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SCIENCE OF LOGIC
IN THIRTEEN WEBPAGE PARTS
(PAGE THREE)
PART THREE
Translated by A. V. Miller George Allen &
Unwin, 1969
Born in Stuttgart and educated in Tübingen,
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel devoted
his
life wholly to academic pursuits, teaching
at Jena, Nuremberg, Heidelberg, and
Berlin.
His Wissenschaft der Logik (Science of Logic) (1812-1816) attributes the unfolding of
concepts of reality in terms of the
pattern
of dialectical reasoning (thesis -
antithesis - synthesis) that Hegel
believed
to be the only method of progress in
human
thought.
Volume One: The Objective Logic
Book One: The Doctrine of BeingQuality - Quantity - Measure
Section One: Determinateness (Quality)§ 130
Being is the indeterminate immediate;
it
is free from determinateness in relation
to essence and also from any which
it can
possess within itself. This reflectionless
being is being as it is immediately
in its
own self alone.
§ 131
Because it is indeterminate being,
it lacks
all quality; but in itself, the character
of indeterminateness attaches to it
only
in contrast to what is determinate
or qualitative.
But determinate being stands in contrast
to being in general, so that the very
indeterminateness
of the latter constitutes its quality.
It
will therefore be shown that the first
being
is in itself determinate, and therefore,
secondly, that it passes over into
determinate
being - is determinate being - but
that this
latter as finite being sublates itself
and
passes over into the infinite relation
of
being to its own self, that is, thirdly,
into being-for-self.
Chapter 1 Being A Being § 132
Being, pure being, without any further
determination.
In its indeterminate immediacy it is
equal
only to itself. It is also not unequal
relatively
to an other; it has no diversity within
itself
nor any with a reference outwards.
It would
not be held fast in its purity if it
contained
any determination or content which
could
be distinguished in it or by which
it could
be distinguished from an other. It
is pure
indeterminateness and emptiness. There
is
nothing to be intuited in it, if one
can
speak here of intuiting; or, it is
only this
pure intuiting itself. Just as little
is
anything to be thought in it, or it
is equally
only this empty thinking. Being, the
indeterminate
immediate, is in fact nothing, and
neither
more nor less than nothing.
B Nothing § 133
Nothing, pure nothing: it is simply
equality
with itself, complete emptiness, absence
of all determination and content -
undifferentiatedness
in itself. In so far as intuiting or
thinking
can be mentioned here, it counts as
a distinction
whether something or nothing is intuited
or thought. To intuit or think nothing
has,
therefore, a meaning; both are distinguished
and thus nothing is (exists) in our
intuiting
or thinking; or rather it is empty
intuition
and thought itself, and the same empty
intuition
or thought as pure being. Nothing is,
therefore,
the same determination, or rather absence
of determination, and thus altogether
the
same as, pure being.®
C Becoming
1. Unity of Being and Nothing § 134
Pure Being and pure nothing are, therefore,
the same. What is the truth is neither
being
nor nothing, but that being - does
not pass
over but has passed over - into nothing,
and nothing into being. But it is equally
true that they are not undistinguished
from
each other, that, on the contrary,
they are
not the same, that they are absolutely
distinct,
and yet that they are unseparated and
inseparable
and that each immediately vanishes
in its
opposite. Their truth is therefore,
this
movement of the immediate vanishing
of the
one into the other: becoming, a movement
in which both are distinguished, but
by a
difference which has equally immediately
resolved itself. ®
Remark 1: The Opposition of Being and
Nothing
in Ordinary Thinking
Remark 2: Defectiveness of the Expression
'Unity, Identity of Being and Nothing'
Remark 3: The Isolating of These Abstractions
Remark 4: Incomprehensibility of the
Beginning
2. Moments of Becoming: Coming-to-be
and
Ceasing-to-be
3. The Sublation of Becoming
Remark: The Expression 'To Sublate'
§ 184
To sublate, and the sublated (that
which
exists ideally as a moment), constitute
one
of the most important notions in philosophy.
It is a fundamental determination which
repeatedly
occurs throughout the whole of philosophy,
the meaning of which is to be clearly
grasped
and especially distinguished from nothing.
What is sublated is not thereby reduced
to
nothing. Nothing is immediate; what
is sublated,
on the other hand, is the result of
mediation;
it is a non- being but as a result
which
had its origin in a being. It still
has,
therefore, in itself the determinate
from
which it originates.
§ 185
'To sublate' has a twofold meaning
in the
language: on the one hand it means
to preserve,
to maintain, and equally it also means
to
cause to cease, to put an end to. Even
'to
preserve' includes a negative elements,
namely,
that something is removed from its
influences,
in order to preserve it. Thus what
is sublated
is at the same time preserved; it has
only
lost its immediacy but is not on that
account
annihilated.
§ 186
The two definitions of 'to sublate'
which
we have given can be quoted as two
dictionary
meanings of this word. But it is certainly
remarkable to find that a language
has come
to use one and the same word for two
opposite
meanings. It is a delight to speculative
thought to find in the language words
which
have in themselves a speculative meaning;
the German language has a number of
such.
The double meaning of the Latin tollere
(which
has become famous through the Ciceronian
pun: tollendum est Octavium) does not
go
so far; its affirmative determination
signifies
only a lifting-up. Something is sublated
only in so far as it has entered into
unity
with its opposite; in this more particular
signification as something reflected,
it
may fittingly be called a moment. In
the
case of the lever, weight and distance
from
a point are called its mechanical moments
on account of the sameness of their
effect,
in spite of the contrast otherwise
between
something real, such as a weight, and
something
ideal, such as a mere spatial determination,
a line.' We shall often have occasion
to
notice that the technical language
of philosophy
employs Latin terms for reflected determinations,
either because the mother tongue has
no words
for them or if it has, as here, because
its
expression calls to mind more what
is immediate,
whereas the foreign language suggests
more
what is reflected.
§ 187
The more precise meaning and expression
which
being and nothing receive, now that
they
are moments, is to be ascertained from
the
consideration of determinate being
as the
unity in which they are preserved.
Being
is being, and nothing is nothing, only
in
their contradistinction from each other;
but in their truth, in their unity,
they
have vanished as these determinations
and
are now something else. Being and nothing
are the same; but just because they
are the
same they are no longer being and nothing,
but now have a different significance.
In
becoming they were coming-to-be and
ceasing-to-be;
in determinate being, a differently
determined
unity, they are again differently determined
moments. This unity now remains their
base
from which they do not again emerge
in the
abstract significance of being and
nothing.
Chapter 2 Determinate Being § 188
In considering determinate being the
emphasis
falls on its determinate character;
the determinateness
is in the form of being, and as such
it is
quality. Through its quality, something
is
determined as opposed to an other,
as alterable
and finite; and as negatively determined
not only against an other but also
in its
own self. This its negation as at first
opposed
to the finite something is the infinite;
the abstract opposition in which these
determinations
appear resolves itself into the infinity
which is free from the opposition,
into being-for-self.
§ 189
The treatment of determinate being
falls
therefore into three parts:
A. Determinate being as such B. Something
and other, finitude C. Qualitative
infinity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Determinate Being as Such
(a) Determinate Being in General
(b) Quality
(c) Something B Finitude
(a) Something and Other
(b) Determination, Constitution and
Limit
(c) Finitude [a] The Immediacy of Finitude
[b] Limitation and the Ought
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark: The Ought
§ 262
The ought has recently played a great
part
in philosophy, especially in connection
with
morality and also in metaphysics generally,
as the ultimate and absolute concept
of the
identity of the in-itself or self-relation,
and of the determinateness or limit.
§ 263
'You can, because you ought' - this
expression,
which is supposed to mean a great deal,
is
implied in the notion of ought. For
the ought
implies that one is superior to the
limitation;
in it the limit is sublated and the
in-itself
of the ought is thus an identical self-relation,
and hence the abstraction of 'can'.
But conversely,
it is equally correct that: 'you cannot,
just because you ought.' For in the
ought,
the limitation as limitation is equally
implied;
the said formalism of possibility has,
in
the limitation, a reality, a qualitative
otherness opposed to it and the relation
of each to the other is a contradiction,
and thus a 'cannot', or rather an impossibility.
§ 264
In the Ought the transcendence of finitude,
that is, infinity, begins. The ought
is that
which, in the further development,
exhibits
itself in accordance with the said
impossibility
as the infinity.
§ 265
With respect to the form of the limitation
and the ought, two prejudices can be
criticised
in more detail. First of all, great
stress
is laid on the limitations of thought,
of
reason, and so on, and it is asserted
that
the limitation cannot be transcended.
To
make such as assertion is to be unaware
that
the very fact that something is determined
as a limitation implies that the limitation
is already transcended. For a determinateness,
a limit, is determined as a limitation
only
in opposition to its other in general,
that
is, in opposition to that which is
free from
the limitation; the other of a limitation
is precisely the being beyond it. Stone
and
metal do not transcend their limitation
because
this is not a limitation for them.
If, however,
in the case of such general propositions
framed by the understanding, such as
that
limitation cannot be transcended, thought
will not apply itself to finding out
what
is implied in the Notion, then it can
be
directed to the world of actuality
where
such proportions show themselves to
be completely
unreal. just because thought is supposed
to be superior to actuality, to dwell
apart
from it in higher regions and therefore
to
be itself determined as an ought-to-be,
on
the one hand, it does not advance to
the
Notion, and, on the other hand, it
stands
in just as untrue a relation to actuality
as it does to the Notion.
Because the stone does not think, does
not
even feel, its limitedness is not a
limitation
for it, that is, is not a negation
in it
for sensation, imagination, thought,
etc.,
which it does not possess. But even
the stone,
as a something, contains the distinction
of its determination or in-itself and
its
determinate being, and to that extent
it,
too, transcends its limitation; the
Notion
which is implicit in it contains the
identity
of the stone with its other. If it
is a base
capable of being acted on by an acid,
then
it can be oxidised, and neutralised,
and
so on. In oxidation, neutralisation
and so
on, it overcomes its limitation of
existing
only as a base; it transcends it, and
similarly
the acid overcomes its limitation of
being
an acid. This ought, the obligation
to transcend
limitations, is present in both acid
and
caustic base in such a degree that
it is
only by force that they can be kept
fixed
as (waterless, that is, purely non-neutral)
acid and caustic base.
§ 266
If, however, an existence contains
the Notion
not merely as an abstract in-itself,
but
as an explicit, self-determined totality,
as instinct, life, ideation, etc.,
then in
its own strength it overcomes the limitation
and attains a being beyond it. The
plant
transcends the limitation of being
a seed,
similarly, of being blossom, fruit,
leaf;
the seed becomes the developed plant,
the
blossom fades away, and so on. The
sentient
creature, in the limitation of hunger,
thirst,
etc., is the urge to overcome this
limitation
and it does overcome it. It feels pain,
and
it is the privilege of the sentient
nature
to feel pain; it is a negation in its
self,
and the negation is determined as a
limitation
in its feeling, just because the sentient
creature has the feeling of its self,
which
is the totality that transcends this
determinateness.
If it were not above and beyond the
determinateness,
it would not feel it as its negation
and
would feel no pain.
But it is reason, thought, which is
supposed
to be unable to transcend limitation
- reason,
which is the universal explicitly beyond
particularity as such (that is, all
particularity),
which is nothing but the overcoming
of limitation!
Granted, not every instance of transcending
and being beyond limitation is a genuine
liberation from it, a veritable affirmation;
even the ought itself, and abstraction
in
general, is in imperfect transcending.
However,
the reference to the wholly abstract
universal
is a sufficient reply to the equally
abstract
assertion that limitation cannot be
transcended,
or, again, even the reference to the
infinite
in general is a sufficient refutation
of
the assertion that the finite cannot
be transcended.
§ 267
In this connection we may mention a
seemingly
ingenious fancy of Leibniz: that if
a magnet
possessed consciousness it would regard
its
pointing to the north as a determination
of its will, as a law of its freedom.
On
the contrary, if it possessed consciousness
and consequently will and freedom,
it would
be a thinking being. Consequently,
space
for it would be universal, embracing
every
direction, so that the single direction
to
the north would be rather a limitation
on
its freedom, just as much as being
fixed
to one spot would be a limitation for
a man
although not for a plant.
§ 268
On the other hand, the ought is the
transcending,
but still only finite transcending,
of the
limitation. Therefore, it has its place
and
its validity in the sphere of finitude
where
it holds fast to being-in-itself in
opposition
to limitedness, declaring the former
to be
the regulative and essential factor
relatively
to what is null. Duty is an ought directed
against the particular will, against
self-seeking
desire and capricious interest and
it is
held up as an ought to the will in
so far
as this has the capacity to isolate
itself
from the true. Those who attach such
importance
to the ought of morality and fancy
that morality
is destroyed if the ought is not recognized
as ultimate truth, and those too who,
reasoning
from the level of the understanding,
derive
a perpetual satisfaction from being
able
to confront everything there is with
an ought,
that is, with a 'knowing better' -
and for
that very reason are just as loath
to be
robbed of the ought - do not see that
as
regards the finitude of their sphere
the
ought receives full recognition. But
in the
world of actuality itself, Reason and
Law
are not in such a bad way that they
only
ought to be - it is only the abstraction
of the in-itself that stops at this-any
more
than the ought is in its own self perennial
and, what is the same thing, that finitude
is absolute. The philosophy of Kant
and Fichte
sets up the ought as the highest point
of
the resolution of the contradictions
of Reason;
but the truth is that the ought is
only the
standpoint which clings to finitude
and thus
to contradiction.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[c] Transition of the Finite into the
Infinite
C Infinity
(a) The Infinite in General
(b) Alternating Determination of the
Finite
and the Infinite
(c) Affirmative Infinity
Transition Remark 1: The Infinite Progress
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark 2: Idealism
§ 316
The proposition that the finite is
ideal
[ideell] constitutes idealism. The
idealism
of philosophy consists in nothing else
than
in recognising that the finite has
no veritable
being. Every philosophy is essentially
an
idealism or at least has idealism for
its
principle, and the question then is
only
how far this principle is actually
carried
out. This is as true of philosophy
as of
religion; for religion equally does
not recognise
finitude as a veritable being, as something
ultimate and absolute or as something
underived,
uncreated, eternal. Consequently the
opposition
of idealistic and realistic philosophy
has
no significance. A philosophy which
ascribed
veritable, ultimate, absolute being
to finite
existence as such, would not deserve
the
name of philosophy; the principles
of ancient
or modern philosophies, water, or matter,
or atoms are thoughts, universals,
ideal
entities, not things as they immediately
present themselves to us, that is,
in their
sensuous individuality - not even the
water
of Thales. For although this is also
empirical
water, it is at the same time also
the in-itself
or essence of all other things, too,
and
these other things are not self-subsistent
or grounded in themselves, but are
posited
by, are derived from, an other, from
water,
that is they are ideal entities. Now
above
we have named the principle or the
universal
the ideal (and still more must the
Notion,
the Idea, spirit be so named); and
then again
we have described individual, sensuous
things
as ideal in principle, or in their
Notion,
still more in spirit, that is, as sublated;
here we must note, in passing, this
twofold
aspect which showed itself in connection
with the infinite, namely that on the
one
hand the ideal is concrete, veritable
being,
and on the other hand the moments of
this
concrete being are no less ideal -
are sublated
in it; but in fact what is, is only
the one
concrete whole from which the moments
are
inseparable.
§ 317
By the ideal [dem Ideellen] is meant
chiefly
the form of figurate conception and
imagination,
and what is simply in my conception,
or in
the Notion, or in the idea, in imagination,
and so on, is called ideal, so that
even
fancies are counted as ideals - conceptions
which are not only distinct from the
real
world, but are supposed to be essentially
not real. In point of fact, the spirit
is
the idealist proper; in spirit, even
as feeling,
imagination and still more as thinking
and
comprehending, the content is not present
as a so-called real existence; in the
simplicity
of the ego such external being is present
only as sublated, it is for me, it
is ideally
in me. This subjective idealism, either
in
the form of the unconscious idealism
of consciousness
generally, or consciously enunciated
and
set up as a principle, concerns only
the
form of conception according to which
a content
is mine; in the systematic idealism
of subjectivity
this form is declared to be the only
true
exclusive form in opposition to the
form
of objectivity or reality, of the external
existence of that content. Such idealism
is [merely] formal because it disregards
the content of imagination or thought,
which
content in being imagined or thought
can
remain wholly in its finitude. In such
an
idealism nothing is lost, just as much
because
the reality of such a finite content,
the
existence filled with finitude, is
preserved,
as because, in so far as abstraction
is made
from such finite reality, the content
is
supposed to be of no consequence in
itself;
and in it nothing is gained for the
same
reason that nothing is lost, because
the
ego, conception, spirit, remains filled
with
the same content of finitude. The opposition
of the form of subjectivity and objectivity
is of course one of the finitudes;
but the
content, as taken up in sensation,
intuition
or even in the more abstract element
of conception,
of thought, contains finitudes in abundance
and with the exclusion of only one
of the
modes of finitude, namely, of the said
form
of subjective and objective, these
finitudes
are certainly not eliminated, still
less
have they spontaneously fallen away.
Chapter 3 Being-for-self § 318
In being-for-self, qualitative being
finds
its consummation; it is infinite being.
The
being of the beginning lacks all determination.
Determinate being is sublated but only
immediately
sublated being. It thus contains, to
begin
with, only the first negation, which
is itself
immediate; it is true that being, too,
is
preserved in it and both are united
in determinate
being in a simple unity, but for that
very
reason they are in themselves still
unequal
to each other and their unity is not
yet
posited. Determinate being is therefore
the
sphere of difference, of dualism, the
field
of finitude. Determinateness is determinateness
as such, in which being is only relatively,
not absolutely determined. In being-for-self,
the difference between being and determinateness
or negation is posited and equalised;
quality,
otherness, limit - like reality, being-in-itself,
the ought, and so on-are the imperfect
embodiments
of the negation in being in which the
difference
of both still lies at the base. Since,
however,
in finitude the negation has passed
into
infinity, into the posited negation
of negation,
it is simple self-relation and consequently
in its own self the equalisation with
being,
absolutely determined being.
§ 319
Being-for-self is first, immediately
a being-for-self
- the One.
Secondly, the One passes into a plurality
of ones - repulsion - and this otherness
of the ones is sublated in their ideality
- attraction.
Thirdly, we have the alternating determination
of repulsion and attraction in which
they
collapse into equilibrium, and quality,
which
in being-for-self reached its climax,
passes
over into quantity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Being-for-self as Such
(a) Determinate Being and Being-for-self
(b) Being-for-one Remark: The German
Expression,
'What For a Thing' (Meaning 'What Kind
of
a Thing')
(c) The One
B The One and the Many
(a) The One in its own self
(b) The One and the Void Remark: Atomism
(c) Many Ones - Repulsion Remark: The
Monad
of Leibniz
C Repulsion and Attraction
(a) Exclusion of the One Remark: The
unity
of the One and the Many
(b) The one One of Attraction
(c) The Relation of Repulsion and Attraction
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark: The Kantian Construction of
Matter
from the Forces of Attraction and Repulsion
§ 373
Attraction and repulsion, as we know,
are
usually regarded as forces. This determination
of them and - the relationships connected
with it have to be compared with the
Notions
which have resulted from our consideration
of them. Conceived as forces, they
are regarded
as self-subsistent and therefore as
not connected
with each other through their own nature;
that is, they are considered not as
moments,
each of which is supposed to pass into
the
other, but rather as fixed in their
opposition
to each other. Further, they are imagined
as meeting in a third, in matter, but
in
such a manner, that this unification
is,
counted, as their truth., on the contrary;
each is regarded also as a first, as
being
in and for itself, and matter, or its
determinations,
are supposed to be realised and produced
by them. When it is said that matter
has
the forces within itself, they are
understood
to be so conjoined in this unity that
they
are at the same time presupposed as
intrinsically
free and independent of each other.
§ 374
Kant, as we know, constructed matter
from
the forces of attraction and repulsion,
or
at least he has, to use his own words,
set
up the metaphysical elements of this
construction.
It will not be without interest to
examine
this construction more closely. This
metaphysical
exposition of a subject matter which
not
only itself but also in its determinations
seemed to belong only to experience
is noteworthy,
partly because as an experiment with
the
Notion it at least gave the impulse
to the
more recent philosophy of nature, to
a philosophy
which does not make nature as given
in sense-perception
the basis of science, but which goes
to the
absolute Notion for its determinations;
and
partly because in many cases no advance
is
made beyond the Kantian construction
which
is held to be a philosophical beginning
and
foundation for physics.
§ 375
Now it is true that matter as it exists
for
sense perception is no more a subject
matter
of logic than are space and its determinations.
But the forces of attraction and repulsion,
in so far as they are regarded as forces
of empirical matter, are also based
on the
pure determinations here considered
of the
one and the many and their inter-relationships,
which, because these names are most
obvious,
I have called repulsion and attraction.
§ 376
Kant's method in the deduction of matter
from these forces, which he calls a
construction,
when looked at more closely does not
deserve
this name, unless any exercise of reflection,
even analytical reflection, is to be
called
a construction; and later philosophers
of
nature have in fact given the name
of construction
to the shallowest reasoning and the
most
baseless concoction of unbridled imagination
and thoughtless reflection - and it
is especially
for the so-called factors of attraction
and
repulsion that such philosophers have
shown
a predilection.
§ 377
For Kant's method is basically analytical,
not constructive. He presupposes the
idea
of matter and then asks what forces
are required
to maintain the determinations he has
presupposed.
Thus, on the one hand, he demands the
force
of attraction because, properly speaking,
through repulsion alone and without
attraction
matter could not exist; and on the
other
hand he derives repulsion, too, from
matter
and gives as the reason that we think
of
matter as impenetrable, since it presents
itself under this category to the sense
of
touch by which it manifests itself
to us.
Consequently, he proceeds, repulsion
is at
once thought in the concept of matter
because
it is immediately given therein, whereas
attraction is added to the concept
syllogistically.
But these syllogisms, too, are based
on what
has just been said, namely, that matter
which
possessed repulsive force alone, would
not
exhaust our conception of matter.
It is evident that this is the method
of
a cognition which reflects on experience,
which first perceives the determinations
in a phenomenon, then makes these the
foundation,
and for their so-called explanation
assumes
corresponding basic elements or forces
which
are supposed to produce those determinations
of the phenomenon.
§ 378
With respect to this difference as
to the
way in which cognition finds the forces
of
repulsion and attraction in matter,
Kant
further remarks that the force of attraction
certainly just as much belongs to the
concept
of matter 'although it is not contained
in
it'; this last expression is italicised
by
Kant. However, it is hard to perceive
what
this difference is supposed to be;
for a
determination which belongs to the
concept
of anything must be truly contained
in it.
§ 379
What causes the difficulty and gives
rise
to this vain subterfuge, is that Kant
from
the start one-sidedly attributes to
the concept
of matter only the determination of
impenetrability,
which we are supposed to perceive by
the
sense of touch, for which reason the
force
of repulsion as the holding off of
an other
from itself is immediately given. But
if,
further, the existence of matter is
supposed
to be impossible without attraction,
then
this assertion is based on a conception
of
matter taken from sense perception;
consequently,
the determination of attraction, too,
must
come within the range of sense perception.
It is indeed easy to perceive that
matter,
besides its being-for-self, which sublates
the being-for-other (offers resistance),
has also a relation between its self-determined
parts, a spatial extension and cohesion,
and in rigidity and solidity the cohesion
is very firm. Physics explains that
the tearing
apart, etc., of a body requires a force
which
shall be stronger than the mutual attraction
of the parts of the body. From this
observation
reflection can just as directly derive
the
force of attraction or assume it as
given,
as it did with the force of repulsion.
In
point of fact, if we consider Kant's
arguments
from which the force of attraction
is supposed
to be deduced (the proof of the proposition
that the possibility of matter requires
a
force of attraction as a second fundamental
force, loc. cit.), it is apparent that
their
sole content is this, that through
repulsion
alone matter would not be spatial Matter
being presupposed as filling space,
it is
credited with continuity, the ground
of which
is assumed to be the force of attraction.
§ 380
Now if the merit of such a construction
of
matter were at most that of an analysis
(though
a merit diminished by the faulty exposition),
still the fundamental thought, namely,
the
derivation of matter from these two
opposite
determinations as its fundamental forces,
must always be highly esteemed. Kant
is chiefly
concerned to banish the vulgar mechanistic
way of thinking which stops short at
the
one determination of impenetrability,
of
self-determined and self- subsistent
puncticity,
and converts into something external
the
opposite determination, the relation
of matter
within itself or the relation of a
plurality
of matters, which in turn are regarded
as
particular ones - a way of thinking
which,
as Kant says, will admit no motive
forces
except pressure and thrust, that is,
only
action from without. This external
manner
of thinking always presupposes motion
as
already externally present in matter,
and
it does not occur to it to regard motion
as something immanent and to comprehend
motion
itself in matter, which latter is thus
assumed
as, on its own account, motionless
and inert.
This stand-point has before it only
ordinary
mechanics, not immanent and free motion.
It is true that Kant sublates this
externality
in so far as he makes attraction (the
relation
of matters to one another in so far
as these
are assumed as separated from one another,
or matter generally in its self-externality)
a force of matter itself; still, on
the other
hand, his two fundamental forces within
matter
remain external to and completely independent
of each other.
§ 381
The fixed difference of these two forces
attributed to them from that external
standpoint
is no less null than any other distinction
must show itself to be which, in respect
of its specific content, is made into
something
supposedly fixed; because these forces
are
only moments which pass over into each
other,
as we saw above when they were considered
in their truth. I go on to consider
these
other distinctions as they are stated
by
Kant.
§ 382
He defines the force of attraction
as a penetrative
force by which one bit of matter can
act
directly on the parts of another even
beyond
the area of contact; the force of repulsion,
on the other hand, he defines as a
surface
force through which bits of matter
can act
on each other only in the common area
of
contact. The reason adduced that the
latter
can be only a surface force is as follows:
'The parts in contact each limit the
sphere
of action of the other, and the force
of
repulsion cannot move any more distant
part
except through the agency of the intervening
parts; an immediate action of one part
of
matter on another passing right across
these
intervening parts by forces of expansion
(which means here, forces of repulsion)
is
impossible.'
§ 383
But here we must remember that in assuming
'nearer' or 'more distant' parts of
matter,
the same distinction would likewise
arise
with respect to attraction, namely,
that
though one atom acted on another, yet
a third,
more distant atom (between which and
the
first atom, the second atom would be),
would
first enter into the sphere of attraction
of the intervening atom nearer to it;
therefore
the first atom would not have an immediate,
simple action on the third, from which
it
would follow that the action of the
force
of attraction, like that of repulsion,
is
equally mediated. Further, the genuine
penetration
of the force of attraction could of
necessity
consist only in this, that every part
of
matter was in and for itself attractive,
not that a certain number of atoms
behaved
passively and only one atom actively.
But
we must at once remark with respect
to the
force of repulsion itself that in the
passage
quoted, 'parts in contact' are mentioned
which implies solidity and continuity
of
a matter already finished and complete
which
would not permit the passage through
it of
a repelling force. But this solidity
of matter
in which parts are in contact and are
no
longer separated by the void already
presupposes
that the force of repulsion is sublated;
according to the sensuous conception
of repulsion
which prevails here, parts in contact
are
to be taken as those which do not repel
each
other. It therefore follows, quite
tautologically,
that where repulsion is assumed to
be not,
there no repulsion can take place.
But from
this nothing else follows which could
serve
to determine the force of repulsion.
However,
reflection on the statement that parts
in
contact are in contact only in so far
as
they hold themselves apart, leads directly
to the conclusion that the force of
repulsion
is not merely on the surface of matter
but
within the sphere which was supposed
to be
only a sphere of attraction.
§ 384
Kant assumes further that 'through
the force
of attraction, matter only occupies
space
but does not fill it'; and 'because
matter
through the force of attraction does
not
fill space, this force can act across
empty
space since there is no intervening
matter
to limit it'. This distinction is much
the
same as the one mentioned above where
a determination
was supposed to belong to the concept
of
a thing but not to be contained in
it; here,
then, matter is supposed only to occupy
a
space but not to fill it. There it
is repulsion,
if we stop at the first determination
of
matter, through which the ones repel
one
another and so are only negatively
related
to one another, here that means, by
empty
space. Here, however, it is the force
of
attraction which keeps space empty;
it does
not fill space by its connection of
the atoms,
in other words, it keeps the atoms
in a negative
relation to one another. We see that
Kant
here unconsciously realises what is
implicit
in the nature of the subject matter,
when
he attributes to the force of attraction
precisely what, in accordance with
the first
determination, he attributed to the
opposite
force. While he was busy with establishing
the difference between the two forces,
it
happened that one had passed over into
the
other. Thus through repulsion, on the
other
hand, matter is supposed to fill a
space,
and consequently through repulsion
the empty
space left by the force of attraction
vanishes.
In point of fact repulsion, in doing
away
with empty space, also destroys the
negative
relation of the atoms or ones, that
is, their
repulsion of one another; in -other
words,
repulsion is determined as the opposite
of
itself.
§ 385
To this effacing of the differences
there
is added the confusion arising from
the fact
that, as we observed at the beginning,
Kant's
exposition of the opposed forces is
analytic;
and whereas matter is supposed to be
derived
from its elements, it is presented
throughout
the entire discourse as already formed
and
constituted. In the definition of surface
and penetrative force both are assumed
as
motive forces by means of which matter
is
supposed to be able to act in one or
other
of these ways. Here, therefore, they
are
represented as forces, not through
which
matter first comes into being but through
which matter, as an already finished
product,
is only set in motion. But in so far
as we
are speaking of the forces through
which
different bodies act on one another
and are
set in motion, this is something quite
different
from the determination and relation
which
these forces were supposed to have
as [constitutive]
moments of matter.
§ 386
The same opposition of attractive and
repulsive
forces is made by their more developed
form
of centripetal and centrifugal forces.
These
appear to offer an essential distinction,
since in their sphere there is a fixed
single
one, a centre, in relation to which
the other
ones behave as not for themselves,
so that
the difference between the forces can
be
linked to this presupposed difference
between
a single central one and the others
which
are not independent relatively to it.
But
if they are to be used for explanation
-
for which purpose they are assumed
to be
(like the forces of repulsion and attraction)
in an inverse quantitative ratio so
that
the one increases as the other decreases
- then the phenomenon of the motion
and its
inequality ought to be the result of
these
forces which were assumed for the purpose
of explanation. However, one need only
examine
the accounts (any of them will do)
of a phenomenon
like the unequal velocity of a planet
in
its orbit round the sun, based on the
opposition
of these forces, to become aware of
the confusion
which prevails in such explanations,
and
the impossibility of disentangling
the magnitudes
of the forces, so that the one which
in the
explanation is assumed to be decreasing
can
just as well be assumed to be increasing,
and vice versa. To make this evident
would
require a lengthier exposition than
could
be given here; but what is necessary
for
this purpose is adduced later on in
connection
with the inverted relation.
Section Two: Magnitude (Quantity) §
387
The difference between quantity and
quality
has been stated. Quality is the first,
immediate
determinateness, quantity is the determinateness
which has become indifferent to being,
a
limit which is just as much no limit,
being-for-self
which is absolutely identical with
being-for-other
- a repulsion of the many ones which
is directly
the non-repulsion, the continuity of
them.
§ 388
Because that which is for itself is
now posited
as not excluding its other, but rather
as
affirmatively continuing itself into
it,
it is otherness in so far as determinate
being again appears in this continuity
and
its determinateness is at the same
time no
longer in a simple self-relation, no
longer
an immediate determinateness of the
determinately
existent something, but is posited
as self-repelling,
as in fact having the relation-to-self
as
a determinateness in another something
(which
is for itself; and since they are at
the
same time indifferent, relationless
limits
reflected into themselves, the determinateness
in general is outside itself, an absolutely
self-external determinateness and an
equally
external something; such a limit, the
indifference
of the limit within itself and of the
something
to the limit, constitutes the quantitative
determinateness of the something.
§ 389
In the first place, pure quantity is
to be
distinguished from itself as a determinate
quantity, from quantum. As the former,
it
is in the first place real being-for-self
which has returned into itself and
which
as yet contains no determinateness:
a compact,
infinite unity which continues itself
into
itself.
§ 390
Secondly, this develops a determinateness
which is posited in it as one which
is at
the same time no determinateness, as
only
an external one. It becomes quantum.
Quantum
is indifferent determinateness, that
is,
a self-transcending, self-negating
determinateness;
as this otherness of otherness it relapses
into the infinite progress. But the
infinite
quantum is the indifferent determinateness
sublated, it is the restoration of
quality.
§ 391
Thirdly, quantum in a qualitative form
is
quantitative ratio. Quantum transcends
itself
only generally: in ratio, however,
its transition
into its otherness is such that this
otherness
in which it has its determination is
at the
same time posited, is another quantum.
Thus
quantum has returned into itself and
in its
otherness is related to itself.
§ 392
At the base of this ratio there is
still
the externality of quantum; the quanta
which
are related to each other are indifferent,
that is, they have their self-relation
in
such self-externality. The ratio is
thus
only a formal unity of quality and
quantity.
Its dialectic is its transition into
their
absolute unity, into Measure.
Remark: Something's Limit as Quality
Chapter 1 Quantity A. PURE QUANTITY
§ 395
Quantity is sublated being-for-self;
the
repelling one which related itself
only negatively
to the excluded one, having passed
over into
relation to it, treats the other as
identical
with itself, and in doing so has lost
its
determination: being-for-self has passed
over into attraction. The absolute
brittleness
of the repelling one has melted away
into
this unity which, however, as containing
this one, is at the same time determined
by the immanent repulsion, and as unity
of
the self-externality is unity with
itself.
Attraction is in this way the moment
of continuity
in quantity.
§ 396
Continuity is, therefore, simple, self-same
self-relation, which is not interrupted
by
any limit or exclusion; it is not,
however,
an immediate unity, but a unity of
ones which
possess being-for-self. The asunderness
of
the plurality is still contained in
this
unity, but at the same time as not
differentiating
or interrupting it. In continuity,
the plurality
is posited as it is in itself; the
many are
all alike, each is the same as the
other
and the plurality is, consequently,
a simple,
undifferentiated sameness. Continuity
is
this moment of self-sameness of the
asunderness,
the self-continuation of the different
ones
into those from which they are distinguished.
§ 397
In continuity, therefore, magnitude
immediately
possesses the moment of discreteness
- repulsion,
as now a moment in quantity. Continuity
is
self-sameness, but of the Many which,
however,
do not become exclusive; it is repulsion
which expands the selfsameness to continuity.
Hence discreteness, on its side, is
a coalescent
discreteness, where the ones are not
connected
by the void, by the negative, but by
their
own continuity and do not interrupt
this
self-sameness in the many.
§ 398
Quantity is the unity of these moments
of
continuity and discreteness, but at
first
it is so in the form of one of them,
continuity,
as a result of the dialectic of being-for-self,
which has collapsed into the form of
self-identical
immediacy. Quantity is, as such, this
simple
result in so far as being-for-self
has not
yet developed its moments and posited
them
within itself. It contains them to
begin
with as being-for-self posited as it
is in
truth. The determination of being-for-
self
was to be a self-sublating relation-to-self,
a perpetual coming-out-of-itself. But
what
is repelled is itself; repulsion is,
therefore,
the creative flowing away of itself.
On account
of the self-sameness of what is repelled,
this distinguishing or differentiation
is
an uninterrupted continuity; and because
of the coming-out- of-itself this continuity,
without being interrupted, is at the
same
time a plurality, which no less immediately
remains in its self-identicalness.
Remark 1: The Conception of Pure Quantity
Remark 2: The Kantian Antinomy of the
Indivisibility
and the Infinite Divisibility
B Continuous and Discrete Magnitude
Remark: The Usual Separation of These
Magnitudes
§ 432
In the usual ideas of continuous and
discrete
magnitude, it is overlooked that each
of
these magnitudes contains both moments,
continuity
and discreteness, and that the distinction
between them consists only in this,
that
in one of the moments the determinateness
is posited and in the other it is only
implicit.
Space, time, matter, and so forth are
continuous
magnitudes in that they are repulsions
from
themselves, a streaming forth out of
themselves
which at the same time is not their
transition
or relating of themselves to a qualitative
other. They possess the absolute possibility
that the one may be posited in them
at any
point - not the empty possibility of
a mere
otherness (as when it is said, it is
possible
that a tree might stand in the place
of this
stone), but they contain the principle
of
the one within themselves; it is one
of the
determinations which constitute them.
§ 433
Conversely, in discrete magnitude continuity
is not to be overlooked; this moment
is,
as has been shown, the one as unity.
Continuous and discrete magnitude can
be
regarded as species of quantity, provided
that magnitude is posited, not under
any
external determinateness, but under
the determinatenesses
of its own moments; the ordinary transition
from genus to species allows external
characteristics
to be attributed to the former according
to some external basis of classification.
And besides, continuous and discrete
magnitude
are not yet quanta; they are only quantity
itself in each of its two forms. They
are
perhaps, called magnitudes in so far
as they
have in common with quantum simply
this-to
be a determinateness in quantity.
C. LIMITATION OF QUANTITY § 434
Discrete magnitude has first the one
for
its principle; secondly, it is a plurality
of ones; and thirdly, it is essentially
continuous;
it is the one as at the same time sublated,
as unity, the continuation of itself
as such
in the discreteness of the ones. Consequently,
it is posited as one magnitude, the
determinateness
of which is the one which, in this
posited
and determinate being is the excluding
one,
a limit in the unity. Discrete magnitude
as such is immediately not limited;
but as
distinguished from continuous magnitude
it
is a determinate being, a something,
with
the one as its determinateness and
also as
its first negation and limit.
§ 435
This limit, which is related to the
unity
and is the negation in it, is also,
as the
one, self-related; it is thus the enclosing,
encompassing limit. Limit here is not
at
first distinguished from its determinate
being as something, but, as the one,
is immediately
this negative point itself. But the
being
which here is limited is essentially
a continuity,
by virtue of which it passes beyond
the limit,
beyond this one, to which it is indifferent.
Real discrete quantity is thus a quantity,
or quantum - quantity as a determinate
being
and a something.
§ 436
Since the one which is a limit includes
within
itself the many ones of discrete quantity,
it equally posits them as sublated
within
it; and because it is a limit of continuity
simply as such, the distinction between
continuous
and discrete magnitude is here of no
significance;
or, more correctly, it is a limit to
the
continuity of the one as much as of
the other;
both undergo transition into quanta.
Chapter 2 Quantum § 437
Quantum, which to begin with is quantity
with a determinateness or limit in
general
is, in its complete determinateness,
number.
Quantum differentiates itself secondly,
into
(a) extensive quantum, in which the
limit
is a limitation of the determinately
existent
plurality; and (b) intensive quantum
or degree,
the determinate being having made the
transition
into being-for-self. Intensive quantum
as
both for itself and at the same time
immediately
outside itself - since it is an indifferent
limit - has its determinateness in
an other.
As this manifest contradiction of being
determined
simply within itself yet having its
determinateness
outside it, pointing outside itself
for it,
quantum posited as being in its own
self
external to itself, passes over thirdly,
into quantitative infinity.
A. NUMBER § 438
Quantity is quantum, or has a limit,
both
as continuous and as discrete magnitude.
The difference between these two kinds
has
here, in the first instance, no immediate
significance.
§ 439
The very nature of quantity as sublated
being-for-self
is ipso facto to be indifferent to
its limit.
But equally, too, quantity is not unaffected
by the limit or by being, a quantum;
for
it contains within itself as its own
moment
the one, which is absolutely determined
and
which, therefore, as posited in the
continuity
or unity of quantity, is its limit,
but a
limit which remains what it has become,
simply
a one.
§ 440
This one is thus the principle of quantum,
but as the one of quantity. Hence,
first,
it is continuous, it is a unity; secondly,
it is discrete, a plurality of ones,
which
is implicit in continuous, or explicit
in
discrete magnitude, the ones having
equality
with one another, possessing the said
continuity,
the same unity. Thirdly, this one is
also
a negation of the many ones as a simple
limit,
an excluding of its otherness from
itself,
a determination of itself in opposition
to
other quanta. Thus the one is [a] self-relating,
[b] enclosing and [c] other-excluding
limit.
§ 441
Quantum completely posited in these
determinations
is number. The complete positedness
lies
in the existence of the limit as a
plurality
and so in its distinction from the
unity.
Consequently, number appears as a discrete
magnitude, but in the unity it equally
possesses
continuity. It is, therefore, also
quantum
in its complete determinateness, for
its
principle the one, the absolutely determinate.
Continuity, in which the one is present
only
in principle, as a sublated moment
- posited
as a unity - is the form of indeterminateness.
§ 442
Quantum, merely as such, is limited
generally;
its limit is an abstract simple determinateness
of it. But in quantum as number, this
limit
is posited as manifold within itself.
It
contains the many ones which constitute
its
determinate being, but does not contain
them
in an indeterminate manner, for the
determinateness
of the limit falls in them; the limit
excludes
other determinate being, that is, other
pluralities
and the ones it encloses are a specific
aggregate,
the amount - which is the form taken
by discreteness
in number - the other to which is the
unit,
the continuity of the amount. Amount
and
unit constitute the moments of number.
§ 443
As regards amount, we must see more
closely
how the many ones of which it consists
are
present in the limit; it is correct
to say
of amount that it consists of the many,
for
the ones are in it not as sublated
but as
affirmatively present, only posited
with
the excluding limit to which they are
indifferent.
This, however, is not indifferent to
them.
In the sphere of determinate being,
the relation
of the limit to it was primarily such
that
the determinate being persisted as
the affirmative
on this side of its limit, while the
limit,
the negation, was found outside on
the border
of the determinate being; similarly,
the
breaking-off [in the counting] of the
many
ones and the exclusion of other ones
appears
as a determination falling outside
the enclosed
ones. But in the qualitative sphere
it was
found that the limit pervades the determinate
being, is coextensive with it, and
consequently
that it lies in the nature of something
to
be limited, that is, finite. In the
quantitative
sphere a number, say a hundred, is
conceived
in such a manner that the hundredth
one alone
limits the many to make them a hundred.
In
one sense this is correct; but on the
other
hand none of the hundred ones has precedence
over any other for they are only equal
-
each is equally the hundredth; thus
they
all belong to the limit which makes
the number
a hundred and the number cannot dispense
with any of them for its determinateness.
Hence, relatively to the hundredth
one, the
others do not constitute a determinate
being
that is in any way different from the
limit,
whether they are outside or inside
it. Consequently,
the number is not a plurality over
against
the enclosing, limiting one, but itself
constitutes
this limitation which is a specific
quantum;
the many constitute a number, a two,
a ten,
a hundred, and so on.
§ 444
Now the limiting one is the number
as determined
relatively to other numbers, as distinguished
from them. But this distinguishing
does not
become a qualitative determinateness
but
remains quantitative, falling only
within
the comparing external reflection;
the number,
as a one, remains returned into itself
and
indifferent to others. This indifference
of a number to others is an essential
determination
of it and constitutes the implicit
determinedness
of the number, but also the number's
own
externality. Number is thus a numerical
one
as the absolutely determinate one,
which
at the same time has the form of simple
immediacy
and for which, therefore, the relation
to
other is completely external. Further,
one
as a number possesses determinateness
(in
so far as this is a relation to other)
as
the moments of itself contained within
it,
in its difference of unit and amount;
and
amount is itself a plurality of ones,
that
is, this absolute externality is in
the one
itself. This contradiction of number
or of
quantum as such within itself is the
quality
of quantum, in the further determinations
of which this contradiction is developed.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark 1: The Species of Calculation
in Arithmetic;
Kant's Synthetic Propositions a priori
Remark 2: The Employment of Numerical
Distinctions
for Expressing Philosophical Notions
B Extensive and Intensive Quantum
(a) Their Difference
(b) Identity of Extensive and Intensive
Magnitude
Remark 1: Examples of This Identity
Remark 2: The determination of degree
as
applied by Kant to the soul
(c) Alteration of Quantum C Quantitative
Infinity
(a) Its Notion
(b) The Quantitative Infinite Progress
Remark
1: The High Repute of the Progress
to Infinity
Remark 2: The Kantian Antinomy of the
Limitation
and Nonlimitation of the World
(c) The Infinity of Quantum Remark
1: The
Specific Nature of the Notion of the
Mathematical
Infinite
Remark 2: The Purpose of the Differential
Calculus Deduced from its Application
Remark 3: Further Forms Connected With
the
Qualitative Determinateness of Magnitude
Chapter 3 The Quantitative Relation
or Quantitative
Ratio A The Direct Ratio B Inverse
Ratio
C The Ratio of Powers
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark
§ 695
In the Remarks above on the quantitative
infinite, it was shown that this infinite
and also the difficulties associated
with
it have their origin in the qualitative
moment
which makes its appearance in the sphere
of quantity, and also how the qualitative
moment of the ratio of powers in particular
is the source of various developments
and
complexities. It was shown that the
chief
obstacle to a grasp of the Notion of
this
infinite is the stopping short at its
merely
negative determination as the negation
of
quantum, instead of advancing to the
simple
affirmative determination which is
the qualitative
moment. The only further remark to
be made
here concerns the intrusion of quantitative
forms into the pure qualitative forms
of
thought in philosophy. It is the relationship
of powers in particular which has been
applied
recently to the determinations of the
Notion.
The Notion in its immediacy was called
the
first power or potence; in its otherness
or difference, in the determinate being
of
its moments, the second power; and
in its
return into itself or as a totality,
the
third power. It is at once evident
that power
as used thus is a category which essentially
belongs to quantum - these powers do
not
bear the meaning of the potentia, the
dynamis
of Aristotle. Thus, the relationship
of powers
expresses determinateness in the form
or
difference which has reached its truth,
but
difference as it is in the particular
Notion
of quantum, not as it is in the Notion
as
such. In quantum, the negativity which
belongs
to the nature of the Notion is still
far
from being posited in the determination
proper
to the Notion; differences which are
proper
to quantum are superficial determinations
for the Notion itself and are still
far from
being determined as they are in the
Notion.
It was in the infancy of philosophic
thinking
that numbers were used, as by Pythagoras,
to designate universal, essential distinctions
- and first and second power, and so
on are
in this respect not a whit better than
numbers.
This was a preliminary stage to comprehension
in the element of pure thought; it
was not
until after Pythagoras that thought
determinations
themselves were discovered, i. e.,
became
on their own account objects for consciousness.
But to retrogress from such determinations
to those of number is the action of
a thinking
which feels its own incapacity, a thinking
which, in Opposition to current philosophical
culture which is accustomed to thought
determinations,
now also makes itself ridiculous by
pretending
that this impotence is something new,
superior,
and an advance.
§ 696
There is as little to be said against
the
expression power when it is used only
as
a symbol, as there is against the use
of
numbers or any other kind of symbols
for
Notions - but also there is just as
much
to be said against them as against
all symbolism
whatever in which pure determinations
of
the Notion or of philosophy are supposed
to be represented.
§ 697
Philosophy needs no such help either
from
the world of sense or from the products
of
the imagination, or from subordinate
spheres
in its own peculiar province, for the
determinations
of such spheres are unfitted for higher
spheres
and for the whole. This unfitness is
manifest
whenever categories of the finite are
applied
to the infinite; the current determinations
of force, or substantiality, cause
and effect,
and so on, are likewise only symbols
for
expressing, for example, vital or spiritual
relationships, i. e. they are untrue
determinations
for such relationships; and still more
so
are the powers of quantum and degrees
of
powers, both for such and for speculative
relationships generally.
§ 698
If numbers, powers, the mathematical
infinite,
and suchlike are to be used not as
symbols
but as forms for philosophical determinations
and hence themselves as philosophical
forms,
then it would be necessary first of
all to
demonstrate their philosophical meaning,
i. e. the specific nature of their
Notion.
If this is done, then they themselves
are
superfluous designations; the determinateness
of the Notion specifies its own self
and
its specification alone is the correct
and
fitting designation. The use of those
forms
is, therefore, nothing more than a
convenient
means of evading the task of grasping
the
determinations of the Notion, of specifying
and of justifying them.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section Three: Measure § 699
Abstractly expressed, in measure quality
and quantity are united. Being as such
is
an immediate identity of the determinateness
with itself. This immediacy of the
determinateness
has sublated itself. Quantity is being
which
has returned into itself in such a
manner
that it is a simple self-identity as
indifference
to the determinateness.
§ 700
But this indifference is only the externality
of having the determinateness not in
its
own self but in an other. Thirdly,
we now
have self-related externality; as self-related
it is also a sublated externality and
has
within itself the difference from itself-the
difference which, as an externality
is the
quantitative, and as taken back into
itself
is the qualitative, moment.
§ 701
In transcendental idealism the categories
of quantity and quality are followed,
after
the insertion of relation, by modality,
which
may therefore be mentioned here. This
category
has there the meaning of being the
relation
of the object to thought. According
to that
idealism thought generally is essentially
external to the thing-in-itself. In
so far
as the other categories have only the
transcendental
character of belonging to consciousness,
but to the objective element of it,
so modality
as the category of relation to the
subject,
to this extent contains relatively
the determination
of reflection-into-self; i. e. the
objectivity
which belongs to the other categories
is
lacking in the categories of modality;
these,
according to Kant, do not in the least
add
to the concept as a determination of
the
object but only express the relation
to the
faculty of cognition. The categories
which
Kant groups under modality - namely,
possibility,
actuality and necessity will occur
later
in their proper place; Kant did not
apply
the infinitely important form of triplicity
- with him it manifested itself at
first
only as a formal spark of light - to
the
genera of his categories (quantity,
quality,
etc.), but only to their species which,
too,
alone he called categories. Consequently
he was unable to hit on the third to
quality
and quantity.
§ 702
With Spinoza, the mode is likewise
the third
after substance and attribute; he explains
it to be the affections of substance,
or
that element which is in an other through
which it is comprehended. According
to this
concept, this third is only externality
as
such; as has already been mentioned,
with.
Spinoza generally, the rigid nature
of substance
lacks the return into itself.
§ 703
The observation here made extends generally
to those systems of pantheism which
have
been partially developed by thought.
The
first is being, the one, substance,
the infinite,
essence; in contrast to this abstraction
the second, namely, all determinateness
in
general, what is only finite, accidental,
perishable, non-essential, etc. can
equally
abstractly be grouped together; and
this
is what usually happens as the next
step
in quite formal thinking. But the connection
of this second with the first is so
evident
that one cannot avoid grasping it as
also
in a unity with the latter; thus with
Spinoza,
the attribute is the whole substance,
but
is apprehended by the intellect which
is
itself a limitation or mode; but in
this
way the mode, the non-substantial generally,
which can only be grasped through an
other,
constitutes the other extreme to substance,
the third generally. Indian pantheism,
too,
in its monstrous fantasies has in an
abstract
way received this development which
runs
like a moderating thread through its
extravagances;
a point of some interest in the development
is that Brahma, the one of abstract
thought,
progresses through the shape of Vishnu,
particularly
in the form of Krishna, to a third
form,
that of Siva. The determination of
this third
is the mode, alteration, coming-to-be
and
ceasing-to-be-the field of externality
in
general. This Indian trinity has misled
to
a comparison with the Christian and
it is
true that in them a common element
of the
nature of the Notion can be recognised;
but
it is essential to gain a more precise
consciousness
of the difference between them; for
not only
is this difference infinite, but it
is the
true, the genuine infinite which constitutes
it. This third principle is, according
to
its determination, the dispersal of
the unity
of substance into its opposite, not
the return
of the unity to itself - not spirit
but rather
the non-spiritual. In the true trinity
there
is not only unity but union, the conclusion
of the syllogism is a unity possessing
content
and actuality, a unity which in its
wholly
concrete determination is spirit. This
principle
of the mode and of alteration does
not, it
is true, altogether exclude the unity;
in
Spinozism, for example, it is precisely
the
mode as such which is untrue; substance
alone
is true and to it everything must be
brought
back. But this is only to submerge
all content
in the void, in a merely formal unity
lacking
all content. Thus Siva, too, is again
the
great whole, not distinct from Brahma,
but
Brahma himself. In other words, the
difference
and the determinateness only vanish
again
but are not preserved, are not sublated,
and the unity does not become a concrete
unity, neither is the disunity reconciled.
The supreme goal for man placed in
the sphere
of coming-to-be and ceasing-to-be,
of modality
generally, is submergence in unconsciousness,
unity with Brahma, annihilation; the
Buddhist
Nirvana, Nibbana etc., is the same.
§ 704
Now although the mode as such is abstract
externality, indifference to qualitative
and quantitative determinations, and
in essence
the external and unessential elements
are
not supposed to count, it is still,
on the
other hand, admitted in many cases
that everything
depends on the kind and manner of the
mode;
such an admission means that the mode
itself
is declared to belong essentially to
the
substantial nature of a thing, a very
indefinite
connection but one which at least implies
that this external element is not so
abstractly
an externality.
§ 705
Here the mode has the specific meaning
of
measure. Spinoza's mode, like the Indian
principle of change, is the measureless.
The Greek awareness, itself still indeterminate,
that everything has a measure - even
Parmenides,
after abstract being, introduced necessity
as the ancient limit by which all things
are bounded - is the beginning of a
much
higher conception than that contained
in
substance and in the difference of
the mode
from substance.
§ 706
Measure in its more developed, more
reflected
form is necessity; fate, Nemesis, was
restricted
in general to the specific nature of
measure,
namely, that what is presumptuous,
what makes
itself too great, too high, is reduced
to
the other extreme of being brought
to nothing,
so that the mean of measure, mediocrity
is
restored. 'The absolute, God, is the
measure
of all things' is not more intensely
pantheistic
than the definition: 'The absolute,
God,
is being,' but it is infinitely truer.
Measure,
it is true, is an external kind and
manner
of determinateness, a more or less,
but at
the same time it is equally reflected
into
itself, a determinateness which is
not indifferent
and external but intrinsic; it is thus
the
concrete truth of being. That is why
mankind
has revered measure as something inviolable
and sacred.
§ 707
The Idea of essence, namely, to be
self-identical
in the immediacy of its determined
being,
is already immanent in measure; so
that the
immediacy is thus reduced by this self-identity
to something mediated, which equally
is mediated
only through this externality, but
is a mediation
with itself - that is, reflection,
the determinations
of which are, but in this being are
nothing
more than moments of their negative
unity.
In measure, the qualitative moment
is quantitative;
the determinateness or difference is
indifferent
and so is no difference, is sublated.
This
nature of quantity as a return-into-self
in which it is qualitative constitutes
that
being-in-and-for-itself which is essence.
But measure is only in itself or in
its Notion
essence; this Notion of measure is
not yet
posited. Measure, still as such, is
itself
the immediate [seiende] unity of quality
and quantity; its moments are determinately
present as a quality, and quanta thereof;
these moments are at first inseparable
only
in principle [an sich], but do not
yet have
the significance of this reflected
determination.
The development of measure contains
the differentiation
of these moments, but at the same time
their
relation, so that the identity which
they
are in themselves becomes their relation
to each other, i. e. is posited. The
significance
of this development is the realisation
of
measure in which it posits itself as
in relation
with itself, and hence as a moment.
Through
this mediation it is determined as
sublated;
its immediacy and that of its moments
vanishes;
they are reflected. Measure, having
thus
realised its own Notion, has passed
into
essence.
§ 708
At first, measure is only an immediate
unity
of quality and quantity, so that: (1),
we
have a quantum with a qualitative significance,
a measure. The progressive determining
of
this consists in explicating what is
only
implicit in it, namely, the difference
of
its moments, of its qualitatively and
quantitatively
determined being. These moments further
develop
themselves into wholes of measure which
as
such are self-subsistent. These are
essentially
in relationship with each other, and
so measure
becomes (2), a ratio of specific quanta
having
the form of self-subsistent measures.
But
their self-subsistence also rests essentially
on quantitative relation and quantitative
difference; and so their self-subsistence
becomes a transition of each into the
other,
with the result that measure perishes
in
the measureless. But this beyond of
measure
is the negativity of measure only in
principle;
this results (3), in the positing of
the
indifference of the determinations
of measure,
and the positing of real measure -
real through
the negativity contained in the indifference
- as an inverse ratio of measures which,
as self-subsistent qualities, are essentially
based only on their quantity and on
their
negative relation to one another, thereby
demonstrating themselves to be only
moments
of their truly self-subsistent unity
which
is their reflection-into-self and the
positing
thereof, essence.
§ 709
The development of measure which has
been
attempted in the following chapters
is extremely
difficult. Starting from immediate,
external
measure it should, on the one hand,
go on
to develop the abstract determination
of
the quantitative aspects of natural
objects
(a mathematics of nature), and on the
other
hand, to indicate the connection between
this determination of measure and the
qualities
of natural objects, at least in general;
for the specific proof, derived from
the
Notion of the concrete object, of the
connection
between its qualitative and quantitative
aspects, belongs to the special science
of
the concrete. Examples of this kind
concerning
the law of falling bodies and free,
celestial
motion will be found in the Encyclopedia.
of the Phil. Sciences, 3rd ed., Sections
267 and 270, Remark. In this connection
the
general observation may be made that
the
different forms in which measure is
realised
belong also to different spheres of
natural
reality. The complete, abstract indifference
of developed measure, i. e. the laws
of measure,
can only be manifested in the sphere
of mechanics
in which the concrete bodily factor
is itself
only abstract matter; the qualitative
differences
of such matter are essentially quantitatively
determined; space and time are the
purest
forms of externality, and the multitude
of
matters, masses, intensity of weight,
are
similarly external determinations which
have
their characteristic determinateness
in the
quantitative element. On the other
hand,
such quantitative determinateness of
abstract
matter is deranged simply by the plurality
of conflicting qualities in the inorganic
sphere and still more even in the organic
world. But here there is involved not
merely
a conflict of qualities, for measure
here
is subordinated to higher relationships
and
the immanent development of measure
tends
to be reduced to the simple form of
immediate
measure. The limbs of the animal organism
have a measure which, as a simple quantum,
stands in a ratio to the other quanta
of
the other limbs; the proportions of
the human
body are the fixed ratio of such quanta.
Natural science is still far from possessing
an insight into the connection between
such
quantities and the organic functions
on which
they wholly depend. But the readiest
example
of the reduction of an immanent measure
to
a merely externally determined magnitude
is motion. In the celestial bodies
it is
free motion, a motion which is determined
solely by the Notion and whose quantitative
elements therefore equally depend solely
on the Notion (see above); but such
free
motion is reduced by the living creature
to arbitrary or mechanically regular,
i.
e. a wholly abstract, formal motion.
§ 710
And in the realm of spirit there is
still
less to be found a characteristic,
free development
of measure. It is quite evident, for
example,
that a republican constitution like
that
of Athens, or an aristocratic constitution
tempered by democracy, is suitable
only for
States of a certain size, and that
in a developed
civil society the numbers of individuals
belonging to different occupations
stand
in a certain relations to one another;
but
all this yields neither laws of measure
nor
characteristic forms of it. In the
spiritual
sphere as such there occur differences
of
intensity of character, strength of
imagination,
sensations, general ideas, and so on;
but
the determination does not go beyond
the
indefiniteness of strength or weakness.
How
insipid and completely empty the so-called
laws turn out to be which have been
laid
down about the relation of strength
and weakness
of sensations, general ideas, and so
on,
comes home to one on reading the psychologies
which occupy themselves with such laws.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chapter 1: Specific Quantity A The
Specific
Quantum B Specifying Measure
(a) The Rule
(b) Specifying Measure
(c) Relation of the Two Sides as Qualities
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark
§ 736
The exposition here of the connection
between
the qualitative nature of something
and its
quantitative determination has its
application
in the already indicated example of
motion.
First of all, in velocity as the direct
ratio
of space traversed and time elapsed,
the
magnitude of time is taken as denominator
while that of space is taken as numerator.
If velocity as such is only a ratio
of the
space and time in a motion, it is immaterial
which of the two moments is to be considered
as amount or as unit. Space, however,
like
weight in specific gravity, is an external,
real whole as such - hence amount -
whereas
time, like volume, is the ideal, negative
factor, the side of unity. But here
there
essentially belongs the more important
ratio,
that which holds between the magnitudes
of
space and time in free motion; at first,
in the still conditioned motion of
a falling
body where the time factor is determined
as a root and the space factor as a
square,
or in the absolutely free motion of
the celestial
bodies where the period of revolution
is
lower by one power than the distance
from
the sun, the former being a square
and the
latter a cube. Fundamental relationships
of this kind rest on the nature of
the interrelated
qualities of space and time and on
the kind
of relation in which they stand, either
as
a mechanical motion, i. e. as an unfree
motion
which is not determined by the Notion
of
the moments of space and time, or as
the
descent of a falling body, i. e. as
a conditionally
free motion, or as the absolutely free
celestial
motion. These kinds of motion, no less
than
their laws, rest on the development
of the
Notion of their moments, of space and
time,
since these qualities as such (space
and
time) prove to be in themselves, i.
e. in
their Notion, inseparable and their
quantitative
relationship is the being-for-self
of measure,
is only one measure-determination.
§ 737
In regard to the absolute relations
of measure,
it is well to bear in mind that the
mathematics
of nature, if it is to be worthy of
the name
of science, must be essentially the
science
of measures - a science for which it
is true
much has been done empirically, but
little
as yet from a strictly scientific,
that is,
philosophical point of view. Mathematical
principles of natural philosophy-as
Newton
called his work-if they are to fulfil
this
description in a profounder sense than
that
accorded to them by Newton and by the
entire
Baconian species of philosophy and
science,
must contain things of quite a different
character in order to bring light into
these
still obscure regions which are, however,
worthy in the highest degree of consideration.
It is a great service to ascertain
the empirical
numbers of nature, e. g., the distances
of
the planets from one another; but it
is an
infinitely greater service when the
empirical
quanta are made to disappear and they
are
raised into a universal form of determinations
of quantity so that they become moments
of
a law or of measure - immortal services
which
Galileo for the descent of falling
bodies
and Kepler for the motion of the celestial
bodies, have achieved. The laws they
discovered
they have proved in this sense, that
they
have shown the whole compass of the
particulars
of observation to correspond to them.
But
yet a still higher proof is required
for
these laws; nothing else, that is,
than that
their quantitative relations be known
from
the qualities or specific Notions of
time
and space that are correlated.
Of this kind of proof there is still
no trace
in the said mathematical principles
of natural
philosophy, neither is there in the
subsequent
works of this kind. It has already
been remarked
in connection with the show of mathematical
proofs of certain relationships in
nature,
a show based on the misuse of the infinitely
small, that it is absurd to try todemonstrate
such proofs on a strictly mathematical
basis,
i. e. neither empirically nor from
the standpoint
of the Notion. These proofs presuppose
thir
theorems, those very laws, from experience;
what they succeed in doing is to reduce
them
to abstract expressions and convenient
formulae.
Undoubtedly the time will come when,
with
a clearer understanding of what mathematics
can accomplish and has accomplished,
the
entire, real merit of Newton as against
Kepler
- the sham scaffolding of proofs being
discarded
- will clearly be seen to be restricted
to
the said transformation of Kepler's
formula
and to the elementary analytical treatment
accorded to it.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C Being-for-self in Measure
Chapter 2 Real Measure A The Relation
of
Self-Subsistent Measures
(a) Combination of Two Measures
(b) Measure of a Series of Measure
Relations
(c) Elective Affinity Remark: Berthollet
on Chemical Affinity and Berzelius's
Theory
of it
B Nodal Line of Measure Relations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remark: Examples of Such Nodal Lines;
the
Maxim, 'Nature Does Not Make Leaps'
§ 774
The system of natural numbers already
shows
a nodal line of qualitative moments
which
emerge in a merely external succession.
It
is on the one hand a merely quantitative
progress and regress, a perpetual adding
or subtracting, so that each number
has the
same arithmetical relation to the one
before
it and after it, as these have to their
predecessors
and successors, and so on. But the
numbers
so formed also have a specific relation
to
other numbers preceding and following
them,
being either an integral multiple of
one
of them or else a power or a root.
In the
musical scale which is built up on
quantitative
differences, a quantum gives rise to
an harmonious
relation without its own relation to
those
on either side of it in the scale differing
from the relation between these again
and
their predecessors and successors.
While
successive notes seem to be at an ever-increasing
distance from the keynote, or numbers
in
succeeding each other arithmetically
seem
only to become other numbers, the fact
is
that there suddenly emerges a return,
a surprising
accord, of which no hint was given
by the
quality of what immediately preceded
it,
but which appears as an actio in distans,
as a connection with something far
removed.
There is a sudden interruption of the
succession
of merely indifferent relations which
do
not alter the preceding specific reality
or do not even form any such, and although
the succession is continued quantitatively
in the same manner, a specific relation
breaks
in per saltum.
§ 775
Such qualitative nodes and leaps occur
in
chemical combinations when the mixture
proportions
are progressively altered; at certain
points
in the scale of mixtures, two substances
form products exhibiting particular
qualities.
These products are distinguished from
one
another not merely by a more or less,
and
they are not already present, or only
perhaps
in a weaker degree, in the proportions
close
to the nodal proportions, but are bound
up
with these nodes themselves. For example,
different oxides of nitrogen and nitric
acids
having essentially different qualities
are
formed only when oxygen and nitrogen
are
combined in certain specific proportions,
and no such specific compounds are
formed
by the intermediate proportions. Metal
oxides,
e. g. the lead oxides, are formed at
certain
quantitative points of oxidation and
are
distinguished by colours and other
qualities.
They do not pass gradually into one
another;
the proportions lying in between these
nodes
do not produce a neutral or a specific
substance.
Without having passed through the intervening
stages, a specific compound appears
which
is based on a measure relation and
possesses
characteristic qualities. Again, water
when
its temperature is altered does not
merely
get more or less hot but passes through
from
the liquid into either the solid or
gaseous
states; these states do not appear
gradually;
on the contrary, each new state appears
as
a leap, suddenly interrupting and checking
the gradual succession of temperature
changes
at these points. Every birth and death,
far
from being a progressive gradualness,
is
an interruption of it and is the leap
from
a quantitative into a qualitative alteration.
§ 776
It is said, natura non facit saltum
[there
are no leaps in nature]; and ordinary
thinking
when it has to grasp a coming-to-be
or a
ceasing-to-be, fancies it has done
so by
representing it as a gradual emergence
or
disappearance. But we have seen that
the
alterations of being in general are
not only
the transition of one magnitude into
another,
but a transition from quality into
quantity
and vice versa, a becoming-other which
is
an interruption of gradualness and
the production
of something qualitatively different
from
the reality which preceded it. Water,
in
cooling, does not gradually harden
as if
it thickened like porridge, gradually
solidifying
until it reached the consistency of
ice;
it suddenly solidifies, all at once.
It can
remain quite fluid even at freezing
point
if it is standing undisturbed, and
then a
slight shock will bring it into the
solid
state.
§ 777
In thinking about the gradualness of
the
coming-to-be of something, it is ordinarily
assumed that what comes to be is already
sensibly or actually in existence;
it is
not yet perceptible only because of
its smallness.
Similarly with the gradual disappearance
of something, the non-being or other
which
takes its place is likewise assumed
to be
really there, only not observable,
and there,
too, not in the sense of being implicitly
or ideally contained in the first something,
but really there, only not observable.
In
this way, the form of the in-itself,
the
inner being of something before it
actually
exists, is transformed into a smallness
of
an outer existence, and the essential
difference,
that of the Notion, is converted into
an
external difference of mere magnitude.
The
attempt to explain coming- to-be or
ceasing-to-be
on the basis of gradualness of the
alteration
is tedious like any tautology; what
comes
to be or ceases to be is assumed as
already
complete and in existence beforehand
and
the alteration is turned into a mere
change
of an external difference, with the
result
that the explanation is in fact a mere
tautology.
The intellectual difficulty attendant
on
such an attempted explanation comes
from
the qualitative transition from something
into its other in general, and then
into
its opposite; but the identity and
the alteration
are misrepresented as the indifferent,
external
determinations of the quantitative
sphere.
§ 778
In the moral sphere, in so far as it
is considered
under the categories of being, there
occurs
the same transition from quantity into
quality
and different qualities appear to be
based
in a difference of magnitude.
It is through a more or less that the
measure
of frivolity or thoughtlessness is
exceeded
and something quite different comes
about,
namely crime, and thus right becomes
wrong
and virtue vice. Thus states, too,
acquire
through their quantitative difference,
other
things being assumed equal, a distinct
qualitative
character. With the expansion of the
state
and an increased number of citizens,
the
laws and the constitution acquire a
different
significance. The state has its own
measure
of magnitude and when this is exceeded
this
mere change of size renders it liable
to
instability and disruption under that
same
constitution which was its good fortune
and
its strength before its expansion.
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C The Measureless
Chapter 3: The Becoming of Essence
A Absolute
Indifference B Indifference as an Inverse
Ratio of its Factors Remark: Centripetal
and Centrifugal Force
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C Transition into Essence § 803
Absolute indifference is the final
determination
of being before it becomes essence;
but it
does not attain to essence. It reveals
itself
as still belonging to the sphere of
being
through the fact that, determined as
indifferent,
it still contains difference as an
external,
quantitative determination; this is
its determinate
being, contrasted with which absolute
indifference
is determined as being only implicitly
the
absolute, not the absolute grasped
as actuality.
In other words, it is external reflection
which stops short at conceiving the
differences
in themselves or in the absolute as
one and
the same, thinking of them as only
indifferently
distinguished, not as intrinsically
distinct
from one another. The further step
which
requires to be made here is to grasp
that
this reflection of the differences
into their
unity is not merely the product of
the external
reflection of the subjective thinker,
but
that it is the very nature of the differences
of this unity to sublate themselves,
with
the result that their unity proves
to be
absolute negativity, its indifference
to
be just as much indifferent to itself,
to
its own indifference, as it is indifferent
to otherness.
§ 804
But we are already familiar with this
self-sublating
of the determination of indifference;
in
the development of its positedness,
this
determination has shown itself to be
from
every aspect a contradiction. It is
in itself
the totality in which every determination
of being is sublated and contained;
it is
thus the substrate, but at first only
in
the one-sided determination of the
in-itself,
and consequently the differences, namely,
the quantitative difference and the
inverse
ratio of factors, are present in it
only
in an external manner. As thus the
contradiction
of itself and its determinedness, of
its
implicit determination and its posited
determinateness,
it is the negative totality whose determinatenesses
have sublated themselves in themselves
and
in so doing have sublated this fundamental
one-sidedness of theirs, their [merely]
implicit
being [Ansichsein]. The result is that
indifference
is now posited as what it in fact is,
namely
a simple and infinite, negative relation-to-self,
its inherent incompatibility with itself,
a repelling of itself from itself.
The process
of determining and being determined
is not
a transition, nor an external alteration,
nor an emergence of determinations
in the
indifference, but is its own self-relating
which is the negativity of itself,
of its
[merely] implicit being.
§ 805
Now these repelled determinations do
not
possess themselves, do not emerge as
self-subsistent
or external determinations, but first,
as
moments belonging to the implicit unity,
they are not expelled from it but are
borne
by it as the substrate and are filled
solely
by it; secondly, as determinations
which
are immanent in the explicated unity,
they
are only through their repulsion from
themselves.
The being of the determinations is
no longer
simply affirmative as in the entire
sphere
of being, but is now a sheer positedness,
the determinations having the fixed
character
and significance of being related to
their
unity, each consequently being related
to
its other and with negation; this is
the
mark of their relativity.
§ 806
Thus we see that being in general and
the
being or immediacy of the distinct
determinatenesses,
no less than the implicit being, has
vanished
and the unity is being, an immediate
presupposed
totality such that it is this simple
self-relation
only as a result of the sublating of
this
presupposition, and this presupposedness
and immediate being is itself only
a moment
of its repelling, the original self-subsistence
and self-Identity is only as the resulting
coming together with itself. Being,
in its
determining, has thus determined itself
to
essence, a being which, through the
sublating
of being, is a simple being-with-itself.
®
ESSENCE - Second Part of The Logic
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