... the break of day, which in a flash and at a single stroke brings to view the structure of the new world.
... the boredom and indifference which result from the continual awakening of expectations by promises never fulfilled.
At its debut, where science has been brought neither to completeness of detail nor to perfection of form ...
... are just, those demands [that] have not been fulfilled.
... insists on immediate rationality and divinity
... the whole which has returned into itself from out of its succession and extension and has come to be the simple concept of itself.
It's useful background to know that the book was published in 1807. I am not a student of the Napoleonic period, but I think Hegel is writing while Napoleon is tearing Europe to pieces, at times within the sound of cannon. — tim wood
Hegel is not talking just about the development of some intellectual pursuit, philosophy, or even a science of the whole, but of a new world in its incipience. — Fooloso4
it strikes me there are two distinctly different meanings of over-thinking, over-working, and worth noting, even if just in passing. First is the idea of existing material over-worked, over-wrought; second the idea of additional and too-much material added. If we try to eat all the thistles in the field, there won't be any left, nor appetite nor capacity for them. — tim wood
To return to an earlier analogy it is as if one were to look at a baby or toddler or child or youth or teen and on that basis alone judge what it is to be a human being. The potential is there but at each of these stages it has not been actualized and thus cannot even be realized or known. — Fooloso4
They are the demands of those who are critical of science who:
... insists on immediate rationality and divinity
It might help to think of this in relation to the analogy in 12 of the prize at the end of the path, won through struggle and effort. — Fooloso4
Unfortunate detail: I'm not totally sure who exactly those "others" are he's complaining about, and what exactly that "absolute idea" is which they are trying to pass off as the pinnacle of all science.
Thoughts? — WerMaat
In Hegel, the non-traditionalists argue, one can see the ambition to bring together the universalist dimensions of Kant’s transcendental program with the culturally contextualist conceptions of his more historically and relativistically-minded contemporaries, resulting in his controversial conception of spirit, as developed in his Phenomenology of Spirit. — Paul Redding
When it comes to content, at times the other side certainly makes it easy for itself to have a vast breadth of such content at its disposal.
It pulls quite a lot of material into its own domain, which is to be sure what is already familiar and well-ordered, and by principally trafficking in rare items and curiosities, it manages to put on the appearance of being in full possession of what knowing had already finished with but which at the same time had not yet been brought to order.
It thereby seems to have subjected everything to the absolute Idea, and in turn, the absolute Idea itself therefore both seems to be recognized in everything and to have matured into a wide-ranging science.
However, if the way it spreads itself out is examined more closely, it turns out not to have come about as a result of one and the same thing giving itself diverse shapes but rather as a result of the shapeless repetition of one and the same thing which is only externally applied to diverse material and which contains only the tedious semblance of diversity.
... what is demanded is for the shapes to originate their richness and determine their differences from out of themselves ...
It is the whole which has returned into itself from out of its succession and extension and has come to be the simple concept of itself. The actuality of this simple whole consists in those embodiments which, having become moments of the whole, again develop themselves anew and give themselves a figuration, but this time in their new element, in the new meaning which itself has come to be.
...this other view instead consists in only a 'monochrome formalism.' I referred to this earlier, thinking it might have to do with the formalism of Kant.
I would be grateful for some clarity on this, thanks. — Amity
Re #15, two things I get - infer - from it is that "idea" is itself not static, and thus anyone or anything, any system, that claims to "have" it, is wrong. — tim wood
... knowledge conforming itself to what is to be known. — tim wood
I find in this idea an opposition to the Platonic eidos - the perfect form that is the model for the Greek's imperfect reality. — tim wood
... having become moments of the whole, again develop themselves anew and give themselves a figuration, but this time in their new element, in the new meaning which itself has come to be.
Schelling's Absolute was left with no other function than that of removing all the differences which give form to thought. The criticisms of Fichte, and more particularly of Hegel (in the Preface to the Phenomenology of Spirit), pointed to a defect in the conception of the Absolute as mere featureless identity.
Section 5. Positive and Negative Philosophy, and the Critique of Hegel
The differences between Hegel and Schelling derive from their respective approaches to understanding the absolute. — Andrew Bowie
*Of course, it should not be overlooked that Plato himself rejected this. In the dialogue Parmenides, the Forms, as presented by a young Socrates, are shown to be incoherent by Parmenides. The Forms are Plato's poetry, designed to replace the theology of the poets. I have written about this elsewhere on the forum. Plato was, after all, both a master dialectician and rhetorician. — Fooloso4
A most generous gift! (and I love how you phrased that)the gift of a problem to future generations. — Valentinus
I currently feel that I have nothing useful to add, but I'm following this discussion with great enjoyment. — WerMaat
The next few paragraphs further develop this. 16 begins:
In so doing, this formalism asserts that this monotony and abstract universality is the absolute ... — Fooloso4
Pinkard #16
- 17 and 18 seem to go along with this, but combined are too long for one entry. No law against looking ahead at them. — tim wood
Like: they're just piling up stuff that was already there, and spray-paint it pink, and then expound how this perfectly shows the superiority of the theory of pinkness. — WerMaat
Thank you all for your helpful comments! I currently feel that I have nothing useful to add, but I'm following this discussion with great enjoyment. — WerMaat
Although he has not used the term, it is aufheben, both to cancel or negate and preserve. You referred to "aufheben and sublation" on page 4. Sublation is the English translation of aufheben. It is the preserve part that you seem to have overlooked. It is not a matter of leaving the past behind. If we are to understand the ontological status of 'idea' for Hegel we must see that he does not mean what we ordinarily mean when we talk about ideas. On the other hand, he does not mean some transcendent realm of unchanging beings either.* — Fooloso4
' ...this other view instead consists in only a 'monochrome formalism' (para 15 ).
I referred to this earlier, thinking it might have to do with the formalism of Kant.
I would be grateful for some clarity on this, thanks. — Amity
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.