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Hegel Glossary
Hegel Glossary
(This glossary merely scratches the surface of Hegel's difficulty terminology. For more help, look in M. Inwood's
Hegel Dictionary. Other works quoted from are listed at the end)
1)
identity, sameness, equality Usually Hegel does not mean numerical identity, but something like
"necessarily connected with." Does not exclude difference. Simple, mere, or abstract self-identity implies
that the thing in question has no structure or determinate characteristics, since such characteristics
imply contrast (and therefore connection) with other things. Self-identity (without the 'mere') implies some
degree of independence, of having an identity that is maintained in becoming more determinate.
2)
(pure) being A (hypothetical) stuff whose only property is that it exists. Hegel argues that such a
thing/stuff would be indistinguishable from (pure) nothing, hence being and nothing are identical (and also
not identical). Thus pure being by itself is not possible, but only a unity of being and non-being, i.e.,
becoming, which expresses the instability of pure being or pure non-being.
3)
determinate being Thing or stuff that has specific characteristics and is therefore different from other
determinate being(s).
4) being-in-itself 'In itself' designates what is implicit or potential in something. A seed is 'in itself' a plant.
Being-in-itself is the 'inner' nature of determinate being.
5)
being-for-itself Being that is something more than merely the opposite of the things it contrasts with.
"Something is for itself in so far as it transcends otherness, its connexion and community with another,
has repelled them and made abstraction from them." (SL158). Being-for-itself has developed to the point
of having a degree of independence from its opposite by incorporating that opposite within itself. It does
this by having an inner relation with that opposite, a relation with the opposite that (partly) determines
what it is itself. Key example: something X that is conscious of itself by seeing another conscious being
Y which is none-the-less identical to X. That is, I become conscious of my self only when I see other
people who are identical with me, and who are conscious of me and of themselves.
6) being-in-and-for-itself not only implies the previously noted characteristics, but has the connotation of a
complete entity, that is what it is in conformity to its nature (its in it self), considered apart from any
relation it may have with anything else.
7)
understanding The kind of thinking that produces contrasting categories like essence vs. appearance.
Understanding makes sharp distinctions, and regards them as fixed and unchanging. (see speculative
reason). speculative reason has a uniting function, but what it unites are opposites which it "dissolves."
(SL28) The contradictory opposites of the Understanding must be reconciled and overcome by
(speculative) Reason, the kind of thinking that produces the Notion (Concept). Speculative thinking "holds
fast contradiction." (SL440)
8)
overcoming, aufheben, sublation A dialectical process the outcome of which incorporates what has
come before, but is also different from what has come before. The result of this process is a unity which
combines the things which are overcome, and modifies those things by their incorporation in to the unity.
See moment.
9)
moment An aspect of something, or some whole as seen from a limited point of view. In dialectical
development, each stage of that development is called a moment. The implication is that a mere moment
is not the comprehensive thing that will come later, which will be a totality of various moments, each of
which is merely a partial version of it.
10) bad infinite An endless repetition of something without coming to an end, like the steps toward moral
perfection in Kant's ethics.
11) negation of the negation The sublation of something, particularly the relation of the true infinite that
sublates the bad infinite. Repetition without limit is a kind of negation (of limit) and negation of the
limitless repetition creates an outcome that incorporates that series of repetitions and completes it. More
generally, the idea that applying dialectical negation twice does not lead back to the original thing, but
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Hegel Glossary
illusory being, show, shein The negative of essence in the essence structure. Immediate in its
relationship to essence, but mediated by essence, too. One suggestion: illusory being is immediate in
the sense that it corresponds to being in the earlier sections of the dialectical, that it is supposed to be
immediate in its relationship to essence (McTaggert). Illusory being exist only as sublated being, as
nothingness (see nothing in essence logic). It is non-essential, non-determinate-being, a determination of
being that only exists in relation to another. (SL395-6) Illusory being is not a "first from which the
beginning was made nor is it an affirmatively present substrate that moves through reflection; on the
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Hegel Glossary
23) (pure) absolute reflection "essence that reflects its illusory being within itself and presupposes for itself
only an illusory being, only positedness, [as opposed to external or real reflection which] presupposes
its self as negated, as the negative of itself." (SL402-3) The idea of this seems to be that in absolute
reflection, essence takes is illusory opposite as given, but does not (yet) include the converse operation
in which essence results from negating illusory being. "Pure absolute reflection thus will be nothing else
but the absolute process of essence is so far as it is negativity." (Dubarle). Pure absolute reflection
"determines itself further" (SL400) into positing, external, and determining reflection. Hegel also
characterizes absolute reflection as "the movement from nothing to nothing." (SL400) On this formulation,
see under nothing in essence logic.
24)
positing reflection This kind of reflection emphasizes that essence posits its other, illusory being,
brings it into existence. Essence posits itself by positing its other, illusory being. "Essence is positing
reflection because it is an activity of self-constitution by the mediation of an other that it gives itself, and
from which it returns to itself. To posit here is to give itself a determination, a gift [i.e., illusory being],
not to an independent other, an other which is already there, but another of itself which institutes an other
in itself in mediating it with itself." (Soual) "The movement of the positing of illusory being on one side,
a moment of self-repulsion and on the other, indissociable unity of the two sides. The specificity of
positing reflection consists in the correlatively necessary affirmation of a positing and a presupposing, a
double movement of self-repulsion and return to self." (Biard)
25) external reflection "What is specific to external reflection is to present as dissociated what positing
reflection keeps united, as the result of a total process that its not yet deployed." (Biard) Reflection which
"finds an [apparently] immediately element which [seems to] exist independently of it [but does not],
which is .. presupposed, not posited." (McTaggart)
26) self-sufficient, self-subsistent Something independent, not requiring or depending on anything else.
Posited being is not self-sufficient, since it depends on an other.
27) reflection-into-self means incorporating the relationship to an other which is part of essence into
essence itself, "bending back" the relation to that other into itself. (SL407) The number -a, reflected into
itself is just a. (SL428) (see the positive and the negative) Reflection-into-self makes something that
reflection an other into something self-sufficient because it incorporates its other into itself.
28) determining reflection The unity of positing reflection and external reflection. The result of reflection at
this degree of development is a determinateness that is constituted by the relation to its other, but has
gone beyond merely positing or presupposing the other, and of differentiating itself from that other. The
determinateness that results from determining reflection is an "essential, not transitory determinateness."
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Hegel Glossary
(SL407) It gains this stability by being not merely posited being, but by having its other reflection-intoanother "bent back" into a reflection-into-itself (SL407).
29) determinations of reflection, essentialities A determination of reflection is "positedness reflected
into itself." (SL407) "The determination of reflection is its relation to its otherness within itself." (SL408)
Essential properties that something has not because of its relationship to something else, but it has
incorporated that relation to another within itself, that is, as reflection-into-self. The two main essentialities
are identity and difference. Difference is subdivided into diversity and opposition, and opposition develops
into contradiction.
30) identity (in essence logic) Essence is self identity, since essence is negativity of being within itself.
Thus essence is (essentially) self-relation, but self-relation is identity. Identity is connection of something
to itself, and this connection always has particular characteristics. Omitting all those particular
characteristics yields abstract identity, which is sometimes taken to be the real identity. But of particular
things is always particular, determinate, hence contains negation. Thus all identity also involves
difference. "Identity, therefore, is its own self absolute non-identity."(SL413) Another way of putting this is
that identity and difference have a common root in the negativity of reflection, and they don't get beyond
this commonality.
31) difference The negativity which reflection has within it, an essential moment of identity. Difference is a
determination of reflection, it is not the mere otherness of the sphere of being, but difference from self,
self-related difference. But what is different from difference is identity. Hence difference includes identity.
"Difference is thus unity of itself and identity.[it] possesses both moments."(SL418)
32) diversity Difference in which the two moments, identity and difference, are not related to each other, but
only self-related. This kind of relationship is call indifference. Neither has its character determined by the
other. Diversity is thus the "indifference of difference."(SL419) The kind of reflection that is involved here is
only external reflection, reflection that concerns the kind of relationship in which the determinations of
identity and difference are not part of the nature of the related entities, but are mere posited "from
outside." External identity is called likeness, and external difference is called unlikeness.
33) negative unity A unity of mutually exclusive moments
34) opposition The unity of identity and difference, "its moments are difference in one identity." (SL424)
Opposition has the positive and the negative as two of its moments, where each is through the non-being
of the other. Each is in so far as the other is, and each is in so far as the other is not (SL425). The a
moment of an opposition is not merely to be compared to its opposite, but opposition is a "determination
belonging to the sides of the opposition themselves" (SL427) Each side of the opposition is "mediated by
its other and contains it", but is also "mediated by the non-being of the other; thus it is a unity existing on
its own and excludes the other from itself." (SL431)
35) the positive, the negative The positive is "self-likeness reflected into itself that contains within itself
reference to unlikeness" (SL424) The negative is "unlikeness that contains within itself the reference to its
non-being, to likeness" (SL424). "Each has an indifferent self-subsistence." (SL431) In arithmetic, the
negative is the "intrinsically opposite as such, but the positive is an indeterminate, indifferent sign in
general." (SL 431)
36) contradiction The two determinations of opposition each (a) contain the other side (by reflection-into-self)
and (b) exclude the other side, its negative. Hence each side is contradictory, including and excluding the
other. (SL 431). The positive, in excluding the negative from itself, makes itself into the negative of what it
excludes, that is into the opposite of the negative. This negative is posited as excluding the positive. So
positing the positive necessarily involves "immediately" ("in a single reflection") the positing of the
negative, hence the positing of an absolute contradiction (SL432) Contradiction is "the root of all
movement and vitality." (SL439) "Opposites contain contradiction in so far as they are, in the same
respect, negatively related to one another or sublate each other and are indifferent to each other." (SL
441, the contradiction is that negative relation and indifference are incompatible??)
37) resolution Roughly speaking, resolution means coming apart. In the "self-excluding reflection" (see
contradiction) each self-sufficient side overcomes (sublates) itself, transposes itself into its other. This
"ceaseless vanishing of opposites into themselves" results in null (i.e., zero, like Kant's real opposition)
(SL 433). Null is NOT simple abstract nothing. But the self-sufficiency of the two contradictory sides is
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Hegel Glossary
sublated here. This resolved contradiction is ground (SL435). A thing, subject or the Concept is selfcontradictory, but also this contradiction resolved when it is reflected-into-itself. It has a higher sphere for
its ground. (SL443)
38) ground A reason, basis, or explanation for something. "Falls to the ground" means "is destroyed."
"Ground is essence as positive identity-with-self" (SL435)
39) The truth of X is Y The outcome of the logical development of X is Y. Example: Essence is the truth of
Being.
40) inner (internal) vs. outer (external) The inner is the essential or necessary (sometimes also potential).
The external is the inessential or contingent. Inwardness sometimes means self-sufficiency.
41)
the Notion, the Concept The outcome of the sublation of essence and being, incorporating the
incompatible oppositions of essence logic, comprehending and reconciling them. The comprehensive
nature of the Notion or Concept can be illustrated from particular notions or concepts. An example from
Hegel: The customs of the Spartans were an effect of their constitution, and conversely their constitution
is an effect of their customs. The concept of the Spartan people is a whole that incorporates (grounds)
both of these reciprocal relations, and all other aspects of their life and history. Strictly speaking the
Concept does not come into being, as what objects have in common. Instead, "things are what they are
through the activity of the Concept that dwells in them and reveals itself in them." Moments of the
Concept (Notion) are Universality, Particularity, Individuality.
42) Universality, Particularity, Individuality The moments of the Notion. Each of these moments is the
whole of the Notion. Most people think of the concept as primarily universal, something resulting from
perceiving all plants, for example, and omitting all specific characteristics of plants. This abstraction is
not, Hegel insists, what he means, even by the universal moment of the Concept. The Concept is different
from the collection of all things that may fall under it; roughly the Concept is the principle that brings
together the diverse cases that fall under it. Hegel's example: in Rousseau, the laws are the expression of
the general will of the citizens (roughly, what would be in their interests), which is not the same as the will
of all the citizens. "The general will is the Concept of willing, and the laws are the particular
determinations of willing as grounded in this Concept." The particularity of the Concept is the totality of
the instances that fall under it. Often Hegel speak of these instances as resulting from the division of the
Concept into the particular cases. The dialectical result of universality and particularity is the singular.
The singular, however, is a subject, i.e., self-consciousness. "Life, or organic nature, is the stage of
nature at which the Notion emerges, but as blind, as unaware of itself and unthinking; the Notion that is
self-conscious and thinks pertains solely to spirit." This idea is partly clarified by Hegel's discussion of
freedom in the Philosophy of Right. There, Universality is identified with Indeterminacy, Particularity with
Determination, and Individuality with Self-Determination. In Indeterminacy, freedom involves "my flight from
every content as a restriction." In Determination, my willing must be willing of something in particular.
Free will is the dialectical unity of Indeterminacy (absence of restrictions) and Determination (pursuit of
particular objects). This unity is Self-Determination, where the ego posits itself as both determinate and
therefore restricted, and yet independent, not determined by restrictions. Keeping this example from
political theory/psychology in mind may make it easier to understand Hegel's claim that the Notion
determines itself freely. It also helps to see what it means to say that the Universal aspect of the Notion
is "free love and boundless blessedness". In "love and friendship" Hegel says that in relating to lover or
friend, a person is not restricted by something external, but "we gladly restrict ourselves in relating to
another."
43) objectivity The Notion determines itself into objectivity in a way similar to the ontological proof for the
existence of God. That proof infers the real existence of God from His concept. The Notion posits itself as
"something real, something that is; this still abstract reality completes itself in objectivity."
44) Idea The unity of the Notion and objectivity. On the state: The Notion of the state constitutes the nature
of individual citizens, hence they have an urge to bring it into reality, thus the unity of Notion and
objectivity in the Idea, no matter how imperfect the resulting state its.
45) Absolute Idea The Absolute Idea is the unity of the theoretical Idea (Idea of the Truth) and the practical
Idea (Idea of the Good). In the Absolute Idea, the Notion has personality (spirit?), and is being (sublated)
and self-knowing truth.
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Hegel Glossary
References: SL = Hegel's Science of Logic, translated by A. V. Miller, Oxford, 1969; Soual = Philippe Soual,
Interiorite et Reflexion: Etude sur la Logique de l'essence chez Hegel, L'Harmattan, 2000; Biard = J. Biard, et.
al., Introduction a la lecture de la Science de la logique de Hegel: La Doctrine de l'Essence, Aubier, 1983;
McTaggart = J. M. E. Mctaggart, A Commentary on Hegel's Logic, Cambridge, 1910,; Doz = A. Doz, La Logique
de Hegel et les Problemes Traditionnels de l'Ontologie, Vrin, 1987; Hansen = F.-P. Hansen, G. W. F. Hegel:
"Wissenschaft der Logik ": Ein Kommentar, Koenigshausen & Neumann, 1996; Schmidt = K. J. Schmidt, G. W.
F. Hegel: "Wissenschaft der Logik Die Lehre vom Wesen", Schoeningh, 1997; Dubarle = D. Dubarle, "La
logique de la reflexion et la transition de la logique de l'etre a celle de l'essence," in D. Henrich, ed., Die
Wissenschaft der Logik und de Logik der Reflexion, Hegel-Studien, Beiheft 18, Bouvier, 1978; Heinrich = D.
Heinrich, "Hegels Logik der Reflexion: Neue Fassung," in Heinrich, Hegel-Studien Beiheft 18; Iber = Ch. Iber,
Metaphysik absoluter Relationalitaet: Ein Studie zu de beiden ersten Kapiteln von Hegel's Wesenslogik , de
Gruyter, 1990; Theunissen = M. Theunissen, Sein und Schein: Dir k ritische Funk tion der Hegelschen Logik ,
Suhrkamp, 2nd ed., 1994.
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