• Amity
    5.1k


    So, negation is important because there is no motion forward without it. The Notion is not an explanation but an activity. It is not "automatic" as a process. If it was, then it would already be appropriated like a Category of Reason.Valentinus

    I think that is correct and is a consistent feature throughout.The latest in para 32 and 33:

    32:
    However, the life of spirit is not a life that is fearing death and austerely saving itself from ruin; rather, it bears death calmly, and in death, it sustains itself. Spirit only wins its truth by finding its feet in its absolute disruption. Spirit is not this power which, as the positive, avoids looking at the negative, as is the case when we say of something that it is nothing, or that it is false, and then, being done with it, go off on our own way on to something else. No, spirit is this power only by looking the negative in the face and lingering with it. This lingering is the magical power that converts it into being. — Hegel

    33:
    Nowadays the task before us consists not so much in purifying the individual of the sensuously immediate and in making him into a thinking substance which has itself been subjected to thought; it consists instead in doing the very opposite. It consists in actualizing and spiritually animating the universal through the sublation of fixed and determinate thoughts. — Hegel
  • Amity
    5.1k
    Further notes from Rockmore:
    https://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft7d5nb4r8;brand=ucpress

    Analysis (Analysieren) of an idea into its constituent elements, through the understanding (Verstand ), as distinguished from reason, will not yield knowledge. Kant's critical philosophy features categories, or pure concepts of the understanding, that "produce," or "construct," the objects of experience by unifying the contents of sensory experience. For Hegel, on the contrary, the understanding does not unify but rather separates. He refers to "the activity of separation of theUnderstanding, the most astonishing and mightiest of powers, or rather the absolute power" (§32, 18). The understanding's capacity to introduce distinctions, to separate what was whole, or the power of the negative that causes death, is a phase of the cognitive process. In a further phase, mere individuality is transformed into universality. In this way, thoughts, or pure essences, are brought together in an "organic whole" (§34, 20). — Tom Rockmore
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    But to seek to know before we know is as absurd...Hegel, Logic, paragragh 10

    This seems the heart of the matter. But this at the end;
    that the usual course which proceeds by assumptions and anticipations is no better than a hypothetical and problematical mode of procedure. But his perceiving this does not alter the character of this method; it only makes clear its imperfections.Hegel, Logic, paragragh 10

    That is (as I read it) that method a) (Kant's) is not perfect and method b) (Reinhold's) is neither perfect nor a fix for method a). That is, that Kant's approach is not perfect.

    A modern phrase (first used before Hegel!) suffices here: "hermeneutic circle." More accurately, spiral. in simplest terms, as you go 'round and 'round with a thing, or idea, it makes the more sense. "Circle" referring variously to a "circle" of texts that inform (by successive recourse to) on the text in question. Or because the Greek root means translate/interpret, which in itself evokes a "taking counsel with," implying an other even it the other needed be found only in one's own critical awareness.

    In digging a little deeper, there is revealed both a temporal aspect in the back-and-forth, which is to say, asking the question to the text about the text and awaiting the answer, which leads through a succession of questions and answers. And an historical aspect: that is, the seeking of meaning (broadly defined) in the seeking of an historical understanding, then extracting it from the terms - the matrix - in which it is found. Not the original language or sense, because that is not what is first found, which is just the at-first expression in modern-current terms of the thing found, but in attempting to "circle back" to what was meant in the context of the time in which it was expressed.

    Perhaps in this we stumble (I stumble) over a sharper distinction between Kant and Hegel, that Kant really is not about historicity or temporality in his account of knowledge, but rather about how it comes to be in the first place, which set of concerns is for Hegel exactly upside-down. The question remains how much Hegel was aware of his own absorption into time and history.

    At this point a decision to be made. Hegel is either a dinosaur, interesting but in-himself a quaint piece of history of no direct interest, or, even today the bearer of truths timeless in-themselves, that ought to be known. And in this lies a hazard perhaps best illustrated in a consideration of paintings by Fragonard.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Honor%C3%A9_Fragonard.
    That hazard lies in the difficulty of distinguishing the intentions and thoughts of the painter, which is problematic in the extreme, and what we impose.

    From Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit, cited in Gadamer, Truth and Method, p. 197.
    [Classical works of art] "are now what they are for us - beautiful fruits torn from the tree. A friendly fate presents them to us a a girl might offer these fruits. We have not the real life of their being - the tree that bore them, the earth and elements, and climate that constituted their substance, the seasonal changes that governed their growth. Nor does fate give us, with those works of art, their world, the Spring and Summer of the moral life in which they bloomed and ripened but only the veiled memory of this reality."
  • Valentinus
    1.6k

    Very well said.
    I consider your question of dinosaur versus current player the one that is most interesting to me and shapes the tenor of many reactions to Hegel's text.
    But I will respond more thoughtfully after a little bit.
    I am being chased by a Velociraptor.
  • Amity
    5.1k
    At this point a decision to be made. Hegel is either a dinosaur, interesting but in-himself a quaint piece of history of no direct interest, or, even today the bearer of truths timeless in-themselves, that ought to be knowntim wood

    Why 'at this point'?
    Why an either/or decision ?
    Why the extreme positions ?

    You might need to make that decision. I don't.

    However, you raise an interesting question which I have taken the liberty of including in a parallel thread:

    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/6430/hegel-is-not-a-philosopher-thoughts-
  • Amity
    5.1k
    I consider your question of dinosaur versus current player the one that is most interesting to me and shapes the tenor of many reactions to Hegel's text.
    But I will respond more thoughtfully after a little bit.
    Valentinus

    'Dinosaur v current player'.
    I look forward to further clarification.
    Clearly, there are many different views and interpretations.
    All of them potentially relevant to one's own developing understanding.That is one of the reasons I started a new thread; to give room for that exploration and to prevent straying too far off the Preface.

    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/6430/hegel-is-not-a-philosopher-thoughts-

    I understood Tim's aim was to focus on the text alone and explicate each paragraph *
    I find this continual comparative analysis of Hegel v Kant useful up to a point. However, it seems to be taking over the objective analysis of the Preface.
    I miss @Fooloso4 comments on each paragraph. Perhaps he has lost interest...

    *
    To understand any book or text requires first that it be read - and understood. That's the task of this thread, and that is the only task of this thread! Opinions and arguments are not welcome! Exception: given a reading, if someone can add light or improve on - or correct - the explication given, then they're very welcome. Or if anyone wants to add their own parallel "reading," also welcome.

    With luck, 50-odd pages, maybe the thing can be done in under 50 - 100 posts!
    tim wood
  • Amity
    5.1k
    I'll proceed paragraph-by-paragraph.tim wood

    This is a difficult read. I intend to proceed through it paragraph-by-paragraph,tim wood

    Copying and pasting.
    Soon the whole Preface will be covered.
    The mountain top reached.
    Out of breath and without oxygen.
    Dead bodies are left on the mountain.
    Where is the joy ?
    Of reading...
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    I find the paragraphs taken severally difficult to get through. Often in trying to follow the path I find no path. I.e., where I look for meaning I have to provide it - and remember that as mine it's provisional. What I'm left with is a larger picture in which detail is lost, but large structure seeming manifest, like a view of a mountain range from a distance.

    In the simplest and briefest terms, I read Hegel (so far) as saying that what there is, is what is. But that it's useless and even more a mistake to suppose that "first impressions" equal final understanding. The road to "spirit" or final understanding must in every person be traveled - few if any shortcuts. Thus a brick, uncritically taken to be a brick, remains in itself concealed in an obscurity abetted by the casual - and ignorant - "taking-as." A comprehensive questioning of the brick will yield its genus and species, qualities, materials, makers, purposes, uses, and all its possible histories and potentials past, present, and future. Aristotle, anyone? And having traversed all of this, then, finally, you know and understand what a brick is, or more properly obscurely, the is-ness of the being of the brick. And a big part of that is the return, the hermeneutic circle/spiral back, to the brick as a brick.

    And it strikes me this seems a profoundly non-scientific view of bricks. Nor even a philosophical view. These are attempts to give an account of the brick. And Hegel (as I read him so far) is not interested in accounts, though they be rendered along the way. In a word, then, it's in essence a relational view, fully developed and brought back to the concrete. (By implication, this imbues the speaker's voice with meaning, but a whole other topic, with its own path back to Aristotle through his Rhetoric!)
  • Valentinus
    1.6k
    In any case the origin of the mystical tradition in Western philosophy is (neo)Platonism and its successors, whose doctrines were fused into early Christianity by the Greek-speaking theologians, including Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and later Pseudo-Dionysius and John Scotus Eriugena. The intuition of 'the One' which is the ground/source of all being through the domain of the forms/ideas is central to that tradition. Although it should be said the marriage of Hebrew prophetic religion with Greek rationalism was often a rather fraught one, and that (in my view) the mystical elements became almost completely subordinated to the literalistic tendencies in Protestantism. But there's a huge amount of study involved in all of those issues, and I've only skimmed the surface. But I think it is possible to identify aspects the Hegelian 'absolute' with both the 'first mover' of Aristotle, and also with the One of neo-platonism (feasibly a kind of 'world soul').Wayfarer

    Your description is helpful. I would only throw a few curve balls into the mix.

    The emphasis in Lutheran thought that what is happening for each individual is the Incarnation is mystical in itself.

    As a matter of struggling with the idea of the "unconditioned" as a means of orientation to establish a starting place, Leibniz and Spinoza did that sort of thing while Kant declined to provide that in his Prolegomena to any Future Metaphysics because he said we could never prove it.
  • Amity
    5.1k
    I find the paragraphs taken severally difficult to get through. Often in trying to follow the path I find no path. I.e., where I look for meaning I have to provide it - and remember that as mine it's provisionaltim wood

    Of course, the paragraphs are difficult to get through to find the meaning. As a group, we all struggle with this to varying degrees. Some spend more time than others, some fall away; it's all a learning process.
    Fascinating to be a part of.The dynamics and dialogue intriguing in themselves.

    As a leader of a discussion, it is wise and important to acknowledge a lack of understanding and not to plough on regardless, without even commenting on a particular paragraph *.
    Silence can mean so many things. It can give the impression of not caring and that is far from the truth.
    It is good to know where we stand, even if the ground is shaky, especially when the ground is shaky.

    All our understanding is provisional. Our thoughts are not written in stone. They are active and adapting.
    Communication is all. Thanks for listening and sharing.

    *
    If something in a view you're examining is unclear to you, don't gloss it over. Call attention to the unclarity. Suggest several different ways of understanding the view. Explain why it's not clear which of these interpretations is correct.Jim Pryor

    I am guilty of glossing over that which I don't understand or dismissing fancy gobbledegook.
    However, sometimes I try to gain clarification by asking questions of other posters. Sometimes I am fortunate enough to get an understandable reply. Other times, the reply is that ambiguous silence.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Wayfarer provides this, from
    https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/en/magee.htm
    "Hegel is not a philosopher. He is no lover or seeker of wisdom — he believes he has found it. Hegel writes in the preface to the Phenomenology of Spirit, “To help bring philosophy closer to the form of Science, to the goal where it can lay aside the title of ‘love of knowing’ and be actual knowledge — that is what I have set before me”. By the end of the Phenomenology, Hegel claims to have arrived at Absolute Knowledge, which he identifies with wisdom."

    Whether accurate or true or not is incidental; it serves here as a touchstone for what can be made of Hegel's text. That is, if an interpretation or understanding doesn't comport with the above, then it is to be set aside. Or should be. Any philosophy - certainly any science - has to touch ground somewhere, somehow; must be in some way or regard relatively simple and comprehensible. That, or it's a creature entirely of air and should be allowed to float away. Admired, perhaps, for its colour or design, but that admiration an indulgence as against the work of determining meaning. Hegel, then, as either philosophy or science, has got to work with and for chairs and tables and for most people. Indeed, Hegel is batting clean-up in a line-up of philosophers that is engaged in a radical re-assessment of the reality of German life of the time. Apparently on the surface that life was stultifying and repressive, if predictable, and underneath was boiling. The fuel was the possibility of personal freedom and growth, ignited by the twin explosions of both the American and French Revolutions, the heat maintained by the Napoleonic wars.

    Hegel's audience was early nineteenth century Germany. Here's a bit of the Wikipedia page on Germany: "During the 16th century, northern German regions became the centre of the Protestant Reformation. After the collapse of the Holy Roman Empire, the German Confederation was formed in 1815. The German revolutions of 1848–49 resulted in the Frankfurt Parliament establishing major democratic rights. In 1871, Germany became a nation state when most of the German states unified (except Switzerland and Austria) into the Prussian-dominated German Empire."

    Which is to note that there was no Germany in any modern sense in Hegel's time. All this may seem a tedious bit of history, but the point is that Hegel, with Kant pretty much as lead-off man, and others (e.g., Jacobi, Reinhold, Fichte, Holderlin, Novalis, Schleiermacher, Schlegel, Schelling, Fries, etc) were competing in the public sphere with each other and for their ideas over a period of years.

    Pinkard describes the Phenomenology, of which our text is the preface, as follows. "Hegel intended the book to satisfy the needs of contemporary (European) humanity: it was to provide an education, a Bildung, a formation for its readership so that they could come to grasp who they had become (namely, a people... "called" to be free), why they had become these people, and why that had been necessary.... [T]o show its readership why "leading one's own life," self-determination, had become necessary for "us moderns" and what such "self-legislation" actually meant. (German Philosophy 1760 - 1860, p. 222.)

    -----

    33. That what is represented becomes a possession of pure selfconsciousness, namely, this elevation to universality itself, is only one aspect of cultural formation and is not yet fully perfected cultural formation.

    – The course of studies of the ancient world is distinct from that of modern times in that the ancient course of studies consisted in a thoroughgoing cultivation of natural consciousness. Experimenting particularly with each part of its existence and philosophizing about everything it came across, the
    ancient course of studies fashioned itself into an altogether active universality.
    — Hegel/Pinkard
    People can attain knowledge and own it, but that's not the end. Ancient studies were essentially observational and reflective, the attempt to know what is, and to make sense of it. That is, an open questioning.

    In contrast, in modern times, the individual finds the abstract form ready-made. The strenuous effort to grasp it and make it his own is more of an unmediated drive to bring the inner to the light of day; it is the truncated creation of the universal rather than the emergence of the universal from out of the concrete, from out of the diversity found in existence. Nowadays the task before us consists not so much in purifying the individual of the sensuously immediate and in making him into a thinking substance which has itself been subjected to thought; it consists instead in doing the very opposite. It consists in actualizing and spiritually animating the universal through the sublation of fixed and determinate thoughts.
    Hegel's criticism appears to be that much of the then current thinking (and our own?) is the free association of idea with nature to "create" understanding. The job, then, is to recover the concrete, the what is, from a too-sensuous appreciation and to study the concrete through the "dialectic" of its being.

    However, it is much more difficult to set fixed thoughts into fluid motion than it is to bring sensuous existence into such fluidity. The reason for this lies in what was said before. The former determinations have the I, the power of the negative, or, pure actuality, as their substance and as the element of their existence, whereas sensuous determinations have their substance only in impotent abstract immediacy, or in being as such.
    The abstract is not the concrete. The abstract flows easily into the fantastic, as ideas. The concrete, on the other hand, has the power of being determinate, as against what it is not. The collision between the what-is and the what-is-not, in so far as both are real, yields to the understanding, through their opposition in the understanding, called by the general name of sublation, a reality that combines and acknowledges them both as a unity, a being-together in difference.

    Thoughts become fluid by pure thinking, this inner immediacy, recognizing itself as a moment, or, by pure self-certainty abstracting itself from itself – it does not consist in only omitting itself, or, setting itself off to one side. Rather, it consists in giving up the fixity of its self-positing as well as the fixity of the purely concrete, which is the I itself in opposition to the differences of its content – as the fixity of differences which, posited as existing in the element of pure thinking, share that unconditionality of the I. Through this movement, pure thoughts become concepts, and are for the first time what they are in truth: self-moving movements, circles, which are what their substance is; namely, spiritual essentialities.

    By releasing the fixity of the I and the fixity of the purely concrete into each other, without omitting either, the thinking, buttressed by the unconditionality of both, achieves a higher level of understanding that takes on a status as a being in-itself.

    Correction/refinement welcome.
  • Amity
    5.1k
    A modern phrase (first used before Hegel!) suffices here: "hermeneutic circle." More accurately, spiral. in simplest terms, as you go 'round and 'round with a thing, or idea, it makes the more sense. "Circle" referring variously to a "circle" of texts that inform (by successive recourse to) on the text in question. Or because the Greek root means translate/interpret, which in itself evokes a "taking counsel with," implying an other even it the other needed be found only in one's own critical awareness.tim wood

    Given that I have started a parallel thread to further explore issues, I will be discussing the question of the 'Hermeneutic Circle' there.
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/6430/hegel-is-not-a-philosopher-thoughts-

    I hope thereby not to intrude on the focus and engagement required for the Preface text discussion.

    @tim wood
    @Fooloso4
    @Wayfarer
    @Valentinus
    And any other interested parties...

    I hope that using parts of quotes from this thread will not be objected to.
    I will give due reference, acknowledgement and show context.
    Have sent a PM to tim wood.
  • Amity
    5.1k
    Correction/refinement welcome.tim wood

    A lot of waffle.

    For anyone interested in a more objective and substantive account, this is recommended:

    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hegel/
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Correction/refinement welcome.
    — tim wood

    A lot of waffle.
    For anyone interested in a more objective and substantive account, this is recommended:
    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hegel/
    Amity

    I am at a loss to see how "waffle" is any kind of correction or refinement - or contribution. What is waffling, where, how?

    But I do observe that there is in your posts almost zero reference to any reading you're doing of Hegel's text. Anyone, everyone, else, but not Hegel. Why would that be? I assume you do read the paragraphs. Why would you be the more interested in what other people - especially those selling something - have to say about Hegel, than in what is before you for you to comment on yourself?

    As to Hegel criticism, surely you're aware that's been a cottage industry that covers nearly the entire range from revilement nearly to sanctification from almost the date of first publication. Never mind what everyone else says; what do you say?.
  • Amity
    5.1k
    I am at a loss to see how "waffle" is any kind of correction or refinement - or contribution. What is waffling, where, how?tim wood

    You are right. You didn't get what you asked for. Tough. Perhaps someone else can be bothered.

    'Waffling':
    noun
    1.BRITISH
    lengthy but vague or trivial talk or writing.
    "we've edited out some of the waffle"

    synonyms:prattle, jabbering, verbiage, drivel, meaningless talk, nonsense, twaddle, gibberish, stuff and nonsense, bunkum, mumbo jumbo, padding, flannel, verbosity, prolixity;
    — Oxford online dictionary
     

    The first part of your post. Verbose padding.

    But I do observe that there is in your posts almost zero reference to any reading you're doing of Hegel's text. Anyone, everyone, else, but not Hegel. Why would that be? I assume you do read the paragraphs.tim wood

    You are right. I have never referenced any paragraphs, discussed any analysis with any other participants or raised any questions about the text. And I never, ever read the paragraphs.

    [ Edit: to remove comments I regret making ]
  • Pussycat
    379
    As to the question of whether Hegel was a mystic, we must first ask what a mystic is. Is it someone who has experiences or someone who has been initiated formally or informally into secret teachings or someone who yearns for immediacy or someone who attempts to attain altered states of consciousness via particular practices or ...?Fooloso4

    A mystic is someone who knows or thinks to know something but refrains from uttering it, for various reasons. Mysticism's main tenet can be summed up in the proposition: "'Whereof one dare not speak thereof one must be silent". But Hegel was pretty much verbose, unless he kept silent about a lot of stuff.
  • Valentinus
    1.6k
    A modern phrase (first used before Hegel!) suffices here: "hermeneutic circle." More accurately, spiral. in simplest terms, as you go 'round and 'round with a thing, or idea, it makes the more sense. "Circle" referring variously to a "circle" of texts that inform (by successive recourse to) on the text in question. Or because the Greek root means translate/interpret, which in itself evokes a "taking counsel with," implying an other even it the other needed be found only in one's own critical awareness.tim wood

    The hermeneutic circle is a good idea to bring into this topic. It is an element in the experiences Hegel describes and also reflects how he is in the circle himself as the origin of many discussions and disputes about ontology and epistemology. In spite of those conditions, I read the Phenomenology as an attempt at escaping the circle of "avoiding learning how to swim before getting in the water." When I read that section of the Logic, I wonder whether Hegel avoided the situation he said Kant was stuck in. Does he escape the problem of being "outside" of his method?

    Some of that wondering goes in the direction being explored by Fooloso4:
    Another thing might be that each thing must be other than all other things. Is the whole other than itself? In one sense since there is nothing other than the whole of what is then there would be nothing other than the whole. But self-knowing requires the self to treat itself as is object of knowledge.Fooloso4

    A greater part of my wondering goes toward how "Self-Awareness" comes into being through its experiences and the role harsh necessity and "un-freedom" play in that. The negativity of the conscious individual meets the negation of the other individuals. The logic of how these events unfold leads to freedom and self-awareness. I accept that something like the structure of a Preface is needed to talk about experience this way. To see conflict as part of a process requires the use of synthesis for it to become past. From that point of view, Hegel is keenly aware of his "absorption" in his time and history. He is a major part of why we talk that way now.

    On the other hand, the idea that the process has reached a kind of completion is at odds with the instruction to stay in the water. The ever expanding generations of Hegel's critics dig into the negativity he did not explore. By the turn of his own method, that points to elements and processes he was not aware of.

    In my mind, it is that relationship between the dialectic and understanding that is still alive and kicking.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    By your description Hegel would not be a mystic, but those who, like Wallace, claim that Hegel was a mystic hold to some other idea of what mysticism means.

    Given the importance of the development of spirit in time, it seems clear that Hegel's thinking goes further than that of the mystics. But, one might argue that the mystic is able to transcend time. For Hegel, however, science is discursive. It is necessary to articulate or give a rational account of what one claims to know. I think he would say that the mystic fails to do this, but not because the mystic chooses to remain silent.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Pinkard #s34, 35, 36

    34. This movement of pure essentialities constitutes the nature of scientific rigor per se. As the connectedness of its content, this movement is both the necessity of that content and its growth into an organic whole.

    The path along which the concept of knowing is reached likewise itself becomes a necessary and complete coming-to-be, so that this preparation ceases to be a contingent philosophizing which just happens to fasten onto this and those objects, relations, or thoughts arising from an imperfect consciousness and having all the contingency such a consciousness brings in its train; or, it ceases to be the type of philosophizing which seeks to ground the truth in only clever argumentation about pros and cons or in inferences based on fully determinate thoughts and the consequences following from them. Instead, through the movement of the concept, this path will encompass the complete worldliness of consciousness in its necessity.

    35. Furthermore, such an account constitutes the first part of science, since the existence of spirit as primary is nothing else but the immediate itself, or, the beginning, which is not yet its return into itself. Hence, the element of immediate existence is the determinateness though which this part of science renders itself distinct from the other parts. – The account of this difference leads directly to the discussion of a few of those idées fixes that usually turn up in these discussions.

    36. The immediate existence of spirit, consciousness, has two moments, namely, knowing and the objectivity which is negative to knowing.

    While spirit develops itself in this element and explicates its moments therein, still this opposition corresponds to these moments, and they all come on the scene as shapes of consciousness.

    The science of this path is the science of the experience consciousness goes through. Substance is considered in the way that it and its movement are the objects of consciousness. Consciousness knows and comprehends nothing but what is in its experience, for what is in experience is just spiritual substance, namely, as the object of its own self.

    However, spirit becomes the object, for it is this movement of becoming an other to itself, which is to say, of becoming an object to its own self and of sublating this otherness. And experience is the name of this very movement in which the immediate, the non-experienced, i.e., the abstract (whether the abstract is that of sensuous being or of “a simple” which has only been thought about) alienates itself and then comes round to itself from out of this alienation. It is only at that point that, as a property of consciousness, the immediate is exhibited in its actuality and in its truth.
    — Hegel/Pinkard


    This link connects to the source for the copied texts:
    https://libcom.org/files/Georg%20Wilhelm%20Friedrich%20Hegel%20-%20The%20Phenomenology%20of%20Spirit%20(Terry%20Pinkard%20Translation).pdf
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    It's a bias of mine that this stuff, this preface, must be relatively simple, notwithstanding the language in which it is expressed. And the language is difficult, as even just the first sentences of #34 gives ample evidence. That is, this must be an exercise in exegesis, not eisegesis.

    "Movement" seems an essential component of what is being said. Movement implies "moments." Moments can only be occasions of some distinction within the movement - because movement is nothing more than a succession of moments - but the distinction must be both apart from and part of the movement itself, the same movement considered in itself as part and then as whole: perhaps at first considered as the object of observation, and then inclusive of observation. And this just a very strange way of saying that science thinks about its subjects and (then) finds ways to question both its subjects and its own understanding relative to those subjects. (Or, that is how it's done in the 2019, but not in 1800.)

    A further point (it seems to me) is a notion of fluidity. By "fluidity" is meant that nothing is fixed. Science - knowledge - tended towards a consultation of and with a set of fixed ideas, thinking in terms of applying templates or worse a Procrustean tailoring of thinking; a deciding of what things are by consulting what other things have been determined to be by fixed set of rules and standards. Fixity, thus, set over and against movement, moments, fluidity.

    And this invokes the history of philosophy in that it sets ancient Greek science, that Hegel apparently takes for an open, "fluid," "moving" enterprise of encounter of observer and world, against the system he finds himself in, wherein the life of science, its spirit, is reduced to pigeonholing as, when, and where possible. At his, Hegel's, end, that pigeonholing is exemplified in the Kantian categories with their problematic noumena, or more importantly, that the Kantian structure, ironically built from pieces laid out and pre-cut to fit by Aristotle, represents a fixed and final set of ideas.

    A picture might help. Imagine two dancers in free dance across a ballroom floor: that would be Hegel's spirit and world, moving freely to discover each other. Then one dancer moving in set steps around a fixed and unmoving stone stele.

    One might say that a problem with the fixed, rigid, system is that it never is more than knowledge "according to..," but never knowledge in itself.

    And I think this tension is old news. In Plato's dialogue Phaedrus, 274 - 275, Plato has Socrates relate to Phaedrus the story of the invention of writing. Quoting the essential part (the Egyptian god Ammon speaking critically to the lesser god and inventor, Theuth): "Those who acquire it [writing] will cease to exercise their memory and become forgetful; they will rely on writing to bring things to their remembrance by external signs instead of on their internal resources. What you have discovered is a receipt for recollection, not for memory. And as for wisdom, your pupils will have a reputation for it without the reality; they will receive a quantity of information without proper instruction, and in consequence be thought very knowledgeable when they are for the most part quite ignorant And because they are filled with the conceit of wisdom instead of real wisdom they will be a burden to society.

    In passing, this not only an indictment of modern education, but a prescient explicit statement of its goals!
  • Pussycat
    379
    I am talking about this sort of thing, as it was laid out by Plato (or his followers) in "The Seventh Letter":

    Therefore every man of worth, when dealing with matters of worth, will be far from exposing them to ill feeling and misunderstanding among men by committing them to writing. In one word, then, it may be known from this that, if one sees written treatises composed by anyone, either the laws of a lawgiver, or in any other form whatever, these are not for that man the things of most worth, if he is a man of worth, but that his treasures are laid up in the fairest spot that he possesses. But if these things were worked at by him as things of real worth, and committed to writing, then surely, not gods, but men "have themselves bereft him of his wits."

    Anyone who has followed this discourse and digression will know well that, if Dionysios or anyone else, great or small, has written a treatise on the highest matters and the first principles of things, he has, so I say, neither heard nor learnt any sound teaching about the subject of his treatise; otherwise, he would have had the same reverence for it, which I have, and would have shrunk from putting it forth into a world of discord and uncomeliness. For he wrote it, not as an aid to memory-since there is no risk of forgetting it, if a man's soul has once laid hold of it; for it is expressed in the shortest of statements-but if he wrote it at all, it was from a mean craving for honour, either putting it forth as his own invention, or to figure as a man possessed of culture, of which he was not worthy, if his heart was set on the credit of possessing it.
    — plato 7th

    http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/seventh_letter.html
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    Perhaps men have themselves bereft Hegel of his wits, or maybe he too is a man of worth. In that case he would be like Plato in that both have a lot to say but both leave the things of the most worth unsaid. I am certain that this is the case for Plato but do not know if it is for Hegel.
  • tim wood
    9.3k
    Are we to take Hegel for what he wrote (and unavoidably how he wrote it), or what he did not write? In my opinion, their (Plato, Hegel, et al) reticence, when they were reticent, was based on calculation: was the material best served by speech or in writing, and was it prudent, or even safe, to commit the thought to writing.

    In a proper consideration of a text, the first task is to read that and even, if possible, to understand it. So far, I have some notions about our text, and I think well of my notions, but I'm far from settled on my notions.
  • Pussycat
    379
    Perhaps men have themselves bereft Hegel of his wits, or maybe he too is a man of worth. In that case he would be like Plato in that both have a lot to say but both leave the things of the most worth unsaid. I am certain that this is the case for Plato but do not know if it is for Hegel.Fooloso4

    Exactly! Which is why I said "but Hegel was pretty much verbose, unless he kept silent about a lot of stuff". No matter whether Plato or Hegel were really mystics, it's another question what they took themselves to be. In that respect, Plato certainly took himself as one, but I doubt that the same can be said of Hegel. In fact, I believe that Hegel wanted to do away with mysticism, most probably seeing the "young spirit" as mystical and secretive, but in its progression breaking free from this secrecy, like you say "it seems clear that Hegel's thinking goes further than that of the mystics".
  • Pussycat
    379
    Yes of course, you are right, the first task is to read and understand what is written. I was just commenting on the mystical.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    When I first read Plato I thought he was a mystic. I no longer read him this way.

    I think he was a Socratic or zetetic skeptic, knowing that he does not know. What he says about the Forms seems to be a direct contradiction of this point, but a careful reading of the Republic makes clear that Socrates is telling stories. He admits he cannot confirm that things are as he says. In other words, he has not had the transcendent experience of direct apprehension of the Forms. The Forms, of which the visible world is said to be an image, are actually themselves images of the truth, a truth he does not know.

    I think what Plato presents is a public teachings that takes on the guise of mystical revelation. It is a salutary teaching about the Good. It is Plato's response to the poets who shaped the minds and souls of man. It is poetry (poeisis, to make), intended to inspire and lead to the desire to aspire, to seek the truth itself.
  • Pussycat
    379
    So, to make things clear, you say that a mystic is like the one being portrayed in the following music video, one that "saw the whole of the moon"?



    And that Plato was not one, but Hegel was?

    I saw the crescent
    You saw the whole of the moon
    I spoke about wings
    You just flew
    I wondered, I guessed and I tried
    You just knew
    I sighed
    But you swooned, I saw the crescent
    You saw the whole of the moon
    The whole of the moon

    How would Hegel call this, the distinction between loving to know and actual knowledge, or I dunno?
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    So, to make things clear, you say that a mystic is like the one being portrayed in the following music video, one that "saw the whole of the moon"?Pussycat

    I am not saying what the mystic is. What I am saying is that there is no single definition of the mystic. I am not sure if the label is important or helpful. So, when someone asks whether Hegel was a mystic I must ask what he or she means by that.

    And that Plato was not one, but Hegel was?Pussycat

    I don't think either of them were. I do see some similarities between Hegel and Lurianic Kabbalah, but I am not prepared to make more of it. I simply do not know his work well enough to speak with more confidence on the matter.
  • Valentinus
    1.6k
    One way I look at the limit of reason stuff in Hegel is that he was a horse who got out of his corral when a gate was left open.
    He galloped for a while and then stopped because he expected there to be another fence after the one he got past.
  • Pussycat
    379

    For sure, there is no single definition of the mystic, or for anything. But we can focus our attention on different meanings for the same word. Which means that there is no point in us, or anyone for that matter, arguing what a mystic really is, really pointless, but to give an account, a description, for what we, individually, mean by that, like you ask. So I am saying that Hegel believed, mystic or not, purported himself to be the one to see the whole, "see the whole of the moon", would you agree?

    I mean, like timmy :) above referred from the marxists:

    "Hegel is not a philosopher. He is no lover or seeker of wisdom — he believes he has found it. Hegel writes in the preface to the Phenomenology of Spirit, “To help bring philosophy closer to the form of Science, to the goal where it can lay aside the title of ‘love of knowing’ and be actual knowledge — that is what I have set before me”. By the end of the Phenomenology, Hegel claims to have arrived at Absolute Knowledge, which he identifies with wisdom."

    In order to know with what we are dealing with here. Are we dealing with this? With a method to attain absolute knowledge, everything that there is to know?? But I think that Hegel did not identify himself with absolute knowledge, like he did not say that he knew everything that there is to know, but that his method, the hegelian method, will lead someone to absolute knowledge.

    Has Hegel lost his mind, or does he know what is he talking about?

    He may be right, of course, I don't know. But it is crucial to know beforehand what we are delving into here.
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