The
Philosophy of
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
I.
Life and Works
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (picture)
was born in Stuttgart in 1770. He studied theology
and philosophy, and at first gave his sympathies to
the philosophy of the Enlightenment and to Kantian
Criticism, only to turn to Romantic historicism and
become attached to Fichte and Schelling. He
lectured in various German universities, and
ultimately at the University of Berlin, where he
exercised great influence. He died in 1831.
Hegel's most representative philosophical works
are: Phenomenology of Spirit; Logic; and
Encyclopedia of Philosophical Sciences. German
Idealism and modern thought, generally speaking,
reach the greatest heights of immanentism in the
compact dialectic system of Hegel.
II.
Being and the New Logic of the
Concrete
The primordial Being, as it is conceived by
Hegel, is the poorest and simplest unity. Indeed,
so poor and simple is it that it blends with
nothingness. Primitive and absolute Being is
non-being. (Cf. the Being of Parmenides.) But this
non-being-Being is a subject; it is
perennial activity. Through this perennial
activity, primitive absolute Being becomes
intrinsically differentiated, constructing itself
in an unlimited series of phenomena. That is to
say, the "pure indeterminateness" (nothing) builds
itself upon itself, passing from state to state,
developing explicitly (in a series of determinate
beings) what is implicitly contained in itself. In
any passage of this kind (and such passages are
continually occurring) the primordial
indeterminateness becomes ever richer and more
conscious.
The rhythm which makes possible this
self-revelation and self-construction is that of
the "coincidence of opposites." Because the
development of Being is achieved with the intention
of becoming what it is not, any link in this chain
of development is characterized by a point of
"coincidence" of being and non-being, united to
affirm a higher entity. Being, affirming this
higher entity, does not nullify the preceding
entity, but revaluates it, together with its
opposite (non-being), in a higher synthesis. Being,
in other words, is characterized in its development
by three stages: being (thesis), non-being
(antithesis), becoming (synthesis). In other words,
the preceding entity (being) is affirmed with its
opposite (non-being) in a higher entity (becoming).
It is in this that Hegel's system of triads
consists.
This higher entity, at the same time it becomes
being, is lacerated, so to speak, by its opposite
(i.e., by non-being), and tends to affirm itself in
a still higher entity, and so on ad infinitum. This
activity of building and of tearing itself apart,
with the intention of rebuilding itself ad
infinitum, is the life of Being. To stop this
activity would mean to destroy Being itself.
Hegel believed that he had found a confirmation
of this dynamic development, in which nothing is
nullified but everything is revaluated in a higher
development, in the growth of our stable ego. At
every moment of the development of our personality
we pass from state to state, and yet the preceding
reality is not nullified, but is affirmed in a
richer and more conscious ego.
Another important characteristic of the
primordial reality is its rationality.
Primordial Being is essentially thought, idea,
logos. Hence logic is the rule of the entire series
of its developments; the entire unbroken series in
which Being divides itself and recomposes itself in
thesis, antithesis and synthesis is rational.
In the primordial Being,
thought is identified with reality, so that the
order of ideas coincides perfectly with the order
of beings. Hence Hegel's principle: Every real
being is rational and every rational being is
real.
This new concept of reality as the realization
and overcoming of opposites (being, non-being,
synthesis) requires a new logic, which Hegel calls
the logic of the concrete, as opposed to
that of Aristotle, which Hegel calls formal.
According to Hegel, formal logic is founded on an
abstract and static concept of being, a being which
has been forcibly divorced from the dynamism that
is the true life of reality. This abstract concept
of being, drawn from reality, is understood as
being always identical with itself.
According to Aristotle, the principle of
identity could be formulated because the concept of
being is always the same -- A is equal to A, and A
cannot be its negation (non-A) at the same time and
in the same respect. For Hegel, this logic is
faulty because it misinterprets reality. For him
reality is never identical with itself, but at
every moment changes, passing from what it is to
what it is not. Contradiction, therefore, is the
life of concrete being.
Now, since the rhythm of logic is identical with
the dynamic rhythm of reality, we need a new logic,
which makes possible the reconciliation of the
terms of the contradiction (being and non-being) in
a higher reality. In other words, in any synthesis
there must be present the terms of contradiction,
the former reality and its negation (the opposite),
being and non-being. Hegel maintains that this new
logic of the concrete must take the place of the
formal logic of Aristotle.
III.
Dialectical Process of Being
According to Hegel, reality is a logical process
developing in accordance with the law of
coincidence of opposites. This process depends upon
a fundamental triad: Idea (Logos), Nature, Spirit.
This triad indicates a logical rather than a
chronological succession, for the entire process is
actuated within the primordial Spirit, in which all
is immanent.
Idea or Logos is the system of the
pure concepts which lie at the foundation of all
reality. Nature is the self-extrinsication,
the objectivation of the Idea. It is the Idea's
becoming other than itself, or its self-extension
in time and space. But it is the Universal
Spirit which establishes itself in the series
of phenomena extended in space and time, with the
purpose of developing itself and revealing to
itself with the intention of gaining consciousness
of self. Indeed, nature
reaches the acme of perfection in the human
organism, and the human organism attains the acme
of perfection in individual consciousness. With the
attainment of this supreme stage of perfection
there begins the return of nature to the Universal
Spirit.
Indeed, individual consciousness (or the
subjective spirit) is the first appearance of the
Universal Spirit as rationality and freedom. But in
the narrow limits of individuality, the Spirit can
never reach the fullness of rationality and
freedom, which are the consummation of the entire
process of the Spirit. To realize this ultimate end
(the fullness of rationality and freedom), the
subjective spirit (individual consciousness)
objectivates itself in many superindividual dorms;
i.e., it constructs the ethical world. The first
objectivation is the juridical order, right, which
guarantees freedom to all in a measure compatible
with the freedom of others.
Right can regulate only external conduct. The
spirit which aspires to regulate the interior world
also, objectivates itself in a higher form, i.e.,
in morality. Morality concretizes itself:
- 1. In the family, in which the spirit
reveals itself as a union of souls;
- 2. In civil society, which is a
larger and higher community of souls; and,
lastly,
- 3. In the state, the highest
revelation that the spirit gives to itself.
The state is the living God, who
concretizes Himself in the spirit of the people
(the "national spirit"). The living God incarnates
Himself now in this, now in that nation, according
as the nation realizes more perfectly than any
other the ideal of civilization. This passing of
the Spirit from one nation to another is what
history is made of.
The Spirit is not limited, but circulates among
the entire multitude of particular institutions.
The passage of the Spirit from one nation to
another, according to Hegel, is necessary, rational
and progressive. So also conflict and war are
necessary, rational and progressive. Hence, to the
one chosen people another succeeds. The new
chosen people possesses all rights over the former
for the sufficient reason that it is the conqueror;
similarly, the vanquished people are wrong merely
because they have been vanquished.
History, therefore, is a tribunal before which
all the injustices, evils and crimes with which the
world is filled, find their rational justification.
Such is the conclusion of a dialectic in which the
real has been proclaimed the rational, and values
have been leveled because all are equally necessary
for the manifestation of the Spirit.
Although the state is the highest objectivation
and manifestation of the Spirit, Hegel places the
Universal or Absolute Spirit over the
objective spirit. The Absolute Spirit -- through
the last triad: art, religion and philosophy --
fully actuate the consciousness of its divine
nature in a full equation with itself.
In art the Spirit apprehends its absolute
essence as an idea expressing a sensible object:
the beautiful is an idea sensibly concretized, in
which the infinite is seen as finite.
In religion, on the other hand, there is the
unity of the finite with the infinite. The infinite
is immanent in the finite, but in a sentimental,
imaginative, mythical form. In tracing the history
of religion, Hegel places Christianity above all
other religions because of the mystery of the
Incarnation, in which the human spirit acquires a
consciousness of its divine nature.
Above religion stands philosophy, which has the
same content as religion, but with this difference
-- that the content has been drawn up on logical,
conceptual and rational form. In philosophy the
Absolute Spirit reaches its full consciousness and
rationality.
The Hegelian concept, in which the state is the
living God and individuals but passing shadows, and
in which, moreover, conflict and war are
affirmations of the vitality of the state, has been
put to the test in the German nation. The course
which Germany followed -- with disastrous results
-- in two world wars is rightly judged the
consequence of such a concept. Needless to say,
Hegel's concept of reality is immanentist,
pantheistic and atheistic.
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