Book contents
- Hegel’s Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences
- Cambridge Critical Guides
- Hegel’s Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Logical and Natural Life
- Chapter 2 Hegel’s Encyclopedia as the Science of Freedom
- Chapter 3 Essence in Hegel’s Encyclopedia and Science of Logic
- Chapter 4 The Concept’s Freedom
- Chapter 5 From Logic to Nature
- Chapter 6 Hegel’s Philosophy of Nature
- Chapter 7 Hegel’s Anthropology
- Chapter 8 Hegel’s Critique of Materialism
- Chapter 9 Hegel’s Psychology
- Chapter 10 Political Ontology and Rational Syllogistic in Hegel’s Objective Spirit
- Chapter 11 Taking the System Seriously
- Chapter 12 §§556–63: Art as a Form of Absolute Spirit
- Chapter 13 The Stubbornness of Nature in Art
- Chapter 14 The Encyclopedia’s Notion of Religion
- Chapter 15 Absolute Geist or Self-Loving God?
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Critical Guides
Chapter 1 - Logical and Natural Life
One Aspect of the Relation between Hegel’s Science of Logic and His Encyclopedia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2021
- Hegel’s Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences
- Cambridge Critical Guides
- Hegel’s Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Logical and Natural Life
- Chapter 2 Hegel’s Encyclopedia as the Science of Freedom
- Chapter 3 Essence in Hegel’s Encyclopedia and Science of Logic
- Chapter 4 The Concept’s Freedom
- Chapter 5 From Logic to Nature
- Chapter 6 Hegel’s Philosophy of Nature
- Chapter 7 Hegel’s Anthropology
- Chapter 8 Hegel’s Critique of Materialism
- Chapter 9 Hegel’s Psychology
- Chapter 10 Political Ontology and Rational Syllogistic in Hegel’s Objective Spirit
- Chapter 11 Taking the System Seriously
- Chapter 12 §§556–63: Art as a Form of Absolute Spirit
- Chapter 13 The Stubbornness of Nature in Art
- Chapter 14 The Encyclopedia’s Notion of Religion
- Chapter 15 Absolute Geist or Self-Loving God?
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Critical Guides
Summary
In his Science of Logic, Hegel treats life as a pure concept. This means that we know what it is to be a living being, and so how to distinguish living from non-living beings, non-empirically. We know it as an implication of the “science of pure thinking” that the Logic develops. The Philosophy of Nature in the Encyclopedia also treats living beings as categorically distinct, and the treatment is also not an empirical one. But it is not derived from the science of pure thinking as such. This suggests that the latter treatment is not absolutely a priori but, as is sometimes said of other aspects of Hegel’s work, “relatively a priori.” (Stated another way, The Philosophy of Nature is philosophy, not natural science.) What “relatively a priori” might mean is the topic here, and the aim is to show by such an analysis the general form of the relation between the Science of Logic and the Encyclopedia. The main point of comparison and contrast will be Kant’s understanding of the relation between “Transcendental Logic,” The Metaphysical First Principles of Natural Science and The Metaphysics of Morals, a similar, albeit quite differently conceived, tri-partite structure to Hegel’s system.
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- Hegel's Encyclopedia of the Philosophical SciencesA Critical Guide, pp. 9 - 27Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021