t there are harsh criticisms that the book has inspired fascism, communism, and overall totalitarianism — Dermot Griffin
Fichte introduced into German philosophy the three-step of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis, using these three terms. Schelling took up this terminology. Hegel did not. He never once used these three terms together to designate three stages in an argument or account in any of his books. — Dermot Griffin
Whatever the dialectic is, it is not logic in the modern sense — Banno
Maybe we should distinguish the modern Analytic philosophical sense from the modern Continental sense. — Joshs
Hegel's social and political philosophy cannot be adequately addressed without discussing his Philosophy of Right. — Fooloso4
In relation to external things, the rational aspect is that I possess property, but the particular aspect comprises subjective aims, needs, arbitrariness, abilities, external circumstances, and so forth (see §45). On these mere possession as such depends, but this particular aspect has in this sphere of abstract personality not yet been established as identical with freedom. What and how much I possess, therefore, is a matter of indifference so far as rights are concerned.
Remark: If at this stage we may speak of more persons than one, although no such distinction has yet been made, then we may say that in respect of their personality persons are equal. But this is an empty tautology, for the person, as something abstract, has not yet been particularised or established as distinct in some specific way.
‘Equality’ is the abstract identity of the Understanding; reflective thought and all kinds of intellectual mediocrity stumble on it at once when they are confronted by the relation of unity to a difference. At this point, equality could only be the equality of abstract persons as such, and therefore the whole field of possession, this terrain of inequality, falls outside it. The demand sometimes made for an equal division of land, and other available resources too, is an intellectualism all the more empty and superficial in that at the heart of particular differences there lies not only the external contingency of nature but also the whole compass of mind, endlessly particularised and differentiated, and the rationality of mind developed into an organism.
We may not speak of the injustice of nature in the unequal distribution of possessions and resources, since nature is not free and therefore is neither just nor unjust. That everyone ought to have subsistence enough for his needs is a moral wish and thus vaguely expressed is well enough meant, but like anything that is only well meant it lacks objectivity. On the other hand, subsistence is not the same as possession and belongs to another sphere, i.e. to civil society. — Hegel, Philosophy of Right, section 49
I guess that's one approach - dialectic as rhetoric rather than logic. — Banno
:clap:Hegel's social and political philosophy cannot be adequately addressed without discussing his Philosophy of Right — Fooloso4
Hegel only rejected the law on non-contradiction because he thought all contradictions were paradoxes in nature and that contradiction was an empty term. — Gregory
I've an allergy to big fish, such explanations are more likely to be wrong than right. Nor have I any idea what "real truth" might be. What could it mean to say of a. truth that it is unreal? The word "real" doesn't seem to be doing anything.He went for the big fish, trying to unite all human thought in a system that still maintained the reality of truth. — Gregory
What does the East have to do with this - are you talking about geography or compass direction, and why? "interdependent coarising" is like "T'was brillig" - “It seems very pretty,” [Alice] said when she had finished it, “but it's rather hard to understand! … Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas–only I don't exactly know what they are!”The East has dependent origination (interdependent coarising) and if all is one then truth is interdependent. — Gregory
So there's the problem. Some folk seem to find Hegel satisfactory, but to me his work is associated with a most unpleasant odour.That happens to be what Hegel thought as well! — Gregory
I've never read any of Hegel's writings, but somehow I came to associate his name with the notion of a historical (or natural) Dialectic summarized in terms of Thesis - Antithesis - Synthesis. I just read the novel by Ken Follett, World Without End, set in late medieval England, when the long-running semi-stable Feudal System of Lords & Serfs was beginning to unravel. The author doesn't analyze the situation philosophically, but describes it in such visceral detail that the reader feels like a first-hand witness to man's inhumanity to man, and especially to women. In light of our modern -- enlightened, but less than perfect -- system, that darker era feels depressing, especially when compressed into a single story-line.The dialectic of lordship and bondage, most commonly called the master-slave dialectic — Dermot Griffin
logic in the modern sense. — Banno
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.