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Subjective Thinking: Kierkegaard on Hegel's Socrates
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2013
Abstract
One of the more surreal moments in Kierkegaard's journals involves a scene from the Underworld. Hegel has been reading Trendelenburg's Logical Investigations, and goes over to Socrates to complain. Alas, the conversation has trouble getting off the ground:
Socr.: Should we begin by being altogether in disagreement, or should we agree on something we could call a presupposition?…. What do you presuppose as your starting-point?
H.: Nothing at all.
Socr: That's quite something! So perhaps you don't start at all?
H.: I not start, I who have written 21 volumes?
Socr: Ye gods, what a hecatomb you have offered!
H.: But I start from nothing.
Socr.: Is that not something?
H.: No – on the contrary. That first makes its appearance in the conclusion of the whole, in the course of which I discuss science, world history etc.
Socr.: How might I be able to master this difficult task for many remarkable things may well be included which would show up my stupidity… You know that I did not even allow Polos to talk more than 5 minutes at a time, and you want to talk XXI volumes.
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- Information
- Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain , Volume 31 , Issue 1 , Spring/Summer 2010 , pp. 23 - 44
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Hegel Society of Great Britain 2010
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