Ulteriori informazioni
Informationen zum Autor Clark Butler is Director of the Institute for Human Rights at Indiana University-Purdue University, Ft. Wayne. He is translator (with Christiane Seiler) of Hegel: The Letters (IUP, 1984) and author of Hegel's Logic: Between Dialectic and History. Klappentext Clark Butler is Director of the Institute for Human Rights at Indiana University¿Purdue University, Ft. Wayne. He is translator (with Christiane Seiler) of Hegel: The Letters (IUP, 1984) and author of Hegel's Logic: Between Dialectic and History. Zusammenfassung Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel gave many lectures in logic at Berlin University between 1818 and his untimely death in 1831. This work features lectures that provide important insight into Hegel's science of logic, dialectical method, and symbolic logic. It helps readers understand the rationality of Hegel's often dark and difficult thought. Inhaltsverzeichnis Translator's Introduction Introduction to the Lectures on Logic Preliminary General Concept of Our Subject Matter A. The First Position [of Thought] Toward Objectivity B. The Second Position of Thought Toward Objectivity B.I. Empiricism B.II. The Critical Philosophy [B.II.]a. The theoretical faculty [B.II.b.] Practical reason [B.II.c. The reflective power of judgment] C. The Third Position [of Thought] Toward Objectivity [More Exact Concept and] Division of the [Science of] Logic [I. Being] II. [Essence] III. The Self-Concept BEING I. Being I.A. Quality I.A.a. Being I.A.b. Determinate Being [Dasein] I.A.c. Being for Itself I.B. Quantity I.C. Measure ESSENCE II. Essence II.A. Essence as the Ground of Existence II.A.a. The Show of the Essence of Being II.A.a. Identity II.A.a. Difference II.A.a. Ground II.A.b. Existence II.A.c. The Thing II.B. Appearance [II.B.a.] The World of Appearance [II.B.b. Form and Content] [II.B.c. Correlation] [1.] The whole and its parts [2. Force and its expression] [3. The inner and the outer] II.C. Actuality [Moments of Actuality as an Efficacious Process: Contingency and Mere Possibility versus the Real Possibility, Pre-Conditions, and Necessity of a Matter at Hand] [II.C.a. The Matter at Hand] [II.C.b. The Moments of Necessity] [1.] Conditions [2.] The matter at hand 3. The activity [of a matter at hand actualizing itself] [II.C.c. The Forms of Necessity] [1. The correlation of substantiality] [2. The correlation of causality] [3. The correlation of reciprocal interaction] THE SELF-CONCEPT III. The Self-Concept Subdivisions [of the Logic of the Self-Concept] III.A. The Subjective Self-Concept III.A.1. The Self-Concept as Such III.A.2. Judgment [III.A.2. Qualitative judgment] III.A.2. Reflective judgment III.A.2. Necessary judgment III.A.2. Conceptual judgment III.A.3. The Syllogisms III.A.3.The qualitative syllogism III.A.3.The reflective syllogism III.A.3.The necessary syllogism III.B. The Object III.B.a. Mechanism III.B.b. Chemism III.B.c. Teleology III.C. The Idea III.C.a. Life [III.C.a.1. The soul] [III.C.a.2. The bodily organism] [III.C.a.3. The species] III.C.b. Recognizance [Erkennen] III.C.b.1. Recognizance as such [The analytical method] [The synthetic method] [Definition] [Classification] [Proof] III.C.b.2. The will III.C.c. The Absolute Idea ...