Hegel's Science of Logic
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작가정보
저자(글) Miller, A.V. (Trn)
목차
- Foreword
Professor J. N. Findlay
Translator's Preface
Volume One: THE OBJECTIVE LOGIC
Preface to the First Edition 25 (6)
Preface to the Second Edition 31 (12)
Introduction: General Notion of Logic 43 (16)
General Division of Logic 59 (8)
BOOK ONE: THE DOCTRINE OF BEING
With What Must the Science begin? 67 (12)
General Division of Being 79 (2)
Section One: Determinateness (Quality) 81 (104)
Being 82 (27)
Being 82 (1)
Nothing 82 (1)
Becoming 82 (27)
Unity of Being and Nothing 82 (1)
The Opposition of Being and Nothing in 83 (7)
Ordinary Thinking
Defectiveness of the Expression: Unity, 90 (3)
Identity of Being and Nothing
The Isolating of These Abstractions 93 (10)
Incomprehensibility of the Beginning 103(1)
Moments of Becoming: Coming-to-be and 103(3)
Ceasing-to-be
Sublation of Becoming 106(1)
Remark: The Expression `To Sublate' 106(3)
Determinate Being 109(48)
Determinate Being as Such 109(7)
Determinate Being in General 109(2)
Quality 111(1)
Remark: Quality and Negation 111(3)
Something 114(2)
Finitude 116(21)
Something and Other 117(5)
Determination, Constitution and Limit 122(7)
Finitude 129(1)
The Immediacy of Finitude 129(2)
Limitation and the Ought 131(2)
Remark: The Ought 133(3)
Transition of the Finite into the Infinite 136(1)
Infinity 137(20)
The Infinite in General 137(1)
Alternating Determination of the Finite 138(5)
and the Infinite
Affirmative Infinity 143(7)
Transition 150(1)
The Infinite Progress 150(4)
Idealism 154(3)
Being-for-self 157(28)
Being-for-self as such 157(7)
Determinate Being and Being-for-self 158(1)
Being-for-one 159(1)
Remark: The German Expression, `What for 160(3)
a Thing' (Meaning `What Kind of a Thing')
The One 163(1)
The One and the Many 164(6)
The One in its Own Self 164(1)
The One and the Void 165(1)
Remark: Atomism 165(2)
Many Ones--Repulsion 167(2)
Remark: The Monad of Leibniz 169(1)
Repulsion and Attraction 170(15)
Exclusion of the One 170(2)
Remark: The Unity of the One and the Many 172(1)
The one One of Attraction 173(1)
The Relation of Repulsion and Attraction 174(4)
Remark: The Kantian Construction of 178(7)
Matter from the Forces of Attraction and
Repulsion
Section Two: Magnitude (Quantity) 185(142)
Remark 186(1)
Quantity 187(15)
Pure Quantity 187(12)
The Conception of Pure Quantity 188(2)
The Kantian Antinomy of the 190(9)
Indivisibility and the Infinite
Divisibility of Time, Space and Matter
Continuous and Discrete Magnitude 199(2)
Remark: The Usual Separation of These 200(1)
Magnitudes
Limitation of Quantity 201(1)
Quantum 202(112)
Number 202(15)
The Species of Calculation in Arithmetic. 204(8)
Kant's Synthetic Propositions A Priori of
Intution
The Employment of Numerical Distinctions 212(5)
for Expressing Philosophical Notions
Extensive and Intensive Quantum 217(8)
Their Difference 217(3)
Identity of Extensive and Intensive 220(1)
Magnitude
Examples of this Identity 221(2)
The Determination of Degree as Applied by 223(1)
Kant to the Soul
Alteration of Quantum 224(1)
Quantitative Infinity 225(89)
Its Notion 225(2)
The Quantitative Infinite Progress 227(1)
The High Repute of the Progress to 228(6)
Infinity
The Kantian Antinomy of the Limitation 234(4)
and Non-limitation of the World in Time
and Space
The Infinity of Quantum 238(2)
The Specific Nature of the Notion of the 240(34)
Mathematical Infinite
The Purpose of the Differential Calculus 274(28)
Deduced from its Application
Further Forms Connected with the 302(12)
Qualitative Determinateness of Magnitude
The Quantitative Relation or Quantitative 314(13)
Ratio
The Direct Ratio 315(2)
Inverse Ratio 317(4)
The Ratio of Powers 321(6)
Remark 324(3)
Section Three: Measure 327(62)
Specific Quantity 332(16)
The Specific Quantum 332(4)
Specifying Measure 336(8)
The Rule 337(1)
Specifying Measure 337(1)
Remark 338(1)
Relation of the Two Sides as Qualities 339(3)
Remark 342(2)
Being-for-self in Measure 344(4)
Real Measure 348(27)
The Relation of Self-subsistent Measures 349(17)
Combination of two Measures 349(2)
Measure as a Series of Measure Relations 351(3)
Elective Affinity 354(2)
Remark 356(10)
Nodal Line of Measure Relations 366(5)
Remark 368(3)
The Measureless 371(4)
The Becoming of Essence 375(14)
Absolute Indifference 375(1)
Indifference as an Inverse Ratio of its 375(8)
Factors
Remark 379(4)
Transition into Essence 383(6)
BOOK TWO: THE DOCTRINE OF ESSENCE 389(4)
Section One: Essence as Reflection Within Itself 393(86)
Illusory Being 394(14)
The Essential and the Unessential 394(1)
Illusory Being 395(4)
Reflection 399(9)
Positing Reflection 400(3)
External Reflection 403(1)
Remark 404(1)
Determining Reflection 405(3)
The Essentialities or Determinations of 408(36)
Reflection
Remark: Determinations of Reflection in 408(3)
the Form of Propositions
Identity 411(6)
Abstract Identity 412(1)
First Original Law of Thought 413(4)
Difference 417(14)
Absolute Difference 417(1)
Diversity 418(4)
Remark: The Law of Diversity 422(2)
Opposition 424(3)
Remark: Opposite Magnitudes of Arithmetic 427(4)
Contradiction 431(13)
Unity of Positive and Negative 435(3)
The Law of the Excluded Middle 438(1)
The Law of Contradiction 439(5)
Ground 444(35)
Remark: The Law of Ground 446(1)
Absolute Ground 447(9)
Form and Essence 447(3)
Form and Matter 450(5)
Form and Content 455(1)
Determinate Ground 456(13)
Formal Ground 456(2)
Remark: Formal Method of Explanation From 458(3)
Tautological Grounds
Real Ground 461(2)
Remark: Formal Method of Explanation From 463(3)
a Ground Distinct From That Which is
Grounded
The Complete Ground 466(3)
Condition 469(10)
The Relatively Unconditioned 469(3)
The Absolutely Unconditioned 472(2)
Emergence of the Fact [Sache] into 474(5)
Existence
Section Two: Appearance 479(50)
Existence 481(18)
The Thing and its Properties 484(8)
Thing-in-itself and Existence 484(1)
Property 484(5)
Remark: The Thing-in-itself of 489(1)
Transcendental Idealism
The Reciprocal Action of Things 490(2)
The Constitution of the Thing out of Matters 492(2)
Dissolution of the Thing 494(5)
Remark: The Porosity of Matters 496(3)
Appearance 499(13)
The Law of Appearance 500(5)
The World of Appearance and the 505(4)
World-in-itself
Dissolution of Appearance 509(3)
The Essential Relation 512(17)
The Relation of Whole and Parts 513(5)
Remark: Infinite Divisibility 517(1)
The Relation of Force and its Expression 518(5)
The Conditionedness of Force 519(2)
The Solicitation of Force 521(1)
The Infinity of Force 521(2)
Relation of Outer and Inner 523(6)
Remark: Immediate Identity of Inner and 526(3)
Outer
Section Three: Actuality 529(70)
The Absolute 530(11)
The Exposition of the Absolute 530(3)
The Absolute Attribute 533(1)
The Mode of the Absolute 534(7)
Remark: Philosophy of Spinoza and Leibniz 536(5)
Actuality 541(13)
Contingency, or Formal Actuality, 542(4)
Possibility, and Necessity
Relative Necessity, or Real Actuality, 546(4)
Possibility, and Necessity
Absolute Necessity 550(4)
The Absolute Relation 554(45)
The Relation of Substantiality 555(3)
The Relation of Causality 558(11)
Formal Causality 558(2)
The Determinate Relation of Causality 560(6)
Action and Reaction 566(3)
Reciprocity 569(6)
Volume Two: SUBJECTIVE LOGIC or THE DOCTRINE OF
THE NOTION
Foreword 575(2)
The Notion in General 577(19)
Division 596(3)
Section One: Subjectivity 599(106)
The Notion 600(22)
The Universal Notion 601(4)
The Particular Notion 605(13)
Remark: The Common Classes of Notions 612(6)
The Individual 618(4)
The Judgement 622(42)
The Judgement of Existence (Inherence) 630(13)
The Positive Judgement 631(5)
The Negative Judgement 636(5)
The Infinite Judgement 641(2)
The Judgement of Reflection 643(7)
The Singular Judgement 645(1)
The Particular Judgement 645(2)
The Universal Judgement 647(3)
The Judgement of Necessity 650(7)
The Categorical Judgement 650(2)
The Hypothetical Judgement 652(1)
The Disjunctive Judgement 653(4)
The Judgement of the Notion 657(7)
The Assertoric Judgement 659(1)
The Problematic Judgement 660(1)
The Apodeictic Judgement 661(3)
The Syllogism 664(41)
The Syllogism of Existence 666(20)
First Figure of the Syllogism 667(1)
The Second Figure: P-I-U 667(7)
The Third Figure: I-U-P 674(5)
The Fourth Figure: U-U-U, or the 679(2)
Mathematical Syllogism
Remark: The Common View of the Syllogism 681(5)
The Syllogism of Reflection 686(9)
The Syllogism of Allness 687(2)
The Syllogism of Induction 689(3)
The Syllogism of Analogy 692(3)
T
기본정보
ISBN | 9781573922807 ( 1573922803 ) |
---|---|
발행(출시)일자 | 1998년 12월 01일 |
쪽수 | 844쪽 |
크기 |
139 * 213
* 44
mm
/ 930 g
|
총권수 | 1권 |
언어 | 영어 |
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