<*)
work,
Soul," 2nd ed., pp. 18-33.
(1)
Upon the confusion of these two relations it
"
Think! There
thought, and begins with the postulate,
at first present, merely the resolve to
"
is, therefore,
This resolve is
engage in the activity of thinking."
its having begun with
presupposed for logic without
the definition of thought as its first 0ris.
produced.
W The accusation made against Hegel that his
INTRODUCTION. 19
heuristic.
/)>
one and
tion are only relative determinations, since
the same thing may appear in relation to one thing as
the more concrete, the mediated, in relation to another
as the immediate. Here is to be thought immediacy
in its purest form, i.e., simple differencelessness.
first part
CATEGORIES OF IMMEDIACY.
BEING.
be expressed only
chapters may be omitted, and may
at the close, but in a printed outline they are not to
be dispensed with. In doing this, reference is gener
in which the selection of
ally made to the section
name In the matter
precisely this or that
is justified.
of nomenclature a threefold principle may be^observed;
either one may designate each group according to the
first category which
occurs in the group, since it con
tains in itself thegerm of all (so Hegel generally), or
when a development is set forth one may designate
the individual groups as periods whose terminal points
are given (so Schelling in the Transcendental Ideal
"
32) ;
the question, What being is, as a question con
Being- is essentially
different from existence or evenactuality. chimera A
which does not exist, to say nothing of its possessing
actuality, is a chimera, that is. To be is merely the
infinitive of the copula is, is merely the emu which
Aristotle describes as
o-i5yKeio-#cu. As there is no
thought in which thought would not be posited
(thought), so there is no expressed thought or pro
position which does not contain the category being.
^ When the consciousness of the meaning of a cate
gory first dawns upon the mind, it expresses its sense
of triumph in this new
conquest by making it the
predicate of every thing, even of the absolute, i.e., it
treats it as the absolute
category. With being, this
happened in the case of the Eleatics, the greatest of
whom regarded not only 6V but precisely emu as this
category. The Eleatic theory has, therefore, a
dogmatic character, because being is the favourite
category of dogmatism. (See 12.) It is the logic of
dogmatism.
the term not (ni) would seem to be the best for com
pletely undetermined negation. This category, which
forms the real core of all views that are designated as
Nihilism, was, in opposition to the affirmation of
being by the Eleatics, employed by the disciples of
even more than by Heraclitus himself.
Heraclitus,
Thereby they became, naturally, the logicians of
scepsis (see 13), which Heraclitus was not. They
seize in the Heraclitic becoming only the side of not
being, and thus convert it into mere //0-being, an
abstraction, like being. (See 32.)
being and not, which, for us, consists in the fact that
we came upon the former first and the latter after
becoming
of being, is implied in ordinary consciousness.
for example) becomes rather than
Everything (a city,
is. When Heraclitus, in opposition to Xenophanes,
made becoming the predicate of everything, he was
right. Heraclitus is in his speculative depth equally
far removed from dogmatism and scepticism. His prin
(4) This
ciple of absolute flux
is concrete. (See 14.)
untruth of being is the reason why thought cannot
abide by that but must go further the untruth of ;
being, as originating^
The two as constituting
3
a becoming are inseparably joined/ )
W Sub late taken in the threefold sense of tollere,
30 CATEGORIES OF IMMEDIACY.
34.
is cessation." (Hegel,
"
nothing/
1)
for this has itself been only a moment in
being^
W
That until now fluid unity of being and not-
being here appears fixed like water in the crystal.
There-being is being, but with a negation is (yonder-
(2>
become contains as a
36. (j8) Secondly, the
moment but no longer the abstract
in itself not;
referenceless not, but not as identical with being
Scholium].
<
2 >
gets, in so doing,
the other side, which is almost as
one-sidely emphasised, when one, for example,
calls
ing is
complete, something has become. That some
thing is really the best designation for the concrete
unity of those two moments is admitted by the fact
that we habitually designate as well that in wJiich a
quality appears, as also the quality itself by the word
something. In general something is a favourite cate
gory of the ordinary consciousness, because it is
neither so abstract as the earlier categories, nor so
concrete as the succeeding.
o the result of
o sublated into being,
becoming *
this subla-
of becoming
nearly defined to the effect that the result
is something and other.
totality.
40 (/3).
But as something contains the moment
of not-being ( 36), so does it also that of being.
QUALITY. 35
W
Universally where two tilings are so related
that each is merely the not-being of the other, they
are not to be thought without one another, and point
to one another as their complements. (2) Such refer
Something, in so far as it is
something, or has being
QUALITY. 37
it of a further development.
(2) Since
what (through our doing) they should be.
what-is-to-be inner determination of
is the proper
something, something is adequate to its what-is-to-be ;
44 (/3).
Determined being as being-in-self, or be
or as it
limited, something a determined some
is is
It be
thing and precisely thereby something.^
comes something, therefore, through the other. (5)
their use
ployed as synonyms, and in
all spatial
meaning is abstracted from. Something is finite in
that it is limited by another. Since here the other
which appears to present beside something
itself
and yet does not. (2) But this leads still further.
or within it.
Something is something through its limit
But the limit of something is precisely the beginning
of the other hence the being of something is
( 44),
of the other. It, therefore, be
really the beginning
it is only because in its being
longs to its essence that
the other begins. Its contradictory nature is, the
40 CA TEGORIES OF IMMEDIA C Y.
able is it something.
W Hence
could "
we think infinitude.
C. INFINITUDE.
>The
therefore
"
and
there arises, in the constant alternation
"
conclusion,"
superfinitude, superalterability.
When Aristotle terms every thought which runs
out into endless progression fallacious, he is in so far
correct as it is not possible to abide by that. The
application of the above-given rule which follows
from the very concept of endless progression is,
for methodical procedure, of extreme importance.
Wherever, that is to say, a concrete identity of
opposite determinations must be thought, endless
progression must result if one does not allow that
identity to be realised. In 31 and 32 this
might easily have been shown. Conversely, wherever
it appears to be unavoidable, there the demand
stated in the section is to be seen therein. However,
there may be spheres in which, because such a con
crete identity cannot be realised, the endless pro
gression occurs. But even then it is not ultimate, but
there is to be found in it the demand to get beyond
and leave behind in thought this entire sphere.
Thus, for example, nature does not rise above endless
progression in the generic process. The scientific
consideration of this process therefore impels
thought
beyond the sphere of nature. (Cf. my work Body
"
If there-being is limited
being, being-for-self is in
finite being.
W This more
figurative expression may state the
being-contained of the other in the one as no longer
Something was only for other ( 39, obs.),
2
real. < >
(3
est per se concipitnr. >Here one is not to think of
the numerical term one, but the word is to be under-
46 CA TEGORIES OF IMMED IA C Y.
therefore, it is
negative^ related, it can be so only
towards one or the entire totality of ones which now
stand opposed to it as the rest. Really, therefore,
one can only be thought as negatively related to the
1)
remaining ones/ Being-for-self is to be thought
only as the juxtaposition of beings-for-self. It, there
finitude ;
it is the not (or un-) being of one.
through
which they may act upon it, but because the prin
2
ciple of distinction dwells in every monad. Hegel
< >
Re
lation is becoming-related. The three moments can
also, therefore, be designated thus : United Being, Dis
united Being, Becoming of Unity. The last of these
selves.
do the exclusive
they as little deduce it as they
relation above but beside the atoms there is to be
;
QUALITY. 49
(1)
When it is said of the Kantian
concept of
matter that it implies only quantitative distinctions,
52 CATEGORIES OF IMMEDIACY.
QUANTITY.
quantity
W be employed where something has
will
>The
A. MAGNITUDE.
greatness of God.
( Hence distinctions of magni
>2)
3
As being and not were no longer as such con
<
or there belongs to
geneity/
1)
But that first moment will not thereby
be excluded, but will be contained as moment in
union.
>As
B. QUANTUM.
63. As from the transition ( 62) results as the
concept of quantum, that it is definite or limited
1)
magnitude/ further, since was magnitude that
it
with
KK&, finally, since magnitude was
it,
follow.
67 (ft). Quantum
number, see 64-) was mag
(or
nitude which was identical with its limit. Looking
to the limit of it, we shall thereby know how
quantum is in the first instance to be conceded. By
66 CA TEGORIES OF 1MMEDIA C Y.
completely posited.
The word degree we use wherever one determina
tion (the twentieth degree of heat is only one heat,
the twentieth degree of latitude is only one latitude)
is different from all others (the twentieth degree is
another heat than the nineteenth) ; although it is not
without it (the twentieth degree is not without the
nineteenth), naj
7
,
it contains them all, as sublated (in
the twentieth degree the nineteenth is contained as
having been, i.e., as sublated). Hence degree, accord
ing to Kant and Maimon, unity thought as plurality.
is
But plurality is taken as passed through, i.e., as sub
lated. For the rest, the analogy between degree and
continuity is so apparent that one can not wonder if
some entirely confound them.
3)
culties/
70. But
and continuity, though not
as discretion
2)
Therefore, it forever ceases to be quantum/ and in
C. QUANTITATIVE RELATION.
reckoning.
arithmetical <?>
in the second, geometrical
<
4 >
But
not only here (when it is sum QIC product}, rather than
the relation
d) If in = e, y and x are rect y-x
of bases, which, for comparison s sake,
angles equal
are made to coincide, e is not that which is common
to both. 2) If
y x is reduced to the simplest
<
74 (c).
If in the inverse arithmetical relation the
or still y
better, /x e, and
y =
/x y
=
afford examples in
which the distinction of the direct relation is im
mediately evident, since it appears that in the ex
ponent of the latter relation are contained deter
minations which constitute the relation.
relation ;
if the attribute alters, the relation also
alters. But it was the essence of qualitative attri
butes that with them that which determined by
is
modality <&>
merely
subjective sense in which Kant used it rather in the ;
parallelism with
the qualitative categories, gave us
sphere.
Ill THIRD CHAPTER.
MODE,
great
indefiniteness of this term, we take it,
similarly as
in the
preceding chapter we took the word Quantity,
as the
superscription of the entire chapter, instead
of the term measure used
by Hegel, which is proper
for one kind
only of mode. 2
(See 78.)
< >
If, there
fore, the view was characterised obs.
( 56, 1) as
justifiable which sought to reduce qualitative attri
butes to quantitative, there now appears as still more
justifiable that view which will
explain physical
qualities by the different mode of configuration of
the atoms, from which also the number of them shall
78
MODE. 79
So, for
example, the ell, the foot, the measure for a
etc., is
3
length. So, six feet say, are the measure for the
< >
being.
it).
| 80.
A recapitulation of the course passed over
has here more than one purpose. First, it has to
again
"
is suggested that
mode or the Jioiv, although distinct from quality or
the what, is, nevertheless, also it in such a manner
that it is
higher quality, proper or second what.
With this second task is naturally combined a third :
(11
presupposing others, they are employed
no by
the first thought which presupposes no preparation
for it, hence is immediate. Hence this first part of
the logic may be characterised as the logic of natural
thought
<
2 >
The later
artistic and scholastic and
categories are those which
scientific
thought applies. To reflect upon reflec <
s >
is no
For such duplication the name of immediacy
longer appropriate,
and so the last modal category
formed the threshold to a group of categories, which,
CATEGORIES OF MEDIATION.
ESSENCE.
essential to it ;
it as much requires the unessential as
the unessential does it. Each, therefore, appears in
the other, or there exists between them a reciprocal
relation, which we call reflection,* or relativity.^
Like this first mediation, all others also are a
gory.
(3) Conceiv ability, which alone interests scholastic
ESSENCE AS SUCH.
to self,
not, yet is, being, i.e., reflected being, reference
identity.
must be broken
being is treated as a shell that
( 2)
One must go forward, it is true, but
through.
keep by the fact in hand.
A. IDENTITY.
abstract distinctionlessness/
1)
i.e., mere being. This
is often denoted by the word identity, although it is
is, however,
only a moment in identity. Identity is completely
conceived only when it is at the same time conceived
as actual reference, which as such has for its pre
supposition exclusion ( 51, 52), so that the true or
concrete identity is the unity of abstract identity and
3)
its opposite/ i.e., inseparability.^
Because it is
W
If one says of two objects that they differ in
this or in that, one says thereby that there is some
thing in which they both coincide (are identical), but
that at the same time they both differ and are dis
tinguished.
(2) In what has just been said the
distinction is also given between being different and
being other. When two things
are different (or each is
Other) there may be assigned wherein they differ on ;
B. DIFFERENCE.
appearance. A=
not - B, or, stated as a rule, If you
think A, exclude B whereby not merely A is thought.
102 CATEGORIES OF MEDIATION.
(5) With
play a very important part in comparison.
out a tertium comparationis the search for diver
sity is somewhat idle. ^ Not accidentally does
our language denote the termination of a dispute by
the word VergleicJi [= comparison taken in the sense
of adjustment of a disagreement}.
So like
unity, hence confirmed, posited identity.
wise non-identity. Hence opposition is formed ; first,
the negative.^
specific nature,
which belongs not to any other, since
the positive appears as that which remains the same,
1 04 CA TE GOR1ES OF MEDIA TION.
and is therefore
determinate, while the negative
appears as the changing and determining.^
>As
together = 0.
3
second power which were not
<
>A
Psychology," 26.)
W
Mere privation does not amount to opposition,
since opposition has as its conditio sine qua non
position. Thus, evil is not mere absence of the good
but its
negation.
2
One needs only to consider the
< >
upon as impossibilities.
since
ence, forms, abstractly stated, the unity of both,
wherein what is identical with itself contradiction
of a law of
category, and therefore yields the content
thought.
(2) In it the same thing (essence) is twice
posited
<
3 >
W
Empirical science uses these categories especially ;
posited ( 101) ;
it is therefore so related to the
This determination is
correctly stated by the ex
pression : Omne (animal) ex ovo.
ESSENCE AS SUCH. 109
itself
^>
The ground, as positing the consequent only
2)
higher/
").
sublates itself
^ posits itself as its own negative.
But now the negative of essence had been degraded
to appearance. Since, therefore, we are compelled by
the inner contradiction of essence to think it as its
own other (as estranged from itself), we are forced to
think it as entering into its other (appearance) filling
it. Filled with the essential, however, is
appearance
phenomenon, and this we have, since it has been
ESSENCE AS SUCH. m
shown that mere essence points beyond itself, and
hence is a mere abstraction (cf. 91) in the second
place to consider.
difficult to discover ;
but much less important than to
hold fast the discovered essential categories in their
peculiarity.
PHENOMENON.
(schein) with
filled essence (hence no longer mere
essenceless appearance) and essence clothed with
;
1)
appearance, hence no longer mere essence/ Essence
phenomenon.
< 2)
If, therefore, appearance stands
are
(i)
What would appearance be where essence is
wanting ?
2
Would essence be where
"
< >
"
itdid not
Phenomenon
"
A. PHENOMENA OR EXISTENCE.
contract a 3) The
is contract. concept of existence
<
on this side is
formal side,
the thing.
Phanomenologie Geistes,"
tion, we
on the one hand, essence, but in its
find,
C. ESSENTIAL RELATION.
117. >y
essential relation we understand a relation in
which, exactly as in the quantitative, two sides con
stitute the relation, only with the nearer determina
tion that with each side the other to which it is
related is
necessarily posited/
1)
and that each side
is at the same time the entire essence which forms
2)
the relation. <
W
This relation is applicable only to phenomenal
essence, i.e., to things. If one takes God as a whole,
as all, for example, and creatures as his parts, this is
a crude mechanical pantheism, which makes of God
a thing. Even the living product of Nature has no
parts, since no mere thing in order to divide
it is ;
W
This progression comes to an end only when
I regard, say a line A
B, as a whole, hence take its
half A
C as part, then C as whole, Aas part, AD
which, again, is taken as whole, etc. When the W
mathematician, in order to solve the difficulties which
are brought about by the endless division of the
path to be traversed in the familiar sophism
(Achilles), construes (geometrically) the totality of
the path, or (arithmetically) bids to sum the series
1 + + ..., he recognises this. To think this
totality, i.e., this divided thing, which is a whole, or
finite sum of infinitely many members, is indeed a
problem.
the ground of the other side, and that which had the
character of plurality as the consequent of the other.
If we do we think an essential relation which
this,
of it than does that
corresponds more to the concept
hitherto considered (1) it is the ;
relation of force ^
is present twice
in the manner described.
V>
In the relation of whole and parts, namely,
are not, as should have
exactly these particular parts
been the case ( 117, obs. 1), posited
with the concept
of the whole, since I can divide at pleasure. On^the
2) Since
contrary, force has its definite expressions.
the of force is really a higher category
category
than that of law, the physicist is justified when he
does not stop at law, but, in order to explain it,
Of course it must
speaks of the underlying forces.
not be forgotten that, like all explanation, it moves
in tautologies. This dynamic mode of explanation
is true, higher than the atomic,
but is closely
is, it
akin to it, as is shown by the experience of the
psychologists who,
with their faculties of the soul,
come very near to a soul that is divided. (3 Hence >
126 CA TEGORIES OF MEDIA TION.
force is
usually explained only from its expression,
and vice versa. If we take God as force, the world
as expression, this,
according to Schleiermacher, is
pantheism. One may maintain this in so far as force
and expression are one nature on the other side, ;
(:) One says this when one says that force must
PHENOMENON. 127
it mani
(3) The outer is
fests itself of itself, in the outer.
more intimately joined with essence than is expres
sion the former is the constant, the latter the
;
abstraction ;
the man who is merely inwardly
good passes only for such. Of the abstract inner
it is of course correct to say that it is unknow
able. This assertion is a pure tautology. (Cf. 40,
cbs.)
ACTUALITY.
4
ring to form, ground < >
possibility was,
its difference from mere existence
and we have mere positedness in the
disappears,
being posited by other/
1)
This gives the category of
It does not exclude necessity, is rather
contingency.
the same with external necessity $?>
in that the con
mined/ 3)
This concept of contingency answers the
1
34 CA TEG OKIES OF ME DIA T10N.
question whether there is
anything contingent/
4)
What
posited itself would not be merely posited,
(1)
or is (3)
What, therefore, is merely
itself, ground/^j.
grounded, or posited, is to be thought as entirely
are sublated.
only is
possible, and
one regards the possible as so indifferent
1 36 CA TEGORIES OF MEDIA TION.
relation.^
138 CATEGORIES OF MEDIATION.
A. SUBSTANTIALITY.
ence/
6)
mere positedness and contingency / 7 >
This
moment of unessentially in the absolute relation
ity
(9) or relation of subsistence and inherence (Kant).
(3) Substance
be taken only in the negative sense.
as absoluta affirmatio existentiae excludes every deter
mination, is that which alone is because not related
to other. W
The concepts essentia (see 125,
obs. 1) and substantia, because of their kinship,
coincide in the Greek word dvo-io. In the double ^
sense which o-v/z/Scu vetv has with Aristotle is to be
recognised the kinship of concepts otherwise so
different. In the accidents, according to Spinoza,
<
sary. The
accidents, on the contrary, are merely
B. CAUSALITY.
3)
no occurrence/
W
Causa, cosa in both meanings. 2) Even
speech <
"
passes ;
^ as into something actually standing over
it.
against
W
The cause of heat is heat, of moisture, moisture,
(2) Hence
of motion, motion. Spinoza in maintaining
the relation of substantiality, speaks against the
causa transiens, while Jacobi, in order to establish an
extra (praeter) mundane God, demands that God be
conceived as cause of the world. This gives what is
termed transcendence.
142 CATEGORIES OF MEDIATION.
Where
as effect, one knows its necessity that it must be
3
so. If the cause is, the effect follows
( >
whether it :
A
the relation of God and the world only as
causalitj^,
would, consistently carried out, become the opposite
of acosmism, namely, atheism. No one has taken the
transcendence of the divine, i.e., the negation of all
immanence, so seriously as the Epicureans.
is
properly (as cause) effect of the effect, and pre
supposes the effect as its own. But just so the effect
The
endless progression arises
immediately so soon
as we apply
to a definite thing the perceived truth
that the cause is in itself effect, and vice versa; and,
indeed, when we have first taken as effect, then A
abstracting therefrom take it as cause, where it has
an effect B., which then again is taken as
cause, etc.
Since the nature of the endless progression is known
( 49), it can of course not terrify. Even Aristotle
is by the
progression of causes and effects impelled
to the thought of interaction. (De Gen. et Corr
IT., 11.)
C. INTERACTION.
vealed") necessity,
therefore, we have the must be
of the logic.
W Action
expressed as follows
Empirically this is :
proposition which
a is fully
and reaction are equal,
ACTUALITY. 145
ence.")
Even in the highest sphere it is a deeper
view which causes the mystic to say, God is in me so
much as is laid to me in Him, as if here one would
assume a one-sided causality. For this mystic,
then, this opposition of immanence and transcend
2
ence no longer exists. If one returns to earlier
< >
tions of distinctionlessness or
immediacy. The result
I. FIRST CHAPTER.
consequence.
W Freedom as a logical category is not
to be restricted to the sphere of spiritual pheno
mena/ 2)
therefore does not coincide with personality,
(1 )
the premises, A is through B, and B is
From
through A, necessarily follows that A is through A,
it
therefore is causa sui in the positive sense of this
term, while substance was so only in the negative
(2
sense. ( 132, 2.) It is, therefore, not a figurative
)
W
In the first meaning the word is taken when
one says, It follows from the concept of triangle that,
etc. this meaning the Greek word Adyos also has, so
;
(Jm Begriffe
stehen\ may, at least, in an indirect fashion, be shown
in the Greek, since in the example cited, Adyos is the
px 7 f growing.
/
(2 Hence a universal idea is far
)
A. THE CONCEPT.
ence to other/
2 >
something fancied/
5)
In the extension of the concept
quality it gives.
or the "
Psychology,"
100), or when one, with Kant, speaks of concepts
without perception, which are empty. 4
Hence < >
closer determination
Similarly as above, this
may be expressed thus: Comprehension takes Since place
where the common is brought to light.
!)
versality/
1)
the concept contains in itself, secondly,
(1)
(Cf- 144, Logical determination is opposed
2).
to abstraction. speak of a division of a
< 2) When we
universal sphere, or of grounds of division, these fall
into a reflection external to the one dividing, similarly
as diversity is brought to light by the comparison of
a third. (See 95.) Such division is called artificial,
scholastic. In fact, this particularisation belongs to
the first chapter of the Second Part. It tells what
cept ;
(3) as the concept was the universal, so it is
<
3 >
give the ,
W
Hegel, who once so presented the logic, was
accordingly in the habit of recommending for self-
study this course besides the systematic. It would
be what the proof is in calculation. The uni &>
4)
the same with the particular/ If, therefore, in
not come forth as actual
any sphere the concept could
subject, one would
have in this sphere merely indivi
dual beings, which would have their substance, as
their them, outside themselves, and
species producing
have only the meaning of examples, which are repeat-
able, while true subjectivity is singularity.^ The
true relation is that each moment of the concept is
6)
the unity of the other two.(
W
Hence the (determined) concept of the ellipse,
for example, is different from that of the parabola,
SUBJECTIVITY. 167
to subjec
above, the transition from substantiality
tivity was mentioned (see 140), here it may be
remarked that while substance is by its concept sole,
on the contrary, is differen
distinctionless, subject,
tiated substantiality. In nature, where there are no
real subjects, examples are merely repetitions of one
type. Where they are not this, the case is regarded
as an irrationality, and we say the example is abor
is not
tive, while in the sphere of spirit originality
regarded as a mishap.
& In so far as judgment
is a higher form of the cor.cept, it is here clear how
we can speak of mere concept as distinguished from
the judgment, as later from the syllogism. The
determinate judgment met us in the definition just
as in the formula of the curve the fomer is, therefore,
;
B. JUDGMENT.
(1)
Hence we may here, as already above ( 155,
obs. 1), speak of several concepts, and of a combination
of two, which was until now not possible any more
than there are two or more actualities or necessities.
(2)
By copula we mean (subjectively and objectively)
the bond by which the terms related in the judgment
are joined to one another. Hence we say of a
man who judges incorrectly that he has no judgment.
hence the
unity of the two others, and
is
really the
entire concept, the realisation of the judgment,
5)
which gives the different forms of the judgment/
(I
- U) is also its. Only, since the union of subject
with predicate is here an external one, and the abstract
give my
( z) If I
a thing, are positive judgments.
self up to a determination, let it pass for right,
positive acquires
here the meaning of the accidental,
hence the usage of speech opposes it to the rational
and necessary. The sky may also acquire another
predicate, I may be unaccommodating to others,
the subsumption is merely positive, i.e., contingent.
WEven have its correctness Mk&k I have by occupa
if it
158 (2).
But it appears in the case of the contin
gent judgment as
well as in contingency itself (129,
172 CATEGORIES OF FREEDOM.
(1) Of the
sky only sky-blue, of this house not all
yellow but only a particular yellow. Both expres
sions mean the same hence the formula for the
:
(infinite) or
identical judgment, in which the pre
judgment.
(V These
propositions This (tin) is an electrical
:
it is at the
say, the individual shall be a universal,
same time determined as both, i.e., as unity of the
universal
(subjected) individual and
the essential
(predicated of it).
If such a unity gives the concept
P-p.
The propositions
1 Some men are rational,
:
(1)
That all wolves are vertebrates is true in the
first instance only of all those which are known.
2
Tacitly there is assumed as the basis of those
< >
167 (2).
In the immediate judgment of the con
(1)
With Hegel, the hypothetical judgment. (2) In
the proposition, the criminal must be punished (or,
if a man is a criminal he is further, in
punished) ;
ished, is yet
it problematical whether it always
happens and when it happens, it remains, since that
;
(2) This
necessity is an external one, an accident.
contradiction is contained in the concept of every
be
problem, every should-be, which as such cannot
realised. (Cf. 44, 2.) The law, therefore, can only
condemn, its judgment compels and punishes.
which have,
hitherto, been considered, and is their truth. The sub-
a new being,
sumption, that, is to say, is neither
nor even a mere must-be, but is both, hence free and,
The judgment
of freedom has a universal character, for what should
be forms no exception.
W
In so far as in such a judgment as The wolf is :
be
judgment in so far as it has real meaning, may
cited even willed rationality, in which man, though
he can be irrational, is rational. This relation may
easily
be reduced to a disjunctive judgment.
1 82 CATEGORIES OF FREEDOM.
W
In the example last cited the subsumption of
man under rationality is itself rationality, i.e., con
(2) The
cept. difficulty of distinguishing the highest
form of the judgment from the syllogism has in this
relation its ground. The student involuntarily passes
from one to the other because what is thought of is
itself this passage. Only in a higher sense must it be
said of the judgment of freedom, as of identical and
universal judgment, that it is no (longer) judgment.
C. THE SYLLOGISM.
latent in the
concept and the judgment (hence
is
2
The
judgment of the concept), and
its truth. < >
immediate syllogism. W
major.
tion, This house is yellow because painted with ochre ;
I-P, /. I-U.
contract 2
The contract is concluded, my obliga
< >
(D Also Aristotle
["Prior Analytics," i., 5] calls
this figure of the syllogism in which the concept of
greatest comprehension forms the terminus medius,
the second, but without giving a reason why it is so
declared. This reason lies in the fact that it has the
second form of the judgment for its conclusion.
<
2 >
Examples of this
the connection with the judgment is always clearly
apparent. Therefore (cf. 158) the proposition, Cajus
is not learned because he was not industrious The ;
because ^
higher than the it it.
first, presupposes
But even it, since it still contains an immediated
one which is
premiss, points to another as
its truth,
of the uni
say, in the second premiss, the identity
versal with the individual, but, likewise, in the con
(P_I_U).(
2 >
entirely nugatory,
(5) and can gain a content only by
a subreption. (6)
W
Precisely this is the reason why formal logic
gives the preference to the first figure but the ;
. .
nothing.
^
This subreption makes us say Some :
(3)
singular essential judgment.
Its schema
would be : I - P - p. (See 162.)
and since totality merely says that for the nonce the
versality i, i,)
but is universality, i.e., individu
(i, i,
(1) In that
example there is the tacit presupposition
that to be electrical conductors is essential to gold,
silver, etc., in so far as they are metals, and not in so
far (say) as they are coloured, i.e., that to the metal
2) A
this predicate is essential. syllogism of ana
<
3
like gold," one says a species of gold."
" "
constant circle,
(2) the former on the contrary labour
under the defect which, instead of petitio principii,
to Instauratio
"
have in the
like everything in its beginning, will
This im
beginning the character of immediacy.
mediate conceptual syllogism is, by Hegel, called the
categorical.
W The immediate conceptual syllogism
is the fulfilment of the immediate conceptual judg
ment ( 160), and therefore has this for its premisses.
W
Such a syllogism is expressed in the proposi
tion The (not a) wolf is, as mammal, a vertebrate.
:
but
something else. Marriage has not an absolute,
only a conditioned, subjective (see 191, obs. 1)
necessity. It is just as possible that the sexual
(3)
(analogously as above
in the judgment, 169) will
freedom.
assert).
W The proposition, The criminal will con
fess, and be punished, may also be expressed thus :
to itself ;
and if the concept was as return into self
conclusion.
ground.
(3) Deductive thought which consisted in
(1)
According to the various principles of designa
tion (see 28, obs.), this chapter may be also headed :
OBJECTIVITY.
justified.
In the first instance^ we have nothing to do
with the opposition to the subjective upon which the
latter usage of speech rests, but only to take objec
207
208 CATEGORIES OF FREEDOM.
Laws are
<*>
nearer determinations of
objectivity which will come
to light, or the
objective categories, & which are now
to be will the
developed, give various relations to
which that world subject. We have, therefore,
is <*>
realm, e.g
of ends," etc. The manifestation of essence
in a plurality of
appeared
things ( 108, 109), the objectivity
ot the concept
(Begriff) in a world of objects, or in a
totality (Inbegriff) of them. (3)
The of categories
phenomenon (or existence) are especially applied
where one will describe or explain nature
(cf. 108,
and 115, obs.); the objective
categories have to do
with it in so far as it is a
tion we show
By their anplica-
totality.
the systematic connection of them for
whether a phenomenon is to be
explained mechanically
or chemically concerns the
systematic* of science.
That they find their
application alone or even
only especially in the sphere of nature is an illusion
which is, it is true, explicable by the concept of
nature, but is, nevertheless, an illusion.
210 CATEGORIES OF FREEDOM.
A. RELATION or OBJECTS.
character of im
192. Since objectivity has the
(a) Mechanism.
are indepen
193Since the related objects
(1).
\
external to them and
dent, their relation appears
OBJECTIVITY. 211
forced, and, in
spite of their relation,
they are
externally conditioned towards one another, and can
not be
thought as one, but only as composite.^
Their relation to one another
is, therefore,
merely a
superficial operation or so-called
impression.) That
which receives the therein not free but
operation is
of passion
falling ; in the spiritual the conditions
OBJECTIVITY. 213
negation of mechanism.
W
If one puts, instead of chemical interpenetra
tion, mechanical juxtaposition, one will fix the differ
ence precisely in the extinction of which the chemical
OBJECTIVITY. 217
Neither
of circumstances or of
changes with the pressure
force 2
Thus the metal
<
becomes
> friable by oxyda-
etc. (3) To the attempts to reduce chemical
tion,
attraction stands as correlate
affinity to mechanical
the attempt to explain the phenomena of gravitation
between solar
by the assumption of chemical affinity some
and terrestrial bodies. In the spiritual sphere
of force, others everything from
expect everything
impelling inner inclinations.
really contained in
201. But what is this reciprocal
degraded
o to moments. How is this relation to be
subject and
a
hitherto considered between object,
The relation of
end is, finally, the truth of mechanism and chemi.sm,
and shows itself as this in thatit degrades them to
Empedocles.
2
The end is subject of the change
< >
221
OBJECTIVITY.
joined
reason, on the other hand, objectivity
here gets the
of mere the quality of stand
meaning objectivity, i.e.,
203 (a).
In the first instance, therefore, the end
W
These various designations are, according as
one places himself upon the side of the end or upon
(2) In the dualism
that of equally correct.
objectivity,
to
of Anaxagoras, therefore, there stands opposed
the of all ends, things in their
the vos as possessor
If, tor
mindless, massy finely-divided condition.
>
itself to it
more competent than the mass, it relates
and mass is related to it as
as mere (crude) force,
in or by which the
unresisting stuff or as material,
end is
2) This realisation of itself in the
realised/
in which it would
(D There scarcely a concept
is
as in the concept ol
be so easy to show contradictions
of the following ground,
end, i.e., of the inactive active,
etc (2) Such immediate realisation of the end meets
is found over against
us in phenomena, where there
material which at once
the end an unresisting (soft)
artist, but not
to the so
yields to it. Clay yields
Ine
the animal tinds at hand what it seeks.
marble :
of end
205 (4 In this form, however, the relation
to this
does not correspond to its concept. According
that.<
minimum ;
he must learn that which the animal can
do of itself, and by making tools always acts with
cunning. In this cunning he gets rid of his barbar-
ousness.
teleological contemplation/
5)
and may pride itself, as
(6)
opposed to that, upon its realism.
<
J >
brought
o to the material from without and combined
finite.
To it as to actual unity
the
beyond Anaxagoras, so Socrates goes beyond
of the finite end, he puts
Sophists, in that, in place
self-end, and therefore, in the place
of the useful, the
4) The for the exist
teleological argument
<
good.
ence of God, which passes from the existence of the
has its
merely purposive to the concept of a self-end,
logical truth in this transition.
IDEA.
(1) Of
these two determinations, the idea in Plato s
sense emphasises the first, the idea in the Kantian
sense the second. The former is, therefore, lifeless,
the latter merely regulative. The idea is neither.
(2)
The idea realises itself, is not completed, dead
being. Therefore it is system. In the idea, ^
therefore, the concept which had got lost in objec
4
tivity returns to itself. Philosophy as idealism
< >
92).
be taken in the
first to
way of immediacy, and since
W
This word is here taken as logical category, and,
therefore, in as wide a sense as it is taken in when
one speaks of living community, etc. This
category
forms the abstract basis both of vitality in nature
and of other spiritual relations. To apply it means
to consider everything organically. In the highest
sphere beauty is the immediate existence (life) of the
absolute spiritual content. (2)
Hence, in popular
usage life often denotes a complex of living beings.
3
Only what is manifestation of self-end has life.
< >
7)
imperilled or extinct/
spiritual and
the highest spheres this category finds its application.
The Church is the body of the Lord. Organs are not
parts, not even mere means an organic view of the ;
it is
something still more than that.
activity by itself.^
W That in
this process of organisation precisely the
soul, the principle or subject of life, is taken as the
i.e.,
the
23] always affirmed in his polemic against
of souls. however, 109, obs. 3.)
transmigration (Cf.,
2
( )
The elements are, therefore, not living, because
there is in them no manifoldness crystals are ;
so it stands in objec
concept as having objectivity,
tivity as a part of
a world ( 191) ;
it will, therefore,
with vitality, by
were, infect the merely objective
assimilating
(3) it. The process of assimilation is
neutral-
neither mechanical composition nor chemical
236 CATEGORIES OF FREEDOM.
no life. (3)
(2) The
of assimilation. feeling of the necessity of
this transition which transition cannot, of course,
have the meaning that by assimilation, of nourish
ment for example, the latter becomes a representative
of the species all hitherto have had who have identi
fied the nutritive and the reproductive function.
3
In the natural
< >
But if this
adequate to one another. (Cf. 221, 1.)
idea
good, points with necessity to the
therefore,
as truth, with same necessity as that with which
transition must be made from the truth to the good.
finitude/
1)
and is absolute idea^ absolute rationality,
W
In this respect one may (figuratively) speak of
(2) Here
the blessed, reconciled life of the idea. is
longer
O becomes other, because there is in it no lack,
no limitation but the science of logic passes over
;
demonstration of creation ;
here is no question either
being rationality.
252 CATEGORIES OF FREEDOM.
particular manner.
W
Logic forms the foundation for the other parts
of philosophy, and its study is for that of the latter
indispensable, since, in order to apprehend reason in
Nature, the life of the mind, etc. (which alone phy
siology, pneumatology, etc., aim at), one must know
what reason is, which precisely logic shows.
W It
forms only the foundation, just because it makes
known only at the end that which they presuppose,
and with which they begin. With logical knowledge,
therefore, one stands as yet only in their fore-court.
3
It is therefore a mistaking of the nature of the
< >
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