Book contents
- True Purposes in Hegel’s Logic
- True Purposes in Hegel’s Logic
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Kant’s Antinomies of Freedom and Teleology
- Chapter 3 Kant’s Concept of Inner Purposiveness
- Chapter 4 Aristotle’s Defence of Natural Teleology
- Chapter 5 The Non-truth of Mechanism
- Chapter 6 The Non-truth of External Purposiveness
- Chapter 7 The Truth of Inner Purposiveness
- Chapter 8 The Immediate Actuality of Purposes
- Chapter 9 The Absolute Realised Purpose
- References
- Index
Chapter 5 - The Non-truth of Mechanism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2023
- True Purposes in Hegel’s Logic
- True Purposes in Hegel’s Logic
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Kant’s Antinomies of Freedom and Teleology
- Chapter 3 Kant’s Concept of Inner Purposiveness
- Chapter 4 Aristotle’s Defence of Natural Teleology
- Chapter 5 The Non-truth of Mechanism
- Chapter 6 The Non-truth of External Purposiveness
- Chapter 7 The Truth of Inner Purposiveness
- Chapter 8 The Immediate Actuality of Purposes
- Chapter 9 The Absolute Realised Purpose
- References
- Index
Summary
Hegel intends to prove two different claims about purposive connections in his Logic: (1) that teleology is the truth of mechanism and (2) that inner purposiveness is the truth of the external reference-to-an-end. I devote this chapter to the analysis of the first of these arguments. To this end, I introduce Hegel’s concept of ‘mechanism’, whose main ingredient is the idea that mechanisms are determined as causes merely from without. This feature disqualifies mechanisms as self-sufficient explainers. I compare Hegel’s understanding of this shortcoming with Hume’s and Kant’s misgivings about the cognition of causal relations. For Hegel, mechanical causes are in themselves apparent and the relations they maintain with other causes are in themselves contingent. It is this essential contingency of the ‘necessary’ that makes Hegel judge mechanical relations to be untrue. Mechanical objects with indeterminate causal powers appear essentially as means and, hence, hypothetically subordinated to self-determining causes.
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- True Purposes in Hegel's Logic , pp. 79 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023