summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 17:11:41 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 17:11:41 -0800
commit9e2f8b105f3196408b6008cf78d02ee98d90de63 (patch)
tree60e66ff4c18c29102d3cfbfc185098123e674cab
parentc4fda9017ef2b680b2cd67a22c0fd4107d1f253c (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/51636-0.txt14992
-rw-r--r--old/51636-0.zipbin331699 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51636-h.zipbin375393 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51636-h/51636-h.htm18036
-rw-r--r--old/51636-h/images/cover.jpgbin22245 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51636-h/images/logo.jpgbin4615 -> 0 bytes
9 files changed, 17 insertions, 33028 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9519cc4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51636 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51636)
diff --git a/old/51636-0.txt b/old/51636-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 9b625d7..0000000
--- a/old/51636-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14992 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hegel's Lectures on the History of
-Philosophy: Volume Two (of 3), by Georg Wilhelm Hegel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Hegel's Lectures on the History of Philosophy: Volume Two (of 3)
-
-Author: Georg Wilhelm Hegel
-
-Translator: E. S. Haldane
- Frances H. Simson
-
-Release Date: April 2, 2016 [EBook #51636]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEGEL'S LECTURES--HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 2 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Giovanni Fini, Fritz Ohrenschall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- HEGEL’S LECTURES ON THE
- HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
-
- VOLUME TWO
-
-
-
-
- Hegel’s Lectures on
-
- THE HISTORY OF
- PHILOSOPHY
-
- _Translated from the German by_
-
- E. S. HALDANE
-
- _and_
-
- FRANCES H. SIMSON, M.A.
-
- _In three volumes_
-
- VOLUME TWO
-
-[Illustration]
-
- ROUTLEDGE & KEGAN PAUL LTD
- Broadway House, 68-74 Carter Lane
- London, E.C.4
-
-
-
-
- _First published in England 1894
- by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. Ltd_
-
- _Reprinted 1955
- by Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd
- Broadway House, 68-74 Carter Lane
- London, E.C.4_
-
-
- _Reprinted by lithography in Great Britain by
- Jarrold and Sons Limited, Norwich_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- GREEK PHILOSOPHY
-
- SECTION ONE (CONTINUED)
-
- PAGE
-
- CHAPTER III.—FIRST PERIOD, THIRD DIVISION 1
-
- A. The Philosophy of Plato 1
-
- 1. Dialectic 49
-
- 2. Philosophy of Nature 71
-
- 3. Philosophy of Mind 90
-
- B. The Philosophy of Aristotle 117
-
- 1. Metaphysics 137
-
- 2. Philosophy of Nature 153
-
- 3. Philosophy of Mind 180
-
- _a._ Psychology 180
-
- _b._ Practical Philosophy 202
-
- α. Ethic 202
-
- β. Politics 207
-
- 4. Logic 210
-
-
- SECTION TWO
-
- SECOND PERIOD.—DOGMATISM AND SCEPTICISM 232
-
- A. The Philosophy of the Stoics 236
-
- 1. Physics 243
-
- 2. Logic 249
-
- 3. Ethics 257
-
- B. The Philosophy of the Epicureans 276
-
- 1. Canonic 281
-
- 2. Metaphysics 286
-
- 3. Physics 292
-
- 4. Ethics 300
-
- C. The Philosophy of the New Academy 311
-
- 1. Arcesilaus 313
-
- 2. Carneades 319
-
- D. Scepticism 328
-
- 1. Earlier Tropes 347
-
- 2. Later Tropes 357
-
-
- SECTION THREE
-
- THIRD PERIOD.—THE NEO-PLATONISTS 374
-
- A. Philo 387
-
- B. The Cabala and Gnosticism 394
-
- 1. Cabalistic Philosophy 394
-
- 2. The Gnostics 396
-
- C. The Alexandrian Philosophy 399
-
- 1. Ammonias Saccas 403
-
- 2. Plotinus 404
-
- 3. Porphyry and Iamblichus 431
-
- 4. Proclus 432
-
- 5. Successors of Proclus 450
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-FIRST PERIOD, THIRD DIVISION: PLATO AND ARISTOTLE.
-
-
-THE development of philosophic science as science, and, further, the
-progress from the Socratic point of view to the scientific, begins with
-Plato and is completed by Aristotle. They of all others deserve to be
-called teachers of the human race.
-
-
-A. PLATO.
-
-Plato, who must be numbered among the Socratics, was the most renowned
-of the friends and disciples of Socrates, and he it was who grasped
-in all its truth Socrates’ great principle that ultimate reality
-lies in consciousness, since, according to him, the absolute is in
-thought, and all reality is Thought. He does not understand by this
-a one-sided thought, nor what is understood by the false idealism
-which makes thought once more step aside and contemplate itself as
-conscious thought, and as in opposition to reality; it is the thought
-which embraces in an absolute unity reality as well as thinking, the
-Notion and its reality in the movement of science, as the Idea of a
-scientific whole. While Socrates had comprehended the thought which
-is existent in and for itself, only as an object for self-conscious
-will, Plato forsook this narrow point of view, and brought the merely
-abstract right of self-conscious thought, which Socrates had raised
-to a principle, into the sphere of science. By so doing he rendered it
-possible to interpret and apply the principle, though his manner of
-representation may not be altogether scientific.
-
-Plato is one of those world-famed individuals, his philosophy one
-of those world-renowned creations, whose influence, as regards the
-culture and development of the mind, has from its commencement down
-to the present time been all-important. For what is peculiar in
-the philosophy of Plato is its application to the intellectual and
-supersensuous world, and its elevation of consciousness into the realm
-of spirit. Thus the spiritual element which belongs to thought obtains
-in this form an importance for consciousness, and is brought into
-consciousness; just as, on the other hand, consciousness obtains a
-foothold on the soil of the other. The Christian religion has certainly
-adopted the lofty principle that man’s inner and spiritual nature
-is his true nature, and takes it as its universal principle, though
-interpreting it in its own way as man’s inclination for holiness;
-but Plato and his philosophy had the greatest share in obtaining for
-Christianity its rational organization, and in bringing it into the
-kingdom of the supernatural, for it was Plato who made the first
-advance in this direction.
-
-We must begin by mentioning the facts of Plato’s life. Plato was an
-Athenian, born in the third year of the 87th Olympiad, or, according to
-Dodwell, Ol. 87, 4 (B.C. 429), at the beginning of the Peloponnesian
-war, in the year in which Pericles died. He was, according to this,
-thirty-nine or forty years younger than Socrates. His father, Ariston,
-traced his lineage from Cadrus; his mother, Perictione, was descended
-from Solon. The paternal uncle of his mother was the celebrated
-Critias, who was for a time among the associates of Socrates, and
-who was the most talented and brilliant, but also the most dangerous
-and obnoxious, of the Thirty Tyrants of Athens (_supra_, Vol. I. p.
-421). Critias is usually represented by the ancients as an atheist,
-with the Cyrenaic Theodoras and Diagoras of Melos; Sextus Empiricus
-(adv. Math. IX. 51-54) has preserved to us a fine fragment from one
-of his poems. Sprung from this noble race, and with no lack of means
-for his culture, Plato received from the most highly esteemed of the
-Sophists an education in all the arts which were then thought to befit
-an Athenian. In his family he was called Aristocles; it was only later
-that he received from his teacher the name of Plato. Some say that he
-was so styled because of the breadth of his forehead; others, because
-of the richness and breadth of his discourse; others again, because of
-his well-built form.[1]
-
-In his youth he cultivated poetry, and wrote tragedies—very much like
-young poets in our day—also dithyrambs and songs. Various specimens of
-the last are still preserved to us in the Greek anthology, and have as
-subject his various loves; we have amongst others a well-known epigram
-on a certain Aster, one of his best friends, which contains a pretty
-fancy, found also in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet:
-
- “To the stars thou look’st, mine Aster,
- O would that I were Heaven,
- With eyes so many thus to gaze on thee.”[2]
-
-In his youth he had every intention of devoting himself to politics.
-He was brought by his father to Socrates when in his twentieth year,
-and enjoyed intimate friendship with him for eight years. It is related
-that Socrates dreamt on the preceding night that he had a young swan
-perched on his knees, whose wings quickly developed, and which then
-flew up to heaven, singing the sweetest songs. Many such incidents are
-mentioned by the ancients, and they bear witness to the deep reverence
-and love with which both contemporaries and those of later times
-regarded the calm dignity of Plato, and that loftiness of demeanour
-which he combined with extreme simplicity and lovableness, traits of
-character which won for him the name of “the divine.” Plato did not
-content himself with the society and wisdom of Socrates, but studied
-in addition the older philosophers, particularly Heraclitus. Aristotle
-(Met. I. 6) states that Plato, before he ever came to Socrates,
-associated with Cratylus, and had been initiated into the doctrines of
-Heraclitus. He also studied the Eleatics, and very particularly the
-Pythagoreans, and he frequented the society of the most noted Sophists.
-Thus deeply immersed in Philosophy, he lost his interest in poetry and
-politics, and gave them up altogether, that he might devote himself
-entirely to scientific pursuits. He fulfilled, like Socrates, his term
-of military service as an Athenian citizen, and is said to have taken
-part in three campaigns.[3]
-
-We have already mentioned (Vol. I. p. 448) that, after Socrates
-was put to death, Plato, like many other philosophers, fled from
-Athens, and betook himself to Euclides at Megara. Leaving Megara
-before long, he travelled first to Cyrene in Africa, where he turned
-his attention specially to mathematics, under the guidance of the
-celebrated mathematician Theodoras, whom he introduces as taking part
-in several of his dialogues. Plato himself soon attained to high
-proficiency in mathematics. To him is attributed the solution of the
-Delian or Delphic problem, which was proposed by the oracle, and,
-like the Pythagorean dogma, has reference to the cube. The problem
-is, to draw a line the cube of which will be equal to the sum of two
-given cubes. This requires a construction through two curves. The
-nature of the tasks then set by the oracles is very curious; on this
-particular occasion application had been made to the oracle in a time
-of pestilence, and it responded by proposing an entirely scientific
-problem; the change indicated in the spirit of the oracle is highly
-significant. From Cyrene Plato went to Italy and Egypt. In Magna Græcia
-he made the acquaintance of the Pythagoreans of that day, Archytas of
-Tarentum, the celebrated mathematician, Philolaus and others; and he
-also bought the writings of the older Pythagoreans at a high price.
-In Sicily he made friends with Dion. Returning to Athens, he opened
-a school of Philosophy in the Academy, a grove or promenade in which
-stood a gymnasium, and there he discoursed to his disciples.[4] This
-pleasure-ground had been laid out in honour of the hero Academus,
-but Plato was the true hero of the Academy who did away with the old
-significance of the name, and overshadowed the fame of the original
-hero, whose place he so completely took that the latter comes down to
-after ages only as connected with Plato.
-
-Plato’s busy life in Athens was twice interrupted by a journey to
-Sicily, to the Court of Dionysius the younger, ruler of Syracuse and
-Sicily. This connection with Dionysius was the most important, if not
-the only external relation into which Plato entered; it had, however,
-no lasting result. Dion, the nearest relative of Dionysius, and other
-respected Syracusans, his friends, deluded themselves with vain hopes
-regarding Dionysius. He had been allowed by his father to grow up
-almost without education, but his friends had instilled into him some
-notion of and respect for Philosophy, and had roused in him a desire to
-make acquaintance with Plato. They hoped that Dionysius would profit
-greatly by his intimacy with Plato, and that his character, which was
-still unformed, and to all appearance far from unpromising, would be so
-influenced by Plato’s idea of the constitution of a true state, that
-this might, through him, come to be realized in Sicily. It was partly
-his friendship with Dion, and partly and more especially the high
-hopes he himself cherished of seeing a true form of government actually
-established by Dionysius, that induced Plato to take the mistaken step
-of journeying to Sicily. On the surface it seems an excellent idea
-that a young prince should have a wise man at his elbow to instruct
-and inspire him; and on this idea a hundred political romances have
-been based; the picture has, however, no reality behind it. Dionysius
-was much pleased with Plato, it is true, and conceived such a respect
-for him that he desired to be respected by him in turn; but this did
-not last long. Dionysius was one of those mediocre natures who may
-indeed in a half-hearted way aspire to glory and honour, but are
-capable of no depth and earnestness, however much they may affect it,
-and who lack all strength of character. His intentions were good, but
-the power failed him to carry them out; it was like our own satirical
-representations in the theatre, of a person who aspires to be quite
-a paragon, and turns out an utter fool. The position of affairs
-represented thereby can be nothing but this, seeing that lack of
-energy alone allows itself to be guided; but it is also the same lack
-of energy which renders impossible of execution even a plan made by
-itself. The rupture between Plato and Dionysius took place on personal
-grounds. Dionysius fell out with his relative Dion, and Plato became
-involved in the quarrel, because he would not give up his friendship
-with Dion. Dionysius was incapable of a friendship based on esteem and
-sympathy in pursuits; it was partly his personal inclination to Plato,
-and partly mere vanity, which had made him seek the philosopher’s
-friendship. Dionysius could not, however, induce Plato to come under
-any obligation to him; he desired that Plato should give himself up to
-him entirely, but this was a demand that Plato refused to entertain.[5]
-
-
-Plato accordingly took his departure. After the separation, however,
-both felt the desire to be again together. Dionysius recalled Plato,
-in order to effect a reconciliation with him; he could not endure
-that he should have failed in the attempt to attach Plato permanently
-to himself, and he found it specially intolerable that Plato would
-not give up Dion. Plato yielded to the urgent representations,
-not only of his family and Dion, but also of Archytas and other
-Pythagoreans of Tarentum, to whom Dionysius had applied, and who were
-taking an interest in the reconciliation of Dionysius with Dion and
-Plato; indeed, they went so far as to guarantee safety and liberty
-of departure to Plato. But Dionysius found that he could endure
-Plato’s presence no better than his absence; he felt himself thereby
-constrained. And though, by the influence of Plato and his other
-companions, a respect for science had been awakened in Dionysius,
-and he had thus become more cultured, he never penetrated beyond the
-surface. His interest in Philosophy was just as superficial as his
-repeated attempts in poetry; and while he wished to be everything—poet,
-philosopher, and statesman—he would not submit to be under the
-guidance of others. Thus no closer tie between Plato and Dionysius
-was formed; they drew together again, and again parted, so that the
-third visit to Sicily ended also in coldness, and the connection was
-not again established. This time the ill-feeling with regard to the
-continued relations with Dion ran so high, that when Plato wished to
-leave Sicily, on account of the treatment his friend had met with from
-Dionysius, the latter deprived him of the means of conveyance, and
-at last would have forcibly prevented his departure from Sicily. The
-Pythagoreans of Tarentum came at length to the rescue,[6] demanded
-Plato back from Dionysius, got him conveyed away safely, and brought
-him to Greece. They were aided by the circumstance that Dionysius was
-afraid of an ill report being spread that he was not on good terms with
-Plato.[7] Thus Plato’s hopes were shattered, and his dream of shaping
-the constitution in accordance with the demands of his own philosophic
-ideas, through the agency of Dionysius, proved vain.
-
-At a later date, therefore, he actually refused to be the lawgiver of
-other States, though they had made application to him for that very
-purpose; amongst these applicants were the inhabitants of Cyrene and
-the Arcadians. It was a time when many of the Greek States found their
-constitutions unsatisfactory, and yet could not devise anything new.[8]
-Now in the last thirty years[9] many constitutions have been drawn up,
-and it would be no hard task for anyone having had much experience in
-this work to frame another. But theorizing is not sufficient for a
-constitution; it is not individuals who make it; it is something divine
-and spiritual, which develops in history. So strong is this power
-of the world-spirit that the thought of an individual is as nothing
-against it; and when such thoughts do count for something, _i.e._
-when they can be realized, they are then none other than the product
-of this power of the universal spirit. The idea that Plato should
-become lawgiver was not adapted for the times; Solon and Lycurgus
-were lawgivers, but in Plato’s day such a thing was impracticable.
-He declined any further compliance with the wishes of these States,
-because they would not agree to the first condition which he imposed,
-namely, the abolition of all private property,[10] a principle which
-we shall deal with later, in considering Plato’s practical philosophy.
-Honoured thus throughout the whole land, and especially in Athens,
-Plato lived until the first year of the 108th Olympiad (B.C. 348); and
-died on his birthday, at a wedding feast, in the eighty-first year of
-his age.[11]
-
-We have to speak, in the first place, of the direct mode in which
-Plato’s philosophy has come down to us; it is to be found in those
-of his writings which we possess; indubitably they are one of the
-fairest gifts which fate has preserved from the ages that are gone.
-His philosophy is not, however, properly speaking, presented there in
-systematic form, and to construct it from such writings is difficult,
-not so much from anything in itself, as because this philosophy has
-been differently understood in different periods of time; and, more
-than all, because it has been much and roughly handled in modern times
-by those who have either read into it their own crude notions, being
-enable to conceive the spiritual spiritually, or have regarded as the
-essential and most significant element in Plato’s philosophy that which
-in reality does not belong to Philosophy at all, but only to the mode
-of presentation; in truth, however, it is only ignorance of Philosophy
-that renders it difficult to grasp the philosophy of Plato. The form
-and matter of these works are alike of interest and importance. In
-studying them we must nevertheless make sure, in the first place, what
-of Philosophy we mean to seek and may find within them, and, on the
-other hand, what Plato’s point of view never can afford us, because
-in his time it was not there to give. Thus it may be that the longing
-with which we approached Philosophy is left quite unsatisfied; it is,
-however, better that we should not be altogether satisfied than that
-such conclusions should be regarded as final. Plato’s point of view is
-clearly defined and necessary, but it is impossible for us to remain
-there, or to go back to it; for Reason now makes higher demands. As for
-regarding it as the highest standpoint, and that which we must take for
-our own—it belongs to the weaknesses of our time not to be able to bear
-the greatness, the immensity of the claims made by the human spirit,
-to feel crushed before them, and to flee from them faint-hearted. We
-must stand above Plato, _i.e._ we must acquaint ourselves with the
-needs of thoughtful minds in our own time, or rather we must ourselves
-experience these needs. Just as the pedagogue’s aim is to train up men
-so as to shield them from the world, or to keep them in a particular
-sphere—the counting-house, for instance, or bean-planting, if you wish
-to be idyllic—where they will neither know the world nor be known
-by it; so in Philosophy a return has been made to religious faith,
-and therefore to the Platonic philosophy.[12] Both are moments which
-have their due place and their own importance, but they are not the
-philosophy of our time. It would be perfectly justifiable to return
-to Plato in order to learn anew from him the Idea of speculative
-Philosophy, but it is idle to speak of him with extravagant enthusiasm,
-as if he represented beauty and excellence in general. Moreover, it is
-quite superfluous for Philosophy, and belongs to the hypercriticism
-of our times, to treat Plato from a literary point of view, as
-Schleiermacher does, critically examining whether one or another of the
-minor dialogues is genuine or not. Regarding the more important of the
-dialogues, we may mention that the testimony of the ancients leaves not
-the slightest doubt.
-
-Then of course the very character of Plato’s works, offering us in
-their manysidedness various modes of treating Philosophy, constitutes
-the first difficulty standing in the way of a comprehension of his
-philosophy. If we still had the oral discourses (ἄγραφα δόγματα) of
-Plato, under the title “Concerning the Good” (περὶ τἀγαθοῦ), which his
-scholars noted down, we should have had his philosophy before us in
-simpler, because in more systematic form.[13] Aristotle seems to have
-had these discourses before him, when dealing with the philosophy of
-Plato, and he quotes them in his work “On Philosophy,” or, “On the
-Ideas,” or, “On the Good” (Brandis has written on this topic). But,
-as it happens, we have only Plato’s Dialogues, and their form renders
-it all the more difficult for us to gather a definite idea of his
-philosophy. For the dialogue form contains very heterogeneous elements;
-Philosophy proper in the treatment of absolute Being, and, intermingled
-with that, its particular mode of representation. It is just this which
-constitutes the manysidedness of Plato’s works.
-
-A second difficulty is said to lie in the distinction drawn between
-exoteric and esoteric philosophy. Tennemann (Vol. II. p. 220) says:
-“Plato exercised the right, which is conceded to every thinker, of
-communicating only so much of his discoveries as he thought good, and
-of so doing only to those whom he credited with capacity to receive it.
-Aristotle, too, had an esoteric and an exoteric philosophy, but with
-this difference, that in his case the distinction was merely formal,
-while with Plato it was also material.” How nonsensical! This would
-appear as if the philosopher kept possession of his thoughts in the
-same way as of his external goods: the philosophic Idea is, however,
-something utterly different, and instead of being possessed by, it
-possesses a man. When philosophers discourse on philosophic subjects,
-they follow of necessity the course of their ideas; they cannot keep
-them in their pockets; and when one man speaks to another, if his
-words have any meaning at all, they must contain the idea present
-to him. It is easy enough to hand over an external possession, but
-the communication of ideas requires a certain skill; there is always
-something esoteric in this, something more than the merely exoteric.
-This difficulty is therefore trifling.
-
-Thirdly, as one of the circumstances that render it difficult to
-comprehend Plato’s own speculative thought, we can scarcely reckon the
-external consideration that in his Dialogues he does not speak in his
-own person, but introduces Socrates and many others as the speakers,
-without always making it plain which of them expresses the writer’s
-own opinion. By reason of this historic circumstance, which seems
-to bear out the manysidedness of Plato, it has of course been often
-said, by ancients as well as moderns, that he merely expounded, from
-a historical point of view, the system and doctrine of Socrates, that
-he adapted much in the Dialogues from various Sophists, and avowedly
-advanced many theorems belonging to an earlier date, especially those
-of the Pythagoreans, Heraclitics, and Eleatics, even adopting, in
-the last case, the Eleatic mode of treatment. Hence it was said that
-to these philosophies the whole matter of the treatise belonged,
-the outward form alone being Plato’s. It is therefore necessary to
-distinguish what is peculiarly his and what is not, or whether the
-component parts are in harmony. In the Socratic Dialogues that we have
-from Cicero, the personages can be much more readily made out; but in
-Cicero there is nothing of real interest offered to us. With Plato
-there can be no talk of this ambiguity, and the difficulty is only in
-appearance. In the Dialogues of Plato his philosophy is quite clearly
-expressed; they are not constructed as are the conversations of some
-people, which consist of many monologues, in which one person expresses
-a certain opinion and another person differs from him, and both hold
-to their own way of thinking. Here, on the contrary, the divergency
-of opinions which comes out is examined, and a conclusion arrived at
-as to the truth; or, if the result is negative, the whole process of
-knowledge is what is seen in Plato. There is, therefore, no need to
-inquire further as to what belongs to Socrates in the Dialogues, and
-what belongs to Plato. This further observation we must, however, make,
-that since Philosophy in its ultimate essence is one and the same,
-every succeeding philosopher will and must take up into his own, all
-philosophies that went before, and what falls specially to him is their
-further development. Philosophy is not a thing apart, like a work of
-art; though even in a work of art it is the skill which the artist
-learns from others that he puts into practice. What is original in the
-artist is his conception as a whole, and the intelligent use of the
-means already at his command; there may occur to him in working an
-endless variety of ideas and discoveries of his own. But Philosophy
-has one thought, one reality, as its foundation; and nothing can be
-put in the place of the true knowledge of this already attained; it
-must of necessity make itself evident in later developments. Therefore,
-as I have already observed (Vol. I. p. 166), Plato’s Dialogues are
-not to be considered as if their aim were to put forward a variety of
-philosophies, nor as if Plato’s were an eclectic philosophy derived
-from them; it forms rather the knot in which these abstract and
-one-sided principles have become truly united in a concrete fashion.
-In giving a general idea of the history of Philosophy, we have already
-seen (Vol. I. p. 54) that such points of union, in which the true is
-concrete, must occur in the onward course of philosophical development.
-The concrete is the unity of diverse determinations and principles;
-these, in order to be perfected, in order to come definitely before
-the consciousness, must first of all be presented separately. Thereby
-they of course acquire an aspect of one-sidedness in comparison with
-the higher principle which follows: this, nevertheless, does not
-annihilate them, nor even leave them where they were, but takes them
-up into itself as moments. Thus in Plato’s philosophy we see all
-manner of philosophic teaching from earlier times absorbed into a
-deeper principle, and therein united. It is in this way that Plato’s
-philosophy shows itself to be a totality of ideas: therefore, as the
-result, the principles of others are comprehended in itself. Frequently
-Plato does nothing more than explain the doctrines of earlier
-philosophers; and the only particular feature in his representation
-of them is that their scope is extended. His Timæus is, by unanimous
-testimony, the amplification of a still extant work of Pythagoras;[14]
-and, in like manner, his amplification of the doctrine of Parmenides
-is of such a nature that its principle is freed from its one-sided
-character.
-
-These last two difficulties having been disposed of, if we would
-likewise solve the first mentioned, we must proceed to describe the
-form in which Plato has propounded his ideas, keeping it, on the other
-hand, distinct from Philosophy proper, as we find it with him. The
-form of the Platonic philosophy is, as is well known, the dialogue.
-The beauty of this form is highly attractive; yet we must not think,
-as many do, that it is the most perfect form in which to present
-Philosophy; it is peculiar to Plato, and as a work of art is of course
-to be much esteemed.
-
-In the first place, scenery and dramatic form belong to what is
-external. Plato gives to his Dialogues a setting of reality, both as
-regards place and persons, and chooses out some particular occasion
-which has brought his characters together; this in itself is very
-natural and charming. Socrates takes the leading part, and among the
-other actors there are many stars well known to us, such as Agathon,
-Zeno, and Aristophanes. We find ourselves in some particular spot; in
-the Phædrus (p. 229 Steph.; p. 6 Bekk.) it is at the plane tree beside
-the clear waters of the Ilyssus, through which Socrates and Phædrus
-pass; in other dialogues we are conducted to the halls of the gymnasia,
-to the Academy, or to a banquet. By never allowing himself to appear
-in person, but putting his thoughts always in the mouth of others, any
-semblance of preaching or of dogmatizing is avoided by Plato, and the
-narrator appears just as little as he does in the History of Thucydides
-or in Homer. Xenophon sometimes brings himself forward, sometimes he
-entirely loses sight of the aim he had in view, of vindicating by what
-he tells of them the life of Socrates and his method of instruction.
-With Plato, on the contrary, all is quite objective and plastic; and he
-employs great art in removing from himself all responsibility for his
-assertions, often assigning them even to a third or fourth person.
-
-As regards the tone of the intercourse between the characters in these
-Dialogues, we find that the noblest urbanity of well-bred men reigns
-supreme; the Dialogues are a lesson in refinement; we see in them the
-_savoir faire_ of a man acquainted with the world. The term courtesy
-does not quite express urbanity; it is too wide, and includes the
-additional notion of testifying respect, of expressing deference and
-personal obligation; urbanity is true courtesy, and forms its real
-basis. But urbanity makes a point of granting complete liberty to all
-with whom we converse, both as regards the character and matter of
-their opinions, and also the right of giving expression to the same.
-Thus in our counter-statements and contradictions we make it evident
-that what we have ourselves to say against the statement made by our
-opponent is the mere expression of our subjective opinion; for this
-is a conversation carried on by persons as persons, and not objective
-reason talking with itself. However energetically we may then express
-ourselves, we must always acknowledge that our opponent is also a
-thinking person; just as one must not take to speaking with the air
-of being an oracle, nor prevent anyone else from opening his mouth
-in reply. This urbanity is, however, not forbearance, but rather
-the highest degree of frankness and candour, and it is this very
-characteristic which gives such gracefulness to Plato’s Dialogues.
-
-Finally, this dialogue is not a conversation, in which what is said
-has, and is meant to have, a merely casual connection, without any
-exhaustive treatment of the subject. When one talks only for amusement,
-the casual and arbitrary sequence of ideas is quite to be expected. In
-the introduction, to be sure, the Dialogues of Plato have sometimes
-this very character of being mere conversations, and consequently
-appear to take an accidental form; for Socrates is made to take his
-start from the particular conceptions of certain individuals, and from
-the circle of their ideas (Vol. I. p. 397). Later, however, these
-dialogues become a systematic development of the matter in hand,
-wherein the subjective character of the conversation disappears,
-and the whole course of the argument shows a beautifully consistent
-dialectic process. Socrates talks, turns the conversation, lays down
-his own views, draws a conclusion, and does all this through the
-apparent instrumentality of the question; most questions are so framed
-as to be answered by merely Yes or No. The dialogue seems to be the
-form best adapted for representing an argument, because it sways hither
-and thither; the different sides are allotted to different persons, and
-thus the argument is made more animated. The dialogue has, however,
-this disadvantage, that it seems to be carried on arbitrarily, so that
-at the end the feeling always remains that the matter might have turned
-out differently. But in the Platonic Dialogues this arbitrary character
-is apparent only; it has been got rid of by limiting the development
-to the development of the subject in hand, and by leaving very little
-to be said by the second speaker. Such personages are, as we already
-saw in connection with Socrates (Vol. I. p. 402), plastic personages
-as regards the conversation; no one is put there to state his own
-views, or, as the French express it, _pour placer son mot_. Just as
-in the Catechism the answers are prescribed to the questions asked,
-so is it in these dialogues, for they who answer have to say what the
-author pleases. The question is so framed that a quite simple answer
-is alone possible, and, thanks to the artistic beauty and power of the
-dialogues, such an answer appears at the same time perfectly natural.
-
-In the next place, there is connected with this outward aspect of
-personality the circumstance that the Platonic philosophy does not
-proclaim itself to be one particular field, where some one begins a
-science of his own in a sphere of his own; for it sometimes enters
-into the ordinary conceptions of culture, like those of Socrates,
-sometimes into those of the Sophists, at other times into those of
-earlier philosophers, and in so doing brings before us exemplifications
-from ordinary knowledge, and also uses the methods of the same. A
-systematic exposition of Philosophy we cannot in this way find; and of
-course it is all the less easy for us to take a comprehensive view of
-the subject, since there are at hand no means of judging whether the
-treatment has been exhaustive or not. Nevertheless, there is present
-there one spirit, one definite point of view as regards Philosophy,
-even though Mind does not make its appearance in the precise form which
-we demand. The philosophic culture of Plato, like the general culture
-of his time, was not yet ripe for really scientific work; the Idea was
-still too fresh and new; it was only in Aristotle that it attained to a
-systematic scientific form of representation.
-
-Connected with this deficiency in Plato’s mode of representation, there
-is also a deficiency in respect of the concrete determination of the
-Idea itself, since the various elements of the Platonic philosophy
-which are represented in these dialogues, namely the merely popular
-conceptions of Being and the apprehending knowledge of the same,
-are really mixed up in a loose, popular way, so that the former
-more especially come to be represented in a myth or parable; such
-intermingling is inevitable in this beginning of science proper in its
-true form. Plato’s lofty mind, which had a perception or conception
-of Mind, penetrated through his subject with the speculative Notion,
-but he only began to penetrate it thus, and he did not yet embrace
-the whole of its reality in the Notion; or the knowledge which
-appeared in Plato did not yet fully realize itself in him. Here it
-therefore happens sometimes that the ordinary conception of reality
-again separates itself from its Notion, and that the latter comes
-into opposition with it, without any statement having been made that
-the Notion alone constitutes reality. Thus we find Plato speaking of
-God, and again, in the Notion, of the absolute reality of things, but
-speaking of them as separated, or in a connection in which they both
-appear separated; and God, as an uncomprehended existence, is made to
-belong to the ordinary conception. Sometimes, in order to give greater
-completeness and reality, in place of following out the Notion, mere
-pictorial conceptions are introduced, myths, spontaneous imaginations
-of his own, or tales derived from the sensuous conception, which no
-doubt are determined by thought, but which this has never permeated in
-truth, but only in such a way that the intellectual is determined by
-the forms of ordinary conception. For instance, appearances of the body
-or of nature, which are perceptible by the senses, are brought forward
-along with thoughts regarding them, which do not nearly so completely
-exhaust the subject as if it had been thoroughly thought out, and the
-Notion allowed to pursue an independent course.
-
-Looking at this as it bears on the question of how Plato’s philosophy
-is to be apprehended, we find, owing to these two circumstances, that
-either too much or too little is found in it. Too much is found by the
-ancients, the so-called -, who sometimes dealt with Plato’s philosophy
-as they dealt with the Greek mythology. This they allegorized and
-represented as the expression of ideas—which the myths certainly
-are—and in the same way they first raised the ideas in Plato’s myths
-to the rank of theorems: for the merit of Philosophy consists alone in
-the fact that truth is expressed in the form of the Notion. Sometimes,
-again, they took what with Plato is in the form of the Notion for the
-expression of Absolute Being—the theory of Being in the Parmenides, for
-instance, for the knowledge of God—just as if Plato had not himself
-drawn a distinction between them. But in the pure Notions of Plato the
-ordinary conception as such is not abrogated; either it is not said
-that these Notions constitute its reality, or they are to Plato no more
-than a conception, and not reality. Again, we certainly see that too
-little is found in Plato by the moderns in particular; for they attach
-themselves pre-eminently to the side of the ordinary conception, and
-see in it reality. What in Plato relates to the Notion, or what is
-purely speculative, is nothing more in their eyes than roaming about
-in abstract logical notions, or than empty subtleties: on the other
-hand, they take that for theorem which was enunciated as a popular
-conception. Thus we find in Tennemann (Vol. II. p. 376) and others an
-obstinate determination to lead back the Platonic Philosophy to the
-forms of our former metaphysic, _e.g._ to the proof of the existence of
-God.
-
-However much, therefore, Plato’s mythical presentation of Philosophy is
-praised, and however attractive it is in his Dialogues, it yet proves a
-source of misapprehensions; and it is one of these misapprehensions, if
-Plato’s myths are held to be what is most excellent in his philosophy.
-Many propositions, it is true, are made more easily intelligible by
-being presented in mythical form; nevertheless, what is not the true
-way of presenting them; propositions are thoughts which, in order to
-be pure, must be brought forward as such. The myth is always a mode
-of representation which, as belonging to an earlier stage, introduces
-sensuous images, which are directed to imagination, not to thought;
-in this, however, the activity of thought is suspended, it cannot yet
-establish itself by its own power, and so is not yet free. The myth
-belongs to the pedagogic stage of the human race, since it entices and
-allures men to occupy themselves with the content; but as it takes away
-from the purity of thought through sensuous forms, it cannot express
-the meaning of Thought. When the Notion attains its full development,
-it has no more need of the myth. Plato often says that it is difficult
-to express one’s thoughts on such and such a subject, and he therefore
-will employ a myth; no doubt this is easier. Plato also says of simple
-Notions that they are dependent, transitory moments, which have their
-ultimate truth in God; and in this first mention of God by Plato, He is
-made a mere conception. Thus the manner of conception and the genuinely
-speculative element are confounded.
-
-In order to gather Plato’s philosophy from his dialogues, what we have
-to do is to distinguish what belongs to ordinary conception—especially
-where Plato has recourse to myths for the presentation of a philosophic
-idea—from the philosophic idea itself; only then do we know that what
-belongs only to the ordinary conception, as such, does not belong to
-thought, is not the essential. But if we do not recognize what is
-Notion, or what is speculative, there is inevitably the danger of these
-myths leading us to draw quite a host of maxims and theorems from the
-dialogues, and to give them out as Plato’s philosophic propositions,
-while they are really nothing of the kind, but belong entirely to
-the manner of presentation. Thus, for instance, in the Timæus (p. 41
-Steph.; p. 43 Bekk.) Plato makes use of the form, God created the
-world, and the dæmons had a certain share in the work; this is spoken
-quite after the manner of the popular conception. If, however, it is
-taken as a philosophic dogma on Plato’s part that God made the world,
-that higher beings of a spiritual kind exist, and, in the creation of
-the world, lent God a helping hand, we may see that this stands word
-for word in Plato, and yet it does not belong to his philosophy. When
-in pictorial fashion he says of the soul of man that it has a rational
-and an irrational part, this is to be taken only in a general sense;
-Plato does not thereby make the philosophic assertion that the soul
-is compounded of two kinds of substance, two kinds of thing. When he
-represents knowledge or learning as a process of recollection, this
-may be taken to mean that the soul existed before man’s birth. In
-like manner, when he speaks of the central point of his philosophy,
-of Ideas, of the Universal, as the permanently self-existent, as the
-patterns of things sensible, we may easily be led to think of these
-Ideas, after the manner of the modern categories of the understanding,
-as substances which exist outside reality, in the Understanding of
-God; or on their own account and as independent—like the angels, for
-example. In short, all that is expressed in the manner of pictorial
-conception is taken by the moderns in sober earnest for philosophy.
-Such a representation of Plato’s philosophy can be supported by Plato’s
-own words; but one who knows what Philosophy is, cares little for such
-expressions, and recognizes what was Plato’s true meaning.
-
-In the account of the Platonic philosophy to which I must now proceed,
-the two cannot certainly be separated, but they must be noted and
-judged of in a very different manner from that which has prevailed
-amongst the moderns. We have, on the one hand, to make clear Plato’s
-general conception of what Philosophy and Knowledge really are, and on
-the other to develop the particular branches of Philosophy of which he
-treats.
-
-In considering his general conception of Philosophy, the first point
-that strikes us is the high estimation in which Plato held Philosophy.
-The lofty nature of the knowledge of Philosophy deeply impressed him,
-and he shows a real enthusiasm for the thought which deals with the
-absolute. Just as the Cyrenaics treat of the relation of the existent
-to the individual consciousness, and the Cynics assert immediate
-freedom to be reality, Plato upholds the self-mediating unity of
-consciousness and reality, or knowledge. He everywhere expresses the
-most exalted ideas regarding the value of Philosophy, as also the
-deepest and strongest sense of the inferiority of all else; he speaks
-of it with the greatest energy and enthusiasm, with all the pride of
-science, and in a manner such as nowadays we should not venture to
-adopt. There is in him none of the so-called modest attitude of this
-science towards other spheres of knowledge, nor of man towards God.
-Plato has a full consciousness of how near human reason is to God, and
-indeed of its unity with Him. Men do not mind reading this in Plato, an
-ancient, because it is no longer a present thing, but were it coming
-from a modern philosopher, it would be taken much amiss. Philosophy
-to Plato is man’s highest possible possession and true reality; it
-alone has to be sought of man. Out of many passages on this subject I
-shall quote in the first instance the following from the Timæus (p. 47
-Steph.; p. 54 Bekk.): “Our knowledge of what is most excellent begins
-with the eyes. The distinction between the visible day and the night,
-the months and courses of the planets, have begotten a knowledge of
-time, and awakened a desire to know the nature of the whole. From this
-we then obtained Philosophy, and no greater gift than this, given by
-God to man, has ever come or will come.”
-
-The manner in which Plato expresses his opinions on this subject in
-the Republic is very well known, as it is greatly decried, because
-it so completely contradicts the common ideas of men, and it is all
-the more surprising in that it concerns the relation of Philosophy
-to the state, and therefore to actuality. For before this, though
-a certain value might indeed be attributed to Philosophy, it still
-remained confined to the thoughts of the individual; here, however,
-it goes forth into questions of constitution, government, actuality.
-After Plato made Socrates, in the Republic, expound the nature of a
-true state, he caused Glaucon to interrupt by expressing his desire
-that Plato should show how it could be possible for such a state to
-exist. Socrates parries the question, will not come to the point,
-seeks evasive pleas, and tries to extricate himself by asserting that
-in describing what is just, he does not bind himself to show how it
-might be realized in actuality, though some indication must certainly
-be given of how an approximate, if not a complete realization of it
-might be possible. Finally, when pressed, he says: “Then it shall
-be expressed, even though a flood of laughter and utter disbelief
-overwhelm me. When philosophers rule the states, or the so-called kings
-and princes of the present time are truly and completely philosophers,
-when thus political greatness and Philosophy meet in one, and the many
-natures who now follow either side to the exclusion of the other, come
-together, then, and not till then, can there be an end, dear Glaucon,
-either to the evils of the state or, as I believe, to those of the
-human race. Then only will this state of which I spoke be possible or
-see the light of day.” “This,” adds Socrates, “is what I have so long
-hesitated to say, because I know that it is so much opposed to ordinary
-ideas.” Plato makes Glaucon answer, “Socrates, you have expressed what,
-you must recollect, would cause many men, and not bad men either, to
-pull off their coats and seize the first weapon that comes to hand, and
-set upon you one and all with might and main; and if you don’t know how
-to appease them with your reasons, you will have to answer for it.”[15]
-
-Plato here plainly asserts the necessity for thus uniting Philosophy
-with government. As to this demand, it may seem a piece of great
-presumption to say that philosophers should have the government of
-states accorded to them, for the territory or ground of history is
-different from that of Philosophy. In history, the Idea, as the
-absolute power, has certainly to realize itself; in other words,
-God rules in the world. But history is the Idea working itself out
-in a natural way, and not with the consciousness of the Idea. The
-action is certainly in accordance with general reflections on what is
-right, moral, and pleasing to God; but we must recognize that action
-represents at the same time the endeavours of the subject as such for
-particular ends. The realization of the Idea thus takes place through
-an intermingling of thoughts and Notions with immediate and particular
-ends. Hence it is only on the one side produced through thoughts, and
-on the other through circumstances, through human actions in their
-capacity of means. These means often seem opposed to the Idea, but that
-does not really matter; all those particular ends are really only means
-of bringing forth the Idea, because it is the absolute power. Hence the
-Idea comes to pass in the world, and no difficulty is caused, but it is
-not requisite that those who rule should have the Idea.
-
-In order, however, to judge of the statement that the regents of
-the people should be philosophers, we must certainty consider what
-was understood by Philosophy in the Platonic sense and in the sense
-of the times. The word Philosophy has had in different periods very
-different significations. There was a time when a man who did not
-believe in spectres or in the devil was called a philosopher. When
-such ideas as these pass away, it does not occur to people to call
-anyone a philosopher for a reason such as this. The English consider
-what we call experimental physics to be Philosophy; a philosopher to
-them is anyone who makes investigations in, and possesses a theoretic
-knowledge of chemistry, mechanics, &c. (Vol. I. p. 57). In Plato
-Philosophy becomes mingled with the knowledge of the supersensuous,
-or what to us is religious knowledge. The Platonic philosophy is thus
-the knowledge of the absolutely true and right, the knowledge of
-universal ends in the state, and the recognition of their validity. In
-all the history of the migration of the nations, when the Christian
-religion became the universal religion, the only point of interest was
-to conceive the supersensuous kingdom—which was at first independent,
-absolutely universal and true—as actualized, and to determine actuality
-in conformity thereto. This has been from that time forth the business
-of culture. A state, a government and constitution of modern times
-has hence quite a different basis from a state of ancient times, and
-particularly from one of Plato’s day. The Greeks were then altogether
-dissatisfied with their democratic constitution, and the conditions
-resulting from it (_supra_, p. 8), and similarly all philosophers
-condemned the democracies of the Greek states in which such things
-as the punishment of generals (_supra_, Vol. I. p. 391) took place.
-In such a constitution it might certainly be thought that what was
-best for the state would be the first subject of consideration; but
-arbitrariness prevailed, and this was only temporarily restrained by
-preponderating individualities, or by masters in statesmanship like
-Aristides, Themistocles, and others. This condition of matters preceded
-the disintegration of the constitution. In our states, on the other
-hand, the end of the state, what is best for all, is immanent and
-efficacious in quite another way than was the case in olden times. The
-condition of the laws and courts of justice, of the constitution and
-spirit of the people, is so firmly established in itself that matters
-of the passing moment alone remain to be decided; and it may even be
-asked what, if anything, is dependent on the individual.
-
-To us government means that in the actual state procedure will be in
-accordance with the nature of the thing, and since a knowledge of the
-Notion of the thing is requisite to this, actuality is brought into
-harmony with the Notion, and thereby the Idea is realized in existence.
-The result of this thus is that when Plato says that philosophers
-should rule, he signifies the determination of the whole matter through
-universal principles. This is realized much more in modern states,
-because universal principles really form the bases—certainly not of
-all, but of most of them. Some have already reached this stage, others
-are striving to reach it, but all recognize that such principles must
-constitute the real substance of administration and rule.
-
-What Plato demands is thus, in point of fact, already present. But what
-we call Philosophy, movement in pure thoughts, has to do with form, and
-this is something peculiar to itself; nevertheless, the form is not
-responsible if the universal, freedom, law, is not made a principle in
-a state. Marcus Aurelius is an example of what a philosopher upon a
-throne could effect; we have, however, only private actions to record
-of him, and the Roman Empire was made no better by him. Frederick
-II. was, on the other hand, justly called the philosopher king. He
-occupied himself with the Wolffian metaphysics and French philosophy
-and verses, and was thus, according to his times, a philosopher.
-Philosophy appears to have been an affair of his own particular
-inclination, and quite distinct from the fact that he was king. But he
-was also a philosophic king in the sense that he made for himself an
-entirely universal end, the well-being and good of the state, a guiding
-principle in his actions and in all his regulations in respect to
-treaties with other states, and to the rights of individuals at home;
-these last he entirely subordinated to absolutely universal ends. If,
-however, later on, procedure of this kind became ordinary custom, the
-succeeding princes are no longer called philosophers, even if the same
-principle is present to them, and the government, and especially the
-institutions, are founded on it.
-
-In the Republic, Plato further speaks in a figure of the difference
-between a condition of philosophic culture and a lack of Philosophy:
-it is a long comparison which is both striking and brilliant. The idea
-which he makes use of is as follows:—“Let us think of an underground
-den like a cave with a long entrance opening to the light. Its
-inhabitants are chained so that they cannot move their necks, and can
-see only the back of the cave. Far behind their backs a torch burns
-above them. In the intervening space there is a raised way and also
-a low wall; and behind this wall” (towards the light) “there are men
-who carry and raise above it all manner of statues of men and animals
-like puppets in a marionette show, sometimes talking to one another
-meanwhile, and sometimes silent. Those who are chained would see only
-the shadows which fall on the opposite wall, and they would take them
-for reality; they would hear, moreover, by means of the echo, what
-was said by those who moved the figures, and they would think that
-it was the voice of the shadows. Now if one of the prisoners were
-released, and compelled to turn his neck so as to see things as they
-are, he would think that what he saw was an illusive dream, and that
-the shadows were the reality. And if anyone were to take him out of
-the prison into the light itself, he would be dazzled by the light and
-could see nothing; and he would hate the person who brought him to the
-light, as having taken away what was to him the truth, and prepared
-only pain and evil in its place.”[16] This kind of myth is in harmony
-with the character of the Platonic philosophy, in that it separates the
-conception of the sensuous world present in men from the knowledge of
-the supersensuous.
-
-Since we now speak more fully of this matter, we must in the second
-place consider the nature of knowledge according to Plato, and in so
-doing commence our account of the Platonic philosophy itself.
-
-a. Plato gave a more precise definition of philosophers as those
-“who are eager to behold the truth.”—Glaucon: “That is quite right.
-But how do you explain it?” Socrates: “I tell this not to everyone,
-but you will agree with me in it.” “In what?” “In this, that as the
-Beautiful is opposed to the Ugly, they are two things.” “Why not?”
-“With the Just and the Unjust, the Good and the Evil, and every other
-Idea (εἶδος) the case is the same, that each of them is by itself a
-One; on the other hand, on account of its combination with actions and
-bodies and other Ideas springing up on every side, each appears as a
-Many.” “You are right.” “I distinguish now, according to this, between
-the sight-loving, art-loving, busy class on the one side, and those
-on the other side, of whom we were just speaking as alone entitled to
-be called philosophers.” “What do you mean by that?” “I mean by that,
-such as delight in seeing and hearing, who love beautiful voices, and
-colours, and forms, and all that is composed thereof, while their
-mind is still incapable of seeing and loving the Beautiful in its own
-nature.” “Such is the case.” “Those, however, who have the power of
-passing on to the Beautiful itself, and seeing what it is in itself
-(καθ̓ αὐτό), are they not rare?” “They are indeed.” “He then who sees
-that beautiful things are beautiful, but does not apprehend Beauty
-itself, and cannot follow if another should seek to lead him to the
-knowledge of the same,—think you that he lives his life awake, or in
-a dream?” (That is to say, those who are not philosophers are like
-men who dream.) “For look, is it not dreaming when one in sleep, or
-even when awake, takes what merely resembles a certain thing to be not
-something that resembles it, but the very thing that it is like?” “I
-should certainly say of such an one that he was dreaming.” “The waking
-man, on the other hand, is he who holds the Beautiful itself to be the
-Existent, and can recognize its very self as well as that which only
-partakes of it (μετέχονυα), and does not confuse between the two.”[17]
-
-In this account of Philosophy, we at once see what the so much talked
-of Ideas of Plato are. The Idea is nothing else than that which is
-known to us more familiarly by the name of the Universal, regarded,
-however, not as the formal Universal, which is only a property of
-things, but as implicitly and explicitly existent, as reality, as
-that which alone is true. We translate εἶδος first of all as species
-or kind; and the Idea is no doubt the species, but rather as it is
-apprehended by and exists for Thought. Of course when we understand by
-species nothing but the gathering together by our reflection, and for
-convenience sake, of the like characteristics of several individuals
-as indicating their distinguishing features, we have the universal in
-quite an external form. But the specific character of the animal is its
-being alive; this being alive is that which makes it what it is, and
-deprived of this, it ceases to exist. To Plato, accordingly, Philosophy
-is really the science of this implicitly universal, to which, as
-contrasted with the particular, he always continues to return. “When
-Plato spoke of tableness and cupness, Diogenes the Cynic said: ‘I see a
-table and a cup, to be sure, but not tableness and cupness.’ ‘Right,’
-answered Plato; ‘for you have eyes wherewith to see the table and the
-cup, but mind, by which one sees tableness and cupness, you have not
-(νοῦν οὐκ ἔχεις).’”[18] What Socrates began was carried out by Plato,
-who acknowledged only the Universal, the Idea, the Good, as that which
-has existence. Through the presentation of his Ideas, Plato opened
-up the intellectual world, which, however, is not beyond reality, in
-heaven, in another place, but is the real world. With Leucippus, too,
-the Ideal is brought closer to reality, and not—metaphysically—thrust
-away behind Nature. The essence of the doctrine of Ideas is thus
-the view that the True is not that which exists for the senses, but
-that only what has its determination in itself, the implicitly and
-explicitly Universal, truly exists in the world; the intellectual world
-is therefore the True, that which is worthy to be known—indeed, the
-Eternal, the implicitly and explicitly divine. The differences are not
-essential, but only transitory; yet the Absolute of Plato, as being the
-one in itself and identical with itself, is at the same time concrete
-in itself, in that it is a movement returning into itself, and is
-eternally at home with itself. But love for Ideas is that which Plato
-calls enthusiasm.
-
-The misapprehension of Plato’s Ideas takes two directions; one of these
-has to do with the thinking, which is formal, and holds as true reality
-the sensuous alone, or what is conceived of through the senses—this
-is what Plato asserts to be mere shadows. For when Plato speaks of
-the Universal as the real, his conception of it is met either by the
-statement that the Universal is present to us only as a property, and
-is therefore a mere thought in our understanding, or else that Plato
-takes this same Universal as substance, as an existence in itself,
-which, however, falls outside of us. When Plato further uses the
-expression that sensuous things are, like images (εἰκόνες), similar to
-that which has absolute existence, or that the Idea is their pattern
-and model (παραδεῖγμα), if these Ideas are not exactly made into
-things, they are made into a kind of transcendent existences which
-lie somewhere far from us in an understanding outside this world, and
-are pictures set up which we merely do not see; they are like the
-artist’s model, following which he works upon a given material, and
-thereon impresses the likeness of the original. And owing to their
-not only being removed from this sensuous present reality, which
-passes for truth, but also being liberated from the actuality of the
-individual consciousness, their subject, of which they are originally
-the representations, passes out of consciousness, and even comes to be
-represented only as something which is apart from consciousness.
-
-The second misapprehension that prevails with regard to these Ideas
-takes place when they are not transferred beyond our consciousness,
-but pass for ideals of our reason, which are no doubt necessary, but
-which produce nothing that either has reality now or can ever attain to
-it. As in the former view the Beyond is a conception that lies outside
-the world, and in which species are hypostatized, so in this view
-our reason is just such a realm beyond reality. But when species are
-looked on as if they were the forms of reality in us, there is again a
-misapprehension, just as if they were looked at as æsthetic in nature.
-By so doing, they are defined as intellectual perceptions which must
-present themselves immediately, and belong either to a happy genius
-or else to a condition of ecstasy or enthusiasm. In such a case they
-would be mere creations of the imagination, but this is not Plato’s nor
-the true sense. They are not immediately in consciousness, but they
-are in the apprehending knowledge; and they are immediate perceptions
-only in so far as they are apprehending knowledge comprehended in its
-simplicity and in relation to the result; in other words, the immediate
-perception is only the moment of their simplicity. Therefore we do not
-possess them, they are developed in the mind through the apprehending
-knowledge; enthusiasm is the first rude shape they take, but knowledge
-first brings them to light in rational developed form; they are in this
-form none the less real, for they alone are Being.
-
-On this account Plato first of all distinguishes Science, the Knowledge
-of the True, from opinion. “Such thinking (διάνοιαν) as of one who
-knows, we may justly call knowledge (γνώμην); but the other, opinion
-(δόξαν). Knowledge proceeds from that which is; opinion is opposed to
-it; but it is not the case that its content is Nothing—that would be
-ignorance—for when an opinion is held, it is held about Something.
-Opinion is thus intermediate between ignorance and science, its content
-is a mixture of Being and Nothing. The object of the senses, the object
-of opinion, the particular, only participates in the Beautiful, the
-Good, the Just, the Universal; but it is at the same time also ugly,
-evil, unjust, and so on. The double is at the same time the half. The
-particular is not only large or small, light or heavy, and any one of
-these opposites, but every particular is as much the one as the other.
-Such a mixture of Being and non-Being is the particular, the object
-of opinion;”[19]—a mixture in which the opposites have not resolved
-themselves into the Universal. The latter would be the speculative
-Idea of knowledge, while to opinion belongs the manner of our ordinary
-consciousness.
-
-b. Before we commence the examination of the objective implicitly
-existent content of knowledge, we must consider more in detail, on the
-one hand, the subjective existence of knowledge in consciousness as we
-find it in Plato, and, on the other, how the content is or appears in
-ordinary conception as soul; and the two together form the relation of
-knowledge, as the universal, to the individual consciousness.
-
-α. The source through which we become conscious of the divine is the
-same as that already seen in Socrates (Vol. I. pp. 410, 411). The
-spirit of man contains reality in itself, and in order to learn what is
-divine he must develop it out of himself and bring it to consciousness.
-With the Socratics this discussion respecting the immanent nature of
-knowledge in the mind of man takes the form of a question as to whether
-virtue can be taught or not, and with the sophist Protagoras of asking
-whether feeling is the truth, which is allied with the question of the
-content of scientific knowledge, and with the distinction between that
-and opinion. But Plato goes on to say that the process by which we
-come to know is not, properly speaking, learning, for that which we
-appear to learn we really only recollect. Plato often comes back to
-this subject, but in particular he treats of the point in the Meno,
-in which he asserts (p. 81, 84 Steph.; p. 349, 355, 356 Bekk.) that
-nothing can, properly speaking, be learned, for learning is just a
-recollection of what we already possess, to which the perplexity in
-which our minds are placed, merely acts as stimulus. Plato here gives
-the question a speculative significance, in which the reality of
-knowledge, and not the empirical view of the acquisition of knowledge,
-is dealt with. For learning, according to the immediate ordinary
-conception of it, expresses the taking up of what is foreign into
-thinking consciousness, a mechanical mode of union and the filling of
-an empty space with things which are foreign and indifferent to this
-space itself. An external method of effecting increase such as this,
-in which the soul appears to be a _tabula rasa_, and which resembles
-the idea we form of growth going on in the living body through the
-addition of particles, is dead, and is incompatible with the nature
-of mind, which is subjectivity, unity, being and remaining at home
-with itself. But Plato presents the true nature of consciousness in
-asserting that it is mind in which, as mind, that is already present
-which becomes object to consciousness, or which it explicitly becomes.
-This is the Notion of the true universal in its movement; of the
-species which is in itself its own Becoming, in that it is already
-implicitly what it explicitly becomes—a process in which it does not
-come outside of itself. Mind is this absolute species, whose process
-is only the continual return into itself; thus nothing is for it which
-it is not in itself. According to this, the process of learning is
-not that something foreign enters in, but that the mind’s own essence
-becomes actualized, or it comes to the knowledge of this last. What has
-not yet learned is the soul, the consciousness represented as natural
-being. What causes the mind to turn to science is the semblance, and
-the confusion caused through it, of the essential nature of mind being
-something different, or the negative of itself—a mode of manifestation
-which contradicts its real nature, for it has or is the inward
-certainty of being all reality. In that it abrogates this semblance
-of other-being, it comprehends the objective, _i.e._ gives itself
-immediately in it the consciousness of itself, and thus attains to
-science. Ideas of individual, temporal, transitory things undoubtedly
-come from without, but not the universal thoughts which, as the true,
-have their root in the mind and belong to its nature; by this means all
-authority is destroyed.
-
-In one sense recollection [Erinnerung] is certainly an unfortunate
-expression, in the sense, namely, that an idea is reproduced which
-has already existed at another time. But recollection has another
-sense, which is given by its etymology, namely that of making oneself
-inward, going inward, and this is the profound meaning of the word in
-thought. In this sense it may undoubtedly be said that knowledge of
-the universal is nothing but a recollection, a going within self, and
-that we make that which at first shows itself in external form and
-determined as a manifold, into an inward, a universal, because we go
-into ourselves and thus bring what is inward in us into consciousness.
-With Plato, however, as we cannot deny, the word recollection has
-constantly the first and empirical sense. This comes from the fact
-that Plato propounds the true Notion that consciousness in itself
-is the content of knowledge, partly in the form of popular idea and
-in that of myths. Hence here even, the already mentioned (p. 18)
-intermingling of idea and Notion commences. In the Meno (p. 82-86
-Steph.; p. 350-360 Bekk.) Socrates tries to show, by experiment on a
-slave who had received no instruction, that learning is a recollection.
-Socrates merely questions him, leaving him to answer in his own way,
-without either teaching him or asserting the truth of any fact, and
-at length brings him to the enunciation of a geometrical proposition
-on the relation which the diagonal of a square bears to its side. The
-slave obtains the knowledge out of himself alone, so that it appears as
-though he only recollected what he already knew but had forgotten. Now
-if Plato here calls this coming forth of knowledge from consciousness a
-recollection, it follows that this knowledge has been already in this
-consciousness, _i.e._ that the individual consciousness has not only
-the content of knowledge implicitly, in accordance with its essential
-nature, but has also possessed it as this individual consciousness and
-not as universal. But this moment of individuality belongs only to the
-ordinary conception, and recollection is not thought; for recollection
-relates to man as a sensuous “this,” and not as a universal. The
-essential nature of the coming forth of knowledge is hence here mingled
-with the individual, with ordinary conception, and knowledge here
-appears in the form of soul, as of the implicitly existent reality,
-the one, for the soul is still only a moment of spirit. As Plato here
-passes into a conception the content of which has no longer the pure
-significance of the universal, but of the individual, he further
-depicts it in the form of a myth. He represents the implicit existence
-of mind in the form of a pre-existence in time, as if the truth had
-already been for us in another time. But at the same time we must
-remark that he does not propound this as a philosophic doctrine, but
-in the form of a saying received from priests and priestesses who
-comprehend what is divine. Pindar and other holy men say the same.
-According to these sayings, the human soul is immortal; it both ceases
-to be, or, as men say, it dies, and it comes again into existence, but
-in no way perishes. “Now if the soul is immortal and often reappears”
-(metempsychosis), “and if it has seen that which is here as well as
-in Hades,” (in unconsciousness) “and everything else, learning has no
-more meaning, for it only recollects what it has already known.”[20]
-Historians seize upon this allusion to what is really an Egyptian
-idea, and a sensuous conception merely, and say that Plato has laid
-down that such and such was the case. But Plato made no such statement
-whatever; what he here says has nothing to do with Philosophy, and more
-particularly nothing to do with his philosophy, any more than what
-afterwards is said regarding God.
-
-β. In other Dialogues this myth is further and more strikingly
-developed; it certainly employs remembrance in its ordinary sense,
-which is that the mind of man has in past time seen that which comes
-to his consciousness as the true and absolutely existent. Plato’s
-principal effort is, however, to show through this assertion of
-recollection, that the mind, the soul, thought, is on its own account
-free, and this has to the ancients, and particularly to the Platonic
-idea, a close connection with what we call immortality of the soul.
-
-αα. In the Phædrus (p. 245 Steph.; p. 38 Bekk.) Plato speaks of this
-in order to show that the Eros is a divine madness (μανία), and is
-given to us as the greatest happiness. It is a state of enthusiasm,
-which here has a powerful, predominating aspiration towards the Idea
-(_supra_, p. 30): but it is not an enthusiasm proceeding from the heart
-and feeling, it is not an ordinary perception, but a consciousness
-and knowledge of the ideal. Plato says that he must expound the
-nature of the divine and human soul in order to demonstrate the
-Eros. “The first point is that the soul is immortal. For what moves
-itself is immortal and eternal, but what obtains its movement from
-another is transient. What moves itself is the first principle, for
-it certainly has its origin and first beginning in itself and derived
-from no other. And just as little can it cease to move, for that alone
-can cease which derives its motion from another.” Plato thus first
-develops the simple Notion of the soul as of the self-moving, and,
-thus far, an element in mind; but the proper life of the mind in and
-for itself is the consciousness of the absolute nature and freedom
-of the “I.” When we speak of the immortality of the soul, the idea
-is most frequently present to us that the soul is like a physical
-thing which has qualities of all kinds, and while these can certainly
-be changed, it yet seems that, as being independent of them, it is
-not subject to change. Now thought is one of these qualities, which
-are thus independent of the thing; and thought is also here defined
-as a thing, and as if it could pass away or cease to be. As regards
-this point, the main feature of the idea is that the soul should be
-able to subsist as an imperishable thing without having imagination,
-thought, &c. With Plato the immortality of the soul is, on the other
-hand, immediately connected with the fact that the soul is itself that
-which thinks; and hence that thought is not a quality of soul, but its
-substance. It is as with body, where the weight is not a quality, but
-its substance; for as the body would no longer exist if the weight
-were abstracted, the soul would not exist if thought were taken away.
-Thought is the activity of the universal, not an abstraction, but the
-reflection into self and the positing of self that takes place in all
-conceptions. Now because thought is an eternal which remains at home
-with itself in every change, soul preserves its identity in what is
-different, just as, for instance, in sensuous perception it deals with
-what is different, with outside matter, and is yet at home with itself.
-Immortality has not then the interest to Plato which it has to us from
-a religious point of view; in that to him it is associated in greater
-measure with the nature of thought, and with the inward freedom of
-the same, it is connected with the determination that constitutes the
-principle of what is specially characteristic of Platonic philosophy,
-it is connected with the supersensuous groundwork which Plato has
-established. To Plato the immortality of the soul is hence likewise of
-great importance.
-
-He proceeds: “To seek to make clear the Idea of the soul would involve
-investigation laborious for any but a god; but the tongue of man may
-speak of this more easily through a figure.” Here follows an allegory
-in which there is, however, something extravagant and inconsistent.
-He says: “The soul resembles the united power of a chariot and
-charioteer.” This image expresses nothing to us. “Now the horses” (the
-desires) “of the gods and the charioteers are good, and of a good
-breed. With us men, the charioteer at first takes the reins, but one
-of the horses only is noble and good and of noble origin; the other
-is ignoble and of ignoble origin. As might be expected, the driving
-is very difficult. How mortal differ from immortal creatures, we
-must endeavour to discover. The soul has the care of the inanimate
-everywhere, and traverses the whole heavens, passing from one idea
-to another. When perfect and fully winged, she soars upwards” (has
-elevated thoughts), “and is the ruler of the universe. But the soul
-whose wings droop roams about till she has found solid ground; then
-she takes an earthly form which is really moved by her power, and the
-whole, the soul and body, put together, is called a living creature,
-a mortal.”[21] The one is thus the soul as thought, existence in and
-for itself; the other is the union with matter. This transition from
-thought to body is very difficult, too difficult for the ancients to
-understand; we shall find more about it in Aristotle. From what has
-been said, we may find the ground for representing Plato as maintaining
-the dogma that the soul existed independently prior to this life, and
-then lapsed into matter, united itself to it, contaminating itself by
-so doing, and that it is incumbent on it to leave matter again. The
-fact that the spiritual realizes itself from itself is a point not
-sufficiently examined by the ancients; they take two abstractions,
-soul and matter, and the connection is expressed only in the form of a
-deterioration on the part of soul.
-
-“But as to the immortal,” continues Plato, “if we do not express it
-in accordance with an apprehending thought, but form an ordinary
-conception of it, owing to our lack of insight and power to comprehend
-the nature of God, we conclude that the immortal life of God is that
-which has a body and soul which, however, are united in one nature
-(συμπεφυκότα),[22] i.e. not only externally but intrinsically made one.
-Soul and body are both abstractions, but life is the unity of both;
-and because God’s nature is to popular conception the holding of body
-and soul unseparated in one, He is the Reason whose form and content
-are an undivided unity in themselves.” This is an important definition
-of God—a great idea which is indeed none other than the definition
-of modern times. It signifies the identity of subjectivity and
-objectivity, the inseparability of the ideal and real, that is, of soul
-and body. The mortal and finite is, on the contrary, correctly defined
-by Plato as that of which the existence is not absolutely adequate to
-the Idea, or, more definitely, to subjectivity.
-
-Plato now further explains what happens in the life of the divine
-Being, which drama the soul thus has before it, and how the wasting
-of its wings occurs. “The chariots of the gods enter in bands, led
-by Zeus, the mighty leader, from his winged chariot. An array of
-other gods and goddesses follow him, marshalled in eleven bands. They
-present—each one fulfilling his work—the noblest and most blessed of
-scenes. The colourless and formless and intangible essence requires
-thought, the lord of the soul, as its only spectator, and thus
-true knowledge takes its rise. For there it sees what is (τὸ ὄν),
-and lives in the contemplation of reality, because it follows in
-an ever-recurring revolution” (of ideas). “In this revolution” (of
-gods), “it beholds justice, temperance, and knowledge, not in the
-form of what men call things, for it sees what in truth is absolute
-(τὸ ὄντως ὄν).” This is thus expressed as though it were something
-which had happened. “When the soul returns from thus beholding, the
-charioteer puts up his horses at the stall, gives them ambrosia to eat
-and nectar to drink. This is the life of the gods. But other souls,
-through fault of charioteer or horses, fall into confusion, with
-broken wings depart from these heavenly places, cease to behold the
-truth, nourish themselves on opinion as their food, and fall to the
-ground; according as a soul has beheld more or less of truth, it takes
-a higher or lower place. In this condition it retains a recollection
-of what it has seen, and if it perceives anything beautiful or right,
-it is rapt in amazement. The wings once more obtain strength, and
-the soul, particularly that of a philosopher, recollects its former
-condition in which, however, it had not seen what was beautiful, just,
-etc., but beauty and justice themselves.”[23] Thus because the life
-of the gods is for the soul, when in individual beauty it is reminded
-of the universal, it is implied that in the soul, as thus absolutely
-existing, there is the Idea of the beautiful, good and just, as
-absolute and as potentially and actually universal. This constitutes
-the general principle of the Platonic conception. But when Plato speaks
-of knowledge as of a recollection, he knows all the time that this is
-only putting the matter in similes and metaphors; he did not ask, as
-theologians used gravely to do, whether the soul had existed before its
-birth, and, if so, in what particular place. It cannot be said of Plato
-that he had any such belief, and he never speaks of the matter in the
-sense that theologians did; in the same way he never spoke about a Fall
-from a perfect state, for example, as if man had to look on the present
-life as an imprisonment. But what Plato expressed as the truth is that
-consciousness in the individual is in reason the divine reality and
-life; that man perceives and recognizes it in pure thought, and that
-this knowledge is itself the heavenly abode and movement.
-
-ββ. Knowledge in the form of soul, is more clearly dealt with in
-the Phædo, where Plato has further developed the ideas about the
-immortality of the soul. What in the Phædrus is kept definitely apart
-as myth and truth respectively, and which is made to appear as such,
-appears less evidently so in the Phædo—that celebrated dialogue in
-which Plato makes Socrates speak of the immortality of the soul. That
-Plato should have connected this discussion with the account of the
-death of Socrates has in all time been matter of admiration. Nothing
-could seem more suitable than to place the conviction of immortality
-in the mouth of him who is in the act of leaving life, and to make
-this conviction living to us through the scene, just as, on the other
-hand, a death-scene like this is made living to us through that
-conviction. We must at the same time remark that in what is fitting the
-following conditions are implied. It must first be really appropriate
-for the dying person to occupy himself with himself instead of with
-the universal, with this certainty of himself as a “this” instead of
-with the Truth. We hence here meet with the ordinary point of view
-but slightly separated from that of the Notion, but, although this is
-so, this ordinary point of view is far removed from sinking into that
-coarse conception of the soul which considers it to be a thing, and
-asks about its continuance or subsistence as if it were a thing. Thus
-we find Socrates expressing himself to the effect that the body and
-what relates to the body is a hindrance in striving after wisdom, the
-sole business of Philosophy, because the sensuous perception shows
-nothing purely, or as it is in itself, and what is true becomes known
-through the removal of the spiritual from the corporeal. For justice,
-beauty and such things are what alone exists in verity; they are that
-to which all change and decay is foreign; and these are not perceived
-through the body, but only in the soul.[24]
-
-We see in this separation the essence of the soul not considered in
-a material category of Being, but as the universal; we see it still
-more in what follows, by which Plato proves immortality. A principal
-point in this argument is that already considered, that the soul has
-existed before this life, because learning is only a recollection,[25]
-and this implies that the soul is already implicitly what it becomes.
-We must not think that the bald conception of innate ideas is hereby
-indicated—such an expression implies the existence of ideas by nature,
-as though our thoughts were in part already implanted, and had in part
-a natural existence which did not first produce itself through the
-movement of the mind. But Plato mainly founds the idea of immortality
-on the fact that what is put together is liable to dissolution and
-decay, while the simple can in no manner be dissolved or destroyed;
-what is always like itself and the same, is, however, simple. The
-beautiful, the good, the like, being simple, are incapable of all
-change; that, on the contrary, in which these universals are, men,
-things, &c., are the changeable. They are perceptible by the senses,
-while the former is the supersensuous. Hence the soul which is in
-thought, and which applies itself to this, as to what is related
-to it, must therefore be held to have itself a simple nature.[26]
-Here, then, we again see that Plato does not take simplicity as the
-simplicity of a thing—not as if it were of anything like a chemical
-ingredient, for example, which can no longer be represented as
-inherently distinguished; this would only be empty, abstract identity
-or universality, the simple as an existent.
-
-But finally the universal really does appear to take the form of an
-existent, as Plato makes Simmias assert: a harmony which we hear is
-none else than a universal, a simple which is a unity of the diverse;
-but this harmony is associated with a sensuous thing and disappears
-with it, just as music does with the lyre. On the other hand Plato
-makes Socrates show that the soul is not a harmony in this sense,
-for the sensuous harmony first exists after its elements, and is
-a consequence that follows from them. The harmony of the soul is,
-however, in and for itself, before every sensuous thing. Sensuous
-harmony may further have diversities within it, while the harmony of
-the soul has no quantitative distinction.[27] From this it is clear
-that Plato receives the reality of the soul entirely in the universal,
-and does not place its true being in sensuous individuality, and hence
-the immortality of the soul cannot in his case be understood in the
-ordinary acceptation, as that of an individual thing. Although later
-on we come across the myth of the sojourn of the soul after death in
-another and more brilliant earth,[28] we have seen above (pp. 40, 41)
-what kind of heaven this would be.
-
-γ. The development and culture of the soul must be taken in connection
-with what precedes. However the idealism of Plato must not be thought
-of as being subjective idealism, and as that false idealism which
-has made its appearance in modern times, and which maintains that we
-do not learn anything, are not influenced from without, but that all
-conceptions are derived from out of the subject. It is often said
-that idealism means that the individual produces from himself all
-his ideas, even the most immediate. But this is an unhistoric, and
-quite false conception; if we take this rude definition of idealism,
-there have been no idealists amongst the philosophers, and Platonic
-idealism is certainly far removed from anything of the kind. In the
-seventh book of his Republic (p. 518 Steph., pp. 333, 334 Bekk.) Plato
-says in connection with what I have already stated (pp. 27-29), and in
-particular reference to the manner in which this learning is created,
-by which the universal which before was secreted in the mind, developes
-out of it alone: “We must believe of science and learning (παιδείας),
-that its nature is not as some assert” (by this he means the Sophists),
-“who speak of culture as though knowledge were not contained within
-the soul, but could be implanted therein as sight into blind eyes.”
-The idea that knowledge comes entirely from without is in modern times
-found in empirical philosophies of a quite abstract and rude kind,
-which maintain that everything that man knows of the divine nature
-comes as a matter of education and habituation, and that mind is thus a
-quite indeterminate potentiality merely. Carried to an extreme, this is
-the doctrine of revelation in which everything is given from without.
-In the Protestant religion we do not find this rude idea in its
-abstract form, for the witness of the spirit is an essential part of
-faith, _i.e._ faith demands that the individual subjective spirit shall
-on its own account accept and set forth the determination which comes
-to it in the form of something given from without. Plato speaks against
-any such idea, for, in relation to the merely popularly expressed myth
-given above, he says: “Reason teaches that every man possesses the
-inherent capacities of the soul and the organ with which he learns.
-That is, just as we might imagine the eye not capable of turning from
-darkness to light otherwise than with the whole body, so must we be
-turned with the whole soul from the world of Becoming” (contingent
-feelings and ideas) “to that of Being, and the soul must gradually
-learn to endure this sight, and to behold the pure light of Being. But
-we say that this Being is the good. The art of so doing is found in
-culture, as being the art of the conversion of the soul—that is, the
-manner in which a person can most easily and effectually be converted;
-it does not seek to implant (ἐμποιῆσαι) sight, but—inasmuch as he
-already possesses it only it has not been properly turned upon himself
-and hence he does not see the objects that he ought to see—it brings it
-into operation. The other virtues of the soul are more in conformity
-with the body; they are not originally in the soul, but come gradually
-through exercise and habit. Thought (τὸ φρονῆσαι) on the contrary,
-as divine, never loses its power, and only becomes good or evil
-through the manner of this conversion.” This is what Plato establishes
-in regard to the inward and the outward. Such ideas as that mind
-determines the good from out of itself are to us much more familiar
-than to Plato; but it was by Plato that they were first maintained.
-
-_c._ In that Plato places truth in that alone which is produced through
-thought, and yet the source of knowledge is manifold—in feelings,
-sensations, &c.—we must state the different kinds of knowledge, as
-given by Plato. Plato is entirely opposed to the idea that the truth
-is given through sensuous consciousness, which is what is known and
-that from which we start; for this is the doctrine of the Sophists
-with which we met in dealing with Protagoras, for instance. As regards
-feeling, we easily make the mistake of placing everything in feeling,
-as indeed that Platonic rage for beauty contained the truth in the
-guise of feeling; but this is not the true form of the truth, because
-feeling is the entirely subjective consciousness. Feeling as such is
-merely a form with which men make the arbitrary will the principle of
-the truth, for what is the true content is not given through feeling;
-in it every content has a place. The highest content must likewise
-be found in feeling; to have a thing in thought and understanding is
-quite different from having it in heart and feeling, _i.e._ in our
-most inward subjectivity, in this “I”; and we say of the content that
-it is for the first time in its proper place when it is in the heart,
-because it then is entirely identical with our individuality. The
-mistake, however, is to say that a content is true because it is in
-our feeling. Hence the importance of Plato’s doctrine that the content
-becomes filled by thought alone; for it is the universal which can
-be grasped by the activity of thought alone. Plato has defined this
-universal content as Idea.
-
-At the close of the sixth book of the Republic (pp. 509-511 Steph.; pp.
-321-325 Bekk.) Plato distinguishes the sensuous and the intellectual in
-our knowledge more exactly, so that in each sphere he again presents
-two modes of consciousness. “In the sensuous (ὁρατόν) the one division
-is the external manifestation, for in it are shadows, reflections in
-water, and also in solid, smooth, and polished bodies, and the like.
-The second section, of which this is only the resemblance, includes
-animals, plants” (this concrete life), “and everything in art. The
-intelligible (νοητόν) is also divided into two parts. In the one
-sub-division the soul uses the sensuous figures given before, and is
-obliged to work on hypotheses (ἐξ ὑποθέσεων) because it does not go to
-the principle but to the result.” Reflection, which is not on its own
-account sensuous, but undoubtedly belongs to thought, mingles thought
-with the first sensuous consciousness, although its object is not as
-yet a pure existence of the understanding. “The other division” (what
-is thought in the soul itself) “is that in which the soul, proceeding
-from an hypothesis, makes its way (μέθοδον) to a principle which is
-above hypotheses, not by means of images, as in the former cases, but
-through the ideas themselves. Those who study geometry, arithmetic, and
-kindred sciences, assume the odd and the even, the figures, three kinds
-of angles, and the like. And since they start from these hypotheses,
-they do not think it necessary to give any account of them, for
-everybody is supposed to know them. You further know that they make
-use of figures which are risible, and speak of them, although they
-are not thinking of them, but of the ideals which they represent; for
-they think of the” (absolute) “square itself and of its diagonals, and
-not of the” (sensuous) “images that they draw. And so it is with other
-things.” Thus, according to Plato, this is certainly the place where
-real knowledge begins, because we have nothing further to do with the
-sensuous as such; at the same time this is not the true knowledge which
-considers the spiritual universal on its own account, but the arguing
-and reasoning knowledge that forms universal laws and particular kinds
-or species out of what is sensuous. “These figures which they draw or
-make, and which also have shadows and images in water, they use only as
-images, and seek to behold their originals, which can only be seen with
-the understanding” (διανοίᾳ).—“That is true.”—“This I have named above
-that species of the intelligible, in inquiring into which the soul
-is compelled to use hypotheses, not proceeding to a first principle,
-because it is not able to get above those hypotheses, but employing
-those secondary images as images which are made absolutely similar to
-the originals in every respect”—“I understand that you are speaking of
-geometry and the kindred arts”—“Now learn about the other division of
-the intelligible in which reason (λόγος) itself is concerned, since
-by the power of the dialectic it makes use of hypotheses, not as
-principles but only as hypotheses—that is to say, as steps and points
-of departure in order to reach a region above hypotheses, the first
-principle of all” (which is in and for itself), “and clinging to this
-and to that which depends on this, it descends again to the result,
-for it requires no sensuous aid at all, but only ideas, and thus it
-reaches the ideas finally through the ideas themselves.” To know this
-is the interest and business of Philosophy; this is investigated by
-pure thought in and for itself, which only moves in such pure thoughts.
-“I understand you, but not perfectly. You seem to me to wish to assert
-that what is contemplated in Being and Knowledge through the science
-of dialectic is clearer than what is contemplated by the so-called
-sciences which have hypotheses as their principle, and where those who
-contemplate them have to do so with the understanding and not with the
-senses. Yet because in their contemplation they do not ascend to the
-absolute principle, but speculate from hypotheses, they appear not to
-exercise thought (νοῦν) upon these objects, although these objects are
-cognizable by thought if a principle is added to them (νοητῶν ὄντων
-μετὰ ἀρχῆς). The methods (ἕξιν) of geometry and its kindred sciences
-you appear to me to call understanding; and that because it stands
-midway between reason (νοῦς) and ‘sensuous’ opinion (δόξα).”—“You have
-quite grasped my meaning. Corresponding to these four sections, I
-will suppose four faculties (παθήματα) in the soul—conceiving reason
-(νόησις) has the highest place (ἐπὶ τῷ ἀνωτάτῳ), understanding the
-second; the third is called faith (πίστις)”—the true conception for
-animals and plants in that they are living, homogeneous and identical
-with ourselves; “and the last the knowledge of images (εἰκασία),”
-opinion. “Arrange them according to the fact that each stage has as
-much clearness (σαφηνείας) as that to which it is related has truth.”
-This is the distinction which forms the basis of Plato’s philosophy,
-and which came to be known from his writings.
-
-Now if we go from knowledge to its content, in which the Idea
-becomes sundered, and thereby organizes itself more completely into
-a scientific system, this content, according to Plato, begins to
-fall into three parts which we distinguish as the logical, natural,
-and mental philosophy. The logical Philosophy the ancients called
-dialectic, and its addition to philosophy is by the ancient writers on
-the subject ascribed to Plato (Vol. I. p. 387). This is not a dialectic
-such as we met with in the Sophists, which merely brings one’s ideas
-altogether into confusion, for this first branch of Platonic philosophy
-is the dialectic which moves in pure Notions—the movement of the
-speculatively logical, with which several dialogues, and particularly
-that of Parmenides, occupy themselves. The second, according to Plato,
-is a kind of natural philosophy, the principles of which are more
-especially propounded in the Timæus. The third is the philosophy of
-the mind—an ethical philosophy—and its representation is essentially
-that of a perfect state in the Republic. The Critias should be taken
-in connection with the Timæus and the Republic, but we need not make
-further reference to it, for it is only a fragment. Plato makes these
-three dialogues one connected conversation. In the Critias and the
-Timæus the subject is so divided that while the Timæus dealt with the
-speculative origin of man and of nature, the Critias was intended to
-represent the ideal history of human culture, and to be a philosophical
-history of the human race, forming the ancient history of the Athenians
-as preserved by the Egyptians. Of this, however, only the beginning
-has come down to us.[29] Hence if the Parmenides be taken along with
-the Republic and the Timæus, the three together constitute the whole
-Platonic system of philosophy divided into its three parts or sections.
-We now wish to consider the philosophy of Plato more in detail in
-accordance with these three different points of view.
-
-
-1. DIALECTIC.
-
-We have already remarked by way of preparation that the Notion of true
-dialectic is to show forth the necessary movement of pure Notions,
-without thereby resolving these into nothing; for the result, simply
-expressed, is that they are this movement, and the universal is just
-the unity of these opposite Notions. We certainly do not find in Plato
-a full consciousness that this is the nature of dialectic, but we find
-dialectic itself present; that is, we find absolute existence thus
-recognized in pure Notions, and the representation of the movement of
-these Notions. What makes the study of the Platonic dialectic difficult
-is the development and the manifestation of the universal out of
-ordinary conceptions. This beginning, which appears to make knowledge
-easier, really makes the difficulty greater, since it introduces us
-into a field in which there is quite a different standard from what
-we have in reason, and makes this field present to us; when, on the
-contrary, progression and motion take place in pure Notions alone, the
-other is not remembered at all. But in that very way the Notions attain
-greater truth. For otherwise pure logical movement might easily appear
-to us to exist on its own account, like a private territory, which has
-another region alongside of it, also having its own particular place.
-But since both are there brought together, the speculative element
-begins to appear as it is in truth; that is, as being the only truth,
-and that, indeed, through the transformation of sensuous opinion into
-thought. For in our consciousness we first of all find the immediate
-individual, the sensuous real; or there are also categories of the
-understanding which are held by us to be ultimate and true. But
-contrasted with merely external reality, it is rather the ideal that
-is the most real, and it was Plato who perceived that it was the only
-real, for he characterized the universal or thought as the true, in
-opposition to what is sensuous.
-
-Thus the aim of many of Plato’s Dialogues, which conclude without any
-positive affirmation (Vol. I. p. 406; II. p. 13), is to show that the
-immediately existent, the many things that appear to us, although we
-may have quite true conceptions of them, are still not in themselves,
-in an objective sense, the true, because they alter and are determined
-through their relation to something else and not through themselves;
-thus we must even in the sensuous individuals consider the universal,
-or what Plato has called the Idea (p. 29). The sensuous, limited,
-and finite is, in fact, both itself and the other, which is also
-considered as existent; and thus there is an unsolved contradiction,
-for the other has dominion in the first. We have been before reminded
-(Vol. I. p. 404; II. p. 33) that the aim of the Platonic dialectic is
-to confuse and to resolve the finite ideas of men, in order to bring
-about in their consciousness what science demands, the consideration
-of that which is. By being thus directed against the form of the
-finite, dialectic has in the first place the effect of confounding the
-particular, and this is brought about by the negation therein present
-being shown forth, so that, in fact, it is proved that it is not what
-it is, but that it passes into its opposite, into the limitations
-which are essential to it. But if this dialectic is laid hold of,
-the particular passes away and becomes another than that which it is
-taken to be. Formal philosophy cannot look at dialectic in any other
-way than as being the art of confusing ordinary conceptions or even
-Notions, and demonstrating their nullity, thus making their result to
-be merely negative. For this reason, Plato in his Republic (VII. pp.
-538, 539, Steph.; pp. 370, 371, Bekk.) advised the citizens not to
-allow dialectic to be studied before the thirtieth year, because by its
-means anyone might transform the beautiful, as he had received it from
-his masters, into that which is hateful. We find this dialectic a great
-deal in Plato, both in the more Socratic and moralizing dialogues, and
-in the many dialogues which relate to the conceptions of the Sophists
-in regard to science.
-
-In connection with this, the second part of dialectic makes its first
-aim the bringing of the universal in men to consciousness, which, as
-we formerly remarked when speaking of Socrates (Vol. I. p. 398), was
-the main interest of Socratic culture. From this time on, we may look
-at such an aim as having been discarded, and simply remark that a
-number of Plato’s Dialogues merely aim at bringing to consciousness a
-general conception, such as we have without taking any trouble at all
-(Vol. I. pp. 403, 404); hence this prolixity on Plato’s part often
-wearies us. This dialectic is, indeed, also a movement of thought,
-but it is really only necessary in an external way and for reflecting
-consciousness, in order to allow the universal, what is in and for
-itself, unalterable and immortal, to come forth. Hence these first two
-sides of the dialectic, directed as they are towards the dissolution of
-the particular and thus to the production of the universal, are not yet
-dialectic in its true form: it is a dialectic which Plato has in common
-with the Sophists, who understood very well how to disintegrate the
-particular. A subject which Plato very often treats of with this end in
-view, is virtue, which he proves to be only one (Vol. I. pp. 405, 411),
-and thereby he makes the universal good emerge from the particular
-virtues.
-
-Now because the universal which has emerged from the confusion of the
-particular, _i.e._ the true, beautiful and good, that which taken by
-itself is species, was at first undetermined and abstract, it is, in
-the third place, a principal part of Plato’s endeavours further to
-determine this universal in itself. This determination is the relation
-which the dialectic movement in thought bears to the universal, for
-through this movement the Idea comes to these thoughts which contain
-the opposites of the finite within themselves. For the Idea, as the
-self-determining, is the unity of these differences, and thus the
-determinate Idea. The universal is hence determined as that which
-resolves and has resolved the contradictions in itself, and hence it
-is the concrete in itself; thus this sublation of contradiction is the
-affirmative. Dialectic in this higher sense is the really Platonic;
-as speculative it does not conclude with a negative result, for it
-demonstrates the union of opposites which have annulled themselves.
-Here begins what is difficult for the understanding to grasp. The
-form of Plato’s methods being not yet, however, developed purely on
-its own account, this is the reason that his dialectic is still often
-merely reasoning, and that it proceeds from individual points of view
-and frequently remains without result. On the other hand, Plato’s own
-teaching is directed against this merely reasoning dialectic; yet we
-see that it gives him trouble properly to show forth the difference.
-The speculative dialectic which commences with him, is thus the most
-interesting but also the most difficult part of his work; hence
-acquaintance is not usually made with it when the Platonic writings are
-studied. Tennemann, for example, did not at all comprehend what was
-most important in the Platonic philosophy, and only gathered some of
-it together in the form of dry ontological determinations—for that was
-what he could comprehend. But it shows the greatest lack of intellect
-in a historian of Philosophy only to see in a great philosophic form
-whether there is anything yielding profit to himself or not.
-
-What we have thus to deal with in the dialectic of Plato is the
-pure thought of reason, from which he very clearly distinguishes
-the understanding (διάνοια), (_supra_, p. 47). We may have thoughts
-about many things—if indeed, we do have thought at all—but this is
-not what Plato means. Plato’s true speculative greatness, and that
-through which he forms an epoch in the history of Philosophy, and
-hence in the history of the world, lies in the fuller determination
-of the Idea; this extension of knowledge is one which some centuries
-later constituted the main element in the ferment which took place
-in universal history, and in the transformation which the human mind
-passed through. This fuller determination may, from what has gone
-before, be understood thus: Plato first comprehended the Absolute as
-the Being of Parmenides, but as the Universal which, as species, is
-also end, _i.e._ which rules, penetrates, and produces the particular
-and manifold. Plato, however, had not yet developed this self-producing
-activity, and hence often stumbled into an external teleology. As the
-union of the preceding principles, Plato further led this Being into
-determinateness and into difference, as the latter is contained in
-the triad of Pythagorean number-determinations, and expressed the
-same in thought. That is, he grasped the Absolute as the unity of
-Being and non-being—in Becoming, as Heraclitus says—or of the one and
-the many,[30] &c. He further now took into the objective dialectic
-of Heraclitus the Eleatic dialectic, which is the external endeavour
-of the subject to show forth contradiction, so that in place of an
-external changing of things, their inward transition in themselves,
-_i.e._ in their Ideas, or, as they are here, in their categories, has
-come to pass out of and through themselves. Plato finally set forth the
-belief of Socrates, which the latter put forward in regard to the moral
-self-reflection of the subject only, as objective, as the Idea, which
-is both universal thought and the existent. The previous philosophies
-thus do not disappear because refuted by Plato, being absorbed in him.
-
-In addition to Being and non-being, one and many, the unlimited and
-limiting are, for instance, likewise pure thoughts such as these, in
-whose absolute contemplation, from an all-embracing point of view, the
-Platonic investigation occupies itself. The purely logical and quite
-abstruse consideration of such objects certainly contrasts strongly
-with our conception of the beautiful, pleasing, and attractive content
-of Plato. Such consideration to him signifies all that is best in
-Philosophy, and it is that which he everywhere calls the true method
-of Philosophy, and the knowledge of the truth; in it he places the
-distinction between philosophers and Sophists. The Sophists on their
-part look at appearances, and these they obtain in opinion; this,
-indeed, implies thought, but not pure thought, or what is in and for
-itself. This is one reason why many turn from the study of Plato’s
-works unsatisfied. When we commence a Dialogue, we find, in the free
-Platonic method of composition, beautiful scenes in nature, a superb
-introduction (p. 14) that promises to lead us through flowery fields
-into Philosophy—and that the highest Philosophy, the Platonic. We meet
-with elevated thoughts, which are responded to more specially by youth,
-but these soon disappear. If at first we have allowed ourselves to be
-carried away by these bright scenes, they must now be all renounced,
-and as we have come to the real dialectic, and truly speculative, we
-must keep to the wearisome path, and allow ourselves to be pricked
-by the thorns and thistles of metaphysics. For behold, we then come
-to what is best and highest, to investigations respecting the one
-and many, Being and nothing; this was not what was anticipated, and
-men go quietly away, only wondering that Plato should seek knowledge
-here. From the most profound dialectic investigation, Plato then again
-proceeds to representations and images, to the description of dialogues
-amongst intelligent men. Thus in the Phædo, for example, which
-Mendelssohn has modernized and transformed into Wolffian metaphysics,
-the beginning and end are elevating and beautiful, and the middle deals
-with dialectic. Hence in making one’s way through Plato’s Dialogues
-very many mental qualities are called into play, and in their study
-we consequently ought to keep our minds open and free as regards the
-very various points of interest. If we read with interest what is
-speculative, we are apt to overlook what is most beautiful; if our
-interest lies in the elevation and culture of the mind, we forget the
-speculative element and find that it does not appeal to us. With some
-it is like the young man in the Bible, who had fulfilled his various
-duties, and who asked Christ what good thing he still had to do to
-become His follower. But when the Lord commanded him to sell what he
-had and give to the poor, the young man went away sorrowful; this was
-not what he had anticipated. Just in the same way many mean well as
-regards Philosophy; they study Fries, and heaven knows whom else. Their
-hearts are full of the true, good and beautiful; they would know and
-see what they ought to do, but their breasts swell with goodwill alone.
-
-While Socrates remained at the good and universal, at implicitly
-concrete thoughts, without having developed them or having revealed
-them through development, Plato certainly goes on to the Idea as
-determined. His defect, however, is that this determinateness and that
-universality are still outside one another. We should certainly obtain
-the determinate Idea by reducing the dialectic movement to its result,
-and that forms an important element in knowledge. Yet when Plato speaks
-of justice, beauty, goodness, truth, their origin is not revealed;
-they are not shown as being results, but merely as hypotheses accepted
-in their immediacy. Consciousness certainly has an innate conviction
-that they form the highest end, but this their determination is not
-discovered. Since Plato’s dogmatic expositions of Ideas are lost
-(_supra_, p. 11), the dialectic of pure thought is only placed before
-us by the Dialogues dealing with the subject, and these, just because
-they deal with pure thought, are amongst the most difficult, viz.:
-the Sophist, the Philebus, and, more especially, the Parmenides. We
-here pass over the Dialogues which contain only negative dialectic and
-Socratic dialogue, because they treat only of concrete ideas and not
-of dialectic in its higher signification; they leave us unsatisfied,
-because their ultimate end is only to confuse one’s opinions, or awaken
-a sense of the necessity for knowledge. But those three express the
-abstract speculative Idea in its pure Notion. The embracing of the
-opposites in one, and the expression of this unity, is chiefly lacking
-in the Parmenides, which has hence, like some other Dialogues, only
-a negative result. But both in the Sophist and the Philebus Plato
-expresses the unity also.
-
-_a._ The fully worked-out and genuine dialectic is, however, contained
-in the Parmenides—that most famous masterpiece of Platonic dialectic.
-Parmenides and Zeno are there represented as meeting Socrates in
-Athens; but the most important part of it is the dialectic which is
-put in the mouths of Parmenides and Zeno. At the very beginning the
-nature of this dialectic is given in detail as follows: Plato makes
-Parmenides praise Socrates thus: “I notice that in conversing with
-Aristoteles,” (one of those present; it might quite well have been
-the philosopher, but that he was born sixteen years after Socrates’
-death) “you were trying to define in what the nature of the beautiful,
-just and good, and all such ideas lay. This your endeavour is noble
-and divine. But train and exercise yourself even more in what the
-multitude call idle chatter, and look on as useless, as long as you
-are young, for otherwise the truth will escape you.—In what, Socrates
-asks, does this exercise consist?—I was much pleased because you said
-before that we must not be content with contemplating the sensuous
-and its illusions, but must consider that which thought alone can
-grasp, and that which alone exists.” I have before[31] remarked that
-men at all times have believed that the truth could be found through
-reflection only, for in reflection thought is found, and that which
-we have before us in the guise of ordinary conception and of belief
-is transformed into thought. Socrates now replies to Parmenides: “I
-believed that I should in that way best discern the like and unlike,
-and the other general determinations in things.” Parmenides replies,
-“Certainly. But if you begin from a point of view such as that, you
-must not only consider what follows from such an hypothesis, but also
-what follows from the opposite of that hypothesis. For example, in the
-case of the hypothesis ‘the many is,’ you have to consider what will
-be the consequences of the relation of the many to itself and to the
-one, and likewise what the consequences of the relation of the one to
-itself and to the many.” The marvellous fact that meets us in thought
-when we take determinations such as these by themselves, is that each
-one is turned round into the opposite of itself. “But again we must
-consider, if the many is not, as to what will be the result as regards
-the one and the many, both to themselves and to one another. The same
-consideration must be employed in respect of identity and non-identity,
-rest and motion, origination and passing away, and likewise in regard
-to Being and non-being. We must ask what is each of these in relation
-to itself, and what is their relation in event of the one or the other
-being accepted? In exercising yourself fully in this, you will learn to
-know real truth.”[32] Plato thus lays great stress on the dialectical
-point of view, which is not the point of view of the merely external,
-but is a living point of view whose content is formed of pure thoughts
-only, whose movement consists in their making themselves the other of
-themselves, and thus showing that only their unity is what is truly
-justified.
-
-Plato makes Socrates say, as regards the meaning of the unity of the
-one and many, “If anyone proved to me that I am one and many, it would
-not surprise me. For since he shows me that I am a many, and points
-out in me the right and left side, an upper and lower half, a front
-and back, I partake of the manifold; and again I partake of unity
-because I am one of us seven. The case is the same with stone, wood,
-&c. But if anyone, after determining the simple ideas of similarity
-and dissimilarity, multiplicity, and unity, rest and movement, and so
-on, were to show that these in their abstract form admit of admixture
-and separation, I should be very much surprised.”[33] The dialectic
-of Plato is, however, not to be regarded as complete in every regard.
-Though his main endeavour is to show that in every determination the
-opposite is contained, it can still not be said that this is strictly
-carried out in all his dialectic movements, for there are often
-external considerations which exercise an influence in his dialectic.
-For example, Parmenides says: “Are either of the two parts of the one
-which is—I mean the One and Being—ever wanting to one another? Is the
-One ever set free from _being_ a part (τοῦ εἶναι μόριον) and Being set
-free from the _one_ part (τοῦ ἑνὸς μόριου)? Once more, each part thus
-possesses both the one and Being, and the smallest part still always
-consists of these two parts.”[34] In other words: “The one is; from
-this it follows that the one is not synonymous with ‘is,’ and thus the
-one and ‘is’ are distinguished. There hence is in the proposition ‘the
-one is’ a distinction; the many is therefore contained in it, and thus
-even with the one I express the many.” This dialectic is certainly
-correct, but it is not quite pure, because it begins from this union of
-two determinations.
-
-The result of the whole investigation in the Parmenides is summarized
-at the close by saying “that whether the one is or is not, it, as
-also the many (τἆλλα), in relation to themselves and in relation
-to one another—all of them both are and are not, appear and do not
-appear.”[35] This result may seem strange. We are far from accepting,
-in our ordinary conception of things, quite abstract determinations
-such as the one, Being, non-being, appearance, rest, movement, &c.,
-as Ideas; but these universals are taken by Plato as Ideas, and this
-Dialogue thus really contains the pure Platonic doctrine of Ideas. He
-shows of the one that when it is as well as when it is not, whether
-like itself or not like itself, both in movement and rest, origination
-and decay, it both is and is not; or the unity as well as all these
-pure Ideas, both are and are not, the one is one as much as it is many.
-In the proposition “the one is,” it is also implied that “the one is
-not one but many;” and, conversely, “the many is” also indicates that
-“the many is not many, but one.” They show themselves dialectically
-and are really the identity with their ‘other’; and this is the truth.
-An example is given in Becoming: in Becoming Being and non-being
-are in inseparable unity, and yet they are also present there as
-distinguished; for Becoming only exists because the one passes into the
-other.
-
-In this respect, perhaps, the result arrived at in the Parmenides
-may not satisfy us, since it seems to be negative in character, and
-not, as the negation of the negation, expressive of true affirmation.
-Nevertheless, the Neo-platonists, and more especially Proclus,
-regard the result arrived at in the Parmenides as the true theology,
-as the true revelation of all the mysteries of the divine essence.
-And it cannot be regarded as anything else, however little this may
-at first appear, and though Tiedemann (Platon. Argumenta, p. 340)
-speaks of these assertions as merely the wild extravagances of the
-Neo-platonists. In fact, however, we understand by God the absolute
-essence of things, which even in its simple Notion is the unity and
-movement of these pure realities, the Ideas of the one and many,
-&c. The divine essence is the Idea in general, as it is either for
-sensuous consciousness or for thought. In as far as the divine Idea
-is the absolute self-reflection, dialectic is nothing more than this
-activity of self-reflection in itself; the Neo-Platonists regarded
-this connection as metaphysical only, and have recognized in it their
-theology, the unfolding of the secrets of the divine essence. But here
-there appears the double interpretation already remarked upon (p.
-19), which has now to be more clearly expounded. It is that God and
-the essential reality of things may be understood in two different
-ways. For, on the one hand, when it is said that the essential reality
-of things is the unity of opposites, it would seem as though only
-the immediate essence of these immediately objective things were
-indicated, and as if this doctrine of real essence or ontology were
-distinguished from the knowledge of God, or theology. These simple
-realities and their relation and movement seem only to express moments
-of the objective and not mind, because there is lacking in them one
-element—that is to say, reflection into themselves—which we demand
-for the existence of the divine essence. For mind, the truly absolute
-essence, is not only the simple and immediate, but that which reflects
-itself into itself, for which in its opposition the unity of itself
-and of that which is opposed is; but these moments and their movement
-do not present it as such, for they make their appearance as simple
-abstractions. On the other hand, they may also be taken to be pure
-Notions, which pertain purely to reflection into itself. In this case
-Being is wanting to them, or what we likewise demand for reflection
-into itself as essential to the divine essence; and then their movement
-is esteemed an empty round of empty abstractions, which belong only to
-reflection and have no reality. For the solution of this contradiction
-we must know the nature of apprehension and knowledge, in order to
-obtain in the Notion everything there present. Thus shall we have the
-consciousness that the Notion is in truth neither the immediate only,
-although it is the simple, nor merely that which reflects itself into
-itself, the thing of consciousness; for it is of spiritual simplicity,
-thus really existent—as it is thought turned back on itself, so it is
-also Being in itself, _i.e._ objective Being, and consequently all
-reality. Plato did not state this knowledge of the nature of the Notion
-so expressly, nor did he say that this essential Being of things is the
-same as the divine essence. But really it is simply not put into words,
-for the fact is undoubtedly present, and the only distinction is one of
-speech as between the mode of the ordinary conception and that of the
-Notion. On the one hand, this reflection into itself, the spiritual,
-the Notion, is present in the speculation of Plato; for the unity of
-the one and many, &c., is just this individuality in difference, this
-being-turned-back-within-itself in its opposite, this opposite which is
-implicit; the essential reality of the world is really this movement
-returning into itself of that which is turned back within itself. But,
-on the other hand, for this very reason, this being reflected into
-self—like the God of ordinary conception—still remains with Plato
-something separated; and in his representation of the Becoming of
-Nature in the Timæus, God, and the essential reality of things, appear
-as distinguished.
-
-_b._ In the Sophist Plato investigated the pure Notions or Ideas of
-movement and rest, self-identity and other-being, Being and non-being.
-He here proves, as against Parmenides, that non-being is, and likewise
-that the simple self-identical partakes of other-being, and unity
-of multiplicity. He says of the Sophists that they never get beyond
-non-being, and he also refutes their whole ground-principle, which is
-non-being, feeling, and the many. Plato has thus so determined the
-true universal, that he makes it the unity of, for example, the one
-and many, Being and non-being; but at the same time he has avoided, or
-it was his endeavour to avoid, the double meaning which lies in our
-talk of the unity of Being and nothing, &c. For in this expression
-we emphasize the unity, and then the difference disappears, just as
-if we merely abstracted from it. Plato tried, however, to preserve
-the difference likewise. The Sophist is a further development of
-Being and non-being, both of which are applicable to all things; for
-because things are different, the one being the other of the other,
-the determination of the negative is present. First of all, however,
-Plato expresses in the Sophist a clearer consciousness of Ideas as
-abstract universalities, and his conviction that this point of view
-could not endure, because it was opposed to the unity of the Idea
-with itself. Plato thus first refutes what is sensuous, and then even
-the Ideas themselves. The first of these points of view is what is
-later on called materialism, which makes the corporeal alone to be
-the substantial, admitting nothing to have reality excepting what can
-be laid hold of by the hand, such as rocks and oaks. “Let us,” says
-Plato, in the second place, “proceed to the other, to the friends
-of Ideas.” Their belief is that the substantial is incorporeal,
-intellectual, and they separate from it the region of Becoming, of
-change, into which the sensuous falls, while the universal is for
-itself. These represent Ideas as immovable, and neither active nor
-passive. Plato asserts, as against this, that movement, life, soul,
-and thought, cannot be denied to true Being (παντελῶς ὄντι), and that
-the holy reason (ἄγιον νοῦν) can be nowhere, and in nothing that is
-unmoved.[36] Plato thus has a clear consciousness of having got further
-than Parmenides when he says:—
-
- “Keep your mind from this way of inquiry,
- For never will you show that non-being is.”
-
-Plato says that Being in anyone partakes both of Being and non-being;
-but what thus participates is different both from Being and non-being
-as such.[37]
-
-This dialectic combats two things in particular; and in the first place
-it is antagonistic to the common dialectic in the ordinary sense,
-of which we have already spoken. Examples of this false dialectic
-to which Plato often comes back, are specially frequent amongst the
-Sophists; yet he did not show sufficiently clearly how they are
-distinguished from the purely dialectical knowledge which is in the
-Notion. For example, Plato expressed his dissent when Protagoras and
-others said that no determination is absolutely certain—that bitter is
-not objective, for what to one person is bitter, to another is sweet.
-Similarly, large and small, more and less, &c., are relative, because
-the large will be, in other circumstances, small, and the small will
-be great. That is to say, the unity of opposites is present to us
-in everything we know, but the common way of looking at things, in
-which the rational does not come to consciousness, always holds the
-opposites asunder, as though they were simply opposed in a determinate
-way. As in each thing we demonstrate unity, so do we also show its
-multiplicity, for it has many parts and qualities. In the Parmenides,
-Plato, as we saw above (p. 58), objected to this unity of opposites,
-because it must thereby be said that something is one in quite another
-respect from that in which it is many. We thus do not here bring
-these thoughts together, for the conception and the words merely go
-backwards and forwards from the one to the other; if this passing to
-and fro is performed with consciousness, it is the empty dialectic
-which does not really unite the opposites. Of this Plato says, “If
-anyone thinks he has made a wonderful discovery in ascertaining that
-he can drag thoughts this way and that, from one determination to
-another, he may be told that he has done nothing worthy of praise; for
-in so doing there is nothing excellent or difficult.” The dialectic
-that annuls a determination because it reveals in it some defect,
-and then goes on to establish another, is thus wrong. “The point of
-difficulty, and what we ought to aim at, is to show that what is the
-other is the same, and what is the same, is another, and likewise in
-the same regard and from the same point of view to show that the one
-has in them come into existence if the other determination is revealed
-within them. But to show that somehow the same is another, and the
-other also the same, that the great is also small” (_e.g._ Protagoras’s
-die), “and the like also unlike, and to delight in thus always proving
-opposites, is no true inquiry (ἔλενχος), but simply proves that he who
-uses such arguments is a neophyte,” in thought, “who has just begun
-to investigate truth. To separate all existences from one another is
-the crude attempt of an uncultured and unphilosophical mind. To cause
-everything to fall asunder means the perfect annihilation of all
-thought, for thought is the union of ideas.”[38] Thus Plato expressly
-speaks against the dialectic of showing how anything may be refuted
-from some point of view or another. We see that Plato, in respect of
-content, expresses nothing excepting what is called indifference in
-difference, the difference of absolute opposites and their unity. To
-this speculative knowledge he opposes the ordinary way of thinking,
-which is positive as well as negative; the former, not bringing the
-thoughts together, allows first one and then the other to have value in
-their separation; the latter is, indeed, conscious of a unity, though
-it is of a superficial, differentiating unity in which the two moments
-are separate, as standing in different aspects.
-
-The second point against which Plato argues is the dialectic of the
-Eleatics, and their assertion, which in its nature resembles that of
-the Sophists, that only Being is, and non-being is not. To the Sophists
-this means, as Plato puts it: Since the negative is not, but only Being
-is, there is nothing false; everything existent, everything which is
-for us, is thus necessarily true, and what is not, we do not know
-or feel. Plato reproaches the Sophists for thus doing away with the
-difference between true and false.[39] Having arrived at this stage
-in the knowledge of the dialectic (and the whole matter is merely a
-difference of stages) the Sophists could allow what they promise—that
-everything that the individual, according to his belief, makes his end
-and interest, is affirmative and right. Hence it cannot be said that
-such and such an act is wrong, wicked, a crime; for this would be to
-say that the maxim of the action is wrong. No more can it be said that
-such and such opinion is deceptive, for in the opinion of the Sophists
-the proposition implies that what I feel or represent to myself, in as
-far as it is mine, is an affirmative content, and thus true and right.
-The proposition in itself seems quite abstract and innocent, but we
-first notice what is involved in such abstractions when we see them
-in concrete form. According to this innocent proposition there would
-be no wickedness and no crime. The Platonic dialectic is essentially
-different from this kind of dialectic.
-
-What is further present to the mind of Plato is that the Idea, the
-absolute universal, good, true, and beautiful, is to be taken for
-itself. The myth, which I have already quoted (p. 27 _et seq._), indeed
-goes to prove that we must not consider a good action, a noble man—not
-the subject of which these determinations are predicated. For that
-which appears in such conceptions or perceptions as predicate, must be
-taken for itself, and this is the absolute truth. This tallies with
-the nature of the dialectic which has been described. An action, taken
-in accordance with the empirical conception, may be called right; in
-another aspect, quite opposite determinations may be shown to be in it.
-But the good and true must be taken on their own account without such
-individualities, without this empirical and concrete character; and
-the good and true thus taken alone, constitute that which is. The soul
-which, according to the divine drama, is found in matter, rejoices in
-a beautiful and just object; but the only actual truth is in absolute
-virtue, justice, and beauty. It is thus the universal for itself which
-is further determined in the Platonic dialectic; of this several forms
-appear, but these forms are themselves still very general and abstract.
-Plato’s highest form is the identity of Being and non-being. The true
-is that which is, but this Being is not without negation. Plato’s
-object is thus to show that non-being is an essential determination in
-Being, and that the simple, self-identical, partakes of other-being.
-This unity of Being and non-being is also found in the Sophists; but
-this alone is not the end of the matter. For in further investigation
-Plato comes to the conclusion that non-being, further determined, is
-the essence of the ‘other’: “Ideas mingle, and Being and the other
-(θάτερον) go through everything and through one another; the other,
-because it participates (μετασχόν) in Being, certainly _is_ through
-this indwelling Being, but it is not identical with that of which it
-partakes, being something different, and being other than Being, it is
-clearly non-being. But since Being likewise partakes of other-being,
-it also is different from other Ideas, and is not any one of them; so
-that there are thousands of ways in which it is not, and as regards
-all else, whether looked at individually or collectively, it in many
-respects is, and in many respects is not.”[40] Plato thus maintains
-that the other, as the negative, non-identical, is likewise in one and
-the same respect the self-identical; there are not different sides
-which are in mutual opposition.
-
-These are the principal points in Plato’s peculiar dialectic. The
-fact that the Idea of the divine, eternal, beautiful, is absolute
-existence, is the beginning of the elevation of consciousness into the
-spiritual, and into the consciousness that the universal is true. It
-may be enough for the ordinary idea to be animated and satisfied by the
-conception of the beautiful and good, but thinking knowledge demands
-the determination of this eternal and divine. And this determination
-is really only free determination which certainly does not prevent
-universality—a limitation (for every determination is limitation) which
-likewise leaves the universal in its infinitude free and independent.
-Freedom exists only in a return into itself; the undistinguished is the
-lifeless; the active, living, concrete universal is hence what inwardly
-distinguishes itself, but yet remains free in so doing. Now this
-determinateness consists in the one being identical with itself in the
-other, in the many, in what is distinguished. This constitutes the only
-truth, and the only interest for knowledge in what is called Platonic
-philosophy, and if this is not known, the main point of it is not
-known. While in the example already often quoted (pp. 58, 64),[41] in
-which Socrates is both one and many, the two thoughts are made to fall
-asunder, it is left to speculative thought alone to bring the thoughts
-together, and this union of what is different, of Being and non-being,
-of one and many, &c., which takes place without a mere transition from
-one to another, constitutes the inmost reality and true greatness of
-Platonic philosophy. This determination is the esoteric element in
-Platonic philosophy, and the other is the exoteric; the distinction is
-doubtless an unwarranted one, indicating, as it seems to do, that Plato
-could have two such philosophies—one for the world, for the people, and
-the other, the inward, reserved for the initiated. But the esoteric
-is the speculative, which, even though written and printed, is yet,
-without being any secret, hidden from those who have not sufficient
-interest in it to exert themselves. To this esoteric portion pertain
-the two dialogues hitherto considered, along with which the Philebus
-may in the third place be taken.
-
-_c._ In the Philebus Plato investigates the nature of pleasure;
-and the opposition of the infinite and finite, or of the unlimited
-(ἄπειρον) and limiting (πέρας), is there more especially dealt with. In
-keeping this before us, it would scarcely occur to us that through the
-metaphysical knowledge of the nature of the infinite and undetermined,
-what concerns enjoyment is likewise determined; but these pure thoughts
-are the substantial through which everything, however concrete or
-seemingly remote, is decided. When Plato treats of pleasure and wisdom
-as contrasted, it is the opposition of finite and infinite. By pleasure
-we certainly represent to ourselves the immediately individual, the
-sensuous; but pleasure is the indeterminate in respect that it is the
-merely elementary, like fire and water, and not the self-determining.
-Only the Idea is the self-determinate, or self-identity. To our
-reflection the infinite appears to be what is best and highest,
-limitation being inferior to it; and ancient philosophers so
-determined it. By Plato, however, it is, on the other hand, shown
-that the limited is the true, as the self-determining, while the
-unlimited is still abstract; it certainly can be determined in many
-different ways, but when thus determined it is only the individual. The
-infinite is the formless; free form as activity is the finite, which
-finds in the infinite the material for self-realization. Plato thus
-characterizes enjoyment dependent on the senses as the unlimited which
-does not determine itself; reason alone is the active determination.
-But the infinite is what in itself passes over to the finite; thus
-the perfect good, according to Plato, is neither to be sought for in
-happiness or reason, but in a life of both combined. But wisdom, as
-limit, is the true cause from which what is excellent arises.[42] As
-that which posits measure and end, it is what absolutely determines the
-end—the immanent determination with which and in which freedom likewise
-brings itself into existence.
-
-Plato further considers the fact that the true is the identity of
-opposites, thus. The infinite, as the indeterminate, is capable of
-a more or less, it may be more intensive or not; thus colder and
-warmer, drier and moister, quicker and slower, &c., are all such.
-What is limited is the equal, the double, and every other measure; by
-this means the opposite ceases to be unlike and becomes uniform and
-harmonious. Through the unity of these opposites, such as cold and
-warm, dry and moist, health arises; similarly the harmony of music
-takes its origin from the limitation of high tones and deep, of quicker
-and slower movement, and, generally speaking, everything beautiful
-and perfect arises through the union of opposites. Health, happiness,
-beauty, &c., would thus appear to be begotten, in as far as the
-opposites are allied thereto, but they are likewise an intermingling
-of the same. The ancients make copious use of intermingling,
-participation, &c., instead of individuality; but for us these are
-indefinite and inadequate expressions. But Plato says that the third,
-which is thus begotten, pre-supposes the cause or that from which it is
-formed; this is more excellent than those through whose instrumentality
-that third arose. Hence Plato has four determinations; first the
-unlimited, the undetermined; secondly the limited, measure, proportion,
-to which pertains wisdom; the third is what is mingled from both, what
-has only arisen; the fourth is cause. This is in itself nothing else
-than the unity of differences, subjectivity, power and supremacy over
-opposites, that which is able to sustain the opposites in itself;
-but it is only the spiritual which has this power and which sustains
-opposition, the highest contradiction in itself. Weak corporeality
-passes away as soon as ‘another’ comes into it. The cause he speaks
-of is divine reason, which governs the world; the beauty of the world
-which is present in air, fire, water, and in all that lives, is
-produced thereby.[43] Thus the absolute is what in one unity is finite
-and infinite.
-
-When Plato speaks thus of the beautiful and good, these are concrete
-ideas, or rather there is only one idea. But we are still far
-from these concrete ideas when we begin with such abstractions as
-Being, non-being, unity, and multiplicity. If Plato, however, has
-not succeeded in bringing these abstract thoughts through further
-development and concretion, to beauty, truth, and morality, there at
-least lies in the knowledge of those abstract determinations, the
-criterion by which the concrete is determined, as also its sources.
-This transition to the concrete is made in the Philebus, since the
-principle of feeling and of pleasure is there considered. The ancient
-philosophers knew very well what they had of concrete in those
-abstract thoughts. In the atomic principle of multiplicity we thus
-find the source of a construction of the state, for the ultimate
-thought-determination of such state-principles is the logical. The
-ancients in their pure Philosophy had not the same end in view as
-we—they had not the end of a metaphysical sequence placed before them
-like a problem. We, on the other hand, have something concrete before
-us, and desire to reduce it to settled order. With Plato Philosophy
-offers the path which the individual must follow in order to attain
-to any knowledge, but, generally speaking, Plato places absolute and
-explicit happiness, the blessed life itself, in the contemplation
-during life of the divine objects named above.[44] This contemplative
-life seems aimless, for the reason that all its interests have
-disappeared. But to live in freedom in the kingdom of thought had
-become the absolute end to the ancients, and they knew that freedom
-existed only in thought.
-
-
-2. PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE.
-
-With Plato Philosophy likewise commenced to devote more attention
-to the understanding of what is further determined, and in this way
-the matter of knowledge began to fall into divisions. In the Timæus
-the Idea thus makes its appearance as expressed in its concrete
-determinateness, and the Platonic Philosophy of Nature hence teaches
-us to have a better knowledge of the reality of the world; we cannot,
-however, enter into details, and if we did, they have little interest.
-It is more especially where Plato treats of physiology that his
-statements in no way correspond with what we now know, although we
-cannot fail to wonder at the brilliant glimpses of the truth there
-found, which have been only too much misconceived by the moderns.
-Plato derived a great deal from the Pythagoreans; how much is theirs,
-however, cannot be satisfactorily determined. We remarked before (p.
-14) that the Timæus is really the fuller version of a Pythagorean
-treatise; other would-be wise persons have indeed said that the
-treatise is only an abstract made by a Pythagorean of the larger
-work of Plato, but the first theory is the more probable. The Timæus
-has in all times been esteemed the most difficult and obscure of the
-Platonic dialogues. This difficulty is due in part to the apparent
-mingling of conceiving knowledge and ordinary perception already
-mentioned (p. 20), just as we shall presently find an intermingling
-of Pythagorean numbers; and it is due still more to the philosophic
-nature of the matter in hand, of which Plato was as yet unconscious.
-The second difficulty lies in the arrangement of the whole, for what
-at once strikes one is that Plato repeatedly breaks off the thread of
-his argument, often appearing to turn back and begin again from the
-beginning.[45] This moved critics such as August Wolff and others, who
-could not understand it philosophically, to take the Timæus to be an
-accumulation of fragments put together, or else to be several works
-which had only been loosely strung together into one, or into the
-Platonic portion of which much that is foreign had been introduced.
-Wolff accordingly thought it was evident from this that the dialogue,
-like Homer’s poems, had been, in its first form, spoken and not
-written. But although the connection seems unmethodical, and Plato
-himself makes what maybe called copious excuses for the confusion, we
-shall find how the whole matter really falls into natural divisions,
-and we shall also find the deep inward reason which makes necessary the
-frequent return to what apparently is the beginning.
-
-An exposition of the reality of nature or of the becoming of the world
-is introduced by Plato in the following way: “God is the Good,” this
-stands also at the head of the Platonic Ideas in the verbally delivered
-discourses (_supra_, p. 11); “goodness, however, has no jealousy of
-anything, and being free from jealousy, God desired to make all things
-like Himself.”[46] God here is still without determination, and a
-name which has no meaning for thought; nevertheless, where Plato in
-the Timæus again begins from the beginning, he is found to have a
-more definite idea of God. That God is devoid of envy undoubtedly is
-a great, beautiful, true, and childlike thought. With the ancients,
-on the contrary, we find in Nemesis, Dike, Fate, Jealousy, the one
-determination of the gods: moved by this they cast down the great and
-bring it low, and suffer not what is excellent and elevated to exist.
-The later high-minded philosophers controverted this doctrine. For in
-the mere idea of the Nemesis no moral determination is as yet implied,
-because punishment there is only the humiliation of what oversteps
-limits, but these limits are not yet presented as moral, and punishment
-is thus not yet a recognition of the moral as distinguished from the
-immoral. Plato’s thought is thus much higher than that of most of our
-moderns, who, in saying that God is a hidden God who has not revealed
-Himself to us and of whom we can know nothing, ascribe jealousy to
-God. For why should He not reveal Himself to us if we earnestly seek
-the knowledge of Him? A light loses nothing by another’s being kindled
-therefrom, and hence there was in Athens a punishment imposed on those
-who did not permit this to be done. If the knowledge of God were kept
-from us in order that we should know only the finite and not attain
-to the infinite, God would be a jealous God, or God would then become
-an empty name. Such talk means no more than that we wish to neglect
-what is higher and divine, and seek after our own petty interests and
-opinions. This humility is sin—the sin against the Holy Ghost.
-
-Plato continues: “God found the visible” (παραλαβών)—a mythical
-expression proceeding from the necessity of beginning with an
-immediate, which, however, as it presents itself, cannot in any way
-be allowed—“not at rest, but moving in an irregular and disorderly
-manner; and out of disorder he brought order, considering that this
-was far better than the other.” From this it appears as if Plato had
-considered that God was only the δημιοῦργος, _i.e._ the disposer of
-matter, and that this, being eternal and independent, was found by
-Him as chaos; but in view of what has been said, this is false. These
-are not the philosophic doctrines which Plato seriously held, for he
-speaks here only after the manner of the ordinary conception, and
-such expressions have hence no philosophic content. It is only the
-introduction of the subject, bringing us, as it does, to determinations
-such as matter. Plato then comes in course of his progress to further
-determinations, and in these we first have the Notion; we must hold to
-what is speculative in Plato, and not to the first-mentioned ordinary
-conception. Likewise, when he says that God esteemed order to be the
-best, the mode of expression is naïve. Nowadays we should ask that
-God should first be proved; and just as little should we allow the
-visible to be established without much further ado. What is proved
-by Plato from this more naïve method of expression is, in the first
-place, the true determination of the Idea, which only appears later
-on. It is further said: “God reflecting that of what is visible, the
-unintelligent (ἀνόητον) could not be fairer than the intelligent
-(νοῦς), and that intelligence could not exist in anything devoid of
-soul, for these reasons put intelligence in the soul, and the soul
-in the body, and so united them that the world became a living and
-intelligent system, an animal.” We have reality and intelligence,
-and the soul as the bond connecting the two extremes, without which
-intelligence could not have part in the visible body; we saw the true
-reality comprehended by Plato in a similar way in the Phædrus (_supra_,
-p. 39). “There is, however, only one such animal, for were there two or
-more, these would be only parts of the one, and only one.”[47]
-
-Plato now first proceeds to the determination of the Idea of corporeal
-existence: “Because the world was to become corporeal, visible and
-tangible, and since without fire nothing can be seen, and without
-solidity, without earth, nothing can be touched, God in the beginning
-made fire and earth.” In this childlike way Plato introduces these
-extremes, solidity and life. “But two things cannot be united without
-a third, there must be a bond between them, uniting both”—one of
-Plato’s simple methods of expression. “The fairest bond, however, is
-that which most completely fuses itself and that which is bound by
-it.” That is a profound saying, in which the Notion is contained; the
-bond is the subjective and individual, the power which dominates the
-other, which makes itself identical with it. “Proportion” (ἀναλογία)
-is best adapted to effect such a fusion; that is, whenever of three
-numbers or magnitudes or powers, that which is the mean is to the
-last term what the first term is to the mean, and again when the mean
-is to the first term as the last term is to the mean (a : b = b : c)
-“then the mean having become the first and last, and the first and
-last both having become means, all things will necessarily come to be
-the same; but having come to be the same, everything will be one.”[48]
-This is excellent, we have still preserved this in our Philosophy;
-it is the distinction which is no distinction. This diremption from
-which Plato proceeds, is the conclusion which we know from logic; it
-appears in the form of the ordinary syllogism, in which, however, the
-whole rationality of the Idea is, at least externally, contained. The
-distinctions are the extremes, and the mean is the identity which in a
-supreme degree makes them one; the conclusion is thus speculative, and
-in the extremes unites itself with itself, because all the terms pass
-through all the different positions. It is hence a mistake to disparage
-the conclusion and not to recognize it as the highest and absolute
-form; in respect of the conclusions arrived at by the understanding,
-on the contrary, we should be right in rejecting it. This last has no
-such mean; each of the differences is there recognized as different in
-its own independent form, as having a character different from that
-of the other. This, in the Platonic philosophy, is abrogated, and
-the speculative element in it constitutes the proper and true form
-of conclusion, in which the extremes neither remain in independence
-as regards themselves, nor as regards the mean. In the conclusion of
-the understanding, on the contrary, the unity which is constituted is
-only the unity of essentially different contents which remain such;
-for here a subject, a determination, is, through the mean, simply
-bound up with another, or “some conception is joined to some other
-conception.” In a rational conclusion, however, the main point of its
-speculative content is the identity of the extremes which are joined
-to one another; in this it is involved that the subject presented in
-the mean is a content which does not join itself with another, but only
-through the other and in the other with itself. In other words, this
-constitutes the essential nature of God, who, when made subject, is
-the fact that He begot His Son, the world; but in this reality which
-appears as another, He still remains identical with Himself, does away
-with the separation implied in the Fall, and, in the other, merely
-unites Himself to Himself and thus becomes Spirit. When the immediate
-is elevated over the mediate and it is then said that God’s actions are
-immediate, there is, indeed, good ground for the assertion; but the
-concrete fact is that God is a conclusion which, by differentiating
-itself, unites itself to itself, and, through the abrogation of the
-mediation, reinstates its own immediacy. In the Platonic philosophy we
-thus have what is best and highest; the thoughts are, indeed, merely
-pure thoughts, but they contain everything in themselves; for all
-concrete forms depend on thought-determinations alone. The Fathers thus
-found in Plato the Trinity which they wished to comprehend and prove
-in thought: with Plato the truth really has the same determination
-as the Trinity. But these forms have been neglected for two thousand
-years since Plato’s time, for they have not passed into the Christian
-religion as thoughts; indeed they were considered to be ideas which had
-entered in through error, until quite recent times, when men began to
-understand that the Notion is contained in these determinations, and
-that nature and spirit can thus be comprehended through their means.
-
-Plato continues: “Since what is solid requires two means, because it
-not only has breadth but also depth, God has placed air and water
-between fire and earth; and indeed He gave to them the same proportion,
-so that fire is related to air as air to water, and as air is to
-water, so is water to earth.”[49] Thus we have, properly speaking,
-four methods of representing space, inasmuch as the point is, through
-line and surface, closely bound up with the solid body. The sundered
-mean here discovered, again indicates an important thought of logical
-profundity; and the number four which here appears, is in nature
-a fundamental number. For as being the different which is turned
-towards the two extremes, the mean must be separated in itself. In
-the conclusion in which God is the One, the second (the mediating),
-the Son; the third, the Spirit; the mean indeed is simple. But the
-cause why that which in the rational conclusion is merely three-fold,
-passes in nature to the four-fold, rests in what is natural, because
-what in thought is immediately the one, becomes separate in Nature.
-But in order that in Nature the opposition should exist as opposition,
-it must itself be a twofold, and thus, when we count, we have four.
-This also takes place in the conception of God, for when we apply
-it to the world, we have nature as mean and the existent spirit as
-the way of return for nature: when the return is made, this is the
-absolute Spirit. This living process, this separation and unifying of
-differences, is the living God.
-
-Plato says further: “Through this unity the visible and tangible world
-has been made. And it comes to pass by God’s having given to it these
-elements entire and unseparated, that it is perfect, and unaffected by
-age and disease. For old age and disease only arise from a body’s being
-worked upon by a superabundance of such elements from without. But
-here this is not so, for the world contains those elements entirely in
-itself, and nothing can come to it from without. The world is spherical
-in form,” (as it was to Parmenides and the Pythagoreans) “as being
-most perfect, and as containing all others in itself; it is perfectly
-smooth, since for it there is nothing outside, and it requires no
-limbs.” Finitude consists in this, that a distinction as regards
-something else is an externality to some other object. In the Idea we
-certainly have determination, limitation, difference, other-being, but
-it is at the same time dissolved, contained, gathered together, in the
-one. Thus it is a difference through which no finitude arises, seeing
-that it likewise is sublated. Finitude is thus in the infinite itself,
-and this is, indeed, a great thought. “God gave the world the most
-appropriate motion of all the seven, being that which harmonizes best
-with mind and consciousness, motion in a circle; the other six He took
-away from it and liberated it from their variations”[50] (movements
-backwards and forwards). This is only a popular way of putting it.
-
-We read further: “Since God wished to make the world a God, He gave it
-soul, and this was placed in the centre and diffused through the whole,
-which was also surrounded by it externally; and in this way He brought
-to pass the self-sufficing existence which required no other, and which
-needed no other friendship or acquaintance than itself. Through these
-means God created the world as a blessed God.” We may say that here,
-where the world is a totality through the world-soul, we first have the
-knowledge of the Idea; for the first time this newly-begotten God,
-as the mean and identity, is the true absolute. That first God which
-was only goodness, is, on the contrary, a mere hypothesis, and hence
-neither determined nor self-determining. “Now though we have spoken of
-the soul last,” Plato goes on, “it does not for that reason come last;
-for this is merely our manner of speech. The soul is the ruler, the
-king, and the body is its subject.” It is only Plato’s naïvety which
-ascribes the reversal of the order of the two to a manner of speech.
-What here appears as contingent is really necessary—that is, to begin
-with the immediate and then come to the concrete. We must likewise
-adopt this method, but with the consciousness that when we begin with
-determinations such as Being, or God, Space, Time, &c., we speak of
-them in an immediate manner, and this content, in accordance with its
-nature, is at first immediate, and consequently undetermined in itself.
-God, for example, with whom we begin as an immediate, is proved only at
-the last, and then, indeed, as the true first. Thus we can, as already
-remarked, (p. 72) show Plato’s confusion of mind in such presentations;
-but it depends entirely on what Plato’s standard of truth is.
-
-Plato further shows us the nature of the Idea in one of the most
-famous and profound of passages, where in the essence of the soul he
-recognizes again the very same idea that he also expressed as the
-essence of the corporeal. For he says: “The soul is created in the
-following way: Of the indivisible and unchangeable and also of the
-divisible which is corporeal, God made a third kind of intermediate
-essence, which partook of the nature of the same and of the nature of
-the other or diverse.” (The divisible is to Plato likewise the other
-as such, or in itself, and not of anything else.) “And God in like
-manner made the soul a sort of intermediate between the indivisible
-and the divisible.” Here the abstract determinations of the one which
-is identity, of the many or non-identical, which is opposition and
-difference, once more appear. If we say: “God, the Absolute, is the
-identity of the identical and non-identical,” a cry is raised of
-barbarism and scholasticism. Those who speak of it so still hold Plato
-in high esteem, and yet it was thus that he determined the truth. “And
-taking these three elements as separate, God mingled them all into one
-Idea, because he forcibly compressed the incongruous nature of the
-other into the same.”[51] This is undoubtedly the power of the Notion,
-which posits the many, the separate, as the ideal, and that is also the
-force applied to the understanding when anything is placed before it.
-
-Plato now describes how the self-identical, as itself a moment, and
-the other or matter, and the third, the apparently dissoluble union
-which has not returned into the first unity—which three were originally
-separated—have now, in simple reflection into self and resumption of
-that beginning, been degraded into moments. “Mingling the identical
-and the other with the essence (οὐσία),” the third moment, “and making
-them all one, God again divided this whole into as many parts was
-as fitting.”[52] Since this substance of the soul is identical with
-that of the visible world, the one whole is for the first time the
-now systematized substance, the true matter, the absolute element
-which is internally divided, an enduring and unseparable unity of the
-one and many; and no other essence must be demanded. The manner and
-mode of the division of this subjectivity contain the famous Platonic
-numbers, which doubtless originally pertain to the Pythagoreans, and
-respecting which both ancients and moderns, and even Kepler himself
-in his _Harmonia mundi_, have taken much pains, but which no one has
-properly understood. To understand would mean two things, and in
-the first place, the recognition of their speculative significance,
-their Notion. But, as already remarked of the Pythagoreans (Vol.
-I. p. 224), these distinctions of number give only an indefinite
-conception of difference, and that only in the earlier numbers; where
-the relationships become more complicated, they are quite incapable of
-designating them more closely. In the second place, because of their
-being numbers, they express, as differences of magnitude, differences
-in what is sensuous only. The system of apparent magnitude—and it is
-in the heavenly system that magnitude appears most purely and freely,
-liberated from what is qualitative—must correspond to them. But
-these living number-spheres are themselves systems composed of many
-elements—both of the magnitude of distance and of velocity and mass. No
-one of these elements, taken as a succession of simple numbers, can be
-likened to the system of heavenly spheres, for the series corresponding
-to this system can, as to its members, contain nothing else than the
-system of all these moments. Now if the Platonic numbers were also
-the elements of each system such as this, it would not be only this
-element which would have to be taken into account, for the relationship
-of moments which become distinguished in movement has to be conceived
-of as a whole, and is the true object of interest and reason. What we
-have to do is to give briefly the main points as matter of history;
-we have the most thorough treatment of it given us by Böckh “On the
-Constitution of the World-Soul in the Timæus of Plato,” in the third
-volume of the Studies of Daub and Creuzer (p. 26 _et seq._).
-
-The fundamental series is very simple: “God first took one part out
-of the whole; then the second, the double of the first; the third is
-one and a half times as many as the second, or three times the first;
-the next is double the second; the fifth is three times the third;
-the sixth is eight times the first; the seventh is twenty-seven times
-greater than the first.” Hence the series is: 1; 2; 3; 4 = 2²; 9 = 3²;
-8 = 2³; 27 = 3³. “Then God filled up the double and triple intervals”
-(the relations 1 : 2 and 1 : 3) “by again abstracting portions from
-the whole. These parts he placed in the intervals in such a way that
-in each interval there were two means, the one exceeding and exceeded
-by the extremes in the same ratio, the other being that kind of mean
-which by an equal number exceeds and is exceeded by the extremes.” That
-is, the first is a constant geometric relationship, and the other is
-an arithmetical. The first mean, brought about through the quadration,
-is thus in the relation 1 : 2, for example, the proportion 1 : √̅2
-: 2; the other is in the same relation, the number 1½. Hereby new
-relations arise which are again in a specially given and more difficult
-method inserted into that first, but this is done in such a way that
-everywhere something has been left out, and the last relation of number
-to number is 256 : 243, or 2^8 : 3^5.
-
-Much progress is not, however, made with these number-relations, for
-they do not present much to the speculative Notion. The relationships
-and laws of nature cannot be expressed by these barren numbers; they
-form an empirical relation which does not constitute the basis of
-the proportions of nature. Plato now says: “God divided this entire
-series lengthways into two parts which he set together crosswise like
-an X, and he bent their ends into a circular form and comprehended
-them in a uniform motion—forming an inner circle and an outer—and he
-called the motion of the outer circle the motion of the same, and
-that of the inner the motion of the diverse, giving supremacy to the
-former, and leaving it intact. But the inner motion he again split
-into seven orbits after the same relations; three of these he made to
-move with equal velocity, and four with unequal velocity to the three
-and to one another. This is the system of the soul within which all
-that is corporeal is formed; the soul is the centre, it penetrates
-the whole and envelopes it from without and moves in itself. Thus
-it has the divine beginning of a never-ceasing and rational life in
-itself.”[53] This is not quite devoid of confusion, and from it we
-can only grasp the general fact that as to Plato with the idea of the
-corporeal universe that of the soul enters in as the all-embracing
-and simple, to him the essence of the corporeal and of the soul is
-unity in difference. This double essence, posited in and for itself
-in difference, becomes systematized within the one in many moments,
-which are, however, movements; thus this reality and that essence both
-pertain to this whole in the antithesis of soul and body, and this
-again is one. Mind is what penetrates all, and to it the corporeal is
-opposed as truly as that it itself is mind.
-
-This is a general description of the soul which is posited in the
-world and reigns over it; and in as far as the substantial, which is
-in matter, is similar to it, their inherent identity is asserted. The
-fact that in it the same moments which constitute its reality are
-contained, merely signifies that God, as absolute Substance, does not
-see anything other than Himself. Plato hence describes the relation
-of soul to objective reality thus: it, if it touches any of the
-moments, whether dispersed in parts or indivisible, is stirred in all
-its powers to declare the sameness and the difference of that or some
-other thing, and how, where, and when, the individual is related to
-the other and to the universal. “Now when the orbit of the sensuous,
-moving in its due course, imparts knowledge of itself to its whole
-soul” (where the different orbits of the world’s course show themselves
-to correspond with the inwardness of mind) “true opinions and beliefs
-arise. But when the soul applies itself to the rational and the orbit
-of the self-identical makes itself known, thought is perfected into
-knowledge.”[54] This is the essential reality of the world as of the
-inherently blessed God; here the Idea of the whole is for the first
-time perfected, and, in accordance with this Idea, the world first
-makes its appearance. What had hitherto appeared was the reality of the
-sensuous only and not the world as sensuous, for though Plato certainly
-spoke before of fire, &c. (p. 75), he there gave only the reality of
-the sensuous; he would hence have done better to have omitted these
-expressions. In them we have the reason for its appearing as if Plato
-had here begun to consider from the beginning that of which he has
-already treated (_supra_, p. 72). For since we must begin from the
-abstract in order to reach the true and the concrete, which first
-appears later on (_supra_, p. 79), this last, when it has been found,
-has the appearance and form of a new commencement, particularly in
-Plato’s loose style.
-
-Plato now goes on further, for he calls this divine world the pattern
-which is in thought (νοητόν) alone, and always in self-identity; but
-he again places this whole in opposition to itself, so that there is
-a second, the copy of the first, the world, which has origination
-and is visible. This second is the system of the heavenly movement,
-the first is the eternally living. The second, which has origination
-and becoming within it, cannot be made perfectly like the first, the
-eternal Idea. But it is made a self-moving image of the eternal that
-remains in the unity; and this eternal image that moves rhythmically,
-after the manner of numbers, is what we call time. Plato says of it
-that we are in the habit of calling the ‘was’ and ‘will be’ parts of
-time, and we transfer these indications of change which operate in
-time, into absolute essence. But the true time is eternal, or the
-present. For the substance can neither become older nor younger, and
-time, as the immediate image of the eternal, has neither the future nor
-the present in its parts. Time is ideal, like space, not sensuous, but
-the immediate mode in which mind comes forth in objective form, the
-sensuous non-sensuous. The real moments of the principle of absolute
-movement in what is temporal, are those in which changes appear. “From
-the mind and will of God in the creation of time, there arose the sun,
-moon, and five other stars which are called the planets, and which
-serve to distinguish and preserve the relations of time.”[55] For in
-them the numbers of time are realized. Thus the heavenly movement, as
-the true time, is the image of the eternal which yet remains in unity,
-_i.e._ it is that in which the eternal retains the determination of the
-‘same.’ For everything is in time, that is, in negative unity which
-does not allow anything to root itself freely in itself, and thus to
-move and to be moved according to chance.
-
-But this eternal is also in the determinateness of the other reality,
-in the Idea of the self-changing and variable principle whose universal
-is matter. The eternal world has a likeness in the world which belongs
-to time, but opposed to this there is a second world where change
-really dwells. The ‘same’ and the ‘other’ are the most abstract opposes
-that we hitherto have had. The eternal world as posited in time has
-thus two forms—the form of similarity and the form of differentiality,
-of variability. The three moments as they appear in the last sphere,
-are, in the first place, simple essence which is begotten, which has
-arisen, or determinate matter; secondly the place in which it is
-begotten, and thirdly that in which what is begotten has its pattern.
-Plato gives them thus: “Essence (ὄν), place, and generation.” We thus
-have the conclusion in which space is the mean between individual
-generation and the universal. If we now oppose this principle to time
-in its negativity, the mean is this principle of the ‘other’ as the
-universal principle—“a receiving medium like a mother”—an essence which
-contains everything, gives to everything an independent subsistence and
-the power to do as is desired. This principle is destitute of form, yet
-capable of receiving all forms, the universal principle of all that
-appears different; it is the false passive matter that we understand
-when we speak of it—the relative substantial, existence generally, but
-external existence here, and only abstract Being-for-self. Form is in
-our reflection distinguished from it, and this, Plato tells us, first
-comes into existence through the mother. In this principle we have
-what we call the phenomenal, for matter is just this subsistence of
-individual generation, in which division is posited. But what appears
-herein is not to be posited as the individual of earthly existence, but
-is to be apprehended as the universal in such determinateness. Since
-matter, as the universal, is the principle of all that is individual,
-Plato in the first place reminds us that we cannot speak of these
-sensuous things—fire, water, earth, air, &c. (which thus once more come
-before us here); for hereby they are expressed as a fixed determination
-which remains as such—but what remains is only their universality, or
-they, as universal, are only the fiery, earthly, &c.[56]
-
-Plato further expounds the determinate reality of these sensuous
-things, or their simple determinateness. In this world of change form
-is figure in space; for as in the world, which is the immediate image
-of the eternal, time is the absolute principle, here the absolute
-ideal principle is pure matter as such, _i.e._ the existence of space.
-Space is the ideal essence of this phenomenal world, the mean which
-unites positivity and negativity, but its determinations are figures.
-And, indeed, of the different dimensions of space, it is surface which
-must be taken as true reality, for it is the absolute mean between
-the line and point in space, and in its first real limitation it
-is three; similarly the triangle is first among the figures, while
-the circle has no limit as such within it. Here Plato comes to the
-deduction of configuration, in which the triangle forms the principle;
-thus triangles form the essence of sensuous things. Hence he says, in
-Pythagorean fashion, that the compounding and uniting together of
-these triangles, as their Idea pertaining to the mean, constitutes
-once more, according to the original number-relations, the sensuous
-elements. This is the principle, but how Plato determines the figures
-of the elements, and the union of the triangles, I refrain from
-considering.[57]
-
-From this point Plato passes to a system of Physics and Physiology into
-which we have no intention of following him. It is to be regarded as a
-first, childlike endeavour to understand sensuous phenomena in their
-manifold character, but as yet it is superficial and confused. Sensuous
-manifestations, such as the parts and limbs of the body, are here
-taken into consideration, and an account of this is given intermingled
-with thoughts which resemble our formal explanations, and in which the
-Notion really vanishes. We have to remember the elevated nature of
-the Idea, as being the main point of excellence in his explanations,
-for, as far as the realization of the same is concerned, Plato merely
-felt and expressed it to be a necessity. Speculative thought is often
-recognizable, but, for the most part, consideration is directed to
-quite external modes of explanation, such as that of end. The method
-of treating Physics is a different one from ours, for while with Plato
-empirical knowledge is still deficient, in modern Physics, on the other
-hand, the deficiency is found in the Idea. Plato, although he does
-not seem to conform to our theory of Physics, ignoring as it does the
-theory of life, and though he proceeds to talk in a childlike way in
-external analogies, yet in certain cases gives utterance to very deep
-perceptions, which would be well worthy of our consideration if the
-contemplation of nature as living had any place with our physicists.
-His manner of relating the physiological to the physical would be as
-interesting. Certain portions of his system contain a general element,
-such as his representation of colours, and from this he goes on to
-more general considerations. For when Plato begins to talk on this
-subject, he says of the difficulty of distinguishing and recognizing
-the individual, that in the contemplation of nature there are “two
-causes to be distinguished, the one necessary and the other divine. The
-divine must be sought for in all things with the view of attaining to
-a blessed life” (this endeavour is an end in and for itself, and in it
-we find happiness) “in as far as our nature admits, but the necessary
-causes need be sought only for the sake of divine things, considering
-that without these necessary causes” (as conditions of knowledge) “we
-cannot know them.” Contemplation in accordance with necessity is the
-external contemplation of objects, their connection, relation, &c.
-“Of the divine, God Himself was the creator,” the divine belongs to
-that first eternal world—not as to one beyond, but to one now present.
-“But the creation and disposition of the mortal He committed to His
-offspring (γεννήμασι).” This is a simple way of passing from the
-divine to the finite and earthly. “Now they, imitating the divine,
-because they had received the immortal principle of a soul, fashioned
-a mortal body, and placed in this a soul of another nature, which was
-mortal. This mortal nature was subject to violent and irresistible
-affections—the first of these was pleasure, the greatest incitement to
-evil, and then pain which is the deterrent (φυγάς) from doing good;
-also rashness (θάῤῥος) and fear, two foolish counsellors; anger, hope,
-&c. These sensations all belong to the mortal soul. And that the
-divine might not be polluted more than necessary, the subordinate gods
-separated this mortal nature from the seat of the divine, and gave it
-a different habitation in another part of the body, placing the neck
-so as to be the isthmus and boundary between head and breast.” The
-sensations, affections, &c., dwell in the breast or in the heart (we
-place that which is immortal in the heart); the spiritual is in the
-head. But in order to make the former as perfect as might be, “they
-placed,” for instance, “as a supporter to the heart which was burnt
-with passion, the lung, soft and bloodless, and which had within it
-hollows like the pores of a sponge, in order that, receiving the breath
-and drink, it might cool the heart and allow of refreshment and an
-alleviation of the heat.”[58]
-
-What Plato says of the liver is specially worthy of notice. “Since the
-irrational part of the soul which desires eating and drinking does not
-listen to reason, God made the liver so that the soul might be inspired
-with terror by the power of thought which originates from reason, and
-which descends upon the liver as on a mirror, receiving upon it figures
-and giving back images. But if this part of the soul is once more
-assuaged, in sleep it participates in visions. For the authors of our
-being, remembering the command of their father to make the human race
-as good as they could, thus ordered our inferior parts in order that
-they also might obtain a measure of truth, and placed the oracle in
-them.” Plato thus ascribes divination to the irrational, corporeal part
-of man, and although it is often thought that revelation, &c., is by
-Plato ascribed to reason, this is a false idea; he says that there is a
-reason, but in irrationality. “Herein we have a conclusive proof that
-God has given the art of divination to the irrationality of man, for
-no man when in his wits, attains prophetic truth and inspiration, but
-when he receives the inspiration either his intelligence is enthralled
-by sleep or he is demented by some distemper or possession.” Thus Plato
-makes divination of a lower grade than conscious knowledge. “And when
-he has recovered his senses he has to remember and explain what he has
-received, for while he is demented, he cannot judge of it. The ancient
-saying is therefore very true, that only a man who has his wits can act
-or judge about himself or his own affairs.”[59] Plato is called the
-patron saint of mere possession, but, according to this, the assertion
-is entirely false. These are the principal points in Plato’s Philosophy
-of Nature.
-
-
-3. PHILOSOPHY OF MIND.
-
-We have already dealt generally from the theoretical side with the
-speculative nature of mind as yet unrealized, as well as with the
-highly important differences with respect to the kinds of knowledge
-(pp. 28-48). It must also be considered that we find in Plato as yet
-no developed consciousness of the organization of the theoretic mind,
-though certainly sensation, memory, &c., are distinguished by him from
-reason; these moments of the mind are, however, neither accurately
-discriminated, nor exhibited in their connection, so as to show the
-necessary relations between them. The only point of interest for us
-then in Plato’s philosophy of mind is his view of man’s moral nature;
-and this real, practical side of consciousness is Plato’s greatest
-glory, and hence must now be specially dealt with by us. Its form
-certainly does not suggest that Plato gave himself much trouble to
-discover a supreme moral principle, as it is now called, which, for
-the very reason that it is supposed to be all-embracing, has in it a
-certain lack of content. Neither did he trouble himself about a natural
-right, which is but a trivial abstraction foisted on to the real
-practical existence, the right; but it is of man’s moral nature that he
-treats in the Republic. Man’s moral nature seems to us to have little
-to do with the State; to Plato, however, the reality of mind—that is,
-of mind as opposed to nature—appeared in its highest truth as the
-organization of a state which, as such, is essentially moral; and he
-recognized that the moral nature (free will in its rationality) comes
-to its right, to its reality, only in an actual nation.
-
-We must further remark that in the Republic Plato introduces the
-investigation of his subject with the object of showing what justice
-(δικαιοσύνη) is. After much discussion has taken place, and several
-definitions of justice have been taken into consideration only to
-be rejected, Plato at last says in his simple way: “The present
-investigation is very like the case of a man who is required to read
-small handwriting at a distance; if it were observed that the same
-letters were to be seen at a shorter distance and of a larger size,
-he would certainly prefer to read first the letters where they were
-written larger, and then would be able to read more easily the small
-letters also. The same plan should be followed now with justice.
-Justice is not only in the individual, but also in the state, and the
-state is greater than the individual; justice is therefore imprinted on
-states in larger characters, and is more easily recognizable.” (This is
-different from what the Stoics say of the wise man.) “It is therefore
-preferable to consider justice as it is to be found in the state.”[60]
-By making this comparison Plato transforms the question anent justice
-into an investigation of the state; it is a very simple and graceful
-transition, though it seems arbitrary. It was great force of insight
-that really led the ancients to the truth; and what Plato brings
-forward as merely simplifying the difficulty, may, in fact, be said
-to exist in the nature of the thing. For it is not convenience which
-leads him to this position, but the fact that justice can be carried
-out only in so far as man is a member of a state, for in the state
-alone is justice present in reality and truth. Justice, not as the
-understanding, but as mind in its striving to realize itself, is the
-existence of freedom here and now, the actuality of the self-conscious,
-intelligent existence in and at home with itself and possessing
-activity—just as in property, for instance, I place my freedom in
-this particular thing. But the principle of the state again is the
-objective reality of justice, the reality in which the whole mind is
-present and not only the knowledge of myself as this individual. For
-as the free and reasonable will determines itself, there are laws of
-freedom; but these laws are nothing else than state-laws, for the
-Notion of the state implies the existence of a reasoning will. Thus
-laws have force in the state, and are there matter of practice and of
-custom; but because self-will is also there in its immediacy, they are
-not only matter of custom, but must also be a force operating against
-arbitrary self-will, and showing itself in the courts of justice and in
-governments. Thus Plato, in order to discern the features of justice,
-with the instinct of reason fixes his attention on their manner of
-representation in the state.
-
-Justice in itself is ordinarily represented by us in the form of a
-natural right, right in a condition of nature; such a condition of
-nature is, however, a direct moral impossibility. That which is in
-itself is, by those who do not attain to the universal, held to be
-something natural, as the necessary moments of the mind are held to
-be innate ideas. The natural is rather what should be sublated by the
-mind, and the justice of the condition of nature can only emerge as
-the absolute injustice of the mind. In contrast with the state, which
-is the real spirit, the spirit in its simple and as yet unrealized
-Notion is the abstract implicitude; this Notion must of course precede
-the construction of its reality; it is this which is conceived of
-as a condition of nature. We are accustomed to take our start from
-the fiction of a condition of nature, which is truly no condition of
-mind, of reasonable will, but of animals among themselves: wherefore
-Hobbes has justly remarked that the true state of nature is a war of
-every man against his neighbour. This implicitude of the mind is at
-the same time the individual man, for in the ordinary conception the
-universal separates itself from the particular, as if the particular
-were absolutely and in and for itself what it certainly is, and the
-Universal did not make it that which it is in truth—as if this were not
-its essence, but as if the individual element were the most important.
-The fiction of a state of nature starts from the individuality of the
-person, his free will, and his relation to other persons according
-to this free will. Natural justice has thus been a term applied to
-that which is justice in the individual and for the individual; and
-the condition of society and of the state has been recognized only
-as a medium for the individual person, who is the chief end and
-object. Plato, in direct contrast with this, lays as his foundation
-the substantial, the universal, and he does this in such a way that
-the individual as such has this very universal as his end, and the
-subject has his will, activity, life and enjoyment in the state, so
-that it may be called his second nature, his habits and his customs.
-This moral substance which constitutes the spirit, life and Being of
-individuality, and which is its foundation, systematizes itself into a
-living, organic whole, and at the same time it differentiates itself
-into its members, whose activity signifies the production of the whole.
-
-This relation of the Notion to its reality certainly did not come into
-consciousness with Plato, and thus we do not find in him a philosophic
-method of construction, which shows first the absolute Idea, then
-the necessity, inherently existent, for its realization, and this
-realization itself. The judgment that has been delivered respecting
-Plato’s Republic therefore is that Plato has therein given a so-called
-ideal for the constitution of a state; this has become proverbial as a
-_sobriquet_, in the sense that this conception is a chimera, which may
-be mentally conceived of—and in itself, as Plato describes it, it is
-doubtless excellent and true—that it is also capable of being carried
-out, but only on the condition that men should be of an excellence
-such as may possibly be present among the dwellers in the moon, but
-that it is not realizable for men like those on the earth. But since
-men most be taken as they are, this ideal cannot be realized by reason
-of men’s wickedness; and to frame such an ideal is therefore altogether
-idle.
-
-As to this, the first remark to be made is that in the Christian
-world in general there passes current an ideal of a perfect man which
-certainly cannot be carried out in the great body of a nation. We may,
-perhaps, see it realized in monks or Quakers, or other similar pious
-folk, but a set of melancholy specimens such as these could never
-form a nation, any more than lice or parasitic plants could exist for
-themselves, or otherwise than on an organic body. If such men were to
-constitute a nation, there would have to be an end of this lamb-like
-gentleness, this vanity which occupies itself exclusively with its
-own individual self, which pets and pampers itself, and ever has the
-image and consciousness of its own excellence before its eyes. For
-life in the universal and for the universal demands, not that lame and
-cowardly gentleness, but gentleness combined with a like measure of
-energy, and which is not occupied with itself and its own sins, but
-with the universal and what is to be done for it. They before whose
-eyes that false ideal floats of course find men to be always compassed
-with weakness and depravity, and never find that ideal realized. For
-they raise into importance the veriest trifles, which no reasonable
-man would give heed to; and they think such weaknesses and defects
-are present even when they overlook them. But we need not esteem this
-forbearance to be generosity; for it rather implies a perception on
-their part that from what they call weakness and defect proceeds their
-own destruction, which comes to pass from their making such defects
-of importance. The man who has them is immediately through himself
-absolved from them, in so far as he makes nothing of them. The crime
-is a crime only when they are real to him, and his destruction is in
-holding them to be something real. Such an ideal must therefore not
-stand in our way, whatever be the fairness of its form, and this even
-when it does not appear exactly as it does to monks and Quakers, but,
-for instance, when it is the principle of renouncing sensuous things,
-and abandoning energy of action, which principle must bring to nought
-much that would otherwise be held of value. It is contradictory to try
-to keep intact all our relationships, for in those that otherwise hold
-good there always is a side where opposition is encountered. Moreover,
-what I have already said regarding the relation between philosophy
-and the state (p. 23 _et seq._) shows that the Platonic ideal is not
-to be taken in this sense. When an ideal has truth in itself through
-the Notion, it is no chimera, just because it is true, for the truth
-is no chimera. Such an idea is therefore nothing idle and powerless,
-but the real. It is certainly permissible to form wishes, but when
-pious wishes are all that a man has in regard to the great and true,
-he may be said to be godless. It is just as if we could do nothing,
-because everything was so holy and inviolable, or as if we refused to
-be anything definite, because all that is definite has its defects. The
-true ideal is not what ought to be real, but what is real, and the only
-real; if an ideal is held to be too good to exist, there must be some
-fault in the ideal itself, for which reality is too good. The Platonic
-Republic would thus be a chimera, not because excellence such as it
-depicts is lacking to mankind, but because it, this excellence, falls
-short of man’s requirements. For what is real, is rational. The point
-to know, however, is what exactly is real; in common life all is real,
-but there is a difference between the phenomenal world and reality. The
-real has also an external existence, which displays arbitrariness and
-contingency, like a tree, a house, a plant, which in nature come into
-existence. What is on the surface in the moral sphere, men’s action,
-involves much that is evil, and might in many ways be better; men will
-ever be wicked and depraved, but this is not the Idea. If the reality
-of the substance is recognized, the surface where the passions battle
-must be penetrated. The temporal and transitory certainly exists,
-and may cause us trouble enough, but in spite of that it is no true
-reality, any more than the particularity of the subject, his wishes and
-inclinations, are so.
-
-In connection with this observation, the distinction is to be called
-to mind which was drawn when we were speaking above (pp. 84, 88)
-of Plato’s Philosophy of Nature: the eternal world, as God holy in
-Himself, is reality, not a world above us or beyond, but the present
-world looked at in its truth, and not as it meets the senses of those
-who hear, see, &c. When we thus study the content of the Platonic
-Idea, it will become clear that Plato has, in fact, represented Greek
-morality according to its substantial mode, for it is the Greek
-state-life which constitutes the true content of the Platonic Republic.
-Plato is not the man to dabble in abstract theories and principles; his
-truth-loving mind has recognized and represented the truth, and this
-could not be anything else than the truth of the world he lived in, the
-truth of the one spirit which lived in him as well as in Greece. No man
-can overleap his time, the spirit of his time is his spirit also; but
-the point at issue is, to recognize that spirit by its content.
-
-On the other hand, a constitution that would be perfect in respect
-to one nation, is to be regarded as not, perhaps, suitable for every
-nation. Thus, when it is said that a true constitution does not do
-for men as they now are, we must no doubt keep in mind that the more
-excellent a nation’s constitution is, it renders the nation also so
-much the more excellent; but, on the other hand, since the morals
-commonly practised form the living constitution, the constitution in
-its abstraction is nothing at all in its independence; it must relate
-itself to the common morality, and be filled with the living spirit
-of the people. It can, therefore, certainly not be said that a true
-constitution suits any and every nation; and it is quite the case that
-for men as they are—for instance, as they are Iroquois, Russians,
-French—not every constitution is adapted. For the nation has its place
-in history. But as the individual man is trained in the state, that
-is, as individuality is raised into universality, and the child grows
-into a man, so is every nation trained; or barbarism, the condition in
-which the nation is a child, passes over into a rational condition.
-Men do not remain at a standstill, they alter, as likewise do their
-constitutions. And the question here is, What is the true constitution
-which the nation must advance towards; just as it is a question which
-is the true science of mathematics or of anything else, but not
-whether children or boys should possess this science, as they must
-rather be first so educated that they may be capable of understanding
-it. Thus the true constitution stands before the nation of history,
-so that it may advance towards it. Every nation in course of time
-makes such alterations in its existing constitution as will bring it
-nearer to the true constitution. The nation’s mind itself shakes off
-its leading-strings, and the constitution expresses the consciousness
-of what it is in itself,—the form of truth, of self-knowledge. If a
-nation can no longer accept as implicitly true what its constitution
-expresses to it as the truth, if its consciousness or Notion and its
-actuality are not at one, then the nation’s mind is torn asunder.
-Two things may then occur. First, the nation may either by a supreme
-internal effort dash into fragments this law which still claims
-authority, or it may more quietly and slowly effect changes on the yet
-operative law, which is, however, no longer true morality, but which
-the mind has already passed beyond. In the second place, a nation’s
-intelligence and strength may not suffice for this, and it may hold
-to the lower law; or it may happen that another nation has reached
-its higher constitution, thereby rising in the scale, and the first
-gives up its nationality and becomes subject to the other. Therefore
-it is of essential importance to know what the true constitution is;
-for what is in opposition to it has no stability, no truth, and passes
-away. It has a temporary existence, but cannot hold its ground; it
-has been accepted, but cannot secure permanent acceptance; that it
-must be cast aside, lies in the very nature of the constitution. This
-insight can be reached through Philosophy alone. Revolutions take place
-in a state without the slightest violence when the insight becomes
-universal; institutions, somehow or other, crumble and disappear, each
-man agrees to give up his right. A government must, however, recognize
-that the time for this has come; should it, on the contrary, knowing
-not the truth, cling to temporary institutions, taking what—though
-recognized—is unessential, to be a bulwark guarding it from the
-essential (and the essential is what is contained in the Idea), that
-government will fall, along with its institutions, before the force of
-mind. The breaking up of its government breaks up the nation itself;
-a new government arises,—or it may be that the government and the
-unessential retain the upper hand.
-
-Thus the main thought which forms the groundwork of Plato’s Republic is
-the same which is to be regarded as the principle of the common Greek
-morality, namely, that established morality has in general the relation
-of the substantial, and therefore is maintained as divine. This is
-without question the fundamental determination. The determination which
-stands in contrast to this substantial relation of the individual
-to established morality, is the subjective will of the individual,
-reflective morality. This exists when individuals, instead of being
-moved to action by respect and reverence for the institutions of the
-state and of the fatherland, from their own convictions, and after
-moral deliberation, come of themselves to a decision, and determine
-their actions accordingly. This principle of subjective freedom is
-a later growth, it is the principle of our modern days of culture:
-it, however, entered also into the Greek world, but as the principle
-of the destruction of Greek state-life. It was looked on as a crime,
-because the spirit, political constitution, and laws of the Greeks
-were not, and could not be calculated to admit of the rise of this
-principle within them. Because these two elements were not homogeneous,
-traditional and conventional morality in Greece was overthrown. Plato
-recognized and caught up the true spirit of his times, and brought it
-forward in a more definite way, in that he desired to make this new
-principle an impossibility in his Republic. It is thus a substantial
-position on which Plato takes his stand, seeing that the substantial
-of his time forms his basis, but this standpoint is at the same time
-relative only, in so far as it is but a Greek standpoint, and the later
-principle is consciously banished. This is the universal of Plato’s
-ideal of the state, and it is from this point of view that we must
-regard it. Investigations as to whether such a state is possible, and
-the best possible, which start from quite modern points of view, can
-only lead us astray. In modern states we have freedom of conscience,
-according to which every individual may demand the right of following
-out his own interests; but this is excluded from the Platonic idea.
-
-a. I will now indicate more fully the main features, in so far as
-they possess philosophic interest. Though Plato represents what the
-state is in its truth, yet this state has a limit, which we shall learn
-to know, namely, that the individual—in formal justice—is not opposed
-to this universality, as in the dead constitution of the ideal states
-founded on the theory of legal right. The content is but the whole;
-the nature of the individual, no doubt, but as reflecting itself into
-the universal, not unbending, or as having absolute validity; so that
-practically the state and the individual are the same in essence.
-Because Plato thus takes his start from that justice which implies
-that the just man exists only as a moral member of the state, in
-dealing with his subject in greater detail, in order to show how this
-reality of the substantial mind is produced, he in the first place
-opens up before us the organism of the moral commonwealth, _i.e._ the
-differences which lie in the Notion of moral substance. Through the
-development of these moments it becomes living and existing, but these
-moments are not independent, for they are held in unity. Plato regards
-these moments of the moral organism under three aspects, first, as
-they exist in the state as classes; secondly, as virtues, or moments
-in morality; thirdly, as moments of the individual subject, in the
-empirical actions of the will. Plato does not preach the morality of
-reflection, he shows how traditional morality has a living movement in
-itself; he demonstrates its functions, its inward organism. For it is
-inner systematization, as in organic life, and not solid, dead unity,
-like that of metals, which comes to pass by means of the different
-functions of the organs which go to make up this living, self-moving
-unity.
-
-α. Without classes, without this division into great masses, the state
-has no organism; these great distinctions are the distinction of the
-substantial. The opposition which first comes before us in the state
-is that of the universal, in the form of state life and business, and
-the individual, as life and work for the individual; these two fields
-of activity are so distinct that one class is assigned to the one, and
-another to the other. Plato further cites three systems of reality
-in the moral, the functions (αα) of legislation, counsel, in short,
-of diligence and foresight in the general behalf, in the interest
-of the whole as such; (ββ) of defence of the commonwealth against
-foes from without; (γγ) of care for the individual, the supplying of
-wants, agriculture, cattle-rearing, the manufacture of clothing and
-utensils, the building of houses, &c. Speaking generally, this is quite
-as it should be, and yet it appears to be rather the satisfaction
-of external necessities, because such wants are found without being
-developed out of the Idea of mind itself. Further, these distinct
-functions are allotted to different systems, being assigned to a
-certain number of individuals specially set apart for the purpose,
-and this brings about the separate classes of the state, as Plato is
-altogether opposed to the superficial conception that one and the
-same must be everything at one time. He accordingly represents three
-classes, (αα) that of the governors, men of learning and wisdom, (ββ)
-that of the warriors, (γγ) that of the producers of necessaries,
-the husbandmen and handicraftsmen. The first he also speaks of as
-guardians (φύλακας), who are really philosophically educated statesmen,
-possessing true knowledge; they have the warriors to work on their
-behalf (ἐπικούρους τε καὶ βοηθούς), but in such a way that there is no
-line of separation between the civil and military classes, both being
-united,[61] and the most advanced in years are the guardians.[62]
-Although Plato does not deduce this division of the classes, they
-follow from the constitution of the Platonic state, and every state is
-necessarily a system within itself of these systems. Plato then passes
-on to particular determinations, which are in some measure trifling,
-and might with advantage have been dispensed with; for instance,
-among other things, he goes so far as to settle for the highest rank
-their special titles, and he states what should be the duties of the
-nurses.[63]
-
-β. Then Plato points out that the moments which are here realized in
-the classes, are moral qualities which are present in individuals,
-and form their true essence, the simple ethical Notion divided into
-its universal determinations. For he states as the result of this
-distinction of the classes that through such an organism all virtues
-are present in the commonwealth; he distinguishes four of these,[64]
-and they have been named cardinal virtues.
-
-αα. Wisdom (σοφία) or knowledge appears as the first virtue; such a
-state will be wise and good in counsel, not because of the various
-kinds of knowledge therein present which have to do with the many
-particular ordinary occupations falling to the multitude, such as the
-trade of blacksmith, and the tillage of the soil (in short, what we
-should call skill in the industrial arts, and in finance). The state is
-called wise, by reason of the true knowledge which is realized in the
-presiding and governing class, who advise regarding the whole state,
-and decide upon the policy that is best, both at home and in relation
-to foreign states. This faculty of perception is properly the peculiar
-possession of the smallest class.[65]
-
-ββ. The second virtue is courage (ἀνδρία) which Plato defines as a firm
-opinion about what may justly and lawfully be considered an object
-of fear, courage which, in its strength of purpose, remains unshaken
-either by desires or pleasures. To this virtue corresponds the class of
-the warriors.[66]
-
-γγ. The third virtue is temperance (σωφροσύνη), the mastery over the
-desires and passions, which like a harmony pervades the whole; so that,
-whether understanding, or strength, or numbers, or wealth, or anything
-else be regarded, the weaker and the stronger work together for one and
-the same object, and are in agreement one with another. This virtue
-therefore is not, like wisdom and courage, confined to one part of
-the state, but like a harmony it is shared by governors and governed
-alike, and is the virtue of all classes.[67] Notwithstanding that this
-temperance is the harmony in which all work towards one end, it is yet
-peculiarly the virtue of the third class, to whom it is allotted to
-procure the necessaries of life by work, although at the first glance
-the one does not appear to have much correspondence with the other.
-But this virtue is present precisely when no moment, no determination
-or particularity isolates itself; or, more closely viewed in a moral
-aspect, it is when no want asserts its reality and thus becomes a
-crime. Now work is just this moment of activity concentrating itself on
-the particular, which nevertheless goes back into the universal, and
-is for it. Therefore, if this virtue is universal, it yet has special
-application to the third class, which at first is the only one to be
-brought into harmony, as it has not the absolute harmony which the
-other classes possess in themselves.
-
-δδ. Finally, the fourth virtue is justice, which was what Plato began
-by considering. This, as right-doing, is to be found in the state
-when each individual does only one kind of work for the state, that
-work for which by the original constitution of his nature he is best
-fitted; so that in this way each man is not a jack-of-all-trades, but
-all have their special work, young and old, women and children, bond
-and free, handicraftsmen, rulers and subjects. The first remark we make
-on this is, that Plato here places justice on a level with the other
-moments, and it thus appears as one of the four determinations. But
-he now retracts this statement and makes it justice which first gives
-to wisdom, courage and temperance the power to exist at all, and when
-they have once come into existence, the power to continue. This is the
-reason of his also saying that justice will be met with independently,
-if only the other virtues spoken of are forthcoming.[68] To express it
-more definitely, the Notion of justice is the foundation, the Idea of
-the whole, which falls into organic divisions, so that every part is
-only, as it were, a moment in the whole, and the whole exists through
-it. Thus the classes or qualities spoken of are nothing else than the
-moments of this whole. Justice is only the general and all-pervading
-quality; but at the same time it implies the independence of every
-part, to which the state gives liberty of action.
-
-In the second place, it is clear from what he says, that Plato did not
-understand by justice the rights of property, the meaning which the
-term commonly bears in jurisprudence, but rather this, that the mind
-in its totality makes for itself a law as evidence of the existence of
-its freedom. In a highly abstract sense my personality, my altogether
-abstract freedom, is present in property. To explain what comes under
-this science of law, Plato considers on the whole superfluous (De
-Republica, IV. p. 425 Steph.; p. 176 Bekk.). To be sure we find him
-giving laws concerning property, police regulations, &c., “But,” he
-says, “to impose laws about such matters on men of noble character does
-not repay the trouble.” In truth, how can we expect to find divine laws
-in what contains contingencies alone? Even in the Laws he considers
-ethics chiefly, though he gives a certain amount of attention to the
-rights of property. But as justice, according to Plato, is really
-the entire being, which presents itself to the individual in such a
-way that each man learns to do the work he is born to do as well as
-it can be done, and does it, it is only as determined individuality
-that man reaches what is law for him; only thus does he belong to the
-universal spirit of the state, coming in it to the universal of himself
-as a “this.” While law is a universal with a definite content, and
-thus a formal universal only, the content in this case is the whole
-determined individuality, not this or that thing which is mine by the
-accident of possession; what I properly hold as my own is the perfected
-possession and use of my nature. To each particular determination
-justice gives its rights, and thus leads it back into the whole; in
-this way it is by the particularity of an individual being of necessity
-developed and brought into actuality, that each man is in his place
-and fulfils his vocation. Justice, therefore, according to its true
-conception, is in our eyes freedom in the subjective sense, because
-it is the attainment of actuality by the reason, and seeing that this
-right on the part of liberty to attain to actuality is universal,
-Plato sets up justice as the determination of the whole, indicating
-that rational freedom comes into existence through the organism of the
-state,—an existence which is then, as necessary, a mode of nature.
-
-γ. The particular subject, as subject, has in the same way these
-qualities in himself; and these moments of the subject correspond with
-the three real moments of the state. That there is thus one rhythm, one
-type, in the Idea of the state, forms for Plato’s state a great and
-grand basis. This third form, in which the above moments are exhibited,
-Plato characterizes in the following manner. There manifest themselves
-in the subject, first of all sundry wants and desires (ἐπιθυμίαι),
-like hunger and thirst, each of which has something definite as its
-one and only object. Work for the satisfaction of desires corresponds
-to the calling of the third class. But, secondly there is also at
-the same time to be found in the individual consciousness something
-else which suspends and hinders the gratification of these desires,
-and has the mastery over the temptation thus to gratify them; this is
-reasonableness (λόγος). To this corresponds the class of rulers, the
-wisdom of the state. Besides these two ideas of the soul there is a
-third, anger (θυμός), which on one side is allied to the desires, but
-of which it is just as true that it resists the desires and takes the
-side of reason. “It may happen that a man has done wrong to another,
-and suffers hunger and cold at the hands of him whom he considers
-entitled to inflict them upon him; in this case, the nobler he is,
-the less will his anger be excited. But it may also happen that he
-suffers a wrong; if this is the case, he boils and chafes, and takes
-the side of what he believes to be justice, and endures hunger and
-cold and other hardships, and overcomes them, and will not desist from
-the right until he conquers or dies, or is calmed down by reason, as
-a shepherd quiets his dog.” Anger corresponds with the class of the
-brave defenders in the state; as these grasp their weapons in behalf
-of reason within the state, so does anger take the part of reason, if
-it has not been perverted by an evil up-bringing. Therefore wisdom in
-the state is the same as in the individual, and this is true of courage
-also. For the rest, temperance is the harmony of the several moments
-of what pertains to nature; and justice, as in external matters it
-consists in each doing his own duty, so, in the inner life, it consists
-in each moment of the mind obtaining its right, and not interfering in
-the affairs of the others, but leaving them to do as they will.[69]
-We have thus the deduction of three moments, where the middle place
-between universality and particularity is filled by anger in its
-independence and as directed against the objective: it is the freedom
-which turns back within itself and acts negatively. Even here, where
-Plato has no consciousness of his abstract ideas, as he has in the
-Timæus, this of a truth is inwardly present to him, and everything is
-moulded thereby. This is given as the plan according to which Plato
-draws up the great whole. To fill up the outlines is a mere detail,
-which in itself has no further interest.
-
-b. In the second place Plato indicates the means of maintaining the
-state. As, speaking generally, the whole commonwealth rests on common
-morality as the minds of individuals grown into nature, this question
-is asked: How does Plato arrange that everyone takes as his own that
-form of activity for which he is specially marked out, and that it
-presents itself as the moral acting and willing of the individual,—that
-everyone, in harmony with temperance, submits to filling this his
-post? The main point is to train the individuals thereto. Plato would
-produce this ethical quality directly in the individuals, and first
-and foremost in the guardians, whose education is therefore the most
-important part of the whole, and constitutes the very foundation. For
-as it is to the guardians themselves that the care is committed of
-producing this ethical quality through maintenance of the laws, in
-these laws special attention must be given to the guardians’ education;
-after that also to the education of the warriors. The condition of
-affairs in the industrial class causes the state but little anxiety,
-“for though cobblers should prove poor and worthless, and should be
-only in appearance what they ought to be, that is no great misfortune
-for the state.”[70] The education of the presidents should, however,
-be carried on chiefly by means of philosophic science, which is the
-knowledge of the universal and absolute. Plato in this passes over the
-particular means of education, religion, art, science. Further on he
-speaks again and more in detail on the question of how far music and
-gymnastic are to be permitted as means. But the poets Homer and Hesiod
-he banishes from his state, because he thinks their representations
-of God unworthy.[71] For then began in real earnest an inquiry into
-the belief in Jupiter and the stories told by Homer, inasmuch as such
-particular representations had been taken as universal maxims and
-divine laws. At a certain stage of education childish tales do no harm;
-but were they to be made the foundation of the truth of morality,
-as present law, the case would be different. The extermination of
-the nations which we read of in the writings of the Israelites, the
-Old Testament, might for instance be taken as a standard of national
-rights, or we might try to make a precedent of the numerous base
-acts committed by David, the man of God, or of the horrors which
-the priesthood, in the person of Samuel, practised and authorized
-against Saul. Then it would be high time to place these records on a
-lower level, as something past, something merely historical. Plato
-would further have preambles to the laws, wherein citizens would be
-admonished as to their duties, and convinced that these exist, &c.[72]
-They also should be shown how to choose that which is most excellent,
-in short, to choose morality.
-
-But here we have a circle: the public life of the state subsists by
-means of morality, and, conversely, morality subsists by means of
-institutions. Morals cannot be independent of institutions, that is,
-institutions cannot be brought to bear on morals through educational
-establishments or religion only. For institutions must be looked on as
-the very first condition of morality, for this is the manner in which
-institutions are subjective. Plato himself gives us to understand
-how much contradiction he expects to find. And even now his defect
-is commonly considered to lie in his being too idealistic, while his
-real deficiency consists in his not being ideal enough. For if reason
-is the universal force, it is essentially spiritual; thus to the
-realm of the spiritual belongs subjective freedom, which had already
-been held up as a principle in the philosophy of Socrates. Therefore
-reason ought to be the basis of law, and so it is, on the whole. But,
-on the other hand, conscience, personal conviction,—in short, all the
-forms of subjective freedom—are essentially therein contained. This
-subjectivity at first, it is true, stands in opposition to the laws and
-reason of the state-organism as to the absolute power which desires
-to appropriate to itself—through the external necessity of wants, in
-which, however, there is absolute reason—the individual of the family.
-Individual conscience proceeds from the subjectivity of free-will,
-connects itself with the whole, chooses a position for itself, and
-thus makes itself a moral fact. But this moment, this movement of
-the individual, this principle of subjective freedom, is sometimes
-ignored by Plato, and sometimes even intentionally disparaged, because
-it proved itself to be what had wrought the ruin of Greece; and he
-considers only how the state may best be organized, and not subjective
-individuality. In passing beyond the principle of Greek morality, which
-in its substantial liberty cannot brook the rise of subjective liberty,
-the Platonic philosophy at once grasps the above principle, and in so
-doing proceeds still farther.
-
-c. In the third place, in regard to the exclusion of the principle
-of subjective freedom, this forms a chief feature in the Republic
-of Plato, the spirit of which really consists in the fact, that all
-aspects in which particularity as such has established its position,
-are dissolved in the universal,—all men simply rank as man in general.
-
-α. It specially harmonizes with this particular quality of excluding
-the principle of subjectivity, that Plato in the first place does
-not allow individuals to choose their own class; this we demand as
-necessary to freedom. It is not, however, birth which marks off the
-different ranks, and determines individuals for these; but everyone is
-tested by the governors of the state, who are the elders of the first
-class, and have the education of individuals in their hands. According
-as anyone has natural ability and talents, these elders make choice
-and selection, and assign each man to a definite occupation.[73] This
-seems in direct contradiction to our principle, for although it is
-considered right that to a certain class there should belong a special
-capacity and skill, it always remains a matter of inclination which
-class one is to belong to; and with this inclination, as an apparently
-free choice, the class makes itself for itself. But it is not permitted
-that another individual should prescribe as to this, or say, for
-example: “Because you are not serviceable for anything better, you are
-to be a labourer.” Everyone may make the experiment for himself; he
-must be allowed to decide regarding his own affairs as subject in a
-subjective manner, by his own free will, as well as in consideration of
-external circumstances; and nothing must therefore be put in his way if
-he says, for instance: “I should like to apply myself to study.”
-
-β. From this determination it further follows that Plato (De Republica,
-III. pp. 416, 417 Steph.; pp. 162-164 Bekk.) in like manner altogether
-abolished in his state the principle of private property. For in it
-individuality, the individual consciousness, becomes absolute; or the
-person is looked on as implicit, destitute of all content. In law,
-as such, I rank as “this” implicitly and explicitly. All rank thus,
-and I rank only because all rank, or I rank only as universal; but
-the content of this universality is fixed particularity. When in a
-question of law we have to do with law, as such, to the judges of the
-case it matters not a whit whether this or that man actually possesses
-the house, and likewise the contending parties think nothing of the
-possession of the thing for which they strive, but of right for right’s
-sake, (as in morality duty is done for duty’s sake): thus a firm hold
-is kept of the abstraction, and from the content of reality abstraction
-is made. But Being to Philosophy is no abstraction, but the unity of
-the universal and reality, or its content. The content has therefore
-weight only in as far as it is negatively posited in the universal;
-thus only as returning into it, and not absolutely. In so far as I
-use things,—not in so far as I have them merely in my possession,
-or as they have worth for me as existent, as definitely fixed on
-me,—they stand in living relation to me. With Plato, then, those of the
-other class (cf. _supra_, p. 101, note) carry on handicrafts, trade,
-husbandry, and procure what will satisfy the general requirements,
-without acquiring personal property by means of their work, for they
-are all one family, wherein each has his appointed occupation; but the
-product of the work is common, and he receives as much as he requires
-both of his own and of the general product. Personal property is a
-possession which belongs to me as a certain person, and in which my
-person as such comes into existence, into reality; on this ground Plato
-excludes it. It remains, however, unexplained how in the development of
-industries, if there is no hope of acquiring private property, there
-can be any incentive to activity; for on my being a person of energy
-very much depends my capacity for holding property. That an end would
-be put to all strifes and dissensions and hatred and avarice by the
-abolition of private property, as Plato thinks, (De Republica, V. p.
-464 Steph.; pp. 243, 244 Bekk.) may very well be imagined in a general
-way; but that is only a subordinate result in comparison with the
-higher and reasonable principle of the right of property: and liberty
-has actual existence only so far as property falls to the share of the
-person. In this way we see subjective freedom consciously removed by
-Plato himself from his state.
-
-γ. For the same reason Plato also abolishes marriage, because it is a
-connection in which persons of opposite sex, as such, remain mutually
-bound to one another, even beyond the mere natural connection. Plato
-does not admit into his state family life—the particular arrangement
-whereby a family forms a whole by itself,—because the family is nothing
-but an extended personality, a relationship to others of an exclusive
-character within natural morality,—which certainly is morality,
-but morality of such a character as belongs to the individual as
-particularity. According to the conception of subjective freedom,
-however, the family is just as necessary, yea, sacred to the individual
-as is property. Plato, on the contrary, causes children to be taken
-away from their mothers immediately after birth, and has them gathered
-together in a special establishment, and reared by nurses taken from
-among the mothers who gave them birth; he has them brought up in
-common, so that no mother can possibly recognize her child. There are
-certainly to be marriage celebrations, and each man is to have his
-particular wife, but in such a way that the intercourse of man and wife
-does not pre-suppose a personal inclination, and that it should not be
-their own pleasure which marks out individuals for one another. The
-women should bear children from the twentieth to the fortieth year, the
-men should have wives from the thirtieth to the fifty-fifth year. To
-prevent incest, all the children born at the time of a man’s marriage
-shall be known as his children.[74] The women, whose natural vocation
-is family life, are by this arrangement deprived of their sphere. In
-the Platonic Republic it therefore follows that as the family is broken
-up, and the women no longer manage the house, they are also no longer
-private persons, and adopt the manners of the man as the universal
-individual in the state. And Plato accordingly allows the women to take
-their part like the men in all manly labours, and even to share in
-the toils of war. Thus he places them on very nearly the same footing
-as the men, though all the same he has no great confidence in their
-bravery, but stations them in the rear only, and not even as reserve,
-but only as _arrière-garde_, in order that they may at least inspire
-the foe with terror by their numbers, and, in case of necessity, hasten
-to give aid.[75]
-
-These are the main features of the Platonic Republic, which has as
-its essential the suppression of the principle of individuality; and
-it would appear as though the Idea demanded this, and as if this were
-the very point on which Philosophy is opposed to the ordinary way
-of looking at things, which gives importance to the individual, and
-thus in the state, as also in actualized mind, looks on the rights of
-property, and the protection of persons and their possessions, as the
-basis of everything that is. Therein, however, lies the very limit
-of the Platonic Idea—to emerge only as abstract idea. But, in fact,
-the true Idea is nothing else than this, that every moment should
-perfectly realize and embody itself, and make itself independent,
-while at the same time, in its independence, it is for mind a thing
-sublated. In conformity with this Idea, individuality must fully
-realize itself, must have its sphere and domain in the state, and yet
-be resolved in it. The element of the state is the family, that is,
-the family is the natural unreasoning state; this element must, as
-such, be present. Then the Idea of the state constituted by reason
-has to realize all the moments of its Notion in such a way that they
-become classes, and the moral substance divides itself into portions,
-as the bodily substance is separated into intestines and organs, each
-of which lives on in a particular way of its own, yet all of which
-together form only one life. The state in general, the whole, must
-finally pervade all. But in exactly the same way the formal principle
-of justice, as abstract universality of personality with individual
-Being as its existent content, must pervade the whole; one class,
-nevertheless, specially belongs to it. There must, then, also be a
-class in which property is held immediately and permanently, the
-possession of the body and the possession of a piece of land alike;
-and in the next place, a class where acquisition is continually going
-on, and possession is not immediate, as in the other, but property is
-ever fluctuating and changing. These two classes the nation gives up
-as a part of itself to the principle of individuality, and allows
-rights to reign here, permitting the constant, the universal, the
-implicit to be sought in this principle, which really is a principle of
-variability. This principle must have its full and complete reality,
-it must indeed appear in the shape of property. We have here for the
-first time the true, actual mind, with each moment receiving its
-complete independence, and the mind itself attaining to being-another
-in perfect indifference of Being. Nature cannot effect this production
-of independent life in her parts, except in the great system.[76] This
-is, as we shall elsewhere see, the great advance of the modern world
-beyond the ancient, that in it the objective attains to greater, yea,
-to absolute independence, but for the very same reason returns with all
-the greater difficulty into the unity of the Idea.
-
-The want of subjectivity is really the want of the Greek moral idea.
-The principle which became prominent with Socrates had been present up
-to this time only in a more subordinate capacity; now it of necessity
-became an even absolute principle, a necessary moment in the Idea
-itself. By the exclusion of private property and of family life, by
-the suspension of freedom in the choice of the class, _i.e._ by the
-exclusion of all the determinations which relate to the principle of
-subjective freedom, Plato believes he has barred the doors to all the
-passions; he knew very well that the ruin of Greek life proceeded
-from this, that individuals, as such, began to assert their aims,
-inclinations, and interests, and made them dominate over the common
-mind. But since this principle is necessary through the Christian
-religion—in which the soul of the individual is an absolute end, and
-thus has entered into the world as necessary in the Notion of the
-mind—it is seen that the Platonic state-constitution cannot fulfil
-what the higher demands of a moral organism require. Plato has not
-recognized the knowledge, wishes, and resolutions of the individual,
-nor his self-reliance, and has not succeeded in combining them with
-his Idea; but justice demands its rights for this just as much as
-it requires the higher resolution of the same, and its harmony with
-the universal. The opposite to Plato’s principle is the principle of
-the conscious free will of individuals, which in later times was by
-Rousseau more especially raised to prominence: the theory that the
-arbitrary choice of the individual, the outward expression of the
-individual, is necessary. In this the principle is carried to the
-very opposite extreme, and has emerged in its utter one-sidedness.
-In opposition to this arbitrariness and culture there must be the
-implicitly and explicitly universal, that which is in thought, not as
-wise governor or morality, but as law, and at the same time as my Being
-and my thought, _i.e._ as subjectivity and individuality. Men must have
-brought forth from themselves the rational along with their interests
-and their passions, just as it must enter into reality through the
-necessities, opportunities, and motives that impel them.
-
-There is still another celebrated side of the Platonic philosophy which
-may be considered, namely æsthetics, the knowledge of the beautiful. In
-respect to this, Plato has in like manner seized the one true thought,
-that the essence of the beautiful is intellectual, the Idea of reason.
-When he speaks of a spiritual beauty, he is to be understood in the
-sense that beauty, as beauty, is sensuous beauty, which is not in some
-other place—no one knows where; but what is beautiful to the senses
-is really the spiritual. The case is the same here as it is with his
-Idea. As the essence and truth of phenomena in general is the Idea,
-the truth of phenomenal beauty must also be this Idea. The relation
-to the corporeal, as a relation of the desires, or of pleasure and
-utility, is no relation to it as the beautiful; it is a relation to
-it as the sensuous alone, or a relation of particular to particular.
-But the essence of the beautiful is just the simple Idea of reason
-present to the sensuous apprehension as a thing; the content of the
-thing is nothing else than this.[77] The beautiful is essentially of
-spiritual nature; it is thus not merely a sensuous thing, but reality
-subject to the form of universality, to the truth. This universal
-does not, however, retain the form of universality, but the universal
-is the content whose form is the sensuous mode; and therein lies the
-determination of the beautiful. In science, the universal has again the
-form of the universal or of the Notion; but the beautiful appears as an
-actual thing—or, when put into words, as a popular conception, in which
-mode the material exists in mind. The nature, essence, and content of
-the beautiful is recognized and judged by reason alone, as its content
-is the same as that of Philosophy. But because reason appears in the
-beautiful in material guise, the beautiful ranks below knowledge, and
-Plato has for this very reason placed the true manifestation of reason
-in knowledge, where it is spiritually manifested.
-
-This may be regarded as the kernel of Plato’s philosophy. His
-standpoint is: first, the contingent form of speech, in which men
-of noble and unfettered nature converse without other interest than
-that of the theory which is being worked out; secondly, led on by the
-content, they reach the deepest Notions and the finest thoughts, like
-jewels on which one stumbles, if not exactly in a sandy desert, yet at
-least upon the arid path; in the third place, no systematic connection
-is to be found, though one interest is the source of all; in the fourth
-place, the subjectivity of the Notion is lacking throughout; but in the
-fifth place, the substantial Idea forms the principle.
-
-Plato’s philosophy had two stages through which it of necessity
-developed and worked its way up to a higher principle. The universal
-which is in reason had first to fall into two divisions opposed to
-each other in the most direct and unmitigated contradiction, in the
-independence of the personal consciousness which exists for itself:
-thus in the New Academy self-consciousness goes back into itself,
-and becomes a species of scepticism—the negative reason, which
-turns against all that is universal, and fails to find the unity
-of self-consciousness and the universal, coming accordingly to a
-standstill at that point. But, in the second place, the Neo-Platonists
-constitute the return, this unity of self-consciousness and the
-absolute essence; to them God is directly present in reason, reasoned
-knowledge itself is the Divine Spirit, and the content of this
-knowledge is the Being of God. Both of these we shall consider later.
-
-
-B. ARISTOTLE.
-
-Here we leave Plato, and we do so with regret. But seeing that we
-pass to his disciple, Aristotle, we fear that it behoves us to enter
-even more into detail, since he was one of the richest and deepest
-of all the scientific geniuses that have as yet appeared—a man whose
-like no later age has ever yet produced. Because we still possess so
-large a number of his works, the extent of the material at hand is
-proportionately greater; unfortunately, however, I cannot give to
-Aristotle the amount of attention that he deserves. For we shall have
-to confine ourselves to a general view of his philosophy, and simply
-remark on one particular phase of it, viz. in how far Aristotle in his
-philosophy carried out what in the Platonic principle had been begun,
-both in reference to the profundity of the ideas there contained, and
-to their expansion; no one is more comprehensive and speculative than
-he, although his methods are not systematic.
-
-As regards the general character of Aristotle’s writings, he may be
-said to have extended his attention to the whole circle of human
-conceptions, to have penetrated all regions of the actual universal,
-and to have brought under the subjection of the Notion both their
-riches and their diversitude. For most of the philosophic sciences
-have to render thanks to him both for their characterization and first
-commencement. But although in this way Science throughout falls into
-a succession of intellectual determinations of determinate Notions,
-the Aristotelian philosophy still contains the profoundest speculative
-Notions. Aristotle proceeds in reference to the whole in the same
-way as in the individual case. But a general view of his philosophy
-does not give us the impression of its being in construction a
-self-systematized whole, of which the order and connection pertain
-likewise to the Notion; for the parts are empirically selected
-and placed together in such a way that each part is independently
-recognized as a determinate conception, without being taken into the
-connecting movement of the science. We need not try to demonstrate
-necessity from the standpoint of the philosophy of that time. But
-although Aristotle’s system does not appear to be developed in its
-parts from the Notion, and its parts are merely ranged side by side,
-they still form a totality of truly speculative philosophy.
-
-One reason for treating of Aristotle in detail rests in the fact that
-no philosopher has had so much wrong done him by the thoughtless
-traditions which have been received respecting his philosophy, and
-which are still the order of the day, although for centuries he was
-the instructor of all philosophers. For to him views are ascribed
-diametrically opposite to his philosophy. And while Plato is much read,
-the treasures contained in Aristotle have for centuries, and until
-quite modern times, been as good as unknown, and the falsest prejudices
-reign respecting him. Almost no one knows his speculative and logical
-works; in modern times more justice has been done to his writings
-regarding nature, but not to his philosophic views. For instance, there
-is a quite generally held opinion that the Aristotelian and Platonic
-philosophies are directly opposed, the one being idealistic and the
-other realistic, and that, indeed, in the most trivial sense. For Plato
-is said to have made the ideal his principle, so that the inward
-idea creates from itself; according to Aristotle, on the contrary,
-we are told that the soul is made a _tabula rasa_, receiving all its
-determinations quite passively from the outer world; and his philosophy
-is thus mere empiricism—Locke’s philosophy at its worst. But we shall
-see how little this really is the case. In fact Aristotle excels Plato
-in speculative depth, for he was acquainted with the deepest kind of
-speculation—idealism—and in this upholds the most extreme empirical
-development. Quite false views respecting Aristotle even now exist in
-France. An example of how tradition blindly echoes opinions respecting
-him, without having observed from his works whether they are justified
-or not, is the fact that in the old Æsthetics the three unities of the
-drama—action, time and place—were held to be _règles d’Aristote, la
-saine doctrine_. But Aristotle speaks (Poet. c. 8 et 5)[78] only of the
-unity of treatment, or very occasionally of the unity of time; of the
-third unity, that of place, he says nothing.
-
-As regards Aristotle’s life, he was born at Stagira, a Thracian town
-on the Strymonian Gulf, but a Greek colony. Thus, though a Thracian,
-he was by birth a Greek. This Greek colony fell, however, like The
-rest of the country, under the rule of Philip of Macedon. The year of
-Aristotle’s birth is the first of the 99th Olympiad (384 B.C.), and
-if Plato was born in the third year of the 87th Olympiad (430 B.C.),
-Aristotle must have been forty-six years younger than he. His father
-Nicomachus was physician to the Macedonian king, Amyntas, the father
-of Philip. After the death of his parents, whom he lost early, he
-was brought up by a certain Proxenus, to whom he was ever grateful;
-and during all his life he held the memory of this friend in such
-high esteem, that he honoured it by erecting statues to him. He also
-requited Proxenus for the education given him, by later on bringing
-up his son Nicanor, adopting him as his own son and making him his
-heir. In the seventeenth year of his age Aristotle came to Athens,
-and remained there twenty years in company with Plato.[79] He thus
-had the best possible opportunity of becoming thoroughly acquainted
-with Plato’s philosophy, and therefore, if we are told that he did not
-understand it (Vol. I p. 167), this is shown, by the evident facts
-of the case, to be an arbitrary and quite unfounded assumption. As
-regards the relation of Plato to Aristotle, and particularly as regards
-the fact that Plato did not select Aristotle as his successor in the
-Academy, but chose Speusippus, a near relative, instead, a number of
-idle and contradictory anecdotes have come to us from Diogenes (V. 2).
-If the continuation of the Platonic school was designed to express
-the hope that the philosophy of Plato, as comprehended by himself,
-was to be there satisfactorily maintained, Plato could certainly not
-designate Aristotle as his successor, and Speusippus was the right
-man to be selected. However, Plato had nevertheless Aristotle as his
-successor, for Aristotle understood Philosophy in Plato’s sense, though
-his philosophy was deeper and more worked out, and thus he carried it
-further. Displeasure at being thus passed over is said to have been the
-cause of Aristotle’s leaving Athens after Plato’s death, and living
-for three years with Hermias, the Tyrant of Atarneus in Mysia, who had
-been a disciple of Plato along with Aristotle, and who had then struck
-up a close friendship with the latter. Hermias, an independent prince,
-was, together with other absolute Greek princes and some Republics,
-brought under the subjection of a Persian satrap in Asia Minor. Hermias
-was even sent as prisoner to Artaxerxes in Persia, and he at once
-caused him to be crucified. In order to avoid a similar fate, Aristotle
-fled with his wife Pythias, the daughter of Hermias, to Mitylene, and
-lived there for some time. He, however, erected a statue to Hermias in
-Delphi, with an inscription which has been preserved. From it we know
-that it was by cunning and treachery that he came under the power of
-the Persians. Aristotle also honoured his name in a beautiful hymn on
-Virtue, which has likewise come down to us.[80]
-
-From Mitylene he was (Ol. 109, 2; 343 B.C.) summoned by Philip of
-Macedon to undertake the education of Alexander, who was then fifteen
-years old. Philip had already invited him to do this in the well-known
-letter that he addressed to him just after Alexander’s birth: “Know
-that a son is born to me, but I thank the gods less that they have
-given him to me, than that they have caused him to be born in your
-time. For I hope that your care and your wisdom will make him worthy
-of me and of his future kingdom.”[81] It certainly would appear to be
-a brilliant historic destiny to be the instructor of an Alexander, and
-Aristotle at this court enjoyed the favour and esteem of Philip and
-of Olympias in the highest degree. What became of Aristotle’s pupil
-is known to all, and the greatness of Alexander’s mind and deeds, as
-also his enduring friendship, are the best witnesses of the success,
-as also of the spirit of this up-bringing, if Aristotle required such
-testimony. Alexander’s education utterly refuted the common talk about
-the practical uselessness of speculative philosophy. Aristotle had in
-Alexander another and worthier pupil than Plato found in Dionysius.
-Plato’s great interest was his Republic, the ideal of a state; he
-enters into relation with a person through whom it might be carried
-out; the individual was thus to him a medium only, and in so far
-indifferent to him. With Aristotle, on the other hand, this purpose was
-not present, he merely had the simple individual before him; and his
-end was to bring up and to develop the individuality as such. Aristotle
-is known to be a profound, thorough, and abstract metaphysician, and it
-is evident that he meant seriously with Alexander. That Aristotle did
-not follow with Alexander the ordinary superficial method of educating
-princes, might be confidently expected from the earnestness of one who
-well knew what was truth and true culture. It is also evident from
-the circumstance that Alexander, while in the midst of his conquests
-in the heart of Asia, when he heard that Aristotle had made known his
-acroamatic doctrines in speculative (metaphysical) writings, wrote him
-a reproachful letter, in which he said that he should not have made
-known to the common people what the two had worked out together. To
-this Aristotle replied that, though published, they were really just as
-much unpublished as before.[82]
-
-This is not the place to estimate Alexander as an historic personage.
-What can be ascribed in Alexander’s education to Aristotle’s
-philosophic instruction is the fact that what was natural to him, the
-inherent greatness of his mental disposition, acquired inward freedom
-also, and became elevated into the perfect, self-conscious independence
-which we see in his aims and deeds. Alexander attained to that perfect
-certainty of himself which the infinite boldness of thought alone
-gives, and to an independence of particular and limited projects, as
-also to their elevation into the entirely universal end of bringing
-about in the world a social life and intercourse of a mutual kind,
-through the foundation of states which were free from contingent
-individuality. Alexander thus carried out the plan which his father
-had already conceived, which was, at the head of the Greeks, to avenge
-Europe upon Asia, and to subject Asia to Greece; so that as it was in
-the beginning of Greek history that the Greeks were united, and that
-only for the Trojan war, this union likewise brought the Greek world
-proper to an end. Alexander thereby also avenged the faithlessness and
-cruelty perpetrated by the Persians on Aristotle’s friend Hermias. But
-Alexander further disseminated Greek culture over Asia, in order to
-elevate into a Greek world this wild medley of utter barbarism, bent
-solely on destruction, and torn by internal dissensions, these lands
-entirely sunk in indolence, negation, and spiritual degeneracy. And if
-it be said that he was merely a conqueror who was unable to establish
-an enduring kingdom, because his kingdom at his death once more fell to
-pieces, we must acknowledge that, from a superficial view of the case,
-this is true, as his family did not retain their rule; Greek rule was,
-however, maintained. Thus Alexander did not found an extensive kingdom
-for his family, but he founded a kingdom of the Greek nation over Asia;
-for Greek culture and science have since his time taken root there.
-The Greek kingdoms of Asia Minor, and particularly of Egypt, were for
-centuries the home of science; and their influence may have extended
-as far as to India and to China. We certainly do not know definitely
-whether the Indians may not have obtained what is best in their
-sciences in this way, but it is probable that at least the more exact
-portion of Indian astronomy came to them from Greece. For it was from
-the Syrian kingdom, stretching into Asia Minor as far as to a Greek
-kingdom in Bactria, that there was doubtless conveyed to the interior
-of India and China, by means of Greek colonies migrating thither, the
-meagre scientific knowledge which has lingered there like a tradition,
-though it has never flourished. For the Chinese, for example, are
-not skilful enough to make a calendar of their own, or to think for
-themselves. Yet they exhibited ancient instruments unsuited to any work
-done by them, and the immediate conjecture was that these had come from
-Bactria. The high idea that men had of the sciences of the Indians and
-of the Chinese hence is false.
-
-According to Ritter (Erdkunde, Vol. II. p. 839, of the first edition),
-Alexander did not set out merely with a view of conquering, but with
-the idea that he was the Lord. I do not think that Aristotle placed
-this notion, which was connected with another Oriental conception, in
-the mind of Alexander. The other idea is that in the East the name of
-Alexander still flourishes as Ispander, and as Dul-k-ar-nein, _i.e._
-the man with two horns, just as Jupiter Ammon is an ancient Eastern
-hero. The question would now be whether the Macedonian kings did not,
-through their descent from the ancient race of Indian heroes, claim
-to rule this land; by this the progress of Dionysius from Thrace to
-India could likewise be explained; whether the “knowledge of this was
-not the real and fundamental religious idea inspiring the young hero’s
-soul when, before his journey to Asia, he found on the lower Ister
-(Danube) Indian priestly states where the immortality of the soul was
-taught, and when, certainly not without the counsel of Aristotle, who,
-through Plato and Pythagoras, was initiated into Indian wisdom, he
-began the march into the East, and first of all visited the Oracle of
-Ammonium (now Siwah), and then destroyed the Persian kingdom and burnt
-Persepolis, the old enemy of Indian religion, in order to take revenge
-upon it for all the violence exercised through Darius on the Buddhists
-and their co-religionists.” This is an ingenious theory, formed from a
-thorough investigation of the connection which exists between Oriental
-and European ideas from the higher point of view in history. But, in
-the first place, this conjecture is contrary to the historical basis
-on which I take my stand. Alexander’s expedition has quite another
-historic, military, and political character than this, and had not much
-to do with his going to India; it was, on the face of it, an ordinary
-conquest. In the second place, Aristotle’s metaphysic and philosophy
-is far from recognizing any such foolish and extravagant imaginations.
-The elevation of Alexander in the Oriental mind into an acknowledged
-hero and god, which followed later, is, in the third place, not matter
-for surprise; the Dalai-Lama is still thus honoured, and God and man
-are never so very far asunder. Greece likewise worked its way to the
-idea of a God becoming man, and that not as a remote and foreign image,
-but as a present God in a godless world: Demetrius Phalereus and
-others were thus soon after honoured and worshipped in Athens as God.
-Was the infinite not also now transplanted into self-consciousness?
-Fourthly, the Buddhists did not interest Alexander, and in his Indian
-expedition they do not appear; the destruction of Persepolis is,
-however, sufficiently justified as a measure of Greek vengeance for the
-destruction by Xerxes of the temples in Greece, especially in Athens.
-
-While Alexander accomplished this great work—for he was the greatest
-individual at the head of Greece, he ever kept science and art in
-mind. Just as in modern times we have once more met with warriors
-who thought of science and of art in their campaigns, we also find
-that Alexander made an arrangement whereby whatever was discovered in
-the way of animals and plants in Asia should be sent to Aristotle,
-or else drawings and descriptions of the same. This consideration on
-Alexander’s part afforded to Aristotle a most favourable opportunity
-of collecting treasures for his study of nature. Pliny (Histor. natur.
-VIII., 17 ed. Bip.) relates that Alexander directed about a thousand
-men, who lived by hunting, fishing and fowling, the overseers of the
-zoological gardens, aviaries, and tanks of the Persian kingdom, to
-supply Aristotle with what was remarkable from every place. In this
-way Alexander’s campaign in Asia had the further effect of enabling
-Aristotle to found the science of natural history, and to be the
-author, according to Pliny, of a natural history in fifty parts.
-
-After Alexander commenced his journey to Asia, Aristotle returned to
-Athens, and made his appearance as a public teacher in the Lyceum,
-a pleasure-ground which Pericles had made for the exercising of
-recruits; it consisted of a temple dedicated to Apollo (Λύκειος), and
-shady walks (περίπατοι), which were enlivened by trees, fountains
-and colonnades. It was from these walks that his school received the
-name of Peripatetics, and not from any walking about on the part of
-Aristotle—because, it is said, he delivered his discourses usually
-while walking. He lived and taught in Athens for thirteen years. But
-after the death of Alexander there broke out a tempest which had, as
-it appeared, been long held back through fear of Alexander; Aristotle
-was accused of impiety. The facts are differently stated: amongst other
-things it is said that his hymn to Hermias and the inscription on the
-statue dedicated to him were laid to his charge. When he saw the storm
-gathering, he escaped to Chalcis in Eub\na, the present Negropont,
-in order, as he himself said, that the Athenians should not have an
-opportunity of once more sinning against Philosophy. There he died,
-in the next year, in the sixty-third year of his age, Ol. 114, 3 (322
-B.C.).[83]
-
-We derive Aristotle’s philosophy from his writings; but when we
-consider their history and nature, so far as externals are concerned,
-the difficulty of deriving a knowledge of his philosophy from them
-seems much increased. I cannot certainly enter into details regarding
-these last. Diogenes Laërtius (V. 21-27) mentions a very large
-number of them, but by their titles we do not always quite know
-which of those now in our possession are indicated, since the titles
-are entirely different. Diogenes gives the number of lines as four
-hundred and forty-five thousand, two hundred and seventy, and, if we
-count about ten thousand lines in a printer’s alphabet, this gives
-us forty-four alphabets. What we now have might perhaps amount to
-about ten alphabets, so that we have only about the fourth part left
-to us. The history of the Aristotelian manuscripts has been stated
-to be such that it would really seem impossible, or almost hopeless,
-that any one of his writings should have been preserved to us in its
-original condition, and not corrupted. Doubts regarding their genuine
-character could not in such circumstances fail to exist; and we can
-only wonder at seeing them come down to us even in the condition in
-which they are. For, as we have said, Aristotle made them known but
-little during his lifetime, and he left his writings to Theophrastus,
-his successor, with the rest of his immense library. This, indeed,
-is the first considerable library, collected as it was by means of
-personal wealth along with Alexander’s assistance, and hence it also
-reveals to us Aristotle’s learning. Later on, it came partially, or in
-some cases in duplicate, to Alexandria, and formed the basis of the
-Ptolemaic library, which, on the taking of Alexandria by Julius Cæsar,
-became a prey to fire. But of the manuscripts of Aristotle himself
-it is said that Theophrastus left them by will to a certain Neleus,
-from whom they came into the hands of ignorant men, who either kept
-them without care or estimation of their value, or else the heirs of
-Neleus, in order to save them from the Kings of Pergamus, who were
-very anxious to collect a library, hid them in a cellar, where they
-lay forgotten for a hundred and thirty years, and thus got into bad
-condition. Finally, the descendants of Theophrastus found them again
-after long search, and sold them to Apellicon of Teos, who restored
-what had been destroyed by worms and mould, but who did not possess
-the learning or the capacity so to do. Hence others went over them,
-filled up the blanks as they thought best, replaced what was damaged,
-and thus they were sufficiently altered. But still it was not enough.
-Just after Apellicon’s death, the Roman Sulla conquered Athens, and
-amongst the spoil carried off to Rome were the works of Aristotle. The
-Romans, who had just begun to become acquainted with Greek science and
-art, but who did not yet appreciate Greek philosophy, did not know how
-to profit from this spoil. A Greek, named Tyrannion, later on obtained
-permission to make use of and publish the manuscripts of Aristotle, and
-he prepared an edition of them, which, however, also bears the reproach
-of being inaccurate, for here they had the fate of being given by the
-dealers into the hands of ignorant copyists, who introduced a number of
-additional corruptions.[84]
-
-This is the way in which the Aristotelian philosophy has come to us.
-Aristotle certainly made known much to his contemporaries, that is to
-say, the writings in the Alexandrian library, but even those works do
-not seem to have been widely known. In fact, many of them are most
-corrupt, imperfect, and, as, for example, the Poetics, incomplete.
-Several of them, such as the Metaphysical treatises, seem to be patched
-up from different writings, so that the higher criticism can give rein
-to all its ingenuity, and, according to one clever critic, the matter
-may with much show of probability be decided in one particular way,
-while another ingenious person has a different explanation to oppose
-to this.[85] So much remains certain, that the writings of Aristotle
-are corrupt, and often both in their details and in the main, not
-consistent; and we often find whole paragraphs almost verbally
-repeated. Since the evil is so old, no real cure can certainly be
-looked for; however, the matter is not so bad as would appear from this
-description. There are many and important works which may be considered
-to be entire and uninjured, and though there are others corrupt here
-and there, or not well arranged, yet, as far as the essentials are
-concerned, no such great harm has been done as might appear. What we
-possess therefore places us in a sufficiently good position to form a
-definite idea of the Aristotelian philosophy, both as a whole, and in
-many of its details.
-
-But there is still an historic distinction to be noted. For there is
-an old tradition that Aristotle’s teaching was of a twofold nature
-and that his writings were of two different kinds, viz. esoteric or
-acroamatic and exoteric—a distinction which was also made by the
-Pythagoreans (Vol. I. p 202). The esoteric teaching was given within
-the Lyceum in the morning, the exoteric in the evening; the latter
-related to practice in the art of rhetoric and in disputation, as
-also to civic business, but the other to the inward and more profound
-philosophy, to the contemplation of nature and to dialectic proper.[86]
-This circumstance is of no importance; we see by ourselves which of
-his works are really speculative and philosophic, and which are rather
-empirical in character; but they are not to be regarded as antagonistic
-in their content, and as if Aristotle intended some for the people and
-others for his more intimate disciples.
-
-_a._ We have first to remark that the name Aristotelian philosophy is
-most ambiguous, because what is called Aristotelian philosophy has at
-different times taken very different forms. It first of all signifies
-Aristotelian philosophy proper. As regards the other forms of the
-Aristotelian philosophy, however, it had, in the second place, at the
-time of Cicero, and specially under the name of Peripatetic philosophy,
-more of the form of a popular philosophy, in which attention was
-principally directed to natural history and to morals (Vol. I. p. 479).
-This period does not appear to have taken any interest in working
-out and bringing to consciousness the deep and properly speaking
-speculative side of Aristotelian philosophy, and indeed with Cicero
-there is no notion of it present. A third form of this philosophy
-is the highly speculative form of the Alexandrine philosophy, which
-is also called the Neo-Pythagorean or Neo-Platonic philosophy, but
-which may just as well be called Neo-Aristotelian—the form as it is
-regarded and worked up by the Alexandrines, as being identical with
-the Platonic. An important signification of the expression, in the
-fourth place, is that which it had in the middle ages where, through
-insufficient knowledge, the scholastic philosophy was designated
-Aristotelian. The Scholastics occupied themselves much with it, but the
-form that the philosophy of Aristotle took with them cannot be held by
-us to be the true form. All their achievements, and the whole extent of
-the metaphysics of the understanding and formal logic which we discover
-in them, do not belong to Aristotle at all. Scholasticism is derived
-only from traditions of the Aristotelian doctrines. And it was not
-until the writings of Aristotle became better known in the West, that
-a fifth Aristotelian philosophy was formed, which was in part opposed
-to the Scholastic—it arose on the decline of scholasticism and with the
-revival of the sciences. For it was only after the Reformation that
-men went back to the fountainhead, to Aristotle himself. The sixth
-signification which Aristotelian philosophy bears, is found in false
-modern ideas and conceptions, such as those that we find in Tennemann,
-who is gifted with too little philosophic understanding to be able
-to grasp the Aristotelian philosophy (Vol. I. p. 113). Indeed, the
-general opinion of Aristotelian philosophy now held is that it made
-what is called experience the principle of knowledge.
-
-_b._ However false this point of view on the one hand is, the occasion
-for it may be found in the Aristotelian manner. Some particular
-passages to which in this reference great importance has been given,
-and which have been almost the only passages understood, are made use
-of to prove this idea. Hence we have now to speak of the character of
-the Aristotelian manner. Since in Aristotle, as we already said (p.
-118), we need not seek a system of philosophy the particular parts of
-which have been deduced, but since he seems to take an external point
-of departure and to advance empirically, his manner is often that
-of ordinary ratiocination. But because in so doing Aristotle has a
-quality, altogether his own, of being throughout intensely speculative
-in his manner, it is further signified that in the first place he
-has comprehended the phenomenal as a thinking observer. He has the
-world of appearance before himself complete and in entirety, and sets
-nothing aside, however common it may appear. All sides of knowledge
-have entered into his mind, all have interest for him, and he has
-thoroughly dealt with all. In the empirical details of a phenomenon
-abstraction may easily be lost sight of, and its application may be
-difficult: our progress may be one-sided, and we may not be able to
-reach the root of the matter at all. But Aristotle, because he looks at
-all sides of the universe, takes up all those units as a speculative
-philosopher, and so works upon them that the profoundest speculative
-Notion proceeds therefrom. We saw, moreover, thought first proceeding
-from the sensuous, and, in Sophistry, still exercising itself
-immediately in the phenomenal. In perception, in ordinary conception,
-the categories appear: the absolute essence, the speculative view of
-these elements, is always expressed in expressing perceptions. This
-pure essence in perception Aristotle takes up. When, in the second
-place, he begins conversely with the universal or the simple, and
-passes to its determination, this looks as if he were enumerating the
-number of significations in which it appears; and, after dealing with
-them all, he again passes all their forms in review, even the quite
-ordinary and sensuous. He thus speaks of the many significations that
-we find, for example, is the words οὐσία, ἀρχή, αἰτία, ὁμοῦ, &c. It
-is in some measure wearisome to follow him in this mere enumeration,
-which proceeds without any necessity being present, and in which the
-significations, of which a list is given, manifest themselves as
-comprehended only in their essence, or in that which is common to all,
-and not in their determinations; and thus the comprehension is only
-external. But, on the one hand, this mode presents a complete series of
-the moments, and on the other, it arouses personal investigation for
-the discovery of necessity. In the third place, Aristotle takes up the
-different thoughts which earlier philosophers have had, contradicts
-them—often empirically—justifies them, reasoning in all sorts of ways,
-and then attains to the truly speculative point of view. And finally,
-in the fourth place, Aristotle passes on thoughtfully to consider
-the object itself of which he treats, _e.g._ the soul, feeling,
-recollection, thought, motion, time, place, warmth, cold, &c. Because
-he takes all the moments that are contained within the conception to
-be, so to speak, united, he does not omit determinations; he does not
-hold now to one determination and then to another, but takes them as
-all in one; while reflection of the understanding, which has identity
-as the rule by which it goes, can only preserve harmony with this by
-always, while in one determination, forgetting and withholding the
-other. But Aristotle has the patience to go through all conceptions and
-questions, and from the investigation of the individual determinations,
-we have the fixed, and once more restored determination of every
-object. Aristotle thus forms the Notion, and is in the highest
-degree really philosophic, while he appears to be only empiric. For
-Aristotle’s empiricism is a totality because he always leads it back
-again immediately to speculation; he may thus be said to be a perfect
-empiricist, yet at the same time a thinking one. If, for example, we
-take away from space all its empirical determinations, the result will
-be in the highest degree speculative, for the empirical, comprehended
-in its synthesis, is the speculative Notion.
-
-In this gathering up of determinations into one Notion, Aristotle
-is great and masterly, as he also is in regard to the simplicity of
-his method of progression, and in the giving of his decisions in few
-words. This is a method of treating of Philosophy which has great
-efficacy, and which in our time has likewise been applied, _e.g._ by
-the French. It deserves to come into larger use, for it is a good
-thing to lead the determinations of the ordinary conception from an
-object to thought, and then to unite them in a unity, in the Notion.
-But undoubtedly this method in one respect appears to be empirical,
-and that, indeed, in the acceptation of objects as we know them in our
-consciousness; for if no necessity is present, this still more appears
-merely to pertain to manner externally regarded. And yet it cannot
-be denied that with Aristotle the object was not to bring everything
-to a unity, or to reduce determinations to a unity of opposites,
-but, on the contrary, to retain each in its determination and thus
-to follow it up. That may, on the one hand, be a superficial method,
-_e.g._ when everything is brought to an empty determinateness, such
-as those of irritability and sensibility, sthenic and asthenic, but,
-on the other, it is likewise necessary to grasp reality in simple
-determinateness, though without making the latter in this superficial
-way the starting point. Aristotle, on the other hand, simply forsakes
-determination in another sphere where it no longer has this form; but
-he shows what it is like here, or what change has taken place within
-it, and thus it comes to pass that he often treats one determination
-after the other without showing their connection. However, in his
-genuine speculation Aristotle is as profound as Plato, and at the
-same time more developed and explicit, for with him the opposites
-receive a higher determination. Certainly we miss in him the beauty of
-Plato’s form, the melodious speech, or, as we might almost call it,
-chatting—the conversational tone adopted, which is as lively as it is
-cultured and human. But where in Plato we find, as we do in his Timæus,
-the speculative Idea definitely expressed in the thesis form, we see in
-it a lack both of comprehension and purity; the pure element escapes
-it, while Aristotle’s form of expression is marked both by purity and
-intelligibility. We learn to know the object in its determination
-and its determinate Notion; but Aristotle presses further into the
-speculative nature of the object, though in such a way that the latter
-remains in its concrete determination, and Aristotle seldom leads
-it back to abstract thought-determinations. The study of Aristotle
-is hence inexhaustible, but to give an account of him is difficult,
-because his teaching must be reduced to universal principles. Thus in
-order to set forth Aristotelian philosophy, the particular content
-of each thing would have to be specified. But if we would be serious
-with Philosophy, nothing would be more desirable than to lecture upon
-Aristotle, for he is of all the ancients the most deserving of study.
-
-_c._ What ought to come next is the determination of the Aristotelian
-Idea, and here we have to say, in quite a general way, that Aristotle
-commences with Philosophy generally, and says, in the first place,
-regarding the value of Philosophy (in the second chapter of the first
-book of the Metaphysics), that the object of Philosophy is what is most
-knowable, viz. the first and original causes, that is, the rational.
-For through these and from these all else is known, but principles
-do not become known through the facts which form their groundwork
-(ὑποκείμενα). In this we already have the opposite to the ordinary
-point of view. Aristotle has further declared the chief subject of
-investigation, or the most essential knowledge (ἐπιστήμη ἀρχικωτάτη)
-to be the knowledge of end; but this is the good in each thing and,
-generally speaking, the best in the whole of nature. This also holds
-good with Plato and Socrates; yet the end is the true, the concrete,
-as against the abstract Platonic Idea. Aristotle then says of the
-value of Philosophy, “Men have begun to philosophize through wonder,”
-for in it the knowledge of something higher is at least anticipated.
-“Thus since man, to escape from ignorance, began to philosophize, it
-is clear that for the sake of knowledge he followed after knowledge,
-and not for any utility which it might possess for him. This is also
-made evident by the whole course of its external history. For it was
-after men had done with all their absolute requirements, and with what
-concerns their comfort, that they first began to seek this philosophic
-knowledge. We hence seek it not for the sake of any outside utility
-that it may have. And thus as we say that a free man is he who exists
-on his own account and not for another, Philosophy is the only science
-that is free, because it alone exists for itself—it is knowledge on
-account of knowledge. Therefore in justice it will not be held to be
-a human possession,” in the sense that, as we said above, (p. 11) it
-is not in the possession of a man. “For in many ways the nature of man
-is dependent, so that, according to Simonides, God alone possesses
-the prerogative (γέρας), and yet it is unworthy on man’s part not to
-seek after the science that is in conformity with his own condition
-(τὴν καθ̓ αὑτὸν ἐπιστήνην). But if the poets were right, and envy
-characterized divinity, all who would aim higher must be unfortunate;”
-Nemesis punishes whatever raises itself above the commonplace, and
-makes everything again equal. “But the divine cannot be jealous,”
-_i.e._ cannot refuse to impart that which it is, as if this knowledge
-should not come to man (_supra_, pp. 72, 73) “and—according to the
-proverb—the poets utter many falsehoods. Nor ought we to consider that
-any science is more entitled to honour than the one we now investigate,
-for that which is most divine, is also most worthy of honour.” That is
-to say, what has and imparts what is best is honoured: the gods are
-thus to be honoured because they have this knowledge. “God is held
-to be the cause and principle of everything, and therefore God has
-this science alone, or for the most part.” But for this reason it is
-not unworthy of man to endeavour to seek the highest good which is
-in conformity with him, this knowledge pertaining to God. “All other
-sciences are, however, more requisite than Philosophy, but none more
-excellent.”
-
-It is difficult to give a more detailed account of the Aristotelian
-philosophy, the universal Idea with the more important elements, for
-Aristotle is much more difficult to comprehend than Plato. In the
-latter there are myths, and we can pass over the dialectic and yet
-say that we have read Plato; but with Aristotle we enter at once upon
-what is speculative. Aristotle always seems to have philosophized only
-respecting the individual and particular, and not to have risen from it
-to the thought of the absolute and universal, to the thought of God; he
-always goes from the individual to the individual. His task concerns
-what is, and is just as clearly divided off as a professor has his
-work divided into a half year’s course; and though in this course he
-examines the whole of the world of conception, he yet appears only to
-have recognized the truth in the particular, or only a succession of
-particular truths. This has nothing dazzling about it, for he does not
-appear to have risen to the Idea (as Plato speaks of the nobility of
-Idea), nor to have led back to it the individual. But if Aristotle on
-the one hand did not logically abstract the universal Idea, (for then
-his so-called logic, which is something very different, would have had
-as its principle the recognition of one Notion in all) on the other
-hand there appears in Aristotle the one Absolute, the idea of God, as
-itself a particular, in its place beside the others, although it is all
-Truth. It is as if we said, “there are plants, animals, men, and also
-God, the most excellent of all.”
-
-From the whole list of conceptions which Aristotle enumerates, we
-shall now select some for further examination, and I will first speak
-of his metaphysics and its determinations. Then I will deal with the
-particular sciences which have been treated by Aristotle, beginning by
-giving the fundamental conception of nature as it is constituted with
-Aristotle; in the third place I will say something of mind, of the soul
-and its conditions, and finally the logical books of Aristotle will
-follow.
-
-
-1. THE METAPHYSICS.
-
-Aristotle’s speculative Idea is chiefly to be gathered from his
-Metaphysics, especially from the last chapters of the twelfth book
-(Λ) which deal with the divine Thought. But this treatise has the
-peculiar drawback noticed above (p. 128) of being a compilation,
-several treatises having been combined into one. Aristotle and the
-ancients did not know this work by the name of the Metaphysics; it was
-by them called πρώτη φιλοσοφία.[87] The main portion of this treatise
-has a certain appearance of unity given to it by the connection of
-the argument,[88] but it cannot be said that the style is orderly
-and lucid. This pure philosophy Aristotle very clearly distinguishes
-(Metaph. IV. 1) from the other sciences as “the science of that which
-is, in so far as it is, and of what belongs to it implicitly and
-explicitly.” The main object which Aristotle has in view (Metaph. VII.
-1) is the definition of what this substance (οὐσία) really is. In
-this ontology or, as we call it, logic, he investigates and minutely
-distinguishes four principles (Metaph. I. 3): first, determination or
-quality as such, the wherefore of anything, essence or form; secondly,
-the matter; thirdly, the principle of motion; and fourthly, the
-principle of final cause, or of the good. In the later part of the
-Metaphysics Aristotle returns repeatedly to the determination of the
-Ideas, but here also a want of connection of thought appears, even
-though all is subsequently united into an entirely speculative Notion.
-
-To proceed, there are two leading forms, which Aristotle characterizes
-as that of potentiality (δύναμις) and that of actuality (ἐνέργεια);
-the latter is still more closely characterized as entelechy
-(ἐντελεχεια) or free activity, which has the end (τὸ τέλος) in itself,
-and is the realization of this end. These are determinations which
-occur repeatedly in Aristotle, especially in the ninth book of the
-Metaphysics, and which we must be familiar with, if we would understand
-him. The expression δύναμις is with Aristotle the beginning, the
-implicit, the objective; also the abstract universal in general, the
-Idea, the matter, which can take on all forms, without being itself
-the form-giving principle. But with an empty abstraction such as the
-thing-in-itself Aristotle has nothing to do. It is first in energy
-or, more concretely, in subjectivity, that he finds the actualizing
-form, the self-relating negativity. When, on the other hand, we
-speak of Being, activity is not yet posited: Being is only implicit,
-only potentiality, without infinite form. To Aristotle the main fact
-about Substance is that it is not matter merely (Metaph. VII. 3);
-although in ordinary life this is what is generally taken to be the
-substantial. All that is contains matter, it is true, all change
-demands a substratum (ὑποκείμενον) to be affected by it; but because
-matter itself is only potentiality, and not actuality—which belongs to
-form—matter cannot truly exist without the activity of form (Metaph.
-VIII. 1, 2). With Aristotle δύναμις does not therefore mean force
-(for force is really an imperfect aspect of form), but rather capacity
-which is not even undetermined possibility; ἐνέργεια is, on the other
-hand, pure, spontaneous activity. These definitions were of importance
-throughout all the middle ages. Thus, according to Aristotle, the
-essentially absolute substance has potentiality and actuality, form and
-matter, not separated from one another; for the true objective has most
-certainly also activity in itself, just as the true subjective has also
-potentiality.
-
-From this definition we now see clearly the sort of opposition in
-which the Idea of Aristotle stands to that of Plato, for although
-the Idea of Plato is in itself essentially concrete and determined,
-Aristotle goes further. In so far, namely, as the Idea is determined
-in itself, the relation of the moments in it can be more closely
-specified, and this relation of the moments to each other is to be
-conceived of as nothing other than activity. It is easy for us to
-have a consciousness of what is deficient in the universal, that is,
-of that which is implicit only. The universal, in that it is the
-universal, has as yet no reality, for because implicitude is inert,
-the activity of realization is not yet posited therein. Reason,
-laws, etc., are in this way abstract, but the rational, as realizing
-itself, we recognize to be necessary, and therefore we take such
-universal laws but little into account. Now the standpoint of Plato
-is in the universal; what he does is to express Being rather as the
-objective, the Good, the end, the universal. To this, however, the
-principle of living subjectivity, as the moment of reality, seems
-to be lacking, or it appears at least to be put in the background.
-This negative principle seems indeed not to be directly expressed
-in Plato, but it is essentially contained in his definition of the
-Absolute as the unity of opposites; for this unity is essentially a
-negative unity of those opposites, which abrogates their being-another,
-their opposition, and leads them back into itself. But with Aristotle
-this negativity, this active efficacy, is expressly characterized
-as energy; in that it breaks up itself—this independence—abrogating
-unity, and positing separation; for, as Aristotle says (Metaph. VII.
-13), “actuality separates.” The Platonic Idea, on the other hand, is
-rather that abrogation of opposites, where one of the opposites is
-itself unity. While, therefore, with Plato the main consideration is
-the affirmative principle, the Idea as only abstractly identical with
-itself, in Aristotle there is added and made conspicuous the moment of
-negativity, not as change, nor yet as nullity, but as difference or
-determination. The principle of individualization, not in the sense
-of a casual and merely particular subjectivity, but in that of pure
-subjectivity, is peculiar to Aristotle. Aristotle thus also makes the
-Good, as the universal end, the substantial foundation, and maintains
-this position against Heraclitus and the Eleatics. The Becoming of
-Heraclitus is a true and real determination, but change yet lacks the
-determination of identity with itself, the constancy of the universal.
-The stream is ever changing, yet it is nevertheless ever the same,
-and is really a universal existence. From this it is at once evident
-that Aristotle (Metaph. IV. 3-6) is controverting the opinions of
-Heraclitus and others when he says that Being and non-being are not
-the same (Vol. I. p. 282), and in connection with this lays down the
-celebrated maxim of contradiction, that a man is not at the same
-time a ship. This shows at once that Aristotle does not understand
-by this pure Being and non-being, this abstraction which is really
-only the transition of the one into the other; but by that which is,
-he understands Substance, the Idea, Reason, viewed likewise as an
-impelling end. As he maintains the universal against the principle of
-mere change, he puts forward activity in opposition to the numbers of
-the Pythagoreans, and to the Platonic Ideas. However frequently and
-fully Aristotle controverts both of these, all his objections turn on
-the remark already quoted (Vol. I. p. 213) that activity is not to be
-found in these principles, and that to say that real things participate
-in Ideas is empty talk, and a poetic metaphor. He says also that Ideas,
-as abstract universal determinations, are only as far as numbers go
-equal to things, but are not on that account to be pointed out as their
-causes. Moreover, he maintains that there are contradictions involved
-in taking independent species, since in Socrates, for instance, there
-are several ideas included: man, biped, animal (Metaph. I. 7 and 9).
-Activity with Aristotle is undoubtedly also change, but change that is
-within the universal, and that remains self-identical; consequently
-a determination which is self-determination, and therefore the
-self-realizing universal end: in mere alteration, on the contrary,
-there is not yet involved the preservation of identity in change. This
-is the chief point which Aristotle deals with.
-
-Aristotle distinguishes various moments in substance, in so far as the
-moments of activity and potentiality do not appear as one, but still
-in separation. The closer determination of this relation of energy to
-potentiality, of form to matter, and the movement of this opposition,
-gives the different modes of substance. Here Aristotle enumerates the
-substances; and to him they appear as a series of different kinds of
-substance, which he merely takes into consideration one by one, without
-bringing them together into a system. The three following are the chief
-among these:—
-
-_a._ The sensuous perceptible substance is that in which the matter
-is still distinguished from the efficient form. Hence this substance
-is finite; for the separation and externality of form and matter are
-precisely what constitute the nature of the finite. Sensuous substance,
-says Aristotle (Metaph. XII. 2), involves change, but in such a way
-that it passes over into the opposite; the opposites disappear in one
-another, and the third beyond these opposites, that which endures, the
-permanent in this change, is matter. Now the leading categories of
-change which Aristotle names are the four differences, in regard to
-the What (κατὰ τὸ τί), or in regard to quality (ποιόν), or in regard to
-quantity (ποσόν), or in regard to place where (ποῦ). The first change
-is the origination and decay of simple determinate Being (κατὰ τόδε);
-the second change is that of the further qualities (κατὰ τὸ πάθος); the
-third, increase and diminution; the fourth, motion. Matter is the dead
-substance on which take place the changes which matter passes through.
-“The change itself is from potential into actual existence; possible
-whiteness transforms itself into actual whiteness. Thus things do not
-arise casually out of nothing, but all arises out of what exists,
-though it exists only in potentiality, not in actuality.” The possible
-is thus really a general implicit existence, which brings about these
-determinations, without producing one out of the other. Matter is
-thus simple potentiality, which, however, is placed in opposition to
-itself, so that a thing in its actuality only becomes that which its
-matter was also in potentiality. There are thus three moments posited:
-matter, as the general substratum of change, neutral in respect of
-what is different (ἐξ οὗ); the opposed determinations of form, which
-are negative to each other as that which is to be abrogated and that
-which is to be posited (τι and εἴς τι); the first mover (ὑφ̓ οὗ), pure
-activity (Metaph. VII. 7; IX. 8; XII. 3).[89] But activity is the
-unity of form and matter; how these two are in the other, Aristotle
-does not, however, further explain. Thus in sensuous substance there
-appears the diversity of the moments, though not as yet their return
-into themselves; but activity is the negative which ideally contains in
-itself the opposite, therefore that also which is about to be.
-
-_b._ A higher kind of substance, according to Aristotle (Metaph. IX.
-2; VII. 7; XII. 3), is that into which activity enters, which already
-contains that which is about to be. This is understanding, absolutely
-determined, whose content is the aim which it realizes through its
-activity, not merely changing as does the sensuous form. For the soul
-is essentially actuality, a general determination which posits itself;
-not only formal activity, whose content comes from somewhere else.
-But while the active posits its content in reality, this content yet
-remains the same; there is an activity present which is different from
-matter, although substance and activity are allied. Thus here we still
-have a matter which understanding demands as its hypothesis. The two
-extremes are matter as potentiality, and thought as efficiency: the
-former is the passive universal, and the latter the active universal;
-in sensuous substance the active is, on the contrary, still quite
-different from matter. In these two moments themselves change does not
-take place, for they are the implicit universal in opposed forms.
-
-_c._ The highest point is, however, that in which potentiality,
-activity and actuality are united; the absolute substance which
-Aristotle (Metaph. XII. 6, 7; IX. 8), defines in general as being the
-absolute (ἀϊδιον), the unmoved, which yet at the same time moves, and
-whose essence is pure activity, without having matter. For matter as
-such is passive and affected by change, consequently it is not simply
-one with the pure activity of this substance. Here as elsewhere we
-certainly see an instance of merely denying a predicate, without
-saying what its truth is; but matter is nothing else than that moment
-of unmoved Being. If in later times it has seemed something new to
-define absolute Being as pure activity, we see that this arises
-from ignorance as to the Aristotelian conception. But the Schoolmen
-rightly looked upon this as the definition of God, since they define
-God as _actus purus_; and higher idealism than this there is none.
-We may also express this as follows: God is the Substance which
-in its potentiality has reality also unseparated from it; therein
-potentiality is not distinguished from form, since it produces from
-itself the determinations of its content. In this Aristotle breaks
-away from Plato, and for this reason controverts number, the Idea, and
-the universal, because if this, as inert, is not defined as identical
-with activity, there is no movement. Plato’s inert Ideas and numbers
-thus bring nothing into reality; but far different is the case with
-the Absolute of Aristotle, which in its quiescence is at the same time
-absolute activity.
-
-Aristotle further says on this subject (Metaph. XII. 6): “It may be
-that what has potentiality is not real; it is of no avail therefore to
-make substances eternal, as the idealists do, if they do not contain a
-principle which can effect change. And even this is insufficient, if it
-is not active, because in that case there is no change. Yea, even if
-it were active, but its substance only a potentiality, there would be
-in it no eternal movement, for it is possible that what is according
-to potentiality may not exist. We must therefore have a principle
-whose substance must be apprehended as activity.” Thus in mind energy
-is substance itself. “But here a doubt seems to spring up. For all
-that is active seems to be possible, but all that is possible does
-not seem to energize, so that potentiality seems to be antecedent,”
-for it is the universal. “But if this were the case, no one of the
-entities would be in existence, for it is possible that a thing may
-possess a capacity of existence, though it has never yet existed.
-But energy is higher than potentiality. We must thus not assert, as
-theologians would have us do, that in the eternal ages there was first
-chaos or night” (matter), “nor must we say with natural philosophers
-that everything existed simultaneously. For how could the First be
-changed, if nothing in reality were cause? For matter does not move
-itself, it is the Master who moves it. Leucippus and Plato accordingly
-say that motion has always existed, but they give no reason for the
-assertion.” Pure activity is, according to Aristotle (Metaph. IX. 8),
-before potentiality, not in relation to time, but to essence. That is
-to say, time is a subordinate moment, far removed from the universal;
-for the absolute first Being is, as Aristotle says at the end of the
-sixth chapter of the twelfth book, “that which in like activity remains
-always identical with itself.” In the former assumption of a chaos and
-so on, an activity is posited which has to do with something else, not
-with itself, and has therefore a pre-supposition; but chaos is only
-bare possibility.
-
-That which moves in itself, and therefore, as Aristotle continues
-(Metaph. XII. 7), “that which has circular motion;” is to be posited as
-the true Being, “and this is evident not merely from thinking reason,
-but also from the fact itself.” From the definition of absolute Being
-as imparting motion, as bringing about realization, there follows that
-it exists in objectivity in visible nature. As the self-identical
-which is visible, this absolute Being is “the eternal heavens.” The
-two modes of representing the Absolute are thus thinking reason and
-the eternal heavens. The heavens are moved, but they also cause
-movement. Since the spherical is thus both mover and moved, there is
-a centre-point which causes movement but remains unmoved, and which
-is itself at the same time eternal and a substance and energy.[90]
-This great definition given by Aristotle of absolute Being as the
-circle of reason which returns into itself, is of the same tenor as
-modern definitions; the unmoved which causes movement is the Idea which
-remains self-identical, which, while it moves, remains in relation to
-itself. He explains this as follows: “Its motion is determined in the
-following manner. That moves which is desired and thought, whereas
-itself it is unmoved, and the original of both is the same.” That is
-the end whose content is the desire and thought; such an end is the
-Beautiful or the Good. “For the thing that is desired is that which
-appears beautiful” (or pleases): “whose first” (or end), “on which the
-will is set, is what is beautiful. But it is rather the case that we
-desire it because it appears beautiful, than that it appears beautiful
-because we desire it.” For if that were so, it would be simply posited
-by activity, but it is posited independently, as objective Being,
-through which our desire is first awakened. “But thought is the true
-principle in this, for thought is moved only by the object of thought.
-But the intelligible” (we scarcely believe our eyes) “is essentially
-the other co-element (συστοιχία)”[91] namely, that which is posited
-as objective, as absolutely existent thought, “and the substance of
-this other element is the first; but the first substance is simple
-pure activity. Such are the Beautiful and the Good, and the first is
-ever the absolutely best or the best possible. But the Notion shows
-that the final cause belongs to the unmoved. What is moved may also
-subsist in a different manner. Motion (φορά) is the first change; the
-first motion, again, is circular motion, but this is due to the above
-cause.” Therefore, according to Aristotle, the Notion, _principium
-cognoscendi_, is also that which causes movement, _principium essendi_;
-he expresses it as God, and shows the relation of God to the individual
-consciousness. “The First Cause is necessary. But the term necessary
-has three meanings: first what is accomplished by violence, because
-it goes contrary to one’s inclination (παρὰ τὴν ὁρμήν); secondly,
-that without which the Good does not subsist; thirdly, that which can
-exist in no other way than it does, but involves absolute existence.
-On such a principle of the unmoved the heavens depend and the whole of
-nature”—the visible that is eternal, and the visible that changes. This
-system is ever-enduring. “But to us” as individuals, “there is granted,
-for a short time only, a sojourn therein of surpassing excellence. For
-the system continues ever the same, but for us that is impossible. Now
-this activity is in its very self enjoyment, and therefore vigilance,
-exercise of the senses, thinking in general, are most productive of
-enjoyment; and for the same reason hopes and memories bring pleasure.
-But thinking, in its pure essence, is a thinking of that which is
-absolutely the most excellent;” the thought is for itself absolute
-end. The difference and contradiction in activity and the abrogation
-of the same, Aristotle expresses thus: “But thought thinks itself
-by participation (μετάληψιν) in that which is thought, but thought
-becomes thought by contact and apprehension, so that thought and the
-object of thought are the same.” Thought, as being the unmoved which
-causes motion, has an object, which, however, becomes transformed into
-activity, because its content is itself something thought, _i.e._ a
-product of thought, and thus altogether identical with the activity of
-thinking. The object of thought is first produced in the activity of
-thinking, which in this way separates the thought as an object. Hence,
-in thinking, that which is moved and that which moves are the same;
-and as the substance of what is thought is thought, what is thought
-is the absolute cause which, itself unmoved, is identical with the
-thought which is moved by it; the separation and the relation are one
-and the same. The chief moment in Aristotle’s philosophy is accordingly
-this, that the energy of thinking and the object of thought are the
-same; “for thought is that which is receptive of objects of perception
-and the existent. When in possession of these it is in a condition
-of activity (ἐνεργεῖ δὲ ἔχων); and thus all this” operation by which
-it thinks itself, “is more divine than the divine possession which
-thinking reason supposes itself to have,”—the content of thought. It
-is not the object of thought that is the more excellent, but the very
-energy of thinking; the activity of apprehension brings that to pass
-which appears as something that is being apprehended. “Speculation
-(ἡ θεωρία) is thus the most pleasing and the best. If then God has
-eternally subsisted in such surpassing excellence as for a limited time
-pertains to us” (in whom this eternal Thought, which is God Himself,
-occurs only as a particular condition), “He is worthy of admiration;
-if He possesses it in a more eminent degree, His nature is still more
-admirable. But this is His mode of subsistence. Life is also inherent
-in Him, for the activity of thought is life. But He constitutes this
-efficient power; essential energy belongs to God as His most excellent
-and eternal life. We therefore say that with God there is life perfect
-and everlasting.” From this substance Aristotle moreover excludes
-magnitude.
-
-We in our way of speaking designate the Absolute, the True, as the
-unity of subjectivity and objectivity, which is therefore neither the
-one nor the other, and yet just as much the one as the other; and
-Aristotle busied himself with these same speculations, the deepest
-forms of speculation even of the present day, and he has expressed
-them with the greatest definiteness. With Aristotle it is thus no
-dry identity of the abstract understanding that is indicated, for he
-distinguishes subjective and objective precisely and decisively. Not
-dead identity such as this, but energy, is for him what is most to
-be reverenced, God. Unity is thus a poor, unphilosophic expression,
-and true Philosophy is not the system of identity; its principle is
-a unity which is activity, movement, repulsion, and thus, in being
-different, is at the same time identical with itself. If Aristotle
-had made the jejune identity of understanding, or experience, his
-principle, he would never have risen to a speculative Idea like this,
-wherein individuality and activity are placed higher than universal
-potentiality. Thought, as the object of thought, is nothing else than
-the absolute Idea regarded as in itself, the Father; yet this First
-and unmoved, as distinguished from activity, is, as absolute, simply
-activity, and is first through this activity set forth as true. In
-what he teaches respecting the soul we shall find Aristotle recurring
-to this speculative thought; but to Aristotle it is again an object,
-like other objects, a kind of condition which he separates from the
-other conditions of the soul which he understands empirically, such as
-sleep, or weariness. He does not say that it alone is truth, that all
-is summed up in Thought, but he says it is the first, the strongest,
-the most honourable. We, on the other hand, say that Thought, as that
-which relates to itself, has existence, or is the truth; that Thought
-comprehends the whole of Truth, even, though we ordinarily represent
-to ourselves sensation and so on, besides thought, as having reality.
-Thus, although Aristotle does not express himself in modern philosophic
-language, he has yet throughout the same fundamental theory; he speaks
-not of a special kind of reason, but of the universal Reason. The
-speculative philosophy of Aristotle simply means the direction of
-thought on all kinds of objects, thus transforming these into thoughts;
-hence, in being thoughts, they exist in truth. The meaning of this is
-not, however, that natural objects have thus themselves the power of
-thinking, but as they are subjectively thought by me, my thought is
-thus also the Notion of the thing, which therefore constitutes its
-absolute substance. But in Nature the Notion does not exist explicitly
-as thought in this freedom, but has flesh and blood, and is oppressed
-by externalities; yet this flesh and blood has a soul, and this is its
-Notion. The ordinary definition of truth, according to which it is “the
-harmony of the conception with the object,” is certainly not borne out
-by the conception; for when I represent to myself a house, a beam, and
-so on, I am by no means this content, but something entirely different,
-and therefore very far from being in harmony with the object of my
-conception. It is only in thought that there is present a true harmony
-between objective and subjective; that constitutes me. Aristotle
-therefore finds himself at the highest standpoint; nothing deeper can
-we desire to know, although he has always the appearance of making
-ordinary conceptions his starting-point.
-
-Aristotle (Metaph. XII. 9) now solves many other doubtful questions,
-for instance, whether thought is compound, and whether science is the
-object of science itself. “Some further doubts arise as to thought
-(νοῦς), which seems to be of all things the most divine; but it is
-only with difficulty that we can conceive under what conditions (πῶς
-δ̓ ἔχων) it is a thing of this sort. When it thinks of nothing, but is
-in a state like that of a sleeper, what constitutes its superiority?
-And when it thinks, but something else is dominant all the time (ἄλλο
-κύριον), that which is its substance is not thought (νόησις), but
-a potentiality;” it would not be in eternal activity. “In this way
-it would not be the highest substance; for it is” (active) “thought
-(τὸ νοεῖν) that gives it its high rank. If now, further, thought or
-thinking is its substance, what does it think? Itself or another? And
-if another, is it always the same, or something different? Does it also
-not make a difference, whether it thinks of what is beautiful or what
-is casual? In the first place, if thought is not thinking, but only
-the power to think, continuous thinking would be laborious for it,”
-for every power wears itself out. “In the next place, something else
-would be more excellent than thought, namely that which is thought
-(νοούμενον); and thinking and thought (τὸ νοεῖν καὶ ἡ νόησις) will be
-present to the mind in understanding what is most inferior. As this
-is to be avoided (in the same way that it is better not to see some
-things than to see them), thinking would not constitute the best.
-Thought is therefore this, to think itself, because it is the most
-excellent; and it is the thinking, which is the thinking of thinking.
-For understanding and sensation and opinion and deliberation seem
-always to have an object other than themselves, and to be their own
-objects only in a secondary sense. Further, if thinking and being
-thought of are different, in relation to which of the two is the Good
-inherent in thought? For the Notion[92] of thinking and that of the
-object of thought are not the same. Or, in the case of some things,
-does the science itself constitute that which is the object of science?
-In what is practical the thing is the immaterial substance and the
-determination of the end (ἡ οὐσία καὶ τὸ τί ἦν εἶναι), and in what is
-theoretical it is the reason and the thinking. As therefore thought and
-the object of thought are not different, these opposites, so far as
-they involve no connection with matter, are the same thing, and there
-is only a thought of the thing thought of.” Reason which thinks itself,
-is the absolute end or the Good, for it only exists for its own sake.
-“There still remains a doubt whether that which thinks is of composite
-nature or not; for it might undergo change in the parts of the whole.
-But the Good is not in this or that part, for it is the best in the
-universe, as distinguished from it. In this way the Thought which is
-its own object subsists to all eternity.”
-
-As this speculative Idea, which is the best and most free, is also to
-be seen in nature, and not only in thinking reason, Aristotle (Metaph.
-XII. 8) in this connection passes on to the visible God, which is the
-heavens. God, as living God, is the universe; and thus in the universe
-God, as living God, shows Himself forth. He comes forth as manifesting
-Himself or as causing motion, and it is in manifestation alone that
-the difference between the cause of motion and that which is moved
-comes to pass. “The principle and the first cause of that which is, is
-itself unmoved, but brings to pass the original and eternal and single
-motion,” that is, the heaven of the fixed stars. “We see that besides
-the simple revolution of the universe, which is brought about by the
-first unmoved substance, there are other eternal motions, those of the
-planets.” We must not, however, enter into further details on this
-subject.
-
-Regarding the organization of the universe in general, Aristotle says
-(Metaph. XII. 10), “We must investigate in what manner the nature of
-the whole has within it the Good and the Best; whether as something set
-apart and absolute, or as an order, or in both ways, as in the case
-of an army. For the good condition of an army depends upon the order
-enforced, as much as on the general, and the general is the cause of
-the army’s good condition in all the greater degree from the fact of
-the order being through him, and not from his being through the order.
-All things are co-ordinated in a certain way, but not all in the same
-way: take, for example, animals which swim, and those which fly, and
-plants; they are not so constituted that one of them is not related to
-another, but they stand in mutual relations. For all are co-ordinated
-into one system just as in a house it is by no means permitted to the
-free inmates to do freely whatever they like, but all that they do, or
-the most of it, is done according to orderly arrangement. By slaves and
-animals, on the contrary, little is done for the general good, but they
-do much that is casual. For the principle of each is his own nature.
-In the same way it is necessary that all should attain to a position
-where distinction is drawn” (the seat of judgment) “but there are some
-things so constituted that all participate in them for the formation
-of a whole.” Aristotle then goes on to refute some other notions;
-showing, for instance, the embarrassments into which they fall who make
-all things proceed from oppositions, and he corroborates, on the other
-hand, the unity of the principle by quoting Homer’s line (Iliad II.
-204):
-
- “It is not good that many govern; let one alone bear rule.”
-
-
-2. PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE.
-
-Amongst the special sciences treated by Aristotle, the Physics is
-contained in a whole series of physical treatises, which form a
-tolerably complete system of what constitutes the Philosophy of
-Nature in its whole extent. We shall try to give their general plan.
-Aristotle’s first work is his Treatise, in eight books, on Physics, or
-on the Principles (φυσικὴ ἀκρόασις ἢ περὶ ἀρχῶν). In this he deals,
-as is fitting, with the doctrine of the Notion of nature generally,
-with movement, and with space and time. The first manifestation of
-absolute substance is movement, and its moments are space and time;
-this conception of its manifestation is the universal, which realizes
-itself first in the corporeal world, passing into the principle of
-separation. Aristotle’s Physics is what for present physicists would,
-properly speaking, be the Metaphysics of Nature; for our physicists
-only say what they have seen, what delicate and excellent instruments
-they have made, and not what they have thought. This first work by
-Aristotle is followed by his treatises concerning the Heavens, which
-deal with the nature of body and the first real bodies, the earth and
-heavenly bodies in general, as also with the general abstract relation
-of bodies to one another through mechanical weight and lightness, or
-what we should call attraction; and finally, with the determination
-of abstract real bodies or elements. Then follow the treatises on
-Production and Destruction, the physical process of change, while
-formerly the ideal process of movement was considered. Besides the
-physical elements, moments which are only posited in process, as such,
-now enter in: for instance, warmth, cold, &c. Those elements are the
-real existent facts, while these determinations are the moments of
-becoming or of passing away, which exist only in movement. Then comes
-the Meteorology; it represents the universal physical process in its
-most real forms. Here particular determinations appear, such as rain,
-the saltness of the sea, clouds, dew, hail, snow, hoar-frost, winds,
-rainbows, boiling, cooking, roasting, colours, &c. On certain matters,
-such as the colours, Aristotle wrote particular treatises. Nothing is
-forgotten, and yet the presentation is, on the whole, empiric. The book
-On the Universe, which forms the conclusion, is said not to be genuine;
-it is a separate dissertation, addressed to Alexander, which contains
-in part the doctrine of the universality of things, a doctrine found
-already in the other treatises; hence this book does not belong to this
-series.
-
-From this point Aristotle proceeds to organic nature, and here his
-works not only contain a natural history, but also a physiology and
-anatomy. To the anatomy pertain his works on the Locomotion of Animals,
-and on the Parts of Animals. He deals with physiology in the works
-on the Generation of Animals, on the common Movement of Animals; and
-then he comes to the distinction between Youth and Age, Sleeping and
-Waking, and treats of Breathing, Dreaming, the Shortness and Length
-of Life, &c., all of which he deals with partly in an empiric,
-and partly in a more speculative manner. Finally, there comes the
-History of Animals, not merely as a history of Nature, but also as
-the history of the animal in its entirety—what we may call a kind of
-physiologico-anatomical anatomy. There is likewise a botanical work On
-Plants (περὶ φυτῶν) which is ascribed to him. Thus we here find natural
-philosophy in the whole extent of its outward content.
-
-As regards this plan, there is no question that this is not the
-necessary order in which natural philosophy or physics must be treated.
-It is long since physics adopted in its conception the form and
-tendency derived from Aristotle, of deducing the parts of the science
-from the whole; and thus even what is not speculative still retains
-this connection as far as outward order goes. This is plainly to be
-preferred to the arrangement in our modern text-books, which is a
-wholly irrational succession of doctrines accidentally put together,
-and is undoubtedly more suitable to that method of contemplating
-nature, which grasps the sensuous manifestation of nature quite
-irrespective of sense or reason. Physics before this contained some
-metaphysics, but the experience which was met with in endeavouring
-unsuccessfully to work it out, determined the physicists, so far as
-possible, to keep it at a distance, and to devote their attention to
-what they call experience, for they think that here they come across
-genuine truth, unspoiled by thought, fresh from the hand of nature;
-it is in their hands and before their faces. They can certainly not
-dispense with the Notion, but through a kind of tacit agreement they
-allow certain conceptions, such as forces, subsistence in parts, &c.,
-to be valid, and make use of these without in the least knowing whether
-they have truth and how they have truth. But in regard to the content
-they express no better the truth of things, but only the sensuous
-manifestation. Aristotle and the ancients understand by physics, on the
-other hand, the comprehension of nature—the universal; and for this
-reason Aristotle also calls it the doctrine of principles. For in the
-manifestation of nature this distinction between the principle and what
-follows it, manifestation, really commences, and it is abrogated only
-in genuine speculation. Yet if, on the one hand, what is physical in
-Aristotle is mainly philosophic and not experimental, he yet proceeded
-in his Physics in what may be called an empiric way. Thus, as it has
-been already remarked of the Aristotelian philosophy in general that
-the different parts fall into a series of independently determined
-conceptions, so we find that this is the case here also; hence an
-account can only be given of a part of them. One part is not universal
-enough to embrace the other part, for each is independent. But that
-which follows, and which has in great measure reference to what is
-individual, no longer comes under the dominion of the Notion, but
-becomes a superficial suggestion of reasons, and an explanation from
-the proximate causes, such as we find in our physics.
-
-In regard to the general conception of nature, we must say that
-Aristotle represents it in the highest and truest manner. For in
-the Idea of nature Aristotle (Phys. II. 8) really relies on two
-determinations: the conception of end and the conception of necessity.
-Aristotle at once grasps the whole matter in its principles, and this
-constitutes the old contradiction and divergence of view existing
-between necessity (_causæ efficientes_) and end (_causæ finales_),
-which we have inherited. The first mode of consideration is that in
-accordance with external necessity, which is the same as chance—the
-conception that all that pertains to nature is determined from without
-by means of natural causes. The other mode of consideration is the
-teleological, but conformity to end is either inward or outward, and
-in the more recent culture the latter has long retained the supremacy.
-Thus men vibrate in their opinion between these two points of view,
-seek external causes, and war against the form of an external teleology
-which places the end outside of nature. These determinations were
-known to Aristotle, and he thoroughly investigates them and considers
-what they are and mean. Aristotle’s conception of nature is, however,
-nobler than that of to-day, for with him the principal point is the
-determination of end as the inward determinateness of natural things.
-Thus he comprehended nature as life, _i.e._ as that which has its
-end within itself, is unity with itself, which does not pass into
-another, but, through this principle of activity, determines changes
-in conformity with its own content, and in this way maintains itself
-therein. In this doctrine Aristotle has before his eyes the inward
-immanent end, to which he considers necessity an external condition.
-Thus, on the one hand, Aristotle determines nature as the final cause,
-which is to be distinguished from what is luck or chance; it is thus
-opposed by him to what is necessary, which it also contains within
-itself; and then he considers how necessity is present in natural
-things. In nature we usually think of necessity first, and understand
-as the essentially natural that which is not determined through end.
-For long men thought that they determined nature both philosophically
-and truly in limiting it to necessity. But the aspect of nature has
-had a stigma removed from it, because, by means of its conformity to
-the end in view, it is elevated above the commonplace. The two moments
-which we have considered in substance, the active form and matter,
-correspond with these two determinations.
-
-We must first consider the conception of adaptation to end as the
-ideal moment in substance. Aristotle begins (Phys. II. 8) with the
-fact that the natural is the self-maintaining, all that is difficult
-is its comprehension. “The first cause of perplexity is, what hinders
-nature from not operating for the sake of an end, and because it is
-better so to operate, but” being, for example, “like Jupiter, who
-rains, not that the corn may grow, but from necessity. The vapour
-driven upwards cools, and the water resulting from this cooling falls
-as rain, and it happens that the corn is thereby made to grow. In like
-manner, if the corn of any one is destroyed, it does not rain for the
-sake of this destruction, but this is an accidental circumstance.”
-That is to say, there is a necessary connection which, however, is an
-external relation, and this is the contingency of the cause as well
-as of the effect. “But if this be so,” Aristotle asks, “what hinders
-us from assuming that what appears as parts” (the parts of an animal,
-for instance) “may thus subsist in nature, too, as contingent? That,
-for example, the front teeth are sharp and adapted for dividing,
-and that the back teeth, on the contrary, are broad and adapted for
-grinding the food in pieces, may be an accidental circumstance, not
-necessarily brought about for these particular ends. And the same is
-true with respect to the other parts of the body which appear to be
-adapted for some end; therefore those living things in which all was
-accidentally constituted as if for some end, are now, having once been
-so existent, preserved, although originally they had arisen by chance,
-in accordance with external necessity.” Aristotle adds that Empedocles
-especially had these reflections, and represented the first beginnings
-of things as a world composed of all sorts of monstrosities, such as
-bulls with human heads; such, however, could not continue to subsist,
-but disappeared because they were not originally constituted so that
-they should endure; and this went on until what was in conformity with
-purpose came together. Without going back to the fabulous monstrosities
-of the ancients, we likewise know of a number of animal tribes which
-have died out, just because they could not preserve the race. Thus
-we also require to use the expression development (an unthinking
-evolution), in our present-day natural philosophy. The conception that
-the first productions were, so to speak, attempts, of which those which
-did not show themselves to be suitable could not endure, is easily
-arrived at by natural philosophy. But nature, as _entelecheia_ or
-realization, is what brings forth itself. Aristotle hence replies: “It
-is impossible to believe this. For what is produced in accordance with
-nature is always, or at least for the most part, produced” (external
-universality as the constant recurrence of what has passed away), “but
-this is not so with what happens through fortune or through chance.
-That in which there is an end (τέλος), equally in its character as
-something which precedes and as something which follows, is made into
-end; as therefore a thing is made, so is its nature, and as is its
-nature, so is it made; it exists therefore for the sake of this.” The
-meaning of nature is that as something is, it was in the beginning;
-it means this inward universality and adaptation to end that realizes
-itself; and thus cause and effect are identical, since all individual
-parts are related to this unity of end. “He who assumes contingent and
-accidental forms, subverts, on the other hand, both nature itself and
-that which subsists from nature, for that subsists from nature which
-has a principle within itself, by whose means, and being continually
-moved, it attains its end.” In this expression of Aristotle’s we now
-find the whole of the true profound Notion of life, which must be
-considered as an end in itself—a self-identity that independently
-impels itself on, and in its manifestation remains identical with
-its Notion: thus it is the self-effectuating Idea. Leaves, blossoms,
-roots thus bring the plant into evidence and go back into it; and that
-which they bring to pass is already present in the seed from which
-they took their origin. The chemical product, on the contrary, does
-not appear to have itself similarly present, for from acid and base a
-third appears to come forth; but here, likewise, the essence of both
-these sides, their relationship, is already present, though it is
-there mere potentiality, as it is in the product merely a thing. But
-the self-maintaining activity of life really brings forth this unity
-in all relationships. What has here been said is already contained in
-that which was asserted by those who do not represent nature in this
-way, but say, “that which is constituted as though it were constituted
-for an end, will endure.” For this is the self-productive action of
-nature. In the modern way of looking at life this conception becomes
-lost in two different ways; either through a mechanical philosophy,
-in which we always find as principle pressure, impulse, chemical
-relationships and forces, or external relations generally—which
-certainly seem to be inherent in nature, but not to proceed from the
-nature of the body, seeing that they are an added, foreign appendage,
-such as colour in a fluid; or else theological physics maintain the
-thoughts of an understanding outside of the world to be the causes.
-In the Kantian philosophy we for the first time have that conception
-once more awakened in us, for organic nature at least; life has there
-been made an end to itself. In Kant this indeed had only the subjective
-form which constitutes the essence of the Kantian philosophy, in which
-it seems as though life were only so determined by reason of our
-subjective reasoning; but still the whole truth is there contained
-that the organic creation is the self-maintaining. The fact that most
-recent times have brought back the rational view of the matter into our
-remembrance, is thus none else than a justification of the Aristotelian
-Idea.
-
-Aristotle also speaks of the end which is represented by organic nature
-in itself, in relation to the means, of which he says (Phys. II. 8):
-“If the swallow builds her nest, and the spider spreads her web, and
-trees root themselves in the earth, for the sake of nutriment, there
-is present in them a self-maintaining cause of this kind, or an end.”
-For this instinctive action exhibits an operation of self-preservation,
-as a means whereby natural existence becomes shut up and reflected
-into itself. Aristotle then brings what is here said into relation
-with general conceptions which he had earlier maintained (p. 138):
-“Since nature is twofold as matter and form, but since the latter is
-end, and the rest are on account of the end, this is final cause.”
-For the active form has a content, which, as content of potentiality,
-contains the means which make their appearance as adapted for an end,
-_i.e._ as moments established through the determinate Notion. However
-much we may, in the modern way of regarding things, struggle against
-the idea of an immanent end, from reluctance to accept it, we must, in
-the case of animals and plants, acknowledge such a conception, always
-re-establishing itself in another. For example, because the animal
-lives in water or in air, it is so constructed that it can maintain
-its existence in air or water; thus it requires water to explain the
-gills of fishes; and, on the other hand, because the animal is so
-constructed, it lives in water. This activity in transformation thus
-does not depend in a contingent way on life; it is aroused through the
-outward powers, but only in as far as conformity with the soul of the
-animal permits.
-
-In passing, Aristotle here (Phys. II. 8) makes a comparison between
-nature and art, which also connects what results with what goes
-before, in accordance with ends. “Nature may commit an error as well
-as art; for as a grammarian sometimes makes a mistake in writing, and
-a physician in mixing a medicinal draught, nature, too, sometimes does
-not attain its ends. Its errors are monstrosities and deformities,
-which, however, are only the errors of that which operates for an
-end. In the production of animals and plants, an animal is not at
-first produced, but the seed, and even in it corruption is possible.”
-For the seed is the mean, as being the not as yet established,
-independent, indifferent, free actuality. In this comparison of nature
-with art we ordinarily have before us the external adaptation to end,
-the teleological point of view, the making for definite ends. And
-Aristotle declaims against this, while he remarks that if nature is
-activity for a certain end, or if it is the implicitly universal, “it
-is absurd to deny that action is in conformity with end, because that
-which moves cannot be seen to have deliberated and considered.” The
-understanding comes forward with the determination of this end, and
-with its instruments and tools, to operate on matter, and we carry
-this conception of an external teleology over into nature. “But art
-also,” says Aristotle, “does not deliberate. If the form of a ship
-were the particular inward principle of the timber, it would act as
-nature prompted. The action of nature is very similar to the exercise
-of the art whereby anyone heals himself.” Through an inward instinct
-the animal avoids what is evil, and does what is good for him; health
-is thus essentially present to him, not as a conscious end, but as an
-understanding which accomplishes its ends without conscious thought.
-
-As Aristotle has hitherto combated an external teleology, he directs
-another equally applicable remark (Phys. II. 9) against merely external
-necessity, and thus we come to the other side, or to how necessity
-exists in nature. He says in this regard: “Men fancy that necessity
-exists in this way in generation, just as if it were thought that a
-house existed from necessity, because heavy things were naturally
-carried downwards, and light things upwards, and that, therefore, the
-stones and foundation, on account of their weight, were under the
-earth, and the earth, because it was lighter, was further up, and the
-wood in the highest place because it is the lightest.” But Aristotle
-thus explains the facts of the case. “The house is certainly not made
-without these materials, but not on account of, or through them (unless
-the material so demands), but it is made for the sake of concealing and
-preserving certain things. The same takes place in everything which
-has an end in itself; for it is not without that which is necessary to
-its nature, and yet it is not on account of this, unless the matter
-so demands, but on account of an end. Hence the necessary is from
-hypothesis only, and not as end, for necessity is in matter, but end
-is in reason (λόγῳ). Thus it is clear that matter and its movement are
-necessity in natural things; both have to be set forth as principle,
-but end is the higher principle.” It undoubtedly requires necessity,
-but it retains it in its own power, does not allow it to give vent
-to itself, but controls external necessity. The principle of matter
-is thus turned into the truly active ground of end, which means the
-overthrow of necessity, so that that which is natural shall maintain
-itself in the end. Necessity is the objective manifestation of the
-action of its moments as separated, just as in chemistry the essential
-reality of both the extremes—the base and the acid—is the necessity of
-their relation.
-
-This is the main conception of Aristotelian Physics. Its further
-development concerns the conceptions of the different objects of
-nature, a material for speculative philosophy which we have spoken
-of above (pp. 153-155), and regarding which Aristotle puts before us
-reflections both difficult and profound. Thus he at first (Phys. III.
-1-3) proceeds from this point to movement (κίνησις), and says that it
-is essential that a philosophy of nature should speak of it, but that
-it is difficult to grasp; in fact, it is one of the most difficult
-conceptions. Aristotle thus sets to work to understand movement in
-general, not merely in space and time, but also in its reality; and
-in this sense he calls it “the activity of an existent thing which
-is in capacity, so far as it is in capacity.” He explains this thus:
-“Brass is in capacity a statue; yet the motion to become a statue
-is not a motion of the brass so far as it is brass, but a motion of
-itself, as the capacity to become a statue. Hence this activity is
-an imperfect one (ἀτελής),” _i.e._ it has not its end within itself,
-“for mere capacity, whose activity is movement, is imperfect.” The
-absolute substance, the moving immovable, the existent ground of
-heaven which we saw as end, is, on the contrary, both activity itself
-and the content and object of activity. But Aristotle distinguishes
-from this what falls under the form of this opposition, “That moving
-is also moved which has movement as a capacity, and whose immobility
-is rest. That in which movement is present has immobility as rest;
-for activity in rest, as such, is movement.” That is to say, rest is
-capacity for motion. “Hence movement is the activity of that which is
-movable (κινητοῦ),[93] so far as it is movable; but this happens from
-the contact of that which is motive (κινητικοῦ), so that at the same
-time it is posited as passive likewise. But that which moves always
-introduces a certain form or end (εἶδος), either this particular thing
-(τόδε), or a quality or a quantity, which is the principle and cause of
-the motion when it moves; thus man, as he is in energy, makes man from
-man as he is in capacity. Thus, too, it is evident that movement is in
-the movable thing: for it is the activity of this, and is derived from
-that which is motive. The activity of that which is motive is likewise
-not different, for both are necessarily activity. It is motive because
-it has the capacity for being so; but it causes motion because it
-energizes. But it is the energetic of the moveable (ἔστιν ἐνεργητικὸν
-τοῦ κινετοῦ), so that there is one energy of both; just as the relation
-between one and two is the same as that between two and one, and there
-also is the same relation between acclivity and declivity, so the way
-from Thebes to Athens is the same as from Athens to Thebes. Activity
-and passivity are not originally (κυρίως) the same, but in what they
-are inherent, in motion, they are the same. In Being (τῷ εἶναι) they
-are identical, but activity, in so far as it is activity of this in
-this” (what is moved), “and the activity of this from this” (what
-moves), “is different as regards its conception (τῷ λόγῳ).” Aristotle
-subsequently deals with the infinite (Phys. III. 4-8).
-
-“In like manner it is necessary,” says Aristotle (Phys. IV. 1-5), “that
-the natural philosopher should consider the subject of place (τόπος).”
-Here come various definitions and determinations under which space
-generally and particular space or place appear. “Is place a body? It
-cannot be a body, for then there would be in one and the same, two
-bodies. Again, if it is the place and receptacle (χώρα) of this body,
-it is evident that it is so also of the superficies and the remaining
-boundaries; but the same reasoning applies to these, for where the
-superficies of water were before, there will now be the superficies
-of air,” and thus the places of both superficies would be in one.
-“But in truth there is no difference between the point and the place
-of the point, so that if place is not different from the other forms
-of limitation, neither is it something outside of them. It is not an
-element, and neither consists of corporeal nor of incorporeal elements,
-for it possesses magnitude, but not body. The elements of bodies
-are, however, themselves bodies, and no magnitude is produced from
-intelligible elements. Place is not the material of things, for nothing
-consists of it—neither the form, nor the Notion, nor the end, nor the
-moving cause; and yet it is something.” Aristotle now determines place
-as the first unmoved limit of that which is the comprehending: it
-comprehends the body whose place it is, and has nothing of the thing
-in itself; yet it co-exists with the thing, because the limits and
-the limited co-exist. The uttermost ends of what comprehends and of
-what is comprehended are identical, for both are bounds; but they are
-not bounds of the same, for form is the boundary of the thing, place
-is that of the embracing body. Place, as the comprehending, remains
-unchangeably passive while the thing which is moved is moved away; from
-which we see that place must be separable from the thing. Or place,
-according to Aristotle, is the boundary, the negation of a body, the
-assertion of difference, of discretion; but it likewise does not merely
-belong to this body, but also to that which comprehends. There is thus
-no difference at all, but unchangeable continuity. “Place is neither
-the universal (κοινός) in which all bodies are” (heaven), “nor the
-particular (ἴδιος), in which they are as the first (πρώτῳ).” Aristotle
-also speaks of above and below in space, in relation to heaven as that
-which contains, and earth as what is beneath. “That body, outside of
-which is a comprehending body, is in space. But the whole heavens are
-not anywhere, since no body comprehends them. Outside the universe
-nothing is, and hence everything is in the heavens, for the heavens
-are the whole. Place, however, is not the heavens, but its external
-quiescent boundary which touches the body moved. Hence the earth is in
-water, water in air, air in ether, but ether in the heavens.”
-
-From this point Aristotle goes on (Phys. IV. 6, 7) to empty space, in
-which an old question is involved which physicists even now cannot
-explain: they could do so if they studied Aristotle, but as far as they
-are concerned there might have been no thought nor Aristotle in the
-world. “Vacuum, according to ordinary ideas, is a space in which there
-is no body, and, fancying that all Being is body, they say that vacuum
-is that in which there is nothing at all. The conception of a vacuum
-has its justification for one thing in the fact that a vacuum,” the
-negative to an existent form, “is essential to motion; for a body could
-not move in a plenum,” and in the place to which it does move there
-must be nothing. “The other argument in favour of a vacuum is found
-in the compression of bodies, in which the parts press into the empty
-spaces.” This is the conception of varying density and the alteration
-of the same, in accordance with which an equal weight might consist
-of an equal number of parts, but these, as being separated by vacuum,
-might present a greater volume. Aristotle confutes these reasonings
-most adroitly, and first of all in this way; “The plenum could be
-changed, and bodies could yield to one another even if no interval of
-vacuum separated them. Liquids as well as solids are not condensed into
-a vacuum; something that they contained is expelled, just as air is
-expelled if water is compressed.”
-
-Aristotle deals more thoroughly, in the first place (Phys. IV. 8), with
-the erroneous conception that the vacuum is the cause of movement.
-For, on the one hand, he shows that the vacuum really abolishes
-motion, and consequently in vacuum a universal rest would reign. He
-calls it perfect indifference as to the greater or less distance to
-which a thing is moved; in vacuum there are no distinctions. It is
-pure negation without object or difference; there is no reason for
-standing still or going on. But body is in movement, and that, indeed,
-as distinguished; it has a positive relation, and not one merely to
-nothing. On the other hand, Aristotle refutes the idea that movement
-is in vacuum because compression is possible. But this does not happen
-in a vacuum; there would be established in it not one movement, but
-a movement towards all sides, a general annihilation, an absolute
-yielding, where no cohesion would remain in the body. “Again, a weight
-or a body is borne along more swiftly or more slowly from two causes;
-either because there is a difference in that through which it is borne
-along, as when it moves through air or water or earth, or because that
-which is borne along differs through excess of weight or lightness.” As
-regards difference of movement on account of the first difference—that
-in the density of the medium—Aristotle says: “The medium through which
-the body is borne along is the cause of the resistance encountered,
-which is greater if the medium is moving in a contrary direction (and
-less if it is at rest); resistance is increased also if the medium is
-not easily divided. The difference in velocity is in inverse ratio to
-the specific gravity of the medium, air and water, so that if the
-medium has only half the density, the rate of progress will be double
-as quick. But vacuum has to body no such relation of differences
-of specific gravity. Body can no more contain a vacuum within its
-dimensions than a line can contain a point, unless the line were
-composed of points. The vacuum has no ratio to the plenum.” But as to
-the other case, the difference in weight and lightness, which has to
-be considered as being in bodies themselves, whereby one moves more
-quickly than another through the same space: “this distinction exists
-only in the plenum, for the heavy body, by reason of its power, divides
-the plenum more quickly.” This point of view is quite correct, and it
-is mainly directed against a number of conceptions that prevail in our
-physics. The conception of equal movement of the heavy and the light,
-as that of pure weight, pure matter, is an abstraction, being taken as
-though they were inherently like, only differing through the accidental
-resistance of the air.
-
-Aristotle (Phys. IV. 9) now comes to the second point, to the proof of
-the vacuum because of the difference in specific gravity. “Many believe
-that the vacuum exists because of the rare and the dense;” the former
-is said to be a rare body, and the latter a perfect continuity; or
-they at least differ quantitatively from one another through greater
-or less density. “For if air should be generated from a quantity of
-water, a given quantity of water must produce a quantity of air the
-same in bulk, or there must necessarily be a vacuum; for it is only
-on the hypothesis of a vacuum that compression and rarefaction are
-explicable. Now if, as they say, the less dense were that which has
-many separate void spaces, it is evident that since a vacuum cannot
-be separated any more than a space can have intervals, neither can
-the rare subsist in this manner. But if it is not separable, and yet
-a vacuum is said to exist in the body, in the first place movement
-could thus only be upwards; for the rare is the light, and hence they
-say that fire is rare,” because it always moves upwards. “In the
-next place the vacuum cannot be the cause of motion as that in which
-something moves, but must resemble bladders that carry up that which
-adheres to them. But how is it possible that a vacuum can move, or that
-there can be a place where there is a vacuum? For that into which it
-is carried would be the vacuum of a vacuum. In short, as there can be
-no movement in vacuum, so also a vacuum cannot move.” Aristotle set
-against these ideas the true state of matters, and states generally the
-ideal conception of nature: “that the opposites, hot and cold, and the
-other physical contraries, have one and the same matter, and that from
-what is in capacity that which is in energy is produced; that matter
-is not separable though it is different in essence[94] (τῷ εἶναι),
-and that it remains one and the same in number (ἀριθμῷ) even if it
-possesses colour, or is hot and cold. And again, the matter of a small
-body and a large is the same, because at one time a greater proceeds
-from a smaller, and at another time a smaller from a greater. If air is
-generated from water it is expanded, but the matter remains the same
-and without taking to itself anything else; for that which it was in
-capacity it becomes in actuality. In a similar way if air is compressed
-from a greater into a less volume, the process will be reversed, and
-air will similarly pass into water, because the matter which is in
-capacity both air and water, also becomes both.” Aristotle likewise
-asserts that increase and decrease of warmth, and its transition into
-cold, is no addition or otherwise of warm matter, and also one and the
-same is both dense and rare. This is very different from the physical
-conceptions which assert more or less matter to correspond with more
-or less density, thus comprehending the difference in specific weight
-as the external addition of matter. Aristotle, on the contrary, takes
-this dynamically, though certainly not in the sense in which dynamics
-are to-day understood, viz. as an increase of intensity or as a
-degree, for he accepts intensity in its truth as universal capacity.
-Undoubtedly the difference must also be taken as a difference in
-amount, but not as an increase and decrease, or as an alteration in the
-absolute quantity of the matter. For here intensity means force, but
-again not as being a thing of thought separated from matter, but as
-indicating that if anything has become more intensive, it has had its
-actuality diminished, having, however, according to Aristotle, attained
-to a greater capacity. If the intensity is again directed outwards,
-and compared with other things, it undoubtedly becomes degree, and
-therefore magnitude immediately enters in. It then is indifferent
-whether greater intension or greater extension is posited; more air is
-capable of being warmed to the same degree as less, through the greater
-intensity of the warmth; or the same air can thereby become intensively
-warmer.
-
-As regards the investigation of time, Aristotle remarks (Phys. IV.
-10, 11, 13) that if time is externally (exoterically, ἐξωτερικῶς)
-regarded, we are inevitably led to doubt (διαπορῆσαι) whether it has
-any being whatever, or whether it has bare existence, as feeble (μόλις
-καὶ ἀμυδρῶς) as if it were only a potentiality. “For one part of it
-was and is not: another part will be and is not as yet; but of these
-parts infinite and everlasting (ἀεὶ λαμβανόμενος), time is composed.
-But it now appears that time, if composed of things that are not, may
-be incapable of existence. And also as regards everything divisible, if
-it exists, either some or all of its parts must be. Time is certainly
-divisible; but some of the parts are past, others are future, and no
-part is present. For the _now_ is no part, since a part has a measure,
-and the whole must consist of the parts; but time does not appear to
-consist of the Now.” That is to say, because the Now is indivisible,
-it has no quantitative determination which could be measured. “Besides
-it is not easy to decide whether the Now remains, or always becomes
-another and another. Again, time is not a movement and change, for
-movement and change occur in that which is moved and changed, or
-accompany time in its course; but time is everywhere alike. Besides
-change is swifter and slower, but time is not. But it is not without
-change and motion” (which is just the moment of pure negativity in the
-same) “for when we perceive no change, it appears as if no time had
-elapsed, as in sleep. Time is hence in motion but not motion itself.”
-Aristotle defines it thus: “We say that time is, when we perceive the
-before and after in movement; but these are so distinguished that we
-apprehend them to be another and another, and conceive that there
-is something between, as a middle. Now when we understand that the
-extremes of the conclusion are different from the middle, and the
-soul says that the Now has two instants, the one prior and the other
-posterior, then we say that this is time. What is determined through
-the Now, we call time, and this is the fundamental principle. But when
-we are sensible of the Now as one, and not as a prior and posterior in
-motion, nor as the identity of an earlier or later, then there does
-not appear to us to have been any time, because neither was there
-any motion.” Tedium is thus ever the same. “Time is hence the number
-of motion, according to priority and posteriority; it is not motion
-itself, unless so far as motion has number. We judge of the more or
-less through number, but of a greater or less motion by time. But we
-call number that which can be numbered, as well as that with which
-we number; but time is not the number with which we number, but that
-which is numbered, and, like motion, always is changing. The Now is,
-which is the unity of number, and it measures time. The whole of time
-is the same, for the Now which was is the same” (universality as the
-Now destroyed) “but in Being it is another. Time thus is through the
-Now both continuous (συνεχής) and discrete (διῇρηται). It thereby
-resembles the point, for that also is the continuity of the line and
-its division, its principle and limit; but the Now is not an enduring
-point. As continuity of time the Now connects the past and the future,
-but it likewise divides time in capacity,” the Now is only divisibility
-and the moments only ideal. “And in as far as it is such, it is always
-another; but, in as far as it unites, it is ever one and the same.
-Similarly, in as far as we divide the line, other and yet other points
-always arise for thought; but in as far as it is one, there is only
-one point. Thus the Now is both the division of time in capacity, and
-the limit and union of both” _i.e._ of the prior and posterior. The
-universally dividing point is only one as actual; but this actual is
-not permanently one, but ever and again another, so that individuality
-has universality, as its negativity, within it. “But division and
-union are the same, and similarly related; however their Notion (τὸ
-εἶναι)[95] is different.” In one and the same respect the absolute
-opposite of what was posited is immediately set forth as existent; in
-space, on the other hand, the moments are not set forth as existent,
-but in it first appears this being and its motion and contradiction.
-Thus the identity of the understanding is not a principle with
-Aristotle, for identity and non-identity to him are one and the same.
-Because the Now is only now, past and future are different from it,
-but they are likewise necessarily connected in the Now, which is not
-without before and after; thus they are in one, and the Now, as their
-limit, is both their union and their division.
-
-Aristotle (Phys. V. 1) then goes on to movement as realized in a thing,
-to change (μεταβολή) or to the physical processes—while before we had
-pure movement. “In movement there is first something which moves, also
-something which is moved, and the time in which it is moved; besides
-these, that from which, and that into which it is moved.” (Cf. _supra_,
-p. 141.) “For all motion is from something and into something; but
-there is a difference between that which is first moved and that into
-which and from which it is moved, as, for instance, wood, warmth and
-cold. The motion is in the wood and not in the form; for neither form
-nor place, nor quantity moves or is moved, but” (in the order in which
-they follow) “there is that which is moved and that which moves, and
-that into which it is moved. That to which movement is made, more than
-that out of which movement is made, is named change. Hence to pass
-into non-being is also change, although what passes away is changed
-from Being: and generation is a mutation into Being, even though it
-is from non-being.” The remark is to be interpreted as meaning that
-for the first time in real becoming motion, _i.e._ in change, the
-relation _whereto_ enters, while the relation _wherefrom_ is that in
-which change is still the mere ideal motion. Besides this first form of
-difference between motion and change, Aristotle further gives another,
-since he divides change into three: “into change from a subject (ἐξ
-ὑποκειμένον) into a subject; or from a subject into a non-subject; or
-from a non-subject into a subject.” The fourth, “from a non-subject
-into a non-subject,” which may also appear in the general division, “is
-no mutation, for it contains no opposition.” It may certainly be merely
-thought or ideal, but Aristotle indicates the actual phenomenon. “The
-mutation from a non-subject into a subject is generation (γένεσις);
-that from a subject into a non-subject is corruption (φθορά); that
-from a subject into a subject, is motion as such;” because that which
-is transformed remains the same, there is no becoming-another of
-the actual, but a merely formal becoming-another. This opposition of
-the materialized motion as mutation, and of merely formal motion, is
-noteworthy.
-
-In the sixth book Aristotle comes to the consideration of the dialectic
-of this motion and change as advanced by Zeno, that is, to the endless
-divisibility which we have already (Vol. I. pp. 266-277) considered.
-Aristotle solves it through the universal. He says that they are the
-contradiction of the universal turned against itself; the unity in
-which its moments dissolve is not a nothing, so that motion and change
-are nothing, but a negative universal, where the negative is itself
-again posited as positive, and that is the essence of divisibility.
-
-Of the further details into which Aristotle enters, I shall only give
-the following. As against atoms and their motion, he remarks (Phys.
-VI. 10) that the indivisible has no motion and mutation, which is the
-direct opposite of the proposition of Zeno that only simple indivisible
-Being and no motion exists. For as Zeno argues from the indivisibility
-of atoms against motion, Aristotle argues from motion against atoms.
-“Everything which moves or changes is in the first division of this
-time partly here and partly there. The atom, as simple indivisible
-Being, can, however, not have any part of it in both points in space,
-because it then would be divisible. The indivisible could thus only
-move if time consisted of the Now; this is, however, impossible, as we
-proved before.” Because atoms thus neither have change in themselves,
-nor can this come to them from without through impulse, &c., they are
-really without truth.
-
-The determination of the pure ideality of change is important.
-Aristotle says of this (Phys. VII. 3), “That which is changed is alone
-the sensuous and perceptible (αἰσθητόν); and forms and figures, as also
-capacities, are not changed, they arise and disappear in a thing only,
-without being themselves changed.” In other words: the content of
-change is unchangeable; change as such belongs to mere form. “Virtues
-or vices belong, for example, to habits acquired. Virtue is the
-perfection (τελείωσις) in which something has reached the end of its
-nature. Vice, however, is the corruption and non-attainment of this.
-They are not changes, for they only arise and pass away while another
-alters.” Or the difference becomes a difference of Being and non-being,
-_i.e._ a merely sensuous difference.
-
-From these conceptions Aristotle now comes nearer to the first real
-or physical motion (Phys. VIII. 6, 8, 9; De C\nlo, I. 4): The first
-principle of motion is itself unmoved. An endless motion in a straight
-line is an empty creation of thought; for motion is necessarily an
-effort after something. The absolute motion is the circular, because
-it is without opposition. For because movement has to be considered
-in regard to the starting-place and the end in view, in the straight
-movement the directions from A to B and from B to A are opposed, but
-in motion in a circle they are the same. The idea that heavenly bodies
-would of themselves have moved in a straight line, but that they
-accidentally came into the sphere of solar attraction, is an empty
-reflection which is far from occurring to Aristotle.
-
-Aristotle then shows (De C\nlo, II. I; I. 3) that “the whole heavens
-neither arose nor can pass away, for they are one and eternal: they
-neither have beginning nor end in eternal time, for they contain
-infinite time shut up within them.” All the other ideas are sensuous
-which try to speak of essential reality, and in them there always
-is that present which they think they have excluded. For when they
-assert a vacuum before the beginning of generation, this is the
-quiescent, self-identical, _i.e._ the eternal matter, which is thus
-already established before origination; they will not allow that
-before origination nothing exists. But in fact a thing does not exist
-before its origination, _i.e._ in movement there is something to move,
-and where reality is, there is motion. They do not, however, bring
-together that vacuum, the self-identical, the un-originated matter
-and this nothing. “That which has this absolute circular movement is
-neither heavy nor light; for the heavy is what moves downwards, and the
-light what moves upwards.” In modern physics the heavenly bodies, on
-the other hand, are endowed with weight, and seek to rush into the sun,
-but cannot do so on account of another force. “It is indestructible
-and ungenerated, without decrease or increase, without any change. It
-is different from earth, fire, air and water; it is what the ancients
-called ether, as the highest place, from its continuous course (ἀεὶ
-θεῖν) in infinite time.” This ether thus appears to be eternal matter
-which does not, however, take such a definite form, but which remains
-as it is, just as the heavens do in our conception, although here the
-juxtaposition begins ever to strike us more forcibly.
-
-Aristotle (De C\nlo, III. 6) shows further that the elements do
-not proceed from one body, but from one another; for in generation
-they neither proceed from what is incorporeal, nor from what is
-corporeal. In the first case they would have sprung from the vacuum,
-for the vacuum is the immediate incorporeal; but in that case the
-vacuum must have existed independently as that in which determinate
-corporeality arose. But neither do the elements arise from a corporeal,
-for else this body itself would be a corporeal element before the
-elements. Thus it only remains that the elements must spring from one
-another. Regarding this we must remark that Aristotle understands by
-origination, actual origination—not the transition from the universal
-to the individual, but the origination of one determinate corporeal,
-not from its principle, but from the opposite as such. Aristotle does
-not consider the universal as it contains the negative within it; else
-the universal would be the absolute matter whose universality, as
-negativity, is set forth, or is real.
-
-From this point Aristotle comes (De C\nlo, IV. I-5) to a kind of
-deduction of the elements, which is noteworthy. He shows that there
-must be four of them, in the following way—because he starts from the
-fundamental conceptions of weight and of lightness, or what we should
-call attraction and centrifugal force. The corporeal, he says, in its
-motion is neither light nor heavy, and, indeed, it is not only relative
-but also absolute. The relatively light and heavy is what, while equal
-in volume, descends more slowly or quickly. Absolute lightness goes
-up to the extremity of the heavens, absolute weight down into the
-middle. These extremes are fire and earth. Between these there are
-mediums, other than they, which relate to one another like them; and
-these are air and water, the one of which has weight, and the other
-lightness, but only relatively. For water is suspended under everything
-except earth, and air over everything except fire. “Hence,” Aristotle
-concludes, “there now are these four matters, but they are four in such
-a way that they have one in common; more particularly, because they
-arise out of one another, but exist as different.” Yet it is not the
-ether that Aristotle designates as this common matter. We must in this
-regard remark that however little these first determinations may be
-exhaustive, Aristotle is still far further on than the moderns, since
-he had not the conception of elements which prevails at the present
-time, according to which the element is made to subsist as simple.
-But any such simple determination of Being is an abstraction and has
-no reality, because such existence would be capable of no motion and
-change; the element must itself have reality, and it thus is, as the
-union of opposites, resolvable. Aristotle hence makes the elements, as
-we have already seen with those who went before (Vol. I., pp. 181, 182;
-290-293; 336), arise out of one another and pass into one another; and
-this is entirely opposed to our Physics, which understands by elements
-an indelible, self-identical simplicity only. Hence men are wonderfully
-discerning in reproaching us for calling water, air, &c., elements!
-Nor yet in the expression “neutrality” have the modern physicists been
-able to grasp a universality conceived of as a unity, such as Aristotle
-ascribes to the elements; in fact, however, the acid which unites with
-a base is no longer, as is asserted, present within it as such. But
-however removed Aristotle may be from understanding simplicity as an
-abstraction, just as little does he recognize here the arid conception
-of consisting of parts. Quite the contrary. He strives enough against
-this, as, for instance, in relation to Anaxagoras (De C\nl. III. 4).
-
-I shall further mention the moments of the real process in relation
-to motion, in which Aristotle finally passes on (De gen. et corr.
-II. 2-4) to the “principles of perceptible body”; we here see the
-elements in process, as formerly in their restful determinateness.
-Aristotle excludes the relations which concern sight, smell, &c.,
-and brings forward the others as being those which are of sensible
-weight or lightness. He gives as these fundamental principles—warmth
-and cold, dryness and moisture; they are the sensible differences for
-others, while weight and lightness are different for themselves. Now
-in order to prepare for the transition of the elements into sensible
-relations, Aristotle says: “Because there are those four principles,
-and four things have properly six relations to one another, but the
-opposite cannot here be connected (the moist cannot be connected
-with the dry, or the warm with the cold), there are four connections
-of these principles, warm and dry, warm and moist, cold and moist,
-cold and dry. And these connections follow those first elements, so
-that thus fire is warm and dry, air warm and moist (vapour), water
-cold and moist, earth cold and dry.” From this Aristotle now makes
-the reciprocal transformation of the elements into one another
-comprehensible thus: Origination and decay proceed from the opposite
-and into the opposite. All elements have a mutual opposite; each is
-as non-being to the Being of the other, and one is thus distinguished
-from the other as actuality and capacity. Now amongst these some have
-an equal part in common; fire and water, for example, have warmth;
-thus if in fire dryness were overcome by moisture, out of fire air
-would arise. On the contrary, as regards those which have nothing in
-common with one another, like earth, which is cold and dry, and air,
-which is warm and moist, the transition goes more slowly forward. The
-transition of all elements into one another, the whole process of
-nature, is thus to Aristotle the constant rotation of their changes.
-This is unsatisfactory, because neither are the individual elements
-comprehended nor is the remainder rounded into a whole.
-
-As a matter of fact, Aristotle now goes on, in meteorology, to
-the consideration of the universal process of nature. But here we
-have reached his limits. Here, in the natural process, the simple
-determination as such—this system of progressive determination—ceases
-to hold good, and its whole interest is lost. For it is in the
-real process that these determinate conceptions always lose their
-signification again and become their opposite, and in it also this
-contingent succession is forced together and united. In determining
-time and motion, we certainly saw Aristotle himself uniting opposite
-determinations; but movement, in its true determination, must take
-space and time back into itself; it must represent itself as being
-the unity of these its real moments and in them; that is, as the
-realization of this ideal. But still more must the following moments,
-moisture, warmth, &c., themselves come back under the conception of
-process. But the sensuous manifestation here begins to obtain the upper
-hand; for the empirical has the nature of the isolated form, which is
-to fall out of relation. The empirical manifestation thus outstrips
-thought, which merely continues everywhere to stamp it as its own,
-but which has no longer power to permeate the manifestation, since it
-withdraws out of the sphere of the ideal, while it is still in the
-region of time, space and movement.
-
-
-3. THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND.
-
-As regards the other side from the Philosophy of Nature, the Philosophy
-of Mind, we find that Aristotle has constituted in it also a separation
-into special sciences, in a series of works which I shall name. In
-the first place, his three books “On the Soul” deal partly with the
-abstract universal nature of the soul, though mainly in an antagonistic
-spirit; and even more, and in a fashion both profound and speculative,
-they deal with the soul’s essential nature—not with its Being, but
-with the determinate manner and potentiality of its energy; for
-this is to Aristotle the Being and essence of the soul. Thus there
-are several different treatises, viz.: On Sense-perception and the
-Sensible, On Memory and Recollection, On Sleeping and Waking, On
-Dreams, On Divination (μαντική) through Dreams, besides a treatise on
-Physiognomy; there is no empirical point of view or phenomenon, either
-in the natural or the spiritual world, that Aristotle has considered
-beneath his notice. With respect to the practical side, he in like
-manner devotes his attention to man in his capacity of householder, in
-a work on economics (οἰκονομικά); then he takes into his consideration
-the individual human being, in a moral treatise (ἠθικά), which is
-partly an inquiry into the highest good or the absolute end, and
-partly a dissertation on special virtues. The manner of treatment is
-almost invariably speculative, and sound understanding is displayed
-throughout. Finally, in his Politics, he gives a representation of the
-true constitution of a state and the different kinds of constitution,
-which he deals with from the empirical point of view; and in his
-Politics an account is given of the most important states, of which we
-are, however, told very little.
-
-
-a. PSYCHOLOGY.
-
-In Aristotle’s teaching on this subject we must not expect to find
-so-called metaphysics of the soul. For metaphysical handling such as
-this really pre-supposes the soul as a thing, and asks, for example,
-what sort of a thing it is, whether it is simple, and so on. Aristotle
-did not busy his concrete, speculative mind with abstract questions
-such as these, but, as already remarked, he deals rather with the
-manner of the soul’s activity; and though this appears in a general way
-as a series of progressive determinations which are not necessarily
-blended into a whole, each determination is yet apprehended in its own
-sphere with as much correctness as depth.
-
-Aristotle (De Anima, I. 1) makes in the first place the general remark
-that it appears as if the soul must, on the one hand, be regarded
-in its freedom as independent and as separable from the body, since
-in thinking it is independent; and, on the other hand, since in the
-emotions it appears to be united with the body and not separate, it
-must also be looked on as being inseparable from it; for the emotions
-show themselves as materialized Notions (λόγοι ἔνυλοι), as material
-modes of what is spiritual. With this a twofold method of considering
-the soul, also known to Aristotle, comes into play, namely the purely
-rational or logical view, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the
-physical or physiological; these we still see practised side by side.
-According to the one view, anger, for instance, is looked on as an
-eager desire for retaliation or the like; according to the other view
-it is the surging upward of the heart-blood and the warm element in
-man. The former is the rational, the latter the material view of anger;
-just as one man may define a house as a shelter against wind, rain, and
-other destructive agencies, while another defines it as consisting of
-wood and stone; that is to say, the former gives the determination and
-the form, or the purpose of the thing, while the latter specifies the
-material it is made of, and its necessary conditions.
-
-Aristotle characterizes the nature of the soul more closely (De Anima,
-II. 1) by referring to the three moments of existence: “First there
-is matter (ὕλη), which is in itself no individual thing; secondly,
-the form and the universal (μορφὴ καὶ εἶδος), which give a thing
-individuality; thirdly, the result produced by both, in which matter
-is potentiality and form is energy (ἐντελέχεια);” matter thus does
-not exist as matter, but only implicitly. “The soul is substance,
-as being the form of the physical organic body which is possessed
-potentially of life; but its substance is energy (ἐντελέχεια), the
-energy of a body such as has been described” (endowed with life). “This
-energy appears in twofold form: either as knowledge (ἐπιστήμη) or as
-active observation (τὸ θεωρεῖν). But it is evident that here it is to
-be regarded as the former of these. For the soul is present with us
-both when we sleep and when we wake; waking corresponds with active
-observation, and sleep with possession and passivity. But knowledge is
-in origination prior to all else. The soul is thus the first energy of
-a physical but organic body.” It is in respect of this that Aristotle
-gives to the soul the definition of being the entelechy (_supra_, pp.
-143, 144).
-
-In the same chapter Aristotle comes to the question of the mutual
-relation of body and soul. “For this reason” (because soul is form)
-“we must no more ask if soul and body are one than we ask if wax and
-its form are one, or, in general, if matter and its forms are one. For
-though unity and Being are used in various senses. Being is essentially
-energy.” Were we, namely, to pronounce body and soul one in the same
-way that a house, which consists of a number of parts, or as a thing
-and its properties, or the subject and predicate, and so on, are
-called one, where both are regarded as things, materialism results.
-An identity such as this is an altogether abstract, and therefore a
-superficial and empty determination, and a term which it is a mistake
-to employ, for form and material do not rank equally as regards Being;
-identity truly worthy of the name is to be apprehended as nothing else
-than energy such as has been described. The only question that now
-arises is whether activity and the organ it employs are one; and our
-idea is to answer in the affirmative. The more definite explanation of
-this relation is to be found in the following; “The soul is substance,
-but only according to the Notion (κατὰ τὸν λόγον); but that is the
-substantial form (τὸ τί ἦν εἶναι)[96] for such and such a body. For
-suppose that an instrument, such as an axe, were a natural body, this
-form, this axehood, would be its substance, and this its form would be
-its soul, for if this were to be taken away from it, it would no longer
-be an axe, the name only would remain. But soul is not the substantial
-form and Notion of such a body as an axe, but of a body which has
-within itself the principle of movement and of rest.” The axe has not
-the principle of its form in itself, it does not make itself an axe,
-nor does its form, its Notion, in itself constitute its substance, as
-its activity is not through itself. “If, for instance, the eye were
-in itself a living thing, vision would be its soul, for vision is the
-reality which expresses the Notion of the eye. But the eye, as such, is
-only the material instrument of vision, for if vision were lost, the
-eye would be an eye only in name, like an eye of stone or a painted
-eye.” Thus to the question, What is the substance of the eye? Aristotle
-answers: Are the nerves, humours, tissues, its substance? On the
-contrary, sight itself is its substance, these material substances are
-only an empty name. “As this is the case in the part, so it also holds
-good of the body as a whole. The potentiality of life is not in any
-such thing as has lost its soul, but in that which still possesses it.
-The seed or the fruit is such and such a body potentially. Like hewing
-and seeing,” in the axe and the eye, “waking” in general “is activity;
-but the corporeal is only potentiality. But as the” living “eye is
-both vision and the eyeball” (the two being connected as actuality and
-potentiality), “so also are soul and body the living animal, the two
-are not to be separated. But it is not yet clear whether the soul is
-the activity of the body in the same way as the steersman is of the
-ship.” That the active form is the true substance, while matter is so
-only potentially, is a true speculative Notion.
-
-As settling the question asked in the above-mentioned metaphor, we may
-quote what Aristotle says later (De Anima, II. 4): “As the principle of
-motion and as end (οὗ ἕνεκα), and as substance of living bodies, the
-soul is the cause. For substance is to all objects the cause of their
-existence, but life is the existence of the living, and its cause and
-principle is the soul; and further, its energy is the existing Notion
-of what has potential existence. The soul is cause also as end,” that
-is, as self-determining universality, “for nature, like thought, acts
-for the sake of an object, which object is its end, but in living
-beings this is soul. All the parts of the body are thus the organs of
-the soul, and hence exist for its sake.” In like manner Aristotle shows
-that the soul is the cause of motion.
-
-Aristotle (De Anima, II. 2, 3) further states that the soul is to
-be determined in three ways, namely as nutrient or vegetable, as
-sensitive, and as intelligent, corresponding with plant life, animal
-life and human life. The nutrient soul, when it is alone, belongs to
-plants; when it is at the same time capable of sense-perception, it is
-the animal soul; and when at once nutrient, sensitive and intelligent,
-it is the mind of man. Man has thus three natures united in himself; a
-thought which is also expressed in modern Natural Philosophy by saying
-that a man is also both an animal and a plant, and which is directed
-against the division and separation of the differences in these
-forms. That difference has also been revived in recent times in the
-observation of the organic, and it is highly important to keep these
-sides separate. The only question (and it is Aristotle who raises it)
-is how far these, as parts, are separable. As to what concerns more
-nearly the relation of the three souls, as they may be termed (though
-they are incorrectly thus distinguished), Aristotle says of them, with
-perfect truth, that we need look for no one soul in which all these are
-found, and which in a definite and simple form is conformable with any
-one of them. This is a profound observation, by means of which truly
-speculative thought marks itself out from the thought which is merely
-logical and formal. Similarly among figures only the triangle and the
-other definite figures, like the square, the parallelogram, &c., are
-truly anything; for what is common to them, the universal figure, is
-an empty thing of thought, a mere abstraction. On the other hand,
-the triangle is the first, the truly universal figure, which appears
-also in the square, &c., as the figure which can be led back to the
-simplest determination. Therefore, on the one hand, the triangle stands
-alongside of the square, pentagon, &c., as a particular figure, but—and
-this is Aristotle’s main contention—it is the truly universal figure.
-In the same way the soul must not be sought for as an abstraction, for
-in the animate being the nutritive and the sensitive soul are included
-in the intelligent, but only as its object or its potentiality;
-similarly, the nutritive soul, which constitutes the nature of plants,
-is also present in the sensitive soul, but likewise only as being
-implicit in it, or as the universal. Or the lower soul inheres only in
-the higher, as a predicate in a subject: and this mere ideal is not
-to be ranked very high, as is indeed the case in formal thought; that
-which is for itself is, on the contrary, the never-ceasing return into
-itself, to which actuality belongs. We can determine these expressions
-even more particularly. For if we speak of soul and body, we term the
-corporeal the objective and the soul the subjective; and the misfortune
-of nature is just this, that it is objective, that is, it is the
-Notion only implicitly, and not explicitly. In the natural there is,
-no doubt, a certain activity, but again this whole sphere is only
-the objective, the implicit element in one higher. As, moreover, the
-implicit in its sphere appears as a reality for the development of the
-Idea, it has two sides; the universal is already itself an actual, as,
-for example, the vegetative soul. Aristotle’s meaning is therefore
-this: an empty universal is that which does not itself exist, or is not
-itself species. All that is universal is in fact real, as particular,
-individual, existing for another. But that universal is real, in that
-by itself, without further change, it constitutes its first species,
-and when further developed it belongs, not to this, but to a higher
-stage. These are the general determinations which are of the greatest
-importance, and which, if developed, would lead to all true views of
-the organic, &c., since they give a correct general representation of
-the principle of realization.
-
-α. The nutritive or vegetative soul is therefore, according to
-Aristotle (De Anima, II. 4), to be conceived as the first, which
-is energy, the general Notion of the soul itself, just as it is,
-without further determination; or, as we should say, plant life is the
-Notion of the organic. What Aristotle goes on to say of nourishment,
-for instance, whether the like is nourished by the like, or by the
-opposite, is of little importance. It may, however, be mentioned that
-Aristotle (De Anima, II. 12) says of the vegetative soul that it is
-related only to matter, and that only after a material manner, as when
-we eat and drink, but that it cannot take up into itself the forms of
-sensible things: we, too, ourselves in practical matters are related as
-particular individuals to a material existence here and now, in which
-our own material existence comes into activity.
-
-β. There is more to interest us in Aristotle’s determination of
-sense-perception (De Anima, II. 5), as to which I shall make some
-further quotations. Sense-perception is in general a potentiality (we
-should say a receptivity), but this potentiality is also activity;
-it is therefore not to be conceived as mere passivity. Passivity and
-activity pertain to one and the same, or passivity has two senses.
-“On the one hand a passivity is the destruction of one state by its
-opposite; on the other hand, it is a preservation of what is merely
-potential by means of what is actual.” The one case occurs in the
-acquisition of knowledge, which is a passivity in so far as a change
-takes place from one condition (ἕξις) into an opposite condition;
-but there is another passivity, in which something only potentially
-posited is maintained, therefore knowledge is knowing in an active
-sense (_supra_, p. 182). From this Aristotle concludes: “There is one
-change which is privative; and another which acts on the nature and the
-permanent energy (ἕξις). The first change in the subject of perception
-(αἰσθητικοῦ) is caused by that which produces the perception; but,
-once produced, the perception is possessed as knowledge (επιστήμη).”
-Because that which produces the change is different from the result,
-perception is passivity; but it is just as much spontaneity, “and
-sense-perception, like knowledge (θεωρεῖν), has to do with this aspect
-of activity. But the difference is, that what causes the perception is
-external. The cause of this is that perceptive activity is directed
-on the particular, while knowledge has as its object the universal;
-but the universal is, to a certain extent, in the soul itself as
-its substance. Everyone can therefore think when he will,” and for
-this very reason thought is free, “but perception does not depend
-on him, having the necessary condition that the object perceived be
-present.” The influence from without, as a passivity, comes therefore
-first; but there follows the activity of making this passive content
-one’s own. This is doubtless the correct point from which to view
-perception, whatever be the manner of further development preferred,
-subjective idealism, or any other way. For it is a matter of perfect
-indifference whether we find ourselves subjectively or objectively
-determined; in both there is contained the moment of passivity, by
-which the perception comes to pass. The monad of Leibnitz appears,
-it is true, to be an idea opposed to this, since every monad, every
-point of my finger, as atom or individual, is an entire universe, the
-whole of which develops in itself without reference to other monads.
-Here seems to be asserted the highest idealistic freedom, but it is
-of no avail to imagine that all in me develops out of me; for we must
-always recollect that what is thus developed in me is passive, and not
-free. With this moment of passivity Aristotle does not fall short of
-idealism; sensation is always in one aspect passive. That is, however,
-a false idealism which thinks that the passivity and spontaneity of
-the mind depend on whether the determination given is from within
-or from without, as if there were freedom in sense-perception,
-whereas it is itself a sphere of limitation. It is one thing when the
-matter—whether it be sensation, light, colour, seeing or hearing—is
-apprehended from the Idea, for it is then shown that it comes to pass
-from the self-determination of the Idea. But it is different when,
-in so far as I exist as an individual subject, the Idea exists in
-me as this particular individual; there we have the standpoint of
-finitude established, and therefore of passivity. Thus there need be
-no standing on ceremony with sense-perception, nor can a system of
-idealism be based on the theory that nothing comes to us from without:
-as Fichte’s theory about himself was, that when he put on his coat, he
-constituted it in part by drawing it on, or even by looking at it. The
-individual element in sensation is the sphere of the individuality of
-consciousness; it is present therein in the form of one thing as much
-as of another, and its individuality consists in this fact, that other
-things exist for it. Aristotle continues: “Speaking generally, the
-difference is that potentiality is twofold; as we say a boy may become
-a general, and a grown man may also become so,” for the latter has the
-effective power. “This is the nature of the faculty of sense-perception
-(αἰσθητικόν); it is in potentiality what the object of sense (αἰσθητόν)
-is in actuality. Sense-perception is therefore passive, in so far as
-it does not resemble its object, but after the impression has been
-made it becomes similar to its object, and is identified with it.”
-The reaction of sense-perception consists therefore in this active
-receiving into itself of that which is perceived; but this is simply
-activity in passivity, the spontaneity which abrogates the receptivity
-in sense-perception. Sense-perception, as made like to itself, has,
-while appearing to be brought to pass by means of an influence working
-on it, brought to pass the identity of itself and its object. If
-then subjective idealism declares that there are no external things,
-that they are but a determination of our self, this must be admitted
-in respect to pure sense-perception, since sense-perception is a
-subjective existence or state in me, which yet, however, is not for
-that reason freedom.
-
-In speaking of sense-perception, Aristotle (De Anima, II. 12)
-makes use of his celebrated simile, which has so often occasioned
-misapprehension, because it has been understood quite incorrectly. His
-words are: “Sense-perception is the receiving of sensible forms without
-matter, as wax receives only the impress of the golden signet ring,
-not the gold itself, but merely its form.” For the form is the object
-as universal; and theoretically we are in the position, not of the
-individual and sensuous, but of the universal. The case is different
-with us in our practical relations, where the influence working upon us
-pre-supposes in return the contact of the material, for which reason,
-as Aristotle asserts, plants do not perceive (_supra_, p. 186). On
-the other hand, in receiving form, the material is lost sight of; for
-the receiving of form indicates no positive relation to the matter,
-which is no longer something offering resistance. If, therefore,
-sense-perceptions are termed in general sensuous impressions, we, in
-matter-of-fact fashion, do not get beyond this crude way of putting
-it; and in making the transition to soul, we take refuge behind
-popular conceptions, which are partly ill-defined Notions, and partly
-not Notions at all. Thus it is said that all sense-perceptions are
-impressed on the soul by external things, just as the matter of the
-signet ring works on the matter of the wax; and then we hear it alleged
-that this is Aristotle’s philosophy. It is the same with most other
-philosophers; if they give any sort of illustration that appeals to
-the senses, everyone can understand it, and everyone takes the content
-of the comparison in its full extent: as if all that is contained in
-this sensuous relationship should also hold good of the spiritual. No
-great importance is therefore to be attached to this conception, as it
-is only an illustration, professing to show by a side comparison that
-the passive element in sense-perception is in its passivity for pure
-form only; this form alone is taken up into the percipient subject,
-and finds a place in the soul. It does not, however, remain in the
-same relation to it as that in which the form stands to the wax, nor
-is it as in chemistry where one element is permeated by another as
-regards its matter. The chief circumstance, therefore, and that which
-constitutes the difference between this illustration and the condition
-of the soul is altogether overlooked. That is to say, the wax does not,
-indeed, take in the form, for the impression remains on it as external
-figure and contour, without being a form of its real Being; if it were
-to become such, it would cease to be wax; therefore, because in the
-illustration there is lacking this reception of form into the Being,
-no thought is given to it. The soul, on the contrary, assimilates this
-form into its own substance, and for the very reason, that the soul is
-in itself, to a certain extent, the sum of all that is perceived by
-the senses (_infra_, p. 198): as it was said above (p. 183), if the
-axe had its form in the determination of substance, this form would
-be the soul of the axe. The illustration of the wax has reference to
-nothing but the fact that only the form comes to the soul; and has
-nothing to do with the form being external to the wax and remaining so,
-or with the soul having, like wax, no independent form. The soul is by
-no means said to be passive wax and to receive its determinations from
-without; but Aristotle, as we shall soon see (p. 194), really says that
-the spirit repels matter from itself, and maintains itself against it,
-having relation only to form. In sense-perception the soul is certainly
-passive, but the manner in which it receives is not like that of the
-wax, being just as truly activity of the soul; for after the perceptive
-faculty has received the impression, it abrogates the passivity, and
-remains thenceforth free from it (_supra_, p. 187). The soul therefore
-changes the form of the external body into its own, and is identical
-with an abstract quality such as this, for the sole reason that it
-itself is this universal form.
-
-This description of sense-perception Aristotle explains more fully in
-what follows (De Anima, III. 2), and expatiates upon this unity and
-its contrasts, in the course of which explanation there appear many
-clear and far-reaching glimpses into the Nature of consciousness. “The
-bodily organ of each sense-perception receives the object perceived
-without matter. Hence, when the object of sense is removed, the
-perceptions and the images which represent them remain in the organs.
-In the act of sense-perception the object perceived is no doubt
-identical with the subject that perceives, but they do not exist[97]
-as the same; for instance, sound and the hearing are the same when in
-active exercise, but that which has hearing does not always hear, and
-that which has sound is not always sounding. When that which is the
-potentiality of hearing comes into exercise, and likewise that which is
-the potentiality of sound, hearing and sound, being in full activity,
-coincide,” they do not remain separate energies. “If then movement
-and action, as well as passivity, have a place in the object on which
-activity is exercised (ἐν τῷ ποιουμένῳ), it follows necessarily that
-the energy of hearing and sound is contained in that which potentially
-is hearing, for the energy of the active and moving is in the passive.
-As therefore activity and passivity are manifested in the subject
-which receives the effect, and not in the object which produces it
-(ποιοῦντι), the energy both of the object and of the faculty of
-sense-perception is in the faculty itself. For hearing and sounding
-there are two words, for seeing only one; seeing is the activity of
-the person who sees, but the activity of the colour is without name.
-Since the energy of that which is perceived and that which perceives
-is one energy, and the aspect they present is alone different, the
-so-called sounding and hearing must cease simultaneously.” There is a
-body which sounds and a subject which hears; they are twofold in the
-aspect they present, but hearing, taken by itself, is intrinsically an
-activity of both. In like manner, when I have by sense the perception
-of redness and hardness, my perception is itself red and hard: that is,
-I find myself determined in that way, even though reflection says that
-outside of me there is a red, hard thing, and that it and my finger
-are two; but they are also one, my eye is red and the thing. It is
-upon this difference and this identity that everything depends; and
-Aristotle demonstrates this in the most emphatic way, and holds firmly
-to his point. The later distinction of subjective and objective is the
-reflection of consciousness; sense-perception is simply the abrogation
-of this separation, it is that form of identity which abstracts from
-subjectivity and objectivity. What is simple, the soul proper or
-the I, is in sense-perception unity in difference. “Further, every
-sense-perception is in its organ, and distinguishes everything that is
-perceived, like black and white, and so on. It is thus not possible for
-separate perceptions, white and sweet, to be distinguished as separate
-indifferent moments, for both must be present (δῆλα) to one subject.
-This one subject must therefore determine one thing to be different
-from another. This, as distinguished, can also not be in a different
-place or time, for it must be undivided and in undivided time. But
-it is impossible that one and the same thing should be affected by
-contrary movements, in so far as it is undivided and in undivided time.
-If sweetness affects sense-perception in one way, and bitterness in the
-contrary way, and whiteness in yet another way, the power of judging is
-numerically not discrete nor divisible, but according to the Notion (τῷ
-εἶναι)[98] it is distinguished. That which is the same and indivisible
-thus possesses in potentiality opposite qualities; but with its true
-existence (τῷ εἶναι) that cannot be the case, for in its activity it
-is separable, and cannot at the same time be both white and black.
-Sense-perception and thinking are like that which some term a point,
-which, in so far as it is one, is inseparable, and in so far as it is
-two, is separable. So far as it is undivided, the judging faculty is
-one and acts in a single point of time, but so far as it is divided”
-(not one) “it employs the same sign twice simultaneously. So far as
-it employs two, it by limitation distinguishes two, and separates
-them as having separate origin; but so far as it is one, it judges by
-one act in one single point of time” (_supra_, p. 172). For as the
-point in time, which resembles the point in space, contains future and
-past, and thus is something different and at the same time one and the
-same, since it is in one and the same respect separation and union;
-sense-perception is also one and at the same time separation, separated
-and not separated, seeing that the faculty of perception has before
-it in one unity the distinct sense-perception, which by this means
-receives for the first time a determinate content. Another example is
-that of number; one and two are different, and, at the same time, even
-in two one is used and posited as one.
-
-γ. From sense-perception Aristotle passes on to thought, and becomes
-here really speculative. “Thinking,” he says (De Anima, III. 4) “is not
-passive (ἀπαθές), but receptive of the form, and is in potentiality
-similar to it. Therefore the understanding (νοῦς), because it thinks
-all things, is free from all admixture (ἀμιγής), in order that it may
-overcome (κρατῇ), as Anaxagoras says, that is, in order that it may
-acquire knowledge; for, coming forth in its energy (παρεμφαινόμενον),
-it holds back what is alien to it, and fortifies itself against it
-(ἀντιφράττει). Therefore the nature of the understanding is none other
-than this potentiality.” But potentiality itself is here not matter;
-that is to say, the understanding has no matter, for potentiality
-pertains to its very substance. For thinking is really the not
-being implicit; and on account of its purity its reality is not the
-being-for-another, but its potentiality is itself a being-for-self.
-A thing is real because it is this determinate thing; the opposite
-determination, its potentiality to be, for instance, smoke, ashes,
-and so on, is not posited in it. In the corporeal, therefore, matter,
-as potentiality, and external form, as reality, are opposed to one
-another; but the soul is, in contrast with this, universal potentiality
-itself, without matter, because its essence is energy. “Understanding,
-then, in the soul, as that which possesses consciousness, is nothing in
-reality before it thinks;” it is absolute activity, but exists only
-when it is active. “It is therefore not incorporated with the body. For
-what should it be like, warm or cold? Or should it be an organ? But it
-is none of these. That it is, however, different from the faculty of
-sense-perception is clear. For sense-perception cannot perceive after
-a violent perception; for instance, it cannot smell nor see after
-experiencing strong smells or colours. But the understanding, after
-it has thought something which can only be thought with difficulty,
-will not have more but less difficulty in thinking of something that
-is easier. For there is no sense-perception independent of the body,
-but the understanding is separable from it. When it has then become
-something individual, like him who is really possessed of a faculty of
-knowing (and this happens when he can energize through himself), it
-then is also in a certain degree according to potentiality, but yet not
-so in the same manner as it was before learning and finding.” (_Cf._
-_supra_, pp. 182, 187.)
-
-Thinking makes itself into passive understanding, that is, into what
-is for it the objective; and thus it here becomes plain to what extent
-the dictum _nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu_ expresses
-Aristotle’s meaning. Aristotle, raising difficulties, goes on to ask,
-“If reason is simple and unaffected by impressions, and has nothing
-in common with other objects, how can it think, since thinking is
-certainly a state of receptivity?” That is to say, in thinking there
-is a reference to an object distinct from itself. “For it is when two
-objects have something in common that the one appears to produce and
-the other to receive an impression. There is a further difficulty,
-whether understanding can itself be the object of thought. In that case
-understanding would either be inherent in other things—unless it is the
-object of thought in a different sense from that in which other things
-are so, but there is only one sense in which things can be objects of
-thought—or, on the other hand, it would have something compounded with
-it, making it an object of thought as other things are. Now it has
-been already said that passivity is so determined that understanding
-is in potentiality all that thought is exercised on: but at the same
-time it is in actuality nothing before the exercise of thought.” That
-is to say, thought is implicitly the content of the object of what is
-thought, and in coming into existence it only coincides with itself;
-but the self-conscious understanding is not merely implicit, but
-essentially explicit, since it is within itself all things. That is an
-idealistic way of expressing it; and yet they say that Aristotle is an
-empiricist.
-
-The passivity of understanding has therefore here only the sense of
-potentiality before actuality, and that is the great principle of
-Aristotle; in regard to this he brings forward at the end of the same
-chapter another much-decried illustration, which has been just as much
-misunderstood as the preceding. “Reason is like a book upon whose
-pages nothing is actually written;” that is, however, paper, but not
-a book. All Aristotle’s thoughts are overlooked, and only external
-illustrations such as this are comprehended. A book on which nothing
-is written everyone can understand. And the technical term is the
-well-known _tabula rasa_, which is to be found wherever Aristotle is
-spoken of: Aristotle is said to have alleged that the mind is a blank
-page, on which characters are first traced by external objects, so
-that thinking thus comes to it from without.[99] But that is the very
-opposite of what Aristotle says. Instead of the Notion being adhered
-to, casual comparisons such as these have been caught up here and
-there by the imagination, as if they expressed the matter itself.
-But Aristotle did not in the least intend that the analogy should be
-pushed to its furthest extent: the understanding is of a surety not a
-thing, and has not the passivity of a writing-tablet; it is itself the
-energy, which is not, as it would be in the case of a tablet, external
-to it. The analogy is therefore confined to this, that the soul has a
-content only in so far as actual thought is exercised. The soul is this
-book unwritten on, and the meaning consequently is that the soul is all
-things implicitly, but it is not in itself this totality; it is like
-a book that contains all things potentially, but in reality contains
-nothing before it is written on. Before real activity nothing truly
-exists; or “Understanding itself can enter thought, like the objects
-of thought in general. For in that which is without matter” (in mind),
-“the thinker” (the subjective) “and the thought” (the objective) “are
-the same; theoretical knowledge and that which comes to be known are
-the same. In that which is material, thinking is only in potentiality,
-so that understanding itself does not belong to it; for understanding
-is a potentiality without matter, but the object of thought exists in
-it,” while Nature contains the Idea only implicitly. It is plain from
-this that the above illustration has been taken in quite a false sense,
-utterly contrary to Aristotle’s meaning.
-
-Until now we have spoken of the passive understanding, which is
-the nature of the soul, but also in equal degree its faculty of
-sense-perception and imagination. Aristotle now proceeds to distinguish
-active understanding from this, as follows (De Anima, III. 5): “In
-nature as a whole there is present in every species of things, on the
-one hand, matter, which in potentiality is the whole of this species,
-and, on the other hand, cause and energy, operative in all things, in
-the same way that art is related to matter. It therefore necessarily
-follows that in the soul also these different elements should be
-present. The faculty of understanding is thus, in one view of it, the
-capacity of becoming all things; but in another view it is the capacity
-of creating all things, as is done by an efficient power (ἕξις),
-light, for instance, which first causes the colours which exist in
-potentiality to exist in reality. This understanding is absolute
-(χωριστός), uncompounded, and not influenced from without, as it is
-essentially activity. For the active is always more in honour than
-the passive, and the principle more in honour than the matter that it
-forms. Knowledge, when in active exercise, is identical with the thing
-(πρᾶγμα) known; but what is in potentiality” (that is, external reason,
-imagination, sense-perception) “is certainly prior in respect of time
-in one and the same individual, but in the universal (ὅλως) it is not
-even so in respect of time. Active understanding is not such that it
-sometimes thinks and sometimes does not. When it is absolute, it is the
-one and only existence; and this alone is eternal and immortal. We,
-however, do not remember this process, because this understanding is
-unaffected from without; but the passive understanding is transitory,
-and without the former it is incapable of thought.”
-
-The seventh and eighth chapters are expositions of the maxims contained
-in the fourth and fifth; they begin with these maxims, and have the
-appearance of being from the hand of a commentator. “The soul,” says
-Aristotle (De Anima, III. 8), “is in a certain sense the whole of
-existence. For existent objects are either perceived by the senses or
-thought; but knowledge itself is in a manner the object of knowledge,
-and perception the object of perception. What are known and perceived
-are either the things themselves or their forms. Knowledge and
-sense-perception are not the things themselves (the stone is not in the
-soul), but their form; so that the soul is like the hand. As this is
-the instrument by which we grasp instruments, so the understanding is
-the form by which we apprehend forms, and sense-perception the form of
-the objects cf sense.” Before this Aristotle had remarked (De Anima,
-III. 4): “It has been truly said that the soul is the _place of ideas_
-(τόπος εἰδῶν): not the whole soul, but only the thinking soul, and
-these ideas do not exist in the soul actually, but only potentially.”
-That is to say, the ideas are at first only quiescent forms, not
-activities, and so Aristotle is not a realist. But the understanding
-makes these forms, like those of external nature, its objects, its
-thoughts, its potentiality, Aristotle therefore says in the seventh
-chapter: “The understanding thinks the abstract (τὰ ἐν ἀφαιρέσει
-λεγόμενα), just as it conceives snubnosedness not as snubnosedness
-that cannot be separated from the flesh, but as hollowness.” Then in
-the eighth chapter Aristotle goes on to say: “But as no object is
-separated from its perceived dimensions, so in the forms perceived by
-sense there are also objects of thought, both abstract conceptions
-and the qualities (ἕξεις) and determinations of the objects of sense.
-In this way he who perceives nothing by his senses learns nothing
-and understands nothing; when he discerns anything (θεωρῇ), he must
-necessarily discern it as a pictorial conception, for such conceptions
-are like sense-perceptions, only without matter. In what way then
-are our primary ideas distinguished, so as not to be mistaken for
-conceptions? Or is it not the case also that other thoughts even
-are not pictorial conceptions, but only that they are never found
-unassociated with such conceptions?” Since what follows contains no
-answer to the questions raised here at the very end, this would seem an
-additional indication that these portions follow later.[100] Aristotle
-concludes the seventh chapter with the words: “Speaking generally,
-the understanding is the faculty which thinks things in their real
-activity. Whether, however, it can think the absolute or not, unless
-it be itself separated from the sensuous, we shall inquire later
-(ὕστερον).” This “later” Buhle considers to have reference to the
-“highest philosophy.”[101]
-
-This identity of the subjective and objective, which is present
-in the active understanding—while finite things and mental states
-are respectively one separated from the other, because there the
-understanding is only in potentiality—is the highest point which
-speculation can reach: and in it Aristotle reverts to his metaphysical
-principles (p. 147), where he termed self-thinking reason absolute
-Thought, divine Understanding, or Mind in its absolute character. It
-is only in appearance that thought is spoken of as on a level with
-what is other than thought; this fashion of bringing what is different
-into conjunction certainly appears in Aristotle. But what he says of
-thought is explicitly and absolutely speculative, and is not on the
-same level with anything else, such as sense-perception, which has only
-potentiality for thought. This fact is moreover involved, that reason
-is implicitly the true totality, but in that case thought is in truth
-the activity which is independent and absolute existence; that is,
-the thought of Thought, which is determined thus abstractly, but which
-constitutes the nature of absolute mind explicitly. These are the main
-points which are to be taken note of in Aristotle with regard to his
-speculative ideas, which it is impossible for us, however, to treat in
-greater detail.
-
-We have now to pass on to what follows, which is a practical
-philosophy, and in doing so we must first establish firmly the
-conception of desire, which is really the turning round of thought into
-its negative side, wherein it becomes practical. Aristotle (De Anima,
-III. 7 and 6) says: “The object of knowledge and active knowledge are
-one and the same; what is in potentiality is in the individual prior in
-point of time, although not so in itself. For all that comes into being
-originates from that which operates actively. The object perceived
-by sense appears as that which causes the faculty of perception in
-potentiality to become the faculty of perception in actuality, for the
-latter is not receptive of influence, and does not undergo change. On
-that account it has a different kind of movement from the ordinary, for
-movement, as we have seen (p. 163) is the activity of an unaccomplished
-end (ἐνέργεια ἀτελοῦς); pure activity (ἁπλῶς ἐνέργεια), on the
-contrary, is that of the accomplished end (τοῦ τετελεσμένον).”—“The
-simple thoughts of the soul are such that in regard to them there
-can be no falsity; but that in which there is falsity or truth is a
-combination of thoughts as constituting one conception; for example,
-‘the diameter is incommensurate.’ Or if by mistake white has been
-stated to be not white, not-white has been brought into connection with
-it. All this process may, however, just as well be termed separation.
-But that which makes everything one is reason, which in the form of its
-thinking thinks the undivided in undivided time and with the undivided
-action of the soul.”—“Sense-perception resembles simple assertion and
-thought, but pleasant or unpleasant sense-perception has the relation
-of affirmation or negation,” therefore of the positive and negative
-determination of thought. “And to perceive the pleasant or unpleasant
-is to employ the activity” (spontaneity) “of the middle state of
-sense-perception upon good or evil, in so far as they are such. But
-desire and aversion are the same in energy; it is only in manifestation
-that they are different. To the reasoning soul pictorial conceptions
-take the place of sense-perceptions, and when the mind affirms or
-denies something to be good or bad, it desires or avoids its object.
-It has the relation both of unity and limit. The understanding,” as
-that which determines opposites, “recognizes the forms underlying
-pictorial conceptions; and in the same manner as what is desirable in
-them and what is to be avoided have been determined for it, so it also
-is determined independently of actual sense-perceptions when it is in
-mental conceptions. And when, in dealing with conception or thought,
-as if seeing them, it compares the future with the present and passes
-judgment accordingly, and determines what is pleasant or unpleasant in
-this respect; it desires or seeks to avoid it, and in general it finds
-itself in practical operation. But independently of action true and
-false are of the same character as good or evil.”
-
-
-b. PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-From this the conception of will, or the practical element is shown to
-us, and it has to be reckoned as still belonging to the Philosophy of
-Mind. Aristotle has treated it in several works which we now possess.
-
-
-α. ETHICS.
-
-We have three great ethical works: the Nicomachean Ethics (Ἠθικὰ
-Νικομάχεια) in ten books, the Magna Moralia (Ἠθικὰ μεγάλα) in two
-books, and the Eudemean Ethics (Ἠθικὰ Εὐδήμια) in seven books; the
-last deals for the most part with particular virtues, while in the
-first two general investigations on the principles are contained. Just
-as the best that we even now possess in reference to psychology is what
-we have obtained from Aristotle, so is it with his reflections on the
-actual agent in volition, on freedom, and the further determinations of
-imputation, intention, &c. We must simply give ourselves the trouble to
-understand these, and to translate them into our own form of speech,
-conception and thought; and this is certainly difficult. Aristotle
-follows the same course here as in his Physics, determining one
-after the other, in the most thorough and accurate fashion, the many
-moments which appear in desire: the purpose, the decision, voluntary
-or forced action, the act of ignorance, guilt, moral responsibility,
-&c. I cannot enter upon this somewhat psychological presentation of
-the subject.[102] I shall only make the following remarks on the
-Aristotelian definitions.
-
-Aristotle[103] defines the principle of morality or the highest good,
-as happiness (εὐδαιμονία), which later on became a much disputed
-expression. It is good generally, not as abstract idea, but in such
-a way that the moment of realization is what actually answers to it.
-Aristotle thus does not content himself with the Platonic idea of the
-good, because it is only general; with him the question is taken in
-its determinateness. Aristotle then says that the good is what has its
-end in itself (τέλειον). If we tried to translate τέλειον by “perfect”
-here, we should translate it badly; it is that which, as having its end
-(τὸ τέλος) in itself, is not desired for the sake of anything else,
-but for its own sake (_supra_, pp. 162, 201). Aristotle determines
-happiness in this regard as the absolute end existing in and for
-itself, and gives the following definition of it: It is “the energy
-of the life that has its end in itself in accordance with absolute
-virtue (ζωῆς τελείας ἐνέργεια κατ̓ ἀρετὴν).” He makes rational insight
-an essential condition; all action arising from sensuous desires, or
-from lack of freedom generally, indicates lack of insight; it is an
-irrational action, or an action which does not proceed from thought as
-such. But the absolute rational activity is alone knowledge, the action
-which in itself satisfies itself, and this is hence divine happiness;
-with the other virtues, on the contrary, only human happiness is
-obtained, just as from a theoretic point of view feeling is finite as
-compared with divine thought. Aristotle goes on to say much that is
-good and beautiful about virtue and the good and happiness in general,
-and states that happiness, as the good attainable by us, is not to be
-found without virtue, &c.; in all of which there is no profound insight
-from a speculative point of view.
-
-In regard to the conception of virtue I should like to say something
-more. From a practical point of view, Aristotle[104] first of all
-distinguishes in soul a rational and an irrational side; in the latter
-reason only exists potentially; under it come the feelings, passions
-and affections. On the rational side understanding, wisdom, discretion,
-knowledge, have their place; but they still do not constitute virtue,
-which first subsists in the unity of the rational and the irrational
-sides. When the inclinations are so related to virtue that they carry
-out its dictates, this, according to Aristotle, is virtue. When the
-perception is either bad or altogether lacking, but the heart is good,
-goodwill may be there, but not virtue, because the principle—that is
-reason—which is essential to virtue, is wanting. Aristotle thus places
-virtue in knowledge, yet reason is not, as many believe, the principle
-of virtue purely in itself, for it is rather the rational impulse
-towards what is good; both desire and reason are thus necessary
-moments in virtue. Hence it cannot be said of virtue that it is
-misemployed, for it itself is the employer. Thus Aristotle, as we have
-already seen (Vol. I. pp. 412-414), blames Socrates, because he places
-virtue in perception alone. There must be an irrational impulse towards
-what is good, but reason comes in addition as that which judges and
-determines the impulse; yet when a beginning from virtue has been made,
-it does not necessarily follow that the passions are in accordance,
-since often enough they are quite the reverse. Thus in virtue, because
-it has realization as its aim, and pertains to the individual, reason
-is not the solitary principle; for inclination is the force that
-impels, the particular, which as far as the practical side of the
-individual subject is concerned, is what makes for realization. But
-then the subject must, in this separation of his activity, bring
-likewise his passions under the subjection of the universal, and this
-unity, in which the rational is pre-eminent, is virtue. This is the
-correct determination; on the one hand this definition is opposed to
-these ideals of the utter subjection of the passions, by which men
-are guided from their youth up, and, on the other, it is opposed to
-the point of view that declares desires to be good in themselves.
-Both these extreme views have been frequent in modern times, just as
-sometimes we hear that the man who by nature is beauteous and noble, is
-better than he who acts from duty; and then it is said that duty must
-be performed as duty, without taking into account the particular point
-of view as a moment of the whole.
-
-Aristotle then passes through the particular virtues at great length.
-Because the virtues, considered as the union of the desiring or
-realizing with the rational, have an illogical moment within them,
-Aristotle places[105] their principle on the side of feeling in
-a mean, so that virtue is the mean between two extremes; _e.g._
-liberality is the mean between avarice and prodigality; gentleness
-between passion and passive endurance; bravery between rashness and
-cowardice; friendship between egotism and self-effacement, &c. For the
-good, and specially that good which has to do with the senses, which
-would suffer if affected to an excessive degree (_supra_, p. 195), is
-therefore a mean, just because the sensuous is an ingredient in it.
-This does not appear to be a sufficient definition, and it is merely
-a quantitative determination, just because it is not only the Notion
-that determines, but the empirical side is also present. Virtue is not
-absolutely determined in itself, but likewise has a material element,
-the nature of which is capable of a more or a less. Thus if it has been
-objected to Aristotle’s definition of virtue as a difference in degree,
-that it is unsatisfactory and vague, we may say that this really is
-involved in the nature of the thing. Virtue, and determinate virtue in
-its entirety, enters into a sphere where that which is quantitative has
-a place; thought here is no more as such at home with itself, and the
-quantitative limit undetermined. The nature of particular virtues is
-of such a kind, that they are capable of no more exact determination;
-they can only be spoken of in general, and for them there is no further
-determination than just this indefinite one.[106] But in our way of
-looking at things, duty is something absolutely existent in itself, and
-not a mean between existent extremes through which it is determined;
-but this universal likewise results in being empty, or rather
-undetermined, while that determinate content is a moment of being that
-immediately involves us in conflicting duties. It is in practice that
-man seeks a necessity in man as individual, and endeavours to express
-it; but it is either formal, or as in particular virtues, a definite
-content, which, in so being, falls a prey to empiricism.
-
-
-β. POLITICS.
-
-We have still to speak of Aristotle’s Politics; he was conscious more
-or less that the positive substance, the necessary organization and
-realization of practical spirit, is the state, which is actualized
-through subjective activity, so that this last finds in it its
-determination and end. Aristotle hence also looks on political
-philosophy as the sum total of practical philosophy, the end of the
-state as general happiness. “All science and all capacity (δύναμις),”
-he says (Magn. Mor. I. 1), “have an end, and this is the good: the
-more excellent they are, the more excellent is their end; but the most
-excellent capacity is the political, and hence its end is also the
-good.” Of Ethics Aristotle recognizes that it indubitably also applies
-to the individual, though its perfection is attained in the nation as
-a whole. “Even if the highest good is the same for an individual and
-for a whole state, it would yet surely be greater and more glorious
-to win and maintain it for a state; to do this for an individual were
-meritorious, but to do it for a nation and for whole states were more
-noble and godlike still. Such is the object of practical science, and
-this pertains in a measure to politics.”[107]
-
-Aristotle indeed appreciates so highly the state, that he starts at
-once (Polit. I. 2) by defining man as “a political animal, having
-reason. Hence he alone has a knowledge of good and evil, of justice
-and injustice, and not the beast,” for the beast does not think, and
-yet in modern times men rest the distinction which exists in these
-determinations on sensation, which beasts have equally with men.
-There is also the sense of good and evil, &c., and Aristotle knows
-this aspect as well (_supra_, p. 202); but that through which it is
-not animal sensation merely, is thought. Hence rational perception
-is also to Aristotle the essential condition of virtue, and thus the
-harmony between the sensational point of view and that of reason is
-an essential moment in his eudæmonism. After Aristotle so determines
-man, he says: “The common intercourse of these, forms the family and
-the state; in the understanding, however, that the state, in the order
-of nature” (_i.e._ in its Notion, in regard to reason and truth, not
-to time) “is prior to the family” (the natural relation, not the
-rational) “and to the individual among us.” Aristotle does not place
-the individual and his rights first, but recognizes the state as what
-in its essence is higher than the individual and the family, for the
-very reason that it constitutes their substantiality. “For the whole
-must be prior to its parts. If, for example, you take away the whole
-body, there is not a foot or hand remaining, excepting in name, and as
-if anyone should call a hand of stone a hand; for a hand destroyed is
-like a hand of stone.” If the man is dead, all the parts perish. “For
-everything is defined according to its energy and inherent powers, so
-that when these no longer remain such as they were, it cannot be said
-that anything is the same excepting in name. The state is likewise
-the essence of the individuals; the individual when separate from the
-whole, is just as little complete in himself as any other organic part
-separated from the whole.” This is directly antagonistic to the modern
-principle in which the particular will of the individual, as absolute,
-is made the starting-point; so that all men by giving their votes,
-decide what is to be the law, and thereby a commonweal is brought into
-existence. But with Aristotle, as with Plato, the state is the _prius_,
-the substantial, the chief, for its end is the highest in respect
-of the practical. “But whoever was incapable of this society, or so
-complete in himself as not to want it, would be either a beast or a
-god.”
-
-From these few remarks it is clear that Aristotle could not have
-had any thought of a so-called natural right (if a natural right be
-wanted), that is, the idea of the abstract man outside of any actual
-relation to others. For the rest, his Politics contain points of view
-even now full of instruction for us, respecting the inward elements
-of a state,[108] and a description of the various constitutions;[109]
-the latter, however, has no longer the same interest, on account of
-the different principle at the base of ancient and modern states. No
-land was so rich as Greece, alike in the number of its constitutions,
-and in the frequent changes from one to another of these in a single
-state; but the Greeks were still unacquainted with the abstract right
-of our modern states, that isolates the individual, allows of his
-acting as such, and yet, as an invisible spirit, holds all its parts
-together. This is done in such a way, however, that in no one is there
-properly speaking either the consciousness of, or the activity for
-the whole; but because the individual is really held to be a person,
-and all his concern is the protection of his individuality, he works
-for the whole without knowing how. It is a divided activity in which
-each has only his part, just as in a factory no one makes a whole, but
-only a part, and does not possess skill in other departments, because
-only a few are employed in fitting the different parts together. It is
-free nations alone that have the consciousness of and activity for the
-whole; in modern times the individual is only free for himself as such,
-and enjoys citizen freedom alone—in the sense of that of a _bourgeois_
-and not of a _citoyen_. We do not possess two separate words to mark
-this distinction. The freedom of citizens in this signification is
-the dispensing with universality, the principle of isolation; but it
-is a necessary moment unknown to ancient states. It is the perfect
-independence of the points, and therefore the greater independence of
-the whole, which constitutes the higher organic life. After the state
-received this principle into itself, the higher freedom could come
-forth. These other states are sports and products of nature which
-depend upon chance and upon the caprice of the individual, but now, for
-the first time, the inward subsistence and indestructible universality,
-which is real and consolidated in its parts, is rendered possible.
-
-Aristotle for the rest has not tried like Plato to describe such a
-state, but in respect of the constitution he merely points out that the
-best must rule. But this always takes place, let men do as they will,
-and hence he has not so very much to do with determining the forms of
-the constitution. By way of proving that the best must rule, Aristotle
-says this: “The best would suffer injustice if rated on an equality
-with the others inferior to them in virtue and political abilities, for
-a notable man is like a god amongst men.” Here Alexander is no doubt
-in Aristotle’s mind, as one who must rule as though he were a god, and
-over whom no one, and not even law, could maintain its supremacy. “For
-him there is no law, for he himself is law. Such a man could perhaps
-be turned out of the state, but not subjected to control any more than
-Jupiter. Nothing remains but, what is natural to all, quietly to submit
-to such an one, and to let men like this be absolutely and perpetually
-(ἀΐδιοι) kings in the states”[110] The Greek Democracy had then
-entirely fallen into decay, so that Aristotle could no longer ascribe
-to it any merit.
-
-
-4. THE LOGIC.
-
-On the other side of the Philosophy of Mind, we have still Aristotle’s
-science of abstract thought, a Logic, to consider. For hundreds and
-thousands of years it was just as much honoured as it is despised now.
-Aristotle has been regarded as the originator of Logic: his logical
-works are the source of, and authority for the logical treatises of all
-times; which last were, in great measure, only special developments
-or deductions, and must have been dull, insipid, imperfect, and purely
-formal. And even in quite recent times, Kant has said that since the
-age of Aristotle, logic—like pure geometry since Euclid’s day—has
-been a complete and perfect science which has kept its place even
-down to the present day, without attaining to any further scientific
-improvements or alteration. Although logic is here mentioned for the
-first time, and in the whole of the history of Philosophy that is to
-come no other can be mentioned (for no other has existed, unless we
-count the negation of Scepticism), we cannot here speak more precisely
-of its content, but merely find room for its general characterization.
-The forms he gives to us come from Aristotle both in reference to the
-Notion and to the judgment and conclusion. As in natural history,
-animals, such as the unicorn, mammoth, beetle, mollusc, &c., are
-considered, and their nature described, so Aristotle is, so to speak,
-the describer of the nature of these spiritual forms of thought; but in
-this inference of the one from the other, Aristotle has only presented
-thought as defined in its finite application and aspect, and his logic
-is thus a natural history of finite thought. Because it is a knowledge
-and consciousness of the abstract activity of pure understanding, it is
-not a knowledge of this and that concrete fact, being pure form. This
-knowledge is in fact marvellous, and even more marvellous is the manner
-in which it is constituted: this logic is hence a work which does the
-greatest honour to the deep thought of its discoverer and to the power
-of his abstraction. For the greatest cohesive power in thought is found
-in separating it from what is material and thus securing it; and the
-strength shows itself almost more, if thus secured when it, amalgamated
-with matter, turns about in manifold ways and is seen to be capable
-of numberless alterations and applications. Aristotle also considers,
-in fact, not only the movement of thought, but likewise of thought
-in ordinary conception. The Logic of Aristotle is contained in five
-books, which are collected together under the name Ὀργανον.
-
-_a._ The Categories (κατηγορίαι), of which the first work treats, are
-the universal determinations, that which is predicated of existent
-things (κατηγορεῖται): as well that which we call conceptions of the
-understanding, as the simple realities of things. This may be called
-an ontology, as pertaining to metaphysics; hence these determinations
-also appear in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. Aristotle (Categor. I.) now
-says: “Things are termed homonyms (ὁμώνυμα) of which the name alone is
-common, but which have a different substantial definition (λόγος τῆς
-οὐσίας); thus a horse and the picture of a horse are both called an
-animal.”
-
-Thus the Notion (λόγος) is opposed to the homonym; and since Aristotle
-deduces herefrom τὰ λεγόμενα, of which the second chapter treats, it is
-clear that this last expression indicates more than mere predication,
-and is here to be taken as determinate Notions. “Determinate
-conceptions are either enunciated after a complex (κατὰ συμπλοκήν)
-or after an incomplex manner (ἄνευ συμπλοκῆς); the first as ‘a man
-conquers,’ ‘the ox runs,’ and the other as ‘man,’ ‘ox,’ ‘to conquer,’
-‘to run.’” In the first rank of this division Aristotle places τὰ ὄντα,
-which are undoubtedly purely subjective relations of such as exist
-_per se_, so that the relation is not in them but external to them.
-Now although τὰ λεγόμενα and τὰ ὄντα are again distinguished from one
-another, Aristotle yet again employs both λέγεται, and ἐστί of the
-ὄντα, so that λέγεται is predicated of a species, in relation to its
-particular; ἐστί is, on the contrary, employed of a universal, which
-is not Idea but only simple. For Aristotle says, “There are predicates
-(ὄντα) which can be assigned to a certain subject (καθ̓ ὑποκειμένον),
-yet are in no subject, as ‘man’ is predicated of ‘some certain man,’
-and yet he is no particular man. Others are in a subject (ἐν ὑποκειμένῳ
-ἐστί) yet are not predicated of any subject (I mean by a thing being
-in a subject, that it is in any thing not as a part, but as unable
-to subsist without that in which it is), as ‘a grammatical art’ (τὶς
-γραμματική) is in a subject, ‘the soul,’ but cannot be predicated
-of any,’ or related as genus to a subject. Some are predicated of
-a subject (λέγεται) and are in it; science is in the soul and is
-predicated of the grammatical art. Some again are neither in, nor are
-predicated of any subject, as ‘a certain man,’ the individual, the
-one in number; but some of them can be in a subject like ‘a certain
-grammatical art.’” Instead of subject we should do better to speak of
-substratum, for it is that to which the Notion necessarily relates,
-_i.e._ that which is neglected in abstraction, and thus the individual
-opposed to the Notion. We can see that Aristotle has the difference of
-the genus or universal and the individual present to his mind.
-
-The first thing which Aristotle has indicated in the foregoing is thus
-the genus, which is predicated of a man, but which is not in him, at
-least not as a particular quality; the brave man, for example, is an
-actual, but expressed as a universal conception. In formal logic and
-its conceptions and definitions there is always present opposition
-to an actual; and the logical actual is in itself something thought,
-bravery thus being, for example, a pure form of abstraction. This logic
-of the understanding seeks, however, in its three stages to imitate the
-categories of the absolute. The conception or definition is a logical
-actual, and thus in itself merely something thought, _i.e._ possible.
-In the judgment this logic calls a conception A the actual subject
-and connects with it another actual as the conception B; B is said to
-be the conception and A to be dependent on it—but B is only the more
-general conception. In the syllogism necessity is said to be simulated:
-even in a judgment there is a synthesis of a conception and something
-whose existence is assumed; in the syllogism it should bear the form
-of necessity, because both the opposites are set forth in a third
-as through the _medius terminus_ of reason, _e.g._ as was the case
-with the mean of virtue (_supra_, p. 206). The major term expresses
-logical being and the minor term logical potentiality, for Caius is a
-mere potentiality for logic; the conclusion unites both. But it is to
-reason that life first unfolds itself, for it is true reality. What
-comes second in Aristotle is the universal, which is not the genus,
-_i.e._ it is not in itself the unity of universal and particular—nor
-is it absolute individuality and hence infinitude. This is the moment
-or predicate in a subject certainly, but it is not absolutely in and
-for itself. This relation is now expressed through οὐ λέγεται; for ὅ
-λέγεται is that which, as universal in itself, is likewise infinite.
-The third is the particular which is predicated: just as science in
-itself is infinite and thus the genus, _e.g._ of the grammatical
-art; but at the same time as universal, or as not individual, it is
-the moment of a subject. The fourth indicated by Aristotle is what
-is called immediate conception—the individual. The reservation that
-something such as a definite grammatical art is also in a subject, has
-no place here, for the definite grammatical art is not really in itself
-individual.
-
-Aristotle, himself,[111] makes the following remarks on this matter:
-“When one thing is predicated (κατηγορεῖται) of another, as of a
-subject, whatever things are said (λέγεται) of the predicate,” _i.e._
-what is related to it as a universal, “may be also said of the
-subject.” This is the ordinary conclusion; from this we see, since
-this matter is so speedily despatched, that the real conclusion has
-with Aristotle a much greater significance. “The different genera not
-arranged under one another (μὴ ὑπ̓ ἄλλμλα τεταγμένα), such as ‘animal’
-and ‘science,’ differ in their species (διαφοράς). For instance,
-animals are divided into beasts, bird, fishes—but science has no such
-distinction. In subordinate genera, however, there may be the same
-distinctions; for the superior genera are predicated of the inferior,
-so that as many distinctions as there are of the predicate, so many
-will there be of the subject.”
-
-After Aristotle had thus far spoken of what is enunciated respecting
-that which is connected, or the complex, he now comes to “that which
-is predicated without any connection,” or the incomplex; for as we
-saw (p. 212) this was the division which he laid down in the second
-chapter. That which is predicated without any connection he treats
-of more fully as the categories proper, in what follows; yet the
-work in which these categories are laid down is not to be regarded
-as complete. Aristotle[112] takes ten of them; “Each conception
-enunciated signifies either Substance (οὐσίαν), or Quality (ποιόν), or
-Quantity (ποσόν),” matter, “or Relation (πρός τι), or Where (ποῦ), or
-When (ποτέ), or Position (κεῖσθαι), or Possession (ἕχειν), or Action
-(ποιεῖν), or Passion (πάσχειν). None of these is considered by itself
-an affirmation (κατάφασις) or a negation (κατάφασις), _i.e._ none
-is either true or false.” Aristotle adds to these predicables five
-post predicaments, but he only ranges them all side by side.[113] The
-categories of relation are the syntheses of quality and quantity, and
-consequently they belonged to reason; but in as far as they are posited
-as mere relation, they belong to the understanding and are forms of
-finitude. Being, essence, takes the first place in them; next to it
-is possibility, as accident or what is caused; the two are, however,
-separated. In substance A is Being, B, potentiality; in the relation
-of causality A and B are Being, but A is posited in B as being posited
-in a postulation of A. A of substance is logical Being; it is its
-essence opposed to its existence, and this existence is in logic mere
-potentiality. In the category of causality the Being of A in B is a
-mere Being of reflection; B is for itself another. But in reason A is
-the Being of B as well as of A, and A is the whole Being of A as well
-as of B.
-
-Aristotle[114] goes on to speak of Substance; first Substance, “in
-its strictest (κυριώτατα), first and chief sense” is to him the
-individual, the fourth class of the divisions enunciated above (pp.
-212-214). “Secondary substances are those in which as species (εἴδεσι)
-these first are contained, that is to say, both these and the genera
-of these species. Of the subject both name and definition (λόγος) of
-all things predicated of a subject (τῶν καθ̓ ὑποκειμένον λεγομένον)—of
-secondary substances—are predicated; for example of the particular
-man, as subject, both the name and the definition of ‘man’ (living
-being) are also predicated. But of things which are in a subject (ἐν
-ὑποκειμένῳ ὄντος) it is impossible to predicate the definition of
-the” subordinate “subjects, yet with some we predicate the name: the
-definition of ‘whiteness’ thus is not of the body in which it is, but
-only the name. All other things however,” besides Definition (λόγος)
-and “in most cases name, are related to primary substances as subjects”
-(the individual), “or are inherent in them. Thus without the primary
-substances none of the rest could exist, for they are the basis
-(ὑποκεῖσθαι) of all else. Of secondary substances, species is more
-substance than genus; for it is nearer to the primary substance, and
-genus is predicated of the species and not the other way.” For species
-is here the subject, or what does not always require to be something
-really determined as individual, but which also signifies that which
-is generally speaking subordinate. “But the species are not more
-substance one than another, just as in primary substances one is not
-more substance than the other. Species and genera are likewise, before
-the rest” (qualities or accidents) “to be called secondary substances:
-the definition ‘man’ before the fact that he is ‘white’ or ‘runs.’”
-Abstraction has thus two kinds of objects; ‘man’ and ‘learned’ are both
-qualities of a certain individual; but the former only abstracts from
-the individuality and leaves the totality, and is thus the elevation
-of the individual into the rational, where nothing is lost but the
-opposition of reflection. “What is true of substances is also true
-of differences; for as synonyms (συνώνυμα) they have both name and
-definition in common.”
-
-_b._ The second treatise is on Interpretation (περὶ ἑρμηνείας); it is
-the doctrine of judgments and propositions. Propositions exist where
-affirmation and negation, falsehood and truth are enunciated;[115] they
-do not relate to pure thought when reason itself thinks; they are not
-universal but individual.
-
-_c._ The Analytics come third, and there are two parts of them, the
-Prior and the Posterior; they deal most fully with proof (ἀπόδειξις)
-and the syllogisms of the understanding. “The syllogism is a reason
-(λόγος) in which if one thing is maintained, another than what was
-maintained follows of necessity.”[116] Aristotle’s logic has treated
-the general theory of conclusions in the main very accurately, but
-they do not by any means constitute the universal form of truth; in
-his metaphysics, physics, psychology, &c., Aristotle has not formed
-conclusions, but thought the Notion in and for itself.
-
-_d._ The Topics (τοπικά) which treat of ‘places’ (τόποι) come fourth;
-in them the points of view from which anything can be considered are
-enumerated. Cicero and Giordano Bruno worked this out more fully.
-Aristotle gives a large number of general points of view which can
-be taken of an object, a proposition or a problem; each problem can
-be directly reduced to these different points of view, that must
-everywhere appear. Thus these ‘places’ are, so to speak, a system of
-many aspects under which an object can be regarded in investigating it;
-this constitutes a work which seems specially suitable and requisite
-for the training of orators and for ordinary conversation, because the
-knowledge of points of view at once places in our hands the possibility
-of arriving at the various aspects of a subject, and embracing its
-whole extent in accordance with these points of view (Vol. I. p. 358).
-This, according to Aristotle, is the function of Dialectic, which he
-calls an instrument for finding propositions and conclusions out of
-probabilities.[117] Such ‘places’ are either of a general kind, such
-as difference, similarity, opposition, relation, and comparison,[118]
-or special in nature, such as ‘places’ which prove that something is
-better or more to be desired, since in it we have the longer duration
-of time, that which the one wise man or several would choose, the
-genus as against the species, that which is desirable for itself;
-also because it is present with the more honourable, because it is
-end, what approximates to end, the more beautiful and praiseworthy,
-&c.[119] Aristotle (Topic VIII. 2) says that we must make use of the
-syllogism by preference, with the dialectician, but of induction with
-the multitude. In the same way Aristotle separates[120] the dialectic
-and demonstrative syllogisms from the rhetorical and every kind of
-persuasion, but he counts induction as belonging to what is rhetorical.
-
-_e._ The fifth treatise, finally, deals with the Sophistical Elenchi
-(σοφιστικοὶ ἔλεγχοι), or ‘On Refutations,’ as in the unconscious
-escape of thought in its categories to the material side of popular
-conception, it arrives at constant contradiction with itself. The
-sophistical elenchi betray the unconscious ordinary idea into these
-contradictions, and make it conscious of them, in order to entrap and
-puzzle it; they were mentioned by us in connection with Zeno, and the
-Sophists sought them out, but it was the Megarics who were specially
-strong in them. Aristotle goes through a number of such contradictions
-by the way of solving them; in so doing he proceeds quietly and
-carefully, and spares no pains, though they might have been made more
-dramatic. We have before (Vol. I. pp. 456-459) found specimens of these
-in treating of the Megarics, and we have seen how Aristotle solves such
-contradictions through distinction and determination.
-
-Of these five parts of the Aristotelian Organon, what is produced in
-our ordinary systems of logic is, as a matter of fact, of the slightest
-and most trivial description, consisting as it does mainly of what
-is contained in the introduction of Porphyry. More particularly in
-the first parts, in the Interpretation and in the Analytics, this
-Aristotelian logic contains these representations of universal forms
-of thought, such as are now dealt with in ordinary logic, and really
-form the basis of what in modern times is known as logic. Aristotle has
-rendered a never-ending service in having recognized and determined
-the forms which thought assumes within us. For what interests us
-is the concrete thought immersed as it is in externalities; these
-forms constitute a net of eternal activity sunk within it, and the
-operation of setting in their places those fine threads which are
-drawn throughout everything, is a masterpiece of empiricism, and this
-knowledge is absolutely valuable. Even contemplation, or a knowledge of
-the numerous forms and modes assumed by this activity, is interesting
-and important enough. For however dry and contentless the enumeration
-of the different kinds of judgments and conclusions, and their numerous
-limitations may appear to us to be, and though they may not seem to
-serve their purpose of discovering the truth, at least no other
-science in opposition to this one can be elevated into its place. For
-instance, if it is held to be a worthy endeavour to gain a knowledge
-of the infinite number of animals, such as one hundred and sixty-seven
-kinds of cuckoo, in which one may have the tuft on his head differently
-shaped from another, or to make acquaintance with some miserable new
-species of a miserable kind of moss which is no better than a scab, or
-with an insect, vermin, bug, &c., in some learned work on entomology,
-it is much more important to be acquainted with the manifold kinds of
-movement present in thought, than to know about such creatures. The
-best of what is stated respecting the forms of judgment, conclusion,
-&c., in ordinary logic, is taken from the works of Aristotle; as far as
-details are concerned, much has been spun out and added to it, but the
-truth is to be found with Aristotle.
-
-As regards the real philosophic nature of the Aristotelian logic, it
-has received in our text-books a position and significance as though
-it gave expression only to the activity of the understanding as
-consciousness; hence it is said to direct us how to think correctly.
-Thus it appears as though the movement of thought were something
-independent, unaffected by the object of thought; in other words, as
-if it contained the so-called laws of thought of our understanding,
-through which we attain to perception, but through a medium which was
-not the movement of things themselves. The result must certainly be
-truth, so that things are constituted as we bring them forth according
-to the laws of thought; but the manner of this knowledge has merely
-a subjective significance, and the judgment and conclusion are not a
-judgment and conclusion of things themselves. Now if, according to
-this point of view, thought is considered on its own account, it does
-not make its appearance implicitly as knowledge, nor is it without
-content in and for itself; for it is a formal activity which certainly
-is exercised, but whose content is one given to it. Thought in this
-sense becomes something subjective; these judgments and conclusions
-are in and for themselves quite true, or rather correct—this no one
-ever doubted; but because content is lacking to them, these judgments
-and conclusions do not suffice for the knowledge of the truth. Thus by
-logicians they are held to be forms whose content is something entirely
-different, because they have not even the form of the content; and the
-meaning which is given to them—namely that they are forms—is found
-fault with. The worst thing said of them, however, is that their only
-error is their being formal; both the laws of thought as such, and
-also its determinations, the categories, are either determinations of
-the judgment only, or merely subjective forms of the understanding,
-while the thing-in-itself is very different. But in that point of
-view and in the blame awarded the truth itself is missed, for untruth
-is the form of opposition between subject and object, and the lack
-of unity in them; in this case the question is not put at all as to
-whether anything is absolutely true or not. These determinations
-have certainly no empirical content, but thought and its movement
-is itself the content—and, indeed, as interesting a content as any
-other that can be given; consequently this science of thought is on
-its own account a true science. But here again we come across the
-drawback pertaining to the whole Aristotelian manner, as also to all
-succeeding logic—and that indeed in the highest degree—that in thought
-and in the movement of thought as such, the individual moments fall
-asunder; there are a number of kinds of judgment and conclusion, each
-of which is held to be independent, and is supposed to have absolute
-truth as such. Thus they are simply content, for they then have an
-indifferent, undistinguished existence, such as we see in the famous
-laws of contradiction, conclusions, &c. In this isolation they have,
-however, no truth; for their totality alone is the truth of thought,
-because this totality is at once subjective and objective. Thus they
-are only the material of truth, the formless content; their deficiency
-is hence not that they are only forms but rather that form is lacking
-to them, and that they are in too great a degree content. Thus as many
-individual qualities of a thing are not anything, such as red, hard,
-&c., if taken by themselves, but only in their unity constitute a real
-thing, so it is with the unity of the forms of judgment and conclusion,
-which individually have as little truth as such a quality, or as a
-rhythm or melody. The form of a conclusion, as also its content, may
-be quite correct, and yet the conclusion arrived at may be untrue,
-because this form as such has no truth of its own; but from this
-point of view these forms have never been considered, and the scorn
-of logic rests simply on the false assumption that there is a lack of
-content. Now this content is none other than the speculative Idea.
-Conceptions of the understanding or of reason constitute the essence
-of things, not certainly for that point of view, but in truth; and
-thus also for Aristotle the conceptions of the understanding, namely
-the categories, constitute the essential realities of Being. If they
-are thus in and for themselves true, they themselves are their own,
-and thus the highest content. But in ordinary logic this is not the
-case, and even as these are represented in the Aristotelian works
-they are only universal thought-determinations, between which the
-abstract understanding makes distinctions. This, however, is not the
-logic of speculative thought, _i.e._ of reason as distinguished from
-understanding; for there the identity of the understanding which
-allows nothing to contradict itself is fundamental. However little
-this logic of the finite may be speculative in nature, yet we must
-make ourselves acquainted with it, for it is everywhere discovered in
-finite relationships. There are many sciences, subjects of knowledge,
-&c., that know and apply no other forms of thought than these forms of
-finite thought, which constitute in fact the general method of dealing
-with the finite sciences. Mathematics, for instance, is a constant
-series of syllogisms; jurisprudence is the bringing of the particular
-under the general, the uniting together of both these sides. Within
-these relationships of finite determinations the syllogism has now,
-indeed, on account of its terms being three in number, been called the
-totality of these determinations, and hence by Kant (Kritik der reinen
-Vernunft, p. 261) also the rational conclusion; but this syllogism
-addressed to the intelligence as it appears in the ordinary logical
-form, is only the intelligible form of rationality, and, as we saw
-above (p. 76), is very different from the rational syllogism proper.
-Aristotle is thus the originator of the logic of the understanding; its
-forms only concern the relationship of finite to finite, and in them
-the truth cannot be grasped. But it must be remarked that Aristotle’s
-philosophy is not by any means founded on this relationship of the
-understanding; thus it must not be thought that it is in accordance
-with these syllogisms that Aristotle has thought. If Aristotle did so,
-he would not be the speculative philosopher that we have recognized him
-to be; none of his propositions could have been laid down, and he could
-not have made any step forward, if he had kept to the forms of this
-ordinary logic.
-
-Like the whole of Aristotle’s philosophy, his logic really requires
-recasting, so that all his determinations should be brought into a
-necessary systematic whole—not a systematic whole which is correctly
-divided into its parts, and in which no part is forgotten, all being
-set forth in their proper order, but one in which there is one living
-organic whole, in which each part is held to be a part, and the whole
-alone as such is true. Aristotle, in the Politics, for instance
-(_supra_, pp. 207-208), often gives expression to this truth. For
-this reason the individual logical form has in itself no truth, not
-because it is the form of thought, but because it is determinate
-thought, individual form, and to be esteemed as such. But as system
-and absolute form ruling this content, thought has its content as a
-distinction in itself, being speculative philosophy in which subject
-and object are immediately identical, and the Notion and the universal
-are the realities of things. Just as duty certainly expresses the
-absolute, but, as determinate, a determinate absolute which is only
-a moment and must be able again to abrogate its determination, the
-logical form which abrogates itself as this determinate in this very
-way gives up its claim to be in and for itself. But in this case logic
-is the science of reason, speculative philosophy of the pure Idea
-of absolute existence, which is not entangled in the opposition of
-subject and object, but remains an opposition in thought itself. Yet we
-certainly may allow that much in logic is an indifferent form.
-
-At this point we would leave off as far as the Aristotelian philosophy
-is concerned, and from this it is difficult to break away. For the
-further we go into its details, the more interesting it becomes, and
-the more do we find the connection which exists among the subjects.
-The fulness with which I have set forth the principal content of the
-Aristotelian philosophy is justified both by the importance of the
-matter itself, because it offers to us a content of its own, and also
-by the circumstances already mentioned (p. 118), that against no
-philosophy have modern times sinned so much as against this, and none
-of the ancient philosophers have so much need of being defended as
-Aristotle.
-
-One of the immediate followers of Aristotle was Theophrastus,
-born Ol 102, 2 (371 B.C.); though a man of distinction, he can
-still only be esteemed a commentator on Aristotle. For Aristotle
-is so rich a treasure-house of philosophic conceptions, that much
-material is found in him which is ready for further working upon,
-which may be put forward more abstractly, and in which individual
-propositions may be brought into prominence. However Aristotle’s
-manner of procedure, which is to take an empirical starting point of
-ratiocination [Raisonnement], and to comprehend this in the focus of
-the speculative Notion, is characteristic of his mind, without being
-one which, on its own account, can be freely elevated into a method
-and a principle. Thus of Theophrastus as of many others (Dicæarchus
-of Messina, for instance), amongst whom Strato of Lampsacus, the
-successor of Theophrastus, is best known, there is not much to tell.
-As regards Dicæarchus, Cicero says, (Tusc. Quæst. I. 31, 10) that he
-controverted the immortality of the soul, for he asserted that “the
-soul is no more than an empty name, and the whole of the capacities
-and powers with which we act and feel are equally extended over all
-living bodies, and inseparable from the body; for it is nothing
-but the body so constituted as to live and feel through a certain
-symmetry and proportion in its body.” Cicero gives in an historical
-manner a result as he made it comprehensible to himself, without any
-speculative conception. Stobæus (Eclog. phys. p. 796), on the other
-hand, quotes from Dicæarchus that he held the soul to be “a harmony of
-the four elements.” We have only a little general information to give
-of Strato, that he acquired great fame as a physicist, and that his
-conception of nature went upon mechanical lines, and yet not on those
-of Leucippus and Democritus, and later, of Epicurus; for, according to
-Stobæus (Eclog. phys. p. 298), he made warmth and cold into elements.
-Hence, if what is said of him is accurate, he was most unfaithful to
-the beliefs of Aristotle, because he led everything back to mechanism
-and chance and did away with the immanent end, without accepting the
-false teleology of modern times. At least, Cicero (De nat. Deor. I. 13)
-relates of him that he maintained that “divine strength lies altogether
-in nature, which has in itself the causes of origination, of growth,
-and of decay, but lacks all sensation and conformation.” The other
-Peripatetics occupied themselves more with working up individual
-doctrines of Aristotle, with bringing out his works in a commentated
-form, which is more or less rhetorical in character, though similar
-in content. But in practical life the Peripatetic school maintained
-as the principle of happiness, the unity of reason and inclination.
-We thus may set aside any further expansion of the Peripatetic
-philosophy, because it has no longer the same interest, and later on
-tended to become a popular philosophy (Vol. I. p. 479, Vol. II. p.
-130); in this mode it no longer remained an Aristotelian philosophy,
-although this, too, as what is really speculative, must coincide most
-closely with actuality. This decay of the Aristotelian philosophy is,
-indeed, closely connected with the circumstance already mentioned (pp.
-126-128), that the Aristotelian writings soon disappeared, and that the
-Aristotelian philosophy did not retain its place so much through these
-documents as through the traditions in the school, whereby they soon
-underwent material changes; and amplifications of Aristotle’s doctrines
-were brought about, as to which it is not known whether some may not
-have slipped into what pass for his works.
-
-Since Aristotle’s leading thought has penetrated all spheres of
-consciousness, and this isolation in the determination through the
-Notion, because it is likewise necessary, contains in every sphere
-the profoundest of true thoughts, Aristotle, to anticipate here the
-external history of his philosophy as a whole, for many centuries
-was the constant mainstay of the cultivation of thought. When in the
-Christian West science disappeared amongst the Christians, the fame
-of Aristotle shone forth with equal brilliance amongst the Arabians,
-from whom, in later times, his philosophy was again passed over to the
-West. The triumph which was celebrated upon the revival of learning,
-on account of the Aristotelian philosophy having been expelled from
-the schools, from the sciences, and specially from theology, as from
-the philosophy which deals with absolute existence, must be regarded
-in two different aspects. In the first place we must remember that
-it was not the Aristotelian philosophy which was expelled, so much
-as the principle of the science of theology which supported itself
-thereon, according to which the first truth is one which is given and
-revealed—an hypothesis which is once for all a fundamental one, and by
-which reason and thought have the right and power to move to and fro
-only superficially. In this form the thought which was awakened in the
-Middle Ages reconstructed its theology more especially, entered into
-all dialectic movements and determinations, and erected an edifice
-where the material that was given was only superficially worked up,
-disposed and secured. The triumph over this system was thus a triumph
-over that principle, and consequently the triumph of free, spontaneous
-thought. But another side of this triumph is the triumph of the
-commonplace point of view that broke free from the Notion and shook off
-the yoke of thought. Formerly, and even nowadays, enough has been heard
-of Aristotle’s scholastic subtleties; in using this name, men thought
-that they had a right to spare themselves from entering on abstraction,
-and, in place of the Notion, they thought that it justified them
-in seeing, hearing, and thus making their escape to what is called
-healthy human understanding. In science, too, in place of subtle
-thoughts, subtle sight has commenced; a beetle or a species of bird is
-distinguished with as great minuteness as were formerly conceptions and
-thoughts. Such subtleties as whether a species of bird is red or green
-in colour, or has a more or less perfect tail, are found more easy than
-the differences in thought; and in the meantime, until a people has
-educated itself up to the labour of thought, in order to be able thus
-to support the universal, the former is a useful preparation, or rather
-it is a moment in this course of culture.
-
-But inasmuch as the deficiency in the Aristotelian philosophy rests in
-the fact, that after the manifold of phenomena was through it raised
-into the Notion, though this last again fell asunder into a succession
-of determinate Notions, the unity of the absolute Notion which unites
-them was not emphasized, and this is what succeeding time had to
-accomplish. What now appears is that the unity of the Notion which is
-absolute existence, makes its appearance as necessity, and it presents
-itself first as the unity of self-consciousness and consciousness, as
-pure thought. The unity of existence as existence is objective unity,
-thought, as that which is thought. But unity, as Notion, the implicitly
-universal negative unity, time as absolutely fulfilled time, and in its
-fulfilment as being unity, is pure self-consciousness. Hence we see it
-come to pass, that pure self-consciousness makes itself reality, but,
-at the same time, it first of all does so with subjective significance
-as a self-consciousness that has taken up its position as such, and
-that separates itself from objective existence, and hence is first of
-all subject to a difference which it does not overcome.
-
-Here we have concluded the first division of Greek philosophy, and
-we have now to pass to the second period. The first period of Greek
-philosophy extended to Aristotle, to the attainment of a scientific
-form in which knowledge has reached the standing of free thought. Thus
-in Plato and Aristotle the result was the Idea; yet we saw in Plato
-the universal made the principle in a somewhat abstract way as the
-unmoved Idea; in Aristotle, on the other hand, thought in activity
-became absolutely concrete as the thought which thinks itself. The next
-essential, one which now is immediately before us, must be contained in
-that into which Philosophy under Plato and Aristotle had formed itself.
-This necessity is none other than the fact that the universal must now
-be proclaimed free for itself as the universality of the principle, so
-that the particular may be recognized through this universal; or the
-necessity of a systematic philosophy immediately enters in, what we
-formerly called one in accordance with the unity of the Notion. We
-may speak of the Platonic and Aristotelian systems, but they are not
-in the form of a system; for that it is requisite that one principle
-should be maintained and consistently carried through the particular.
-In the perfect complex of the conception of the universe as it is
-to Aristotle, where everything is in the highest form of scientific
-knowledge led back to what is speculative, however empiric may be his
-manner of setting to work, there certainly is one principle brought
-forward, and that a speculative one, though it is not brought forward
-as being one. The nature of the speculative has not been explicitly
-brought to consciousness as the Notion—as containing in itself the
-development of the manifold nature of the natural and spiritual
-universe, consequently it is not set forth as the universal, from which
-the particular was developed. Aristotle’s logic is really the opposite
-of this. He in great measure passes through a series of the living
-and the dead, makes them confront his objective, that is, conceiving
-thought, and grasps them in his understanding; each object is on its
-own account a conception which is laid open in its determinations,
-and yet he also brings these reflections together, and thereby is
-speculative. If even Plato on the whole proceeded in an empiric way,
-taking up this and that idea, each of which is in turn examined, with
-Aristotle this loose method of procedure appears still more clearly. In
-the Aristotelian teaching the Idea of the self-reflecting thought is
-thus grasped as the highest truth; but its realization, the knowledge
-of the natural and spiritual universe, constitutes outside of that
-Idea a long series of particular conceptions, which are external
-to one another, and in which a unifying principle, led through the
-particular, is wanting. The highest Idea with Aristotle consequently
-once more stands only as a particular in its own place and without
-being the principle of his whole philosophy. Hence the next necessity
-in Philosophy is that the whole extent of what is known must appear as
-one organization of the Notion; that in this way the manifold reality
-may be related to that Idea as the universal, and thereby determined.
-This is the standpoint which we find in this second period.
-
-A systematic philosophy such as this becomes in the first place
-dogmatism, in antagonism to which, because of its one-sided character,
-scepticism immediately arises. In the same way the French call
-what is dogmatic _systématique_, and _système_ that in which all
-the conceptions must consistently proceed from one determination;
-hence to them _systématique_ is synonymous with one-sided. But the
-philosophies that ensue are one-sided, because in them it was only the
-necessity of one principle that was recognized, without their meanwhile
-developing from themselves, as might well have come to pass in and
-for itself, the Idea as the real universal, and thus comprehending
-the world in such a way that the content is only grasped as the
-determination of the self-reflective thought. Hence this principle
-stands up formally and abstractly, and the particular is not yet
-deduced from it, for the universal is only applied to the particular
-and the rules for this application sought out. In Aristotle the Idea
-is at least implicitly concrete, as the consciousness of the unity of
-subjective and objective, and therefore it is not one-sided. Should
-the Idea be truly concrete, the particular must be developed from
-it. The other relation would be the mere bringing of the particular
-under the universal, so that both should be mutually distinguished;
-in such a case the universal is only a formal principle, and such a
-philosophy is therefore one-sided. But the true difficulty is that the
-two endeavours, the development of the particular from the Idea, and
-the bringing of the particular under the universal, collide with one
-another. The manifestations of the physical and spiritual world must
-first, from their respective sides, be prepared for and worked into the
-Notion, so that the other sciences can form therefrom universal laws
-and principles. Then for the first time can speculative reason present
-itself in determinate thoughts, and bring perfectly to consciousness
-the inwardly existing connection between them. As dogmatic, however,
-those philosophies, it may be further said, are assertive likewise,
-because in such a method the principle is only asserted and is not
-truly proved. For a principle is demanded under which everything is
-subsumed; thus it is only pre-supposed as the first principle. Before
-this we have had abstract principles such as pure Being, but here the
-particular, with which begins the distinction from what is different,
-became posited as the purely negative. That necessity, on the other
-hand, makes for a universal which must likewise be in the particular,
-so that this should not be set aside, but should have its determinate
-character through the universal.
-
-This demand for a universal, even though still unproved principle,
-is henceforth present to knowledge. What answers to this demand
-now appears in the world through the inward necessity of mind—not
-externally, but as being in conformity with the Notion. This necessity
-has produced the philosophy of the Stoics, Epicureans, New Academy, and
-Sceptics, which we have now to consider. If we have remained too long
-in the consideration of this period, we may now make amends for this
-protraction, for in the next period we may be brief.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION TWO
-
-SECOND PERIOD: DOGMATISM AND SCEPTICISM.
-
-
-IN this second period, which precedes the Alexandrian philosophy, we
-have to consider Dogmatism and Scepticism—the Dogmatism which separates
-itself into the two philosophies, the Stoic and the Epicurean; and the
-third philosophy, of which both partake and which yet differs from them
-both, Scepticism. Along with this last we would take the New Academy,
-which has entirely merged in it—while in the Older Academy, Plato’s
-philosophy indubitably still maintained its purity. We saw at the
-close of the previous period the consciousness of the Idea, or of the
-Universal, which is an end in itself—a principle, universal indeed,
-but at the same time determined in itself, which is thus capable of
-subsuming the particular, and of being applied thereto. The application
-of universal to particular is here the relationship that prevails, for
-the reflection that from the universal itself the separation of the
-totality is developed, is not yet present. There always is in such a
-relationship the necessity of a system and of systematization; that
-is to say, one determinate principle must consistently be applied to
-the particular, so that the truth of all that is particular should be
-determined according to this abstract principle, and be at the same
-time likewise recognized. Now since this is what we have in so-called
-Dogmatism, it is a philosophizing of the understanding, in which
-Plato’s and Aristotle’s speculative greatness is no longer present.
-
-In respect of this relationship, the task of Philosophy now comes to
-be summed up in the twofold question which we spoke of earlier (Vol.
-I. pp. 474, 475), and which has regard to a criterion of truth and to
-the wise man. At this point we may better than before, and also from a
-different point of view, explain the necessity for this phenomenon. For
-because truth has now become conceived as the harmony of thought and
-reality, or rather as the identity of the Notion, as the subjective,
-with the objective, the first question is what the universal principle
-for judging and determining this harmony is; but a principle through
-which the true is judged (κρίνεται) to be true, is simply the
-criterion. Yet because this question had only been formally and
-dogmatically answered, the dialectic of Scepticism, or the knowledge of
-the one-sidedness of this principle as a dogmatic principle, at once
-appeared. A further result of this mode of philosophizing is that the
-principle, as formal, is subjective, and consequently it has taken the
-real significance of the subjectivity of self-consciousness. Because
-of the external manner in which the manifold is received, the highest
-point, that in which thought finds itself in its most determinate
-form, is self-consciousness. The pure relation of self-consciousness
-to itself is thus the principle in all these philosophies, since in it
-alone does the Idea find satisfaction, just as the formalism of the
-understanding of the present so-called philosophizing seeks to find its
-fulfilment, the concrete which is opposed to this formalism, in the
-subjective heart, in the inward feelings and beliefs. Nature and the
-political world are certainly also concrete, but externally concrete;
-the arbitrary concrete is, on the other hand, not in the determinate
-universal Idea, but only in self-consciousness and as being personal.
-The second ruling determination is consequently that of the wise men.
-Not reason alone, but everything must be something thought, that is,
-subjectively speaking, my thought; that which is thought, on the
-contrary, is only implicit, that is to say, it is itself objective
-in so far as it appears in the form of the formal identity of thought
-with itself. The thought of the criterion as of the one principle
-is, in its immediate actuality, the subject itself; thought and the
-thinker are thus immediately connected. Because the principle of this
-philosophy is not objective but dogmatic, and rests on the impulse of
-self-consciousness towards self-satisfaction, it is the subject whose
-interests are to be considered. The subject seeks on its own account a
-principle for its freedom, namely, immovability in itself; it must be
-conformable to the criterion, _i.e._ to this quite universal principle,
-in order to be able to raise itself into this abstract independence.
-Self-consciousness lives in the solitude of its thought, and finds
-therein its satisfaction. These are the fundamental determinations in
-the following philosophies: the exposition of their main principles
-will come next, but to go into details is not advisable.
-
-Although, as no doubt is the case, these philosophies, as regards
-their origin, pertain to Greece, and their great teachers were
-always Greeks, they were yet transferred to the Roman world; thus
-Philosophy passed into the Roman world and these systems in particular
-constituted under Roman rule the philosophy of the Roman world, in
-opposition to which world, unsuited as it was to the rational practical
-self-consciousness, this last, driven back into itself from external
-actuality, could only seek for reason in itself and could only care
-for its individuality—just as abstract Christians only care for their
-own salvation. In the bright Grecian world the individual attached
-himself more to his state or to his world, and was more at home in
-it. The concrete morality, the impulse towards the introduction of
-the principle into the world through the constitution of the state,
-which we see in Plato, the concrete science that we find in Aristotle,
-here disappear. In the wave of adversity which came across the Roman
-world, everything beautiful and noble in spiritual individuality
-was rudely swept away. In this condition of disunion in the world,
-when man is driven within his inmost self, he has to seek the unity
-and satisfaction, no longer to be found in the world, in an abstract
-way. The Roman world is thus the world of abstraction, where one
-cold rule was extended over all the civilized world. The living
-individualities of national spirit in the nations have been stifled
-and killed; a foreign power, as an abstract universal, has pressed
-hard upon individuals. In such a condition of dismemberment it was
-necessary to fly to this abstraction as to the thought of an existent
-subject, that is, to this inward freedom of the subject as such. As
-what was held in estimation was the abstract will of the individual
-ruler of the world, the inward principle of thought also had to be an
-abstraction which could bring forth a formal, subjective reconciliation
-only. A dogmatism erected on a principle made effectual through the
-form of the understanding could alone satisfy the Roman mind. These
-philosophies are thus conformable to the spirit of the Roman world,
-as indeed Philosophy in general ever stands in close connection with
-the world in its ordinary aspect (Vol. I. pp. 53, 54). The Roman world
-has, indeed, produced a formal patriotism and corresponding virtue, as
-also a developed system of law; but speculative philosophy could not
-proceed from such dead material—we could only expect good advocates
-and the morality of a Tacitus. These philosophies, always excepting
-Stoicism, also arose amongst the Romans in opposition to their ancient
-superstitions, just as now Philosophy comes forward in the place of
-religion.
-
-The three principles of Stoicism, Epicureanism and Scepticism are
-necessary; in the first there is the principle of thought or of
-universality itself, but yet determined in itself; the abstract
-thought is here the determining criterion of the truth. There is
-opposed to thought, in the second place, the determinate as such, the
-principle of individuality, feeling generally, sensuous perception and
-observation. These two form the principles of the Stoic and Epicurean
-philosophies. Both principles are one-sided and, as positive, become
-sciences of the understanding; just because this thought is not in
-itself concrete but abstract, the determinateness falls outside of
-thought and must be made a principle for itself; for it has an absolute
-right as against abstract thought. Besides Stoicism and Epicureanism,
-there is, in the third place, Scepticism, the negation of these two
-one-sided philosophies which must be recognized as such. The principle
-of Scepticism is thus the active negation of every criterion, of all
-determinate principles of whatever kind they be, whether knowledge
-derived from the senses, or from reflection on ordinary conceptions, or
-from thought. Thus the next result arrived at is that nothing can be
-known. Yet the imperturbability and uniformity of mind in itself, which
-suffers through nothing, and which is affected neither by enjoyment,
-pain, nor any other bond, is the common standpoint and the common
-end of all these philosophies. Thus however gloomy men may consider
-Scepticism, and however low a view they take of Epicureanism, all these
-have in this way been philosophies.
-
-
-A. THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE STOICS.
-
-We must, first of all, and in a general way, remark of Stoicism, as
-also of Epicureanism, that they came in the place of the philosophy
-of the Cynics and Cyrenaics as their counterpart, just as Scepticism
-took the place of the Academy. But in adopting the principle of these
-philosophies, they at the same time perfected it and elevated it
-more into the form of scientific thought. Yet because in them, just
-as in the others, the content is a fixed and definite one, since
-self-consciousness therein sets itself apart, this circumstance really
-puts an end to speculation, which knows nothing of any such rigidity,
-which rather abolishes it and treats the object as absolute Notion,
-as in its difference an unseparated whole. Hence with the Stoics, as
-also really with the Epicureans, instead of genuine speculation, we
-only meet with an application of the one-sided, limited principle,
-and thus we require in both to enter merely upon a general view of
-their principle. Now if Cynicism made reality for consciousness the
-fact of being immediately natural (where immediate naturalness was
-the simplicity of the individual, so that he is independent and,
-in the manifold movement of desire, of enjoyment, of holding many
-things to be reality, and of working for the same, really keeps up
-the external simple life) the Stoic elevation of this simplicity into
-thought consists in the assertion, not that immediate naturalness
-and spontaneity is the content and the form of the true Being of
-consciousness, but that the rationality of nature is grasped through
-thought, so that everything is true or good in the simplicity of
-thought. But while with Aristotle what underlies everything is the
-absolute Idea as unlimited and not set forth in a determinate character
-and with a difference—and its deficiency is only the deficiency which
-is present in realization, the not being united into one Notion—here
-the one Notion is undoubtedly set forth as real existence, and
-everything is related to it, and hence the requisite relation is
-undoubtedly present; but that in which everything is one is not the
-true. With Aristotle each conception is considered absolutely in its
-determination and as separate from any other; here the conception
-certainly is in this relation and is not absolute, but at the same
-time it is not in and for itself. Because thus the individual is not
-considered absolutely but only relatively, the whole working out is
-not interesting, for it is only an external relation. Likewise with
-Aristotle the individual only is taken into consideration, but this
-consideration is lost sight of by the speculative treatment adopted:
-here, however, the individual is taken up and the treatment is likewise
-external. This relation is not even consistent, if, as also happens,
-something such as nature is considered in itself; for the absolute
-falls outside of it, since its consideration is only a system of
-reasoning from indeterminate principles, or from principles which are
-only the first that come to hand.
-
-As a contribution to the history of the philosophy of the Stoics, we
-first of all desire to mention the more eminent Stoics. The founder of
-the Stoic School is Zeno (who must be distinguished from the Eleatic);
-he belonged to Cittium, a town in Cyprus, and was born about the 109th
-Olympiad. His father was a merchant who, from his business visits to
-Athens, then, and for long afterwards, the home of Philosophy and of
-a large number of philosophers, brought with him books, particularly
-those of the Socratics, whereby a love and craving for knowledge was
-awakened in his son. Zeno himself travelled to Athens, and, according
-to some, he found a further motive to live for Philosophy, in that he
-lost all his possessions by a shipwreck. What he did not lose was the
-cultured nobility of his mind and his love of rational understanding.
-Zeno visited several sections of the Socratics, and particularly
-Xenocrates, a man belonging to the Platonic School, who, on account
-of the strictness of his morality and the austerity of his whole
-demeanour, was very celebrated. Thus he underwent the same ordeals
-as those to which the holy Francis of Assisi subjected himself, and
-succumbed to them just as little. This may be seen by the fact that
-while no testimony was given without oath in Athens, the oath was in
-his case dispensed with, and his simple word believed—and his teacher
-Plato is said often to have remarked to him that he might sacrifice to
-the Graces. Then Zeno also visited Stilpo, a Megaric, whom we already
-know about (Vol. I. p. 464), and with whom he studied dialectic for
-ten years. Philosophy was considered as the business of his life,
-and of his whole life, and not studied as it is by a student who
-hurries through his lectures on Philosophy in order to hasten on to
-something else. But although Zeno principally cultivated dialectic
-and practical philosophy, he did not, like other Socratics, neglect
-physical philosophy, for he studied very specially Heraclitus’ work on
-Nature, and finally came forward as an independent teacher in a porch
-called Poecile (στοὰ ποικίλη), which was decorated with the paintings
-of Polygnotus. From this his school received the name of Stoic. Like
-Aristotle his principal endeavour was to unite Philosophy into one
-whole. As his method was characterized by special dialectic skill and
-training, and by the acuteness of his argumentation, so he himself was
-distinguished, in respect of his personality, by stern morality, which
-resembles somewhat that of the Cynics, though he did not, like the
-Cynics, try to attract attention. Hence with less vanity his temperance
-in the satisfaction of his absolute wants was almost as great, for he
-lived on nothing but water, bread, figs and honey. Thus amongst his
-contemporaries Zeno was accorded general respect; even King Antigonus
-of Macedonia often visited him and dined with him, and he invited
-him to come to him in a letter quoted by Diogenes: this invitation,
-however, Zeno in his reply refused, because he was now eighty years of
-age. But the circumstance that the Athenians trusted to him the key of
-their fortress, speaks for the greatness of their confidence in him;
-indeed, according to Diogenes, the following resolution was passed at
-a meeting of the people: “Because Zeno, the son of Mnaseas, has lived
-for many years in our town as a philosopher, and, for the rest, has
-proved himself to be a good man, and has kept the youths who followed
-him in paths of virtue and of temperance, having led the way thereto
-with his own excellent example, the citizens decide to confer on him
-a public eulogy, and to present him with a golden crown, on account
-both of his virtue and his temperance. In addition to this he shall be
-publicly buried in the Ceramicus. And for the crown and the building
-of the tomb, a commission of five men shall be appointed.” Zeno
-flourished about the 120th Olympiad (about 300 B.C.) at the same time
-as Epicurus, Arcesilaus of the New Academy, and others. He died at a
-great age, being ninety-eight years of age (though some say he was only
-seventy-two), in the 129th Olympiad; for being tired of life, he put an
-end to it himself either by strangulation or by starvation—just because
-he had broken his toe.[121]
-
-Amongst the succeeding Stoics Cleanthes must be specially singled out;
-he was a disciple and the successor of Zeno in the Stoa, and author
-of a celebrated Hymn to God, which Stobæus has preserved. He is well
-known by an anecdote told respecting him. It is said that he was called
-in accordance with the law before a court of justice in Athens to
-give an account of the means by which he maintained himself. He then
-proved that at night he carried water for a gardener, and by means of
-this occupation, earned as much as he required in order in the day to
-be in Zeno’s company—as to which the only point which is not quite
-comprehensible to us is how, even in such a way, philosophy, of all
-things, could be studied. And when for this a gratuity was voted to him
-from the public treasury, he refused it at Zeno’s instigation. Like his
-teacher, Cleanthes also died voluntarily, in his eighty-first year, by
-abstaining from food.[122]
-
-Of the later Stoics there were many more who could be named as having
-been famous. More distinguished in science than Cleanthes was his
-disciple, Chrysippus of Cilicia, born Ol. 125, 1 (474 A.U.C.; 280
-B.C.), who likewise lived in Athens, and who was specially active
-in promoting the wide cultivation and extension of the philosophy
-of the Stoics. His logic and dialectic were what contributed most
-largely to his fame, and hence it was said that if the gods made use
-of dialectic, they would use none other than that of Chrysippus. His
-literary activity is likewise admired, for the number of his works, as
-Diogenes Laërtius tells us, amounted to seven hundred and five. It is
-said of him in this regard that he wrote five hundred lines every day.
-But the manner in which his writings were composed detracts very much
-from our wonder at this facility in writing, and shows that most of his
-works consisted of compilations and repetitions. He often wrote over
-again respecting the very same thing; whatever occurred to him he put
-down on paper, dragging in a great variety of evidence. Thus he quoted
-almost entire books by other writers; and someone gave expression to
-the belief that if all that belonged to others were taken away from his
-books, only white paper would be left. But of course it is not so bad
-as all this, as we may see by all the quotations from the Stoics, where
-the name of Chrysippus is placed at the head, as it always is, and his
-conclusions and explanations are used by preference. His writings,
-of which Diogenes Laërtius mentions a long list, have, however, all
-been lost to us; so much is nevertheless correct, that he was the main
-constructor of the Stoic logic. While it is to be regretted that some
-of his best works have not come down to us, it is, perhaps, a good
-thing that all are not preserved; if we had to choose between having
-all or none, the decision would be a hard one. He died in the 143rd
-Olympiad (212 B.C.).[123]
-
-In the period immediately following, Diogenes of Seleucia in Babylonia
-is a distinguished figure; Carneades, the celebrated Academic, is said
-to have learned dialectic from him, and he is also noteworthy because
-with this Carneades and Critolaus, a Peripatetic thinker, in Olympiad
-156, 2 (598 A.U.C., or 156 B.C.) and in the time of the elder Cato, he
-was sent as Athenian ambassador to Rome—an embassy which first caused
-the Romans to make acquaintance with Greek philosophy, dialectic and
-rhetoric, in Rome itself. For those philosophers there gave lectures
-and discourses.[124]
-
-Besides these, Panaetius is well known as having been Cicero’s
-instructor; the latter wrote his treatise, _De Officiis_, after
-Panaetius. Finally, we have Posidonius, another equally famous teacher,
-who lived for long in Rome in the time of Cicero.[125]
-
-Later on we see the philosophy of the Stoics pass over to the Romans,
-that is to say, it became the philosophy of many Romans, though this
-philosophy did not gain anything as a science by so doing. On the
-contrary, as in the case of Seneca and the later Stoics, in Epictetus
-or Antoninus, all speculative interest was really lost, and a
-rhetorical and hortatory disposition shown, of which mention cannot be
-made in a history of Philosophy any more than of our sermons. Epictetus
-of Hierapolis in Phrygia, born at the end of the first century after
-Christ, was first of all the slave of Epaphroditus, who, however, freed
-him, after which he betook himself to Rome. When Domitian banished
-the philosophers, poisoners and astrologers from Rome (94 A.D.),
-Epictetus went to Nicopolis, in Epirus, and taught there publicly.
-From his lectures Arrian compiled the voluminous _Dissertationes
-Epicteteæ_, which we still possess, and also the manual ἐγχειρίδιον of
-Stoicism.[126] We still have the Meditations εἰς ἑαυτόν of the Emperor
-Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, in twelve books; he first of all ruled
-along with Lucius Aurelius Verus from 161 to 169 A.D., and then from
-169 to 180 alone and he conducted a war with the Marcomanni. In his
-Meditations he always speaks to himself; these reflections are not,
-however, speculative in nature, being admonitions, such as that man
-should exercise himself in every virtue.
-
-We have no other original works by the older Stoics. For the Stoic
-Philosophy, too, the sources on which we formerly could count are cut
-off. The sources from which a knowledge of the philosophy of the Stoics
-is to be derived are, however, well known. There is Cicero, who was
-himself a Stoic, though in his representation there is great difficulty
-in discovering how, for instance, the principle of Stoic morality is
-to be distinguished from that which constitutes the principle of the
-morality of the Peripatetics. And, more particularly, we have Sextus
-Empiricus, whose treatment is mainly theoretic, and is thus interesting
-from a philosophic point of view. For Scepticism has had to do with
-Stoicism more especially. But also Seneca, Antoninus, Arrian, the
-manual of Epictetus, and Diogenes Laërtius must really be called into
-council.
-
-As regards the philosophy of the Stoics themselves, they definitely
-separated it into those three parts which we have already met with
-(Vol. I. p. 387, Vol. II. pp. 48, 49), and which will, generally
-speaking, be always found. There is Logic in the first place; secondly,
-Physics, or Natural Philosophy; and thirdly, Ethics, or the Philosophy
-of Mind, on the practical side especially. The content of their
-philosophy has, however, not much that is original or productive.
-
-
-1. PHYSICS.
-
-As regards the Physics of the Stoics, we may in the first place say
-that it does not contain much that is peculiar to itself, since it is
-rather a compendium of the Physics of older times, and more especially
-of that of Heraclitus. However, each of the three schools now being
-dealt with has had a very characteristic and definite terminology,
-which is more than can be altogether said of the philosophy of Plato
-and Aristotle. Thus we must now make ourselves familiar with the
-particular expressions used and with their significance. The following
-is the essence of the Physics of the Stoics: The determining reason
-(λόγος) is the ruling, all-productive substance and activity, extended
-throughout all, and constituting the basis of all natural forms; this
-preponderating substance, in its rational effectuating activity, they
-call God. It is a world-soul endowed with intelligence, and, since
-they called it God, this is really Pantheism. But all Philosophy is
-pantheistic, for it goes to prove that the rational Notion is in the
-world. The hymn of Cleanthes is to this effect: “Nothing happens on
-earth without thee, O Dæmon, neither in the ethereal pole of the
-heavens, nor in the sea, excepting what the wicked do through their own
-foolishness. But thou knowest how to make crooked things straight, and
-thou orderest that which is without order, and the inimical is friendly
-to thee. For thus hast thou united everything into one, the good to
-the evil; thus one Notion (λόγος) is in everything that ever was, from
-which those mortals who are evil flee. How unhappy are they, too, who,
-ever longing to possess the good, do not perceive God’s universal law,
-nor listen thereto, the which if they but obeyed with reason, (σὺν νῷ)
-they would attain a good and happy life!”[127] The Stoics thus believed
-the study of nature to be essential, in order to know in nature its
-universal laws, which constitute the universal reason, in order that
-we might also know therefrom our duties, the law for man, and live
-conformably to the universal laws of nature. “Zeno,” according to
-Cicero (De nat. Deor. I. 14), “holds this natural law to be divine, and
-believes that it has the power to dictate the right and prohibit what
-is wrong.” Thus the Stoics desired to know this rational Notion which
-rules in nature not altogether on its own account; and the study of
-nature was consequently to them rather a mere matter of utility.
-
-If we are now to give some further idea of what these Physics are, we
-may say that the Stoics distinguish in the corporeal—although nature
-is only the manifestation of one common law—the moment of activity
-and that of passivity; the former is, according to Aristotle, active
-reason, or, according to Spinoza, _natura naturans_; the latter passive
-reason, or _natura naturata_. The latter is matter, substance without
-quality, for quality is, generally speaking, form, _i.e._ that which
-forms universal matter into something particular. This is indeed the
-reason likewise that with the Greeks quality is called τὸ ποιόν, just
-as we in German derive _Beschaffenheit_ from _Schaffen_—that which is
-posited, the negative moment. But the actuating, as the totality of
-forms, is, according to the Stoics, the Notion in matter; and this is
-God. (Diog. Laërt. VII. 134.)
-
-As regards the further nature of these forms, these universal laws of
-nature, and the formation of the world, the Stoics have in the main
-adopted the ideas of Heraclitus, for Zeno studied him very particularly
-(_supra_, p. 239). They thus make fire the real Notion, the active
-principle which passes into the other elements as its forms. The
-world arises by the self-existent gods driving the universal material
-substance (οὐσίαν) out of the fire, through the air, into the water;
-and as in all generation the moisture which surrounds a seed comes
-first as the begetter of all that is particular, so that conception,
-which in this respect is called seed-containing (σπερματικός), remains
-in the water and then actuates the indeterminate Being of matter into
-the origination of the other determinations. The elements, fire, water,
-air and earth, are consequently primary. Respecting them the Stoics
-speak in a manner which has no longer any philosophic interest.
-“The coagulation of the denser parts of the world forms the earth;
-the thinner portion becomes air, and if this becomes more and more
-rarefied, it produces fire. From the combination of these elements are
-produced plants, animals, and other kinds of things.” The thinking
-soul is, according to them, of a similar fiery nature, and all human
-souls, the animal principle of life, and also plants, are parts of
-the universal world-soul, of the universal fire; and this central
-point is that which rules and impels. Or, as it is put, souls are a
-fiery breath. Sight, in the same way, is a breath of the ruling body
-(ἡγεμονικοῦ) transmitted to the eyes; similarly hearing is an extended,
-penetrating breath, sent from the ruling body to the ears.[128]
-
-Respecting the process of nature we may further say this: Fire, Stobæus
-tells us (Eclog. phys. I. p. 312), is called by the Stoics an element
-in a pre-eminent sense, because from it, as the primary element, all
-else arises through a transformation, and in it, as in an ultimate,
-everything is fused and becomes dissolved. Thus Heraclitus and Stoicism
-rightly comprehended this process as a universal and eternal one. This
-has even been done by Cicero, though in a more superficial way; in
-this reflection he falsely sees the conflagration of the world in time
-and the end of the world, which is quite another matter. For in his
-work _De natura Deorum_ (II. 46) he makes a Stoic speak thus: “In the
-end (_ad extremum_) everything will be consumed by fire; for if all
-moisture becomes exhausted the earth can neither be nourished, nor can
-air return into existence. Thus nothing but fire remains, through whose
-reanimation and through God the world will be renewed and the same
-order will return.” This is spoken after the manner of the ordinary
-conception. But to the Stoics everything is merely a Becoming. However
-deficient this may be, God, as the fiery principle, is yet to them
-the whole activity of nature, and likewise the rational order of the
-same, and in this lies the perfect pantheism of the Stoic conception of
-nature. Not only do they call this ordering force God, but also nature,
-fate or necessity (εἱμαρμένην), likewise Jupiter, the moving force of
-matter, reason (νοῦν) and foresight (πρόνοιαν); to them all these are
-synonymous.[129] Because the rational brings forth all, the Stoics
-compare this impelling activity to a seed, and say: “The seed which
-sends forth something rational (λογικόν) is itself rational. The world
-sends forth the seeds of the rational and is thus in itself rational;”
-that is to say, rational both generally, in the whole, and in each
-particular existent form. “All beginning of movement in any nature and
-soul rises from a ruling principle, and all powers which are sent forth
-upon the individual parts of the whole proceed from the ruling power as
-from a source; so that each force that is in the part is also in the
-whole, because the force is distributed by the ruling power in it. The
-world embraces the seed-containing conceptions of the life which is in
-conformity with the conception,” _i.e._ all particular principles.[130]
-The Physics of the Stoics is thus Heraclitean, though the logical
-element is entirely at one with Aristotle; and we may regard it as
-being such. However, speaking generally, only those belonging to
-earlier times had a physical element in their philosophy: those coming
-later neglected Physics entirely and kept alone to Logic and to Ethics.
-
-The Stoics again speak of God and the gods according to the popular
-manner of regarding them. They say that “God is the ungenerated and
-imperishable maker of all this disposition of things, who after certain
-periods of time absorbs all substance in Himself, and then reproduces
-it from Himself.”[131] There no definite perception is reached, and
-even the above relation of God, as absolute form, to matter has
-attained no developed clearness. The universe is at one time the unity
-of form and matter, and God is the soul of the world; at another time,
-the universe, as nature, is the Being of the constituted matter,
-and that soul is antagonistic to it, but the activity of God is a
-disposition of the original forms of matter.[132] This opposition is
-devoid of the essentials of union and division.
-
-Thus the Stoics remain at the general conception that each individual
-is comprehended in a Notion, and this again in the universal Notion,
-which is the world itself. But because the Stoics recognized the
-rational as the active principle in nature, they took its phenomena
-in their individuality as manifestations of the divine; and their
-pantheism has thereby associated itself with the common ideas about
-the gods as with the superstitions which are connected therewith (p.
-235), with belief in all sorts of miracles and with divination—that is
-to say, they believe that in nature there are intimations given which
-men must receive through divine rites and worship. Epicureanism, on the
-contrary, proceeds towards the liberation of men from this superstition
-to which the Stoics are entirely given over. Thus Cicero, in his work
-_De divinatione_, has taken the most part of his material from them,
-and much is expressly given as being the reasoning of the Stoics. When,
-for example, he speaks of the premonitory signs given in connection
-with human events, all this is conformable with the Stoic philosophy.
-The fact that an eagle flies to the right, the Stoics accepted as a
-revelation of God, believing that thereby it was intimated to men what
-it was advisable for them to do in some particular circumstances. Just
-as we find the Stoics speaking of God as having universal necessity,
-to them God, as Notion, has hence a relation to men and human ends
-likewise, and in this respect He is providence; thus they now arrived
-at the conception of particular gods also. Cicero says in the work
-quoted above (II. 49): “Chrysippus, Diogenes and Antipater argued thus:
-If gods exist, and if they do not let men know beforehand what is to
-happen in the future, they cannot love men, or else they themselves do
-not know what stands before them in the future, or they are of opinion
-that it does not signify whether man knows it or not, or they consider
-such a revelation beneath the dignity of their majesty, or they cannot
-make it comprehensible to men.” All this they refute, for amongst other
-things they say that nothing can exceed the beneficence of the gods,
-&c. Thus they draw the conclusion that “the gods make known to men the
-future”—a system of reasoning in which the entirely particular ends
-of individuals also form the interests of the gods. To make men know
-and comprehend at one time and not at another, is an inconsistency,
-_i.e._ an incomprehensibility, but this very incomprehensibility, this
-obscurity, is the triumph of the common way of regarding religions
-affairs. Thus in the Stoics all the superstitions of Rome had their
-strongest supporters; all external, teleological superstition is taken
-under their protection and justified. Because the Stoics started from
-the assertion that reason is God (it certainly is divine, but it
-does not exhaust divinity), they immediately made a bound from this
-universal to the revelation of that which operates for the sake of
-individual ends. The truly rational is doubtless revealed to men as the
-law of God; but the useful, what is in conformity with individual ends,
-is not revealed in this truly divine revelation.
-
-
-2. LOGIC.
-
-In the second place, as to the intellectual side of the philosophy, we
-must first of all. consider the principle of the Stoics in answering
-the question of what the true and rational is. In regard to the source
-of our knowledge of truth, or of the criterion, which in those times
-used to be discussed (Vol. I. p. 474, Vol. II. p. 233), the Stoics
-decided that the scientific principle is the conception that is laid
-hold of (φαντασία καταληπτική), for the true as well as for the good;
-for the true and good are set forth as content or as the existent.
-Thus a unity of apprehending thought and Being is set forth in which
-neither can exist without the other; by this is meant not sensuous
-conception as such, but that which has returned into thought and become
-proper to consciousness. Some of the older Stoics, amongst whom we
-certainly find Zeno, called this criterion the very truth of reason
-(ὀρθὸς λόγος). Ordinary conception on its own account (φαντασία) is
-an impression (τύπωσις), and for it Chrysippus used the expression
-alteration (ἐτεροίωσις).[133] But that the conception should be true,
-it must be comprehended; it begins with feeling, whereby in fact the
-type of another is brought into us; the second step is that we should
-transform this into part of ourselves, and this first of all occurs
-through thought.
-
-According to Cicero’s account (Academ. Quæst. IV. 47), Zeno illustrated
-the moments of this appropriation by a movement of the hand. When he
-showed the open palm he said that this was a sensuous perception;
-when he bent the fingers somewhat, this was a mental assent through
-which the conception is declared to be mine; when he pressed them
-quite together and formed a fist, this was comprehension (κατάληψις),
-just as in German we speak of comprehension [Begreifen] when by means
-of our senses we lay hold of anything in a similar way; when he then
-brought the left hand into play and pressed together that fist firmly
-and forcibly, he said that this was science, in which no one but the
-wise man participated. This double pressure, my pressing with the
-other hand that which is grasped, is said to signify conviction, my
-being conscious of the identity of thought with the content. “But who
-this wise man is or has been the Stoics never say,” adds Cicero; and
-of this we shall afterwards have to speak in greater detail. In fact,
-the matter is not made clear through this gesticulation of Zeno’s.
-The first action, the open hand, is sensuous apprehension, immediate
-seeing, hearing, &c.; the first motion of the hand is then, speaking
-generally, spontaneity in grasping. This first assent is likewise
-given by fools; it is weak, and may be false. The next moment is the
-closing of the hand, comprehension, taking something in; this makes
-the ordinary conception truth, because the ordinary conception becomes
-identical with thought. By this my identity with this determination
-is indeed set forth, but this is not yet scientific knowledge, for
-science is a firm, secure, unchangeable comprehension through reason or
-thought, which is that which rules or directs the soul. Midway between
-scientific knowledge and folly is the true Notion as the criterion,
-although as yet it is not itself science; in it thought gives its
-approbation to existence and recognizes itself, for approbation is
-the harmony of a thing with itself. But in scientific knowledge a
-perception of the first elements and determinate knowledge through
-thought of the object is contained. Thus the ordinary conception as
-apprehended is thought; scientific knowledge is the consciousness of
-thought, the knowledge of that harmony.
-
-We may also give our assent to these conclusions of the Stoics with
-their various stages, since in them there is a perception which is
-undoubtedly true. In this we have an expression of the celebrated
-definition of the truth, by which it is made the harmony of object and
-consciousness; but at the same time it is well to remark that this is
-to be understood simply, and not as indicating that consciousness had a
-conception, and that on the other side stood an object, which two had
-to harmonize with one another, and hence that a third was necessarily
-brought into existence which had to compare them. Now this would be
-consciousness itself, but what this last can compare is nothing more
-than its conception, and—not the object, but—its conception again.
-Consciousness thus really accepts the conception of the object; it is
-by this approbation that the conception actually receives truth—the
-testimony of mind to the objective rationality of the world. It is
-not, as is ordinarily represented, that a round object here impresses
-itself upon wax, that a third compares the form of the round and of the
-wax and, finding them to be similar, judges that the impress must have
-been correct, and the conception and the thing have harmonized. For
-the action of thought consists in this, that thought in and for itself
-gives its approbation and recognizes the object as being in conformity
-with itself; this it is in which lies the power of truth—or approbation
-is the expression of this harmony, or judgment itself. In this, say
-the Stoics, the truth is contained; it is an object which is likewise
-thought, so that the thought that gives its assent is the ruling
-thought which posits the harmony of subject with content. The fact that
-anything is or has truth is thus not because it is (for this moment of
-Being is only ordinary conception), but the fact that it is, has its
-power in the approbation of consciousness. But this thought alone and
-for itself is not the truth, nor is the truth as such contained in it,
-for the Notion requires the objective element and is only the rational
-consciousness respecting the truth. But the truth of the object itself
-is contained in the fact that this objective corresponds to thought,
-and not the thought to the objective; for this last may be sensuous,
-changeable, false, and contingent, and thus it is untrue for mind.
-This is the main point as far as the Stoics are concerned, and even
-if we discover the Stoic speculative doctrines from their antagonists
-better than from their originators and advocates, yet from them, too,
-this idea of unity proceeds; and while both sides of this unity are
-opposed, both are necessary, but thought is essential reality. Sextus
-Empiricus (adv. Math. VIII. 10) understands this thus: “The Stoics say
-that as regards the perceptible and that which is thought some things
-alone are true; what is felt, however, is not immediate (έξ εὐθείας),
-for it becomes true for the first time through its relation to the
-thought that corresponds to it.” Thus neither is immediate thought the
-true, excepting in so far us it corresponds to the Notion and is known
-through the working out of rational thought.
-
-This general idea is the only one which is interesting in the Stoics,
-but even in this very principle, limitations are found to be present.
-It merely expresses the truth as subsisting in the object, as thought
-of, yet for that very reason it is still a very formal determination,
-or not in itself the real Idea. From this point of view Sextus
-Empiricus (adv. Math. X. 183) examines the Stoics, and he considers
-and discusses them in all sorts of ways. The most striking thing that
-he says is what relates to the following. The fact that anything is,
-rests in its being thought—the fact that it is thought in something
-being there; the one is the pre-supposition of the other. That is to
-say, the Stoics assert that a thing exists, not because it is, but
-through thought; but consciousness for its existence requires another,
-for thought is likewise one-sided. In this criticism by Sextus it is
-indicated that thought requires an object as an external to which it
-gives its approbation. There can be no talk of its being here indicated
-that the thinking mind in order to exist as consciousness does not
-require the object; this is really inherent in its conception. But the
-“this” of the object as an external is only a moment which is not the
-only one or the essential. It is the manifestation of mind, and mind
-exists only in that it appears; this therefore must come to pass in
-it, that it must have its object as external and give its approbation
-to it—that is, it must withdraw from this relationship into itself and
-therein recognize its unity. But likewise, having gone into itself, it
-has now from itself to beget its object and give itself the content
-which it sends forth from itself. Stoicism is only this return of
-mind into itself, positing the unity of itself and the object, and
-recognizing the harmony; but not the going forth again to the extension
-of the real knowledge of a content from itself. We do not find Stoicism
-getting any farther, for it stops short at making the consciousness of
-this unity its object, without developing it in the slightest; thus
-reason remains the simple form which does not go on to the distinction
-of the content itself. Hence the formalism of this celebrated standard,
-and of the standpoint from which all truth of content is judged, rests
-farther in the fact that the thought of thought, as what is highest,
-finds this content indeed conformable to itself and appropriates it,
-since it transforms it into the universal, but its determinations are
-given. For if thought predominates, still it is always universal form
-alone. On account of this universality thought yields nothing but the
-form of identity with itself; the ultimate criterion is thus only the
-formal identity of the thought which discovers harmony. But it may
-be asked, with what? For there no absolute self-determination, no
-content that proceeds from thought as such is to be found; and hence
-everything may harmonize with my thought. The criterion of the Stoics
-is consequently only the principle of contradiction; yet when we remove
-the contradiction from absolute reality, it is indeed self-identical,
-but for that very reason empty. The harmony must be a higher one; there
-must be harmony with self in what is other than self, in content, in
-determination; and thus it must be harmony with harmony.
-
-In accordance with this recognition of the principle of the Stoics,
-both their logic and their morality is judged; neither the one nor the
-other arrives at being immanent free science. We have already remarked
-(p. 241) that they also occupied themselves with logical definitions,
-and since they made abstract thought the principle, they have brought
-formal logic to great perfection. Logic is hence to them logic in
-the sense that it expresses the activity of the understanding as of
-conscious understanding; it is no longer as with Aristotle, at least
-in regard to the categories, undecided as to whether the forms of the
-understanding are not at the same time the realities of things; for the
-forms of thought are set forth as such for themselves. Then along with
-this comes in, for the first time, the question respecting the harmony
-of thought and object or the demand that an appropriate content of
-thought be shown. However, since all given content may be taken into
-thought and posited as something thought without therefore losing its
-determinate character, and this determinate character contradicts and
-does not support the simplicity of thought, the taking of it up does
-not help at all; for its opposite may also be taken up and set forth
-as something thought. The opposition is thereby, however, only in
-another form; for instead of the content being in outward sensation as
-something not pertaining to thought and not true, as it formerly was,
-it now pertains to thought, but is unlike it in its determinateness,
-seeing that thought is the simple. Thus what was formerly excluded
-from the simple Notion, now comes into it again; this separation
-between activity of the understanding and object must indeed be made,
-but likewise the unity in the object as such has to be shown, if it
-is only something thought. Hence Scepticism cast up this opposition
-more especially to the Stoics, and the Stoics amongst themselves had
-always to improve on their conceptions. As we have just seen (p. 250)
-in Sextus Empiricus, they did not quite know whether they should define
-conception as impression or alteration, or in some other way. Now if
-this conception is admitted into that which directs the soul, into pure
-consciousness, Sextus further asks (since thought _in abstracto_ is the
-simple and self-identical which, as incorporeal, is neither passive
-nor active), How can an alteration, an impression, be made on this?
-Then the thought-forms are themselves incorporeal. But, according to
-the Stoics, only the corporeal can make an impression or bring about
-an alteration.[134] That is to say, on the one hand, because corporeal
-and incorporeal are unlike they cannot be one; and, on the other,
-incorporeal thought-forms, as capable of no alteration, are not the
-content, for this last is the corporeal only.
-
-If the thought-forms could in fact have attained the form of content,
-they would have been a content of thought in itself. But as they were
-they had value as laws of thought (λεκτά)[135] merely. The Stoics
-indeed had a system of immanent determinations of thought, and actually
-did a great deal in this direction; for Chrysippus specially developed
-and worked out this logical aspect of things, and is stated to have
-been a master in it (_supra_, pp. 240, 241). But this development took
-a very formal direction; there are the ordinary well-known forms of
-inference, five of which are given by Chrysippus, while others give
-sometimes more and sometimes fewer. One of them is the hypothetical
-syllogism through remotion, “When it is day it is light, but now it is
-night and hence it is not light.” These logical forms of thought are
-by the Stoics held to be the unproved that requires no proof; but they
-are likewise only formal forms which determine no content as such. The
-wise man is specially skilful in dialectic, we are told by the Stoics,
-for all things, both physical and ethical, are perceived through a
-knowledge of logic.[136] But thus they have ascribed this perception
-to a subject, without stating who this wise man is (p. 250). Since
-objective grounds by which to determine the truth are wanting, the
-ultimate decision is attributed to the will of the subject; and this
-talk about the wise man consequently has its ground in nothing but
-the indefiniteness of the criterion, from which we cannot get to the
-determination of content.
-
-It would be superfluous to speak further of their logic any more than
-of their theory of judgments, which in part coincides with it, and in
-part is a grammar and a rhetoric; by it no real scientific content
-can be reached. For this logic is not, like Plato’s dialectic, the
-speculative science of the absolute Idea; but, as formal logic, as we
-saw above (p. 254), it is science as the firm, secure, unalterable
-comprehension of reasons, and stops short at the perception of the
-same. This logical element, whose essence consists pre-eminently in
-escaping to the simplicity of the conception to that which is not in
-opposition to itself nor falls into contradiction, obtains the upper
-hand. This simplicity, which has not negativity and content in itself,
-requires a given content which it may not abrogate—but consequently
-it cannot thus attain to a genuine “other” through itself. The Stoics
-have constituted their logic often in the most isolated fashion;
-the principal point that is established here is that the objective
-corresponds to thought, and they investigated this thought more
-closely. If in a manner it is quite correct to say that the universal
-is the true, and that thought has a definite content that must also
-be concrete, the main difficulty, which is to deduce the particular
-determination from the universal, so that in this self-determination it
-may remain identical with itself, has not been solved by the Stoics:
-and this the Sceptics brought to consciousness. This is the point of
-view most important in the philosophy of the Stoics; it thus showed
-itself in their physics also.
-
-
-3. ETHICS.
-
-Since the theory of mind, the doctrine of knowledge, came before us
-in the investigation of the criterion, we have, in the third and
-last place, to speak of the morality of the Stoics, to which is due
-their greatest fame, but which does not rise above this formal element
-any more than what precedes, although it cannot be denied that in
-presenting it they have taken a course which seems very plausible to
-the popular conception, but which in fact is to a great extent external
-and empiric.
-
-a. In order, in the first place, to find the definition of virtue,
-Chrysippus gives some good expositions of practical ethics which
-Diogenes Laërtius (VII. 85, 86) quotes at considerable length; they
-are psychological in character and in them Chrysippus establishes his
-formal harmony with himself. For according to him the Stoics say: “The
-first desire (ὁρμή) of the animal is for self-preservation, because
-nature from the beginning reconciled each existence with itself. This
-first object innate in every animal” (immanent desire) “is thus the
-harmony of the animal with itself, and the consciousness of the same,”
-the self-consciousness through which “the animal is not alienated
-from itself. Thus it repels what is injurious and accepts what is
-serviceable to it.” This is Aristotle’s conception of the nature of
-adaptation to an end, in which, as the principle of activity, both the
-opposite and its sublation are contained. “Enjoyment is not the first
-object, for it” (the sense of satisfaction) “is only for the first time
-added when the nature of an animal that seeks itself through itself,
-receives into itself that which is in conformity with its harmony with
-itself.” This is likewise worthy of approbation: self-consciousness,
-enjoyment, is just this return into self, the consciousness of this
-unity in which I enjoy something and thereby have my unity as this
-individual in the objective element. The case is similar in regard
-to man; his end is self-preservation, but with a conscious end, with
-consideration, according to reason. “In plants nature operates without
-voluntary inclination (ὁρμῆς) or sense-perception, but some things in
-us take place in the same manner as in plants.” For in the plant there
-also is the seed-containing conception, but it is not in it as end, nor
-as its object, for it knows nothing about it. “In animals inclination
-comes in; in them nature makes their impulses conformable to their
-first principle;” _i.e._ the end of inclination is simply the first
-principle of their nature, and that through which they make for their
-own preservation. “Rational creatures likewise make nature their end,
-but this is to live according to reason, for reason becomes in them the
-artist who produces inclination,” _i.e._ it makes a work of art in man
-from what in the animal is desire merely. To live in accordance with
-nature is thus, to the Stoics, to live rationally.
-
-This now appears somewhat like certain receipts given by the Stoics for
-the purpose of discovering right motive forces in regard to virtue. For
-their principle put generally is this: “Men must live in conformity
-with nature, _i.e._ with virtue; for to it” (rational) “nature leads
-us.” That is the highest good, the end of everything—a most important
-form in Stoic morality, which appears in Cicero as _finis bonorum_
-or _summum bonum_. With the Stoics right reason and the securing of
-it on its own account, is the highest principle. But here, too, we
-immediately see that we are thereby merely led round in a circle in a
-manner altogether formal, because virtue, conformity to nature, and
-reason, are only determined through one another. Virtue consists in
-living conformably with nature, and what is conformable to nature is
-virtue. Likewise thought must further determine what is in conformity
-with nature, but conformity with nature again is that alone which
-is determined through reason. The Stoics further say, according to
-Diogenes Laërtius (VII. 87, 88) “To live according to nature is to
-live according to that which experience teaches us of the laws both
-of universal nature and of our own nature, by doing nothing which
-universal law forbids; and that law is the right reason which pervades
-everything, being the same with Jupiter, the disposer (καθηγεμόνι) of
-the existing system of things. The virtue of the happy man is when
-everything occurs according to the harmony of the genius (δαίμονος)
-of each individual with reference to the will of the disposer of all
-things.” Thus everything remains as it was in a universal formalism.
-
-We must throughout allow to the Stoics that virtue consists in
-following thought, _i.e._ the universal law, right reason; anything is
-moral and right only in as far as a universal end is in it fulfilled
-and brought into evidence. This last is the substantial, the essential
-nature of a relationship, and in it we have that which is really in
-thought alone. The universal which must be the ultimate determination
-in action, is, however, not abstract, but the universal in this
-relationship, just as, for example, in property the particular is
-placed on one side. Because man, as a man of thought and culture, acts
-according to his perception, he subordinates his impulses and desires
-to the universal; for they are individual. There is in each human
-action an individual and particular element; but there is a distinction
-as to whether the particular as such is solely insisted upon or whether
-in this particular the universal is secured. It is to the securing
-of this universal that the energy of Stoicism is directed. But this
-universal has still no content and is undetermined, and thereby the
-Stoic doctrines of virtue are incomplete, empty, meaningless and
-tedious. Virtue indeed is commended in a forcible, lively and edifying
-manner, but as to what this universal law of virtue is, we have no
-indications given us.
-
-b. The other side as regards the good is external existence, and the
-agreement of circumstances, of external nature, with the end aimed
-at by man. For although the Stoics have expressed the good as being
-conformity with law, in relation to the practical will, they yet
-defined it, according to Diogenes Laërtius (VII. 94, 95), as being at
-the same time the useful, “either absolutely and immediately useful or
-not contrary to utility,” so that generally speaking the useful is,
-as it were, the accident of virtue. “The Stoics likewise distinguished
-manifold good into good having reference to the soul, and external
-good; the former indicates virtues and their actions; the latter the
-fact of pertaining to a noble country, having a virtuous friend, and
-so on. In the third place it is neither external nor is it a matter
-of self-consciousness alone, when the self-same man is virtuous and
-happy.” These conclusions are quite good. Morality does not require
-to look so coldly on what concerns utility, for every good action is
-in fact useful, _i.e._ it has actuality and brings forth something
-good. An action which is good without being useful is no action and
-has no actuality. That which in itself is useless in the good is its
-abstraction as being a non-reality. Men not only may, but must have
-the consciousness of utility; for it is true that it is useful to know
-the good. Utility means nothing else but that men have a consciousness
-respecting their actions. If this consciousness is blameworthy, it
-is still more so to know much of the good of one’s action and to
-consider it less in the form of necessity. Thus the question was raised
-as to how virtue and happiness are related to one another, a theme
-of which the Epicureans have also treated. Here it was, as in more
-recent times, regarded as the great problem to discover whether virtue
-gives happiness, taken altogether by itself, whether the conception
-of happiness is included in its conception. That union of virtue and
-happiness, as the mean, is thus rightly represented as being perfect,
-neither pertaining only to self-consciousness nor to externality.
-
-α. In order to be able to give a general answer to this question,
-we most recollect what was said above of the principle of
-self-preservation, according to which virtue has to do with the
-rational nature. The fulfilment of its end is happiness as finding
-itself realized, and as the knowledge or intuitive perception of itself
-as an external—a harmony of its Notion or its genius with its Being
-or its reality. The harmony of virtue with happiness thus means that
-the virtuous action realizes itself in and for itself, man becomes in
-it an immediate object to himself, and he comes to the perception of
-himself as objective, or of the objective as himself. This rests in
-the conception of action and particularly of good action. For the bad
-destroys reality and is opposed to self-preservation; but the good
-is what makes for its self-preservation and effectuates it—the good
-end is thus the content that realizes itself in action. But in this
-general answer to that question, properly speaking, the consciousness
-of the implicitly existent end has not sufficiently exactly the
-signification of virtue, nor has action proceeding from the same
-exactly the signification of virtuous action, neither has the reality
-which it attains the signification of happiness. The distinction rests
-in the fact that the Stoics have merely remained at this general
-conception, and set it forth immediately as actuality; in it however,
-the conception of virtuous action is merely expressed, and not reality.
-
-β. A further point is that just because the Stoics have remained at
-this position, the opposition between virtue and happiness immediately
-enters in, or, in abstract form, that between thought and its
-determination. These opposites are with Cicero _honestum_ and _utile_,
-and their union is the question dealt with.[137] Virtue, which is
-living in accordance with the universal law of nature, is confronted
-by the satisfaction of the subject as such in his particularity.
-The two sides are, in the first place, this particularity of the
-individual, which, in the most varied aspects has existence in me as
-the abstract “this,” for example, in the pre-supposition of determinate
-inclinations; and here we have pleasure and enjoyment in which my
-existence harmonizes with the demands of my particularity. In the
-second place, I, as the will that fulfils law, am only the formal
-character which has to carry out the universal; and thus, as willing
-the universal, I am in accord with myself as thinking. The two now
-come into collision, and because I seek the one satisfaction or the
-other, I am in collision with myself, because I am also individual.
-As to this we may hear many trivial things said, such as that things
-often go badly with the virtuous and well with the wicked, and that
-the latter is happy, &c. By going well all external circumstances
-are understood, and on the whole the content is quite uninteresting,
-for it is constituted by the attainment of commonplace ends, points
-of view and interests. Such at once show themselves, however, to be
-merely contingent and external; hence we soon get past this standpoint
-in the problem, and thus external enjoyment, riches, noble birth,
-&c., do not accord with virtue or happiness. The Stoics indeed said:
-“The implicitly good is the perfect” (that which fulfils its end) “in
-accordance with the nature of the rational; now virtue is such, but
-enjoyment, pleasure and such-like are its accessories”[138]—the end of
-the satisfaction of the individual on his own account. Thus these may
-be the concomitants of virtue, although it is a matter of indifference
-whether they are so or not, for since this satisfaction is not end,
-it is equally a matter of indifference if pain is the concomitant
-of virtue. Conduct which is according to reason only, thus further
-contains man’s abstract concentration within himself, and the fact that
-the consciousness of the true enters into him, so that he renounces
-everything that belongs to immediate desires, feelings, &c.
-
-In this quite formal principle of holding oneself in a pure harmony
-with oneself of a merely thinking nature, there now rests the power of
-becoming indifferent to every particular enjoyment, desire, passion
-and interest. Because this following of the determinations of reason
-is in opposition to enjoyment, man should seek his end or satisfaction
-in nothing else than in the satisfaction of his reason, in satisfying
-himself in himself, but not in anything outwardly conditioned. Hence
-much has been said by the Stoics in respect of that which pertains to
-the passions being something that is contradictory. The writings of
-Seneca and Antoninus contain much that is true in this regard, and
-they may be most helpful to those who have not attained to the higher
-degree of conviction. Seneca’s talent must be recognized, but we must
-also be convinced that it does not suffice. Antoninus (VIII. 7) shows
-psychologically that happiness or pleasure is not a good. “Regret is a
-certain self-blame, because something useful has failed, the good must
-be something useful, and the noble and good man must make the same his
-interest. But no noble and good man will feel regret that he has fallen
-short in pleasure; pleasure is thus neither useful nor good. The man
-who has the desire for glory after his death does not recollect that
-he who holds him in remembrance himself dies also, and again he who
-follows this one, until all recollection through these admiring ones
-who have passed away, has been extinguished.” Even if this independence
-and freedom is merely formal, we must still recognize the greatness of
-this principle. However, in this determination of the abstract inward
-independence and freedom of the character in itself lies the power
-which has made the Stoics famous; this Stoic force of character which
-says that man has only to seek to remain like himself, thus coincides
-with the formal element which I have already given (p. 254). For if
-the consciousness of freedom is my end, in this universal end of the
-pure consciousness of my independence all particular determinations of
-freedom which are constituted by duties and laws, have disappeared. The
-strength of will of Stoicism has therefore decided not to regard the
-particular as its essence, but to withdraw itself therefrom; we see on
-the one hand, that this is a true principle, but on the other, it is at
-the same time abstract still.
-
-Now because the principle of the Stoic morality professes to be the
-harmony of mind with itself, what should be done is not to let this
-remain formal, and therefore not to let what is not contained in
-this self-contained be any longer shut out of it. That freedom which
-the Stoics ascribe to man is not without relation to what is other
-than himself; thus he is really dependent, and under this category
-happiness really falls. My independence is only one side, to which
-the other side, the particular side of my existence, hence does not
-yet correspond. The old question, which at this time again came up,
-thus concerns the harmony between virtue and happiness. We speak of
-morality rather than virtue, because that according to which I ought
-to direct my actions is not, as in virtue, my will, as it has become
-custom. Morality really contains my subjective conviction that that
-which I do is in conformity with rational determinations of will, with
-universal duties. That question is a necessary one, a problem which
-even in Kant’s time occupied men, and in endeavouring to solve it
-we must begin by considering what is to be understood by happiness.
-Much more is afterwards said of that in which satisfaction is to be
-sought. However, from what is external and exposed to chance we must
-at once break free. Happiness in general means nothing more than the
-feeling of harmony with self. That which is pleasing to the senses is
-pleasing because a harmony with ourselves is therein contained. The
-contrary and unpleasing is, on the other hand, a negation, a lack of
-correspondence with our desires. The Stoics have posited as the very
-essence of enjoyment this harmony of our inner nature with itself,
-but only as inward freedom and the consciousness, or even only the
-feeling of this harmony, so that enjoyment such as this is contained in
-virtue itself. Yet this enjoyment ever remains a secondary matter, a
-consequence, which in so far as it is so cannot be made end, but should
-only be considered as an accessory. The Stoics said in this regard
-that virtue is alone to be sought, but with virtue happiness on its
-own account is found, for it confers blessing explicitly as such. This
-happiness is true and imperturbable even if man is in misfortune;[139]
-thus the greatness of the Stoic philosophy consists in the fact that
-if the will thus holds together within itself, nothing can break into
-it, that everything else is kept outside of it, for even the removal
-of pain cannot be an end. The Stoics have been laughed at because they
-said that pain is no evil.[140] But toothache and the like are not in
-question as regards this problem. We cannot but know we are subject
-to such; pain like this, and unhappiness are, however, two different
-things. Thus the problem throughout is only to be understood as the
-demand for a harmony of the rational will with external reality. To
-this reality there also belongs the sphere of particular existence, of
-subjectivity, of personality, of particular interests. But of these
-interests the universal alone truly pertains to this reality, for only
-in so far as it is universal, can it harmonize with the rationality
-of the will. It is thus quite right to say that suffering, pain, &c.,
-are no evil, whereby the conformity with myself, my freedom, might be
-destroyed; I am elevated over such in the union which is maintained
-with myself, and even if I may feel them, they can still not make me
-at variance with myself. This inward unity with myself as felt, is
-happiness, and this is not destroyed by outward evil.
-
-γ. Another opposition is that within virtue itself. Because the
-universal law of right reason is alone to be taken as the standard of
-action, there is no longer any really absolutely fixed determination,
-for all duty is always, so to speak, a particular content, which
-can plainly be grasped in universal form, without this, however, in
-any way affecting the content. Because virtue is thus that which is
-conformable to the real essence or law of things, in a general sense
-the Stoics called virtue everything, in every department, which is
-in conformity with law in that department. Hence, Diogenes tells us
-(VII. 92), they also speak of logical and physical virtues, just as
-their morality represents individual duties (τὰ καθήκοντα) by passing
-in review the individual natural relationships in which man stands,
-and showing what in them is rational.[141] But this is only a kind
-of quibbling such as we have also seen in Cicero’s case. Thus in as
-far as an ultimate deciding criterion of that which is good cannot be
-set up, the principle being destitute of determination, the ultimate
-decision rests with the subject, Just as before this it was the oracle
-that decided, at the commencement of this profounder inwardness the
-subject was given the power of deciding as to what is right. For since
-Socrates’ time the determination of what was right by the standard of
-customary morality had ceased in Athens to be ultimate; hence with the
-Stoics all external determination falls away, and the power of decision
-can only be placed in the subject as such, which in the last instance
-determines from itself as conscience. Although much that is elevated
-and edifying may find its support here, an actual determination
-is still wanting; hence there is according to the Stoics only one
-virtue,[142] and the wise man is the virtuous.
-
-c. The Stoics have thus in the third place likewise been in the way of
-representing an ideal of the wise man which, however, is nothing more
-than the will of the subject which in itself only wills itself, remains
-at the thought of the good, because it is good, allows itself in its
-steadfastness to be moved by nothing different from itself, such as
-desires, pain, &c., desires its freedom alone, and is prepared to give
-up all else—which thus, if it experiences outward pain and misfortune,
-yet separates these from the inwardness of its consciousness. The
-question of why the expression of rel morality has with the Stoics
-the form of the ideal of the wise man finds its answer, however,
-in the fact that the mere conception of virtuous consciousness, of
-action with respect to an implicitly existent end, finds in individual
-consciousness alone the element of moral reality. For if the Stoics
-had gone beyond the mere conception of action for the implicitly
-existent end, and had reached to the knowledge of the content, they
-would not have required to express this as a subject. To them rational
-self-preservation is virtue. But if we ask what it is that is evolved
-by virtue, the answer is to the effect that it is just rational
-self-preservation; and thus they have not by this expression got beyond
-that formal circle. Moral reality is not expressed as that which is
-enduring, which is evolved and ever evolving itself. And moral reality
-is just this, to exist; for as nature is an enduring and existent
-system, the spiritual as such must be an objective world. To this
-reality the Stoics have, however, not reached. Or we may understand
-this thus. Their moral reality is only the wise man, an ideal and not a
-reality—in fact the mere conception whose reality is not set forth.
-
-This subjectivity is already contained in the fact that moral reality,
-expressed as virtue, thereby immediately presents the appearance
-of being present only as a quality of the individual. This virtue,
-as such, in as far as only the moral reality of the individual is
-indicated, cannot attain to happiness in and for itself, even though
-happiness, regarded in the light of realization, were only the
-realization of the individual. For this happiness would be just the
-enjoyment of the individual as the harmony of existence with him
-as individual; but with him as individual true happiness does not
-harmonize, but only with him as universal man. Man must likewise not
-in the least desire that it should harmonize with him as individual
-man, that is, he must be indifferent to the individuality of his
-existence, and to the harmony with the individual as much as to the
-want of harmony; he must be able to dispense with happiness just
-as, if he possesses it, he must be free from it; or it is only a
-harmony of him with himself as a universal. If merely the subjective
-conception of morality is therein contained, its true relationship is
-yet thereby expressed; for it is this freedom of consciousness which
-in its enjoyment rests in itself and is independent of objects,—what
-we expressed above (p. 264) as the special characteristic of the
-Stoic morality. Stoic self-consciousness has not here to deal with
-its individuality as such, but solely with the freedom in which it is
-conscious of itself only as the universal. Now could one call this
-happiness, in distinction to the other, true happiness, happiness
-would still, on the whole, remain a wrong expression. The satisfaction
-of rational consciousness in itself as an immediate universal, is a
-state of being which is simulated by the determination of happiness;
-for in happiness we have the moment of self-consciousness as an
-individuality. But this differentiated consciousness is not present in
-that self-satisfaction; for in that freedom the individual has rather
-the sense of his universality only. Striving after happiness, after
-spiritual enjoyment, and talking of the excellence of the pleasures of
-science and art, is hence dull and insipid, for the matter with which
-we are occupied has no longer the form of enjoyment, or it does away
-with that conception. This sort of talk has indeed passed away and
-it no longer has any interest. The true point of view is to concern
-oneself with the matter itself and not with enjoyment, that is, not
-with the constant reflection on the relation to oneself as individual,
-but with the matter as a matter, and as implicitly universal. We must
-take care besides that things are tolerable to us as individuals,
-and the pleasanter the better. But no further notice or speech about
-this is requisite, nor are we to imagine that there is much that is
-rational and important within it. But the Stoic consciousness does not
-get beyond this individuality to the reality of the universal, and
-therefore it has only to express the form, the real as an individual,
-or the wise man.
-
-The highest point reached by Aristotle, the thought of thought, is
-also present in Stoicism, but in such a way that it does not stand in
-its individual capacity as it appears to do in Aristotle, having what
-is different beside it, but as being quite alone. Thus in the Stoic
-consciousness there is just this freedom, this negative moment of
-abstraction from existence, an independence which is capable of giving
-up everything, but not as an empty passivity and self-abnegation, as
-though everything could be taken from it, but an independence which
-can resign it voluntarily, without thereby losing its reality; for its
-reality is really just the simple rationality, the pure thought of
-itself. Here pure consciousness thus attains to being its own object,
-and because reality is to it only this simple object, its object annuls
-in itself all modes of existence, and is nothing in and for itself,
-being therein only in the form of something abrogated.
-
-All is merged into this: the simplicity of the Notion, or its pure
-negativity, is posited in relation to everything. But the real
-filling in, the objective mode, is wanting, and in order to enter
-into this, Stoicism requires that the content should be given. Hence
-the Stoics depicted the ideal of the wise man in specially eloquent
-terms, telling how perfectly sufficient in himself and independent
-he is, for what the wise man does is right. The description of the
-ideal formed by the Stoics is hence a common subject of discussion
-and is even devoid of interest; or at least the negative element in
-it is alone noteworthy. “The wise man is free and likewise in chains,
-for he acts from himself, uncorrupted by fear or desire.” Everything
-which belongs to desire and fear he does not reckon to himself, he
-gives to such the position of being something foreign to him; for no
-particular existence is secure to him. “The wise man is alone king,
-for he alone is not bound to laws, and he is debtor to no one.” Thus
-we here see the autonomy and autocracy of the wise man, who, merely
-following reason, is absolved from all established laws which are
-recognized, and for which no rational ground can be given, or which
-appear to rest somewhat on a natural aversion or instinct. For even
-in relation to actual conduct no definite law has properly speaking
-reality for him, and least of all those which appear to belong to
-nature as such alone, _e.g._ the prohibition against entering into
-marriage relations which are considered incestuous, the prohibition
-of intercourse between man and man, for in reason the same thing is
-fitting as regards the one which is so as regards the others. Similarly
-the wise man may eat human flesh,[143] &c. But a universal reason is
-something quite indeterminate. Thus the Stoics have not passed beyond
-their abstract understanding in the transgression of these laws, and
-therefore they have allowed their king to do much that was immoral;
-for if incest, pederasty, the eating of human flesh, were at first
-forbidden as though through a natural instinct only, they likewise
-can by no means exist before the judgment-seat of reason. The Stoic
-wise man is thus also ‘enlightened,’ in the sense that where he did
-not know how to bring the natural instinct into the form of a rational
-reason, he trampled upon nature. Thus that which is called natural
-law or natural instinct comes into opposition with what is set forth
-as immediately and universally rational. For example, those first
-actions seem to rest on natural feelings, and we must remember that
-feelings are certainly not the object of thought; as opposed to this,
-property is something thought, universal in itself, a recognition of my
-possession from all, and thus it indeed belongs to the region of the
-understanding. But should the wise man hence not be bound by the former
-because it is not something immediately thought, this is merely the
-fault of his want of comprehension. As we have, however, seen that in
-the sphere of theory the thought-out simplicity of the truth is capable
-of all content, so we find this also to be the case with the good, that
-which is practically thought-out, without therefore being any content
-in itself. To wish to justify such a content through a reason thus
-indicates a confusion between the perception of the individual and that
-of all reality, it means a superficiality of perception which does not
-acknowledge a certain thing because it is not known in this and that
-regard. But this is so for the reason that it only seeks out and knows
-the most immediate grounds and cannot know whether there are not other
-aspects and other grounds. Such grounds as these allow of reasons for
-and against everything being found—on the one hand a positive relation
-to something which, though in other cases necessary, as such can also
-be again sublated; and, on the other hand, a negative relation to
-something necessary, which can likewise again be held to be valid.
-
-Because the Stoics indeed placed virtue in thought, but found
-no concrete principle of rational self-determination whereby
-determinateness and difference developed, they, in the first place,
-have carried on a reasoning by means of grounds to which they lead back
-virtue. They draw deductions from facts, connections, consequences,
-from a contradiction or opposition; and this Antoninus and Seneca do in
-an edifying way and with great ingenuity. Reasons, however, prove to
-be a nose of wax; for there are good grounds for everything, such as
-“These instincts, implanted as they are by nature,” or “Short life,”
-&c. Which reasons should be esteemed as good thereby depends on the end
-and interest which form the pre-supposition giving them their power.
-Hence reasons are as a whole subjective. This method of reflecting on
-self and on what we should do, leads to the giving to our ends the
-breadth of reflection due to penetrative insight, the enlargement
-of the sphere of consciousness. It is thus I who bring forward these
-wise and good grounds. They do not constitute the thing, the objective
-itself, but the thing of my own will, of my desire, a bauble through
-which I set up before me the nobility of my mind; the opposite of this
-is self-oblivion in the thing. In Seneca himself there is more folly
-and bombast in the way of moral reflection than genuine truth; and thus
-there has been brought up against him both his riches, the splendour
-of his manner of life, his having allowed Nero to give him wealth
-untold, and also the fact that he had Nero as his pupil; for the latter
-delivered orations composed by Seneca.[144] This reasoning is often
-brilliant, as with Seneca: we find much that awakens and strengthens
-the mind, clever antitheses and rhetoric, but we likewise feel the
-coldness and tediousness of these moral discourses. We are stimulated
-but not often satisfied, and this may be deemed the character of
-sophistry: if acuteness in forming distinctions and sincere opinion
-must be there recognized, yet final conviction is ever lacking.
-
-In the second place there is in the Stoic standpoint the higher,
-although negatively formal principle, that what is thought is alone as
-such the end and the good, and therefore that in this form of abstract
-thought alone, as in Kant’s principle of duty, there is contained that
-by which man must establish and secure his self-consciousness, so
-that he can esteem and follow nothing in himself in as far as it has
-any other content for itself. “The happy life,” says Seneca (De vita
-beata, 5), “is unalterably grounded on a right and secure judgment.”
-The formal security of the mind which abstracts from everything,
-sets up for us no development of objective principles, but a subject
-which maintains itself in this constancy, and in an indifference
-not due to stupidity, but studied; and this is the infinitude of
-self-consciousness in itself.
-
-Because the moral principle of the Stoics remains at this formalism,
-all that they treat of is comprised in this. For their thoughts are the
-constant leading back of consciousness to its unity with itself. The
-power of despising existence is great, the strength of this negative
-attitude sublime. The Stoic principle is a necessary moment in the
-Idea of absolute consciousness; it is also a necessary manifestation
-in time. For if, as in the Roman world, the life of the real mind
-is lost in the abstract universal; the consciousness, where real
-universality is destroyed, must go back into its individuality and
-maintain itself in its thoughts. Hence, when the political existence
-and moral actuality of Greece had perished, and when in later times the
-Roman Empire also became dissatisfied with the present, it withdrew
-into itself, and there sought the right and moral which had already
-disappeared from ordinary life. It is thus herein implied, not that
-the condition of the world is a rational and right one, but only that
-the subject as such should assert his freedom in himself. Everything
-that is outward, world, relationships, &c., are so disposed as to be
-capable of being abrogated; in it there is thus no demand for the real
-harmony of reason and existence; or that which we might term objective
-morality and rectitude is not found in it. Plato has set up the ideal
-of a Republic, _i.e._ of a rational condition of mankind in the state;
-for this esteem for right, morality and custom which is to him the
-principal matter, constitutes the side of reality in that which is
-rational; and it is only through a rational condition of the world
-such as this, that the harmony of the external with the internal is
-in this concrete sense present. In regard to morality and power of
-willing the good, nothing more excellent can be read than what Marcus
-Aurelius has written in his Meditations on himself; he was Emperor
-of the whole of the then known civilized world, and likewise bore
-himself nobly and justly as a private individual. But the condition
-of the Roman Empire was not altered by this philosophic emperor,
-and his successor, who was of a different character, was restrained
-by nothing from inaugurating a condition of things as bad as his own
-wicked caprice might direct. It is something much higher when the
-inward principle of the mind, of the rational will, likewise realizes
-itself, so that there arises a rational constitution, a condition of
-things in accordance with culture and law. Through such objectivity
-of reason, the determinations which come together in the ideal of
-the wise man are first consolidated. There then is present a system
-of moral relationships which are duties; each determination is then
-in its place, the one subordinated to the other, and the higher is
-predominant. Hence it comes to pass that the conscience becomes bound
-(which is a higher point than the Stoic freedom), that the objective
-relationships which we call duties are consolidated after the manner
-of a just condition of things, as well as being held by mind to be
-fixed determinations. Because these duties do not merely appear to
-hold good in a general sense, but are also recognized in my conscience
-as having the character of the universal, the harmony of the rational
-will and reality is established. On the one hand, the objective system
-of freedom as necessity exists, and, on the other, the rational in
-me is real as conscience. The Stoic principle has not yet reached
-to this more concrete attitude, as being on the one hand abstract
-morality, and, on the other, the subject that has a conscience. The
-freedom of self-consciousness in itself is the principle, but it has
-not yet attained to its concrete form, and its relation to happiness
-exists only in its determination as indifferent and contingent, which
-relation must be given up. In the concrete principle of rationality
-the condition of the world, as of my conscience, is not, however,
-indifferent.
-
-This is a general description of Stoic morality; the main point is to
-recognize its point of view and chief relationships. Because in the
-Roman world a perfectly consistent position, and one conformable to
-existing conditions, has attained to the consciousness of itself,
-the philosophy of the Stoics has more specially found its home in the
-Roman world. The noble Romans have hence only proved the negative, an
-indifference to life and to all that is external; they could be great
-only in a subjective or negative manner—in the manner of a private
-individual. The Roman jurists are also said to have been likewise
-Stoic philosophers, but, on the one hand, we find that our teachers of
-Roman law only speak ill of Philosophy, and, on the other, they are
-yet sufficiently inconsistent to state it to the credit of the Roman
-jurists that they were philosophers. So far as I understand law, I can
-find in it, among the Romans, nothing either of thought, Philosophy
-or the Notion. If we are to call the reasoning of the understanding
-logical thought, they may indeed be held to be philosophers, but this
-is also present in the reasoning of Master Hugo, who certainly does not
-claim to be a philosopher. The reasoning of the understanding and the
-philosophic Notion are two different things. We shall now proceed to
-what is in direct contrast to the Stoic philosophy, Epicureanism.
-
-
-B. EPICURUS.
-
-The Epicurean philosophy, which forms the counterpart to Stoicism, was
-just as much elaborated as the Stoic, if, indeed, it were not more so.
-While the latter posited as truth existence for thought—the universal
-Notion—and held firmly to this principle, Epicurus, the founder of
-the other system, held a directly opposite view, regarding as the
-true essence not Being in general, but Being as sensation, that is,
-consciousness in the form of immediate particularity. As the Stoics
-did not seek the principle of the Cynics—that man must confine himself
-to the simplicity of nature—in man’s requirements, but placed it in
-universal reason, so Epicurus elevated the principle that happiness
-should be our chief end into the region of thought, by seeking pleasure
-in a universal which is determined through thought. And though, in so
-doing, he may have given a higher scientific form to the doctrines of
-the Cyrenaics. it is yet self-evident that if existence for sensation
-is to be regarded as the truth, the necessity for the Notion is
-altogether abrogated, and in the absence of speculative interest
-things cease to form a united whole, all things being in point of fact
-lowered to the point of view of the ordinary human understanding.
-Notwithstanding this proviso, before we take this philosophy into
-consideration, we must carefully divest ourselves of all the ideas
-commonly prevalent regarding Epicureanism.
-
-As regards the life of Epicurus, he was born in the Athenian village of
-Gargettus in Ol. 109, 3 (B.C. 342), and therefore before the death of
-Aristotle, which took place in Ol. 114, 3. His opponents, especially
-the Stoics, have raked up against him more accusations than I can tell
-of, and have invented the most trivial anecdotes respecting his doings.
-He had poor parents; his father, Neocles, was village schoolmaster,
-and Chærestrata, his mother, was a sorceress: that is, she earned
-money, like the women of Thrace and Thessaly, by furnishing spells and
-incantations, as was quite common in those days. The father, taking
-Epicurus with him, migrated with an Athenian colony to Samos, but here
-also he was obliged to give instruction to children, because his plot
-of land was not sufficient for the maintenance of his family. At the
-age of about eighteen years, just about the time when Aristotle was
-living in Chalcis, Epicurus returned to Athens. He had already, in
-Samos, made the philosophy of Democritus a special subject of study,
-and now in Athens he devoted himself to it more than ever; in addition
-to this, he was on intimate terms with several of the philosophers
-then flourishing, such as Xenocrates, the Platonist, and Theophrastus,
-a follower of Aristotle. When Epicurus was twelve years old, he read
-with his teacher Hesiod’s account of Chaos, the source of all things;
-and this was perhaps not without influence on his philosophic views.
-Otherwise he professed to be self-taught, in the sense that he produced
-his philosophy entirely from himself; but we are not to suppose from
-this that he did not attend the lectures or study the writings of other
-philosophers. Neither is it to be understood that he was altogether
-original in his philosophy as far as content was concerned; for, as
-will be noted later, his physical philosophy especially is that of
-Leucippus and Democritus. It was at Mitylene in Lesbos that he first
-came forward as teacher of an original philosophic system, and then
-again at Lampsacus in Asia Minor; he did not, however, find very many
-hearers. After having for some years led an unsettled life, he returned
-in about the six and thirtieth year of his age to Athens, to the
-very centre of all Philosophy; and there, some time after, he bought
-for himself a garden, where he lived and taught in the midst of his
-friends. Though so frail in body that for many years he was unable to
-rise from his chair, in his manner of living he was most regular and
-frugal, and he devoted himself entirely to science, to the exclusion
-of all other interests. Even Cicero, though in other respects he has
-little to say in his favour, bears testimony to the warmth of his
-friendships, and adds that no one can deny he was a good, a humane,
-and a kindly man. Diogenes Laërtius gives special commendation to his
-reverence towards his parents, his generosity to his brothers, and his
-benevolence to all. He died of stone in the seventy-first year of his
-age. Just before his death he had himself placed in a warm bath, drank
-a cup of wine, and charged his friends to remember what he had taught
-them.[145]
-
-No other teacher has ever been loved and reverenced by his scholars
-as much as Epicurus; they lived on such intimate terms of friendship
-that they determined to make common stock of their possessions with
-him, and so continue in a permanent association, like a kind of
-Pythagorean brotherhood. This they were, however, forbidden to do by
-Epicurus himself, because it would have betrayed a distrust in their
-readiness to share what they had with one another; but where distrust
-is possible, there neither friendship, nor unity, nor constancy of
-attachment can find a place. After his death he was held in honoured
-remembrance by his disciples: they carried about with them everywhere
-his likeness, engraved on rings or drinking-cups, and remained so
-faithful to his teaching that they considered it almost a crime to make
-any alteration in it (while in the Stoic philosophy development was
-continually going on), and his school, in respect of his doctrines,
-resembled a closely-barricaded state to which all entrance was denied.
-The reason for this lies, as we shall presently see, in his system
-itself; and the further result, from a scientific point of view, ensued
-that we can name no celebrated disciples of his who carried on and
-completed his teaching on their own account. For his disciples could
-only have gained distinction for themselves by going further than
-Epicurus did. But to go further would have been to reach the Notion,
-which would only have confused the system of Epicurus; for what is
-devoid of thought is thrown into confusion by the introduction of
-the Notion, and it is this very lack of thought which has been made
-a principle. Not that it is in itself without thought, but the use
-made of thought is to hold back thought, and thought thus takes up a
-negative position in regard to itself; and the philosophic activity of
-Epicurus is thus directed towards the restoration and maintaining of
-what is sensuous through the very Notion which renders it confused.
-Therefore his philosophy has not advanced nor developed, but it must
-also be said that it has not retrograded; a certain Metrodorus alone
-is said to have carried it on further in some directions. It is also
-told to the credit of the Epicurean philosophy that this Metrodorus
-was the only disciple of Epicurus who went over to Carneades; for the
-rest, it surpassed all others in its unbroken continuity of doctrine
-and its long duration; for all of them became degenerate or suffered
-interruption. When some one called the attention of Arcesilaus to this
-attachment to Epicurus, by the remark that while so many had gone over
-from other philosophers to Epicurus, scarcely a single example was
-known of any one passing over from the Epicurean system to another,
-Arcesilaus made the witty rejoinder: “Men may become eunuchs, but
-eunuchs can never again become men.”[146]
-
-Epicurus himself produced in his lifetime an immense number of works,
-being a much more prolific author than Chrysippus, who vied with him
-in the number of his writings,[147] if we deduct from the latter his
-compilations from the works of others or from his own. The number of
-his writings is said to have amounted to three hundred; it is scarcely
-to be regretted that they are lost to us. We may rather thank Heaven
-that they no longer exist; philologists at any rate would have had
-great trouble with them. The main source of our knowledge of Epicurus
-is the whole of the tenth book of Diogenes Laërtius, which after all
-gives us but scanty information, though it deals with the subject
-at great length. We should, of course, have been better off had we
-possessed the philosopher’s own writings, but we know enough of him to
-make us honour the whole. For, besides this, we know a good deal about
-the philosophy of Epicurus through Cicero, Sextus Empiricus and Seneca;
-and so accurate are the accounts they give of him, that the fragment of
-one of Epicurus’s own writings, found some years ago in Herculaneum,
-and reprinted by Orelli from the Neapolitan edition (Epicuri Fragmenta
-libri II. et XI. De natura, illustr. Orellius, Lipsiæ 1818), has
-neither extended nor enriched our knowledge; so that we must in all
-earnestness deprecate the finding of the remaining writings.
-
-With regard to the Epicurean philosophy, it is by no means to be looked
-on as setting forth a system of Notions, but, on the contrary, as a
-system of ordinary conceptions or even of sensuous existence, which,
-looked at from the ordinary point of view as perceived by the senses,
-Epicurus has made the very foundation and standard of truth (p. 277). A
-detailed explanation of how sensation can be such, he has given in his
-so-called Canonic. As in the case of the Stoics, we have first to speak
-of the manner which Epicurus adopted of determining the criterion of
-truth; secondly, of his philosophy of nature; and thirdly and lastly,
-of his moral teaching.
-
-
-1. CANONICAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-Epicurus gave the name of Canonic to what is really a system of logic,
-in which he defines the criteria of truth, in regard to the theoretic,
-as in fact sensuous perceptions, and, further, as conceptions or
-anticipations (προλήψεις); in regard to the practical, as the passions,
-impulses, and affections.[148]
-
-a. On the theoretic side the criterion, closely considered, has,
-according to Epicurus, three moments, which are the three stages of
-knowledge; first, sensuous perception, as the side of the external;
-secondly, ordinary conception, as the side of the internal; thirdly,
-opinion (δόξα), as the union of the two.
-
-α. “Sensuous perception is devoid of reason,” being what is given
-absolutely. “For it is not moved by itself, nor can it, if if is moved
-by something else, take away from or add to” that which it is, but
-it is exactly what it is. “It is beyond criticism or refutation. For
-neither can one sensation judge another, both being alike, since both
-have equal authority;”—when the presentations of sight are of the
-same kind, every one of them must admit the truth of all the rest.
-“Nor can one of them pass judgment on another when they are unlike,
-for they each have their value as differing;” red and blue, for
-example, are each something individual. “Nor can one sensation pass
-judgment on another when they are heterogeneous; for we give heed to
-all. Thought, in the same way, cannot criticize the senses; for all
-thought itself depends on the sensation,” which forms its content.
-But sensuous perception may go far wrong. “The truth of what our
-senses perceive is first evinced by this, that the power of perception
-remains with us; sight and hearing are permanent powers of this kind
-as much as the capacity of feeling pain. In this way even the unknown”
-(the unperceived) “may be indicated by means of that which appears”
-(perception). Of this conception of objects of perception which are not
-immediate we shall have to speak more particularly hereafter (p. 292)
-in dealing with physical science. “Thus all” (unknown, imperceptible)
-“thoughts originated in the senses either directly in respect of their
-chance origin or in respect of relationship, analogy, and combination;
-to these operations thought also contributes something,” namely as the
-formal connection of the sensuous conceptions. “The fancies of the
-insane or of our dreams are also true; for they act upon us, but that
-which is not real does not act.”[149] Thus every sensuous perception
-is explicitly true, in so far as it shows itself to be abiding, and
-that which is not apparent to our senses must be apprehended after the
-same manner as the perception known to us. We hear Epicurus say, just
-as we hear it said in everyday life: What I see and hear, or, speaking
-generally, what I perceive by my senses, comprises the existent; every
-such object of sense exists on its own account, one of them does not
-contradict the other, but all are on the same level of validity, and
-reciprocally indifferent. These objects of perception are themselves
-the material and content of thought, inasmuch as thought is continually
-making use of the images of these things.
-
-β. “Ordinary conception is now a sort of comprehension (κατάληψις),
-or correct opinion or thought, or the universal indwelling power of
-thinking; that is to say, it is the recollection of that which has
-often appeared to us,”—the picture. “For instance, when I say, ‘this is
-a man,’ I, with the help of previous perceptions, at once by my power
-of representation recognize his form.” By dint of this repetition the
-sensuous perception becomes a permanent conception in me, which asserts
-itself; that is the real foundation of all that we hold true. These
-representations are universal, but certainly the Epicureans have not
-placed universality in the form of thinking, but only said it is caused
-by frequency of appearance. This is further confirmed by the name which
-is given to the image which has thus arisen within us. “Everything
-has its evidence (ἐναργές) in the name first conferred on it.”[150]
-The name is the ratification of the perception. The evidence which
-Epicurus terms ἐνάργεια is just the recognition of the sensuous through
-subsumption under the conceptions already possessed, and to which the
-name gives permanence; the evidence of a conception is therefore this,
-that we affirm an object perceptible by the senses to correspond with
-the image. That is the acquiescence which we have found taking place
-with the Stoics when thought gives its assent to a content; thought,
-however, which recognizes the thing as its own, and receives it into
-itself, with the Stoics remained formal only. With Epicurus the
-unity of the conception of the object with itself exists also as a
-remembrance in consciousness, which, however, proceeds from the senses;
-the image, the conception, is what harmonizes with a sense-perception.
-The recognition of the object is here an apprehension, not as an
-object of thought, but as an object of imagination; for apprehension
-belongs to recollection, to memory. The name, it is true, is something
-universal, belongs to thinking, makes the manifold simple, yea, is in a
-high degree ideal; but in such a way that its meaning and its content
-are the sensuous, and are not thus to be counted as simple, but as
-sensuous. In this way opinion is established instead of knowledge.
-
-γ. In the last place, opinion is nothing but the reference of
-that general conception, which we have within us, to an object, a
-perception, or to the testimony of the senses; and that is the passing
-of a judgment. For in a conception we have anticipated that which comes
-directly before our eyes; and by this standard we pronounce whether
-something is a man, a tree, or not. “Opinion depends on something
-already evident to us, to which we refer when we ask how we know that
-this is a man or not. This opinion is also itself termed conception,
-and it may be either true or false:—true, when what we see before
-our eyes is corroborated or not contradicted by the testimony of the
-conception; false in the opposite case.”[151] That is to say, in
-opinion we apply a conception which we already possess, or the type, to
-an object which is before us, and which we then examine to see if it
-corresponds with our mental representation of it. Opinion is true if
-it corresponds with the type; and it has its criterion in perceiving
-whether it repeats itself as it was before or not. This is the whole of
-the ordinary process in consciousness, when it begins to reflect. When
-we have the conception, it requires the testimony that we have seen or
-still see the object in question. From the sensuous perceptions blue,
-sour, sweet, and so on, the general conceptions which we possess are
-formed; and when an object again comes before us, we recognize that
-this image corresponds with this object. This is the whole criterion,
-and a very trivial process it is; for it goes no further than the first
-beginnings of the sensuous consciousness, the immediate perception
-of an object. The next stage is without doubt this, that the first
-perception forms itself into a general image, and then the object which
-is present is subsumed under the general image. That kind of truth
-which anything has of which it can only be said that the evidence of
-the senses does not contradict it, is possessed by the conceptions of
-the unseen, for instance, the apprehension of heavenly phenomena: here
-we cannot approach nearer, we can see something indeed, but we cannot
-have the sensuous perception of it in its completeness; we therefore
-apply to it what we already know by other perceptions, if there is
-but some circumstance therein which is also present in that other
-perception or conception (_supra_, p. 282).
-
-b. From these external perceptions of objects presently existing, with
-which we here began, the affections, the internal perceptions, which
-give the criteria for practical life are however distinguished; they
-are of two kinds, either pleasant or unpleasant. That is to say, they
-have as their content pleasure or satisfaction, and pain: the first, as
-that which peculiarly belongs to the perceiver, is the positive; but
-pain, as something alien to him, is the negative. It is these sensuous
-perceptions which determine action; they are the material from which
-general conceptions regarding what causes me pain or pleasure are
-formed; as being permanent they are therefore again conceptions, and
-opinion is again this reference of conception to perception, according
-to which I pass judgment on objects—affections, desires, and so
-on.[152] It is by this opinion, therefore, that the decision to do or
-to avoid anything is arrived at.
-
-This constitutes the whole Canon of Epicurus, the universal standard
-of truth; it is so simple that nothing can well be simpler, and yet it
-is very abstract. It consists of ordinary psychological conceptions
-which are correct on the whole, but quite superficial; it is the
-mechanical view of conception having respect to the first beginnings
-of observation. But beyond this there lies another and quite different
-sphere, a field that contains determinations in themselves; and these
-are the criteria by which the statements of Epicurus must be judged.
-Nowadays even Sceptics are fond of speaking of facts of consciousness;
-this sort of talk goes no further than the Epicurean Canon.
-
-
-2. METAPHYSICS.
-
-In the second place, Epicurus enters on a metaphysical explanation of
-how we are related to the object; for sensuous perception and outside
-impressions he unhesitatingly regards as our relation to external
-things, so that he places the conceptions in me, the objects outside
-of me. In raising the question of how we come by our conceptions,
-there lies a double question: on the one hand, since sense-perceptions
-are not like conceptions, but require an external object, what is
-the objective manner in which the images of external things enter
-into us? On the other hand, it may be asked how conceptions of such
-things as are not matter of perception arise in us; this seems to be
-an activity of thought, which derives conceptions such as these from
-other conceptions; we shall, however, see presently (pp. 287, 288) and
-more in detail, how the soul, which is here related to the object in
-independent activity, arrives at such a point.
-
-“From the surfaces of things,” says Epicurus in the first place, “there
-passes off a constant stream, which cannot be detected by our senses”
-(for things would in any other case decrease in size) and which is very
-fine; “and this because, by reason of the counteracting replenishment,
-the thing itself in its solidity long preserves the same arrangement
-and disposition of the atoms; and the motion through the air of these
-surfaces which detach themselves is of the utmost rapidity, because
-it is not necessary that what is detached should have any thickness;”
-it is only a surface. Epicurus says, “Such a conception does not
-contradict our senses, when we take into consideration how pictures
-produce their effects in a very similar way, I mean by bringing us into
-sympathy with external things. Therefore emanations, like pictures,
-pass out from them into us, so that we see and know the forms and
-colours of things.”[153] This is a very trivial way of representing
-sense-perception. Epicurus took for himself the easiest criterion of
-the truth that is not seen, a criterion still in use, namely that it is
-not contradicted by what we see or hear. For in truth such matters of
-thought as atoms, the detachment of surfaces, and so forth, are beyond
-our powers of sight. Certainly we manage to see and to hear something
-different; but there is abundance of room for what is seen and what is
-conceived or imagined to exist alongside of one another. If the two are
-allowed to fall apart, they do not contradict each other; for it is not
-until we relate them that the contradiction becomes apparent.
-
-“Error,” as Epicurus goes on to say on the second point “comes to pass
-when, through the movement that takes place within us on the conception
-therein wrought, such a change is effected that the conception can no
-longer obtain for itself the testimony of perception. There would be no
-truth, no likeness of our perceptions, which we receive as in pictures
-or in dreams or in any other way, if there were nothing on which we,
-as it were, put out our faculty of observation. There would be no
-untruth if we did not receive into ourselves another movement, which,
-to be sure, is conformable to the entering in of the conception, but
-which has at the same time an interruption.”[154] Error is therefore,
-according to Epicurus, only a displacement of the pictures in us, which
-does not proceed from the movement of perception, but rather from this,
-that we check their influence by a movement originating in ourselves;
-how this interruption is brought about will be shown more fully later
-on (pp. 290, 300).
-
-The Epicurean theory of knowledge reduces itself to these few passages,
-some of which are also obscurely expressed, or else not very happily
-selected or quoted by Diogenes Laërtius; it is impossible to have a
-theory less explicitly stated. Knowledge, on the side of thought, is
-determined merely as a particular movement which makes an interruption;
-and as Epicurus, as we have already seen, looks on things as made up
-of a multitude of atoms, thought is the moment which is different from
-the atoms, the vacuum, the pores, whereby resistance to this stream of
-atoms is rendered possible. If this negative is also again, as soul,
-affirmative, Epicurus in the notional determination of thinking has
-only reached this negativity, that we look away from something, _i.e._
-we interrupt that inflowing stream. The answer to the question of
-what this interrupting movement exactly is, when taken for itself, is
-connected with the more advanced conceptions of Epicurus; and in order
-to discuss them more in detail, we must go back to the implicit basis
-of his system.
-
-This constitutes on the whole the metaphysic of Epicurus; in it he has
-expounded his doctrine of the atom, but not with greater definiteness
-than did Leucippus and Democritus. The essence and the truth of things
-were to him, as they were to them, atoms and vacuum: “Atoms have no
-properties except figure, weight and magnitude.” Atoms, as atoms, must
-remain undetermined; but the Atomists have been forced to take the
-inconsistent course of ascribing properties to them: the quantitative
-properties of magnitude and figure, the qualitative property of
-weight. But that which is in itself altogether indivisible can have
-neither figure nor magnitude; and even weight, direction upon something
-else, is opposed to the abstract repulsion of the atom. Epicurus even
-says: “Every property is liable to change, but the atoms change not. In
-all dissolutions of the composite, something must remain a constant and
-indissoluble, which no change can transform into that which is not, or
-bring from non-being into Being. This unchangeable element, therefore,
-is constituted by some bodies and figures. The properties are a certain
-relation of atoms to each other.”[155] In like manner we have already
-seen with Aristotle (p. 178) that the tangible is the foundation of
-properties: a distinction which under various forms is still always
-made and is in common use. We mean by this that an opposition is
-established between fundamental properties, such as we here have in
-weight, figure and magnitude, and sensuous properties, which are
-only in relation to us, and are derived from the former original
-differences. This has frequently been understood as if weight were in
-things, while the other properties were only in our senses: but, in
-general, the former is the moment of the implicit, or the abstract
-essence of the thing, while the latter is its concrete existence, which
-expresses its relation to other things.
-
-The important matter now would be to indicate the relation of atoms to
-sensuous appearance, to allow essence to pass over into the negative:
-but here Epicurus rambles amidst the indeterminate which expresses
-nothing; for we perceive in him, as in the other physicists, nothing
-but an unconscious medley of abstract ideas and realities. All
-particular forms, all objects, light, colour, &c., the soul itself
-even, are nothing but a certain arrangement of these atoms. This is
-what Locke also said, and even now Physical Science declares that
-the basis of things is found in molecules, which are arranged in a
-certain manner in space. But these are empty words, and a crystal,
-for instance, is not a certain arrangement of parts, which gives this
-figure. It is thus not worth while to deal with this relation of atoms;
-for it is an altogether formal way of speaking, as when Epicurus again
-concedes that figure and magnitude, in so far as pertaining to atoms,
-are something different from what they are as they appear in things.
-The two are not altogether unlike; the one, implicit magnitude, has
-something in common with apparent magnitude. The latter is transitory,
-variable; the former has no interrupted parts,[156] that is, nothing
-negative. But the determination of the atoms, as originally formed in
-this or that fashion, and having original magnitude of such and such
-a kind, is a purely arbitrary invention. That interruption, which we
-regarded above (p. 288) as the other side to atoms, or as vacuum, is
-the principle of movement: for the movement of thought is also like
-this and has interruptions. Thought in man is the very same as atoms
-and vacuum are in things, namely their inward essence; that is to say,
-atoms and vacuum belong to the movement of thought, or exist for this
-in the same way as things are in their essential nature. The movement
-of thinking is thus the province of the atoms of the soul; so that
-there takes place simultaneously therein an interruption of the inward
-flow of atoms from without. There is therefore nothing further to be
-seen in this than the general principle of the positive and negative,
-so that even thought is affected by a negative principle, the moment of
-interruption. This principle of the Epicurean system, further applied
-to the difference in things, is the most arbitrary and therefore the
-most wearisome that can be imagined.
-
-Besides their different figures, atoms have also, as the fundamental
-mode in which they are affected, a difference of movement, caused
-by their weight; but this movement to some extent deviates from the
-straight line in its direction. That is to say, Epicurus ascribes
-to atoms a curvilinear movement, in order that they may impinge
-on one another and so on.[157] In this way there arise particular
-accumulations and configurations; and these are things.
-
-Other physical properties, such as taste and smell, have their basis
-again in another arrangement of the molecules. But there is no bridge
-from this to that, or what results is simply empty tautology, according
-to which the parts are arranged and combined as is requisite in order
-that their appearance may be what it is. The transition to bodies
-of concrete appearance Epicurus has either not made at all, or what
-has been cited from him as far as this matter is concerned, taken by
-itself, is extremely meagre.
-
-The opinion that one hears expressed respecting the Epicurean
-philosophy is in other respects not unfavourable; and for this reason
-some further details must be given regarding it. For since absolute
-Being is constituted by atoms scattered and disintegrated, and by
-vacuum, it directly follows that Epicurus denies to these atoms any
-relationship to one another which implies purpose. All that we call
-forms and organisms, or generally speaking, the unity of Nature’s
-end, in his way of thinking, belongs to qualities, to an external
-connection of the configurations of the atoms, which in this way is
-merely an accident, brought about by their chance-directed motion; the
-atoms accordingly form a merely superficial unity, and one which is
-not essential to them. Or else Epicurus altogether denies that Notion
-and the Universal are the essential, and because all originations are
-to him chance combinations, for him their resolution is just as much
-a matter of chance. The divided is the first and the truly existent,
-but at the same time chance or external necessity is the law which
-dominates all cohesion. That Epicurus should in this fashion declare
-himself against a universal end in the world, against every relation
-of purpose—as, for instance, the inherent conformity to purpose of the
-organism—and, further, against the teleological representations of the
-wisdom of a Creator in the world, his government, &c., is a matter of
-course; for he abrogates unity, whatever be the manner in which we
-represent it, whether as Nature’s end in itself, or as end which is
-in another, but is carried out in Nature. In contrast to this, the
-teleological view enters largely into the philosophy of the Stoics,
-and is there very fully developed. To show that conformity to an end
-is lacking, Epicurus brings forward the most trivial examples; for
-instance, that worms and so on are produced by chance from mud through
-the warmth of the sun. Taken in their entirety, they may very well be
-the work of chance in relation to others; but what is implicit in them,
-their Notion and essence is something organic: and the comprehension of
-this is what we have now to consider. But Epicurus banishes thought as
-implicit, without its occurring to him that his atoms themselves have
-this very nature of thought; that is, their existence in time is not
-immediate but essentially mediate, and thus negative or universal;—the
-first and only inconsistency that we find in Epicurus, and one which
-all empiricists are guilty of. The Stoics take the opposite course of
-finding essential Being in the object of thought or the universal; and
-they fail equally in reaching the content, temporal existence, which,
-however, they most inconsistently assume. We have here the metaphysics
-of Epicurus; nothing that he says farther on this head is of interest.
-
-
-3. PHYSICS.
-
-The natural philosophy of Epicurus is based on the above foundation;
-but an aspect of interest is given it by the fact that it is still
-peculiarly the method of our times; his thoughts on particular aspects
-of Nature are, however, in themselves feeble and of little weight,
-containing nothing but an ill-considered medley of all manner of loose
-conceptions. Going further, the principle of the manner in which
-Epicurus looks on nature, lies in the conceptions he forms, which we
-have already had before us (pp. 282, 285). That is to say, the general
-representations which we receive through the repetition of several
-perceptions, and to which we relate such perceptions in forming an
-opinion, must be then applied to that which is not exactly matter of
-perception, but yet has something in common with what we can perceive.
-In this way it comes about that by such images we can apprehend the
-unknown which does not lend itself immediately to perception; for from
-what is known we must argue to what is unknown. This is nothing else
-but saying that Epicurus judged by analogy, or that he makes so-called
-evidence the principle of his view of Nature; and this is the principle
-which to this day has authority in ordinary physical science. We go
-through experiences and make observations, these arising from the
-sensuous perceptions which are apt to be overlooked. Thus we reach
-general concepts, laws, forces, and so on, electricity and magnetism,
-for instance, and these are then applied by us to such objects and
-activities as we cannot ourselves directly perceive. As an example, we
-know about the nerves and their connection with the brain; in order
-that there may be feeling and so on, it is said that a transmission
-from the finger-tips to the brain takes place. But how can we represent
-this to ourselves? We cannot make it a matter of observation. By
-anatomy we can lay bare the nerves, it is true, but not the manner
-of their working. We represent these to ourselves on the analogy of
-other phenomena of transmission, for instance as the vibration of a
-tense string that passes through the nerves to the brain. As in the
-well-known phenomenon of a number of billiard balls set close together
-in a row, the last of which rolls away when the first is struck, while
-those in the middle, through each of which the effect of the stroke has
-been communicated to the next, scarcely seem to move, so we represent
-to ourselves the nerves as consisting of tiny balls which are invisible
-even through the strongest magnifying glass, and fancy that at every
-touch, &c., the last springs off and strikes the soul. In the same way
-light is represented as filaments, rays, or as vibrations of the ether,
-or as globules of ether, each of which strikes on the other. This is an
-analogy quite in the manner of Epicurus.
-
-In giving such explanations as those above, Epicurus professed to
-be most liberal, fair and tolerant, saying that all the different
-conceptions which occur to us in relation to sensuous objects—at our
-pleasure, we may say,—can be referred to that which we cannot ourselves
-directly observe; we should not assert any one way to be the right one,
-for many ways may be so. In so saying, Epicurus is talking idly; his
-words fall on the ear and the fancy, but looked on more narrowly they
-disappear. So, for instance, we see the moon shine, without being able
-to have any nearer experience of it. On this subject Epicurus says:
-“The moon may have its own light, or a light borrowed from the sun; for
-even on earth we see things which shine of themselves, and many which
-are illuminated by others. Nothing hinders us from observing heavenly
-things in the light of various previous experiences, and from adopting
-hypotheses and explanations in accordance with these. The waxing and
-waning of the moon may also be caused by the revolution of this body,
-or through changes in the air” (according as vapour is modified in one
-way or another), “or also by means of adding and taking away somewhat:
-in short, in all the ways whereby that which has a certain appearance
-to us is caused to show such appearance.” Thus there are to be found in
-Epicurus all these trivialities of friction, concussion, &c., as when
-he gives his opinion of lightning on the analogy of how we see fire of
-other kinds kindled: “Lightning is explained by quite a large number
-of possible conceptions; for instance, that through the friction and
-collision of clouds the figuration of fire is emitted, and lightning
-is produced.” In precisely the same way modern physicists transfer the
-production of an electric spark, when glass and silk are rubbed against
-each other, to the clouds. For, as we see a spark both in lightning and
-electricity, we conclude from this circumstance common to both that the
-two are analogical; therefore, we come to the conclusion that lightning
-also is an electric phenomenon. But clouds are not hard bodies, and
-by moisture electricity is more likely to be dispersed; therefore,
-such talk has just as little truth in it as the fancy of Epicurus. He
-goes on to say: “Or lightning may also be produced by being expelled
-from the clouds by means of the airy bodies which form lightning—by
-being struck out when the clouds are pressed together either by each
-other or by the wind,” &c. With the Stoics things are not much better.
-Application of sensuous conceptions according to analogy is often
-termed comprehension or explanation, but in reality there is in such
-a process not the faintest approach to thought or comprehension. “One
-man,” adds Epicurus, “may select; one of these modes, and reject the
-others, not considering what is possible for man to know, and what is
-impossible, and therefore striving to attain to a knowledge of the
-unknowable.”[158]
-
-This application of sensuous images to what has a certain similarity
-to them, is pronounced to be the basis and the knowledge of the
-cause, because, in his opinion, a transference such as this cannot
-be corroborated by the testimony of mere immediate sensation; thus
-the Stoic method of seeking a basis in thought is excluded, and in
-this respect the mode of explanation adopted by Epicurus is directly
-opposed to that of the Stoics. One circumstance which strikes us at
-once in Epicurus is the lack of observation and experience with regard
-to the mutual relations of bodies: but the kernel of the matter, the
-principle, is nothing else than the principle of modern physics. This
-method of Epicurus has been attacked and derided, but on this score no
-one need be ashamed of or fight shy of it, if he is a physicist; for
-what Epicurus says is not a whit worse than what the moderns assert.
-Indeed, in the case of Epicurus the satisfactory assurance is likewise
-always present of his emphasizing the fact most strongly that just
-because the evidence of the senses is found to be lacking, we must
-not take our stand on any one analogy. Elsewhere he in the same way
-makes light of analogy, and when one person accepts this possibility
-and another that other possibility, he admires the cleverness of the
-second and troubles himself little about the explanation given by
-the first; it may be so, or it may not be so.[159] This is a method
-devoid of reason, which reaches no further than to general conceptions.
-Nevertheless, if Physical Science is considered to relate to immediate
-experience on the one hand, and, on the other hand—in respect of that
-which cannot be immediately experienced—to relate to the application
-of the above according to a resemblance existing between it and that
-which is not matter of experience, in that case Epicurus may well be
-looked on as the chief promoter, if not the originator of this method,
-and also as having asserted that it is identical with knowledge. Of the
-Epicurean method in philosophy we may say this, that it likewise has
-a side on which it possesses value, and we may in some measure assent
-when we hear, as we frequently do, the Epicurean physics favourably
-spoken of. Aristotle and the earlier philosophers took their start in
-natural philosophy from universal thought _a priori_, and from this
-developed the Notion; this is the one side. The other side, which is
-just as necessary, demands that experience should be worked up into
-universality, that laws should be found out; that is to say, that the
-result which follows from the abstract Idea should coincide with the
-general conception to which experience and observation have led up.
-The _a priori_ is with Aristotle, for instance, most excellent but not
-sufficient, because to it there is lacking connection with and relation
-to experience and observation. This leading up of the particular to the
-universal is the finding out of laws, natural forces, and so on. It may
-thus be said that Epicurus is the inventor of empiric Natural Science,
-of empiric Psychology. In contrast to the Stoic ends, conceptions of
-the understanding, experience is the present as it appears to the
-senses: there we have abstract limited understanding, without truth
-in itself, and therefore without the present in time and the reality
-of Nature; here we have this sense of Nature, which is more true than
-these other hypotheses.
-
-The same effect which followed the rise of a knowledge of natural laws,
-&c., in the modern world was produced by the Epicurean philosophy in
-its own sphere, that is to say, in so far as it is directed against
-the arbitrary invention of causes. The more, in later times, men
-made acquaintance with the laws of Nature, the more superstition,
-miracles, astrology, &c. disappeared; all this fades away owing to
-the contradiction offered to it by the knowledge of natural laws. The
-method of Epicurus was directed more especially against the senseless
-superstition of astrology, &c., in whose methods there is neither
-reason nor thought, for it is quite a thing of the imagination,
-downright fabrication being resorted to, or what we may even term
-lying. In contrast with this, the way in which Epicurus works, when
-the conceptions and not thought are concerned, accords with truth. For
-it does not go beyond what is perceived by the sight, and hearing,
-and the other senses, but keeps to what is present and not alien to
-the mind, not speaking of certain things as if they could be seen and
-heard, when that is quite impossible, seeing that the things are pure
-inventions. The effect of the Epicurean philosophy in its own time was
-therefore this, that it set itself against the superstition of the
-Greeks and Romans, and elevated men above it.[160] All the nonsense
-about birds flying to right or to left, or a hare running across the
-path, or men deciding how they are to act according to the entrails of
-animals, or according as chickens are lively or dull—all that kind of
-superstition the Epicurean philosophy made short work of, by permitting
-that only to be accepted as truth which is counted as true by sense
-perception through the instrumentality of anticipations; and from it
-more than anything those conceptions which have altogether denied the
-supersensuous have proceeded. The physics of Epicurus were therefore
-famous for the reason that they introduced more enlightened views
-in regard to what is physical, and banished the fear of the gods.
-Superstition passes straightway from immediate appearances to God,
-angels, demons; or it expects from finite things other effects than the
-conditions admit of, phenomena of a higher kind. To this the Epicurean
-natural philosophy is utterly opposed, because in the sphere of the
-finite it refuses to go beyond the finite, and admits finite causes
-alone; for the so-called enlightenment is the fact of remaining in the
-sphere of the finite. There connection is sought for in other finite
-things, in conditions which are themselves conditioned; superstition,
-on the contrary, rightly or wrongly, passes at once to what is above
-us. However correct the Epicurean method may be in the sphere of
-the conditioned, it is not so in other spheres. Thus if I say that
-electricity comes from God, I am right and yet wrong. For if I ask for
-a cause in this same sphere of the conditioned, and give God as answer,
-I say too much; though this answer fits all questions, since God is
-the cause of everything, what I would know here is the particular
-connection of the phenomenon. On the other hand, in this sphere even
-the Notion is already something higher; but this loftier way of looking
-at things which we met with in the earlier philosophers, was quite put
-an end to by Epicurus, since with superstition there also passed away
-self-dependent connection and the world of the Ideal.
-
-To the natural philosophy of Epicurus there also belongs his conception
-of the soul, which he looks on as having the nature of a thing, just
-as the theories of our own day regard it as nerve-filaments, cords
-in tension, or rows of minute balls (p. 294). His description of the
-soul has therefore but little meaning, since here also he draws his
-conclusion by analogy, and connects therewith the metaphysical theory
-of atoms: “The soul consists of the finest and roundest atoms, which
-are something quite different from fire, being a fine spirit which
-is distributed through the whole aggregate of the body, and partakes
-of its warmth.” Epicurus has consequently established a quantitative
-difference only, since these finest atoms are surrounded by a mass of
-coarser atoms and dispersed through this larger aggregate. “The part
-which is devoid of reason is dispersed in the body” as the principle
-of life, “but the self-conscious part (τὸ λογικόν) is in the breast,
-as may be perceived from joy and sadness. The soul is capable of much
-change in itself, owing to the fineness of its parts, which can move
-very rapidly: it sympathizes with the rest of the aggregate, as we see
-by the thoughts, emotions and so on; but when it is taken away from us
-we die. But the soul, on its part, has also the greatest sympathy with
-sensuous perception; yet it would have nothing in common with it, were
-it not in a certain measure covered by the rest of the aggregate” (the
-body)—an utterly illogical conception. “The rest of this aggregate,
-which this principle provides for the soul, is thereby also partaker,
-on its part, of a like condition” (sensuous perception), “yet not of
-all that the former possesses; therefore, when the soul escapes,
-sensuous perception exists no more for it. The aggregate spoken of
-above has not this power in itself, but derives it from the other which
-is brought into union with it, and the sentient movement comes to pass
-through the flow of sympathy which they have in common.”[161] Of such
-conceptions it is impossible to make anything. The above-mentioned
-(p. 287) interruption of the streaming together of images of external
-things with our organs, as the ground of error, is now explained by
-the theory that the soul consists of peculiar atoms, and the atoms
-are separated from one another by vacuum. With such empty words and
-meaningless conceptions we shall no longer detain ourselves; we can
-have no respect for the philosophic thoughts of Epicurus, or rather he
-has no thoughts for us to respect.
-
-
-4. ETHICS.
-
-Besides this description of the soul the philosophy of mind contains
-the ethics of Epicurus, which of all his doctrines are the most
-decried, and therefore the most interesting; they may, however,
-also be said to constitute the best part of that philosophy. The
-practical philosophy of Epicurus depends on the individuality of
-self-consciousness, just as much as does that of the Stoics; and the
-end of his ethics is in a measure the same, the unshaken tranquillity
-of the soul, and more particularly an undisturbed pure enjoyment of
-itself. Of course, if we regard the abstract principle involved in
-the ethics of Epicurus, our verdict cannot be other than exceedingly
-unfavourable. For if sensation, the feeling of pain and pleasure, is
-the criterion for the right, good, true, for that which man should
-make his aim in life, morality is really abrogated, or the moral
-principle is in fact not moral; at least we hold that the way is
-thereby opened up to all manner of arbitrariness in action. If it is
-now alleged that feeling is the ground of action, and that because I
-find a certain impulse in myself it is for that reason right—this is
-Epicurean reasoning. Everyone may have different feelings, and the
-same person, may feel differently at different times; in the same way
-with Epicurus it may be left to the subjectivity of the individual to
-determine the course of action. But it is of importance to notice this,
-that when Epicurus sets tip pleasure as the end, he concedes this only
-so far as its enjoyment is the result of philosophy. We have before now
-remarked (vol. i., p. 470) that even with the Cyrenaics, while on the
-one hand sensation was certainly made the principle, on the other hand
-it was essential that thought should be in intimate connection with
-it. Similarly it is the case with Epicurus that while he designated
-pleasure as the criterion of the good, he demanded a highly cultured
-consciousness, a power of reflection, which weighs pleasure to see if
-it is not combined with a greater degree of pain, and in this way forms
-a correct estimate of what it is. Diogenes Laërtius (X. 144) quotes
-from him with regard to this point of view: “The wise man owes but
-little to chance; Reason attains what is of the greatest consequence,
-and both directs it and will direct it his whole life long.” The
-particular pleasure is therefore regarded only with reference to the
-whole, and sensuous perception is not the one and only principle of
-the Epicureans; but while they made pleasure the principle, they made
-a principle at the same time of that happiness which is attained,
-and only attainable by reason; so that this happiness is to be
-sought in such a way that it may be free and independent of external
-contingencies, the contingencies of sensation. The true Epicureans were
-therefore, just as much as the Stoics, raised above all particular
-ties, for Epicurus, too, made his aim the undisturbed tranquillity of
-the wise man. In order to be free from superstition Epicurus specially
-requires physical science, as it sets men free from all the opinions
-which most disturb their rest—opinions regarding the gods, and their
-punishments, and more particularly from the thought of death.[162]
-Freed from all this fear, and from the imaginings of the men who make
-any particular object their end and aim, the wise man seeks pleasure
-only as something universal, and holds this alone to be positive. Here
-the universal and the particular meet; or the particular, regarded only
-in its bearings to the whole, is raised into the form of universality.
-Thus it happens that, while materially, or as to content, Epicurus
-makes individuality a principle, on the other hand he requires the
-universality of thinking, and his philosophy is thus in accordance with
-that of the Stoics.
-
-Seneca, who is known as a thorough-going and uncompromising Stoic, when
-in his treatise _De Vita Beata_ (c. 12, 13) he happens to speak of the
-Epicureans, gives testimony which is above suspicion to the ethical
-system of Epicurus: “My verdict is, however—and in thus speaking I
-go, to some extent, against many of my own countrymen—that the moral
-precepts of Epicurus prescribe a way of life that is holy and just,
-and, when closely considered, even sorrowful. For every pleasure of
-Epicurus turns on something very paltry and poor, and we scarcely know
-how restricted it is, and how insipid. The self-same law which we lay
-down for virtue he prescribes for pleasure; he requires that Nature be
-obeyed; but very little in the way of luxury is required to satisfy
-Nature. What have we then here? He who calls a lazy, self-indulgent,
-and dissolute life happiness merely seeks a good authority for a thing
-that is evil, and while, drawn on by a dazzling name, he turns in the
-direction where he hears the praise of pleasure sounding, he does not
-follow the pleasures to which he is invited by Epicurus, but those
-which he himself brings with him. Men who thus abandon themselves
-to crime seek only to hide their wickedness under the mantle of
-philosophy, and to furnish for their excesses a pretext and an excuse.
-Thus it is by no means permitted that youth should hold up its head
-again for the reason that to the laxity of its morality an honourable
-title has been affixed.” By the employment of our reflective powers,
-which keep guard over pleasure and consider whether there can be any
-enjoyment in that which is fraught with dangers, fear, anxiety and
-other troubles, the possibility of our obtaining pleasure pure and
-unalloyed is reduced to a minimum. The principle of Epicurus is to live
-in freedom and ease, and with the mind at rest, and to this end it is
-needful to renounce much of that which men allow to sway them, and in
-which they find their pleasure. The life of a Stoic is therefore but
-little different from that of an Epicurean who keeps well before his
-eyes what Epicurus enjoins.
-
-It might perhaps occur to us that the Cyrenaics had the same moral
-principle as the Epicureans, but Diogenes Laërtius (X. 139, 136, 137)
-shows us the difference that there was between them. The Cyrenaics
-rather made pleasure as a particular thing their end, while Epicurus,
-on the contrary, regarded it as a means, since he asserted painlessness
-to be pleasure, and allowed of no intermediate state. “Neither do the
-Cyrenaics recognize pleasure in rest (καταστηματικήν), but only in the
-determination of motion,” or as something affirmative, that consists
-in the enjoyment of the pleasant; “Epicurus, on the contrary, admits
-both—the pleasure of the body as well as that of the soul.” He meant
-by this that pleasure in rest is negative, as the absence of the
-unpleasant, and also an inward contentment, whereby rest is maintained
-within the mind. Epicurus explained these two kinds of pleasure more
-clearly as follows: “Freedom from fear and desire (ἀταραξία) and from
-pain and trouble (ἀπονία) are the passive pleasures (καταστηματικὶα
-ἡδοναί),”—the setting of our affections on nothing which we may run the
-risk of losing; pleasures of the senses, on the other hand, like “joy
-and mirth (χαρὰ δὲ καὶ εὐφροσύνη), are pleasures involving movement
-(κατὰ κίνησιν ἐνεργείᾳ βλέπονται.9)” The former pleasures Epicurus held
-to be the truest and highest. “Besides this, pain of the body was held
-by the Cyrenaics to be worse than sorrow of the soul, while with the
-Epicureans this is reversed.”
-
-The main teaching of Epicurus in respect of morals is contained in a
-letter to Men\nceus, which Diogenes Laërtius has preserved, and in
-which Epicurus expresses himself as follows: “The youth must neither
-be slow to study philosophy, nor must the old man feel it a burden,
-for no one is either too young or too old to study the health of his
-soul. We must therefore endeavour to find out wherein the happy life
-consists; the following are its elements: First, we must hold that
-God is a living Being, incorruptible and happy, as the general belief
-supposes Him to be; and that nothing is lacking to His incorruptibility
-nor to His happiness. But though the existence of the gods is known
-to be a fact, yet they are not such as the multitude suppose them to
-be. He is therefore not impious who discards his faith in the gods of
-the multitude, but he who applies to them the opinions entertained of
-them by the mass.” By these gods of Epicurus we can understand nothing
-else than the Holy, the Universal, in concrete form. The Stoics held
-more to the ordinary conception, without indeed giving much thought
-to the Being of God; with the Epicureans, on the other hand, the gods
-express an immediate Idea of the system. Epicurus says: “That which is
-holy and incorruptible has itself no trouble nor causes it to others;
-therefore it is unstirred by either anger or show of favour, for it is
-in weakness only that such find a place. The gods may be known by means
-of Reason; they consist partly in Number; others are the perfected
-type of man, which, owing to the similarity of the images, arises
-from the continuous confluence of like images on one and the same
-subject.”[163] The gods are thus the altogether general images which
-we receive into ourselves; and Cicero says (De Natura Deorum, 18, 38)
-that they come singly upon us in sleep. This general image, which is
-at the same time an anthropomorphic conception, is the same to which
-we give the name of Ideal, only that here the source assigned to it is
-the reiterated occurrence of images. The gods thus seem to Epicurus to
-be Ideals of the holy life; they are also existent things, consisting
-of the finest atoms; they are, however, pure souls, unmixed with any
-grosser element, and therefore exempt from toil and trouble and pain.
-Their self-enjoyment is wholly passive, as it must be if consistent,
-for action has always in it something alien, the opposition of itself
-and reality, and the toil and trouble which are involved in it really
-represent the aspect of consciousness of opposition rather than that
-of realization. The gods lead an existence of pure and passive self
-enjoyment, and trouble themselves not with the affairs of the world
-and of men. Epicurus goes on to say: “Men must pay reverence to the
-gods on account of the perfection of their nature and their surpassing
-holiness, not in order to gain from them some special good, or for the
-sake of this or that advantage,”[164] The manner in which Epicurus
-represents the gods as corporeal Beings in human likeness has been
-much derided; thus Cicero, for instance, in the passage quoted (c. 18)
-laughs at Epicurus for alleging that the gods have only _quasi_ bodies,
-flesh and blood. But from this there follows only that they are, as it
-were, the implicit, as we see it stated of the soul and things palpable
-to the senses, that they have behind them what is implicit. Our talk
-of qualities is no better; for if justice, goodness, and so on, are to
-be taken _in sensu eminentiori_, and not as they are with men, we have
-in God a Being in the same way possessed of only something resembling
-justice and the other qualities. With this there is closely connected
-the theory of Epicurus that the gods dwell in vacant space, in the
-intermediate spaces of the world, where they are exposed neither to
-rain or wind or snow or the like.[165] For the intermediate spaces are
-the vacuum, wherein, as the principle of movement, are the atoms in
-themselves. Worlds, as phenomena, are complete continuous concretions
-of such atoms, but concretions which are only external relations.
-Between them, as in vacuum, there are thus these Beings also, which
-themselves are certainly concretions of atoms, but concretions which
-remain implicit. Yet this leads only to confusion, if a closer
-definition is given, for concretion constitutes what is for the senses,
-but the gods, even if they were concretions, would not be realities
-exactly such as these. In illogical fashion the general, the implicit,
-is taken out of reality and set above it, not as atoms, but just as
-before, as a combination of these atoms; in this way this combination
-is not itself the sensuous. This seems ridiculous, but it is connected
-with the interruptions spoken of, and with the relation of the vacuum
-to the plenum, the atom. So far, therefore, the gods belong to the
-category of negativity as against sensuality, and as this negative is
-thought, in that sense what Epicurus said of the gods may still to
-some extent be said. To this determination of God a larger measure of
-objectivity of course belongs, but it is a perfectly correct assertion
-that God, as Thought, is a holy Being, to whom reverence is due for
-His own sake alone. The first element in a happy life is therefore
-reverence for the gods, uninfluenced by fear or hope.
-
-Further, a second point with Epicurus is the contemplation of death,
-the negative of existence, of self-consciousness in man; he requires
-us to have a true conception of death, because otherwise it disturbs
-our tranquillity. He accordingly says: “Accustom thyself then to the
-thought that death concerns us not; for all good and evil is a matter
-of sensation, but death is a deprivation (στέρησις) of sensation.
-Therefore the true reflection that death is no concern of ours,
-makes our mortal life one of enjoyment, since this thought does not
-add an endless length of days, but does away with the longing after
-immortality. For nothing in life has terrors for him who has once truly
-recognized the fact that not to live is not a matter of dread. Thus it
-is a vain thing to fear death, not because its presence but because
-the anticipation of it brings us pain. For how can the anticipation
-of a thing pain us when its reality does not? There is therefore in
-death nothing to trouble us. For when we are in life, death is not
-there, and when death is there, we are not. Therefore death does not
-concern either the living or the dead.” This is quite correct, if we
-look at the immediate; it is a thought full of meaning, and drives away
-fear. Mere privation, which death is, is not to be confounded with the
-feeling of being alive, which is positive; and there is no reason for
-worrying oneself about it. “But the future in general is neither ours,
-nor is it not ours; hence we must not count upon it as something that
-will come to pass, nor yet despair of it, as if it would not come to
-pass.”[166] It is no concern of ours either that it is or that it is
-not; and it need not therefore cause us uneasiness. This the right way
-in which to regard the future also.
-
-Epicurus passes on to speak of impulses, saying: “This moreover is
-to be kept in mind, that amongst impulses some are natural, but
-others are vain; and of those that are natural some are necessary
-while others are natural only. Those that are necessary are either
-necessary to happiness, or tend to save the body from pain, or to
-self-preservation in general. The perfect theory teaches how to choose
-that which promotes health of body and steadfastness of soul, and how
-to reject what impairs them, this being the aim of the holy life.
-This is the end of all our actions, to have neither pain of body nor
-uneasiness of mind. If we but attain to this, all turmoil of the soul
-is stilled, since the life no longer has to strive after something
-which it needs, and no longer has to seek anything outside of itself
-by which the welfare of soul and body is arrived at. But even on the
-supposition that pleasure is the first and the inborn good, we do not
-for that reason choose all pleasures, but many we renounce, when they
-are more than counterbalanced by their painful results; and many pains
-we prefer to pleasures, if there follows from them a pleasure that
-is greater. Contentment we hold to be a good, not that we may aim at
-merely reducing our requirements to a minimum, as the Cynics did, but
-that we may seek not to be discontented even when we have not very
-much, knowing that they most enjoy abundance who can do without it, and
-that what is naturally desired is easy to procure, while what is a mere
-idle fancy can be procured only with difficulty. Simple dishes afford
-just as much enjoyment as costly banquets, if they appease hunger.
-Therefore when we make pleasure our aim, it is not the enjoyments of
-the gourmand, as is often falsely thought, but freedom from both pain
-of body and uneasiness of mind. We attain to this life of happiness by
-sober reason alone, which examines the grounds of all choice and all
-rejection, and expels the thoughts by which the soul’s rest is most
-disturbed. It is surely better to be unhappy and reasonable than to be
-happy and unreasonable; for it is better that in our actions we should
-judge correctly than that we should be favoured by luck. Meditate on
-this day and night, and let thyself be shaken by nought from thy peace
-of soul, that thou mayest live as a god amongst men; for the man who
-lives amongst such imperishable treasures has nothing in common with
-mortal men. Of all those the first and foremost is reasonableness
-(φρόνησις), which on this account is still more excellent than
-philosophy; from it spring all the other virtues. For they show that
-one cannot live happily, unless he lives wisely and honourably and
-justly: nor can he live wisely and honourably and justly without living
-happily.”[167]
-
-Therefore, although at first sight there seems not much to be said for
-the principle of Epicurus, nevertheless by means of the inversion of
-making the guiding principle to be found in thought proceeding from
-Reason, it passes into Stoicism, as even Seneca himself has admitted
-(_v. supra_, pp. 302, 303); and actually the same result is reached
-as with the Stoics. Hence the Epicureans describe their wise man in
-at least as glowing terms as the Stoics do theirs; and in both these
-systems the wise man is depicted with the same qualities, these being
-negative. With the Stoics the Universal is the essential principle,—not
-pleasure, the self-consciousness of the particular as particular; but
-the reality of this self-consciousness is equally something pleasant.
-With the Epicureans pleasure is the essential principle, but pleasure
-sought and enjoyed in such a way that it is pure and unalloyed, that
-is to say, in accordance with sound judgment, and with no greater evil
-following to destroy it: therefore pleasure is regarded in its whole
-extent, that is, as being itself a universal. In Diogenes Laërtius,
-however (X. 117-121), the Epicurean delineation of the wise man has a
-character of greater mildness; he shapes his conduct more according to
-laws already in operation, while the Stoic wise man, on the other hand,
-does not take these into account at all. The Epicurean wise man is less
-combative than the Stoic, because the latter makes his starting-point
-the thought of self-dependence, which, while denying self, exercises
-activity: the Epicureans, on the other hand, proceed from the thought
-of existence, which is not so exacting, and seeks not so much this
-activity directed outwards, as rest; this, however, is not won by
-lethargy, but by the highest mental culture. Yet although the content
-of the Epicurean philosophy, its aim and result, stands thus on as high
-a level as the Stoic philosophy, and is its exact parallel, the two
-are nevertheless in other respects directly opposed to one another;
-but each of these systems is one-sided, and therefore both of them
-are dogmatisms inconsistent with themselves by the necessity of the
-Notion, that is, they contain the contrary principle within them. The
-Stoics take the content of their thought from Being, from the sensuous,
-demanding that thought should be the thought of something existent: the
-Epicureans, on the contrary, extend their particularity of existence
-to the atoms which are only things of thought, and to pleasure as a
-universal; but in accordance with their respective principles, both
-schools know themselves to be definitely opposed to each other.
-
-The negative mean to these one-sided principles is the Notion, which,
-abrogating fixed extremes of determination such as these, moves them
-and sets them free from a mere state of opposition. This movement of
-the Notion, the revival of dialectic—directed as it is against these
-one-sided principles of abstract thinking and sensation—we now see in
-its negative aspect, both in the New Academy and in the Sceptics. Even
-the Stoics, as having their principle in thought, cultivated dialectic,
-though theirs was (pp. 254, 255) a common logic, in which the form of
-simplicity passes for the Notion, while the Notion, as such, represents
-the negative element in it, and dissolves the determinations, which are
-taken up into that simplicity. There is a higher form of the Notion of
-dialectic reality, which not only applies itself to sensuous existence,
-but also to determinate Notions, and which brings to consciousness the
-opposition between thought and existence; not expressing the Universal
-as simple Idea, but as a universality in which all comes back into
-consciousness as an essential moment of existence. In Scepticism we now
-really have an abrogation of the two one-sided systems that we have
-hitherto dealt with; but this negative remains negative only, and is
-incapable of passing into an affirmative.
-
-
-C. THE NEW ACADEMY.
-
-As opposed to the Stoic and Epicurean Dogmatism, we first of all have
-the New Academy, which is a continuation of Plato’s Academy in as far
-as the followers of Plato are divided into the Old, Middle, and New
-Academies; some indeed allow of a fourth Academy and even a fifth.[168]
-The most noteworthy figures here are those of Arcesilaus and Carneades.
-The establishment of the Middle Academy is ascribed to Arcesilaus,
-and the New Academy is said to contain the philosophy of Carneades;
-but this distinction has no signification. Both of these are closely
-connected with Scepticism, and the Sceptics themselves have often
-trouble in distinguishing their standpoint from the Academic principle.
-Both have been claimed by Scepticism as Sceptics, but between the
-Academics and pure Scepticism a distinction has been drawn, which is
-certainly very formal, and has but little signification, but to which
-the Sceptics in their subtlety undoubtedly attached some meaning. The
-distinction often consists in the meanings of words only, and in quite
-external differences.
-
-The standpoint of the Academics is that they express the truth as a
-subjective conviction of self-consciousness; and this tallies with the
-subjective idealism of modern times. The truth, in so far as it is only
-a subjective conviction, has hence been called, by the New Academy,
-the _probable_. Although followers of Plato, and hence, Platonists,
-the Academicians did not remain at the standpoint of Plato, nor could
-they have done so. But we easily see the connection of this principle
-with the Platonic doctrines, if we recollect that with Plato the Idea
-has been the principle, and that, indeed, on the whole, in the form
-of universality. Plato remained, as we saw above (pp. 139, 140), in
-the abstract Idea; to him the one great matter in Philosophy is to
-combine the infinite and finite. Plato’s Ideas are derived from the
-necessities of reason, from enthusiasm for the truth, but they are in
-themselves devoid of movement, and only universal, while Aristotle
-demands actuality, self-determining activity. Plato’s dialectic has
-only attempted to assert the universal as such, and to demonstrate the
-determinate and particular to be null, thus leaving nothing at all but
-abstract universality. His dialectic has hence very often a negative
-result, in which determinations are merely done away with and annulled.
-With Plato the working out of the concrete has thus not gone far, and
-where he, as in the Timæus, proceeds into the determinate, _e.g._ of
-organic life, he becomes infinitely trivial and quite unspeculative,
-while with Aristotle matters are very different. The necessity for a
-scientific ground has necessarily caused us to be carried on beyond
-this Platonic point of view. The Stoics and Epicureans were imbued
-with the scientific necessity, not yet recognized by Plato, of giving
-a content to the universal of the Idea, _i.e._ of grasping particular
-determinateness, but the succeeding Academicians stand in a negative
-attitude to them in this regard. To the end they made a point of
-holding to the Platonic universality, uniting to this the Platonic
-dialectic also. The principle of the New Academy could thus, like the
-Platonic dialectic, possess a dialectic attitude and bearing which
-proceeded to nothing affirmative; as, indeed, in many of Plato’s
-dialogues, mere confusion is what is arrived at. But while with Plato
-the affirmative result is essentially the result of dialectic, so that
-with him we have really found the universal Idea as species, during all
-this time, on the other hand, the tendency to abstract apprehension
-is predominant; and as this showed itself in the Stoic and Epicurean
-philosophy, it has also extended to the Platonic Idea and degraded it
-into being a form of the understanding. Plato’s Ideas were thus torn
-from their rest through thought, because in such universality thought
-has not yet recognized itself as self-consciousness. Self-consciousness
-confronted them with great pretensions, actuality in general asserted
-itself against universality; and the rest of the Idea necessarily
-passed into the movement of thought. This movement now, however, in
-the New Academy turned dialectically against the determination of the
-Stoics and Epicureans, which rested on the fact that the criterion of
-the truth ought to be a concrete. For example, in the conception as
-comprehended by the Stoics, there is a thought which likewise has a
-content, although, again, this union still remains very formal. But the
-two forms in which the dialectic of the New Academy turns against this
-concrete, are represented by Arcesilaus and Carneades.
-
-
-1. ARCESILAUS.
-
-Arcesilaus kept to the abstraction of the Idea as against the
-criterion; for though in the Idea of Plato, _i.e._ in the Timæus and in
-his dialectic, the concrete was derived from quite another source, this
-was only admitted for the first time later on by the Neo-platonists,
-who really recognized the unity of the Platonic and the Aristotelian
-principles. The opposition to the Dogmatists thus does not in the case
-of Arcesilaus proceed from the dialectic of the Sceptics, but from
-keeping to abstraction; and here we perceive the gulf marking out this
-epoch from any other.
-
-Arcesilaus was born at Pitane in Æolia in the 116th Olympiad (318
-B.C.), and was a contemporary of Epicurus and Zeno. Though he
-originally belonged to the Old Academy, yet the spirit of the time and
-the progressive development of Philosophy did not now admit of the
-simplicity of the Platonic manner. He possessed considerable means, and
-devoted himself entirely to the studies requisite for the education
-of a noble Greek, viz. to rhetoric, poetry, music, mathematics, &c.
-Mainly for the purpose of exercising himself in rhetoric, he came to
-Athens, here was introduced to Philosophy, and lived henceforth for
-its sake alone; he held intercourse with Theophrastus, Zeno, &c.,
-and it is a subject of dispute whether he did not hear Pyrrho also.
-Arcesilaus, familiar with all the Philosophy of those days, was by
-his contemporaries held to be as noble a man as he was a subtle and
-acute philosopher; being without pride in himself, he recognized the
-merits of others. He lived in Athens, occupied the post of scholarch
-in the Academy, and was thus a successor of Plato. After the death
-of Crates, the successor of Speusippus, the place of honour in the
-Academy devolved on Sosicrates, but he willingly gave it up in favour
-of Arcesilaus on account of the superiority of the latter in talent
-and philosophy. What really happened as regards the transference
-of the chair to others, is, for the rest, unknown to us. He filled
-this office, in which he made use of the method of disputation, with
-approbation and applause, until his death, which took place in Olympiad
-134, 4 (244 B.C.), in the seventy-fourth year of his age.[169]
-
-The principal points in the philosophy of Arcesilaus are preserved
-by Cicero in his _Academics Quæstiones_, but Sextus Empiricus is
-more valuable as an authority, for he is more thorough, definite,
-philosophic and systematic.
-
-_a._ This philosophy is specially known to us as being a dialectic
-directed against Stoicism, with which Arcesilaus had much to do, and
-its result, as far as its main principles are concerned, is expressed
-thus: “The wise man must restrain his approbation and assent.”[170]
-This principle was called ἐποχή, and it is the same as that of the
-Sceptics; on the other hand this expression is connected with the
-principle of the Stoics as follows. Because to Stoic philosophy truth
-consists in the fact that thought declares some content of existence to
-be its own, and the conception as comprehended gives its approbation
-to this content, the content of our conceptions, principles and
-thoughts undoubtedly appears to be different from thought, and the
-union of the two, which is the concrete, only arises by means of some
-determinate content being taken up into the form of thought and thus
-being expressed as the truth. But Arcesilaus saw this consequence,
-and his saying that approbation most be withheld is thus as much as
-saying that by thus taking up the content no truth comes to pass, but
-only phenomenon; and this is true, because, as Arcesilaus puts it,
-conception and thought likewise remain apart. Arcesilaus has certainly
-unthinkingly allowed that this content united to consciousness is
-a concrete such as was indicated, only he has asserted that this
-connection merely gives a perception with a good ground, and not
-what he calls truth. This is called probability, but not quite
-appropriately; it is a universal set forth through the form of thought,
-and is only formal, having no absolute truth. Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c.
-33, § 233) puts this plainly in saying that “Arcesilaus has declared
-the withholding of approbation in relation to parts, to be a good, but
-the assenting to parts to be an evil,” because the assent only concerns
-_parts_. That is, if thought is to be retained as a universal, it
-cannot come to be a criterion; and that is the meaning of Arcesilaus
-when he asks that the wise man should remain at the universal, and not
-go on to the determinate as if this determinate were the truth.
-
-Sextus Empiricus gives us (adv. Math. VII. 155, 151-153) a more
-particular explanation of this philosophy, which is preserved to us
-only as being in opposition to the Stoics. Arcesilaus asserted as
-against the Stoics, that everything is incomprehensible (ἀκατάληπτα).
-He thus combated the conception of thought (καταληπτικὴν φαντασίαν),
-which to the Stoics is the point of most importance and the concrete
-truth. Arcesilaus further attacked the Stoics thus: “They themselves
-say that the conception of thought is the mean between scientific
-knowledge and opinion, the one of which pertains alone to fools and the
-other alone to wise men; the conception of thought is common to both,
-and the criterion of the truth. Arcesilaus here argued in such a way as
-to show that between scientific knowledge and opinion the conception
-of thought is no criterion, for it is either in the wise man or the
-fool, and in the former it is knowledge, and in the latter, opinion.
-If it is nothing excepting these, there remains to it nothing but an
-empty name.” For knowledge must be a developed consciousness derived
-from reasons, but these reasons, as conceptions of thought, Arcesilaus
-states to be just such thoughts as those of the fool. They are thus,
-no doubt, the concrete directing power which constitutes the principal
-content of our consciousness; but it is not proved that they are the
-truth. Thus this mean, as judging between reason and opinion, pertains
-equally to the wise man and the fool, and may be error or truth
-equally; and thus the wise man and the fool have the same criterion,
-and yet they must, in relation to the truth, be distinguished from one
-another.
-
-Arcesilaus further gives effect to the distinctions which are more
-particularly brought up in modern times, and relied upon. “If
-comprehension is the assent given to a conception of thought, it does
-not exist. For, in the first place, the assent is not on account of
-a conception, but of a reason; that is to say, it is only as regards
-axioms that this assent holds good.”[171] That is good; more fully
-the purport would be something like this: Thought, as subjective, is
-made to assent to an existence which is a determinate content of the
-conception. A sensuous image such as this, however, is foreign to
-thought, and with it thought cannot accord, because it is something
-different from it, something from which thought, on the contrary,
-holds itself aloof. It is, in general, only to a thought that thought
-finds itself conformable, and only in a thought that it finds itself;
-thus only a universal axiom is capable of such accord, for only
-such abstract principles are immediately pure thoughts. Arcesilaus
-thus holds it up against the Stoics that their principle contains a
-contradiction within itself, because the conception of thought is made
-to be the thought of another, but thought can only think itself. This
-is a thought which concerns the inmost essence of the thing. Arcesilaus
-thus here makes the same celebrated distinction as in recent times has
-again been brought forward with so much force as the opposition between
-thought and Being, ideality and reality, subjective and objective.
-Things are something different from me. How can I attain to things?
-Thought is the independent determination of a content as universal;
-but a given content is individual and hence we cannot assent to such.
-The one is here, the other there; subjective and objective cannot
-pass to one another—this is a form of thought upon which for long the
-whole culture of modern philosophy has turned, and which we still find
-to-day. It is important to have a consciousness of this difference,
-and to assert this consciousness against the principle of the Stoics.
-It was of this unity of thought and reality that the Stoics ought to
-have given an account; and this they did not do, and indeed it was
-never done in ancient times. For the ancients did not prove that the
-subjective element of thought and this objective content are really in
-their diversity the passing into one another, and that this identity
-is their truth; this was only found in Plato in an abstract form and
-as a first commencement. The unity of thought and conception is the
-difficult matter; thus if thought, as such, is the principle, it is
-abstract. The logic of the Stoics hence remained formal merely, and the
-attainment of a content could not be demonstrated. Thought and Being
-are themselves such abstractions, and we may move to and fro between
-them for long without arriving at any determination. Thus this unity of
-universal and particular cannot be the criterion. With the Stoics the
-conception as comprehended appears to be immediately asserted; it is a
-concrete, but it is not shown that this is the truth of these distinct
-elements. Against this immediately accepted concrete, the assertion of
-the difference of the two is thus quite consistent.
-
-“In the second place,” says Arcesilaus, “there is no apprehended
-conception that is not also false, as has been confirmed many times and
-oft,” just as the Stoics themselves say that the apprehended conception
-could be both true and false. Determinate content has its opposite in
-a determinate which must likewise as an object of thought be true; and
-this destroys itself. In this consists the blind wandering about in
-thoughts and reasons such as these, which are not grasped as Idea, as
-the unity of opposites, but in one of the opposites asserts one thing,
-and then, with as good reason, the opposite. The truth of the world is,
-on the contrary, quite different, the universal law of reason which is
-as such for thought. Reasons are relatively ultimate for a content, but
-not absolutely ultimate; they can only be regarded as good reasons, as
-probability, as the Academics express it. This is a great truth which
-Arcesilaus had attained. But because no unity can thus come forth, he
-then draws the conclusion that the wise man must withhold his assent,
-that is, not that he should not think, but that he must not merely for
-that reason regard as true that which is thought. “For since nothing is
-comprehensible, he will, if he assents, assent to an incomprehensible;
-now because such an assent is opinion, the wise man will only be wise
-in opinion.”[172] We still likewise hear this said: Man thinks, but
-does not thereby arrive at the truth; it remains beyond. Cicero (Acad.
-Quæst. IV. 24) thus expresses this: “Neither the false nor the true can
-be known, if the true were simply to be such as is the false.”
-
-_b._ In relation to what is practical, Arcesilaus says: “But since
-the conduct of life without a criterion of the true or the false is
-impossible, and the end of life, or happiness, can only be determined
-through such grounds, the wise man, not withholding his approbation
-regarding everything, will, as regards what has to be done and left
-undone, direct his actions in accordance with the probable (εὔλογον),”
-as the subjectively convincing conception. What is right in this is
-that the good ground does not extend as far as truth. “Happiness is
-brought about by discretion (φρόνησις), and rational conduct operates
-in fitting and right action (κατορθώμασι); that is rightly done which
-is permitted by a well-grounded justification,” so that it appears to
-be true. “Thus, he who regards what is well-founded will do rightly and
-be happy,” but for this culture and intelligent thought are requisite.
-Arcesilaus thus remains at the indeterminate, at subjectivity of
-conviction, and a probability justified by good grounds. Thus we see
-that in regard to what is positive, Arcesilaus does not really get
-any further than the Stoics, nor say anything different from what
-they do; only the form is different, because, what the Stoics call
-true, Arcesilaus calls well-founded or probable. But, on the whole, he
-possessed a higher kind of knowledge than the Stoics, because what is
-thus founded cannot be held to have the significance of an implicit
-existence, but only a relative truth in consciousness.
-
-
-2. CARNEADES.
-
-Carneades was equally famous; he was one of the followers of Arcesilaus
-in the Academy, and he also lived in Athens, though considerably later.
-He was born in Cyrene in Ol. 141, 3 (217 B.C.), and died in Ol. 162,
-4 (132 B.C.), thus being eighty-five years old; though, according to
-others he was as much as ninety.[173] During the already mentioned (pp.
-241, 242) embassy of the three philosophers to Rome, it was chiefly
-Carneades’ quickness, eloquence, and power of conviction, as also his
-great fame, which aroused remark, attracted men together, and gained
-great approbation in Rome. For he here held, after the manner of the
-Academics, two discourses on justice; the one for and the other against
-justice. That on which both generally speaking rested, can easily be
-discovered. In the justification of justice he took the universal as
-principle; but in showing its nullity, he laid weight on the principle
-of individuality, of self-interest. To the young Romans who knew little
-of the opposition in the Notion, this was something new; they had no
-idea of such methods of applying thought, were much attracted by them,
-and were soon won over to them. But the older Romans, and particularly
-the elder Cato, the Censor, who was then still living, saw this very
-unwillingly, and declaimed much against it, because the youths were
-thereby turned away from the strictness of ideas and virtues which
-prevailed in Rome. As the evil gained ground, Caius Acilius made a
-proposition in the Senate to banish all philosophers from the city,
-amongst whom, naturally, without their names being mentioned, those
-three ambassadors were included. The elder Cato, however, moved the
-Senate to conclude the business with the ambassadors as quickly as
-possible, so that they might again set forth, and return to their
-schools, and might henceforth instruct only the sons of the Greeks.
-The Roman youths might then as formerly give ear to their laws and
-magistrates, and learn wisdom from intercourse with the senators.[174]
-But this taint can no more be avoided than could in Paradise the
-desire for knowledge. The knowledge which is a necessary moment in
-the culture of a people, thus makes its appearance as the Fall from
-innocence, and as corruption. An epoch such as this, in which thought
-appears to veer about, is then regarded as an evil as far as the
-security of the ancient constitution is concerned. But this evil of
-thought cannot be prevented by laws, &c.; it can and must be the healer
-of itself through itself alone, if thought through thought itself is
-truly brought to pass.
-
-a. The philosophy of Carneades has been given to us in most detail
-by Sextus Empiricus; and all else of Carneades that we possess is
-likewise directed against the dogmatism of the Stoic and Epicurean
-philosophy. The fact that the nature of consciousness is what is most
-particularly considered makes his propositions interesting. While in
-Arcesilaus we still found a good reason or argument maintained, the
-principle which Carneades supported is expressed as that “in the first
-place there is absolutely no criterion of the truth, neither feeling,
-conception, nor thought, nor any other such thing; for all this put
-together deceives us.” This general empirical proposition is still in
-vogue. In developing the matter further, Carneades proves what he says
-from reasons, and we have the nature of consciousness more definitely
-expressed in the following: “In the second place he shows that even if
-such a criterion existed, it could not be without an affection (πάθος)
-of consciousness, which proceeds from perception.”[175] For this,
-speaking generally, is his principal reflection, that every criterion
-must be constituted so that it has two elements, one being the
-objective, existent, immediately determined, while the other element is
-an affection, an activity, an attribute of consciousness, and belongs
-to the sensitive, conceiving or thinking subject—but as such it could
-not be the criterion. For this activity of consciousness consists in
-the fact that it changes the objective, and thus does not allow the
-objective as it is to come to us immediately. Hence the same attitude
-of separation is pre-supposed as formerly, viz. that the understanding
-is to be regarded as an ultimate and clearly absolute relationship.
-
-α. As against the Epicureans, Carneades maintains this: “Because
-the living is distinguished from the dead through the activity of
-sensation, by this means it will comprehend itself and what is
-external. But this sensation which,” as Epicurus puts it (_supra_, p.
-281), “remains unmoved and is impassive and unchangeable, is neither
-sensation nor does it comprehend anything. For not until they have been
-changed and determined by the invasion of the actual does sensation
-show forth things.”[176] The sensation of Epicurus is an existent,
-but there is in it no principle of judgment, because each sensation
-is independent. But sensation must be analyzed in accordance with
-the two points of view there present, for as the soul is therein,
-determined, so likewise is that which determines determined by the
-energy of the conscious subject. Because I, as a living being, have
-sensation, a change in my consciousness takes place, which means that I
-am determined from without and from within. Consequently the criterion
-cannot be a simple determinateness, for it is really an implicit
-relationship in which two moments, sensation and thought, must be
-distinguished.
-
-β. Since to Carneades sensation is merely what comes first, he then
-says: “The criterion is thus to be sought for in the affection of the
-soul by actuality.” For it is only in the mean between the energy
-of the soul and that of outward things that the criterion can fall.
-A determinate content of sensation such as this, which is at the
-same time again determined through consciousness, this passivity and
-activity of consciousness, this third something, Carneades called the
-conception which constituted to the Stoics the content of thought.
-Respecting this criterion, he says: “This being determined must,
-however, be an indication both of itself and of the apparent, or of
-the thing through which it is affected; this affection is none other
-than the conception. Hence in life the conception is something which
-presents both itself and the other. If we see something, the sight has
-an affection, and it no longer is just as it was before seeing. Through
-an alteration such as this there arise in us two things: first change
-itself, _i.e._ the ordinary conception” (the subjective side) “and
-then that which change produced, what is seen” (the objective). “Now
-just as the light shows itself and everything in it, the conception
-reigns over knowledge in the animal, and it must, like the light, make
-itself evident, and reveal the actual through which consciousness is
-affected.” This is quite the correct standpoint for consciousness,
-and it is in itself comprehensible, but it is only for the phenomenal
-mind that the other in the determinateness of consciousness is
-present. We now expect a development of this opposition; but Carneades
-passes into the region of empiricism without giving this further
-development. “Since the conception,” he continues, “does not always
-point to the truth, but often lies, and resembles bad messengers in
-that it misrepresents what it proceeds from, it follows that not every
-conception can give a criterion of the truth, but only that which is
-true, if any are so. But because none is so constituted that it might
-not also be false, conceptions are likewise a common criterion of
-the true as of the false, or they form no criterion.” Carneades also
-appealed to the fact of a conception proceeding even from something
-not existing, or—if the Stoics asserted that what in the objective is
-thinkingly apprehended is an existent—to the fact that the false may
-also be apprehended.[177] In a popular way that is stated thus: There
-are also conceptions of untruth. Although I am convinced, it is still
-my conception merely, even if men think they have said something by
-saying that they have this conviction. They likewise say that insight
-or objective knowledge is still only the conviction of difference, but
-really the content is in its nature universal.
-
-γ. Finally, “because no conception is a criterion, neither can thought
-be taken as such, for this depends on conception”—and must hence be
-just as uncertain as it is. “For to thought, that respecting which
-it judges must be conception; but conception cannot exist without
-unthinking sensation”—this may, however, be either true or false, “so
-that there is no criterion.”[178] This constitutes the principle in the
-Academic philosophy—that on the one hand the conception is in itself
-this distinction of thought and existence, and that there is likewise
-a unity of both, which, however, is no absolutely existing unity.
-Philosophic culture of those times remained at this standpoint, and in
-modern times Reinhold also arrived at the same result.
-
-b. Now what Carneades gave expression to of an affirmative nature
-respecting the criterion, is found in the statement that undoubtedly
-criteria are to be maintained for the conduct of life and for the
-acquisition of happiness, but not for the speculative consideration
-of what is in and for itself. Thus Carneades passes more into
-what is psychological, and into finite forms of the understanding
-consciousness; this is consequently no criterion respecting truth,
-but respecting the subjective habits and customs of the individual,
-and hence it also is of subjective truth alone, although it still
-remains a concrete end. “The conception is a conception of something;
-of that from which it comes as of the externally perceived object, and
-of the subject in which it is, _e.g._ of man. In this way it has two
-relationships—on the one hand to the object, and, on the other, to that
-which forms the conception. According to the former relationship it is
-either true or false; true if it harmonizes with what is conceived of,
-false if this is not so.” But this point of view cannot here in any
-way come under consideration, for the judgment respecting this harmony
-is most certainly not in a position to separate the matter itself
-from the matter as conceived. “According to the relationship to that
-which conceives, the one is conceived (φαινομένε) to be true, but the
-other is not conceived to be true.” Merely this relationship to the
-conceiver, however, comes under the consideration of the Academicians.
-“That conceived of as true is called by the Academician appearance
-(ἔμφασις) and conviction, and convincing conception; but what is not
-conceived as true is called incongruity (ἀπέμφασις) and non-conviction
-and non-convincing conception. For neither that which is presented to
-us through itself as untrue, nor what is true but is not presented to
-us, convinces us.”[179]
-
-Carneades thus determines the leading principle very much as does
-Arcesilaus, for he recognizes it merely in the form of a “convincing
-conception;” but as convincing it is “likewise a firm and a developed
-conception,” if it is to be a criterion of life. These distinctions, on
-the whole, pertain to a correct analysis, and likewise approximately
-appear in formal logic; they are very much the same stages as are
-found, according to Wolff, in the clear, distinct, and adequate
-conception. “We have now shortly to show what is the distinction
-between these three steps.”[180]
-
-α. “A convincing conception (πιθανή) is that which appears to be true
-and which is sufficiently obvious; it has a certain breadth as well,
-and may be applied in many ways and in a great variety of cases; ever
-verifying itself more through repetitions,” as in the case of Epicurus,
-“it makes itself ever more convincing and trustworthy.” No further
-account of its content is given, but what is so frequently produced
-is, as empirical universality, made the first criterion.[181] But this
-is only an individual and, speaking generally, an immediate and quite
-simple conception.
-
-β. “Because, however, a conception is never for itself alone, but one
-depends on another as in a chain, the second criterion is added, viz.
-that it should be both convincing and secure (ἀπερίσπαστος),” _i.e._
-connected and determined on all sides, so that it cannot be changed,
-nor drawn this way and that and made variable by circumstances; and
-other conceptions do not contradict it, because it is known in this
-connection with others. This is quite a correct determination, which
-everywhere appears in the universal. Nothing is seen or said alone, for
-a number of circumstances stand in connection with it. “For example,
-in the conception of a man much is contained, both as to what concerns
-himself and what surrounds him: as to the former, there is colour,
-size, form, movement, dress, &c.; and in reference to the latter,
-air, light, friends, and the like. If none of such circumstances make
-us uncertain or cause us to think the others false, but when all
-uniformly agree, the conception is the more convincing.”[182] Thus
-when a conception is in harmony with the manifold circumstances in
-which it stands, it is secure. A cord may be thought to be a snake,
-but all the circumstances of the same have not been considered. “Thus,
-as in judging of an illness all the symptoms must be brought under
-our consideration, so the fixed conception has conviction because all
-circumstances agree.”[183]
-
-γ. “Even more trustworthy than the fixed conception is the conception
-as developed (διεξωδευμένη), which brings about perfect conviction,”
-the third moment. “While in the case of the fixed conception we only
-investigate whether the circumstances agree with one another, in the
-developed conception each one of the circumstances existing in harmony
-is strictly inquired into on its own account. Thus he who judges
-as well as what is judged and that according to which judgment is
-given, are subject to investigations. Just as in common life in some
-unimportant matter one witness satisfies us, in one more important
-several are required, and in a case which is more material still the
-individual witnesses are themselves examined through a comparison of
-their testimonies, so in less important matters a general convincing
-conception satisfies us, in things of a certain importance one which is
-established, but in those which pertain to a good and happy life one
-which is investigated in its parts is required.”[184] We thus see—in
-contradistinction to those who place truth in what is immediate, and,
-especially in recent times, in sensuous perception, in an immediate
-knowledge, whether as inward revelation or outward perception—that
-this kind of certainty with Carneades rightly takes the lowest place;
-the conception worked out and developed really is to him the essential
-one, and yet it appears in a formal manner only. In fact, the truth
-is only in thinking knowledge, and if Carneades does not exhaust all
-that can be said of the nature of this knowledge, he still has rightly
-emphasized an essential moment in it, the opening out and the judging
-movements of the moments.
-
-In the New Academy we see the subjective side of conviction expressed,
-or the belief that not the truth as truth, but its manifestation, or
-really what it is to the conception, is present in consciousness.
-Thus only subjective certainty is demanded; of the truth nothing
-more is said, for only what is relative in respect of consciousness
-is considered. Just as the Academic principle limited itself to the
-subjective act of the convincing conception, so likewise did the
-Stoics really place implicit existence in thought, and Epicurus in
-perception; but they called this the truth. The Academicians, on the
-contrary, set it up against the truth, and asserted that it is not
-the existent as such. They had thus a consciousness that the implicit
-really has the moment of consciousness in it, and that without this
-it cannot exist; this was also a fundamental principle to the former,
-but they were not conscious of it. Though, according to this, the
-implicit has now an essential relation to consciousness, this last
-is still in contrast with the truth; to conscious knowledge, as to
-the moment of explicitude, the implicit thus still stands in the
-background, it still confronts it, but at the same time it includes
-the explicit as an essential moment, even in antagonism to itself; in
-other words, consciousness is not yet set forth in and for itself.
-Now, if this Academic standpoint is driven to its ultimate limit, it
-amounts to this, that everything is clearly for consciousness alone,
-and that the form of an existent, and of the knowledge of existence,
-also quite disappears as form; this, however, is Scepticism. Thus if
-the Academicians still preferred one conviction, one estimate of truth
-to another, as that in which the aim of a self-existent truth might be
-said to dwell, or float before their eyes, there still remains this
-simple belief in the validity of opinion without distinction, or the
-fact that everything is in like manner only related to consciousness,
-and is, in fact, phenomenal alone. Thus the Academy had no longer any
-fixed subsistence, but hereby really passed into Scepticism, which
-merely asserted a subjective belief in truth, so that all objective
-truth has really been denied.
-
-
-D. SCEPTICISM.
-
-Scepticism completed the theory of the subjectivity of all knowledge
-by the fact that in knowledge it universally substituted for Being the
-expression _appearance_. Now this Scepticism undoubtedly appears to be
-something most impressive, to which great respect is due from man. In
-all times as now, it has been held to be the most formidable, and,
-indeed, the invincible opponent of Philosophy, because it signifies
-the art of dissolving all that is determinate, and showing it in its
-nullity. Thus it might almost appear as though it were held to be in
-itself invincible, and as though the only difference in convictions
-were whether the individual decided for it or for a positive, dogmatic
-philosophy. Its result undoubtedly is the disintegration of the
-truth, and, consequently, of all content, and thus perfect negation.
-The invincibility of Scepticism must undoubtedly be granted, only,
-however, in a subjective sense as regards the individual, who may
-keep to the point of view of taking no notice of Philosophy, and only
-asserting the negative. Scepticism in this way seems to be something
-to which men give themselves over, and we have the impression that we
-are not able to get within reach of anyone who thus throws himself
-entirely into Scepticism; another man, however, simply rests content
-with his philosophy, because he takes no notice of Scepticism, and
-this is really what he ought to do, for, properly speaking, it cannot
-be refuted. Certainly if we were merely to escape from it, it would
-not in reality have been defeated, for on its side it would remain
-where it was, and in possession of the field. For positive philosophy
-allows Scepticism to exist beside it; Scepticism, on the other hand,
-encroaches upon the domain of positive philosophy, for Scepticism has
-power to overcome the other, while positive philosophy cannot do the
-same to it. If anyone actually desires to be a Sceptic, he cannot be
-convinced, or be brought to a positive philosophy,[185] any more than
-he who is paralyzed in all his limbs can be made to stand. Scepticism
-is, in fact, such paralysis—an incapacity for truth which can only
-reach certainty of self, and not of the universal, remaining merely in
-the negative, and in individual self-consciousness. To keep oneself in
-individuality depends on the will of the individual; no one can prevent
-a man from doing this, because no one can possibly drive another out
-of nothing. But thinking Scepticism is quite different; it is the
-demonstration that all that is determinate and finite is unstable. As
-to this, positive philosophy may have the consciousness that it has the
-negation to Scepticism in itself; thus it does not oppose it, nor is it
-outside of it, for Scepticism is a moment in it. But this is true in
-such a way that this philosophy comprehends in itself the negative in
-its truth, as it is not present in Scepticism.
-
-The relation of Scepticism to Philosophy is further this, that the
-former is the dialectic of all that is determinate. The finitude of all
-conceptions of truth can be shown, for they contain in themselves a
-negation, and consequently a contradiction. The ordinary universal and
-infinite is not exalted over this, for the universal which confronts
-the particular, the indeterminate which opposes the determinate,
-the infinite which confronts the finite, each form only the one
-side, and, as such, are only a determinate. Scepticism is similarly
-directed against the thought of the ordinary understanding which
-makes determinate differences appear to be ultimate and existent. But
-the logical Notion is itself this dialectic of Scepticism, for this
-negativity which is characteristic of Scepticism likewise belongs
-to the true knowledge of the Idea. The only difference is that the
-sceptics remain at the result as negative, saying, “This and this
-has an internal contradiction, it thus disintegrates itself, and
-consequently does not exist.” But this result as merely negative is
-itself again a one-sided determinateness opposed to the positive;
-_i.e._ Scepticism only holds its place as abstract understanding.
-It makes the mistake of thinking that this negation is likewise a
-determinate affirmative content in itself; for it is, as the negation
-of negation, the self-relating negativity or infinite affirmation.
-This, put quite abstractly, is the relation of Philosophy to
-Scepticism. The Idea, as abstract Idea, is the quiescent and inert; it
-only is in truth in as far as it grasps itself as living. This occurs
-because it is implicitly dialectic, in order to abrogate that inert
-quiescence, and to change itself. But if the philosophic Idea is thus
-implicitly dialectic, it is not so in a contingent manner. Scepticism,
-on the contrary, exercises its dialectic contingently, for just as the
-material comes up before it, it shows in the same that implicitly it is
-negative.
-
-The older Scepticism must further be distinguished from the modern,
-and it is only with the former that we have to do, for it alone is of
-a true, profound nature; the modern more resembles Epicureanism. Thus
-Schulze of Göttingen has in recent times boasted of his Scepticism;
-he wrote an “Ænesidemus” in order thus to compare himself with that
-sceptic; and in other works, too, he put forward Scepticism in
-opposition to Leibnitz and to Kant. Nevertheless, he ignores entirely
-the true position of Scepticism as it has just been described, and
-instead of representing the true distinction which exists between his
-Scepticism and the ancient, Schulze recognizes nothing but Dogmatism
-and Scepticism, and not the third philosophy at all. Schulze and others
-make it fundamental that we must consider sensuous Being, what is
-given to us by sensuous consciousness, to be true; all else must be
-doubted. What we think is ultimate, the facts of consciousness. The
-older sceptics, indeed, allowed that men must direct their actions in
-accordance with this last, but to assert it to be the truth did not
-occur to them. Modern Scepticism is only directed against thought,
-against the Notion and the Idea, and thus against what is in a higher
-sense philosophic; it consequently leaves the reality of things quite
-unquestioned, and merely asserts that from it nothing can be argued as
-regards thought. But that is not even a peasants’ philosophy, for they
-know that all earthly things are transient, and that thus their Being
-is as good as their non-being. Modern Scepticism is the subjectivity
-and vanity of consciousness, which is undoubtedly invincible, not,
-however, to science and truth, but merely to itself, this subjectivity.
-For it goes no further than saying, “This is held by me to be true, my
-feeling, my heart is ultimate to me.” But here certainty is alone in
-question, and not truth; and, indeed, this nowadays is no longer called
-Scepticism. But the conviction of this individual subject expresses
-nothing at all, however high the matter which we talk of is supposed to
-be. Thus because on the one hand it is said that the truth is merely
-the conviction of another, and on the other hand personal conviction,
-which is also a ‘merely,’ is set on high, we must leave this subject
-alone, first on account of its high pretensions, and then on account
-of its lowliness. The result of the older Scepticism is indeed the
-subjectivity of knowledge only, but this is founded on an elaborately
-thought out annihilation of everything which is held to be true and
-existent, so that everything is made transient.
-
-According to this, the function of Scepticism is wrongly termed the
-inculcation of proneness to doubt; nor can we translate σκέψις by
-Doubt, if Scepticism was also called by Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. 3, § 7)
-ephectic (ἐφεκτική) because one of its chief points was that judgment
-must be suspended. Doubt, however, is only uncertainty, irresolution,
-indecision, the thought which is opposed to something held to be valid.
-Doubt proceeds from the fact of there being two; it is a passing to and
-fro between two or more points of view, so that we neither rest at the
-one nor the other—and yet we ought to remain at one point or another.
-Thus doubt in man is quite likely to involve a rending asunder of mind
-and spirit; it gives unrest and brings unhappiness with it; doubts,
-for instance, arise respecting the immortality of the soul and the
-existence of God. Forty years ago,[186] much was written about this;
-in poetry, too, we found the situation of the doubter was a subject of
-the greatest interest, the unhappiness of doubt being depicted to us as
-in the “Messias.” This supposes a deep interest in a content, and the
-desire of the mind that this content should either be established in it
-or not, because it desires to find its rest either in the one or the
-other. Such doubt is said to betoken a keen and sharp-witted thinker,
-but it is only vanity and simple verbiage, or a feebleness that can
-never arrive at anything. This Scepticism has nowadays entered into our
-life, and it thus makes itself of account as this universal negativity.
-But the older Scepticism does not doubt, being certain of untruth, and
-indifferent to the one as to the other; it does not only flit to and
-fro with thoughts that leave the possibility that something may still
-be true, but it proves with certainty the untruth of all. Or its doubt
-to it is certainty which has not the intention of attaining to truth,
-nor does it leave this matter undecided, for it is completely at a
-point, and perfectly decided, although this decision is not truth to
-it. This certainty of itself thus has as result the rest and security
-of the mind in itself, which is not touched with any grief, and of
-which doubt is the direct opposite. This is the standpoint of the
-imperturbability of Scepticism.
-
-Now what has to be considered even before treating of Scepticism
-itself, is its external history. As regards the origin of Scepticism
-the Sceptics say that it is very old, that is, if we take it in the
-quite indeterminate and universal sense, in so far as to say “Things
-are, but their Being is not true, for it likewise involves their
-non-being; or they are changeable. For example, this day is to-day,
-but to-morrow is also to-day, &c.; it is day now but night is also
-now, &c.” Thus of what in this way is allowed to be a determinate,
-the opposite is also expressed. Now if it be said that all things are
-transient, things may in the first place be changed; however this is
-not only possible, but the fact that all things are transient really
-means when taken in its universality:—“Nothing exists in itself, for
-its reality is the abrogation of self, because things in themselves,
-in accordance with their necessity, are transient. Only now are they
-thus; at another time they are different, and this time, the now, is
-itself no more while I am speaking of it; for time is not itself fixed,
-and it makes nothing fixed.” This uncertainty in what is sensuous
-represents a long-standing belief amongst the unphilosophic public as
-well as amongst philosophers up to this time; and this negativity in
-all determinations likewise constitutes the characteristic feature
-of Scepticism. The Sceptics have also presented this position in an
-historic way, and they show that even Homer was a sceptic, because
-he speaks of the same things in opposite ways. They also count in
-this category Bias, with his maxim “Pledge thyself never.” For this
-has the general sense “Do not consider anything to be anything, do
-not attach yourself to any object to which you devote yourself, do
-not believe in the security of any relationship, &c.” Likewise the
-negative aspect of the philosophy of Zeno and Xenophanes is said to
-be sceptical, and further, Heraclitus, too, with his principle that
-everything flows, that everything is consequently contradictory and
-transient; finally Plato and the Academy are sceptical, only here
-Scepticism is not yet quite clearly expressed.[187] All this may be
-taken as being in part the sceptical uncertainty of everything; but
-that is not its real meaning. It is not this conscious and universal
-negativity; as conscious, it must prove, as universal, it must extend
-the untruth of the objective to everything; thus it is not a negativity
-which says definitely that everything is not implicit but is only for
-self-consciousness, and everything merely goes back into the certainty
-of itself. As philosophic consciousness Scepticism is consequently of
-later date. By Scepticism we must understand a specially constituted
-consciousness for which in some measure not only sensuous Being, but
-also Being for thought does not hold true, and which can then with
-consciousness account for the nullity of that which is asserted to be
-reality; and finally, in a general way, it not only annuls this and
-that sensuous fact or thought, but is adapted for the recognition in
-everything of its untruth.
-
-The history of Scepticism, properly so called, is usually commenced
-with Pyrrho as being its founder; and from him the names Pyrrhonism
-and Pyrrhonic are derived. Sextus Empiricus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 3, § 7)
-says of him “that he went into Scepticism more fully (σωματικώτερον)
-and clearly than did his predecessors.” He is earlier than some of
-the philosophers already considered; but because Scepticism is to be
-taken as a whole, Pyrrho’s Scepticism, even if it is merely aimed
-against the immediate truth both of the senses and of morality, must
-be taken along with the later Scepticism, which directs its attention
-rather against the truth as thought, as will be farther shown on a
-closer consideration; for this last was the first, properly speaking,
-to make a sensation. As to the events of Pyrrho’s life, they appear to
-be as much a matter of doubt as his doctrine; for they are without any
-connection, and little is known for certain concerning them. Pyrrho
-lived in the time of Aristotle and was born at Elis. I shall not give
-the names of his instructors; Anaxarchus, a disciple of Democritus, is
-specially mentioned amongst them. We cannot discover where he really
-lived, for the most part at least. As a proof of how very much he was
-esteemed during his life, it is said that his native town chose him as
-head priest, and the town of Athens gave him the right of citizenship.
-It is finally stated that he accompanied Alexander the Great in his
-journey to Asia; and that there he had considerable dealings with
-magicians and Brahmins. We are told that Alexander had him put to
-death because he desired the death of a Persian satrap; and this fate
-befel him in his ninetieth year. If all this is to be accepted, since
-Alexander spent between twelve and fourteen years in Asia, Pyrrho must
-at the earliest have set out on his travels in his seventy-eighth year.
-Pyrrho does not appear to have come forward as a public teacher, but
-merely to have left behind him individual friends who had been educated
-by him. Anecdotes are told, not so much about the circumstances of
-his life as about the sceptical manner in which he conducted himself,
-and in them his behaviour is made to look ridiculous; in this the
-universal of Scepticism is set against a particular case, so that what
-is absurd shoots up as of itself into relationships which appear to be
-consistent. For because he asserted that the reality of sensuous things
-has no truth, it is, for instance, said that were he walking he would
-go out of the way of no object, no waggon or horse that came towards
-him; or he would go straight up against a wall, completely disbelieving
-in the reality of sensuous sensations and such like. They also said
-that it was only the friends surrounding him who drew him away from
-such dangers and saved him.[188] But such anecdotes are evidently
-extravagant, because, for one thing, it is not conceivable that he
-could have followed Alexander to Asia at ninety years of age. It is
-also very clear that such stories are simply invented with the object
-of ridiculing the sceptical philosophy, by following out its principle
-to such extreme consequences. To the Sceptics sensuous existence
-undoubtedly holds good as phenomenal in so far as the regulation of
-ordinary conduct is concerned (_infra_, p. 343), but not in as far as
-it is held to be the truth; for even the followers of the New Academy
-said that men must not only direct their lives in accordance with
-rules of prudence, but also in accordance with the laws of sensuous
-manifestation (_supra_, pp. 319, 324).
-
-After Pyrrho, Timon of Phliasis, the sillographist, became specially
-famous.[189] Of his Silli, _i.e._ biting remarks respecting all
-philosophies, many are quoted by the ancients; they are certainly
-bitter and disdainful enough, but many of them are not very witty or
-worthy of being preserved. Dr. Paul collected them in an essay, but in
-it much is given that is meaningless. Goethe and Schiller certainly
-show more capacity in works of a similar nature. The Pyrrhonians
-hereupon disappear,—they seem in general only to have shown themselves
-in a more or less isolated way; for a long time after this we read in
-history of the Peripatetics, Stoics and Epicureans being confronted
-only by the Academicians and perhaps some of the older Sceptics who are
-mentioned likewise.
-
-Ænesidemus was the first to reawaken Scepticism; he was of Cnossus
-in Crete, and lived in Cicero’s time in Alexandria,[190] which soon
-began to compete with Athens for the honour of being the seat of
-Philosophy and the sciences. Subsequently, when the Academy lost
-itself in Scepticism, we see the latter, from which the former is all
-the same only separated by a thin partition, taking up a position of
-predominance as representing the purely negative point of view. But
-a scepticism such as that of Pyrrho, which does not as yet show much
-culture or tendency towards thought, but which is directed only against
-what is sensuous, could have no interest in the culture of Philosophy
-as it is found in Stoicism, Epicureanism, Platonism, &c. Thus it is
-requisite, in order that Scepticism should appear with the dignity
-pertaining to Philosophy, that it should itself be developed on its
-philosophic side; and this was first done by Ænesidemus.
-
-However, one of the most celebrated of the Sceptics, whose works we
-still in great measure possess, and who for us is by far the most
-important writer upon Scepticism, because he gives us detailed accounts
-of this philosophy, is Sextus Empiricus, of whose life unfortunately
-as good as nothing is known. He was a physician, and that he was
-an empirical physician, who did not act according to theory but in
-accordance with what appears, his name tells us. He lived and taught
-about the middle of the second century after Christ.[191] His works
-are divided into two parts: first, his _Pyrrhoniæ Hypotyposes_, in
-three books, which give us somewhat of a general presentation of
-Scepticism, and secondly his books _adversus Mathematicos_, _i.e._
-against scientific knowledge generally, and more especially against
-the geometricians, arithmeticians, grammarians, musicians, logicians,
-physicists, and moral philosophers. There were in all eleven books, six
-of which are actually directed against mathematicians, but the other
-five against the philosophers.
-
-The distinction between the Academy and Scepticism was a matter as to
-which the Sceptics exercised themselves much. The New Academy really
-bordered so closely upon Scepticism, that the Sceptics had enough to
-do to dissociate themselves from it, and in the Sceptic school a long
-and important battle raged as to whether Plato, and subsequently the
-New Academy, belonged to Scepticism or not;[192] in the course of this
-we also see that Sextus did not really know what to make of Plato.
-The Sceptics are, on the whole, very careful to distinguish their own
-from other systems. Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 1, §§ 1-4) distinguishes
-three philosophies: “He who seeks an object must either find it or
-deny that it can be found, or persevere in the search. Now the same
-holds good with philosophic investigations; some assert that they
-have found the truth; others deny that it can be grasped; a third set
-are still engaged in search. The first, like Aristotle, Epicurus, the
-Stoics, and others, are the so-called Dogmatists; those who assert
-incomprehensibility are the Academicians; the Sceptics still continue
-to seek. Hence there are three philosophies: the Dogmatic, the Academic
-and the Sceptical.” For this reason, the Sceptics called themselves the
-seekers (ζητητικοί), and their philosophy the seeking (ζητητική).[193]
-However, the distinction between Scepticism and the New Academy rests
-in the form of expression only, and is thus not a great one: indeed it
-is founded only on the mania of the Sceptics to cut off and to shun
-any sort of assertive statement. Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 7, § 13; c
-10, §§ 19-20) says: “The Sceptic does not dogmatize, but only assents
-to the affections into which he is impelled, not of his own will, by
-the conceptions; thus, if for example, he is warm or cold, he will
-certainly not say, I seem not to be cold or warm. But if it be asked
-if the subject is as it appears, we allow appearance (φαίνεσθαι); yet
-we do not investigate the thing that appears, but only the predicate
-predicate (ὃ λέγεται)[194] expressing its appearance. Thus, whether
-anything is sweet or not, we consider only as regards the Notion Notion
-(ὄσον ἐπὶ τῷ λόγῳ); but that is not what appears, but what is said of
-what appears. But if we institute direct investigations respecting
-what appears, we do so not in order to destroy what appears, but in
-order to condemn the rashness (προπέτειαν) of the dogmatists.” Thus
-the Sceptics endeavour to bring about the result that in what they say
-no expression of a Being can be demonstrated, so that, for example, in
-a proposition, they always set appearance in the place of existence.
-According to Sextus they say (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 7, § 14; c. 28, § 206):
-“The Sceptic makes use of his propositions—for example, determine
-nothing (οὐδὲν ὁρίζειν), not the more (οὐδὲν μᾶλλον), nothing is true,
-&c.—not as if they really did exist. For he believes, for instance,
-that the proposition, everything is false, asserts that itself as well
-as the others is false, and consequently limits it (συμπεριγράφει).
-Thus we must similarly in all sceptical propositions recollect that
-we do not at all assert their truth; for we say that they may destroy
-themselves, since that limits them of which they are predicated.” Now,
-the New Academy of Carneades does not express anything as being the
-true and existent, or as anything to which thought could agree; the
-Sceptics thus come very near to the Academy. Pure Scepticism merely
-makes this objection to the Academy, that it is still impure. Sextus
-says (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, §§ 226-233): “But clearly they differ from
-us in the judgment of good and evil. For they assert that something is
-good or evil,” that is to say, the former is the withholding of assent,
-and the latter the granting of it (_supra_, p. 315), “whereby they are
-convinced of its being probable that what of good is attributed to the
-predicate, is more likely to be good than the opposite.” Thus they have
-not elevated themselves to the purity of Scepticism, because they speak
-of _existence_, and not of _appearance_. But this is nothing more than
-a mere form, for the content immediately destroys that which in form
-appears to be an assertion. If we say: “Something is a good, thought
-assents to it,” and then ask, “But what is the good to which thought
-assents?” the content here is that it should not assent. Hence the form
-is, “It is a good,” but the content is that nothing should be held to
-be good or true. Thus the Sceptics also assert this: To the Sceptics
-“all conceptions are alike in trustworthiness or untrustworthiness in
-relation to the ground,” to truth. “But the Academicians say that some
-are probable, and others improbable, and amongst the probable, some
-again are to be preferred to the others.” Preference is thus one of the
-forms which the Sceptics also object to (_infra_, p. 345); for such
-expressions strike them as still too positive.
-
-Now, speaking generally, the essential nature of Scepticism consists
-in its considering that to self-consciousness on its own account,
-there proceeds from the disappearance of all that is objective, all
-that is held to be true, existent or universal, all that is definite,
-all that is affirmative, through the withholding of assent, the
-immovability and security of mind, this imperturbability in itself.
-Hence the same result is obtained, that we have already seen in systems
-of philosophy immediately preceding this. Thus as soon as anything is
-held to be truth to self-consciousness, we find the result that to
-self-consciousness this truth is the universal reality, passing beyond
-itself, and in regard to this, self-consciousness esteems itself as
-nothing. But this external and determinate truth, as finite, is not
-implicitly existent, so that its necessity is to vacillate and give
-way. Then when this security disappears, self-consciousness itself
-loses its equilibrium, and becomes driven hither and thither in unrest,
-fear and anguish; for its stability and rest is the permanence of its
-existence and truth. But sceptical self-consciousness is just this
-subjective liberation from all the truth of objective Being, and from
-the placing of its existence in anything of the kind; Scepticism thus
-makes its end the doing away with the unconscious servitude in which
-the natural self-consciousness is confined, the returning into its
-simplicity, and, in so far as thought establishes itself in a content,
-the curing it of having a content such as this established in thought.
-“The effective principle of Scepticism,” Sextus hence tells us (Pyrrh.
-Hyp. I. c. 6, § 12, c. 12, §§ 25-30), “is the hope of attaining to
-security. Men of distinguished excellence, disquieted through the
-instability of things, and dubious as to which should in preference
-be given assent to, began the investigation of what is the truth and
-what false in things, as if they could reach imperturbability through
-the decision of such matters. But while engaged in this investigation,
-man attains the knowledge that opposite determinations,” desires,
-customs, &c., “have equal power,” and thus resolve themselves; “since
-in this way he cannot decide between them, he really only then attains
-to imperturbability when he withholds his judgment. For if he holds
-anything to be good or evil by nature, he never is at rest, whether it
-be that he does not possess what he holds to be good, or that he thinks
-himself vexed and assailed by natural evil. But he who is undecided
-respecting that which is good and beautiful in nature, neither shuns
-nor seeks anything with zeal; and thus he remains unmoved. What
-happened to the painter Apelles, befalls the Sceptic. For it is told
-that when he was painting a horse, and was altogether unsuccessful in
-rendering the foam, he finally in anger threw the sponge on which he
-had wiped his brushes, and in which every colour was therefore mixed,
-against the picture, and thereby formed a true representation of foam.”
-Thus, the Sceptics find in the mingling of all that exists, and of
-all thoughts, the simple self-identity of self-consciousness which
-“follows mind as the shadow does the body,” and is only acquired, and
-can only be acquired through reason. “Hence we say that the end of the
-Sceptic is imperturbability in the conceptions and moderation in the
-affections which he is compelled to have.” This is the indifference
-which the animals have by nature, and the possession of which through
-reason distinguishes men from animals. Thus, Pyrrho once showed to his
-fellow-passengers on board a ship, who were afraid during a storm, a
-pig, which remained quite indifferent and peacefully ate on, saying to
-them: in such indifference the wise man must also abide.[195] However
-the indifference must not be like that of the pig, but must be born
-of reason. But if to Scepticism existence was only a manifestation or
-conception, it was yet esteemed by it as that in respect to which
-the Sceptics directed their conduct, both in what they did, and what
-they left undone. The above-quoted (p. 336) anecdotes about Pyrrho are
-thus opposed to what the Sceptics themselves said on the subject: “We
-undoubtedly direct our conduct in accordance with a reason which, in
-conformity with sensuous phenomena, teaches us to live conformably to
-the customs and laws of our country, and in consonance with recognized
-institutions and personal affections.”[196] But for them this had only
-the significance of a subjective certainty and conviction, and not the
-value of an absolute truth.
-
-Thus the universal method of Scepticism was, as Sextus Empiricus puts
-it (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 4, §§ 8-10; c. 6, § 12): “a power of in some way
-or other setting what is felt, and what is thought, in opposition,
-whether it be the sensuous to the sensuous, and what is thought to
-what is thought, or what is sensuous to what is thought, or what is
-thought to what is sensuous, _i.e._ showing that any one of these has
-as much force and weight as its opposite, and is hence equivalent as
-far as conviction and non-conviction are concerned. From this the
-suspension of judgment (ἐποχή) results, in conformity with which we
-select and posit nothing, and thereby complete freedom from all mental
-emotion is attained. The principle of Scepticism is thus found in the
-proposition that each reason is confronted by another, which holds
-equally good. We do not, however, necessarily accept affirmation and
-negation as opposite grounds, but merely those that conflict with
-one another.” That which is felt is really existence for sensuous
-certainty, which simply accepts it as truth; or it is that which is
-felt in the Epicurean form, which consciously asserts it to be true.
-What is thought is in the Stoic form a determinate Notion, a content in
-a simple form of thought; both these classes, immediate consciousness
-and thinking consciousness, comprehend everything which is in any
-way to be set in opposition. In as far as Scepticism limits itself
-to this, it is a moment in Philosophy itself, which last, having an
-attitude of negativity in relation to both, only recognizes them
-as true in their abrogation. But Scepticism thinks that it reaches
-further; it sets up a pretension of venturing against the speculative
-Idea and conquering it; Philosophy, however, since Scepticism itself
-is present in it as a moment, rather overcomes it (_supra_, p. 330).
-As far as what is sensuous and what is thought in their separation
-are concerned, it certainly may conquer, but the Idea is neither the
-one nor the other, and it does not touch on the rational at all. The
-perpetual misunderstanding which those who do not know the nature of
-the Idea are under concerning Scepticism, is that they think that the
-truth necessarily falls into the one form or the other, and is thus
-either a determinate Notion or a determinate Being. Against the Notion
-as Notion, _i.e._ against the absolute Notion, Scepticism does not in
-any way proceed; the absolute Notion is rather its weapon of defence,
-though Scepticism has no consciousness of this. We shall on the one
-hand see Scepticism use that weapon against the finite, and on the
-other, how it tries its skill upon the rational.
-
-But though, according to this, Scepticism always expresses itself as if
-everything were in appearance only, the Sceptics go further than those
-who support the newer and purely formal idealism. For they deal with
-content, and demonstrate of all content that it is either experienced
-by the senses or thought, and consequently that it has something in
-opposition to it. Thus they show in the same thing the contradiction
-that exists, so that of everything that is presented the opposite
-also holds good. This is the objective element in Scepticism in its
-manifestation, and that through which it is not subjective idealism.
-Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 13, §§ 32, 33) says: “Thus, for instance,
-the sensuous is set against the sensuous by our being reminded of
-the fact that the same tower when looked at near is square and when
-regarded in the distance looks round;” and hence the one assertion is
-as good as the other. This, indeed, is a very trivial example, but its
-interest lies in the thought that is present in it. “Or what is thought
-is set in opposition to what is thought. As to the fact that there
-is a providence,” which rewards the good and punishes the evil, “men
-appeal,” as against those who deny it, “to the system of the heavenly
-bodies; to this it is objected that the good often fare badly and the
-evil well, from which we demonstrate that there is no providence.” As
-to the “opposition of what is thought to the sensuous,” Sextus adduces
-the conclusion of Anaxagoras, who asserts of the snow, that although
-it appears to be white, regarded in relation to the reasons given by
-reflection it is black. For it is frozen water, but water has no colour
-and hence is black; consequently snow must be the same.
-
-We must now consider further the method in which the Sceptics proceed,
-and it consists in this, that they have brought the universal principle
-that each definite assertion has to be set over against its ‘other,’
-into certain forms, not propositions. Thus, in view of the nature of
-Scepticism, we cannot ask for any system of propositions, nor will this
-philosophy really be a system; just as little did it lie in the spirit
-of Scepticism to form a school, properly speaking, but only an external
-connection in the wider sense of the word. Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 8,
-§ 16, c. 3, § 7) hence says that Scepticism is no selection (αἵρεσις)
-of dogmas, it is not a preference for certain propositions, but only
-that which leads, or rather which directs us (ἀγωγή) to live rightly
-and think correctly; thus it is in this way rather a method or manner
-by which only universal modes of that opposition are shown. Now since
-what sort of thoughts reveal themselves is a matter of contingency, the
-manner and mode of grasping them is contingent likewise; for in one the
-contradiction appears thus and in another otherwise. These determinate
-modes of opposition, whereby the withholding of assent comes to pass,
-the Sceptics called tropes (τρόποι), which are turned upon everything
-that is thought and felt in order to show that this is not what it is
-implicitly, but only in relation to another—that it thus itself appears
-in another, and allows this other to appear in it, and consequently
-that, speaking generally, what is, only seems; and this, indeed,
-follows directly from the matter in itself, and not from another which
-is assumed as true. If, for example, men say that empiric science has
-no truth because truth exists only in reason, this is only assuming the
-opposite of empiricism; likewise the truth of reason proved in itself
-is not a refutation of empiric science, for this last stands alongside
-of the former with equal rights as, and within the same.
-
-Now since the sceptical doctrine consists in the art of demonstrating
-contradictions through these _tropes_, we only require to elucidate
-these modes. The Sceptics themselves, like Sextus, for example (Pyrrh.
-Hyp. I. c. 14, 15) distinguish in these forms the earlier and the
-later: ten of them belong to the elder Sceptics, that is to say to
-Pyrrho, and five were afterwards added by the later Sceptics, and
-Diogenes Laertius indeed tells us (IX. 88) that this was first done
-by Agrippa. From a specification of these it will be shown that the
-earlier are directed against the ordinary consciousness generally and
-belong to a thought of little culture, to a consciousness which has
-sensuous existence immediately before it. For they proceed against what
-we call common belief in the immediate truth of things, and refute it
-in a manner which is immediate likewise, not through the Notion but
-through the existence which is opposed to it. In their enumeration,
-too, there is this same absence of the Notion. But the five others
-appear to be better, have more interest, and are manifestly of later
-origin; they proceed against reflection, _i.e._ against a consciousness
-which relates itself to the developed understanding, and thus
-specially against thought-forms, scientific categories, the thought of
-the sensuous, and the determination of the same through Notions. Now
-though the most part of these may appear to us to be quite trivial, we
-must still be indulgent towards them, for they are historically, and
-consequently really, directed against the form “it is.” But without
-doubt it is a very abstract consciousness that makes this abstract form
-“it is” its object and combats it. However trivial then and commonplace
-these tropes may always appear to be, even more trivial and commonplace
-is the reality of the so-called external objects, that is, immediate
-knowledge, as when, for instance, I say “This is yellow.” Men ought
-not to talk about philosophy, if in this innocent way they assert the
-reality of such determinations. But this Scepticism was really far from
-holding things of immediate certainty to be true; thus it actually
-stands in contrast to modern Scepticism, in which it is believed
-that what is in our immediate consciousness, or indeed, all that is
-sensuous, is a truth (_supra_, pp. 331, 332). As distinguished from
-this, the older Scepticism, the modes of which we would now consider
-further, is directed against the reality of things.
-
-
-1. THE EARLIER TROPES.
-
-In the earlier tropes we see the lack of abstraction appearing as
-the incapacity to grasp their diversitude under more simple general
-points of view, although they all, in fact, partly under a simple
-conception and partly in their difference, do in fact converge into
-some necessary simple determinations. From all alike, in relation to
-immediate knowledge, is the insecurity demonstrated of that of which
-we say “it is.” Sextus Empiricus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, § 38) even
-remarks, that “all the tropes may be summed up in three: the one is the
-judging subject; the other that respecting which the judgment is made;
-the third that which contains both sides”—the relation of subject and
-object. If thought is developed further, it embraces things in these
-more general determinations.
-
-a. “The first trope is the diversitude in animal organization,
-according to which different living beings experience different
-conceptions and sensations respecting the same object. This the
-Sceptics conclude from the different nature of their origin, because
-some are brought into being through copulation and others without
-copulation” (from a _generatio æquivoca_): “but of the first some are
-hatched from eggs, and others come immediately living into the world,
-&c. Thus it is a matter of no doubt that this difference of origin
-produces opposite constitutions, temperaments, &c. The variety in
-the parts of the body, and particularly in those which are given to
-the animal for purposes of distinguishing and feeling, thus produces
-in them the greatest differences in conceptions. For instance, the
-jaundiced patient sees as yellow what to others appears white,” and as
-green, what to the latter seems blue. “Similarly the eyes of animals
-are differently constructed in different species, and have different
-colours, being pale, grey or red; consequently what is perceived
-thereby must be different.”[197]
-
-This difference in the subject undoubtedly establishes a difference in
-perception, and this last a difference between the conception and the
-nature of the object of perception. But if we say “That is,” we mean
-something fixed, maintaining itself under all conditions; whereas in
-opposition to this the Sceptics show that everything is variable. But
-if they thereby destroy similarity and identity for the senses, and
-consequently _this_ universality, another steps in, for universality
-or existence rests simply in the fact of men knowing that, in the
-hackneyed example of the jaundiced man, things appear so to him, _i.e._
-the necessary law is known whereby a change of sensation arises for
-him. But certainly it is implied in this that the first sensuous
-universality is not true universality, because it is one immediate
-and unknown; and in it as sensuous existence, its non-universality is
-rightly demonstrated within itself through another universality. As
-against the statement “This is blue because I see it as such,” which
-clearly makes sight the ground of its being asserted to be blue, it
-is quite fair to point to another who has immediate perception of the
-object and for whom it is not blue.
-
-b. The second trope, the diversitude of mankind in reference to
-feelings and conditions, amounts very much to the same thing as in
-the first case. In respect to difference in constitution of body, the
-Sceptics discover many idiosyncrasies. As regards the proposition
-“Shade is cool,” for instance, they say that someone felt cold in the
-sunlight, but warm in shadow; as against the statement “Hemlock is
-poisonous,” they instance an old woman in Attica who could swallow a
-large dose of hemlock without harm—thus the predicate poisonous is
-not objective, because it suits the one and not the other. Because
-such great bodily differences are present amongst men, and the body is
-the image of the soul, men must have a diversity of mind likewise and
-give the most contradictory judgments, so that no one can know whom to
-believe. To judge by the greater number would be foolish, for all men
-cannot be inquired of.[198] This trope again relates to the immediate;
-if, therefore, what has to be done is merely to believe some statement
-inasmuch as it is made by others, undoubtedly nothing but contradiction
-takes place. But a belief like this, that is ready to believe anything,
-is, as a matter of fact, incapable of understanding what is said; it
-is an immediate acceptance of an immediate proposition. For it did not
-demand the reason; but the reason is, in the first place, the mediation
-and the meaning of the words of the immediate proposition. Diversitude
-in men is really something which now likewise appears in other forms.
-It is said that men differ in regard to taste, religion, &c.; that
-religion must be left for each to decide for himself; that each, from
-a standpoint of his own, must settle how things are to be regarded
-as far as religion is concerned. The consequence of this is that in
-regard to religion there is nothing objective or true, everything ends
-in subjectivity, and the result is indifference to all truth. For then
-there is no longer a church; each man has a church and a liturgy of his
-own, each has his own religion. The Sceptics more particularly—as those
-who in all times spare themselves the trouble of philosophizing, on
-some sort of pretext, and who try to justify this evasion—persistently
-preach the diversity of philosophies; Sextus Empiricus does this
-very expressly, and it may even be brought forward here, although it
-will appear more definitely as the first of the later tropes. If the
-principle of the Stoics, as it is in its immediacy, holds good, the
-opposite principle, that of the Epicureans, has just as much truth, and
-holds equally good. In this way, when it is said that some particular
-philosophy asserts and maintains certain propositions, the greatest
-diversity is undoubtedly to be found. For here we have the talk which
-we censured earlier (Vol. I. p. 16): “Since the greatest men of all
-times have thought so differently and have not been able to come to
-an agreement, it would be presumptuous on our part to believe we had
-found what they could not attain to,” and with those who speak thus,
-the timid shrinking from knowledge makes out the inertness of their
-reason to be a virtue. Now if the diversity cannot be denied, because
-it is a fact that the philosophies of Thales, Plato, and Aristotle were
-different, and that this was not merely apparently the case, but that
-they contradicted one another, this way of wishing in such statements
-of them to gain a knowledge of the philosophies, shows a want of
-understanding as regards Philosophy; for such propositions are not
-Philosophy, nor do they give expression to it. Philosophy is quite the
-reverse of this immediacy of a proposition, because in that the very
-knowledge that is essential is not taken into account; hence such men
-see everything in a philosophy excepting Philosophy itself, and this is
-overlooked. However different the philosophic systems may be, they are
-not as different as white and sweet, green and rough; for they agree in
-the fact that they are philosophies, and this is what is overlooked.
-But as regards the difference in philosophies, we must likewise remark
-upon this immediate validity accorded to them, and upon the form, that
-the essence of Philosophy is expressed in an immediate manner. As
-regards this ‘is’ the trope undoubtedly does its work, for all tropes
-proceed against the ‘is,’ but the truth is all the time not this dry
-‘is,’ but genuine process. The relative difference in philosophies is,
-in their mutual attitude towards one another (see the fifth trope),
-always to be comprehended as a connection, and therefore not as an ‘is.’
-
-c. The third trope turns on the difference in the constitution of
-the organs of sense as related to one another; _e.g._ in a picture
-something appears raised to the eye but not to the touch, to which it
-is smooth, &c.[199] This is, properly speaking, a subordinate trope,
-for in fact a determination such as this coming through some sense,
-does not constitute the truth of the thing, what it is in itself.
-The consciousness is required that the unthinking description which
-ascribes existence to blue, square, &c., one after the other, does not
-exhaust and express the Being of the thing; they are only predicates
-which do not express the thing as subject. It is always important
-to keep in mind that the different senses grasp the same thing in
-contradictory ways, for by this the nullity of sensuous certainty is
-revealed.
-
-d. The fourth trope deals with the diversitude of circumstances in the
-subject, in reference to its condition, the changes taking place in it,
-which must prevent our making an assertion respecting any particular
-thing. The same thing manifests itself differently to the same man,
-according as he, for instance, is at rest or moving, asleep or awake,
-moved by hatred or love, sober or drunk, young or old, &c. In the
-diversitude of these circumstances very different judgments are passed
-regarding one and the same object, hence we must not talk of anything
-as being more than a manifestation.[200]
-
-e. The fifth trope relates to the different positions, distances and
-places, for from every different standpoint the object appears to be
-different. In respect to position, a long passage appears to the man
-who stands at the one end to taper to a point at the other; but if he
-goes there he finds it to be of the same breadth at that end as it was
-at the other. Distance is likewise, properly speaking, a difference
-in the greatness and smallness of objects. In respect to place, the
-light in a lantern is quite feeble in the sunshine, and yet in darkness
-it shines quite brightly. Pigeons’ necks, regarded from different
-points of view, shimmer quite differently.[201] In regard to motion
-in particular very different views prevail. The best known example of
-such is found in the course of the sun round the earth, or the earth
-round the sun. As the earth is said to go round the sun, even though
-the opposite appears to be the case, the former assertion is based
-on reasons. This example does not, however, come in here, but this
-trope will show that because one sensuous feeling contradicts another,
-existence is not expressed in it.
-
-f. The sixth trope is taken from intermixture, because nothing comes
-within the scope of the sense alone and isolated, but only as mingled
-with something else; this admixture with something else, however,
-causes change, just as scents are stronger in the sunshine than in
-cold air, &c. Further, through the subject himself, this admixture
-comes in; the eyes consist of various tunics and humours, the ear has
-different passages, &c., consequently they cannot allow sensations—the
-light or the voice—to come to us in their purity, for the sensuous
-element comes to us first of all modified by these tunics of the eye
-and likewise by the passages of the ear.[202] But if we are to express
-ourselves in this particular manner, the direct opposite might likewise
-be maintained, that the sensuous element there present is simply
-purified; the apprehending ear, for example, again purifies the voice
-that comes in bodily form from a soul.
-
-g. The seventh trope is the cohesion, the size or quantity of things,
-through which they appear different; for instance, we see how glass is
-transparent, but loses this transparency when it is pounded, and thus
-has its cohesion altered. Shavings of goat’s-horn appear to be white,
-but the whole piece looks black; or Carrara marble ground into powder
-looks white, though the whole piece is yellow. The same holds good as
-regards quantity. A moderate portion of wine fortifies and exhilarates,
-a large quantity of it destroys the body, and the case is similar with
-drugs.[203] If the quantity is not to be spoken of as the substance,
-it is still an abstraction that quantity and combination are matters
-of indifference as regards quality and disintegration; the change of
-quantity likewise changes the quality.
-
-h. The eighth trope arises from the relativity of things, and is thus
-the universal trope of relationship. This relativity of everything
-existent and thought is a more inward, real determinateness, and all
-the tropes already mentioned really aim at it. “According to this
-trope,” says Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 135, 136), “we conclude
-that since everything is in relation to something, we must withhold
-our judgment as to what it is on its own account and in its nature.
-But it must be remarked that we here make use of ‘is’ in the sense
-of appearance only. Relationship is used in two respects: first in
-relation to the judging subject,” and this difference we saw in the
-previous tropes, “and in the second place in relation to the object
-which is to be judged, like right and left.” Sextus, in the passage
-above (§§ 137, 140), argues as follows: “As regards what is set forth
-on its own account and separate from others, is it distinguished from
-the mere relative or not? If it were not different from it, it would
-itself be a relative. If it is different, it again is a relative.
-That is to say, what is different is related to something, for it
-is set forth in relation to that from which it is distinguished.”
-Relativity, generally, is present in what is absolutely predicated,
-for relationship is a relationship in itself and not to another.
-Relationship contains opposition: what is in relation to another is
-on the one hand independent on its own account, but on the other,
-because it is in relationship, it is likewise not independent. For if
-anything is only in relation to something else, the other likewise
-belongs to it; it is thus not on its own account. But if its other
-already belongs to it, its non-being also already belongs to it, and
-it is a contradictory as soon as it is not without its other. “But
-because we cannot separate the relative from its other, we likewise do
-not know what it is on its own account and in its nature, and we must
-consequently suspend our judgment.”
-
-i. The ninth trope is the more or less frequent occurrence of things,
-which likewise alters one’s judgment upon the things. What happens
-seldom is more highly esteemed than what comes to pass frequently; and
-custom brings about the fact that one judges in this way and the other
-in that way. Custom is thus made a circumstance which also permits us
-to say that things appear so and so to us, but not universally and
-generally that they are so.[204] When men say of any particular things
-that “this is so,” circumstances may be instanced in which the opposite
-predicate is applicable to them also. If, for example, we remain at
-the abstraction of the man, does it really signify whether or not we
-have a prince?—No. States?—No. A republic?—No, and so on, for they are
-here and not there.
-
-k. The tenth trope mainly concerns ethics and is related to manners,
-customs and laws. What is moral and legal is likewise not such; for
-what is here considered to be right is elsewhere held to be wrong. The
-attitude of Scepticism in this regard is to show that the opposite
-of what is maintained as valid law holds equally good. As regards
-the ordinary understanding respecting the validity of this and that
-maxim, _e.g._ that the son has to pay the debts of his father, the
-ultimate and indeed only ground lies in its being said that this is
-true in its immediacy, for it holds good as law or custom. As against
-this the Sceptics likewise prove the opposite, saying for instance,
-that the son has, indeed, to undertake the debts of the father by the
-law of Rhodes; but in Rome he does not require to do so, if he has
-renounced his claim on the paternal goods.[205] As in the existence
-of what is determined, which is held to be true because it is, the
-opposite is shown to exist; so in the case of laws, if their ground
-is that they are in force, their opposite can be demonstrated. The
-natural man has no consciousness of the presence of opposites; he lives
-quite unconsciously in his own particular way, in conformity with the
-morality of his town, without ever having reflected on the fact that he
-practises this morality. If he then comes into a foreign land, he is
-much surprised, for through encountering the opposite he for the first
-time experiences the fact that he has these customs, and he immediately
-arrives at uncertainty as to whether his point of view or the opposite
-is wrong. For the opposite of what held good to him holds equally good,
-and he does not possess any further ground for his practice; so that
-since the one holds good equally with the other, neither holds good.
-
-We now see in these modes that, properly speaking, they are not logical
-modes at all, nor have they to do with the Notion, for they proceed
-directly against empiricism. Something is by immediate certainty given
-out as being true, the opposite of this last is from some other point
-of view demonstrated to be equally true, and thus its other-being is
-set forth as valid. The different modes in which the non-validity of
-the first and the validity of the other-being relate to one another,
-are ranged under the above heads. If we now classify these ten tropes
-in conformity with the plan indicated above by Sextus (p. 347), we find
-in the first four tropes the dissimilarity of the object to depend on
-the judging subject, because that which judges is either the animal or
-the man or one of his senses or particular dispositions in him. Or the
-dissimilarity depends on the object, and here we come to the seventh
-and tenth tropes, since first the amount makes a thing into something
-quite different, and then the code of morals in different places makes
-itself the only absolute, excluding and prohibiting any other. The
-fifth, sixth, eighth and ninth tropes finally deal with a union of
-both sides, or these all together contain the relationship; this is a
-demonstration that the object does not present itself in itself, but in
-relation to something else.
-
-From content and form we see in these modes their early origin; for
-the content, which has only to deal with Being, shows its change only,
-takes up only the variability of its manifestation, without showing its
-contradiction in itself, _i.e._ in its Notion. But in form they show
-an unpractised thought, which does not yet bring the whole of these
-examples under their universal points of view, as is done by Sextus,
-or which places the universal, relativity, alongside of its particular
-modes. On account of their dulness we are not accustomed to lay great
-stress on such methods, nor esteem them of any value; but, in fact, as
-against the dogmatism of the common human understanding they are quite
-valid. This last says directly, “This is so because it is so,” taking
-experience as authority. Now through these modes this understanding
-will be shown that its belief has contingencies and differences within
-it, which at one time present a thing in this way and at another time
-in that way; and thereby it will be made aware that it itself, or
-another subject, with equal immediacy and on the same ground (on none
-at all), says: “It is not so, for it really is the opposite,” Thus the
-signification of these tropes has still its value. Should faith or
-right be founded on a feeling, this feeling is in me, and then others
-may say: “It is not in me.” If one person’s tastes are to be accepted
-as authoritative, it is not difficult to demonstrate that another
-person’s tastes are utterly opposite, but Being is thereby degraded
-into seeming, for in every assurance such as that, the opposite holds
-equally good.
-
-
-2. THE LATER TROPES.
-
-The five other sceptical tropes have an entirely different character,
-and it is at once evident that they indicate quite another point of
-view and degree of culture as regards philosophic thought; for they
-pertain more to thinking reflection, and contain the dialectic which
-the determinate Notion has within it. Sextus Empiricus[206] sets them
-forth as follows:—
-
-a. The first trope is the diversitude in opinions (ἀπὸ τῆς διαφωνίας),
-and that not among animals and men, but expressly among philosophers;
-of this matter we have just spoken above (pp. 349, 350). Sextus, and
-an Epicurean quoted by Cicero (Vol. I. p. 16), adduce the manifold
-nature of dogmas, and from this the conclusion is drawn that the one
-has just as much support as the other. Philosophers and others still
-make copious use of this sceptical trope, which is consequently in
-great favour: on account of the diversitude in philosophies, they
-say, Philosophy has no value, and truth is unattainable because men
-have thought about it in ways so contradictory. This diversitude
-in philosophic opinion is said to be an invincible weapon against
-Philosophy; but the category of difference is very barren, and we
-have said in the introduction (Vol. I. pp. 17-19) how it is to be
-understood. The Idea of Philosophy is to all philosophers one and the
-same, even if they themselves are not aware of it; but those who speak
-so much of this diversity know as little about it. The true difference
-is not a substantial one, but a difference in the different stages
-of development; and if the difference implies a one-sided view, as
-it does with the Stoics, Epicureans, and Sceptics, in their totality
-undoubtedly we first reach truth.
-
-b. A very important trope is that of failing into an infinite
-progression (ἡ εἰς ἄπειρον ἔκπτωσις); by it the Sceptics show that the
-reason which is brought forward for an assertion itself again requires
-a reason, and this again another, and so on into infinitude; from this
-suspension of judgment thus likewise follows, for there is nothing
-which can furnish a solid foundation. Consequently no permanent ground
-can be pointed out, for each continues to press further and further
-back, and yet finally a cessation must be made. In more recent times
-many have plumed themselves on this trope, and, in fact, it is as
-regards the understanding and the so-called syllogism (_supra_, pp.
-222, 223), a trope of great force. For if deduction from reasons is
-made the power of knowledge, we must, on the other hand, remember that
-by so doing we have premises which are quite ungrounded.
-
-c. The trope of Relationship, the relativity of determinations (ὀ ἀπὸ
-τοῦ πρός τι), has already been found among those mentioned above (p.
-353). It is that what is maintained shows itself as it appears, partly
-merely in relation to the judging subject and partly to other things,
-but not as it is in itself by nature.
-
-d. The fourth trope is that of Pre-supposition (ὀ ἐξ ὑποθέσεως): “When
-the dogmatists see that they are thrown back into the infinite, they
-put forward something as principle which they do not prove, but wish to
-have conceded to them simply and without proof:” that is an axiom. If
-the dogmatist has the right to pre-suppose an axiom as unproved, the
-sceptic has equally the right, or, if we choose to say so, equally no
-right, to pre-suppose the opposite as unproved. One is as good as the
-other. Thus all definitions are pre-suppositions. For instance, Spinoza
-pre-supposes definitions of the infinite, of substance, of attribute,
-&c.; and the rest follows consistently from them. Nowadays men prefer
-to give assurances and speak of facts of consciousness.
-
-e. The last trope is that of Reciprocity (διάλληλος), or proof in a
-circle. “That which is dealt with is grounded on something which itself
-again requires something else as its ground; now that which has been
-said to be proved by it is used for this purpose, so that each is
-proved through the other.” When we would avoid infinite progression
-and the making of pre-suppositions, we use again that which was proved
-to prove its own proof. To the question, “What is the ground of the
-phenomenon?” the reply is “Power,” but this is itself merely deduced
-from the moments of the phenomenon.
-
-Now Sextus shows (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 15, §§ 169-177) in the following
-way that, speaking generally, all sceptical investigations pass into
-these five modes of reasoning; and from this it is likewise clear that
-Scepticism is not really a reasoning against anything from reasons
-which can be found, which quick-wittedness discovers in the particular
-object, but that it has a profound knowledge of the categories. (α)
-“The object before us is either one felt” (according to Epicurus),
-“or one thought” (according to the Stoics). “But however it may be
-determined, there always is a difference of opinion respecting it,”
-and specially of sophic opinions. This is the first trope. “For some
-believe what is felt and others what is thought to be alone the truth,”
-_i.e._ the criterion; “others, however, again accept partly what is
-thought and partly what is felt.” There consequently is a contradiction
-present here. “Now is it possible to harmonize this contradiction
-or not? If not, we must withhold our judgment. But if it is to be
-solved, the question is, ‘How shall we decide?’” What is to contain the
-criterion, the standard, the implicit? “Is what is felt to be judged
-by what is felt, or by what is thought?” (β) Either side, individually
-considered as the implicit, passes, according to the Sceptics, into
-the infinite; but this is a description which must necessarily be
-proved on its own account. “If what is felt is to be judged by what is
-felt, it is allowed (since feeling is in question) that this sensation
-requires another sensation as its reason;” for the conviction of its
-truth is not without contradiction. “But if that which constitutes the
-reason is again a feeling, that which is said to be a reason must have
-a reason just as much; thus we go on into infinitude”—and here we have
-the second trope. The case is, however, similar if what is thought is
-the criterion, or if the implicit is made to rest on it. “If to what
-is thought is given the power of judging what is felt, this likewise,
-since it is that respecting which no harmony prevails, requires another
-as its ground. This reason is, however, something thought likewise, and
-it again requires a reason; thus this, too, passes into the infinite.”
-From effect men thus reach cause; nevertheless this too is not
-original, but is itself an effect; and so on. But if men thus progress
-into infinitude, they have no first original ground to stand on, for
-what is accepted as first cause is itself merely effect; and since they
-merely progress continually, it is implied that no ultimate is posited.
-The false belief that this progression is a true category, is also to
-be found in Kant and Fichte; but there is really no true ultimate,
-or, what is the same, no true first. The understanding represents
-infinite progression as something great; but its contradiction is that
-men speak of a first cause and it is then shown that it is only an
-effect. Men only attain to the contradiction and constant repetition
-of the same, but not to the solution of it, and consequently to the
-true _prius_. (γ) But should this endless progression not satisfy
-us—which the Sceptics indeed perceived—and therefore have to be put
-a stop to, this may happen by what is or what is felt having its
-foundation in thought, and, on the other hand, by likewise taking for
-the foundation of thought that which is felt. In this way each would be
-founded without there having been a progression into infinitude; but
-then that which founds would also be that which is founded, and there
-would merely be a passing from one to the other. Thus, in the third
-place, this falls into the trope of Reciprocity, in which, however,
-there is no more than there was before any true foundation. For in
-it each merely exists through the other, neither is really set forth
-absolutely, but each is the implicit only for the other, and this is
-self-abrogation. (δ) But if this is avoided by an unproved axiom which
-is taken as an implicit fact, a first and absolute ground, this way
-of arguing falls into the mode of Pre-supposition—the fourth trope.
-But if an assumption such as this were to be allowed, it would also be
-legitimate for anyone to assume the contrary. Thus against the absolute
-assertion of idealism, “The Absolute is the I,” it is with equal force
-maintained that “The Absolute is existence.” The one man says in the
-immediate certainty of himself: “I am absolute to myself;” another man
-likewise in certainty of himself says, “It is absolutely certain to
-me that things exist.” Idealism did not prove the former, nor did it
-destroy the latter; it takes its stand alongside of it, and only bases
-its assertions on its own principle. Everything, however, then, comes
-round to this, that because the ‘I’ is absolute, the ‘not-I’ cannot
-be absolute. On the other hand it may be said as justly: “Because the
-thing is absolute, the ‘I’ cannot be absolute.” If it is legitimate,
-Sextus further says, immediately to pre-suppose something as unproved,
-it is absurd to pre-suppose anything else as proof of that on whose
-behalf it is pre-supposed; we only require to posit straightway the
-implicit existence of that which is in question. But as it is absurd
-to do so, so also is the other absurd. Men set to work in the finite
-sciences in a similar way. But when, as in a dogmatism like this, a
-man asserts his right of pre-supposing something, every other man has
-equally the right of pre-supposing something. Consequently the modern
-immediate revelation of the subject now appears. It does no good for
-any man to affirm, for example, that he finds in his consciousness that
-God exists; since anyone has the right to say that he finds in his
-consciousness that God does not exist. In modern times men have not got
-very far with this immediate knowledge—perhaps not further than the
-ancients, (ε) In the fifth place everything perceived has, according
-to the trope of Relationship, a relation to something else, to what
-perceives; its Notion is just that of being for another. The same
-holds good with what is thought; as the universal object of thought it
-likewise has the form of being something for another.
-
-If we sum this up in a general way, the determinate, whether it is
-existent or thought, is (α) really, as determinate, the negative of
-another, _i.e._ it is related to another and exists for the same, and
-is thus in relationship; in this everything is really exhausted. (β) In
-this relationship to another this last, posited as its universality,
-is its reason; but this reason, as opposed to that which is proved,
-is itself a determinate, and consequently has its reality only in
-what is proved. And for the reason that I really again consider this
-universal as a determinate, it is conditioned by another like the one
-that goes before, and so on into infinity. (γ) In order that this
-determinate for which, as in consciousness, the other is, should have
-existence, this other must exist, for in this it has its reality;
-and because this its object is likewise for another, they mutually
-condition each other and are mediated through one another, neither
-being self-existent. And if the universal as the basis has its reality
-in the existent, and this existent its reality in the universal, this
-forms the Reciprocity whereby what in themselves are opposites mutually
-establish one another. (δ) But what is implicit is something which is
-not mediated through another; as the immediate, that is because it is,
-it is, however, an Hypothesis. (ε) Now if this determinate is taken as
-pre-supposed, so also may another be. Or we might say more shortly that
-the deficiency in all metaphysics of the understanding lies partly in
-(α) the Demonstration, by which it falls into the infinite; and partly
-in (β) the Hypotheses, which constitute an immediate knowledge.
-
-These tropes thus form an effective weapon against the philosophy
-of the ordinary understanding, and the Sceptics directed them with
-great acuteness, sometimes against the common acceptation of things,
-and sometimes against principles of philosophic reflection. These
-sceptical tropes, in fact, concern that which is called a dogmatic
-philosophy—not in the sense of its having a positive content, but as
-asserting something determinate as the absolute; and in accordance
-with its nature, such a philosophy must display itself in all these
-forms. To the Sceptics, the Notion of dogmatic philosophy is in
-effect that something is asserted as the implicit; it is thus opposed
-to idealism by the fact of its maintaining that an existence is the
-absolute. But there is a misunderstanding or a formal understanding in
-considering that all philosophy that is not Scepticism is Dogmatism.
-Dogmatism, as the Sceptics quite correctly describe it, consists in
-the assertion that something determinate, such as ‘I’ or ‘Being,’
-‘Thought’ or ‘Sensation,’ is the truth. In the talk about idealism,
-to which dogmatism has been opposed, just as many mistakes have
-been made, and misunderstandings taken place. To the criticism which
-knows no implicit, nothing absolute, all knowledge of implicit
-existence as such is held to be dogmatism, while it is the most wanton
-dogmatism of all, because it maintains that the ‘I,’ the unity of
-self-consciousness, is opposed to Being, is in and for itself, and
-that the implicit in the outside world is likewise so, and therefore
-that the two absolutely cannot come together. By idealism that is
-likewise held to be dogmatism in which, as is the case in Plato and
-Spinoza, the absolute has been made the unity of self-consciousness and
-existence, and not self-consciousness opposed to existence. Speculative
-philosophy thus, indeed, asserts, but does not assert a determinate;
-or it cannot express its truth in the simple form of a proposition,
-although Philosophy is often falsely understood as pre-supposing an
-original principle from which all others are to be deduced. But though
-its principle can be given the form of a proposition, to the Idea what
-pertains to the proposition as such is not essential, and the content
-is of such a nature that it really abrogates this immediate existence,
-as we find with the Academicians. As a matter of fact, that which is
-now called a proposition, absolutely requires a mediation or a ground;
-for it is an immediate determinate that has another proposition in
-opposition to it, which last is again of a similar nature, and so on
-into infinitude. Consequently, each, as being a proposition, is the
-union of two moments between which there is an inherent difference,
-and whose union has to be mediated. Now dogmatic philosophy, which has
-this way of representing one principle in a determinate proposition as
-a fundamental principle, believes that it is therefore universal, and
-that the other is in subordination to it. And undoubtedly this is so.
-But at the same time, this its determinateness rests in the fact that
-it is _only_ universal; hence such a principle is always conditioned,
-and consequently contains within it a destructive dialectic.
-
-As against all these dogmatic philosophies, such criticism and idealism
-not excepted, the sceptical tropes possess the negative capacity of
-demonstrating that what the former maintain to be the implicit is not
-really so. For implicitude such as this is a determinate, and cannot
-resist negativity, its abrogation. To Scepticism is due the honour
-of having obtained this knowledge of the negative, and of having so
-definitely thought out the forms of negativity. Scepticism does not
-operate by bringing forward what is called a difficulty, a possibility
-of representing the matter otherwise; that would merely indicate some
-sort of fancy which is contingent as regards this asserted knowledge.
-Scepticism is not an empiric matter such as this, for it contains a
-scientific aim, its tropes turn on the Notion, the very essence of
-determinateness, and are exhaustive as regards the determinate. In
-these moments Scepticism desires to assert itself, and the Sceptic
-therein recognizes the fancied greatness of his individuality; these
-tropes prove a more cultivated dialectic knowledge in the process of
-argumentation than is found in ordinary logic, the logic of the Stoics,
-or the canon of Epicurus. These tropes are necessary contradictions
-into which the understanding falls; even in our time progression into
-infinitude and pre-supposition (immediate knowledge) are particularly
-common (_supra_, p. 363).
-
-Now, speaking generally, this is the method of Scepticism, and it
-is most important. Because the sceptical conscience demonstrates
-that in all that is immediately accepted there is nothing secure and
-absolute, the Sceptics have taken in hand all particular determinations
-of the individual sciences, and have shown that they are not fixed.
-The further details of this application to the different sciences do
-not concern us here: this far-seeing power of abstraction is also
-requisite in order to recognize these determinations of negation or
-of opposition everywhere present in all concrete matter, and in all
-that is thought, and to find in this determinate its limits. Sextus,
-for example, takes up the individual sciences concretely, thereby
-demonstrating much capacity for abstraction, and he shows in all their
-determinations the opposite of themselves. Thus he sets the definitions
-of mathematics against one another, and that not externally, but as
-they are in themselves; he lays hold of the fact (adv. Math. III.
-20-22) that there is said to be a point, space, line, surface, one,
-&c. We unquestioningly allow the point to rank as a simple unit in
-space, according to which it has no dimension; but if it has no
-dimension, it is not in space, and therefore is no longer a point. On
-the one hand it is the negation of space, and, on the other, inasmuch
-as it is the limit of space, it touches space. Thus this negation of
-space participates in space, itself occupies space, and thus it is in
-itself null, but at the same time it is also in itself a dialectic.
-Scepticism has thus also treated of ideas which are, properly speaking,
-speculative, and demonstrated their importance; for the demonstration
-of the contradiction in the finite is an essential point in the
-speculatively philosophic method.
-
-The two formal moments in this sceptical culture are firstly the power
-of consciousness to go back from itself, and to take as its object the
-whole that is present, itself and its operation included. The second
-moment is to grasp the form in which a proposition, with whose content
-our consciousness is in any way occupied, exists. An undeveloped
-consciousness, on the other hand, usually knows nothing of what is
-present in addition to the content. For instance, in the judgment “This
-thing is one,” attention is paid only to the one and the thing, and
-not to the circumstance that here something, a determinate, is related
-to the one. But this relation is the essential, and the form of the
-determinate; it is that whereby this house which is an individual,
-makes itself one with the universal that is different from it. It is
-this logical element, _i.e._ the essential element, that Scepticism
-brings to consciousness, and on this it depends; an example of this is
-number, the one, as the hypothetical basis of arithmetic. Scepticism
-does not attempt to give the thing, nor does it dispute as to whether
-it is thus or thus, but whether the thing itself is something; it
-grasps the essence of what is expressed, and lays hold of the whole
-principle of the assertion. As to God, for example, the Sceptics do not
-inquire whether He has such and such qualities, but turn to what is
-most inward, to what lies at the ground of this conception, and they
-ask whether this has reality. “Since we do not know the reality of
-God,” says Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. III. c. I, § 4), “we shall not be able
-to know and perceive His qualities.” Likewise in the preceding books
-(II. c. 4, sqq.), inquiry is made as to whether the criterion of truth
-as fixed by the understanding is anything, whether we know the thing in
-itself, or whether the ‘I’ is to itself the only absolute certainty.
-This is the way to penetrate to reality.
-
-In these ways the operations of Scepticism are undoubtedly directed
-against the finite. But however much force these moments of its
-negative dialectic may have against the properly-speaking dogmatic
-knowledge of the understanding, its attacks against the true infinite
-of the speculative Idea are most feeble and unsatisfactory. For this
-last is in its nature nothing finite or determinate, it has not the
-one-sided character which pertains to the proposition, for it has the
-absolute negative in itself; in itself it is round, it contains this
-determinate and its opposite in their ideality in itself. In so far as
-this Idea, as the unity of these opposites, is itself again outwardly
-a determinate, it stands exposed to the power of the negative; indeed
-its nature and reality is just to move continually on, so that as
-determinate it again places itself in unity with the determinates
-opposed to it, and thus organizes itself into a whole whose
-starting-point again coincides with the final result. This identity is
-quite different from that of the understanding; the object as concrete
-in itself, is, at the same time, opposed to itself; but the dialectic
-solution of this finite and other is likewise already contained in the
-speculative, without Scepticism having first had to demonstrate this;
-for the rational, as comprehended, does, as regards the determinate,
-just what Scepticism tries to do. However, if Scepticism attempts to
-deal with this properly speculative element, it can in no way lay
-hold of it, nor make any progress except by doing violence to the
-speculative itself; thus the method of its procedure against the
-rational is this, that it makes the latter into a determinate, and
-always first of all introduces into it a finite thought-determination
-or idea of relationship to which it adheres, but which is not really
-in the infinite at all; and then it argues against the same. That is
-to say it comprehends it falsely and then proceeds to contradict it.
-Or it first of all gives the infinite the itch in order to be able to
-scratch it. The Scepticism of modern times, with which for crudity of
-comprehension and false teaching the old cannot compare, is specially
-noteworthy in this respect. Even now what is speculative is transformed
-into something crude; it is possible to remain faithful to the letter,
-and yet to pervert the whole matter, because the identity of the
-determinate has been carried over to the speculative. What here appears
-to be most natural and impartial is to have an investigation made of
-what the principle of a speculative philosophy is; its essential nature
-seems to be expressed thereby, and nothing is apparently added or
-imputed to it, nor does any change appear to be effected in it. Now,
-here, according to the conception of the non-speculative sciences,
-it is placed in this dilemma: the principle is either an unproved
-hypothesis or demands a proof which in turn implies the principle. The
-proof that is demanded of this principle itself pre-supposes something
-else, such as the logical laws of proof; these rules of logic are,
-however, themselves propositions such as required to be proved; and
-so it goes on into infinitude, if an absolute hypothesis to which
-another can be opposed is not made (_supra_, p. 362). But these forms
-of proposition, of consecutive proof, &c., do not in this form apply to
-what is speculative (_supra_, p. 364) as though the proposition were
-before us here, and the proof were something separate from it there;
-for in this case the proof comes within the proposition. The Notion is
-a self-movement, and not, as in a proposition, a desire to rest; nor is
-it true that the proof brings forward another ground or middle term and
-is another movement; for it has this movement in itself.
-
-Sextus Empiricus (adv. Math. VII., 310-312), for example, thus
-reaches the speculative Idea regarding reason, which, as the thought
-of thought, comprehends itself, and is thus in its freedom at home
-with itself. We saw this (pp. 147-151) with Aristotle. In order to
-refute this idea, Sextus argues in the following way: “The reason that
-comprehends is either the whole or it is only a part.” But to know
-the speculative it is requisite that there should be, besides the
-‘either ... or,’ a third; this last is ‘both ... and’ and ‘neither
-... nor.’ “If reason as the comprehending is the whole, nothing else
-remains to be comprehended. If the comprehending reason is, however,
-only a part which comprehends itself, this part again, as that which
-comprehends, either is the whole (and in that case again nothing at
-all remains to be comprehended), or else, supposing what comprehends
-to be a part in the sense that what is comprehended is the other part,
-that which comprehends does not comprehend itself,” &c. In the first
-place, however, it is clear that by arguing thus nothing is shown
-further than the fact that here Scepticism in the first place brings
-into the relationship of thought thinking about thought, the very
-superficial category of the relationship of the whole and the parts,
-as understood by the ordinary understanding, which last is not found
-in that Idea, although as regards finite things the whole is simply
-composed of all the parts, and these parts constitute the whole, the
-parts and the whole being consequently identical. But the relationship
-of whole and part is not a relationship of reason to itself, being
-much too unimportant, and quite unworthy of being brought into the
-speculative Idea. In the second place Scepticism is wrong in allowing
-this relationship to hold good immediately, as it does in the ordinary
-and arid conception, where we make no objection to it. When reflection
-speaks of a whole, there is for it beyond this nothing else remaining.
-But the whole is just the being opposed to itself. On the one hand
-it is as whole simply identical with its parts, and, on the other
-hand, the parts are identical with the whole, since they together
-constitute the whole. The self-comprehension of reason is just like
-the comprehension by the whole of all its parts, if it is taken in
-its real speculative significance; and only in this sense could this
-relationship be dealt with here. But in the sense implied by Sextus,
-that there is nothing except the whole, the two sides, the whole and
-the parts, remain in mutual, isolated opposition; in the region of
-speculation the two indeed are different, but they are likewise not
-different, for the difference is ideal. Outside of the whole there
-thus undoubtedly remains another, namely itself as the manifold of
-its parts. The whole argument thus rests upon the fact that a foreign
-determination is first of all brought within the Idea, and then
-arguments against the Idea are brought forward, after it has been thus
-corrupted by the isolation of a one-sided determination unaccompanied
-by the other moment of the determination. The case is similar when it
-is said; “Objectivity and subjectivity are different, and thus their
-unity cannot be expressed.” It is indeed maintained that the words
-are literally adhered to; but even as contained in these words, the
-determination is one-sided, and the other also pertains to it. Hence
-this difference is not what remains good, but what has to be abrogated.
-
-We may perhaps have said enough about the scientific nature of
-Scepticism, and we have concluded therewith the second section of Greek
-philosophy. The general point of view adopted by self-consciousness in
-this second period, the attainment of the freedom of self-consciousness
-through thought, is common to all these philosophies. In Scepticism we
-now find that reason has got so far that all that is objective, whether
-of Being or of the universal, has disappeared for self-consciousness.
-The abyss of the self-consciousness of pure thought has swallowed up
-everything, and made entirely clear the basis of thought. It not only
-has comprehended thought and outside of it a universe in its entirety,
-but the result, positively expressed, is that self-consciousness itself
-is reality. External objectivity is not an objective existence nor
-a universal thought; for it merely is the fact that the individual
-consciousness exists, and that it is universal. But though for us
-there is an object, yet this is for it no object, and thus it still
-has itself the mode of objectivity. Scepticism deduces no result, nor
-does it express its negation as anything positive. But the positive
-is in no way different from the simple; or if Scepticism aims at the
-disappearance of all that is universal, its condition, as immovability
-of spirit, is itself in fact this universal, simple, self-identical—but
-a universality (or a Being) which is the universality of the individual
-consciousness. Sceptical self-consciousness, however, is this divided
-consciousness to which on the one hand motion is a confusion of its
-content; it is this movement which annuls for itself all things, in
-which what is offered to it is quite contingent and indifferent; it
-acts according to laws which are not held by it to be true, and is a
-perfectly empiric existence. On another side its simple thought is
-the immovability of self-identity, but its reality, its unity with
-itself is something that is perfectly empty, and the actual filling in
-is any content that one chooses. As this simplicity, and at the same
-time pure confusion, Scepticism is in fact the wholly self-abrogating
-contradiction. For in it the mind has got so far as to immerse
-itself in itself as that which thinks; now it can comprehend itself
-in the consciousness of its infinitude as the ultimate. In this way
-Scepticism flourishes in the Roman world, because, as we saw (p.
-281), in this external, dead abstraction of the Roman principle (in
-the principle of Republicanism and imperial Despotism) the spirit
-has flown from an existence here and now, that could give it no
-satisfaction, into intellectuality. Then because here the mind can only
-seek reconciliation and eudæmonism inwardly through cultured thought,
-and the whole aim of the world is merely the satisfaction of the
-individual, good can only be brought forth as individual work in each
-particular case. Under the Roman emperors we certainly find famous men,
-principally Stoics, such as Marcus Aurelius and others; they, however,
-only considered the satisfaction of their individual selves, and did
-not attain to the thought of giving rationality to actuality through
-institutions, laws and constitutions. This solitude of mind within
-itself is then truly Philosophy; but the thought is abstractly at home
-with itself as dead rigidity, and as to outward things it is passive.
-If it moves it only moves while bearing with it a contempt of all
-distinctions. Scepticism thus belongs to the decay both of Philosophy
-and of the world.
-
-The stage next reached by self-consciousness is that it receives
-a consciousness respecting that which it has thus become, or its
-essential nature becomes its object. Self-consciousness is to itself
-simple essence; there is for it no longer any other reality than
-this, which its self-consciousness is. In Scepticism this reality is
-not yet an object to it, for to it its object is merely confusion.
-Because it is consciousness, something is for it; in this opposition
-only the vanishing content is for the sceptical consciousness, without
-its having been comprehended in its simple permanence. Its truth,
-however, is its immersion in self-consciousness, and the fact of
-self-consciousness becoming an object to itself. Thus reality has
-indeed the form of a universal in existence or in thought, but in
-this its self-consciousness is really not a foreign thing as it is
-in Scepticism. In the first place it is not simple as immediate and
-merely existent, a complete ‘other,’ as when we speak of the soul being
-simple; for this last is the simple negative that turns back out of
-movement, out of difference, as the universal, into itself. In the
-second place this universal power that expresses that “I am at home
-with myself,” has likewise the significance of the Being, which, as
-objective reality, has a permanence for consciousness, and does not
-merely, as with the Sceptics, disappear; for reason in it alone knows
-how to possess and to find itself. This inwardness of mind at home with
-itself has built in itself an ideal world, has laid the foundation
-and groundwork of the intellectual world, of a kingdom of God which
-has come down into actuality and is in unity with it, and this is the
-standpoint of the Alexandrian philosophy.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION THREE
-
-THIRD PERIOD: THE NEO-PLATONISTS.
-
-
-SINCE Scepticism is the annulling of the opposites which in Stoicism
-and Epicureanism were accepted as the universal principles from which
-all other opposites took their rise, it likewise is the unity in which
-these opposites are found as ideal determinations, so that the Idea
-must now come into consciousness as concrete in itself. With this
-third development, which is the concrete result of all that has gone
-before, an entirely new epoch begins. Philosophy is now on quite a
-different footing, since, with the rejection of the criterion for
-subjective knowledge, finite principles in general also disappear;
-for it is with these that the criterion has to do. This then is the
-form which Philosophy takes with the Neo-Platonists, and which is
-closely connected with the revolution which was caused in the world
-by Christianity. The last stage which we reached—that subjective
-contentment and return of self-consciousness into itself which is
-attained by the renunciation of all that is fixed and objective, by
-flight into the pure, infinite abstraction in itself, by the absolute
-dearth of all determinate content—this stage had come to perfection in
-Scepticism, although the Stoic and Epicurean systems have the same end
-in view. But with this complete entering into and abiding within itself
-of infinite subjectivity, Philosophy had reached the standpoint at
-which self-consciousness knew itself in its thought to be the Absolute
-(Vol. II. p. 372); and since Philosophy now rejected the subjective and
-finite attitude of self-consciousness, and its manner of distinguishing
-itself from an unmeaning external object, it comprehended in itself the
-difference, and perfected the truth into an intelligible world. The
-consciousness of this, expressing itself as it did in the spirit of the
-world, now constitutes the object of Philosophy; it was principally
-brought about by employing and reasoning from Platonic conceptions and
-expressions, but also by making use of those of the Aristotelians and
-Pythagoreans.
-
-The idea which had now come home to men that absolute existence is
-nothing alien to self-consciousness, that nothing really exists for it
-in which self-consciousness is not itself immediately present—this is
-the principle which is now found as the universal of the world-spirit,
-as the universal belief and knowledge of all men; at once it changes
-the world’s whole aspect, destroying all that went before, and bringing
-about a regeneration of the world. The manifold forms which this
-knowledge assumes do not belong to the history of Philosophy, but to
-the history of consciousness and culture. This principle appears as a
-universal principle of justice, by which the individual man, in virtue
-of his existence, has absolute value as a universal being recognized
-by all. Thus, as far as external politics are concerned, this is the
-period of the development of private rights relating to the property
-of individual persons. But the character of Roman culture, under
-which this form of philosophy falls, was at the same time abstract
-universality (Vol. II. p. 235), in the lifelessness of which all
-characteristic poetry and philosophy, and all citizen life perished.
-Cicero, for example, shows, as few philosophers do, an utter want of
-appreciation of the state of affairs in his country. Thus the world has
-in its existence separated into two parts; on the one side we have the
-atoms, private individuals, and on the other side a bond connecting
-them, though only externally, which, as power, had been relegated to
-one subject, the emperor. The Roman power is thus the real Scepticism.
-In the domain of thought we find an exact counterpart to this species
-of abstract universality, which, as perfect despotism, is in the
-decline of national life directly connected with the isolation of the
-atom, showing itself as the withdrawal into the aims and interests of
-private life.
-
-It is at this point that mind once more rises above the ruin, and again
-goes forth from its subjectivity to the objective, but at the same time
-to an intellectual objectivity, which does not appear in the outward
-form of individual objects, nor in the form of duties and individual
-morality, but which, as absolute objectivity, is torn of mind and of
-the veritable truth. Or, in other words, we see here on the one hand
-the return to God, on the other hand the manifestation of God, as He
-comes before the human mind absolutely in His truth. This forms the
-transition to the mind’s restoration, by the fact of thought, which had
-conceived itself only subjectively, now becoming objective to itself.
-Thus in the Roman world the necessity became more and more keenly felt
-of forsaking the evil present, this ungodly, unrighteous, immoral
-world, and withdrawing into mind, in order here to seek what there
-no longer can be found. For in the Greek world the joy of spiritual
-activity has flown away, and sorrow for the breach that has been made
-has taken its place. These philosophies are thus not only moments in
-the development of reason, but also in that of humanity; they are forms
-in which the whole condition of the world expresses itself through
-thought.
-
-But in other forms some measure of contempt for nature here began to
-show itself, inasmuch as nature is no longer anything for itself,
-seeing that her powers are merely the servants of man, who, like a
-magician, can make them yield obedience, and be subservient to his
-wishes. Up to this time oracles had been given through the medium of
-trees, animals, &c., in which divine knowledge, as knowledge of the
-eternal, was not distinguished from knowledge of the contingent. Now it
-no longer is the gods that work their wonders, but men, who, setting
-at defiance the necessities of nature, bring about in the same that
-which is inconsistent with nature as such. To this belief in miracle,
-which is at the same time disbelief in present nature, there is thus
-allied a disbelief in the past, or a disbelief that history was just
-what it was. All the actual history and mythology of Romans, Greeks,
-Jews, even single words and letters, receive a different meaning; they
-are inwardly broken asunder, having an inner significance which is
-their essence, and an empty literal meaning, which is their appearance.
-Mankind living in actuality have here forgotten altogether how to
-see and to hear, and have indeed lost all their understanding of the
-present. Sensuous truth is no longer accepted by them; they constantly
-deceive us, for they are incapable of comprehending what is real, since
-it has lost all meaning for their minds. Others forsake the world,
-because in it they can now find nothing, the real they discover in
-themselves alone. As all the gods meet together in one Pantheon, so
-all religions rush into one, all modes of representation are absorbed
-in one; it is this, that self-consciousness—an actual human being—is
-absolute existence. It is to Rome that all these mysterious cults
-throng, but the real liberation of the spirit appeared in Christianity,
-for it is therein that its true nature is reached. Now it is revealed
-to man what absolute reality is; it is a man, but not yet Man or
-self-consciousness in general.
-
-The one form of this principle is therefore the infinitude in itself
-of the consciousness that knows itself, distinguishes itself in itself,
-but yet remains in perfectly transparent unity with itself; and only
-as this concretely self-determining thought has mind any meaning. An
-actual self-consciousness is the fact that the Absolute is now known
-in the form of self-consciousness, so that the determinations of the
-former are manifested in all the forms of the latter; this sphere does
-not properly belong to Philosophy, but is the sphere of Religion,
-which knows God in this particular human being. This knowledge, that
-self-consciousness is absolute reality, or that absolute reality is
-self-consciousness, is the World-spirit. It is this knowledge, but
-knows this knowledge not; it has merely an intuition of it, or knows
-it only immediately, not in thought. Knowing it only immediately means
-that to the World-spirit this reality as spirit is doubtless absolute
-self-consciousness, but in existent immediacy it is an individual man.
-It is this individual man, who has lived at a particular time and in
-a particular place, and not the Notion of self-consciousness, that is
-for the World-spirit absolute spirit: or self-consciousness is not yet
-known nor comprehended. As an immediacy of thought, absolute reality is
-immediate in self-consciousness, or only like an inward intuition, in
-the same way that we have pictures present in our mind.
-
-The other form is that this concrete is grasped in a more abstract way,
-as the pure identity of thought, and thus there is lost to thought the
-point of self-hood pertaining to the concrete. This aspect, expressed
-as absolute reality in the form of mind in conceiving thought, but
-yet as in some measure existing immediately in self-consciousness as
-absolute reality, comes under Philosophy. But spirit, if complete in
-every aspect, must have also the natural aspect, which in this form of
-philosophy is still lacking. Now as in Christianity universal history
-makes this advance of mind in the consciousness of itself, so in the
-innermost mysteries of the same, in Philosophy, this same change must
-just as inevitably take place; in fact, Philosophy in her further
-development does nothing else than grasp this Idea of absolute reality,
-which in Christianity is merely shadowed forth. Absolute Spirit implies
-eternal self-identical existence that is transformed into another
-and knows this to be itself; the unchangeable, which is unchangeable
-in as far as it always, from being something different, returns into
-itself. It signifies the sceptical movement of consciousness, but in
-such a form that the transient objective element at the same time
-remains permanent, or in its permanence has the signification of
-self-consciousness.
-
-In the Christian religion this spiritual reality was first of all
-represented as indicating that eternal reality becomes for itself
-something different, that it creates the world, which is posited purely
-as something different. To this there is added later this moment, that
-the other element in itself is not anything different from eternal
-reality, but that eternal reality manifests itself therein. In the
-third place there is implied the identity of the other and eternal
-reality, Spirit, the return of the other into the first: and the other
-is here to be understood as not only the other at that point where
-eternal reality manifested itself, but as the other in a universal
-sense. The world recognizes itself in this absolute reality which
-becomes manifest; it is the world, therefore, which has returned into
-reality; and spirit is universal Spirit. But since this Idea of spirit
-appeared to the Christians first of all in the bare form of ordinary
-conception, God, the simple reality of the Jews, was for them beyond
-consciousness; such a God doubtless thinks, but He is not Thought, for
-He remains beyond reality, and He is only that which is distinguished
-from the world that our senses perceive. There likewise stands in
-opposition to the same an individual man—the moment of unity of the
-world and reality, and spirit, the universality of this unity, as a
-believing community, which possesses this unity only in the form of
-ordinary conception, but its reality in the hope of a future.
-
-The Idea in pure Thought—that God’s way of working is not external,
-as if He were a subject, and therefore that all this does not come to
-pass as a casual resolution and decree of God, to whom the thought
-of so acting happened to occur, but that God is this movement as
-the self-revealing moments of His essence, as His eternal necessity
-in Himself, which is not at all conditioned by chance—this we find
-expressed in the writings of philosophic or expressly Platonic Jews.
-The place where this point of view took its origin happens to be
-the country where East and West have met in conflict; for the free
-universality of the East and the determinateness of Europe, when
-intermingled, constitute Thought. With the Stoics the universality
-of thought has a place, but it is opposed to sensation, to external
-existence. Oriental universality is, on the contrary, entirely free;
-and the principle of universality, posited as particular, is Western
-Thought. In Alexandria more especially this form of philosophy was
-cultivated, but at the same time regard was had to the earlier
-development of thought, in which lie the partially concealed beginnings
-of the building up in thought of the concrete, which is now the point
-mainly regarded. Even in the Pythagorean philosophy we found difference
-present as the Triad; then in Plato we saw the simple Idea of spirit
-as the unity of indivisible substance and other-being, though it was
-only as a compound of both. That is the concrete, but only in simple
-moments, not in the comprehensive manner in which other-being is in
-general all reality of nature and of consciousness,—and the unity
-which has returned as this self-consciousness is not only a thought,
-but living God. With Aristotle, finally, the concrete is ἐνέργεια,
-Thought which is its own object, the concrete. Therefore although this
-philosophy is known as Neo-Pythagorean and Neo-Platonic, it may also
-be termed Neo-Aristotelian; for the Alexandrians studied Aristotle just
-as much as Plato, and valued both very highly, later on combining their
-philosophies in one unity.
-
-But we must have a clearer grasp of the difference between this point
-of view and the earlier. Already in the earlier philosophies we have
-seen, that νοῦς is the essence of the world, and similarly Aristotle
-comprehended the whole series of things endued with life and mind in
-such a way as to recognize the Notion to be the truth of these things.
-In the case of the Stoics this unity, this system, was most definitely
-brought forward, while Aristotle rather followed up the particulars.
-This unity of thought we saw among the Stoics more especially on the
-one side as the return of self-consciousness into itself, so that
-spirit through the purity of thought is independent in itself; on the
-other hand we have seen there an objectivity in which the λόγος became
-essentially the all-penetrating basis of the whole world. With the
-Stoics, however, this basis remained as substance only, and thus took
-on the form of Pantheism, for that is the first idea that we light
-on when we determine the universal to be the true. Pantheism is the
-beginning of the elevation of spirit, in that it conceives everything
-in the world to be a life of the Idea. For when self-consciousness
-emerges from itself, from its infinitude, from its thought directed on
-self, and turns to particular things, duties, relationships; or when
-thought, which thinks this universal substance, passes over from it to
-the particular, and makes the heavens, the stars, or man its object,
-it descends from the universal immediately into the particular, or
-immediately into the finite, since all these are finite forms. But
-the concrete is the universal which makes itself particular, and in
-this making of itself particular and finite yet remains eternally at
-home with itself. In Pantheism, on the contrary, the one universal
-substance merely makes itself finite, and thereby lowers itself. That
-is the mode of emanation, according to which the universal, in making
-itself the particular, or God in creating the world, by becoming
-particular becomes debased or deteriorated and sets a limit to Himself;
-so that this making of Himself finite is incompatible with any return
-into Himself. The same relation is also found in the mythology of the
-Greeks and Romans; the giving definiteness and form to God, who remains
-no empty abstraction, is a rendering finite of God, who thus becomes
-a mere work of art; but the Beautiful itself remains a finite form,
-which is not brought to such a point as to express the free Idea. The
-determination, the specialization, the reality of objectivity, must
-now be of such a nature that it shall be adequate to the absolute
-universal; the forms of the gods, as also natural forms and the forms
-which are known as duties, fail to be thus adequate.
-
-What is therefore now required is that the knowing mind, which thus
-out of objectivity returns into itself and its inwardness, should
-reconcile with itself the world which it has left, so that the world’s
-objectivity may of course be distinct from mind, yet adequate thereto.
-This concrete standpoint which, as it is that of the world, is also
-that of Philosophy, is the development of Mind, for it is requisite
-to Mind that it should not merely be pure thought, but that it should
-be thought which makes itself objective, and therein maintains itself
-and is at home with itself. The earlier efforts of thought towards
-objectivity constitute a passing into determinateness and finitude
-merely, and not into an objective world adequate to absolute existence.
-The universal standpoint of the Neo-Platonic or Alexandrian philosophy
-now is from the loss of the world to produce a world which in its
-outwardness shall still remain an inward world, and thus a world
-reconciled; and this is the world of spirituality, which here begins.
-Thus the fundamental Idea was Thought which is its own object, and
-which is therefore identical with its object, with what is thought; so
-that we have the one and the other, and the unity of both.
-
-This concrete Idea has again come to the front, and in the development
-of Christianity, as thought also penetrated there, it became known
-as the Trinity; and this Idea is absolute reality. This Idea did not
-develop directly from Plato and Aristotle, but took the circuitous
-path of Dogmatism. With the earlier thinkers it doubtless immediately
-emerged as supreme; but beside and beyond it appears the other content
-in addition, the riches of the thoughts of Mind and of Nature; and so
-it is conceived. Aristotle has thus comprehended the kingdom of Nature;
-and with Plato development is represented only in a loose multiplicity.
-But in order that the Idea should appear as the truth that encompasses
-and includes all within itself, it was requisite that this finite, this
-wider content of determinations which had been collected, should be
-comprehended on its finite side also, that is, in the finite form of
-a universal opposition. That was the function of Dogmatism, which was
-then dissolved by Scepticism. The dissolution of all that is particular
-and finite, which constitutes the essence of the latter, was not
-taken in hand by Plato and Aristotle, and therefore the Idea was not
-posited by them as all-inclusive. Now the contradiction is done away
-with, and Mind has attained to its negative rest. The affirmative, on
-the other hand, is the repose of mind in itself, and to this freedom
-from all that is particular Mind now proceeds. It is the knowledge of
-what Mind is in itself, after it has come to be reconciled in itself
-through the dissolution of all finality. This eternal rest of Mind in
-itself now constitutes its object; it is aware of the fact, and strives
-to determine and develop it further by thought. In this we likewise
-possess the principle of evolution, of free development; everything
-except Mind is only finite and transitory. When therefore Mind goes
-forth to the particular, the particular is determined as something
-plainly contained in this ideality, which Mind knows as something
-subject to itself. That is the affirmative result of sceptical
-philosophy. It is evident that, starting from this point of view, an
-utterly different opinion will be expressed. God, as absolute pure Mind
-in and for Himself, and His activity in Himself, are now the object.
-But God is no longer known as the Abstract, but as the Concrete in
-Himself, and this Concrete is nothing but Mind. God is living, the One
-and the Other and the unity of these distinct determinations; for the
-abstract is only the simple, but the living has difference in itself,
-and is yet therein at home with itself.
-
-Further, the following points have specially claimed the attention of
-Mind; firstly, that this consciousness which has become subjective
-makes its object the absolute as truth, placing this absolute outside
-of itself; or that it attains to faith in God, that God is now
-manifested, and reveals Himself, that is, exists for consciousness.
-The absolute, altogether universal, posited at the same time as
-objective, is God. Here comes in the relation of man to this his
-object, to absolute truth. This new standpoint, which from this time
-acquires an absolute interest, is therefore not a relation to external
-things, duties and the like; these are all determined, limited, they
-are not the all-embracing determination, as that is which has just
-been spoken of. In this relation the mere turning of the subject on
-himself, this talk of the wise man. in his one-sidedness, is likewise
-done away with. The same liberty, happiness, steadfastness, which were
-the aim of Epicureanism, Stoicism and Scepticism are doubtless still
-to be reached by the subject, but now this can only be brought about
-by turning to God, by giving heed to absolute truth, not by fleeing
-from the objective; so that by means of the objective itself, liberty
-and happiness are attained for the subject. This is the standpoint
-of reverencing and fearing God, so that by man’s turning to this his
-object, which stands before him free and firm, the object of the
-subject’s own freedom is attained.
-
-In the second place, there are contradictions herein contained which
-necessarily attract the attention of mind, and whose reconciliation
-is essential. If we adopt this one-sided position, God is on the one
-side, and man in his freedom is on the other. A freedom such as this,
-standing in contrast to the objective, a freedom in which man, as
-thinking self-consciousness, conceives as the absolute the relation of
-his pure inwardness to himself, is, however, only formally, and not
-concretely absolute. In so far then as the human will determines itself
-negatively towards the objective, we have the origin of sin, evil in
-contrast to the absolute Affirmative.
-
-A third essential point of interest is the form in which God must
-now be apprehended in general, for since it pertains essentially
-to the Notion of Mind to determine God as concrete, living God, it
-is indispensable that God should be thought of in relation to the
-world and to man. This relation to the world is then a relation to
-an ‘other,’ which thereby at first appears to be outside of God; but
-because this relation is _His_ activity, the fact of having this
-relation in Himself is a moment of Himself. Because the connection
-of God with the world is a determination in Himself, so the being
-another from the one, the duality, the negative, the distinction,
-the self-determination in general, is essentially to be thought of
-as a moment in Him, or God reveals Himself in Himself, and therefore
-establishes distinct determinations in Himself. This distinction
-in Himself, His concrete nature, is the point where the absolute
-comes into connection with man, with the world, and is reconciled
-with the same. We say God has created man and the world, this is
-His determination in Himself, and at the same time the point of
-commencement, the root of the finite in God Himself. In this manner,
-therefore, that which afterwards appears finite is yet produced by Him
-in Himself—the particular Ideas, the world in God Himself, the Divine
-world, where God has begun to separate Himself, and has His connection
-with the temporal world. In the fact that God is represented as
-concrete, we have immediately a Divine world in Himself.
-
-Since the Divine forms, as natural and political, have now separated
-themselves from the True, and the temporal world has appeared to men as
-the negative, the untrue, so, in the fourth place, man recognizes God
-in Mind; he has recognized that natural things and the State are not,
-as in mythology, the mode in which God exists, but that the mode, as
-an intelligible world, exists in Himself. The unhappiness of the Roman
-world lay in its abstraction from that in which man had hitherto found
-his satisfaction; this satisfaction arose out of that pantheism, in
-which man found his highest truth in natural things, such as air and
-fire and water, and further in his duties, in the political life of
-the State. Now, on the contrary, in the world’s grief over her present
-woes, despair has entered in, and disbelief in these forms of the
-natural finite world and in the moral world of citizen life; to this
-form of reality, in its external and outwardly moral character, man
-has proved untrue. That condition which man terms the life of man in
-unity with nature, and in which man meets with God in nature because
-he finds his satisfaction there, has ceased to exist. The unity of
-man with the world is for this end broken, that it may be restored
-in a higher unity, that the world, as an intelligible world, may be
-received into God. The relation of man to God thereby reveals itself in
-the way provided for our salvation in worship, but more particularly
-it likewise shows itself in Philosophy; and that with the express
-consciousness of the aim that the individual should render himself
-capable of belonging to this intelligible world. The manner in which
-man represents to himself his relation to God is more particularly
-determined by the manner in which man represents to himself God.
-What is now often said, that man need not know God, and may yet have
-the knowledge of this relation, is false. Since God is the First, He
-determines the relation, and therefore in order to know what is the
-truth of the relation, man must know God. Since therefore thought goes
-so far as to deny the natural, what we are now concerned with is not to
-seek truth in any existing mode, but from our inner Being to go forth
-again to a true objective, which derives its determination from the
-intrinsic nature of thought.
-
-These are the chief moments of the present standpoint, and the
-reflections of the Neo-Platonists belong to it. Before entering upon
-them we must, however, make cursory mention of Philo the Jew, and also
-notice sundry moments appearing in the history of the Church.
-
-
-A. PHILO.
-
-Philo, a learned Jew of Alexandria, lived before and after the birth of
-Christ, in the reigns of the first Roman Emperors; that is to say, he
-was born B.C. 20, but lived until after Christ’s death. In him we for
-the first time see the application of the universal consciousness as
-philosophical consciousness. In the reign of Caligula, before whom very
-heinous charges against the Jews had been brought by Apion, he was,
-when advanced in years, sent to Rome as ambassador from his people,
-in order to give to the Romans a more favourable account of the Jews.
-There is a tradition that he came also in the reign of the Emperor
-Claudius to Rome, and there fell in with the Apostle Peter.[207]
-
-Philo wrote a long series of works, many of which we still possess;
-for instance, those on The Creation of the World, on Rewards and
-Punishments, the Offerers of Sacrifices, the Law of Allegories, Dreams,
-the Immutability of God, &c.; they were published in folio at Frankfort
-in 1691, and afterwards by Pfeiffer at Erlangen. Philo was famous for
-the great extent of his learning, and was well acquainted with Greek
-philosophy.
-
-He is more especially distinguished for his Platonic philosophy, and
-also for the pains he took to demonstrate the presence of Philosophy
-in the sacred writings of the Jews. In his explanation of the history
-of the Jewish nation, the narratives and statements therein contained
-have lost for him the immediate significance of reality. He reads
-into them throughout a mystical and allegorical meaning, and finds
-Plato present in Moses; in short, the endeavour of Philo resembled
-that of the Alexandrians when they recognized philosophic dogmas in
-Greek mythology. He treats of the nature of Mind, not, indeed, as
-comprehended in the element of thought, but as expressed therein, and
-this expression is still both far from pure and is associated with all
-sorts of imageries. By the spirit of Philosophy the Jews were compelled
-to seek in their sacred books, as the heathen sought in Homer and in
-the popular religion, a deeper speculative meaning, and to represent
-their religious writings as a perfect system of divine wisdom. That is
-the character of the time, in consequence of which all that appealed
-to the finite understanding in popular conceptions has not endured.
-The important point, then, is that on the one hand the popular
-conception is here still allied with the forms of reality; but as, on
-the other hand, what these forms express only immediately is no longer
-sufficient, the desire arises to understand them in a deeper sense.
-Although in the external histories of the Jewish and heathen religions
-men had the authority and starting-point of truth, they yet grasped the
-thought that truth cannot be given externally. Therefore, men read
-deep thoughts into history, as the expression is, or they read them out
-of it, and this latter is the true conception. For in the case of the
-Divine Book, whose author is the Spirit, it cannot be said that this
-spirituality is absent. The point of importance comes to be, whether
-this spirituality lies deeper down or nearer to the surface; therefore,
-even if the man who wrote the book had not the thoughts, they are
-implicitly contained in the inward nature of the relation. There is,
-generally speaking, a great difference between that which is present
-therein and that which is expressed. In history, art, philosophy, and
-the like, the point of importance is that what is contained therein
-should also be expressed; the real work of the mind is wholly and
-solely that of bringing to consciousness what is contained therein.
-The other side of the matter is that although all that lies within a
-form, a-religion, &c., does not come before consciousness, one can
-still not say that it did not enter into the human mind; it was not
-in consciousness, neither did it come into the form of the ordinary
-conception, and yet it was in mind. On the one side, the bringing of
-thought into definite consciousness is a bringing in from without, but
-on the other side, as far as matter is concerned, there is nothing
-brought in from without. Philo’s methods present this aspect in a
-pre-eminent sense. All that is prosaic has disappeared, and, therefore,
-in writers of the period that follows, miracles are of common
-occurrence, inasmuch as external connection is no longer required as a
-matter of necessity. The fundamental conceptions of Philo, and these
-alone need be taken into consideration, are then somewhat as follows:—
-
-1. With Philo the main point is the knowledge of God. In regard to
-this, he says, in the first place: God can be known only by the eye
-of the soul, only by Beholding (ὅρασις). This he also calls rapture,
-ecstasy, God’s influence; we often find these terms. For this it is
-requisite that the soul should break loose from the body, and should
-give up its sensuous existence, thus rising to the pure object of
-thought, where it finds itself nearer to God. We may term this a
-beholding by the intelligence. But the other side is that God cannot be
-discerned by the eye of the soul; the soul can only know that He is,
-and not what He is. His essence is the primordial light.[208] Philo
-here speaks in quite Oriental fashion; for light is certainly simple,
-in contrast with which perception has the signification of knowing
-something as determined, as concrete in itself. So long, therefore,
-as the determination of simplicity is adhered to, this First Light
-permits not itself to be known, and since Philo says, “This One is God
-as such,” we cannot know what God is. In Christianity, on the contrary,
-simplicity is only a moment, and only in the Whole do we find God the
-Spirit.
-
-Philo continues: “The First is the space of the universe, encompassing
-and filling it; this existence is itself place, and is filled by
-itself. God is sufficient for Himself; all other things are paltry and
-meaningless; He fills all other things and gives them coherence, but He
-Himself is surrounded by nothing, because He Himself is One and All.
-Similarly, God exists in the primordial form of time (αἰών),”[209] that
-is, in the pure Notion of time. Why is it necessary that God should
-fill Himself with Himself? Even the subjective and abstract has need
-also of an object. But the all is likewise, as with Parmenides, the
-abstract, because it is only substance, which remains empty beside that
-which fills it. Absolute fulness, on the other hand, is the concrete,
-and we reach this first in the λόγος, in which we have that which
-fills, that which is filled, and a third composed of both.
-
-2. To this Philo now comes in the second place: “God’s image and
-reflection is thinking reason (λόγος), the Firstborn Son, who rules and
-regulates the world. This λόγος is the innermost meaning of all Ideas;
-God Himself, in contrast to this, as the One, as such, is pure Being
-(τὸ ὄν) only[210]—an expression which Plato also used. Here verily we
-come upon a contradiction; for the image can only represent what the
-thing is; if therefore the image is concrete, its original must also be
-understood to be concrete. For the rest, it is therefore only logical,
-after Philo has once limited the name of God to the First Light or
-to pure Being, to assert that only the Son can be known. For as this
-Being God is only abstract existence, or only His own Notion; and it
-is quite true that the soul cannot perceive what this Being is, since
-it is really only an empty abstraction. What can be perceived is that
-pure existence is only an abstraction, and consequently a nothing, and
-not the true God. Of God as the One it may therefore be said that the
-only thing perceived is that He does exist. Perception is the knowledge
-of the concrete self-determination of the living God. If we therefore
-desire to know God, we must add to Being, as the First, this other
-moment also; the former is defective, and as abstract as when we say,
-‘God the Father,’” that is, this undisclosed One, this indeterminate
-in Himself, who has not yet created anything; the other moment is,
-however, the determination and distinction of Himself in Himself, the
-begetting. What is begotten is His other, which at the same time is in
-Him, and belongs to Him, and is thus a moment of Himself, if God is to
-be thought of as concrete and living it is this that is here by Philo
-called λόγος. In Christianity the name of God is therefore not limited
-to Essence, but the Son is conceived of as a determination which itself
-belongs to the true Essence of God. That which God is, He is therefore
-as Spirit only, and that is the unity of these moments.
-
-God’s differences therefore, according to Philo, constitute the finite
-understanding (λόγος) itself, which is then the archangel (ἀρχάγγελος),
-a realm of thought which contains determinateness. That is man as
-heavenly man, primeval man, who is also represented under the name of
-Wisdom (σοφία, תגמה), as Adam Kadmon, as the rising of the sun—man in
-God. This finite understanding now separates itself into Ideas, which
-by Philo are also named angels or messengers (ἄγγελοι). This mode of
-conception is not yet conception in pure thought, for forms of the
-imagination are still interwoven with it. Moreover there comes in here
-for the first time that which determines, where God is looked on as
-activity, which so far Being was not. This λόγος is therefore itself,
-we might say, the first restful world of thought, although it is
-already differentiated; but another λόγος is that which gives utterance
-(λόγος προφορικός) as speech. That is the activity, the creation of the
-world, as the former is its preservation, its permanent understanding.
-Speech has always been regarded as a manifestation of God, because it
-is not corporeal; as sound it is momentary and immediately disappears;
-its existence is therefore immaterial. “God created by the word of
-His month, interposing nothing;” what He created remains ideal, like
-speech. “If we would express the dogma in a still truer form, the Logos
-is the ‘Work of God.’”[211]
-
-This Logos is at the same time the teacher of wisdom for
-self-consciousness. For natural things are upheld only in their laws;
-but self-conscious beings know also of these laws, and this is wisdom.
-Thus the λόγος is the high priest, who is the mediator between God and
-man, the Spirit of the Godhead, who teaches man—even the self-conscious
-return of God into Himself, into that first unity of the primordial
-light. That is the pure intelligible world of truth itself, which is
-nothing other than the Word of God.[212]
-
-3. In the third place, since thought has come to negativity, the
-sensuous existent world stands in opposition to this ideal world. Its
-principle with Philo, as with Plato, is matter, the negative (οὐκ
-ὄν).[213] As God is Being, so the essence of matter is non-being; it is
-not nothing, as when we say that God created the world out of nothing,
-for non-being, the opposite of Being, is itself a positive, and as
-good as Being. It exists, in so far as there is placed within it a
-resemblance to implicit truth. Philo had the true perception that the
-opposite of Being is just as positive as Being. If this seems absurd to
-anyone, he need only be reminded that really when we posit Being, the
-negative of Being is thinking—which is something very positive. But the
-next step, the Notion of this opposition, and the passing of Being into
-non-being, is not to be found in Philo. In general this philosophy is
-less a metaphysic of the Notion or of Thought itself, than a philosophy
-in which Mind appears only in pure Thought, and not here in the mode
-of ordinary conception—Notions and Ideas are still represented as
-independent forms. Thus, for instance, it is said: “In the beginning
-the Word of God created the heavens, which consist of the purest Being
-and are the dwelling-place of the purest angels, which do not appear,
-and are not perceptible by the senses,” but by thought alone; these
-are the Ideas. “The Creator before the whole of the intelligible world
-made the incorporeal heavens and the non-sensuous earth, and the Idea
-of the air and of the void, and after this the incorporeal essence
-of the water and an incorporeal light, and a non-sensuous archetype
-(ἀρχέτυπος) of the sun and all the stars;”[214] and the sensuous world
-is the anti-type of this. Philo now proceeds according to the Mosaic
-record. In the Old Testament history of creation, grass, plants, and
-trees are created on the third day, and on the fourth day lights in
-the firmament of heaven, the sun and moon. Philo therefore says (De
-mundi opificio, pp. 9, 10) that on the fourth day a number adorned the
-heavens, the four, the tetractys, the most perfect, &c. These are the
-main points in Philo’s philosophy.
-
-
-B. CABALA AND GNOSTICISM.
-
-The Cabalistic philosophy and the Gnostic theology both occupied
-themselves with these same conceptions which Philo also had. To them
-also the First is the abstract, the unknown, the nameless; the Second
-is the unveiling, the concrete, which goes forth into emanation.
-But there is also to be found in some degree the return to unity,
-especially among Christian philosophers: and this return, which is
-accepted as the Third, belongs to the λόγος; so with Philo Wisdom, the
-teacher, the high priest, was that which in the contemplation of God
-leads back the Third to the First.
-
-
-1. CABALISTIC PHILOSOPHY.
-
-Cabala is the name given to the secret wisdom of the Jews, with which,
-however, much that is dark and mysterious is mingled; regarding its
-origin also many fables are related. We are told of it that it is
-contained in two books, _Jezirah_ (Creation) and _Sohar_ (Brightness).
-_Jezirah_, the more important of these two books, is ascribed to a
-certain Rabbi Akibha; it is about to be published in a more complete
-form by Herr von Mayer, in Frankfort. The book has certain very
-interesting general principles, and this better portion of it consists
-of ideas, which in some respects resemble those of Philo, though they
-are more fancifully presented, and often sink into the fantastic. It
-is not of the antiquity which those who reverence the Cabala would
-assign to it; for they relate that this heavenly book was given to
-Adam to console him after his fall. It is a medley of astronomy,
-magic, medicine, and prophecy; sundry traces followed up historically
-indicate that such were cultivated in Egypt. Akibha lived soon after
-the destruction of Jerusalem, and took an active part in a revolt of
-the Jews against Hadrian, in the course of which they collected an army
-two hundred thousand strong, in order to establish Barcochba as the
-Messiah; the revolt was, however, suppressed, and the Rabbi was flayed
-alive. The second book is said to have been the work of his disciple,
-Rabbi Simeon Ben Jochai, who was called the Great Light, the Spark of
-Moses.[215] Both books were translated into Latin in the seventeenth
-century. A speculative Israelite, Rabbi Abraham Cohen Irira, also wrote
-a book, the Door of Heaven (_Porta c\nlorum_); it is later, dating
-from the fifteenth century, and sundry references to the Arabians and
-Scholastics are contained in it. These are the sources of the high
-cabalistic wisdom.
-
-In earlier times there is no representation among the Jews of God as
-being in His essence Light, of an opposite to God, Darkness and Evil,
-which is at strife with the Light; there is nothing of good and evil
-angels, of the Fall of the wicked, of their condemnation, of their
-being in Hell, of a future day of judgment for the good and the evil,
-of the corruption of the flesh. It was not until this time that the
-Jews began to carry their thoughts beyond their reality; only now does
-a world of spirit, or at least of spirits, begin to open itself up
-before them; before this these Jews cared only for themselves, being
-sunk in the filth and self-conceit of their present existence, and in
-the maintenance of their nation and tribes.
-
-Further particulars of the Cabala are these. One is expressed as the
-principle of all things, as it is likewise the first source of all
-numbers. As unity itself is not one number among the rest, so is
-it with God, the basis of all things, the _En-Soph_. The emanation
-therewith connected is the effect of the first cause by the limitation
-of that first infinite whose boundary (ὅρος) it is. In this one cause
-all is contained _eminenter_, not _formaliter_ but _causaliter_.
-The second element of importance is the Adam Kadmon, the first man,
-_Kether_, the first that arose, the highest crown, the microcosm, the
-macrocosm, with which the world that emanated stands in connection as
-the efflux of light. By further expansion the other spheres or circles
-of the world came into being; and this emanation is represented as
-streams of light. In the first place there come forth ten of such
-emanations, _Sephiroth_, forming the pure world _Azilah_, which exists
-in itself and changes not. The second is the world _Beriah_, which
-does change. The third is the created world, _Jezirah_, the world of
-pure spirits set in matter, the souls of the stars—that is, further
-distinctions into which this dark and mysterious philosophy proceeds.
-In the fourth place comes the created world, the _Asijja_: it is the
-lowest, the vegetative and sensible world.[216]
-
-
-2. THE GNOSTICS.
-
-Though there are various sects of the Gnostics, we find certain common
-determinations constituting their basis.
-
-\Joe Cooper\roddr\charliehoward\— Professor Neander has with great
-learning made a collection of these, and elaborated them exhaustively;
-some of the forms correspond with those which we have given. Their
-general aim was that of knowledge (γνῶσις); whence they also derived
-their name.
-
-One of the most distinguished Gnostics is Basilides. For him, too,
-the First is the unspeakable God (θεὸς ἄῤῥητος)—the _En-Soph_ of the
-Cabala; He is, as with Philo also, that which is (τὸ ὄν), He who is (ὁ
-ὤν), the nameless one (ἀνωνόμαστος)—that is, the immediate. The second
-is then the Spirit (νοῦς), the first-born, also λόγος, the Wisdom
-(σοφία), Power (δύναμις): more closely defined, it is Righteousness
-(δικαιοσύνη), and Peace (εἰρήνη). These are followed by principles
-still further determined, which Basilides names archons, heads of
-spiritual kingdoms. One main point in this is likewise the return, the
-refining process of the soul, the economy of purification (οἰκονονία
-καθάρσεων): the soul from matter must come back to wisdom, to peace.
-The First Essence bears all perfection sealed up in Himself, but only
-in potentiality; Spirit, the first-born, is the first revelation of
-the latent. It is, moreover, only through being made one with God that
-all created beings can attain to a share in true righteousness and the
-peace which flows therefrom.[217]
-
-The Gnostics, for instance Marcus, term the First also the Unthinkable
-(ἀνεννόητος), even the Non-existent (ἀνούσιος) which proceeds not to
-determinateness, the Solitude (μονότης), and the pure Silence (σιγή);
-the Ideas, the angels, the æons, then form the Other. These are termed
-the Notions, roots, seeds of particular fulfillings (πληρώματα), the
-fruit; every æon in this bears its own special world in itself.[218]
-
-With others, as for instance Valentinus, the First is also termed
-“the completed æon in the heights that cannot be seen or named,” or
-the unfathomable, the primordial cause, the absolute abyss (ἄβυσσον,
-βῦθος), wherein all is, as abrogated: also what is even before
-the beginning (προάρχη), before the Father (προπάτωρ). The active
-transition of the One signifies then the differentiation (διάθεσις)
-of this abyss; and this development is also termed the making itself
-comprehensible of the incomprehensible (κατάληψις τοῦ ἀκαταλήπτου), in
-the same way that we found comprehension spoken of by the Stoics (Vol.
-II. p. 250). Æons, particular expositions, are Notions. The second step
-is likewise termed limitation (ὅρος); and inasmuch as the development
-of life is conceived more clearly by contrast, the key to this is
-stated to be contained in two principles, which appear in the form of
-male and female. The one is required to perfect the other, each has its
-complement (σύζυγος) in the other; from their conjunction (σύνθεσις,
-συξυγία), which first constitutes the real, a perfect whole proceeds.
-The inward significance of these fulfilments generally is the world of
-æons, the universal filling of the abyss, which therefore, inasmuch
-as what was distinguished in it was still unrevealed, is also termed
-hermaphrodite, man-woman (ἀῤῥενόθηλυς),[219]—very much the same theory
-as was held long before by the Pythagoreans (Vol. I. p. 221).
-
-Ptolemæus assigns two conjunctions (σύζυγους) to the abyss, and
-two separations, which are pre-supposed throughout all temporal
-existence, Will and Perception (θέλημα καὶ ἔννοια). Complicated and
-motley forms here appear, but the fundamental determination is the
-same throughout, and abyss and revelation are the most important
-matters. The revelation which has come down is also conceived as the
-glory (δόξα, Shekinah) of God; as heavenly wisdom, which is itself
-a beholding of God; as unbegotten powers which encircle Him and are
-radiant with the most brilliant light. To these Ideas the name of God
-is more especially given, and in this regard He is also called the
-many-named (πολυώνυμος), the demiurge; this is the manifestation, the
-determination of God.[220]
-
-All these forms pass into the mysterious, but they have on the whole
-the same determinations as principle; and the general necessity which
-forms their basis is a profound necessity of reason, namely, the
-determination and comprehension of what is absolute as the concrete.
-I have, however, merely been desirous of calling these forms to
-remembrance, in order to indicate their connection with the universal.
-
-
-C. ALEXANDRIAN PHILOSOPHY.
-
-The unity of self-consciousness and Being appears in more philosophical
-and intelligent form in the Alexandrian School, which constitutes the
-most important, and at the same time the most characteristic form of
-philosophy pertaining to this sphere. For Alexandria had for some time
-past, mainly through the Ptolemies, become the principal seat of the
-sciences. Here, as if in their centre-point, all the popular religions
-and mythologies of the East and West, and likewise their history, came
-into touch and intermingled with one another in various forms and
-shapes. Religions were compared with one another: in each of them there
-was, on the one hand, a searching for and putting together of that
-which was contained also in the other, and, on the other hand, there
-was the more important task of reading into the popular conceptions
-of religion a deeper meaning, and of giving to them a universal
-allegorical signification. This endeavour has doubtless given birth to
-much that is dim and mystical; its purer product is the Alexandrian
-Philosophy. The bringing together of the philosophies naturally
-succeeded better than those connections which, on the side of religion,
-are only the mystic products of a Reason that as yet is unintelligible
-to itself. For while in fact there is but one Idea in Philosophy, it
-annuls by its own means the special form which it has adopted, the
-one-sidedness in which it expresses itself. In Scepticism had been
-reached this negative stage of seeing annulled the definite modes of
-Being in which the Absolute was posited.
-
-Since the form of philosophy which arose in Alexandria did not attach
-itself to any of the earlier philosophic schools, but recognized
-all the different systems of philosophy, and more especially the
-Pythagorean, Platonic, and Aristotelian, to be in their various forms
-but one, it was frequently asserted to be Eclecticism. Brucker (Hist.
-crit. phil. T. II., p. 193) is the first to do so, as I have found,
-and Diogenes Laërtius gave him the occasion thereto, by speaking
-(Pr\nmium, § 21) of a certain Potamo of Alexandria, who not so very
-long before (ρπὸ ὀλίγου) had selected from the different philosophies
-their principal maxims and the best of their teaching. Then Diogenes
-goes on to quote several passages from Potamo, saying that this
-writer had produced an eclectic philosophy; but these maxims drawn
-from Aristotle, Plato, and the Stoics are not of importance, and the
-distinguishing characteristics of the Alexandrians cannot be recognized
-therein. Diogenes is also earlier than the Alexandrian School; but
-Potamo, according to Suidas (s.v. Ποτάμον, T. III., p. 161), was
-tutor of the stepsons of Augustus, and for the instructor of princes
-eclecticism is a very suitable creed. Therefore, because this Potamo
-is an Alexandrian, Brucker has bestowed on the Alexandrian philosophy
-the name of Eclectic; but that is neither consistent with fact, nor is
-it true to history. Eclecticism is something to be utterly condemned,
-if it is understood in the sense of one thing being taken out of this
-philosophy, and another thing out of that philosophy, altogether
-regardless of their consistency or connection, as when a garment is
-patched together of pieces of different colours or stuffs. Such an
-eclecticism gives nothing but an aggregate which lacks all inward
-consistency. Eclectics of this kind are sometimes ordinary uncultured
-men, in whose heads the most contradictory ideas find a place side
-by side, without their ever bringing these thoughts together and
-becoming conscious of the contradictions involved; sometimes they are
-men of intelligence who act thus with their eyes open, thinking that
-they attain the best when, as they say, they take the good from every
-system, and so provide themselves with a _vade mecum_ of reflections,
-in which they have everything good except consecutiveness of thought,
-and consequently thought itself. An eclectic philosophy is something
-that is altogether meaningless and inconsequent: and such a philosophy
-the Alexandrian philosophy is not. In France the Alexandrians are
-still called Eclectics; and there, where _système_ is synonymous with
-narrowness of views, and where indeed one must have the name which
-sounds least systematic and suspicious, that may be borne with.
-
-In the better sense of the word the Alexandrians may, however, very
-well be called eclectic philosophers, though it is quite superfluous
-to give them this designation at all. For the Alexandrians took as
-their groundwork the philosophy of Plato, but availed themselves of
-the general development of Philosophy, which after Plato they became
-acquainted with through Aristotle and all the following philosophies,
-and especially through the Stoics; that is to say, they reinstated it,
-but as invested with a higher culture. Therefore we find in them no
-refutation of the views of the philosophers whom they quote. To this
-higher culture there more especially belongs the deeper principle that
-absolute essence must be apprehended as self-consciousness, that its
-very essence is to be self-consciousness, and that it is therefore
-in the individual consciousness. This is not to be understood as
-signifying that God is a Spirit who is outside of the world and outside
-self-consciousness, as is often said, but as indicating that His
-existence as self-conscious spirit is really self-consciousness itself.
-The Platonic universal, which is in thought, accordingly receives the
-signification of being as such absolute essence. In the higher sense a
-wider point of view as regards the Idea thus signifies its concretely
-blending into one the preceding principles, which contain only single
-one-sided moments of the Idea. This really indicates a deeper knowledge
-of the philosophical Idea which is known concretely in itself, so
-that the more abstract principles are contained in the deeper form
-of the Idea. For after some divergence has taken place in the past
-it must from time to time come about that the implicit identity of
-the divergent views is recognized, so that difference has force only
-as form. In this sense even Plato is eclectic, since he harmonized
-Pythagoras, Heraclitus, and Parmenides; and the Alexandrians are also
-thus eclectics, seeing that they were just as much Pythagoreans as
-Platonists and Aristotelians; the only thing is that this term always
-at once calls up the idea of an arbitrary selection.
-
-All earlier philosophies could therefore find a place in that of
-the Alexandrians. For in Alexandria the Ptolemies had attracted to
-themselves science and the learned, partly by reason of their own
-interest in science, and partly on account of the excellence of their
-institutions. They founded the great and celebrated library for which
-the Greek translation of the Old Testament was made; after Cæsar had
-destroyed it, it was again restored. There was also there a museum, or
-what would nowadays be called an Academy of Science, where philosophers
-and men of special learning received payments of money, and had no
-other duties than that of prosecuting scientific study. In later times
-such foundations were instituted in Athens also, and each philosophic
-school had its own public establishment,[221] without favour being
-shown to one philosophy or to the other. Thus the Neo-Platonic
-philosophy arose beside the others, and partly upon their ruins, and
-overshadowed the rest, until finally all earlier systems were merged
-therein. It, therefore, did not constitute an individual philosophical
-school similar to those which went before; but, while it united them
-all in itself, it had as its leading characteristic the study of Plato,
-of Aristotle, and of the Pythagoreans.
-
-With this study was combined an interpretation of the writings of these
-men, which aimed at exhibiting their philosophic ideas in their unity;
-and the principal mode in which the Neo-Platonic teachers carried on
-and elaborated Philosophy consisted in their explaining the various
-philosophical works, especially the writings of Plato and Aristotle, or
-giving sketches of these philosophies. These commentaries on the early
-philosophers were either given in lectures or written; and many of them
-have come down to us, some in the number being excellent. Aristotle’s
-works were commented on by Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Andronicus
-Rhodius, Nicolaus Damascenus, and also Porphyrius. Plato had as
-commentators Numenius and Maximus Tyrius. Other Alexandrians combined
-a commentary on Plato with study of the other philosophic maxims or
-philosophies, and managed to grasp the point of unity of the various
-modes of the Idea very successfully. The best commentaries date from
-this period; most of the works of Proclus are commentaries on single
-dialogues of Plato and similar subjects. This school has the further
-peculiarity of expressing speculation as actual divine Being and life,
-and, therefore, it makes this appear to be mystical and magical.
-
-
-1. AMMONIUS SACCAS.
-
-Ammonius Saccas, that is, the sack-bearer, is named as one of the first
-or most celebrated teachers of this school; he died A.D. 243.[222]
-But we have none of his writings, nor have any traditions regarding
-his philosophy come down to us. Among his very numerous disciples
-Ammonius had many men celebrated in other branches of science, for
-example, Longinus and Origen; it is, however, uncertain if this were
-the Christian Father of that name. But his most renowned disciple in
-philosophy is Plotinus, through whose writings as they are preserved
-to us we derive our chief knowledge of the Neo-Platonic philosophy.
-The systematized fabric of this philosophy is, indeed, ascribed to him
-by those who came after, and this philosophy is known specially as his
-philosophy.
-
-
-2. PLOTINUS.
-
-As the disciples of Ammonius had, by their master’s desire, made an
-agreement not to commit his philosophy to writing, it was not until
-late in life that Plotinus wrote; or, rather, the works received from
-him were published after his death by Porphyrius, one of his disciples.
-From the same disciple we have an account of the life of Plotinus; what
-is remarkable in it is that the strictly historical facts recounted
-are mixed up with a great variety of marvellous episodes. This is
-certainly the period when the marvellous plays a prominent part; but
-when the pure system of Philosophy, the pure meaning of such a man, is
-known, it is impossible to express all one’s astonishment at anecdotes
-of this kind. Plotinus was an Egyptian; he was born at Lycopolis about
-A.D. 205, in the reign of Septimius Severus. After he had attended
-the lectures of many teachers of Philosophy, he became melancholy
-and absorbed in thought; at the age of eight and twenty he came to
-Ammonius, and, finding here at last what satisfied him, he remained for
-eleven years under his instruction. As at that time wonderful accounts
-of Indian and Brahminical wisdom were being circulated, Plotinus set
-out on his way to Persia in the army of the Emperor Gordian; but
-the campaign ended so disastrously that Plotinus did not attain his
-object, and had difficulty even in procuring his own safety. At
-the age of forty he proceeded to Rome, and remained there until his
-death, twenty-six years later. In Rome his outward demeanour was most
-remarkable; in accordance with the ancient Pythagorean practice, he
-refrained from partaking of flesh, and often imposed fasts on himself;
-he wore, also, the ancient Pythagorean dress. As a public lecturer,
-however, he gained a high reputation among all classes. The Emperor of
-those days, Gallienus, whose favour Plotinus enjoyed, as well as that
-of the Empress, is said to have been inclined to hand over to him a
-town in Campania, where he thought to realize the Platonic Republic.
-The ministers, however, prevented the carrying out of this plan, and
-therein they showed themselves men of sense, for in such an outlying
-spot of the Roman Empire, and considering the utter change in the
-human mind since Plato’s days, when another spiritual principle had
-of necessity to make itself universal, this was an enterprise which
-was far less calculated than in Plato’s time to bring honour to the
-Platonic Republic. It does little credit to the sagacity of Plotinus
-that this idea ever entered into his head; but we do not exactly know
-if his plan were limited to the Platonic Republic, or if it did not
-admit of some extension or modification thereof. Of course an actual
-Platonic state was contrary to the nature of things; for the Platonic
-state is free and independent, which such an one as this, within the
-Roman Empire, could of course not be. Plotinus died at Rome, in the
-sixty-sixth year of his age, A.D. 270.[223]
-
-The writings of Plotinus are originally for the most part answers
-given as occasion required to questions proposed by his auditors; he
-committed them to writing during the last sixteen years of his life,
-and Porphyrius edited them some time later. In his teaching Plotinus
-adopted, as has been already mentioned, the method of commenting in
-his lectures on the writings of various earlier philosophers. The
-writings of Plotinus are known as Enneads, and are six in number, each
-of them containing nine separate treatises. We thus have altogether
-fifty-four of such treatises or books, which are subdivided into many
-chapters; it is consequently a voluminous work. The books do not,
-however, form a connected whole; but in each book, in fact, there are
-special matters brought forward and philosophically handled; and it is
-thus laborious to go through them. The first Ennead has for the most
-part a moral character; the first book proposes the question of what
-animals are, and what man is; the second deals with the virtues; the
-third with dialectic; the fourth with happiness (περὶ εὐδαιμονίας); the
-fifth investigates whether happiness consists in protraction of time
-(παρατάσει χρόνου); the sixth speaks of the beautiful; the seventh of
-the highest (πρώτου) good and of the other goods; the eighth inquires
-into the origin of evil; the ninth treats of a rational departure from
-life. Other Enneads are of a metaphysical nature. Porphyrius says in
-his Life of Plotinus (pp. 3-5, 9, 17-19) that they are unequal. He
-states that twenty-one of these books were already in written form
-before he came to Plotinus, which was when the latter was fifty-nine
-years of age; and in that year and the five following, which Porphyrius
-spent with Plotinus as his disciple, other four-and-twenty were added.
-During the absence of Porphyrius in Sicily, Plotinus wrote nine more
-books, in the last years before his death, which later books are
-weaker. Creuzer is preparing to bring out an edition of Plotinus. To
-give an account of him would be a difficult task, and would amount to
-a systematic explanation. The mind of Plotinus hovers over each of the
-particular matters that he deals with; he treats them rationally and
-dialectically, but traces them all back to one Idea. Many beautiful
-detached quotations could be made from Plotinus, but as there is in
-his works a continual repetition of certain leading thoughts, the
-reading of them is apt to prove wearisome. Since then it is the manner
-of Plotinus to lead the particular, which he makes his starting-point,
-always back again to the universal, it is possible to grasp the ideas
-of Plotinus from some of his books, knowing that the reading of those
-remaining would not reveal to us any particular advance. Plato’s ideas
-and expressions are predominant with him, but we find also many very
-lengthy expositions quite in the manner of Aristotle; for he makes
-constant use of terms borrowed from Aristotle—force, energy, &c.—and
-their relations are essentially the object of his meditations. The main
-point is that he is not to be taken as placing Plato and Aristotle in
-opposition; on the contrary, he went so far as to adopt even the Logos
-of the Stoics.
-
-It is very difficult to give a systematic account of his philosophy.
-For it is not the aim of Plotinus, as it was of Aristotle, to
-comprehend objects in their special determinations, but rather
-to emphasize the truth of the substantial in them as against the
-phenomenal. The point of greatest importance and the leading
-characteristic in Plotinus is his high, pure enthusiasm for the
-elevation of mind to what is good and true, to the absolute. He lays
-hold of knowledge, the simply ideal, and of intellectual thought, which
-is implicitly life, but not silent nor sealed. His whole philosophy is
-on the one hand metaphysics, but the tendency which is therein dominant
-is not so much an anxiety to explain and interpret and comprehend
-what forces itself on our attention as reality, or to demonstrate the
-position and the origin of these individual objects, and perhaps,
-for instance, to offer a deduction of matter, of evil; but rather to
-separate the mind from these externals, and give it its central place
-in the simple, clear Idea. The whole tenor of his philosophy thus leads
-up to virtue and to the intellectual contemplation of the eternal, as
-source of the same; so that the soul is brought to happiness of life
-therein. Plotinus then enters to some extent on special considerations
-of virtue, with the view of cleansing the soul from passions, from
-false and impure conceptions of evil and destiny, and also from
-incredulity and superstition, from astrology and magic and all their
-train. This gives some idea of the general drift of his teaching.
-
-If we now go on to consider the philosophy of Plotinus in detail,
-we find that there is no longer any talk of the criterion, as with
-the Stoics and Epicureans,—that is all settled; but a strenuous
-effort is made to take up a position in the centre of things, in
-pure contemplation, in pure thought. Thus what with the Stoics and
-Epicureans is the aim, the unity of the soul with itself in untroubled
-peace, is here the point of departure; Plotinus takes up the position
-of bringing this to pass in himself as a condition of ecstasy
-(ἔκστασις), as he calls it, or as an inspiration. Partly in this name
-and partly in the facts themselves, a reason has been found for calling
-Plotinus a fanatic and visionary, and this is the cry universally
-raised against this philosophy; to this assertion the fact that for the
-Alexandrian school all truth lies in reason and comprehension alone,
-presents a very marked antithesis and contradiction.
-
-And firstly, with regard to the term ecstasy, those who call Plotinus a
-fanatic associate with the idea nothing but that condition into which
-crazy Indians, Brahmins, monks and nuns fall, when, in order to bring
-about an entire retreat into themselves, they seek to blot out from
-their minds all ordinary ideas and all perception of reality; thus this
-in some measure exists as a permanent and fixed condition; and again as
-a steady gaze into vacuity it appears as light or as darkness, devoid
-of motion, distinction, and, in a word, of thought. Fanaticism like
-this places truth in an existence which stands midway between reality
-and the Notion, but is neither the one nor the other,—and therefore
-only a creature of the imagination. From this view of ecstasy, however,
-Plotinus is far removed.
-
-But in the second place there is something in the thing itself which
-has contributed to bring upon him this reproach, and it is this,
-that very often the name of fanaticism is given to anything that
-transcends sensuous consciousness or the fixed notions of the finite
-understanding, which in their limitation are held to constitute real
-existence. Partly, however, the imputation is due to the manner in
-which Plotinus speaks in general of Notions, spiritual moments as
-such, as if they had a substantial existence of their own. That is to
-say, Plotinus sometimes introduces sensuous modes, modes of ordinary
-conception, into the world of Notions, and sometimes he brings down
-Ideas into the sphere of the sensuous, since, for instance, he utilizes
-the necessary relations of things for purposes of magic. For the
-magician is just he who attributes to certain words and particular
-sensuous signs a universal efficacy, and who attempts by prayers,
-&c., to lift them up to the universal. Such a universal this is not,
-however, in itself, in its own nature: universality is only attributed
-to it; or the universal of thought has not yet given itself therein a
-universal reality, while the thought, the act of a hero is the true,
-the universal, whose effects and whose means have equal greatness and
-universality. In a certain sense therefore the Neo-Platonists have
-well deserved the reproach of fanaticism, for in the biographies of
-the great teachers of this school, Plotinus, Porphyrius and Iamblichus
-we certainly find much recounted that comes under the category of
-miracle-working and sorcery, just as we found it in the case of
-Pythagoras (Vol. I. p. 200). Upholding as they did the belief in the
-gods of heathendom, they asserted in reference to the worship of images
-that these really were filled with the divine power and presence.
-Thus the Alexandrian school cannot be altogether absolved from the
-charge of superstition.[224] For in the whole of that period of the
-world’s history, among Christians and heathen alike, the belief in
-miracle-working prevailed, because the mind, absorbed in itself and
-filled with astonishment at the infinite power and majesty of this
-self, paid no heed to the natural connection of events, and made the
-interference of a supreme power seem easy. But what the philosophers
-taught is utterly remote therefrom; except the quite theoretical
-observation regarding the images of the gods which we mentioned above,
-the writings of Plotinus contain nothing in any way related thereto.
-
-He then who gives the name of fanaticism to every effort of the soul
-to rise to the supersensuous, to every belief that man can have in
-the virtuous, the noble, the divine, the eternal, to every religious
-conviction,—may count the Neo-Platonists as being fanatics; but
-fanaticism is in this case an empty name employed only by the dull
-finite understanding, and by unbelief in all that is high and noble. If
-we, however, give the name of fanatics to those who rise to speculative
-truths which contradict the categories of the finite understanding, the
-Alexandrians have indeed incurred this imputation, but with quite equal
-reason may the Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy be also termed
-fanaticism. For Plato most certainly speaks with enthusiasm of the
-elevation of the spirit into thought, or rather the Platonic enthusiasm
-proper consists in rising into the sphere of the movement of thought.
-Those who are convinced that the absolute essence in thought is not
-thought itself, constantly reiterate that God is beyond consciousness,
-and that the thought of Him is the notion of One whose existence or
-reality is nevertheless an utterly different thing; just as, when we
-think of or imagine an animal or a stone, our notion or imagination is
-something quite different from the animal itself,—which is making this
-last to be the truth. But we are not speaking of this or that animal
-perceived by our senses, but of its essential reality, and this is the
-Notion of it. The essential reality of the animal is not present as
-such in the animal of our senses, but as being one with the objective
-individuality, as a mode of that universal; as essence it is our
-Notion, which indeed alone is true, whereas what the senses perceive is
-negative. Thus our Notion of absolute essence is the essence itself,
-when it is the Notion of absolute essence, not of something else. But
-this essence does not seem to be co-extensive with the idea of God; for
-He is not only Essence or His Notion, but His existence. His existence,
-as pure essence, is our thought of Him; but His real existence is
-Nature. In this real existence the ‘I’ is that which has the faculty of
-individual thought; it belongs to this existence as a moment present
-in it, but does not constitute it. From the existence of essence as
-essence we must pass over to existence, to real existence as such.
-As such, God is doubtless a Beyond to individual self-consciousness,
-that is to say, of course, in the capacity of essence or pure thought;
-thus to a certain extent He, as individual reality, is Nature which is
-beyond thought. But even this objective mode comes back into essence,
-or the individuality of consciousness is overcome. Therefore what has
-brought upon Plotinus the reproach of fanaticism is this, that he had
-the thought of the essence of God being Thought itself and present in
-Thought. As the Christians said that He was once present to sensuous
-perception at a certain time and in a certain place—but also that He
-ever dwells in His people and is their Spirit—so Plotinus said that
-absolute essence is present in the self-consciousness that thinks, and
-exists in it as essence, or Thought itself is the Divine.
-
-In further defining the relation of individual self-consciousness to
-the knowledge of absolute essence, Plotinus asserts (Ennead. VI. l. 7,
-c. 35, 36) that the soul which withdraws from the corporeal and loses
-every conception but that of pure essence brings itself nigh to the
-Deity. The principle of the philosophy of Plotinus is therefore the
-Reason which is in and for itself. The condition of ecstasy through
-which alone that which has true Being comes to be known, is named
-by Plotinus (Ennead. VI. l. 9, c. 11) a simplification of the soul,
-through which it is brought into a state of blissful repose, because
-its object is itself simple and at rest. But it is evident that we
-are not to imagine this simplification of self-consciousness to be
-a condition of fanaticism, seeing that even an immediate knowledge
-of God such as this is a thinking of Him and a comprehension of Him,
-and not a vacant feeling, or what is quite as vacant, an intuition.
-This withdrawal of the soul from the body takes place through pure
-thought; thought is the activity and at the same time the object. It
-is thus a tranquil state, without any wild turmoil of the blood or
-of the imagination. Ecstasy is not a mere rapturous condition of the
-senses and fancy, but rather a passing beyond the content of sensuous
-consciousness; it is pure thought that is at home with itself, and
-is its own object. Plotinus often speaks of this condition in the
-same way as in the following passage: “Often when I out of the body
-awaken to myself, and am beyond the other,” the external, “and have
-entered into my inmost nature, and have a wondrous intuition, and live
-a godlike life,” &c.[225] In this way Plotinus certainly approaches
-to the intuitive point of view. Yet his figurative mode of expression
-separates itself still more from the, in great measure, confused
-mythical ideas. The Idea of the philosophy of Plotinus is thus an
-intellectualism or a higher idealism, which indeed from the side of the
-Notion is not yet a perfect idealism; that of which Plotinus becomes
-conscious in his ecstasy is, however, philosophic thought, speculative
-Notions and Ideas.
-
-As for the determinate principle of Plotinus, the objective, the
-content, which is at home with itself in this ecstasy, in this Being of
-Thought—this content, as regards its chief moments in the universal, is
-that already dealt with. The three principles are for him the One, the
-νοῦς and the soul.
-
-a. The first, the absolute, the basis, is here, as with Philo, pure
-Being, the unchangeable, which is the basis and the cause of all Being
-that appears, whose potentiality is not apart from its actuality, but
-is absolute actuality in itself. It is the unity which is likewise
-essence, or unity as the essence of all essence. The true principle
-is not the multiplicity of present Being, the ordinary substantiality
-of things, according to which each appears as one separated from the
-others, for really and truly their unity is their essence. This unity
-is, properly speaking, not All; for All is nothing but the result of
-the units, the comprehension of them—forming the basis, as they do, as
-essence—in a unity which is strange to them. Nor is it before all; for
-it is not different from the all in actual existence, since otherwise
-it would again be only something thought.[226] The later unity, as
-regulative of the Reason, has the force of a subjective principle; but
-Plotinus establishes it as the highest objectivity, as Being.
-
-This unity has no multiplicity in it, or multiplicity is not implicit;
-unity is only as it was for Parmenides and Zeno, absolute, pure
-Being; or else the absolute Good, in the sense in which the absolute
-was spoken of in the writings of Plato and especially in those of
-Aristotle. In the first place, what is the Good?—“It is that on
-which all depends (ἀνήρτηται),[227] and which all things desire
-(ἐφίεται)”—also according to Aristotle—“and have as principle, and
-which they are all in want of, while itself it has lack of nothing, is
-sufficient for itself, and is the measure and limit of all, which out
-of itself gives the νοῦς and essence (οὐσίαν) and soul and life, and
-the activity of reason (περὶ νοῦν ἐνήργειαν). And up to this point all
-is beautiful, but _it_ is more than beautiful (ὑπέρκαλος) and better
-than the best (ἐπέκεινα τῶν ἀρίστων), the superlatively good, bearing
-free rule, exercising royal rights in Thought (βασιλεύων ἐν τῷ νοητῷ).
-But it is itself by no means that whose principle it is. For when thou
-hast said “the Good,” add nothing thereto, and think of nothing beyond.
-When thou hast abrogated Being itself, and takest it in this wise,
-astonishment will seize thee; and, making this thy aim and resting
-therein, thou wilt understand it and its greatness by what is derived
-from it. And when thou hast Being thus before thee, and regardest it in
-this purity, wonder will lay hold of thee.”[228]
-
-Of absolute Being Plotinus then asserted that it is unknowable—which
-Philo also said—and that it remains in itself. On this point Plotinus
-expatiates at great length, and frequently recurs to the fact that the
-soul must really first attain to the thought of this unity through
-negative movement, which is something different from mere assertion,
-and is rather sceptical movement which makes trial of all predicates
-and finds nothing except this One. All such predicates as Being and
-substance do not conform to it in the opinion of Plotinus; for they
-express some determination or other. There is no sensation, no thought,
-no consciousness; for in all these there lies a distinction. Because
-the determination of the One is the main point, with Plotinus the
-Good is the aim for subjective thought as well as for practical; but
-although the Good is the absolutely free, it is nevertheless without
-resolution and will; for will has in it the distinction of itself and
-the Good.[229]
-
-That Being is and remains God, and is not outside of Him, but is His
-very self: “Absolute unity upholds things that they fall not asunder;
-it is the firm bond of unity in all, penetrating all—bringing together
-and unifying things which in mutual opposition were in danger of
-separation. We term it the One and the Good. It neither _is_, nor is it
-something, nor is it anything, but it is over all. All these categories
-are negatived; it has no magnitude, is not infinite. It is the middle
-point of the universe, the eternal source of virtue and the origin of
-divine love, around which all moves, by which every thing directs its
-course, in which νοῦς and self-consciousness ever have their beginning
-and their end.”[230] To this substance Plotinus leads back everything;
-it alone is the true, and in all remains simply identical with itself.
-
-But out of this First all proceeds, owing to its revealing itself; that
-is the connection with creation and all production. But the Absolute
-cannot be conceived as creative, if it is determinate as an abstract,
-and is not rather comprehended as the One which has energy in itself.
-This transition to the determinate is thus not made by Plotinus
-philosophically or dialectically, but the necessity of it is expressed
-in representations and images. Thus he says (Ennead. III. l. 8, c. 9)
-of the νοῦς, his second principle, “The one absolute Good is a source
-which has no other principle, but is the principle for all streams, so
-that it is not swallowed up by these, but as source remains at rest in
-itself,” and thus contains these streams as such in itself; so that
-they, “flowing out in one direction and another, have yet not flowed
-away, but know whence and whither they are flowing.” This distinction
-is the point to which Plotinus often returns, and this advance from the
-unrevealed to the revelation, this production, is a point of importance.
-
-b. Now what is first begotten by this Unity, the Son, is finite
-understanding (νοῦς), the second Divine Being, the other principle.
-Here the main difficulty confronts us—the task known and recognized
-long years ago—the comprehension of how the One came to the decision
-to determine itself; and the endeavour to elucidate this fact still
-constitutes the essential point of interest. The ancients did not
-frame this question in the definite form in which we have it; but they
-nevertheless occupied themselves with it. For the νοῦς is nothing
-more or less than the self-finding of self; it is the pure duality
-(δυάς), itself and its object; it contains all that is thought, it is
-this distinction, but pure distinction that remains at the same time
-identical with itself. Simple unity is, however, the First. Plotinus
-thus also says in a somewhat Pythagorean fashion that things are as
-numbers in this λόγος. “But number is not the First, for unity is not
-a number. The first number is the two, but as indeterminate duality;
-and the one is what determines it; the two is also the soul. Number is
-the solid; what sensuous perception takes to be existent, is a later
-development.”[231]
-
-Plotinus has here (Ennead. V. l. 1, c. 6) all sorts of modes of
-representation in order to make clear to himself the development out
-of the One: “How then this process is accomplished, how out of unity
-proceed two and plurality in general—if we would know how to express
-this, we must call on God, not, however, with audible voice, but
-pouring out our soul in prayer to Him; this we can do only by coming
-all alone to Him who is alone. He who contemplates must retire into his
-secret heart as into a temple, and remain there at rest, being elevated
-above all things, and in such contemplation as admits of no change.”
-This is always the mood of the thinking soul, to which Plotinus exhorts
-and would lead everything back. In this pure thought or contemplation
-the νοῦς is actual; and this is divine activity itself.
-
-Plotinus continues: “This production is not a movement nor a change;
-change and what comes to pass through change, the changeable, we
-arrive at only in the third place;” change implies other-Being and is
-directed to something else, νοῦς is still the remaining at home with
-self of meditation. “The finite understanding originating thus from
-absolute essence, yet without change, is the immediate reflection of
-the same; it is not established by an act of will or a resolution.
-But God,” as One, the Good, “is the immovable; and production is a
-light proceeding from Him who endures. The One sheds light round about
-Himself; the finite understanding flows from Him, the enduring one,
-just as the light from the sun encircles it. All things which are
-permanent give forth and diffuse from their substance an essence which
-is dependent upon them;” or, as Plotinus really says, it is identical
-with them. “As fire diffuses warmth, and snow cold, around itself, but
-especially as the fragrance of things clings round them,” so does νοῦς,
-like light, diffuse Being around. “That which has come to perfection
-passes into the emanation, into the circle of light,” spreads a
-fragrance around.[232] For this going forth (πρόοδον) or production,
-Plotinus also employs the image of overflowing, whereby, however, the
-One remains simply one. “Because it is complete in itself, without
-anything lacking, it overflows; and this overflow is what is produced.
-This that is produced merely, however, returns to the One,” the Good,
-“which is its object, content and fulfilling; and this is finite
-understanding,”—this the reversion of what is produced to the original
-unity. “The first state of Being that is restful is absolute essence,
-and finite understanding is the contemplation of this essence;” or it
-comes into existence by means of the first essence, through return upon
-itself, seeing itself, by its being a seeing seeing. The light shed
-around is a contemplation of the One; this reflection of self on self
-(ἐπιστρέφειν) is then thought, or the νοῦς is this movement in a circle
-(ἐπιστροφή).[233]
-
-These are the main principles of Plotinus; and he has in this way
-truly determined the nature of the Idea in all its moments. Only there
-is a difficulty here which makes us pause; and it is found in this
-development. We can imagine the infinite disclosing itself in a variety
-of ways; in later times there has been much talk of an issuing-forth
-from God, which, however, is still a sensuous conception or something
-quite immediate. The necessity of self-disclosure is not expressed
-thereby, for it is stated only as something having come to pass. That
-the Father begets the eternal Son satisfies the imagination; the Idea
-is according to its content quite correctly conceived as the Trinity,
-and this is an important matter. But although these determinations are
-true, the form of the immediacy of movement is at the same time neither
-sufficient nor satisfying for the Notion. For because the Becoming of
-the simple unity, as the abrogation of all predicates, is that same
-absolute negativity which is implicitly the production of itself, we
-must not begin with unity and only then pass over into duality, but we
-must grasp them both as one. For, according to Plotinus, the object of
-the finite understanding is clearly nothing which is alien or opposite
-to this or to itself; the manifold Ideas are alone the content of the
-same. God therefore through distinction and extension is likewise a
-return to Himself, that is, this very duality is simply in the unity,
-and is its object. What is thought is not outside of νοῦς in thought
-νοῦς merely possesses itself as thinking. The object of thought, that
-to which thought turns back, is absolute unity; into this, however, as
-such, there is no forcing a way, and it is not determined, but remains
-the unknown. Since thinking is, however, only the fact of having itself
-as object, it has thus already an object which contains mediation and
-activity, or, to speak generally, duality in itself. This is Thought as
-the thought of Thought. Or in the perfecting of this thought in itself,
-inasmuch as it is its own object, there lies for Plotinus the first
-and truly intellectual world, which thus stands to the world of sense
-in such a relation that the latter is only a distant imitation of the
-former. Things, looked at as they exist in this absolute Thought, are
-their own Notions and essence (λόγοι); and these are the patterns of
-sensuous existences, as Plato also expressed it.[234]
-
-That the nature of thought is to think itself, is a quite Aristotelian
-definition. But with Plotinus and the Alexandrians it is likewise the
-case that the true universe, the intellectual worlds is produced from
-thought; what Plato termed the Ideas, is here the understanding that
-forms, the intelligence that produces, which is actual in that which
-is produced, and has itself as object, thinks itself. Of the relation
-of these many Notions in the understanding, Plotinus states that they
-are present there, just as the elements are present in a thing, and
-therefore not as mutually indifferent species, but as being diverse
-and yet entirely one. They are not indifferent through space, but
-only differ through an inner difference, that is, not in the manner
-of existent parts.[235] The finite understanding is thereby expressed
-as negative unity. But it is utterly inappropriate when the relation
-of the elements which constitute a thing is defined as that of the
-parts of which the whole consists, and each of which is absolute—for
-instance, when it is represented that in a crystal, water, flint,
-&c., are still present as such. Their Being is really neutrality, in
-which each of them is abrogated as indifferent and existent: therefore
-their unity is negative unity, the inner essence, the principle of
-individuality as containing in itself elements that differ.
-
-_c._ The world that changes, which is subject to difference, arises
-from this, that the multiplicity of these forms is not only implicitly
-in the understanding, but they also exist for it in the form of its
-object. Further, there is for it a three-fold mode of thinking: in the
-first place it thinks the unchangeable, its unity, as object. This
-first mode is the simple undifferentiated contemplation of its object,
-or it is light; not matter, but pure form, activity. Space is the
-abstract pure continuity of this activity of light, not the activity
-itself, but the form of its uninterruptedness. The understanding, as
-the thought of this light, is itself light, but light real in itself,
-or the light of light.[236] In the second place the understanding
-thinks the difference between itself and essence; the differentiated
-multiplicity of the existent is object for it. It is the creation of
-the world; in it everything has its determinate form in regard to
-everything else, and this constitutes the substance of things. Since,
-in the third place, substantiality or permanency in the faculty of
-thought is determination, its production, or the flowing out of all
-things from it, is of such a nature that it remains filled with all
-things, or likewise absorbs all immediately. It is the abrogation
-of these differences, or the passing over from one to another; this
-is its manner of thinking itself, or it is object to itself in this
-fashion. This is change; thinking has thus the three principles in
-it. Inasmuch as νοῦς thinks of itself as changing, but yet in change
-remaining simple and at home with itself, the subject of its thought
-is life as a whole; and the fact of its establishing its moments as
-existing in opposition to each other is the true, living universe. This
-turning round on itself of the outflow from itself, this thinking of
-itself, is the eternal creation of the world.[237] It is plain that
-in these thoughts of Plotinus the Being-another, the foreign element,
-is abrogated, existent things are implicitly Notions. The Divine
-understanding is the thinking of them, and their existence is nothing
-else than this very fact of their being the object of thought of the
-Divine understanding; they are moments of thought and, for this very
-reason, of Being. Plotinus thus distinguishes in νοῦς thinking (νοῦς),
-the object thought of (νοητόν), and thought (νόησις), so that νοῦς is
-one, and at the same time all; but thought is the unity of what had
-been distinguished.[238] We would term thought not so much unity as
-product; yet even thought, that is, the subject, soars upwards to God.
-The distinction between thought and an external God is thus doubtless
-at an end; for this reason the Neo-Platonists are accused of being
-visionaries, and in truth they do themselves propound wondrous things.
-
-α. Plotinus now goes on to describe the third principle, the soul:
-“Νοῦς is eternally active in exactly the same way as now. The movement
-to it and around it is the activity of the soul. Reason (λόγος), which
-passes from it to the soul, confers on the soul a power of thought,
-placing nothing between them. Thinking (νοῦς) is not a manifold;
-thinking is simple, and consists in the very fact of thinking. The
-true νοῦς (not ours, as it is found, for instance, in desire) thinks
-in thoughts, and the object of its thought is not beyond it; for it is
-itself the object of its thought, has of necessity itself in thought
-and sees itself; and sees itself not as non-thinking, but as thinking.
-Our soul is partly in the eternal” (light), “a part of the universal
-soul; this itself is in part in the eternal, and flows out thence,
-remaining in contemplation of itself, without any designed regulation.
-The embellishment of the whole gives to every corporeal object what in
-view of its determination and nature it is capable of carrying out,
-just as a central fire diffuses warmth all around it. The One must not
-be solitary, for were it so all things would be hidden, and would have
-no form present in them; nothing of what exists would exist if the
-One stood by itself, neither would there be the multitude of existent
-things, produced by the One, if those who have attained to the order of
-souls had not received the power to go forth. Similarly souls must not
-exist alone, as if what is produced through them should not appear, for
-in every nature it is immanent to make and bring to light something in
-conformity with itself, as the seed does from an undivided beginning.
-There is nothing to prevent all from having a share in the nature of
-the Good.”[239] Plotinus leaves the corporeal and sensuous on one
-side, as it were, and does not take pains to explain it, his sole and
-constant aim being to purify therefrom, in order that the universal
-soul and our soul may not be thereby endangered.
-
-β. Plotinus speaks, moreover, of the principle of the sensuous
-world, which is matter, and with which the origin of evil is closely
-connected. He dwells much on this subject of matter in his philosophy.
-Matter is the non-existent (οῦκ ὄν), which presents an image of the
-existent. Things differ in their pure form, the difference that
-distinguishes them; the universal of difference is the negative, and
-this is matter. As Being is the first absolute unity, this unity of the
-objective is the pure negative; it lacks all predicates and properties,
-figure, &c. It is thus itself a thought or pure Notion, and indeed the
-Notion of pure indeterminateness; or it is universal potentiality
-without energy. Plotinus describes this pure potentiality very well,
-and defines it as the negative principle. He says, “Brass is a statue
-only in potentiality; for in what is not permanent, the possible, as we
-have seen, was something utterly different. But when the grammarian in
-potentiality becomes the grammarian in actuality, the potential is the
-same as the actual. The ignorant man may be a grammarian, as it were
-by accident (κατὰ συμβεβηκός), and it is not in virtue of his present
-ignorance that he has the possibility of knowledge. It is for the very
-reason of its possessing a certain measure of knowledge that the soul
-which is actual attains to what it was potentially. It would not be
-inappropriate to give the name of form and idea to energy, in so far as
-it exists as energy and not as mere potentiality—not simply as energy,
-but as the energy of something determinate. For we might give the
-name more properly, perhaps, to another energy, namely that which is
-opposed to the potentiality which leads to actuality, for the possible
-has the possibility of being something else in actuality. But through
-possibility the possible has also in itself actuality, just as skill
-has the activity related thereto, and as bravery has brave action. When
-in the object of thought (ἐν τοῖς νοηντοῖς)[240] there is no matter,—as
-in the case of something existing in potentiality—and it does not
-become something that does not yet exist, nor something that changes
-into something else, nor something that—itself permanent—produces
-another, or emerging from itself permits another to exist in its
-place—in that case we have then no mere potential but the existent,
-which has eternity and not time. Should we consider matter to be there
-as form, as even the soul, although a form, is matter in respect to
-what is different? But, speaking generally, matter is not in actuality,
-it is what exists in potentiality. Its Being only announces a Becoming,
-so that its Being has always to do with future Being. That which is
-in potentiality is thus not something, but everything;” energy alone
-is determinate. “Matter consequently always leans towards something
-else, or is a potentiality for what follows; it is left behind as
-a feeble and dim image that cannot take shape. Is it then an image
-in respect to reality, and therefore a deception? This is the same
-as a true deception, this is the true non-existent;” it is untrue
-by reason of energy. “That is therefore not existent in actuality
-which has its truth in the non-existent;” it exists not in truth, for
-“it has its Being in non-Being. If you take away from the false its
-falseness, you take away all the existence that it has. Similarly, if
-you introduce actuality into that which has its Being and its essence
-in potentiality, you destroy the cause of its substance (ὑποστάσεως),
-because Being consisted for it in potentiality. If we would therefore
-retain matter uninjured, we must keep it as matter; apparently we must
-therefore say that it is only in potentiality, in order that it may
-remain what it is.”[241]
-
-In accordance with this, therefore, Plotinus (Ennead. III. l. 6,
-c. 7, 8) defines it: “Matter is truly non-existent, a motion which
-abrogates itself, absolute unrest, yet itself at rest—what is opposed
-in itself; it is the great which is small, the small which is great,
-the more which is less, the less which is more. When defined in one
-mode, it is really rather the opposite; that is to say, when looked
-at and fixed, it is not fixed and escapes, or when not fixed it is
-fixed—the simply illusory.” Matter itself is therefore imperishable;
-there is nothing into which it can change. The Idea of change is itself
-imperishable, but what is implied in this Idea is changeable. This
-matter is nevertheless not without form; and we have seen that the
-finite understanding has a third relationship to its object, namely in
-reference to differences. As now this relation and alteration, this
-transition, is the life of the universe, the universal soul of the
-same, its Being is in like manner not a change which takes place in
-the understanding, for its Being is its being the immediate object of
-thought through the understanding.
-
-γ. The Evil likewise, as contrasted with the Good, now begins to be
-the object of consideration, for the question of the origin of evil
-must always be a matter of interest to the human consciousness. These
-Alexandrians set up as matter the negative of thought, but since the
-consciousness of the concrete mind entered in, the abstract negative
-is apprehended in this concrete fashion as within the mind itself,
-therefore as the mentally negative. Plotinus regards this question of
-evil from many sides; but thoughtful consideration of this subject does
-not yet go very far. The following conceptions are those that prevail
-at this time: “The Good is νοῦς, but not the understanding in the sense
-it used to bear for us, which from a pre-supposition both satisfies
-itself and understands what is said to it, which forms a conclusion
-and from what follows draws up a theory, and from the consequence
-comes to a knowledge of what is, having now obtained something not
-formerly possessed; for before this its knowledge was empty, although
-it was understanding. But νοῦς, as we now understand it, contains all
-things in itself, is all things, and is at home with itself; it has all
-things while not having them,” because it is in itself ideal. “But it
-does not possess all in the sense in which we regard what we possess
-as something different or alien from ourselves; what is possessed is
-not distinguished from itself. For it is each thing and everything
-and not confounded, but absolute. What partakes of the same does not
-partake of all things at once, but partakes in so far as it can. Νοῦς
-is the first energy and the first substance of the soul, which has
-activity in regard thereto. The soul, externally revolving round νοῦς,
-contemplating it and gazing into its depths, beholds God by means of
-it; and this is the life of the gods, free from evil and filled with
-blessedness”—in so far as the intelligence which goes forth from itself
-has in its difference to do only with itself, and remains in its divine
-unity. “If it remained thus constant there would be no evil. But there
-are goods of the first and second and third rank, all surrounding the
-King over all; and He is the originator of all good, and all is His,
-and those of the second rank revolve round the second, and those of
-the third round the third. If this is the existent and something even
-higher than the existent, evil is not included in what is existent or
-higher than the existent; for this is the good. Nothing remains then
-but that evil, if it exists, is in the non-existent, as a form of the
-non-existent—but the non-existent not as altogether non-existent,
-but only as something other than the existent.” Evil is no absolute
-principle independent of God, as the Manichæans held it to be. “It is
-not non-existent in the same way that motion and rest are existent, but
-is like an image of the existent, or non-existent in an even greater
-degree; it is the sensuous universe.”[242]. Thus evil has its root in
-the non-existent.
-
-In the eighth book of the first Ennead Plotinus says (c. 9, 3, 4, 7):
-“But how is evil recognized? It is owing to thought turning away from
-itself that matter arises; it exists only through the abstraction of
-what is other than itself. What remains behind when we take away the
-Ideas is, we say, matter; thought accordingly becomes different, the
-opposite of thought, since it dares to direct itself on that which
-is not within its province. Like the eye turning away from the light
-in order to see the darkness which in the light it does not see—and
-this is a seeing which yet is non-seeing—so thought experiences the
-opposite of what it is, in order that it may see what is opposed to
-itself.” This abstract other is nothing but matter, and it is also
-evil; the seeing of the less measure is nothing but a non-seeing. “The
-sensuous in regard to measure, or the limited, is the less measure, the
-boundless, the undefined, unresting, insatiable, the utterly deficient;
-such is not accidental to it, but its substance.” Its aim is always
-Becoming; we cannot say that it is, but only that it is always about to
-be. “The soul which makes νοῦς its aim is pure, holds off matter and
-all that is indeterminate and measureless. But why then, when there is
-the Good, is there also necessarily Evil? Because there must be matter
-in the whole, because the whole necessarily consists of opposites. It
-would not be there, if matter were not present; the nature of the world
-is compounded of νοῦς and necessity. To be with the gods means to be
-in thought; for they are immortal. We may also apprehend the necessity
-of evil in this wise: As the Good cannot exist alone, matter is a
-counterpart to the Good, necessary to its production. Or we might also
-say that Evil is that which by reason of constant deterioration and
-decay has sunk until it can sink no lower; but something is necessary
-after the first, so that the extreme is also necessary. But that is
-matter, which has no longer any element of good in it; and this is the
-necessity of evil.”
-
-With Plotinus, as with Pythagoras, the leading of the soul to virtue
-is also an important subject. Plotinus has for this reason blamed the
-Gnostics frequently, especially in the ninth book of the second Ennead
-(c. 15), because “they make no mention at all of virtue and the Good,
-nor of how they may be reached, and the soul rendered better and purer.
-For no purpose is served by saying,[243] ‘Look unto God;’ it must
-also be shown how we can succeed in causing man thus to behold God.
-For it may be asked, What is to prevent a man from beholding, while
-at the same time he refrains from the gratification of no desire, and
-allows anger to take possession of him? Virtue, which sets a final end
-before itself and dwells in the soul with wisdom, manifests God; but
-without true virtue God is an empty word.” The Gnostics limit truth
-to the mental and intellectual; to this mere intellectuality Plotinus
-declares himself distinctly opposed, and holds firmly to the essential
-connection of the intelligible and the real. Plotinus honoured the
-heathen gods, attributing to them a deep meaning and a profound
-efficacy. He says in the same treatise (c. 16), “It is not by despising
-the world and the gods in it, and all else that is beautiful, that man
-attains to goodness. The wicked man holds the gods in contempt, and
-it is only when he has completely reached this stage that he becomes
-utterly depraved. The above-mentioned reverence of the Gnostics for the
-intelligible gods (νοητοὺς θεούς) is nothing corresponding with this
-(ἀσυμπαθὴς ἂν γένοιτο):” that is to say, there is no harmony between
-thoughts and the real world, when one does not go beyond the object of
-thought. “He who loves anything loves also all things related to the
-same, therefore also the children of the father whom he loves. Every
-soul is the daughter of this father. But souls in the heavenly spheres
-are more intelligible, and better, and far more nearly related to the
-higher Power than our souls are. For how could this world of reality
-be cut off from that higher sphere? Those who despise that which is
-related thereto know it only in name. How could it be pious to believe
-that Divine providence (πρόνοια) does not reach to matters here below?
-Why is God not also here? For how otherwise could He know what takes
-place within this sphere? Therefore He is universally present, and is
-in this world, in whatever way it be, so that the world participates in
-Him. If He is at a distance from the world, He is at a distance also
-from us, and you could say nothing of Him or of what He produces. This
-world also partakes of Him, and is not forsaken by Him, and never will
-be so. For the whole partakes of the divine much more than the part
-does, and the world-soul shares in it to a still greater degree. The
-Being and the rationality of the world are a proof of this.”
-
-In this we have the main ideas on which the intellectualism of Plotinus
-is based, the general conceptions to which everything particular is
-led back; the instances in which this is done are often, however,
-figurative. What, in the first place, is lacking in them, as we have
-already remarked, is the Notion. Severance, emanation, effluence
-or process, emergence, occurrence, are words which in modern times
-have also had to stand for much, but in fact nothing is expressed
-by them. Scepticism and dogmatism, as consciousness or knowledge,
-establish the opposition of subjectivity and objectivity. Plotinus
-has rejected it, has soared upwards into the highest region, into
-the Aristotelian thought of Thought; he has much more in common with
-Aristotle than with Plato, and thereby he is not dialectic, nor does
-he proceed out of himself, nor as consciousness does he go back out
-of himself into himself again. With this, in the second place, there
-is connected the fact that the further descent either to nature or
-to manifested consciousness, even when expressed as the operation of
-the higher soul, yet contains much that is arbitrary, and is devoid
-of the necessity of the Notion; for that which ought to be defined
-in Notions is expressed in many-coloured pictures, in the form of
-a reality; and this, to say the least, is a useless and inadequate
-expression. I quote one example only: our soul belongs not only to
-the sphere of the finite understanding, where it was perfect, happy,
-lacking nothing; its power of thought alone belongs to the first, the
-finite understanding. Its power of motion, or itself looked on as life,
-had as its source the intelligent world-soul, but sensation had its
-source in the soul of the world of sensation. That is to say, Plotinus
-makes the first world-soul to be the immediate activity of the finite
-understanding, which is an object to itself; it is pure soul above the
-sublunar region, and dwells in the upper heaven of the fixed stars.
-This world-soul has power to originate; from it again there flows an
-entirely sensuous soul. The desire of the individual and particular
-soul separated from the whole gives it a body; this it receives in
-the higher region of the heavens. With this body it obtains fancy and
-memory. At last it repairs to the soul of the sensible world; and from
-this it acquires sensation, desires, and the life that is vegetative in
-nature.[244]
-
-This declension, this further step towards the corporeality of the
-soul, is described by the followers of Plotinus as if the soul sank
-from the Milky Way and the Zodiac into the orbits of planets which
-have their place lower down, and in each of these it receives new
-powers, and in each begins also to exercise these powers. In Saturn
-the soul first acquires the power of forming conclusions with regard
-to things; in Jupiter it receives the power of effectiveness of the
-will; in Mars, affections and impulses; in the Sun, sensation, opinion,
-and imagination; in Venus, sensuous desires aiming at the particular;
-in the Moon, lastly, the power of production.[245] In such a way as
-this Plotinus makes into a particular existence for the spiritual the
-very things that he declares to be, on the one hand, intelligible
-moments. The soul which only has desires is the beast; that which only
-vegetates, which has only power of reproduction, is the plant. But
-what we spoke of above are not particular conditions of mind, outside
-of the universal spirit, in the world-spirit’s particular stages
-of its self-consciousness regarding itself; and Saturn and Jupiter
-have nothing further to do with it. When they in their potency are
-expressed as moments of the soul, this is not a whit better than when
-each of them was supposed to express a particular metal. As Saturn
-expresses lead, Jupiter tin, and so forth, so Saturn also expresses
-argumentation, Jupiter will, &c. It is doubtless easier to say that
-Saturn corresponds with lead, &c., that it is the power of drawing
-conclusions, or that it represents lead and the power of drawing
-conclusions, or anything else you like, instead of expressing its
-Notion, its essence. The above is a comparison with a thing that in
-like manner does not express a Notion, but is apparent to the senses,
-which is laid hold of out of the air, or rather indeed from the ground.
-Such representations are warped and false; for if we say that this is
-lead, we mean thereby the essence or the implicitness of lead, with
-which the soul has an affinity; but this is no longer the sensuous
-Being which is known as lead, nor has this moment of such a state any
-reality for the soul.
-
-
-3. PORPHYRY AND IAMBLICHUS.
-
-Porphyry and Iamblichus, who have already been mentioned as the
-biographers of Pythagoras (Vol. I. p. 197), are distinguished followers
-of Plotinus. The first, a Syrian, died in 304: the latter, likewise
-of Syria, in the year 333.[246] Amongst other works by Porphyrius,
-we possess an “Introduction to the Organon of Aristotle on Genera,
-Species, and Judgments,” in which his logic is propounded in its
-principal elements. This work is one which has at all times been the
-text-book of Aristotelian Logic, and also an authority from which the
-knowledge of its form has been derived; and our ordinary books of logic
-contain little more than what is found in this Introduction. The fact
-that Porphyry devoted himself to logic shows that a determinate form
-of thought was coming into favour with the Neo-Platonists; but this is
-something pertaining altogether to the understanding and very formal.
-Thus we here have the characteristic fact that with the Neo-Platonists
-the logic of the understanding, the quite empiric treatment of the
-sciences, is found in conjunction with the entirely speculative
-Idea, and in respect of practical life with a belief in theurgy, the
-marvellous and strange: in his life of Plotinus, Porphyry, indeed,
-describes him a miracle-worker, which statement we, however, must set
-aside as appertaining to literature.
-
-Iamblichus evinces more mistiness and confusion still; he certainly
-was a teacher highly esteemed in his time, so that he even received
-the name of divine instructor; but his philosophic writings
-form a compilation without much specially to characterize them,
-and his biography of Pythagoras does not do much credit to his
-understanding. It was likewise in the Pythagorean philosophy that the
-Neo-Platonists gloried, and more particularly they revived the form of
-number-determination which pertains to it. In Iamblichus thought sinks
-into imagination, the intellectual universe to a kingdom of demons
-and angels with a classification of the same, and speculation comes
-down to the methods of magic. The Neo-Platonists called this theurgy
-(θεουργία); for in the miracle speculation, the divine Idea, is, so to
-speak, brought into immediate contact with actuality, and not set forth
-in a universal way. As to the work _De mysteriis Ægyptiorum_, it is not
-known for certain whether it had Iamblichus as its author or not; later
-on Proclus makes great ado concerning him, and testifies that he was
-indebted to Iamblichus for his main ideas.[247]
-
-
-4. PROCLUS.
-
-Proclus, a later Neo-Platonist who has still to be mentioned, is more
-important. He was born in 412 at Constantinople, but carried on his
-studies and spent most of his life with Plutarchus in Athens, where he
-also died in 485. His life is written by Marinus, in a style similar
-to that of the biographies just mentioned. According to this his
-parents came from Xanthus in Lycia, a district of Asia Minor; and since
-Apollo and Minerva were the tutelary deities of this town, he rendered
-grateful worship to them. They, themselves, vouchsafed to him, as their
-favourite, particular regard and personal manifestations; indeed, he
-was healed of an illness by Apollo touching his head; by Minerva,
-however, he was called upon to go to Athens. First of all he went to
-Alexandria to study rhetoric and philosophy, and then to Athens, to be
-with Plutarchus and Syrianus, the Platonists. Here he first studied
-Aristotelian and then Platonic philosophy. Above all the daughter of
-Plutarchus, Asclepigenia, initiated him into the profound secrets of
-philosophy; she, as Marinus assures us, was the only individual at that
-time who retained the knowledge, transmitted to her by her father, of
-the mystic ceremonies and of the whole theurgic discipline. Proclus
-studied everything pertaining to the mysteries, the Orphic hymns, the
-writings of Hermes, and religious institutions of every kind, so that,
-wherever he went, he understood the ceremonies of the pagan worship
-better than the priests who were placed there for the purpose of
-performing them. Proclus is said to have had himself initiated into
-all the pagan mysteries. He himself kept all the religious festivals
-and observances pertaining to nations the most various; he was even
-familiar with the Egyptian form of worship, observed the Egyptian days
-of purification and festivals, and spent certain fast days in offering
-up prayers and praise. Proclus himself composed many hymns—of which we
-still possess some that are very beautiful—both in honour of the better
-known divinities and of those whose fame is entirely local. Of the
-circumstance that he—“the most God-fearing man”—had dealings with so
-many religions, he himself says: “It is not fitting for a philosopher
-to be minister (θεραπευτήν) to the worship of one town or of what
-pertains to the few, for he should be the universal hierophant of the
-whole world.” He considered Orpheus to be the originator of all Greek
-theology, and set a specially high value on the Orphic and Chaldaic
-oracles. It was in Athens that he taught. Of course his biographer,
-Marinus, relates the most marvellous things about him, that he brought
-down rain from heaven and tempered great heat, that he stilled the
-earthquake, healed diseases, and beheld visions of the divine.[248]
-
-Proclus led a most intellectual life; he was a profoundly speculative
-man, and the scope of his knowledge was very great. In his case, as
-also in that of Plotinus, the contrast between the insight of such
-philosophers and what their disciples relate of them in biographies,
-must strike one very forcibly, for of the wonders described by the
-biographers few traces are to be found in the works of the subjects
-themselves. Proclus left behind him a great number of writings, many of
-which we now possess; he was the author of several mathematical works
-which we also have, such as that on the Sphere. His more important
-philosophic works are the Commentaries on Plato’s Dialogues, certain
-of which have been published from time to time; that on the Timæus was
-the most famous. But several were only found in manuscript, and of
-these Cousin issued in Paris the Commentaries on the Alcibiades (Vols.
-II. III.), and the Parmenides (Vols. IV.-VI.) for the first time. The
-first volume of Cousin’s edition contains some writings by Proclus
-which now exist only in Latin, on Freedom, Providence, and Evil. Works
-separately published are his important writings, The Platonic Theology
-(εἰς τὲν Πλάτωνος θεολογίαν) and his Theological Elements (συοιχείωσις
-θεολογική); the latter short work Creuzer has had re-published, as also
-some of the before-mentioned Commentaries.
-
-Proclus lived, so to speak, in the worship of science. We cannot fail
-to see in him great profundity of perception, and greater capacity for
-working a matter out and clearness of expression than are found in
-Plotinus; scientific development also advanced with him, and on the
-whole he possesses an excellent manner of expression. His philosophy,
-like that of Plotinus, has the form of a Commentary on Plato; his book
-“On the Theology of Plato,” is in this respect his most interesting
-work. The main ideas of his philosophy may easily be recognized from
-this work, which possesses many difficulties for this reason in
-particular, that in it the pagan gods are considered, and philosophic
-significations derived from them. But he distinguishes himself entirely
-from Plotinus by the fact that with him the Neo-Platonic philosophy, as
-a whole, has at least reached a more systematic order, and also a more
-developed form; thus in his Platonic theology especially (dialectic as
-the work undoubtedly is) a more distinct progression and distinction
-between the spheres in the Idea is to be found, than is noticeable in
-Plotinus. His philosophy is an intellectual system; we must see how
-we can work it out. His way of putting it is not perfectly clear, but
-leaves much to be desired.
-
-Proclus differs first of all from Plotinus in not making Being his
-principle or purely abstract moment, but by beginning from unity,
-and for the first time understanding Being or subsistence as the
-third; thus to him everything has a much more concrete form. But the
-self-development of this unity is not made the necessity of the Notion
-with Proclus any more than with Plotinus; we must once for all give up
-seeking here for the Notion of disunion. Proclus (Theol. Plat. II. p.
-95) says, “The one is in itself inexpressible and unknowable; but it is
-comprehended from its issuing forth and retiring into itself.” Proclus
-in the same place (pp. 107, 108) defines this self-differentiation, the
-first characteristic of unity, as a production (παράγειν), a going
-forth (πρόοδος), and also as a representation or demonstration. The
-relation to difference of the unity which brings forth is, however, not
-an issuing forth from self, for an issuing forth would be a change,
-and unity would be posited as no more self-identical. Hence through
-its bringing forth unity suffers no loss or diminution, for it is
-the thought that suffers no deterioration through the creation of a
-determinate thought, but remains the same, and also receives what is
-brought forth into itself.[249] As far as this goes, the Notion is,
-properly speaking, no clearer than with Plotinus.
-
-What distinguishes Plotinus is his more profound study of the Platonic
-dialectic; in this way he occupies himself in his Platonic theology
-with the most acute and far-reaching dialectic of the One. It is
-necessary for him to demonstrate the many as one and the one as many,
-to show forth the forms which the One adopts. But it is a dialectic
-which to a greater or less extent is externally worked out, and which
-is most wearisome. But while with Plato these pure notions of unity,
-multiplicity, Being, &c., appear naturally, and so to speak devoid of
-other significance than that which they immediately possess (for we
-designate them as universal ideas which are present in our thought),
-with Proclus they have another and higher meaning; and hence it comes
-to pass that, as we have seen (pp. 59, 60), he found in the apparently
-negative result of the Platonic Parmenides the nature of absolute
-existence particularly and expressly recognized. Proclus now shows,
-according to the Platonic dialectic, how all determinations, and
-particularly that of multiplicity, are resolved into themselves and
-return into unity. What to the conceiving consciousness is one of its
-most important truths—that many substances exist, or that the many
-things, each of which is termed a one, and hence substance, exist in
-truth in themselves—is lost in this dialectic, and the result ensues
-that only unity is true existence, all other determinations are merely
-vanishing magnitudes, merely moments, and thus their Being is only
-an immediate thought. But since we now ascribe no substantiality,
-no proper Being to a thought, all such determinations are only
-moments of a thing in thought. The objection at this point made and
-constantly maintained against the Neo-Platonists and Proclus is this,
-that certainly for thought everything goes back within unity, but
-that this is a logical unity alone, a unity of thought and not of
-actuality, and that consequently there can be no arguing from the
-formal to actuality. From this they say it by no means follows that all
-actual things are not actual substances, that they have not different
-principles independent of one another, and even that they are not
-different substances, each of which is separated from the other and in
-and for itself. That is to say, this contradiction always begins the
-whole matter over again when it says of actuality that it is something
-implicit, for those who do this call actuality a thing, a substance, a
-one—which last are merely thoughts; in short they always again bring
-forward, as something implicitly existent, that whose disappearance or
-non-implicitude has been already demonstrated.
-
-But in this regard Proclus displays great sagacity in a remark he
-makes on the manner in which this mode of production appears in the
-Parmenides of Plato, who shows in a negative way in this Dialogue that
-if the existence of unity is affirmed, the existence of multiplicity,
-&c., must be denied. Respecting these negations (ἀποφάσεις) Proclus
-now says (Theol. Plat. II. pp. 108, 109) that they do not signify an
-abrogation of the content (στερητικαὶ τῶν ὑποκειμένων) of which they
-are predicated, but are the creation of determinatives in accordance
-with their opposites (γεννητικαὶ τῶν οἷον ἀντικειμένων). “Thus if
-Plato shows that the first is not many, this has the significance that
-the many proceed from the first; if he shows that it is not a whole,
-it proves that the fact of being a whole proceeds from it. The mode
-(τρόπος) of negations is thus to be taken as perfection which remains
-in unity, issues forth from everything, and is in an inexpressible
-and ineffable preponderance of simplicity. On the other hand, God
-must likewise be derived from these negations; else there would be
-no Notion (λόγος) of them, and also no negation. The Notion of the
-inexpressible revolves round itself, never resting, and it strives with
-itself;” _i.e._ the one implies its determinations ideally, the whole
-is contained in the one. Multiplicity is not taken empirically and then
-merely abrogated; the negative, as dividing, producing, and active, not
-merely contains what is privative, but also affirmative determinations.
-In this way the Platonic dialectic wins for Proclus a positive
-significance; through dialectic he would lead all differences back to
-unity. With this dialectic of the one and many Proclus makes much ado,
-more especially in his famous elementary doctrines. The submersion of
-everything in unity remains, however, merely beyond this unity, instead
-of which this very negativity must really be grasped as signifying its
-production.
-
-That which brings forth, according to Proclus, furthermore brings forth
-through a superfluity of power. There certainly also is a bringing
-forth through want; all need, all desire, for example, becomes cause
-through want; and its bringing forth is its satisfaction. The end here
-is incomplete, and the energy arises from the endeavour to complete
-itself, so that only in production the need becomes less, the desire
-ceases to be such, or its abstract Being-for-self disappears. Unity,
-on the other hand, goes forth out of itself through the superfluity
-of potentiality, and this superabundant potentiality is actuality
-generally: this reflection of Proclus is quite Aristotelian. Hence
-the coming forth of the unity consists in the fact that it multiplies
-itself, pure number comes forth; but this multiplication does not
-negate or diminish that first unity, but rather takes place in the
-method of unity (ἑνιαίως). The many partakes of the unity, but the
-unity does not partake of multiplicity.[250] The absolute unity
-which multiplies itself into many ones has consequently generated
-multiplicity as it is in these ones. Proclus makes use of a many-sided
-dialectic to show that the many does not exist in itself, is not the
-creator of the many, that everything goes back into unity, and thus
-unity is also the originator of the many. It is, however, not made
-clear how this is the negative relation of the one to itself; what we
-see is then a manifold dialectic, which merely passes backwards and
-forwards over the relationship of the one to the many.
-
-To Proclus an important characteristic of this progression is the fact
-that it takes place through analogy, and what is dissimilar to the
-truth is the further removed from the same. The many partakes of unity,
-but it is in a measure likewise not one, but dissimilar to one. But
-since the many is also similar to what produces it, it likewise has
-unity as its essence; hence the many are independent unities (ἑνάδες).
-They contain the principle of unity within themselves, for if as being
-many they are likewise different, they are, so to speak, only many
-for a third, being in and for themselves unities. These unities again
-beget others which must, however, be less perfect, for the effect
-is not exactly like the cause, that which is brought forth is not
-quite similar to what brings it forth. These next unities are wholes,
-_i.e._, they are no longer real unities, unities in themselves, since
-in them the unity is only an accident. But because things themselves
-are in their synthetic nature merely wholes because their souls bind
-them together, they are dissimilar to the first unity, and cannot be
-immediately united to it. The abstractly conceived multiplicity is
-thus their mean; multiplicity is analogous to absolute unity, and is
-that which unites unity with the whole universe. Pure multiplicity
-makes the different elements like one another, and hence unites them to
-unity; but things only have similarity to unity. Thus things that are
-begotten ever remove themselves more and more from unity, and partake
-of it less and less.[251]
-
-The further determination of the Idea is known as the trinity (τριάς).
-Of this Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. p. 140) first of all gives the
-abstract definition that its three forms are three gods, and now we
-have more especially to find out how he defined the trinity. This
-trinity is certainly interesting in the Neo-Platonists, but it is
-specially so in the case of Proclus, because he did not leave it in
-its abstract moments. For he again considers these three abstract
-determinations of the absolute, each on its own account, as a totality
-of triunity, whereby he obtains one real trinity. Thus in the whole
-there are three spheres, separated from one another, which constitute
-the totality, but in such a way that each has again to be considered
-as complete and concrete in itself; and this must be acknowledged as a
-perfectly correct point of view which has been reached. Because each
-of these differences in the Idea, as remaining in unity with itself,
-is really again the whole of these moments, there are different orders
-in production; and the whole is the process of the three totalities
-establishing themselves in one another as identical. It will be shown
-directly which orders these are, and Proclus occupies himself much with
-these, because he tries to demonstrate the different powers again in
-them. Proclus is hence much more detailed, and he went much further
-than did Plotinus; it may indeed be said that in this respect we find
-in him the most excellent and best that was formulated by any of the
-Neo-Platonists.
-
-As regards the further details of his trinity there are, according to
-his account, three abstract moments present in it, which are worked
-out in his Platonic theology—the one, the infinite and the limitation;
-the last two we have likewise seen in Plato (p. 68). The first, God,
-is just the absolute unity already frequently discussed, which by
-itself is unknowable and undisclosed, because it is a mere abstraction;
-it can only be known that it is an abstraction, since it is not yet
-activity. This unity is the super-substantial (ὑπερούσιον), and in
-the second place its first production is the many ones (ἑνάδες) of
-things, pure numbers. In these we have the thinking principles of
-things, through which they partake of absolute unity; but each partakes
-of it only through a single individual unity, through the one, while
-souls do so through thought-out, universal unities. To this Proclus
-refers the forms of ancient mythology. That is to say, as he calls
-that first unity God, he calls these numerous unities of thought that
-flow from it, gods, but the following moments are likewise so called.
-He says, (Institut. theol. c. 162): “The gods are named in accordance
-with what depends upon the orders (τάξεων); hence it is possible to
-know from this their unknowable substances, which constitute their
-determinate nature. For everything divine is inexpressible on its own
-account and unknowable as forming part of the inexpressible one; but
-from differentiation, from change, it comes to pass that we know its
-characteristics. Thus there are gods capable of being known, which
-radiate true Being; hence true Being is the knowable divine, and the
-incommunicable is made manifest for the νοῦς.” But there always remains
-a compulsion to represent mythology in the determinateness of the
-Notion. These gods or unities do not correspond to the order of things
-in such a way that there are just as many and such unities (ἑνάδες) or
-gods as there are things; for these unities only unite things with the
-absolute unity. The third is just the limit which holds these unities
-(ἑνάδες) together, and constitutes their unity with the absolute
-unity; the limit asserts the unity of the many and the one.[252]
-
-This is better expressed by what follows, in which Proclus takes up
-the three fundamental principles—the limit, the infinite and what
-is mingled—of Plato’s Philebus, because the opposition is thus more
-clearly determined; and therefore these appear to be the original gods.
-But to such abstractions the name gods is not applicable, for it is
-as returning that we first of all see them as divine. Proclus says
-(Theol. Plat. III. pp. 133-134): “From that first limit (πέρας),” the
-absolute one, “things have (ἐξέρτηται) union, entirety and community,”
-the principle of individuality, “and divine measure. All separation
-and fertility and what makes for multiplicity, on the contrary, rest
-on the first infinitude (ἄπειρον);” the infinite is thus quantity, the
-indeterminate, just as Plato in the Philebus calls the infinite the
-evil, and pleasure the untrue, because no reason is present in it (pp.
-68, 69). “Hence when we speak of the process of anything divine, it is
-implied that in the individuals it remains steadfastly one, and only
-progresses towards infinitude,” continuity as self-production, “and
-has at the same time the one and multiplicity present in it—the former
-from the principle of limitation, and the latter from the principle
-of infinitude. In all opposition which is found in species that are
-divine, what is more excellent belongs to limitation, and what is
-less excellent to the infinite. From these two principles everything
-derives its progress until it steps forth into Being. Thus the eternal,
-in so far as it is measure as intellectual, partakes of limitation,
-but in so far as it is the cause of unceasing effort after Being, of
-infinitude. Thus the understanding in so far as it has the standard
-(ραραδειγματικὰ μέτρα) within it, is a product of limitation; in so
-far as it eternally produces everything, it has undiminished capacity
-for infinitude.” Multiplicity as Notion, not as the many, is itself
-unity; it is duality, or the determinateness which stands over against
-indeterminateness. Now according to Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. p. 137)
-the third is a whole, the unity of determinate and indeterminate,
-or that which is mingled (μικτόν). “This is first of all everything
-existent, a monad of many possibilities, a completed reality, a many
-in one (ἓν πολλά).” The expression “mingled” is not very suitable, is
-indeed faulty, because mixture at first expresses only an external
-union, while here the concrete, the unity of opposites, and even more
-the subjective, is properly speaking indicated.
-
-Now if we consider further the nature of what is mingled we find the
-three triads likewise, for each of those three abstract principles is
-itself a similar complete triad, but under one or these particular
-forms. Proclus says (Theol. Plat. III. p. 135); “The first Being (τὸ
-πρώτως ὄν) is the mingled, the unity of the triad with itself; it
-is the Being of the life as well as of the understanding. The first
-of what is mingled is the first of all existence, the life and the
-spirit are the two other orders; everything is consequently in triads.
-These three triads determine themselves thus as absolute Being, life
-and spirit; and they are spiritual and to be grasped in thought.”
-According to this only the intelligible world is true for Proclus. But
-that Proclus did not make the understanding proceed immediately from
-the unity, is the second point in which he differs from Plotinus; in
-this Proclus is more logical, and he follows Plato more closely. His
-sequence is excellent, and he is right in placing the understanding,
-as the richer, last, since it is not until after the development of
-the moments which are present in life that the understanding springs
-forth, and from it in turn the soul.[253] Proclus says (Theol. Plat.
-I. pp. 21, 22, 28) that certainly in the first unity all agree, but
-that Plotinus makes the thinking nature appear just after the unity;
-yet the instructor of Proclus, who led him into all divine truth,
-limited better this indefinite way of looking at things adopted by
-the ancients, and differentiated this disorderly confusion of various
-orders into a comprehensible plan, and succeeded in satisfactorily
-following and maintaining the distinction of determinations. As a
-matter of fact we find more distinction and clearness in Proclus than
-in the turbidity of Plotinus; he is quite correct in recognizing the
-νοῦς as the third, for it is, that which turns back.
-
-Regarding the relationship of the three orders Proclus now expresses
-himself in the passage already quoted (Theol. Plat. III. pp. 135-136)
-thus: “These three are themselves really contained in the existent, for
-in it is substance, life, the νοῦς and[254] what is the culminating
-point of all existence (ἀκρότης τῶν ὄντων),” the individuality of
-the self, the existent on its own account, the subjective, the point
-of negative unity. “The life that is grasped by thought is the very
-centre-point of existence. But the understanding is the limit of the
-existent, and it is thought as known (ὁ νοητὸς νοῦς), for in what is
-thought is thinking, and in thinking what is thought. But in what
-is thought thinking is in the mode of thought (νοητῶς), in thinking
-what is thought is in the mode of thinking (νοερῶς). Substance is the
-enduring element in existence and that which is interwoven with the
-first principles and which does not proceed from the one.” The second,
-“the life, is however that which proceeds from the principles and
-is born with infinite capacity;” it is itself the whole totality in
-the determination of infinitude, so that it is a concrete manifold.
-“The understanding is, again, the limit which leads back once more
-to the principles, brings about conformity with the principle, and
-accomplishes an intellectual circle. Now since it is a three-fold in
-itself, in part it is the substantial in itself, in part the living,
-in part the intellectual, but everything is substantially contained in
-it, and hence it is the foremost in existence, that which is united
-from the first principles.” That is the first reality. Excellent! “I
-call it substance, since the first substance (αὐτοουσία) is supreme
-over all existence and is, so to speak, the monad of everything.
-The understanding itself is that which knows, but life is thinking,
-and Being is just what is thought. Now if the whole of what exists
-is mingled, but the first existence (τὸ αὐτοόν) is substance, the
-substance that comes from the three principles (ὑφισταμένε) is
-mingled. What is mingled is thus substance as thought; it is from
-God, from whom also come the infinite and limitation. There are thus
-four moments, since what is mingled is the fourth.” The first is the
-monad, the absolute one, then come the many which themselves are units,
-the infinite of Plato; the third is limitation. The one is clearly
-all-penetrating, remaining at home with itself, all-embracing; it
-does not thus appear as one of the three moments, for Proclus adds a
-fourth which then likewise appears as the third moment, since it is the
-totality. “This united one is not only derived from those principles
-which are according to the one, but it also goes forth from them and is
-three-fold.” It is one trinity and three trinities. The limit and the
-infinite are, according to Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. pp. 138, 139),
-before substance and again in it; and this unity of moments is what
-comes first in all existence (πρωτίστη οὐσία). In the abstract trinity
-everything is thus contained in itself. Proclus says (Theol. Plat. III.
-pp. 139, 140): “The truly existent has the trinity of Beauty, Truth,
-and Symmetry in itself” (this is the way in which, like Plato, he names
-these three triads), “Beauty for order, Truth for purity, and Symmetry
-for the unity of what is joined together. Symmetry gives the cause that
-the existent is unity; Truth, that it is Being; Beauty, that it is
-thought.” Proclus shows that in each of the three triads, limit, the
-unlimited, and that which is mingled, are contained; each order is
-thus the same, but set forth in one of the three forms which constitute
-the first triad.
-
-_a._ Proclus says (Theol. Plat. III. p. 140): “Now this is the first
-triad of all that is thought—the limit, the infinite, and that which
-is mingled. The limit is God going forth to the culminating point
-of thought from the uncommunicable and first God, measuring and
-determining everything, admitting all that is paternal and coherent,
-and the unblemished race of gods. But the infinite” (quantity) “is
-the inexhaustible potentiality of this God, that which makes all
-productions and orders to appear, and the whole infinitude, the
-primeval essence as well as the substantial, and even the ultimate
-matter. What is mingled is, however, the first and highest order
-(διάκοσμος) of the gods, and it is that which holds everything
-concealed in itself, completed in accordance with the intelligible
-and all-embracing triad, comprehending in simple form the cause of
-all that exists, and establishing in the first objects of thought the
-culminating point which is derived from the wholes.” The first order is
-thus in its culminating point the abstract substance in which the three
-determinations as such are shut up without development and maintained
-in strict isolation; this pure reality is in so far the undisclosed.
-It is the greatest height reached by thought and likewise really the
-turning back, as this likewise appears in Plotinus; and this first
-begets in its culminating point the second order which in the whole is
-life, and culminates in its turn in the νοῦς.
-
-_b._ This second triad is placed in the determination of the infinite.
-On making this step forward Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. pp. 141, 142)
-breaks into a transport of bacchanalian ecstasy, and says, “After this
-first triad which remains in unity, let us now in hymns praise the
-second which proceeds from this, and is brought to pass through the
-abolition of that which comes before it. As the first unity begets the
-culminating point of existence, the middle unity begets the middle
-existence; for it is likewise begetting and self-retaining.” In the
-second order three moments again appear as before: “Here the principle
-or the first is the substance which was the completion of the first
-triad; the second, which was there the infinite, is here potentiality
-(δύναμις). The unity of both these is Life (ζωή),” the centre, or
-what gives determinateness to the whole order; “the second existence
-is life as thought, for in the most external thought Ideas have their
-subsistence (ὑπόστασιν). The second order is a triad analogous to the
-first, for the second is likewise a God.” The relationship of these
-trinities is hence this: “As the first triad is everything, but is so
-intellectually (νοητῶς) and as proceeding immediately from the one
-(ἑνκαίως), and remaining within limits (περατοειδῶς), so the second
-is likewise everything, but in living fashion and in the principle
-of infinitude (ζωτικῶς καὶ ἀπειροειδῶς), and similarly the third has
-proceeded after the manner of what is mingled. Limitation determines
-the first trinity, the unlimited the second, the concrete (μικτόν) the
-third. Each determination of unity, the one placed beside the other,
-also explains the intelligible order of gods; each contains all three
-moments subordinate to itself, and each is this trinity set forth under
-one of these moments.” These three orders are the highest gods; later
-on, we find in Proclus (in Timæum, pp. 291, 299) four orders of gods
-appearing.
-
-_c._ Proclus comes (Theol. Plat. III. p. 143) to the third triad,
-which is thought itself as such, the νούς: “The third monad places
-round itself the νούς as thought, and fills it with divine unity; it
-places the middle between itself and absolute existence, fills this
-last by means of the middle and turns it to itself. This third triad
-does not resemble cause (κατ̓ αἰτίαν), like the first existence,
-nor does it reveal the all like the second; but it is all as act
-and expression (ἐκφανῶς); hence it is also the limit of all that is
-thought. The first triad remains concealed in limit itself, and has
-all subsistence of intellectuality fixed in it. The second is likewise
-enduring, and at the same time steps forward;” the living appears, but
-is in so doing led back to unity. “The third after progression shifts
-and turns the intelligible limit back to the beginning, and bends the
-order back into itself; for the understanding is the turning back to
-what is thought” (to unity), “and the giving of conformity with it.
-And all this is one thought, one Idea: persistence, progression and
-return.” Each is a totality on its own account, but all three are led
-back into one. In the νοῦς the first two triads are themselves only
-moments; for spirit is just the grasping in itself of the totality of
-the first two spheres. “Now these three trinities announce in mystic
-form the entirely unknown (ἄγνωστον) cause of the first and unimparted
-(ἀμεθεκτοῦ) God,” who is the principle of the first unity, but is
-manifested in the three: “the one has inexpressible unity, the second
-the superfluity of all powers, but the third the perfect birth of
-all existence.” In this the mystic element is that these differences
-which are determined as totalities, as gods, become comprehended as
-one. The expression “mystic” often appears with the Neo-Platonists.
-Thus Proclus for example says (Theol. Plat. III. p. 131): “Let us once
-more obtain initiation into the mysteries (μυσταγωγίαν) of the one.”
-Mysticism is just this speculative consideration of Philosophy, this
-Being in thought, this self-satisfaction and this sensuous perception.
-However, μυστήριον has not to the Alexandrians the meaning that it
-has to us, for to them it indicates speculative philosophy generally.
-The mysteries in Christianity have likewise been to the understanding
-an incomprehensible secret, but because they are speculative, reason
-comprehends them, and they are not really secret, for they have been
-revealed.
-
-In conclusion, Proclus institutes a comparison between these triads.
-“In the first order the concrete is itself substance, in the second it
-is life, and in the third the thought that is known.” Proclus calls
-substance likewise Ἑστία, the fixed, the principle. “The first trinity
-is the God of thought (θεὸς νοητός); the second the thought of and
-thinking (θεὸς νοητὸς καὶ νοερός)” the active; “the third the” pure,
-“thinking God (θεὸς νοερός),” who is in himself this return to unity
-in which, as return, all three are contained; for “God is the whole
-in them.” These three are thus clearly the absolute one, and this
-then constitutes one absolute concrete God. “God knows the divided as
-undivided, what pertains to time as timeless, what is not necessary as
-necessary, the changeable as unchangeable, and, speaking generally, all
-things more excellently than in accordance with their order. Whose are
-the thoughts, his also are the substances, because the thought of every
-man is identical with the existence of every man, and each is both the
-thought and the existence,” and so on.[255]
-
-These are the principal points in the theology of Proclus, and it
-only remains to us to give some external facts. The individuality of
-consciousness is partially in the form of an actuality, as magic and
-theurgy; this often appears among the Neo-Platonists and with Proclus,
-and is called making a god. The element of theurgy is thus brought into
-relation with the heathen divinities: “The first and chief names of
-the gods, one must admit, are founded in the gods themselves. Divine
-thought makes names of its thoughts, and finally shows the images of
-the gods; each name gives rise, so to speak, to an image of a god.
-Now as theurgy through certain symbols calls forth the unenvying
-goodness of God to the light of the images of the artist, the science
-of thought makes the hidden reality of God appear through the uniting
-and separating of the tones.”[256] Thus the statues and pictures of
-artists show the inward speculative thought, the being replete with the
-divinity that brings itself into externality; thus the consecration
-of images is likewise represented. This connecting fact—that the
-Neo-Platonists have even inspired the mythical element with the
-divine—is thereby expressed, so that in images, &c., the divine power
-is present. Nevertheless I have only wished to call this moment to mind
-because it plays a great part at this particular time.
-
-
-5. THE SUCCESSORS OF PROCLUS.
-
-In Proclus we have the culminating point of the Neo-Platonic
-philosophy; this method in philosophy is carried into later times,
-continuing even through the whole of the Middle Ages. Proclus had
-several successors who were scholarchs at Athens—Marinus, his
-biographer, and then Isidorus of Gaza, and finally Damascius. Of the
-latter we still possess some very interesting writings; he was the last
-teacher of the Neo-Platonic philosophy in the Academy. For in 529 A.D.
-the Emperor Justinian caused this school to be closed, and drove all
-heathen philosophers from his kingdom: amongst these was Simplicius, a
-celebrated commentator on Aristotle, several of whose commentaries are
-not yet printed. They sought and found protection and freedom in Persia
-under Chosroïs. After some time they ventured to return to the Roman
-Empire, but they could no longer form any school at Athens; thus as far
-as its external existence is concerned, the heathen philosophy went
-utterly to ruin.[257] Eunapius treats of this last period, and Cousin
-has dealt with it in a short treatise. Although the Neo-Platonic school
-ceased to exist outwardly, ideas of the Neo-Platonists, and specially
-the philosophy of Proclus, were long maintained and preserved in the
-Church; and later on we shall on several occasions refer to it. In the
-earlier, purer, mystical scholastics we find the same ideas as are seen
-in Proclus, and until comparatively recent times, when in the Catholic
-Church God is spoken of in a profound and mystical way, the ideas
-expressed are Neo-Platonic.
-
-In the examples given by us perhaps the best of the Neo-Platonic
-philosophy is found; in it the world of thought has, so to speak,
-consolidated itself, not as though the Neo-Platonists had possessed
-this world of thought alongside of a sensuous world, for the sensuous
-world has disappeared and the whole been raised into spirit, and this
-whole has been called God and His life in it. Here we witness a great
-revolution, and with this the first period, that of Greek philosophy,
-closes. The Greek principle is freedom as beauty, reconciliation in
-imagination, natural free reconciliation that is immediately realized,
-and thus represents an Idea in sensuous guise. Through philosophy
-thought, however, desires to tear itself away from what is sensuous,
-for philosophy is the constitution of thought into a totality beyond
-the sensuous and the imaginary. Herein is this simple progression
-contained, and the points of view which we have noticed are, as
-cursorily surveyed, the following.
-
-First of all we saw the abstract in natural form: then abstract thought
-in its immediacy, and thus the one, Being. These are pure thoughts,
-but thought is not yet comprehended as thought; for us these thoughts
-are merely universal thoughts to which the consciousness of thought is
-still lacking. Socrates is the second stage, in which thought appears
-as self, the absolute is the thought of itself; the content is not
-only determined, _e.g._ Being, the atom, but is concrete thought,
-determined in itself and subjective. The self is the most simple form
-of the concrete, but it is still devoid of content; in as far as it
-is determined it is concrete, like the Platonic Idea. This content,
-however, is only implicitly concrete and is not yet known as such;
-Plato, beginning with what is given, takes the more determinate content
-out of sensuous perception. Aristotle attains to the highest idea; the
-thought about thought takes the highest place of all; but the content
-of the world is still outside of it. Now in as far as this manifold
-concrete is led back to the self as to the ultimate simple unity of the
-concrete, or, on the other hand, the abstract principle has content
-given to it, we saw the systems of dogmatism arising. That thought
-of thought is in Stoicism the principle of the whole world, and it
-has made the attempt to comprehend the world as thought. Scepticism,
-on the other hand, denies all content, for it is self-consciousness,
-thought, in its pure solitude with itself, and likewise reflection on
-that beginning of pre-suppositions. In the third place the absolute is
-known as concrete, and this is as far as Greek philosophy goes. That
-is to say, while in the system of Stoics the relation of difference
-to unity is present only as an “ought,” as an inward demand, without
-the identity coming to pass, in the Neo-Platonist school the absolute
-is finally set forth in its entirely concrete determination, the
-Idea consequently as a trinity, as a trinity of trinities, so that
-these ever continue to emanate more and more. But each sphere is a
-trinity in itself, so that each of the abstract moments of this triad
-is itself likewise grasped as a totality. Only that which manifests
-itself, and therein retains itself as the one, is held to be true. The
-Alexandrians thus represent the concrete totality in itself, and they
-have recognized the nature of spirit; they have, however, neither gone
-forth from the depths of infinite subjectivity and its absolute chasm,
-nor have they grasped the absolute, or, if we will, abstract freedom of
-the “I” as the infinite value of the subject.
-
-The Neo-Platonic standpoint is thus not a philosophic freak, but a
-forward advance on the part of the human mind, the world and the
-world-spirit. The revelation of God has not come to it as from an
-alien source. What we here consider so dry and abstract is concrete.
-“Such rubbish,” it is said, “as we consider when in our study we see
-philosophers dispute and argue, and settle things this way and that at
-will, are verbal abstractions only.” No, no; they are the deeds of the
-world-spirit, gentlemen, and therefore of fate. The philosophers are
-in so doing nearer to God than those nurtured upon spiritual crumbs;
-they read or write the orders as they receive them in the original;
-they are obliged to continue writing on. Philosophers are the initiated
-ones—those who have taken part in the advance which has been made into
-the inmost sanctuary; others have their particular interests—this
-dominion, these riches, this girl. Hundreds and thousands of years are
-required by the world-spirit to reach the point which we attain more
-quickly, because we have the advantage of having objects which are past
-and of dealing with abstraction.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Diog. Laërt. III. 1-4 (Tennemann, Vol. I. p. 416; II. p. 190).
-
-[2] Diog. Laërt. III. 5, 29.
-
-[3] Plat. Epist. VII, p. 324-326 (p. 428-431); Diog. Laërt. III., 5, 6,
-8.
-
-[4] Diog. Laërt. III, 6, 7, 9, 18-21; Plat. Epist. VII., p. 326, 327
-(p. 431-433).
-
-[5] Plat. Epist. VII. p. 327-330 (p. 433-439); III. p. 316, 317 (p.
-410, 411).
-
-[6] This circumstance is assigned by Diogenes Laërtius, in the passage
-quoted (III. 21, 22), not to the time of Plato’s second journey to
-Dionysius the younger, _i.e._ of his third visit to Sicily, where it is
-placed by the writers of Plato’s Letters, but to the second journey of
-Plato to Sicily, which corresponds with his first visit to Dionysius
-the younger.—[Editor’s note.]
-
-[7] Plat. Epist. VII. p. 337-342 (p. 453-461), p. 344-350 (p. 466-477);
-III. p. 317, 318 (p. 411-415).
-
-[8] Plat. Epist. VII. p. 326 (p. 431).
-
-[9] From the lectures of 1825.
-
-[10] Diog. Laërt. III. 23 (Menag. ad h.l.); Ælian Var. Histor. II. 42;
-Plutarch, ad principem ineruditum, init. p. 779, ed. Xyl.
-
-[11] Diog. Laërt. III. 2; Bruckeri Hist. Crit. Philos. Vol. I, p. 653.
-
-[12] Compare Vol. I. p. 47-53.
-
-[13] Brandis: De perditis Aristotelis libris de ideis et de bono, sive
-philosophia, p. 1-13. (Compare Michelet: Examen critique de l’ouvrage
-d’Aristote intitulé Métaphysique, 1835, p. 28-78.)—[Editor’s note.]
-
-[14] Scholia in Timæum, p. 423, 424 (ed. Bekk: Commentar crit. in Plat.
-Vol. II.).
-
-[15] Plat. De Republica, V. p. 471-474 (p. 257-261).
-
-[16] Plat. De Republica VII. pp. 514-516 (pp. 326-328).
-
-[17] Plato De Republica, V. p. 475, 476 (p. 265, 266).
-
-[18] Diog. Laërt. VI. 53; cf. Plato De Rep. VI. p. 508 (p. 319).
-
-[19] Plat. De Republ. V. p. 476-479 (p. 266-273).
-
-[20] Plat. Meno, p. 81 (p. 348, 349).
-
-[21] Plat. Phædrus, p. 246 (p. 39, 40).
-
-[22] Plat. Phædrus, p. 246 (p. 40).
-
-[23] Plat. Phædrus, pp. 246-251 (pp. 40-50).
-
-[24] Plat. Phædo, pp. 65-67 (pp. 18-23).
-
-[25] Ibid. p. 72 (p. 35), p. 75 (p. 41).
-
-[26] Ibid. pp. 78-80 (pp. 46-51).
-
-[27] Plat. Phædo, pp. 85, 86 (pp. 62, 63), pp. 92-94 (pp. 74-80).
-
-[28] Ibid. pp. 110-114 (pp. 111-120).
-
-[29] Plat. Timæus, p. 20 _et seq._ (p. 10 _seq._); Critias, p. 108
-_seq._ (p. 149 _seq._).
-
-[30] Cf. Vol. I. pp. 318, 319, and the remarks there made. [Editor’s
-Note.]
-
-[31] Hegel’s Werke, Vol. VI., Pt. I, p. 8.
-
-[32] Plat. Parmenides, pp. 135, 136 (pp. 21-23).
-
-[33] Ibid. p. 129 (pp. 9, 10).
-
-[34] Plat. Parmenides, p. 142 (pp. 35, 36); cf. Arist. Eth. Nicom. ed.
-Michelet, T. I. Præf. p. VII. sqq.
-
-[35] Plat. Parmenides, p. 166 (p. 84); cf. Zeller; Platonische Studien,
-p. 165.
-
-[36] Plat. Sophist, pp. 246-249 (pp. 190-196).
-
-[37] Ibid. p. 258 (p. 219).
-
-[38] Plat. Sophist. p. 259 (pp. 220, 221).
-
-[39] Plat. Sophist. pp. 260, 261 (pp. 222-224).
-
-[40] Plat. Sophist. pp. 258, 259 (pp. 218-220).
-
-[41] Cf. also Plat. Phileb. p. 14 (p. 138).
-
-[42] Plat. Phileb. pp. 11-23 (pp. 131-156); pp. 27, 28 (pp. 166, 167).
-
-[43] Plat. Phileb. pp. 23-30 (pp. 156-172).
-
-[44] Plat. Phileb. p. 33 (p. 178).
-
-[45] Cf. Plat. Tim. p. 34 (p. 31); p. 48 (pp. 56, 57); p. 69 (p. 96).
-
-[46] Ibid. p. 29 (p. 25).
-
-[47] Plat. Timæus, p. 30, 31 (pp. 25-27).
-
-[48] Plat. Timæus, pp. 31, 32 (pp. 27, 28).
-
-[49] Plat. Timæus p. 32 (p. 28).
-
-[50] Plat. Timæus, pp. 32-34 (pp. 28-31).
-
-[51] Plat. Timæus, p. 35 (p. 32).
-
-[52] Ibid.
-
-[53] Plat. Timæus, pp. 35, 36 (pp. 32-34).
-
-[54] Plat. Timæus, p. 37 (p. 35).
-
-[55] Plat. Timæus, p. 48 (p. 57); pp. 37, 38 (pp. 36, 37).
-
-[56] Plat, Timæus, pp. 47-53 (pp. 55-66).
-
-[57] Plat. Timæus, pp. 53-56 (pp. 66-72).
-
-[58] Plat. Timæus, pp. 67-70 (pp. 93-99).
-
-[59] Plat. Timæus pp. 70-72 (pp. 99-102).
-
-[60] Plat. De Republica, II., pp. 368, 369 (p. 78.)
-
-[61] Following the outline here given by Plato, Hegel, in an earlier
-attempt to treat the philosophy of Justice (Werke, Vol. I. pp. 380,
-381), included in one these two classes, and later named them the
-general class (Werke, Vol. VIII. p. 267); the “other” class (as Hegel
-expresses it, in the first of the passages referred to above), which
-by Plato is not included in this, Hegel divided, however, in both his
-narratives, into the second class (that of city handicraftsmen), and
-the third (that of tillers of the soil).—[Editor’s note.]
-
-[62] Plat. de Republica, II. pp. 369-376 (pp. 79-93); III. p. 414 (pp.
-158, 159).
-
-[63] Plat. De Republica, V. p. 463, (p. 241,); p. 460 (p. 236).
-
-[64] Plat. De Republica, IX. pp. 427, 428 (pp. 179-181).
-
-[65] Ibid. IV. pp. 428, 429 (pp. 181, 182).
-
-[66] Ibid. pp. 429, 430 (pp. 182-185).
-
-[67] Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 430-432 (pp. 185-188).
-
-[68] Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 432, 433 (pp. 188-191).
-
-[69] Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 437-443 (pp. 198-210).
-
-[70] Plat. De Republica, IV. p. 421 (pp. 167, 168).
-
-[71] Ibid. II. p.376-III. p. 412 (pp. 93-155); V. p. 472-VII. fin. (pp.
-258-375).
-
-[72] Plat. De Legibus, IV. pp. 722, 723 (pp. 367-369).
-
-[73] Plat. De Republica, III. pp. 412-415 (pp. 155-161.)
-
-[74] Plat. De Republica, V. pp. 457-461 (pp. 230-239).
-
-[75] Ibid. pp. 451-457 (pp. 219-230); p. 471 (p. 257).
-
-[76] Cf. Hegel: On the Scientific Modes of treating Natural Law (Werke,
-Vol. I.), pp. 383-386.
-
-[77] Plat. Hippias Major, p. 292 (p. 433); p. 295 sqq. (p. 439 sqq.) p.
-302 (pp. 455, 456).
-
-[78] In quoting the chapters of Aristotle both hitherto and in future,
-Becker’s edition is adopted; where a second number is placed in
-brackets after the first, different editions are indicated, _e.g._, for
-the Organon, Buhle’s edition, for the Nicomachiean Ethics those of Zell
-and the editor, &c.—[Editor’s note.]
-
-[79] Diog. Laërt. V. 1, 9, 12, 15; Buhle: Aristotelis vita (ante Arist.
-Opera, T. I.) pp. 81, 82; Ammonius Saccas: Aristotelis vita (ed. Buhle
-in. Arist. Op. T. I.), pp. 43, 44.
-
-[80] Diog. Laërt. V. 3, 4; 7, 8; Buhle: Aristotel. vita, pp. 90-92.
-
-[81] Aristotelis Opera (ed. Pac. Aurel. Allobrog, 1607), T. I., in
-fine: Aristotelis Fragmenta. (Cf. Stahr. Aristotelia, Pt. I. pp. 85-91.)
-
-[82] Aulus Gellius: Noctis Atticæ, XX. 5
-
-[83] Diog. Laërt. V. 5, 6; Suidas, s. v. Aristoteles; Buhle: Aristot.
-vit. p. 100; Ammon. Saccas: Arist. vit. pp. 47, 48; Menag. ad. Diog.
-Laërt. V. 2; Stahr. Aristotelia, Pt. I. pp. 108, 109; Bruckeri Hist.
-crit. phil. T. I. pp. 788, 789.
-
-[84] Strabo, XIII. p. 419 (ed. Casaub. 1587); Plutarch in Sulla, c.
-26; Brucker. Hist. crit. phil. T. I. pp. 798-800 (cf. Michelet: Examen
-critique de l’ouvrage d’Aristote, intitulé Métaphysique, pp. 5-16.)
-
-[85] Cf. Michelet: Examen critique, &c., pp. 17-23; 28-114; 199-241.
-
-[86] Gellius: Noct. Atticæ, XX. 5; Stahr: Aristotelia, Pt. I. pp
-110-112.
-
-[87] Arist. Metaphys. VI. 1; Physic. II. 2; I. 9. (Cf. Michelet: Examen
-critique, etc., pp. 23-27.)
-
-[88] Michelet: Examen critique, pp. 115-198.
-
-[89] Not only the form which is to be abrogated, but also matter is
-spoken of by Aristotle as τι, because in truth the form which is to be
-abrogated serves only as material for the form which is to be posited;
-so that he in the first passage names the three moments ἔκ τινος,
-τι, ὑπό τινος, and in the last passage names them τι, εἴς τι, ὑπό
-τινος.—[Editor’s Note.]
-
-[90] As this explanation by Hegel of Aristotle’s celebrated passage
-has so many authorities to support it, the editor cannot here, as
-frequently elsewhere in these lectures, remain faithful to the
-directions of his colleagues, quietly to set right anything that is
-incorrect. It is, nevertheless, clear that Aristotle is speaking of
-three substances: a sublunar world, which the heavens move; the heavens
-as the centre which is both mover and moved; and God, the unmoved
-Mover. The passage must therefore, on the authority of Alexander of
-Aphrodisias (Schol. in Arist. ed. Brandis, p. 804 _b_), of Cardinal
-Bessarion (Aristoteles lat. ed. Bekk. p. 525 _b_) and others, be
-thus read: ἔστι τοίνυν τι καὶ ὃ κινεῖ (sc. ὁ οὐρανός)· ἐπεὶ δε τὸ
-κινούμενον καὶ κινοῦν καὶ μέσον τοίνυν, ἔυτι τι ὃ οὐ κινούμενον κινεῖ.
-The translation, if this reading be adopted, would be as follows:
-Besides the heavens in perpetual motion “there is something which the
-heavens move. But since that which at the same time is moved and causes
-movement cannot be other than a centre, there is also a mover that is
-unmoved.” (Cf. Michelet: Examen critique, etc., p. 192; Jahrbücher
-für wisseuschaftliche Kritik, November, 1841, No. 84, pp. 668, 669).
-[Editor’s note]
-
-[91] συστοιχία is a good word, and might also mean an element which is
-itself its own element, and determines itself only through itself.
-
-[92] The word τὸ εἶναι, when it governs the dative (τὸ εἶναι νοήσεί καὶ
-νοουμένῳ) invariably expresses the Notion, while, when it governs the
-accusative, it denotes concrete existence. (Trendelenburg: Comment, in
-Arist. De anima, III. 4, p. 473.) [Editor’s Note.]
-
-[93] Aristotle here distinguishes four determinations: what is moved
-in capacity, or the movable [das Bewegbare] (κινητόν); what is moved
-in actuality (κινούμενον); the moving in capacity (κινητικόν), or
-what Hegel calls the motive [das Bewegliche]; the moving in actuality
-(κινοῦν). It might have been better to translate κινητόν by motive
-[Beweglich] and κινητικόν by mobile [Bewegerisch].—[Editor’s note.]
-
-[94] While above (p. 164) we must take the expression τὸ εἶναι as
-immediate existence because it is opposed to the Notion, here it has
-the meaning of Notion, because it stands in opposition to immediate
-existence (καὶ οὺ χωριστὴ μὲν ὕλη, δ̓ εἶναι, καὶ μία τῷ ἀριθμῷ). Cf.
-Michelet: Comment. in Arist. Eth. Nicom. V. I., pp. 209-214.—[Editor’s
-note.]
-
-[95] Here τὸ εἶναι has again the signification of Notion, as above (p.
-169), because in the preceding words (ἔστι δὲ ταὐτὸ καὶ κατὰ ταὐτὸ ἡ
-διαίρεσις καὶ ἥ ἕνωσις) immediate existence is expressed.—[Editor’s
-note.]
-
-[96] The editor has considered himself justified in adopting this
-rendering, which was commonly used by the Scholastics, and revived by
-Leibnitz. (Cf. Michelet, Examen Critique, &c., pp. 165, 261, 265.)
-
-[97] Here and once again on this page τὸ εἶναι is the immediate
-existence of the separate sides of sense-perception, therefore their
-mere potentiality; while, on the other hand, the active unity of the
-perceived and the percipient may be expressed as the true Notion of
-sense-perception.—[Editor’s Note.]
-
-[98] _Cf._ _supra_, p. 169, and note there given. The two
-significations of τῷ εἶναι here come into immediate contact with one
-another, being likewise intermingled; for immediate existence (ἀριθμῷ
-ἀδιαίρετον καὶ ἀχωριστον), which is opposed to the Notion (τῷ εἶναι)
-becomes in what directly follows mere possibility, to which the true
-reality (δυνάμει μὲν γὰρ τὸ αὐτὸ καὶ ἀδιαίρετον εἶναι) is opposed
-(δυνάμει μὲν γὰρ τὸ αὐτὸ καὶ ἀδιαίρετον τἀναντία, δ̓ εἶναι ου, ἀλλα τῷ
-ἐνεργεῖσθαι διαίρετον).—[Editor’s Note.]
-
-[99] Cf. Tenneman, Vol. III. p. 198.
-
-[100] While Aristotle’s reply is short, and given in the manner
-usually adopted by him, that of following up by a second question
-the first question proposed (ἢ οὐδὲ τἆλλα φαντάσματα, ἀλλʹ οὐκ ἄνευ
-φαντασμάτον;), this answer seems quite sufficient. For Aristotle’s
-words certainly bear the meaning that the original thoughts of the
-active understanding (the reason), in contradistinction to those of
-the passive understanding, have quite obliterated in themselves the
-element of pictorial conception; while in the latter this has not been
-thoroughly carried out, though even in them pictorial conception is not
-the essential moment.—[Editor’s Note.]
-
-[101] Against this we have only to remember that in Aristotle’s way
-of speaking ὕστερον and πρότερον always refer to the work they occur
-in, while he marks quotations from his other writings by the words: ἐν
-ἄλλοις, ἐν ἑτέροις, ἄλλοτε, or εἰς ἐκεῖνον τὸν καιρὸν ἀποκείσθω (De
-Ausc. phys. I. 9). And if it be said, as it may be with truth, that
-all the physical and psychological works, including the Metaphysics,
-form one great scientific system, so that ὕστερον and πρότερον may
-very well be used in relating these works to one another, I have yet
-proved that the treatise περὶ ψυχῆς must be placed much later than
-the Metaphysics (Michelet: Examen Critique, &c., pp. 209-222). Might
-not then the expression ὕστερον refer to the following chapter? In
-truth, the difficulty raised at the end of the seventh chapter seems
-completely solved by the words of the eighth chapter quoted above (pp.
-198, 199).—[Editor’s Note.]
-
-[102] See Michelet, De doli et culpæ in jure criminali notionibus;
-System der philosophischen Moral. Book II. Part I; Afzelius,
-Aristotelis De imputatione actionum doctrina.—[Editor’s Note.]
-
-[103] Ethic, Nicom. I. 2-12 (4-12); X. 6-8; Eth. Eudem. II. 1.
-
-[104] Magn. Moral. I. 5, 35; Eth. Nic. I. 13; Eth. Eud. II. 1.
-
-[105] Ethic. Nicomach. II. 5-7 (6, 7); Maga. Moral. I. 5-9; Eth. Eud.
-II. 3.
-
-[106] Cf. Arist. Ethic. Nicom. I. 1 (3).
-
-[107] Arist. Eth. Nic. I. 1 (2).
-
-[108] Arist. Polit. III. 1; IV. 14-16.
-
-[109] Ibid. III. 7 (5)-IV. 13.
-
-[110] Arist. Polit. III. 13 (8-9).
-
-[111] Categor. c. 3 (c. 2, § 3-5.)
-
-[112] Categor. c. 4 (c. 2, § 6-8).
-
-[113] Categor. c. 10-14 (8-11); cf. Kant, Kritik der reinen Vernunft,
-p. 79 (6th Ed.).
-
-[114] Categor. c. 5 (3).
-
-[115] Arist. Categor. c. 4 (2); De Interpretat. c. 4-6.
-
-[116] Arist. Analytic. prior. I. 1; Topic I. 1.
-
-[117] Arist. Topic I. 13 (11) et 1.
-
-[118] Ibid. I. 16-18 (14-16); II. 7, 8, 10.
-
-[119] Ibid. III. 1; Buhle, Argum. p. 18.
-
-[120] Analyt. prior. II. 23 (25).
-
-[121] Diog. Laërt. VII. I, 12, 31, 32, 5, 2 (IV. 6, 7), 13, 6-11, 28,
-29. Tennemann, Vol. IV. p. 4; Vol. II. pp. 532, 534; Bruck. Hist. Crit.
-Phil. T. I. pp. 895, 897-899. (_Cf._ Fabric. Biblioth. Græc. T. II. p.
-413), 901.
-
-[122] Diog. Laërt, VII. 168, 169, 176.
-
-[123] Diog. Laërt. VII. 179-181, 184, 189-202; Tennemann, Vol. IV. p.
-443.
-
-[124] Diog. Laërt. VI. 81; Cicer. Acad. Quæst. IV. 30; De Oratore II.
-37, 38; De Senectute, c. 7; Tennemann, Vol. IV. p. 444.
-
-[125] Cic. De Officiis III. 2; De Nat. Deor. I. 3; Suidas: s. v.
-Posidonius, T. III. p. 159.
-
-[126] Aul. Gell. Noct. Att. I. 2 (Gronovius ad h. 1.); II. 18; XV. 11;
-XIX. 1.
-
-[127] Stob. Eclog. phys. I. p. 32.
-
-[128] Diog. Laërt. VII. 136, 142, 156, 157; Plutarch, de plac. philos.
-IV. 21.
-
-[129] Diog. Laërt. VII. 135; Stob. Eclog. phys. I. p. 178.
-
-[130] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. IX. 101-103.
-
-[131] Diog. Laërt. VII. 137.
-
-[132] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 234; Diog. Laërt. VII. 138-140, 147,
-148.
-
-[133] Diog. Laërt. VII. 54, 46; Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 227-230.
-
-[134] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VIII. 403, sqq.; cf. Senec. Epist. 107.
-
-[135] Diog. Laërt. VII. 63; Sext. Emp. adv. Math. VIII. 70.
-
-[136] Diog. Laërt. VII. 79, 80, 83.
-
-[137] Cicer. De Officiis I. 3, III.; Diog. Laërt. VII. 98, 99.
-
-[138] Diog. Laërt. VII. 94.
-
-[139] Diog. Laërt. VII. 127, 128; Cicer. Paradox, 2.
-
-[140] Cicer. De finibus III. 13; Tusculan. Quæst. II. 25.
-
-[141] Diog. Laërt. VII. 107, 108.
-
-[142] Plutarch. De Stoicorum repugnantia, p. 1031 (ed. Xyl.); Stob.
-Eclog. ethic. P. II. p. 110 Diog. Laërt. VII. 125.
-
-[143] Diog. Laërt. VII. 121, 122, 116, 117, 129; Sext. Empir. adv.
-Math. XI. 190-194.
-
-[144] Tacit. Annal. XIV. 53; XIII. 42, 3.
-
-[145] Diog. Laërt. X. 1-8, 10-15; Cic. De Nat. Deor. I. 26; De Finibus,
-II. 25; Bruck. Hist. Crit. Phil. T. I. pp. 1230, 1231, 1233, 1236;
-Sext. Emp. adv. Math. X. 18; I. 3.
-
-[146] Diog. Laërt. X. 11, 24, 9; IV. 43; Cic. De Finib. V. 1; Euseb.
-Præp. evangel. XIV. 5.
-
-[147] Diog. Laërt. X. 26.
-
-[148] Diog. Laërt. X. 31.
-
-[149] Diog. Laërt. X. 31, 32.
-
-[150] Diog. Laërt. X. 33.
-
-[151] Diog. Laërt. X. 33, 34.
-
-[152] Diog. Laërt. X. 34.
-
-[153] Diog. Laërt. X. 48, 49.
-
-[154] Diog. Laërt. X. 50, 51.
-
-[155] Diog. Laërt. X. 54, 55.
-
-[156] Diog. Laërt. X. 55-58.
-
-[157] Diog. Laërt. X. 43, 44, 60, 61; Cic. De fato, c. 10; De finibus,
-l. 6; Plutarch. De animæ procreat. e Timæo, p. 1015.
-
-[158] Diog. Laërt. X. 78-80, 86, 87, 93-96, 101, 97.
-
-[159] Diog. Laërt. X. 113, 114.
-
-[160] Cicer. De natura Deorum, I. 20.
-
-[161] Diog. Laërt. X. 66, 63, 64.
-
-[162] Diog. Laërt. X. 141-143.
-
-[163] Diog. Laërt. X. 122, 123, 139.
-
-[164] Cicer. De nat. Deor. I. 17, 19, 20.
-
-[165] Cicer. De divinat. II. 17; De nat. Deor. I. 8.
-
-[166] Diog. Laërt. X. 124, 125, 127.
-
-[167] Diog. Laërt. X. 127-132 (119, 135).
-
-[168] Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, § 220.
-
-[169] Diog. Laërt. IV. 28-33, 36-38, 42, 44; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil.
-T. I. p. 746; Tennemann, Vol. IV. p. 443; Cic. De finib. II. 1.
-
-[170] Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, § 232; Diog. Laërt. IV. 32.
-
-[171] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 154.
-
-[172] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 154-156.
-
-[173] Diog. Laërt. IV. 62, 65; Tennemann, Vol. IV. pp. 334, 443, 444;
-Cicer. Acad. Quæst. II. 6; Valer. Maxim. VIII. 7, ext. 5.
-
-[174] Plutarch. Cato major, c. 22; Gell. Noct. Attic. VII. 14; Cic. De
-orat. II. 37, 38; Aelian. Var. hist. III. 17; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil.
-T. I. p. 763.
-
-[175] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 159, 160.
-
-[176] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 160, 161.
-
-[177] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 161-164, 402.
-
-[178] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 165.
-
-[179] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 166-169.
-
-[180] Ibid. 166, 167.
-
-[181] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 173-175.
-
-[182] Ibid. 176, 177; 187-189; 179.
-
-[183] Ibid. 176, 177; 179; 187-189.
-
-[184] Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 181-184.
-
-[185] As it is used here and shortly afterwards, “positive philosophy”
-has quite an opposite meaning from what we have just seen it to bear in
-two previous passages (p. 329), because speculation certainly stands
-in opposition to dogmatism; and at the same time we must in Hegel
-distinguish altogether this expression in its double significance from
-the positivism so prevalent in modern times, which, merely escaping
-from the necessity for thinking knowledge, finally throws itself into
-the arms of revelation and simple faith, whether it tries to call
-itself free thought or not.—[Editor’s note.]
-
-[186] Lectures of 1825-1826.
-
-[187] Diog. Laërt. IX. 71-73; cf. Vol. I. pp. 161, 246, 284.
-
-[188] Diog. Laërt. IX. 61-65, 69, 70; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T. I.
-pp. 1320-1323.
-
-[189] Diog. Laërt. IX. 109.
-
-[190] Diog. Laërt. IX. 116; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T. I. p. 1328.
-
-[191] Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 631-636.
-
-[192] Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 39, §§ 221-225.
-
-[193] Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 3, § 7; Diog. Laërt. IX. 69, 70.
-
-[194] Cf. _supra_, p. 212.
-
-[195] Diog. Laërt. IX. 68.
-
-[196] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hypot. I. c. 8, § 17.
-
-[197] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 40-44.
-
-[198] Sext. Emp, Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 79-82, 85-89.
-
-[199] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 91, 92.
-
-[200] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 100, 112.
-
-[201] Ibid, §§ 118-120.
-
-[202] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 124-126.
-
-[203] Ibid. §§ 129-131, 133.
-
-[204] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 141-144.
-
-[205] Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 145, 148, 149.
-
-[206] Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 15, §§ 164-169. (Diog. Laërt. IX. 88, 89.)
-
-[207] Bruck. Hist. crit. philos. T. II. pp. 797, 799, et notæ; Phil.
-De legatione ad Cajum, p. 992 (ed. Francf. 1691): Joseph. Antiq. Jud.
-XVIII. c. 10, p. 649; Euseb. Hist, eccles. II. c. 18; _cf._ Fabric
-Biblioth. Gr. Vol. III. p. 115 (Hamburg, 1708).
-
-[208] Phil. De confusione linguarum, p. 358; De special. legib. II. pp.
-806, 807; De mundi opificio, p. 15; De migratione Abrahami, pp. 393,
-417, 418; Quis. rer. divin. hæres. p. 518; Quod Deus sit immutabilis,
-pp. 301, 302; De monarchia, I. p. 816; De nominum mutatione, p. 1045;
-De Cherub. p. 124; De somniis, p. 576.
-
-[209] Phil. De somniis, pp. 574, 575; Liber legis allegoriarum, I. p.
-48; Quod Deus sit immut. p. 298.
-
-[210] Phil. De mundi opificio, pp. 4-6; De agricultura, p. 195; De
-somniis, pp. 597, 599.
-
-[211] Phil. Leg. allegor. I. p. 46, et II. p. 93; Quod deterius potiori
-insidiari soleat, p. 165; De temulentia, p. 244; De somniis, pp. 578,
-586, 588; De confus. ling. pp. 341, 345; Euseb. Præp. ev. VII. c. 13;
-Phil. De vita Mosis, III. p. 672; De sacrif. Abel., p. 140.
-
-[212] Buhle: Lehrbuch d. Gesch. d. Phil. Pt. IV. p. 124; Phil. De mundi
-opificio, p. 5.
-
-[213] Phil. De mund. opific. p. 4; De victimas offerentibus, p. 857
-(Buhle, ibid. p. 125).
-
-[214] De mundi opificio, pp. 5, 6 (Brucker Hist. crit. phil. Tom. II.
-pp. 802, 803).
-
-[215] Brucker Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 834-840, 924-927.
-
-[216] Irira: Porta c\nlorum, Dissertatio I. c. 4; c. 6, § 13 et c. 7, §
-2; IV. c. 4, sqq.; II. c. 1; V. c. 7, 8; Tiedemann: Geist der speculat.
-Philosophie, Pt. III. pp. 149, 150, 155-157; Buhle: Lehrbuch der Gesch.
-der Phil. Pt. IV. pp. 156, 162, 160, 157.
-
-[217] Neander: Genetische Entwickelung der vornehmsten gnostischen
-Systeme, pp. 10, 33, 34; Philo De nominum mutat. p. 1046.
-
-[218] Neander: Genet. Entwickelung, &c., pp. 168, 170, 171.
-
-[219] Neander: Genet. Entwickelung, &c., pp. 94-97.
-
-[220] Ibid. pp. 160, 10-13; Phil. Quod Deus sit immut. p. 304.
-
-[221] Cf. Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil. Pt. IV. pp. 195-200.
-
-[222] Brucker, Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 205, 213, 214.
-
-[223] Porphyrius, Vita Plotini (præmissa Ennead. Plot. Basil. 1580),
-pp. 2, 3, 5-8; Brucker, Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 218-221;
-Tiedemann, Geist d. spec. Phil. Vol. III. p. 272; Buhle, Lehrb. d.
-Gesch. d. Phil. Pt. IV. p. 306.
-
-[224] Cf. Plotin. Ennead. I. l. 6, c. 7; IV. l. 4, c. 39-43; Procli
-Theol. Plat. I. pp. 69, 70 (ed. Aem. Portus, Hamburg, 1618).
-
-[225] Plot. Ennead. IV. l. 8, c. 1; cf. _ibidem_, c. 4-7.
-
-[226] Plot. Ennead. III. l. 6, c. 6; VI. l. 9, c. 1, 2; III. l. 8, c. 8.
-
-[227] This Aristotelian word, and also ἐξέρτηται (Procl. Theol. Plat.
-III. p. 133), often occur in the Neo-Platonists.
-
-[228] Plot. Ennead. I. l. 8: Περὶ τοῦ τίνα καὶ πόθεν τὰ κακά, c. 2 (VI.
-l. 9, c. 6); III. l. 8, c. 9, 10.
-
-[229] Plot. Ennead. V. l. 3, c. 13, 14; l. 2, c. 1; VI. l. 2, c. 9, 10;
-l. 8, c. 8, 9; l. 9, c. 3, VI. l. 9, c. 6; l. 8, c. 7 (13, 21).
-
-[230] Steinhart: Quæstiones de dialectica Plotini ratione, p. 21;
-Plotini Ennead. VI. l. 9, c. 1-9, _passim_.
-
-[231] Plot. Ennead. III. l. 8, c. 10 fin.; IV. l. 3, c. 17; V. l. 1, c.
-4, 5; c. 7; l. 4, c. 2; l. 5, c. 1.
-
-[232] Plot. Ennead. V. l. 1, c. 6 (IV. l. 3, c. 17).
-
-[233] Plot. Ennead. V. l. 2, c. 1; l. 1, c. 7; VI. l. 9, c. 2.
-
-[234] Plot. Ennead. V. l. 3, c. 5; VI. l. 2, c. 8; II. l. 4, c. 4; VI.
-l. 4, c. 2; V. l. 9, c. 8, 9.
-
-[235] Plot. Ennead. VI. l. 2, c. 2; V. l. 9, c. 8.
-
-[236] Plot. Ennead. IV. l. 3, c. 17.
-
-[237] Plot. Ennead. V. l. 1, c. 7; l. 2, c. 1, 2; l. 6, c. 4; VI. l. 2,
-c. 22.
-
-[238] Plot. Ennead. V. l. 3, c. 5; ἕν ἅμα πάντα ἔσται, νοῦς, νόησις, τὸ
-νοητόν.
-
-[239] Plot. Ennead. II. l. 9, c. 1-3, 6.
-
-[240] If we were to translate this by “in the intelligible world,” the
-expression would be misleading; for “the world” is nowhere. Neither may
-we say, “intelligible things,” as if there were things of some other
-kind; such distinctions and definitions are nowhere found.
-
-[241] Plot. Ennead. II. l. 4, c. 4, 12-15; l. 5, c. 2-5.
-
-[242] Plot. Ennead. I. l. 8, c. 2, 3.
-
-[243] Instead of δεῖ in the sentence οὐ γὰρ δεῖ τὸ εἰπεῖν we should
-certainly read δή, or something of the kind.
-
-[244] Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil. Part IV. pp. 418, 419;
-Tiedemann, Geist. d. spec. Phil. Vol. III. pp. 421-423; cf. Plotini
-Ennead. IV. l. 3 et 8 passim.
-
-[245] Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil. Part IV. pp. 419, 420.
-
-[246] Brucker: Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 248, 268.
-
-[247] Cf. Procli. Theol. Plat. III. p. 140.
-
-[248] Brucker: Hist. cr. phil. T. II. p. 320; Tennemann, Vol. VI. pp.
-284-289; Marinus: Vita Procli, passim (præm. Theol. Plat.).
-
-[249] Procli Institutionis theologicæ, c. 26.
-
-[250] Procli Institut. theol. c. 27; Theol. Plat. III. p. 119; II. pp.
-101, 102; III. p. 121; Institut. theol. c. 5.
-
-[251] Procli Institut. theol. c. 1-2; c. 28; Theol. Plat. III. pp. 118,
-122-125; II. pp. 108, 109.
-
-[252] Procli Theol. Plat. III. pp. 123-124.
-
-[253] Procli Theol. Plat. III. pp. 141, 127; Instit. theol. c. 192.
-
-[254] It is doubtful whether the καὶ should not be omitted, so that ἡ
-ἁκρότης τῶν ὄντων would stand in apposition to νοῦς.
-
-[255] Procli Theol. Plat. III. p. 144 (VI. p. 403); Instit. theol. c.
-124, 170.
-
-[256] Procli Theol. Plat. I. pp. 69, 70.
-
-[257] Brucker: Hist. cr. phil. T. II. pp. 350, 347; Joan. Malala: Hist.
-chron. P. II. p. 187; Nic. Alemannus ad Procopii anecdot. c. 26. p. 377.
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:
-
-—Obvious print and punctuation errors were corrected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hegel's Lectures on the History of
-Philosophy: Volume Two (of 3), by Georg Wilhelm Hegel
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEGEL'S LECTURES--HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 2 ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51636-0.txt or 51636-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/6/3/51636/
-
-Produced by Giovanni Fini, Fritz Ohrenschall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/51636-0.zip b/old/51636-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 7b68121..0000000
--- a/old/51636-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51636-h.zip b/old/51636-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 30b776b..0000000
--- a/old/51636-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51636-h/51636-h.htm b/old/51636-h/51636-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index ebbdf07..0000000
--- a/old/51636-h/51636-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18036 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lectures on the History of Philosophy (Vol.2 of 3), by by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
-div.limit {max-width: 35em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;}
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-.head {font-size: 70%; font-weight: normal;}
-
- h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 {text-align: center; clear: both;}
-
-.ln1 {position: absolute; text-align: right; top: auto; margin-left: -1em;}
-
-p {margin-top: 0.2em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: 0em; text-indent: 1.5em;}
-.pn1 {margin-top: 0.2em; text-align: justify; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0em; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pn2 {margin-top: 0.2em; text-align: justify; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 0em; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pc {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pc1 {margin-top: 1em; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pc2 {margin-top: 2em; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pc4 {margin-top: 4em; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pp6 {margin-top: 0em; font-size: 90%; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 0em; padding-left: 6em; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pp6q {margin-top: 0em; font-size: 90%; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 0em; padding-left: 6em; text-indent: -0.45em;}
-.pp7 {margin-top: 0em; font-size: 90%; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 0em; padding-left: 7em; text-indent: 0em;}
-.pfn4 {margin-top: 1em; font-size: 90%; text-indent: 0em; margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 1em;}
-.ptn {margin-top: 0.3em; text-align: justify; text-indent: -1em; margin-left: 2%;}
-
-.p1 {margin-top: 1em;}
-.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
-
-.small {font-size: 75%;}
-.reduct {font-size: 90%;}
-.lmid {font-size: 110%;}
-.mid {font-size: 125%;}
-.large {font-size: 150%;}
-
-hr {width: 33%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em; margin-left: 33.5%; margin-right: 33.5%; clear: both;}
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-
-table { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;}
- .tdl1 {text-align: left; vertical-align: top; padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -1em;}
- .tdl2 {text-align: left; vertical-align: top; padding-left: 4em; text-indent: -1em;}
- .tdl3 {text-align: left; vertical-align: top; padding-left: 6em; text-indent: -1em;}
- .tdl4 {text-align: left; vertical-align: top; padding-left: 8em; text-indent: -1em;}
- .tdr1 {text-align: right; vertical-align: bottom; padding-left: 0.5em;}
-
-#toc1, #toc2, #toc3 {width: 90%; line-height: 1em; margin-top: 1em;}
-
-.pagenum { /* visibility: hidden; */ position: absolute; left: 94%; color: gray;
- font-size: smaller; text-align: right; text-indent: 0em; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal;}
-
-.figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
-
-.footnotes {border: dashed 1px; padding: 1em;}
-.label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
-.fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA; color: black; font-size:smaller; padding:0.5em; margin-bottom:5em; font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hegel's Lectures on the History of
-Philosophy: Volume Two (of 3), by Georg Wilhelm Hegel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Hegel's Lectures on the History of Philosophy: Volume Two (of 3)
-
-Author: Georg Wilhelm Hegel
-
-Translator: E. S. Haldane
- Frances H. Simson
-
-Release Date: April 2, 2016 [EBook #51636]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEGEL'S LECTURES--HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 2 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Giovanni Fini, Fritz Ohrenschall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="limit">
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="pc4 large">HEGEL’S LECTURES ON THE<br />
-HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY</p>
-
-<p class="pc2 mid">VOLUME TWO</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 class="p4">Hegel’s Lectures on<br />
-THE HISTORY OF<br />
-PHILOSOPHY</h1>
-
-<p class="pc4"><i>Translated from the German by</i></p>
-<p class="pc1 mid">E. S. HALDANE</p>
-<p class="pc1"><i>and</i></p>
-<p class="pc1 mid">FRANCES H. SIMSON, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>In three volumes</i></p>
-<p class="pc1 mid">VOLUME TWO</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/logo.jpg" width="200" height="185"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc1 lmid">ROUTLEDGE &amp; KEGAN PAUL LTD</p>
-<p class="pc1">Broadway House, 68-74 Carter Lane</p>
-<p class="pc1">London, E.C.4</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pc4 reduct"><i>First published in England 1894<br />
-by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner &amp; Co. Ltd</i><br />
-<i>Reprinted 1955<br />
-by Routledge &amp; Kegan Paul Ltd<br />
-Broadway House, 68-74 Carter Lane<br />
-London, E.C.4</i></p>
-
-<p class="pc4 reduct"><i>Reprinted by lithography in Great Britain by<br />
-Jarrold and Sons Limited, Norwich</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 mid">GREEK PHILOSOPHY</p>
-
-<p class="pc1 lmid">SECTION ONE (CONTINUED)</p>
-
-<table id="toc1" summary="cont1">
-
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><span class="small">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1"><span class="smcap">Chapter III.&mdash;First Period, Third Division</span></td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c1a">1</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">A. The Philosophy of Plato</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c1b">1</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Dialectic</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c49">49</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Philosophy of Nature</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c71">71</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">3. Philosophy of Mind</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c90">90</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">B. The Philosophy of Aristotle</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c117">117</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Metaphysics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c137">137</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Philosophy of Nature</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c153">153</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">3. Philosophy of Mind</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c180a">180</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl3"><i>a.</i> Psychology</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c180b">180</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl3"><i>b.</i> Practical Philosophy</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c202a">202</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl4">α. Ethic</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c202b">202</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl4">β. Politics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c207">207</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">4. Logic</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c210">210</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="pc2 lmid">SECTION TWO</p>
-
-<table id="toc2" summary="cont2">
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1"><span class="smcap">Second Period.&mdash;Dogmatism and Scepticism</span></td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c232">232</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">A. The Philosophy of the Stoics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c236">236</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Physics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c243">243</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Logic</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c249">249</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">3. Ethics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c257">257</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">B. The Philosophy of the Epicureans</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c276">276</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Canonic</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c281">281</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Metaphysics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c286">286</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">3. Physics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c292">292</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">4. Ethics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c300">300</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">C. The Philosophy of the New Academy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c311">311</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Arcesilaus</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c313">313</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Carneades</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c319">319</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">D. Scepticism </td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c328">328</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Earlier Tropes</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c347">347</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Later Tropes</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c357">357</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="pc2 lmid">SECTION THREE</p>
-
-<table id="toc3" summary="cont3">
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1"><span class="smcap">Third Period.&mdash;The Neo-Platonists</span></td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c374">374</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">A. Philo</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c387">387</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">B. The Cabala and Gnosticism</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c394a">394</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Cabalistic Philosophy</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c394b">394</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. The Gnostics</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c396">396</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">C. The Alexandrian Philosophy</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c399">399</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">1. Ammonias Saccas</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c403">403</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">2. Plotinus</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c404">404</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">3. Porphyry and Iamblichus</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c431">431</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">4. Proclus</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c432">432</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2">5. Successors of Proclus</td>
- <td class="tdr1"><a href="#c450">450</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4"><a name="c1a" id="c1a">CHAPTER III</a><br />
-
-<span class="smcap head">First Period, Third Division: Plato and Aristotle.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="pn2"><span class="smcap">The</span> development of philosophic science as science, and,
-further, the progress from the Socratic point of view to
-the scientific, begins with Plato and is completed by
-Aristotle. They of all others deserve to be called teachers
-of the human race.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c1b" id="c1b">A. <span class="smcap">Plato.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>Plato, who must be numbered among the Socratics, was
-the most renowned of the friends and disciples of Socrates,
-and he it was who grasped in all its truth Socrates’ great
-principle that ultimate reality lies in consciousness, since,
-according to him, the absolute is in thought, and all reality
-is Thought. He does not understand by this a one-sided
-thought, nor what is understood by the false idealism which
-makes thought once more step aside and contemplate itself
-as conscious thought, and as in opposition to reality; it is
-the thought which embraces in an absolute unity reality as
-well as thinking, the Notion and its reality in the movement
-of science, as the Idea of a scientific whole. While Socrates
-had comprehended the thought which is existent in and
-for itself, only as an object for self-conscious will, Plato
-forsook this narrow point of view, and brought the merely
-abstract right of self-conscious thought, which Socrates had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-raised to a principle, into the sphere of science. By so
-doing he rendered it possible to interpret and apply the
-principle, though his manner of representation may not be
-altogether scientific.</p>
-
-<p>Plato is one of those world-famed individuals, his philosophy
-one of those world-renowned creations, whose
-influence, as regards the culture and development of the
-mind, has from its commencement down to the present time
-been all-important. For what is peculiar in the philosophy
-of Plato is its application to the intellectual and supersensuous
-world, and its elevation of consciousness into the
-realm of spirit. Thus the spiritual element which belongs
-to thought obtains in this form an importance for consciousness,
-and is brought into consciousness; just as, on
-the other hand, consciousness obtains a foothold on the soil
-of the other. The Christian religion has certainly adopted
-the lofty principle that man’s inner and spiritual nature is
-his true nature, and takes it as its universal principle,
-though interpreting it in its own way as man’s inclination
-for holiness; but Plato and his philosophy had the greatest
-share in obtaining for Christianity its rational organization,
-and in bringing it into the kingdom of the supernatural,
-for it was Plato who made the first advance in this
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>We must begin by mentioning the facts of Plato’s life.
-Plato was an Athenian, born in the third year of the 87th
-Olympiad, or, according to Dodwell, Ol. 87, 4 (<span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 429), at
-the beginning of the Peloponnesian war, in the year in
-which Pericles died. He was, according to this, thirty-nine
-or forty years younger than Socrates. His father, Ariston,
-traced his lineage from Cadrus; his mother, Perictione,
-was descended from Solon. The paternal uncle of his
-mother was the celebrated Critias, who was for a time
-among the associates of Socrates, and who was the most
-talented and brilliant, but also the most dangerous and
-obnoxious, of the Thirty Tyrants of Athens (<i>supra</i>, Vol. I. p.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-421). Critias is usually represented by the ancients as an
-atheist, with the Cyrenaic Theodoras and Diagoras of Melos;
-Sextus Empiricus (adv. Math. IX. 51-54) has preserved to
-us a fine fragment from one of his poems. Sprung from
-this noble race, and with no lack of means for his culture,
-Plato received from the most highly esteemed of the
-Sophists an education in all the arts which were then
-thought to befit an Athenian. In his family he was called
-Aristocles; it was only later that he received from his
-teacher the name of Plato. Some say that he was so styled
-because of the breadth of his forehead; others, because of
-the richness and breadth of his discourse; others again,
-because of his well-built form.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>In his youth he cultivated poetry, and wrote tragedies&mdash;very
-much like young poets in our day&mdash;also dithyrambs
-and songs. Various specimens of the last are still preserved
-to us in the Greek anthology, and have as subject
-his various loves; we have amongst others a well-known
-epigram on a certain Aster, one of his best friends, which
-contains a pretty fancy, found also in Shakespeare’s Romeo
-and Juliet:</p>
-
-<p class="pp6q p1">“To the stars thou look’st, mine Aster,</p>
-<p class="pp7">O would that I were Heaven,</p>
-<p class="pp6">With eyes so many thus to gaze on thee.”<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<p class="pn1">In his youth he had every intention of devoting himself to
-politics. He was brought by his father to Socrates when in
-his twentieth year, and enjoyed intimate friendship with
-him for eight years. It is related that Socrates dreamt on
-the preceding night that he had a young swan perched on
-his knees, whose wings quickly developed, and which then
-flew up to heaven, singing the sweetest songs. Many
-such incidents are mentioned by the ancients, and they
-bear witness to the deep reverence and love with which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-both contemporaries and those of later times regarded the
-calm dignity of Plato, and that loftiness of demeanour
-which he combined with extreme simplicity and lovableness,
-traits of character which won for him the name of
-“the divine.” Plato did not content himself with the
-society and wisdom of Socrates, but studied in addition the
-older philosophers, particularly Heraclitus. Aristotle
-(Met. I. 6) states that Plato, before he ever came to
-Socrates, associated with Cratylus, and had been initiated
-into the doctrines of Heraclitus. He also studied the
-Eleatics, and very particularly the Pythagoreans, and he
-frequented the society of the most noted Sophists. Thus
-deeply immersed in Philosophy, he lost his interest in
-poetry and politics, and gave them up altogether, that he
-might devote himself entirely to scientific pursuits. He
-fulfilled, like Socrates, his term of military service as an
-Athenian citizen, and is said to have taken part in three
-campaigns.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>We have already mentioned (Vol. I. p. 448) that, after
-Socrates was put to death, Plato, like many other philosophers,
-fled from Athens, and betook himself to Euclides at
-Megara. Leaving Megara before long, he travelled first to
-Cyrene in Africa, where he turned his attention specially to
-mathematics, under the guidance of the celebrated mathematician
-Theodoras, whom he introduces as taking part in
-several of his dialogues. Plato himself soon attained to high
-proficiency in mathematics. To him is attributed the solution
-of the Delian or Delphic problem, which was proposed
-by the oracle, and, like the Pythagorean dogma, has reference
-to the cube. The problem is, to draw a line the cube
-of which will be equal to the sum of two given cubes. This
-requires a construction through two curves. The nature of
-the tasks then set by the oracles is very curious; on this
-particular occasion application had been made to the oracle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>in a time of pestilence, and it responded by proposing an
-entirely scientific problem; the change indicated in the
-spirit of the oracle is highly significant. From Cyrene
-Plato went to Italy and Egypt. In Magna Græcia he
-made the acquaintance of the Pythagoreans of that day,
-Archytas of Tarentum, the celebrated mathematician,
-Philolaus and others; and he also bought the writings of
-the older Pythagoreans at a high price. In Sicily he made
-friends with Dion. Returning to Athens, he opened a
-school of Philosophy in the Academy, a grove or promenade
-in which stood a gymnasium, and there he discoursed to
-his disciples.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> This pleasure-ground had been laid out in
-honour of the hero Academus, but Plato was the true hero
-of the Academy who did away with the old significance of
-the name, and overshadowed the fame of the original hero,
-whose place he so completely took that the latter comes
-down to after ages only as connected with Plato.</p>
-
-<p>Plato’s busy life in Athens was twice interrupted by a
-journey to Sicily, to the Court of Dionysius the younger,
-ruler of Syracuse and Sicily. This connection with Dionysius
-was the most important, if not the only external
-relation into which Plato entered; it had, however, no
-lasting result. Dion, the nearest relative of Dionysius, and
-other respected Syracusans, his friends, deluded themselves
-with vain hopes regarding Dionysius. He had been allowed
-by his father to grow up almost without education, but his
-friends had instilled into him some notion of and respect
-for Philosophy, and had roused in him a desire to make
-acquaintance with Plato. They hoped that Dionysius would
-profit greatly by his intimacy with Plato, and that his
-character, which was still unformed, and to all appearance
-far from unpromising, would be so influenced by Plato’s
-idea of the constitution of a true state, that this might,
-through him, come to be realized in Sicily. It was partly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>his friendship with Dion, and partly and more especially
-the high hopes he himself cherished of seeing a true form of
-government actually established by Dionysius, that induced
-Plato to take the mistaken step of journeying to Sicily.
-On the surface it seems an excellent idea that a young
-prince should have a wise man at his elbow to instruct and
-inspire him; and on this idea a hundred political romances
-have been based; the picture has, however, no reality
-behind it. Dionysius was much pleased with Plato, it is
-true, and conceived such a respect for him that he desired
-to be respected by him in turn; but this did not last long.
-Dionysius was one of those mediocre natures who may
-indeed in a half-hearted way aspire to glory and honour,
-but are capable of no depth and earnestness, however much
-they may affect it, and who lack all strength of character.
-His intentions were good, but the power failed him to
-carry them out; it was like our own satirical representations
-in the theatre, of a person who aspires to be quite a
-paragon, and turns out an utter fool. The position of affairs
-represented thereby can be nothing but this, seeing that
-lack of energy alone allows itself to be guided; but it is also
-the same lack of energy which renders impossible of execution
-even a plan made by itself. The rupture between
-Plato and Dionysius took place on personal grounds.
-Dionysius fell out with his relative Dion, and Plato became
-involved in the quarrel, because he would not give up his
-friendship with Dion. Dionysius was incapable of a friendship
-based on esteem and sympathy in pursuits; it was
-partly his personal inclination to Plato, and partly mere
-vanity, which had made him seek the philosopher’s friendship.
-Dionysius could not, however, induce Plato to come
-under any obligation to him; he desired that Plato should
-give himself up to him entirely, but this was a demand that
-Plato refused to entertain.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-<p>Plato accordingly took his departure. After the separation,
-however, both felt the desire to be again together.
-Dionysius recalled Plato, in order to effect a reconciliation
-with him; he could not endure that he should have failed
-in the attempt to attach Plato permanently to himself, and
-he found it specially intolerable that Plato would not give
-up Dion. Plato yielded to the urgent representations, not
-only of his family and Dion, but also of Archytas and other
-Pythagoreans of Tarentum, to whom Dionysius had applied,
-and who were taking an interest in the reconciliation of
-Dionysius with Dion and Plato; indeed, they went so far as
-to guarantee safety and liberty of departure to Plato. But
-Dionysius found that he could endure Plato’s presence no
-better than his absence; he felt himself thereby constrained.
-And though, by the influence of Plato and his
-other companions, a respect for science had been awakened
-in Dionysius, and he had thus become more cultured, he
-never penetrated beyond the surface. His interest in
-Philosophy was just as superficial as his repeated attempts
-in poetry; and while he wished to be everything&mdash;poet,
-philosopher, and statesman&mdash;he would not submit to be
-under the guidance of others. Thus no closer tie between
-Plato and Dionysius was formed; they drew together
-again, and again parted, so that the third visit to Sicily
-ended also in coldness, and the connection was not again
-established. This time the ill-feeling with regard to the
-continued relations with Dion ran so high, that when Plato
-wished to leave Sicily, on account of the treatment his
-friend had met with from Dionysius, the latter deprived
-him of the means of conveyance, and at last would have
-forcibly prevented his departure from Sicily. The Pythagoreans
-of Tarentum came at length to the rescue,<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>demanded Plato back from Dionysius, got him conveyed
-away safely, and brought him to Greece. They were aided
-by the circumstance that Dionysius was afraid of an ill
-report being spread that he was not on good terms with
-Plato.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Thus Plato’s hopes were shattered, and his dream
-of shaping the constitution in accordance with the demands
-of his own philosophic ideas, through the agency of
-Dionysius, proved vain.</p>
-
-<p>At a later date, therefore, he actually refused to be the
-lawgiver of other States, though they had made application
-to him for that very purpose; amongst these applicants were
-the inhabitants of Cyrene and the Arcadians. It was a time
-when many of the Greek States found their constitutions
-unsatisfactory, and yet could not devise anything new.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-Now in the last thirty years<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> many constitutions have been
-drawn up, and it would be no hard task for anyone having
-had much experience in this work to frame another. But
-theorizing is not sufficient for a constitution; it is not
-individuals who make it; it is something divine and
-spiritual, which develops in history. So strong is this
-power of the world-spirit that the thought of an individual
-is as nothing against it; and when such thoughts do count
-for something, <i>i.e.</i> when they can be realized, they are
-then none other than the product of this power of the
-universal spirit. The idea that Plato should become lawgiver
-was not adapted for the times; Solon and Lycurgus
-were lawgivers, but in Plato’s day such a thing was impracticable.
-He declined any further compliance with the
-wishes of these States, because they would not agree to
-the first condition which he imposed, namely, the abolition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-of all private property,<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> a principle which we shall deal
-with later, in considering Plato’s practical philosophy.
-Honoured thus throughout the whole land, and especially
-in Athens, Plato lived until the first year of the 108th
-Olympiad (<span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 348); and died on his birthday, at a
-wedding feast, in the eighty-first year of his age.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<p>We have to speak, in the first place, of the direct mode
-in which Plato’s philosophy has come down to us; it is to
-be found in those of his writings which we possess; indubitably
-they are one of the fairest gifts which fate has
-preserved from the ages that are gone. His philosophy
-is not, however, properly speaking, presented there in
-systematic form, and to construct it from such writings is
-difficult, not so much from anything in itself, as because
-this philosophy has been differently understood in different
-periods of time; and, more than all, because it has been
-much and roughly handled in modern times by those who
-have either read into it their own crude notions, being
-enable to conceive the spiritual spiritually, or have regarded
-as the essential and most significant element in
-Plato’s philosophy that which in reality does not belong to
-Philosophy at all, but only to the mode of presentation; in
-truth, however, it is only ignorance of Philosophy that
-renders it difficult to grasp the philosophy of Plato. The
-form and matter of these works are alike of interest and
-importance. In studying them we must nevertheless make
-sure, in the first place, what of Philosophy we mean to seek
-and may find within them, and, on the other hand, what
-Plato’s point of view never can afford us, because in his
-time it was not there to give. Thus it may be that the
-longing with which we approached Philosophy is left quite
-unsatisfied; it is, however, better that we should not be
-altogether satisfied than that such conclusions should be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-regarded as final. Plato’s point of view is clearly defined
-and necessary, but it is impossible for us to remain there,
-or to go back to it; for Reason now makes higher demands.
-As for regarding it as the highest standpoint, and that
-which we must take for our own&mdash;it belongs to the weaknesses
-of our time not to be able to bear the greatness, the
-immensity of the claims made by the human spirit, to feel
-crushed before them, and to flee from them faint-hearted.
-We must stand above Plato, <i>i.e.</i> we must acquaint ourselves
-with the needs of thoughtful minds in our own time, or
-rather we must ourselves experience these needs. Just as
-the pedagogue’s aim is to train up men so as to shield
-them from the world, or to keep them in a particular
-sphere&mdash;the counting-house, for instance, or bean-planting,
-if you wish to be idyllic&mdash;where they will neither know
-the world nor be known by it; so in Philosophy a return
-has been made to religious faith, and therefore to the
-Platonic philosophy.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> Both are moments which have their
-due place and their own importance, but they are not the
-philosophy of our time. It would be perfectly justifiable
-to return to Plato in order to learn anew from him the
-Idea of speculative Philosophy, but it is idle to speak of
-him with extravagant enthusiasm, as if he represented
-beauty and excellence in general. Moreover, it is quite
-superfluous for Philosophy, and belongs to the hypercriticism
-of our times, to treat Plato from a literary point
-of view, as Schleiermacher does, critically examining
-whether one or another of the minor dialogues is genuine
-or not. Regarding the more important of the dialogues,
-we may mention that the testimony of the ancients leaves
-not the slightest doubt.</p>
-
-<p>Then of course the very character of Plato’s works,
-offering us in their manysidedness various modes of treating
-Philosophy, constitutes the first difficulty standing
-in the way of a comprehension of his philosophy. If we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-still had the oral discourses (ἄγραφα δόγματα) of Plato, under
-the title “Concerning the Good” (περὶ τἀγαθοῦ), which
-his scholars noted down, we should have had his philosophy
-before us in simpler, because in more systematic form.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-Aristotle seems to have had these discourses before him,
-when dealing with the philosophy of Plato, and he quotes
-them in his work “On Philosophy,” or, “On the Ideas,”
-or, “On the Good” (Brandis has written on this topic).
-But, as it happens, we have only Plato’s Dialogues, and
-their form renders it all the more difficult for us to gather
-a definite idea of his philosophy. For the dialogue form
-contains very heterogeneous elements; Philosophy proper
-in the treatment of absolute Being, and, intermingled with
-that, its particular mode of representation. It is just this
-which constitutes the manysidedness of Plato’s works.</p>
-
-<p>A second difficulty is said to lie in the distinction drawn
-between exoteric and esoteric philosophy. Tennemann
-(Vol. II. p. 220) says: “Plato exercised the right, which
-is conceded to every thinker, of communicating only so
-much of his discoveries as he thought good, and of so
-doing only to those whom he credited with capacity to
-receive it. Aristotle, too, had an esoteric and an exoteric
-philosophy, but with this difference, that in his case the
-distinction was merely formal, while with Plato it was also
-material.” How nonsensical! This would appear as if
-the philosopher kept possession of his thoughts in the same
-way as of his external goods: the philosophic Idea is, however,
-something utterly different, and instead of being
-possessed by, it possesses a man. When philosophers discourse
-on philosophic subjects, they follow of necessity the
-course of their ideas; they cannot keep them in their
-pockets; and when one man speaks to another, if his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>words have any meaning at all, they must contain the idea
-present to him. It is easy enough to hand over an external
-possession, but the communication of ideas requires
-a certain skill; there is always something esoteric in this,
-something more than the merely exoteric. This difficulty
-is therefore trifling.</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly, as one of the circumstances that render it
-difficult to comprehend Plato’s own speculative thought, we
-can scarcely reckon the external consideration that in his
-Dialogues he does not speak in his own person, but introduces
-Socrates and many others as the speakers, without
-always making it plain which of them expresses the
-writer’s own opinion. By reason of this historic circumstance,
-which seems to bear out the manysidedness of
-Plato, it has of course been often said, by ancients as well
-as moderns, that he merely expounded, from a historical
-point of view, the system and doctrine of Socrates, that he
-adapted much in the Dialogues from various Sophists, and
-avowedly advanced many theorems belonging to an earlier
-date, especially those of the Pythagoreans, Heraclitics, and
-Eleatics, even adopting, in the last case, the Eleatic mode
-of treatment. Hence it was said that to these philosophies
-the whole matter of the treatise belonged, the outward
-form alone being Plato’s. It is therefore necessary
-to distinguish what is peculiarly his and what is not, or
-whether the component parts are in harmony. In the
-Socratic Dialogues that we have from Cicero, the personages
-can be much more readily made out; but in Cicero
-there is nothing of real interest offered to us. With
-Plato there can be no talk of this ambiguity, and the
-difficulty is only in appearance. In the Dialogues of Plato
-his philosophy is quite clearly expressed; they are not
-constructed as are the conversations of some people, which
-consist of many monologues, in which one person expresses
-a certain opinion and another person differs from him, and
-both hold to their own way of thinking. Here, on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-contrary, the divergency of opinions which comes out is
-examined, and a conclusion arrived at as to the truth; or,
-if the result is negative, the whole process of knowledge is
-what is seen in Plato. There is, therefore, no need to
-inquire further as to what belongs to Socrates in the
-Dialogues, and what belongs to Plato. This further observation
-we must, however, make, that since Philosophy
-in its ultimate essence is one and the same, every succeeding
-philosopher will and must take up into his own, all
-philosophies that went before, and what falls specially to
-him is their further development. Philosophy is not a thing
-apart, like a work of art; though even in a work of art it
-is the skill which the artist learns from others that he puts
-into practice. What is original in the artist is his conception
-as a whole, and the intelligent use of the means
-already at his command; there may occur to him in working
-an endless variety of ideas and discoveries of his own.
-But Philosophy has one thought, one reality, as its foundation;
-and nothing can be put in the place of the true
-knowledge of this already attained; it must of necessity
-make itself evident in later developments. Therefore, as I
-have already observed (Vol. I. p. 166), Plato’s Dialogues
-are not to be considered as if their aim were to put forward
-a variety of philosophies, nor as if Plato’s were an eclectic
-philosophy derived from them; it forms rather the knot in
-which these abstract and one-sided principles have become
-truly united in a concrete fashion. In giving a general
-idea of the history of Philosophy, we have already seen
-(Vol. I. p. 54) that such points of union, in which the
-true is concrete, must occur in the onward course of philosophical
-development. The concrete is the unity of diverse
-determinations and principles; these, in order to be perfected,
-in order to come definitely before the consciousness,
-must first of all be presented separately. Thereby they of
-course acquire an aspect of one-sidedness in comparison
-with the higher principle which follows: this, nevertheless,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-does not annihilate them, nor even leave them where they
-were, but takes them up into itself as moments. Thus in
-Plato’s philosophy we see all manner of philosophic teaching
-from earlier times absorbed into a deeper principle, and
-therein united. It is in this way that Plato’s philosophy
-shows itself to be a totality of ideas: therefore, as the
-result, the principles of others are comprehended in itself.
-Frequently Plato does nothing more than explain the
-doctrines of earlier philosophers; and the only particular
-feature in his representation of them is that their scope
-is extended. His Timæus is, by unanimous testimony,
-the amplification of a still extant work of Pythagoras;<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
-and, in like manner, his amplification of the doctrine of
-Parmenides is of such a nature that its principle is freed
-from its one-sided character.</p>
-
-<p>These last two difficulties having been disposed of, if we
-would likewise solve the first mentioned, we must proceed
-to describe the form in which Plato has propounded his
-ideas, keeping it, on the other hand, distinct from Philosophy
-proper, as we find it with him. The form of the
-Platonic philosophy is, as is well known, the dialogue. The
-beauty of this form is highly attractive; yet we must not
-think, as many do, that it is the most perfect form in which
-to present Philosophy; it is peculiar to Plato, and as a work
-of art is of course to be much esteemed.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, scenery and dramatic form belong to
-what is external. Plato gives to his Dialogues a setting of
-reality, both as regards place and persons, and chooses out
-some particular occasion which has brought his characters
-together; this in itself is very natural and charming.
-Socrates takes the leading part, and among the other actors
-there are many stars well known to us, such as Agathon,
-Zeno, and Aristophanes. We find ourselves in some particular
-spot; in the Phædrus (p. 229 Steph.; p. 6 Bekk.) it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>is at the plane tree beside the clear waters of the Ilyssus,
-through which Socrates and Phædrus pass; in other
-dialogues we are conducted to the halls of the gymnasia,
-to the Academy, or to a banquet. By never allowing himself
-to appear in person, but putting his thoughts always in
-the mouth of others, any semblance of preaching or of dogmatizing
-is avoided by Plato, and the narrator appears just
-as little as he does in the History of Thucydides or in
-Homer. Xenophon sometimes brings himself forward,
-sometimes he entirely loses sight of the aim he had in view,
-of vindicating by what he tells of them the life of Socrates
-and his method of instruction. With Plato, on the contrary,
-all is quite objective and plastic; and he employs
-great art in removing from himself all responsibility for
-his assertions, often assigning them even to a third or fourth
-person.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the tone of the intercourse between the
-characters in these Dialogues, we find that the noblest
-urbanity of well-bred men reigns supreme; the Dialogues
-are a lesson in refinement; we see in them the <i>savoir faire</i>
-of a man acquainted with the world. The term courtesy
-does not quite express urbanity; it is too wide, and
-includes the additional notion of testifying respect, of
-expressing deference and personal obligation; urbanity
-is true courtesy, and forms its real basis. But urbanity
-makes a point of granting complete liberty to all with whom
-we converse, both as regards the character and matter of
-their opinions, and also the right of giving expression to
-the same. Thus in our counter-statements and contradictions
-we make it evident that what we have ourselves to
-say against the statement made by our opponent is the
-mere expression of our subjective opinion; for this is a
-conversation carried on by persons as persons, and not
-objective reason talking with itself. However energetically
-we may then express ourselves, we must always acknowledge
-that our opponent is also a thinking person; just as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-one must not take to speaking with the air of being an
-oracle, nor prevent anyone else from opening his mouth in
-reply. This urbanity is, however, not forbearance, but rather
-the highest degree of frankness and candour, and it is this
-very characteristic which gives such gracefulness to Plato’s
-Dialogues.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, this dialogue is not a conversation, in which what
-is said has, and is meant to have, a merely casual connection,
-without any exhaustive treatment of the subject.
-When one talks only for amusement, the casual and arbitrary
-sequence of ideas is quite to be expected. In the
-introduction, to be sure, the Dialogues of Plato have sometimes
-this very character of being mere conversations, and
-consequently appear to take an accidental form; for
-Socrates is made to take his start from the particular conceptions
-of certain individuals, and from the circle of their
-ideas (Vol. I. p. 397). Later, however, these dialogues become
-a systematic development of the matter in hand,
-wherein the subjective character of the conversation disappears,
-and the whole course of the argument shows a
-beautifully consistent dialectic process. Socrates talks,
-turns the conversation, lays down his own views, draws a
-conclusion, and does all this through the apparent instrumentality
-of the question; most questions are so framed
-as to be answered by merely Yes or No. The dialogue
-seems to be the form best adapted for representing an
-argument, because it sways hither and thither; the
-different sides are allotted to different persons, and thus
-the argument is made more animated. The dialogue has,
-however, this disadvantage, that it seems to be carried on
-arbitrarily, so that at the end the feeling always remains
-that the matter might have turned out differently. But
-in the Platonic Dialogues this arbitrary character is apparent
-only; it has been got rid of by limiting the development
-to the development of the subject in hand, and
-by leaving very little to be said by the second speaker.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-Such personages are, as we already saw in connection
-with Socrates (Vol. I. p. 402), plastic personages as regards
-the conversation; no one is put there to state his own views,
-or, as the French express it, <i>pour placer son mot</i>. Just as
-in the Catechism the answers are prescribed to the questions
-asked, so is it in these dialogues, for they who answer have
-to say what the author pleases. The question is so framed
-that a quite simple answer is alone possible, and, thanks to
-the artistic beauty and power of the dialogues, such an
-answer appears at the same time perfectly natural.</p>
-
-<p>In the next place, there is connected with this outward
-aspect of personality the circumstance that the Platonic
-philosophy does not proclaim itself to be one particular field,
-where some one begins a science of his own in a sphere of
-his own; for it sometimes enters into the ordinary conceptions
-of culture, like those of Socrates, sometimes into
-those of the Sophists, at other times into those of earlier
-philosophers, and in so doing brings before us exemplifications
-from ordinary knowledge, and also uses the methods of
-the same. A systematic exposition of Philosophy we cannot
-in this way find; and of course it is all the less easy for us to
-take a comprehensive view of the subject, since there are at
-hand no means of judging whether the treatment has been
-exhaustive or not. Nevertheless, there is present there
-one spirit, one definite point of view as regards Philosophy,
-even though Mind does not make its appearance in the
-precise form which we demand. The philosophic culture of
-Plato, like the general culture of his time, was not yet ripe
-for really scientific work; the Idea was still too fresh and
-new; it was only in Aristotle that it attained to a
-systematic scientific form of representation.</p>
-
-<p>Connected with this deficiency in Plato’s mode of representation,
-there is also a deficiency in respect of the concrete
-determination of the Idea itself, since the various
-elements of the Platonic philosophy which are represented
-in these dialogues, namely the merely popular conceptions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-of Being and the apprehending knowledge of the same, are
-really mixed up in a loose, popular way, so that the
-former more especially come to be represented in a myth
-or parable; such intermingling is inevitable in this beginning
-of science proper in its true form. Plato’s lofty
-mind, which had a perception or conception of Mind, penetrated
-through his subject with the speculative Notion, but
-he only began to penetrate it thus, and he did not yet
-embrace the whole of its reality in the Notion; or the
-knowledge which appeared in Plato did not yet fully
-realize itself in him. Here it therefore happens sometimes
-that the ordinary conception of reality again separates
-itself from its Notion, and that the latter comes into
-opposition with it, without any statement having been
-made that the Notion alone constitutes reality. Thus we
-find Plato speaking of God, and again, in the Notion, of
-the absolute reality of things, but speaking of them as
-separated, or in a connection in which they both appear
-separated; and God, as an uncomprehended existence, is
-made to belong to the ordinary conception. Sometimes,
-in order to give greater completeness and reality, in place
-of following out the Notion, mere pictorial conceptions are
-introduced, myths, spontaneous imaginations of his own,
-or tales derived from the sensuous conception, which no
-doubt are determined by thought, but which this has never
-permeated in truth, but only in such a way that the
-intellectual is determined by the forms of ordinary conception.
-For instance, appearances of the body or of
-nature, which are perceptible by the senses, are brought
-forward along with thoughts regarding them, which do
-not nearly so completely exhaust the subject as if it had
-been thoroughly thought out, and the Notion allowed to
-pursue an independent course.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at this as it bears on the question of how Plato’s
-philosophy is to be apprehended, we find, owing to these
-two circumstances, that either too much or too little is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-found in it. Too much is found by the ancients, the
-so-called -, who sometimes dealt with Plato’s
-philosophy as they dealt with the Greek mythology. This
-they allegorized and represented as the expression of ideas&mdash;which
-the myths certainly are&mdash;and in the same way
-they first raised the ideas in Plato’s myths to the rank of
-theorems: for the merit of Philosophy consists alone in
-the fact that truth is expressed in the form of the Notion.
-Sometimes, again, they took what with Plato is in the
-form of the Notion for the expression of Absolute Being&mdash;the
-theory of Being in the Parmenides, for instance, for
-the knowledge of God&mdash;just as if Plato had not himself
-drawn a distinction between them. But in the pure
-Notions of Plato the ordinary conception as such is not
-abrogated; either it is not said that these Notions constitute
-its reality, or they are to Plato no more than a conception,
-and not reality. Again, we certainly see that too little
-is found in Plato by the moderns in particular; for they
-attach themselves pre-eminently to the side of the ordinary
-conception, and see in it reality. What in Plato relates to
-the Notion, or what is purely speculative, is nothing more
-in their eyes than roaming about in abstract logical notions,
-or than empty subtleties: on the other hand, they take
-that for theorem which was enunciated as a popular conception.
-Thus we find in Tennemann (Vol. II. p. 376) and
-others an obstinate determination to lead back the Platonic
-Philosophy to the forms of our former metaphysic, <i>e.g.</i> to
-the proof of the existence of God.</p>
-
-<p>However much, therefore, Plato’s mythical presentation
-of Philosophy is praised, and however attractive it is in his
-Dialogues, it yet proves a source of misapprehensions;
-and it is one of these misapprehensions, if Plato’s myths
-are held to be what is most excellent in his philosophy.
-Many propositions, it is true, are made more easily intelligible
-by being presented in mythical form; nevertheless,
-what is not the true way of presenting them; propositions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-are thoughts which, in order to be pure, must be brought
-forward as such. The myth is always a mode of representation
-which, as belonging to an earlier stage, introduces
-sensuous images, which are directed to imagination,
-not to thought; in this, however, the activity of thought is
-suspended, it cannot yet establish itself by its own power,
-and so is not yet free. The myth belongs to the pedagogic
-stage of the human race, since it entices and allures men
-to occupy themselves with the content; but as it takes
-away from the purity of thought through sensuous forms, it
-cannot express the meaning of Thought. When the Notion
-attains its full development, it has no more need of the
-myth. Plato often says that it is difficult to express one’s
-thoughts on such and such a subject, and he therefore will
-employ a myth; no doubt this is easier. Plato also says
-of simple Notions that they are dependent, transitory
-moments, which have their ultimate truth in God; and in
-this first mention of God by Plato, He is made a mere
-conception. Thus the manner of conception and the
-genuinely speculative element are confounded.</p>
-
-<p>In order to gather Plato’s philosophy from his dialogues,
-what we have to do is to distinguish what belongs to ordinary
-conception&mdash;especially where Plato has recourse to
-myths for the presentation of a philosophic idea&mdash;from the
-philosophic idea itself; only then do we know that what
-belongs only to the ordinary conception, as such, does not
-belong to thought, is not the essential. But if we do not
-recognize what is Notion, or what is speculative, there is
-inevitably the danger of these myths leading us to draw
-quite a host of maxims and theorems from the dialogues,
-and to give them out as Plato’s philosophic propositions,
-while they are really nothing of the kind, but belong
-entirely to the manner of presentation. Thus, for instance,
-in the Timæus (p. 41 Steph.; p. 43 Bekk.) Plato makes
-use of the form, God created the world, and the dæmons
-had a certain share in the work; this is spoken quite after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-the manner of the popular conception. If, however, it is
-taken as a philosophic dogma on Plato’s part that God
-made the world, that higher beings of a spiritual kind exist,
-and, in the creation of the world, lent God a helping hand,
-we may see that this stands word for word in Plato, and
-yet it does not belong to his philosophy. When in pictorial
-fashion he says of the soul of man that it has a rational and
-an irrational part, this is to be taken only in a general
-sense; Plato does not thereby make the philosophic assertion
-that the soul is compounded of two kinds of substance,
-two kinds of thing. When he represents knowledge or
-learning as a process of recollection, this may be taken to
-mean that the soul existed before man’s birth. In like
-manner, when he speaks of the central point of his philosophy,
-of Ideas, of the Universal, as the permanently self-existent,
-as the patterns of things sensible, we may easily
-be led to think of these Ideas, after the manner of
-the modern categories of the understanding, as substances
-which exist outside reality, in the Understanding of God;
-or on their own account and as independent&mdash;like the
-angels, for example. In short, all that is expressed in the
-manner of pictorial conception is taken by the moderns in
-sober earnest for philosophy. Such a representation of
-Plato’s philosophy can be supported by Plato’s own words;
-but one who knows what Philosophy is, cares little for
-such expressions, and recognizes what was Plato’s true
-meaning.</p>
-
-<p>In the account of the Platonic philosophy to which I
-must now proceed, the two cannot certainly be separated,
-but they must be noted and judged of in a very different
-manner from that which has prevailed amongst the moderns.
-We have, on the one hand, to make clear Plato’s general
-conception of what Philosophy and Knowledge really are,
-and on the other to develop the particular branches of
-Philosophy of which he treats.</p>
-
-<p>In considering his general conception of Philosophy, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-first point that strikes us is the high estimation in which
-Plato held Philosophy. The lofty nature of the knowledge
-of Philosophy deeply impressed him, and he shows a real
-enthusiasm for the thought which deals with the absolute.
-Just as the Cyrenaics treat of the relation of the existent
-to the individual consciousness, and the Cynics assert immediate
-freedom to be reality, Plato upholds the self-mediating
-unity of consciousness and reality, or knowledge. He
-everywhere expresses the most exalted ideas regarding the
-value of Philosophy, as also the deepest and strongest sense
-of the inferiority of all else; he speaks of it with the
-greatest energy and enthusiasm, with all the pride of
-science, and in a manner such as nowadays we should not
-venture to adopt. There is in him none of the so-called
-modest attitude of this science towards other spheres of
-knowledge, nor of man towards God. Plato has a full consciousness
-of how near human reason is to God, and indeed
-of its unity with Him. Men do not mind reading this in
-Plato, an ancient, because it is no longer a present thing,
-but were it coming from a modern philosopher, it would be
-taken much amiss. Philosophy to Plato is man’s highest
-possible possession and true reality; it alone has to be
-sought of man. Out of many passages on this subject I
-shall quote in the first instance the following from the
-Timæus (p. 47 Steph.; p. 54 Bekk.): “Our knowledge of
-what is most excellent begins with the eyes. The distinction
-between the visible day and the night, the months and
-courses of the planets, have begotten a knowledge of time,
-and awakened a desire to know the nature of the whole.
-From this we then obtained Philosophy, and no greater gift
-than this, given by God to man, has ever come or will
-come.”</p>
-
-<p>The manner in which Plato expresses his opinions on this
-subject in the Republic is very well known, as it is greatly
-decried, because it so completely contradicts the common
-ideas of men, and it is all the more surprising in that it concerns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-the relation of Philosophy to the state, and therefore
-to actuality. For before this, though a certain value might
-indeed be attributed to Philosophy, it still remained confined
-to the thoughts of the individual; here, however, it
-goes forth into questions of constitution, government,
-actuality. After Plato made Socrates, in the Republic,
-expound the nature of a true state, he caused Glaucon to
-interrupt by expressing his desire that Plato should show
-how it could be possible for such a state to exist. Socrates
-parries the question, will not come to the point, seeks
-evasive pleas, and tries to extricate himself by asserting
-that in describing what is just, he does not bind himself to
-show how it might be realized in actuality, though some
-indication must certainly be given of how an approximate,
-if not a complete realization of it might be possible. Finally,
-when pressed, he says: “Then it shall be expressed, even
-though a flood of laughter and utter disbelief overwhelm
-me. When philosophers rule the states, or the so-called
-kings and princes of the present time are truly and completely
-philosophers, when thus political greatness and
-Philosophy meet in one, and the many natures who now
-follow either side to the exclusion of the other, come
-together, then, and not till then, can there be an end, dear
-Glaucon, either to the evils of the state or, as I believe, to
-those of the human race. Then only will this state of
-which I spoke be possible or see the light of day.”
-“This,” adds Socrates, “is what I have so long hesitated
-to say, because I know that it is so much opposed to
-ordinary ideas.” Plato makes Glaucon answer, “Socrates,
-you have expressed what, you must recollect, would cause
-many men, and not bad men either, to pull off their coats
-and seize the first weapon that comes to hand, and set upon
-you one and all with might and main; and if you don’t
-know how to appease them with your reasons, you will have
-to answer for it.”<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Plato here plainly asserts the necessity for thus uniting
-Philosophy with government. As to this demand, it may
-seem a piece of great presumption to say that philosophers
-should have the government of states accorded to them,
-for the territory or ground of history is different from that
-of Philosophy. In history, the Idea, as the absolute power,
-has certainly to realize itself; in other words, God rules in
-the world. But history is the Idea working itself out in a
-natural way, and not with the consciousness of the Idea.
-The action is certainly in accordance with general reflections
-on what is right, moral, and pleasing to God; but we
-must recognize that action represents at the same time the
-endeavours of the subject as such for particular ends. The
-realization of the Idea thus takes place through an intermingling
-of thoughts and Notions with immediate and particular
-ends. Hence it is only on the one side produced
-through thoughts, and on the other through circumstances,
-through human actions in their capacity of means. These
-means often seem opposed to the Idea, but that does not
-really matter; all those particular ends are really only
-means of bringing forth the Idea, because it is the absolute
-power. Hence the Idea comes to pass in the world, and
-no difficulty is caused, but it is not requisite that those who
-rule should have the Idea.</p>
-
-<p>In order, however, to judge of the statement that the
-regents of the people should be philosophers, we must
-certainty consider what was understood by Philosophy in
-the Platonic sense and in the sense of the times. The
-word Philosophy has had in different periods very different
-significations. There was a time when a man who did not
-believe in spectres or in the devil was called a philosopher.
-When such ideas as these pass away, it does not occur to
-people to call anyone a philosopher for a reason such as this.
-The English consider what we call experimental physics
-to be Philosophy; a philosopher to them is anyone who
-makes investigations in, and possesses a theoretic knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-of chemistry, mechanics, &amp;c. (Vol. I. p. 57). In
-Plato Philosophy becomes mingled with the knowledge of
-the supersensuous, or what to us is religious knowledge.
-The Platonic philosophy is thus the knowledge of the absolutely
-true and right, the knowledge of universal ends
-in the state, and the recognition of their validity. In all
-the history of the migration of the nations, when the
-Christian religion became the universal religion, the only
-point of interest was to conceive the supersensuous
-kingdom&mdash;which was at first independent, absolutely
-universal and true&mdash;as actualized, and to determine actuality
-in conformity thereto. This has been from that time forth
-the business of culture. A state, a government and constitution
-of modern times has hence quite a different basis
-from a state of ancient times, and particularly from one
-of Plato’s day. The Greeks were then altogether dissatisfied
-with their democratic constitution, and the conditions
-resulting from it (<i>supra</i>, p. 8), and similarly all
-philosophers condemned the democracies of the Greek
-states in which such things as the punishment of generals
-(<i>supra</i>, Vol. I. p. 391) took place. In such a constitution it
-might certainly be thought that what was best for the
-state would be the first subject of consideration; but arbitrariness
-prevailed, and this was only temporarily restrained
-by preponderating individualities, or by masters in statesmanship
-like Aristides, Themistocles, and others. This
-condition of matters preceded the disintegration of the constitution.
-In our states, on the other hand, the end of the
-state, what is best for all, is immanent and efficacious in
-quite another way than was the case in olden times. The
-condition of the laws and courts of justice, of the constitution
-and spirit of the people, is so firmly established in
-itself that matters of the passing moment alone remain to
-be decided; and it may even be asked what, if anything, is
-dependent on the individual.</p>
-
-<p>To us government means that in the actual state<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-procedure will be in accordance with the nature of the
-thing, and since a knowledge of the Notion of the thing is
-requisite to this, actuality is brought into harmony with
-the Notion, and thereby the Idea is realized in existence.
-The result of this thus is that when Plato says that philosophers
-should rule, he signifies the determination of the
-whole matter through universal principles. This is realized
-much more in modern states, because universal principles
-really form the bases&mdash;certainly not of all, but of most of
-them. Some have already reached this stage, others are
-striving to reach it, but all recognize that such principles
-must constitute the real substance of administration and
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>What Plato demands is thus, in point of fact, already
-present. But what we call Philosophy, movement in pure
-thoughts, has to do with form, and this is something peculiar
-to itself; nevertheless, the form is not responsible if the
-universal, freedom, law, is not made a principle in a state.
-Marcus Aurelius is an example of what a philosopher upon
-a throne could effect; we have, however, only private actions
-to record of him, and the Roman Empire was made no
-better by him. Frederick II. was, on the other hand, justly
-called the philosopher king. He occupied himself with
-the Wolffian metaphysics and French philosophy and verses,
-and was thus, according to his times, a philosopher.
-Philosophy appears to have been an affair of his own particular
-inclination, and quite distinct from the fact that he
-was king. But he was also a philosophic king in the
-sense that he made for himself an entirely universal end,
-the well-being and good of the state, a guiding principle
-in his actions and in all his regulations in respect to
-treaties with other states, and to the rights of individuals
-at home; these last he entirely subordinated to absolutely
-universal ends. If, however, later on, procedure of this
-kind became ordinary custom, the succeeding princes are
-no longer called philosophers, even if the same principle is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-present to them, and the government, and especially the
-institutions, are founded on it.</p>
-
-<p>In the Republic, Plato further speaks in a figure of the
-difference between a condition of philosophic culture and a
-lack of Philosophy: it is a long comparison which is both
-striking and brilliant. The idea which he makes use of is
-as follows:&mdash;“Let us think of an underground den like a
-cave with a long entrance opening to the light. Its inhabitants
-are chained so that they cannot move their necks,
-and can see only the back of the cave. Far behind their
-backs a torch burns above them. In the intervening space
-there is a raised way and also a low wall; and behind this
-wall” (towards the light) “there are men who carry and raise
-above it all manner of statues of men and animals like puppets
-in a marionette show, sometimes talking to one another
-meanwhile, and sometimes silent. Those who are chained
-would see only the shadows which fall on the opposite wall,
-and they would take them for reality; they would hear, moreover,
-by means of the echo, what was said by those who
-moved the figures, and they would think that it was the
-voice of the shadows. Now if one of the prisoners were released,
-and compelled to turn his neck so as to see things
-as they are, he would think that what he saw was an illusive
-dream, and that the shadows were the reality. And if anyone
-were to take him out of the prison into the light itself,
-he would be dazzled by the light and could see nothing;
-and he would hate the person who brought him to the light,
-as having taken away what was to him the truth, and prepared
-only pain and evil in its place.”<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> This kind of myth
-is in harmony with the character of the Platonic philosophy,
-in that it separates the conception of the sensuous world
-present in men from the knowledge of the supersensuous.</p>
-
-<p>Since we now speak more fully of this matter, we must
-in the second place consider the nature of knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-according to Plato, and in so doing commence our account
-of the Platonic philosophy itself.</p>
-
-<p>a. Plato gave a more precise definition of philosophers
-as those “who are eager to behold the truth.”&mdash;Glaucon:
-“That is quite right. But how do you explain it?”
-Socrates: “I tell this not to everyone, but you will agree
-with me in it.” “In what?” “In this, that as the
-Beautiful is opposed to the Ugly, they are two things.”
-“Why not?” “With the Just and the Unjust, the Good
-and the Evil, and every other Idea (εἶδος) the case is
-the same, that each of them is by itself a One; on the
-other hand, on account of its combination with actions
-and bodies and other Ideas springing up on every side, each
-appears as a Many.” “You are right.” “I distinguish
-now, according to this, between the sight-loving, art-loving,
-busy class on the one side, and those on the other side, of
-whom we were just speaking as alone entitled to be called
-philosophers.” “What do you mean by that?” “I mean
-by that, such as delight in seeing and hearing, who love
-beautiful voices, and colours, and forms, and all that is composed
-thereof, while their mind is still incapable of seeing
-and loving the Beautiful in its own nature.” “Such is the
-case.” “Those, however, who have the power of passing
-on to the Beautiful itself, and seeing what it is in itself
-(καθ̓ αὐτό), are they not rare?” “They are indeed.”
-“He then who sees that beautiful things are beautiful, but
-does not apprehend Beauty itself, and cannot follow if
-another should seek to lead him to the knowledge of the
-same,&mdash;think you that he lives his life awake, or in a
-dream?” (That is to say, those who are not philosophers
-are like men who dream.) “For look, is it not dreaming
-when one in sleep, or even when awake, takes what merely
-resembles a certain thing to be not something that resembles
-it, but the very thing that it is like?” “I should
-certainly say of such an one that he was dreaming.”
-“The waking man, on the other hand, is he who holds the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-Beautiful itself to be the Existent, and can recognize its
-very self as well as that which only partakes of it (μετέχονυα),
-and does not confuse between the two.”<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<p>In this account of Philosophy, we at once see what the
-so much talked of Ideas of Plato are. The Idea is nothing
-else than that which is known to us more familiarly by the
-name of the Universal, regarded, however, not as the formal
-Universal, which is only a property of things, but as implicitly
-and explicitly existent, as reality, as that which
-alone is true. We translate εἶδος first of all as species or
-kind; and the Idea is no doubt the species, but rather
-as it is apprehended by and exists for Thought. Of course
-when we understand by species nothing but the gathering
-together by our reflection, and for convenience sake, of the
-like characteristics of several individuals as indicating their
-distinguishing features, we have the universal in quite an
-external form. But the specific character of the animal is
-its being alive; this being alive is that which makes it what
-it is, and deprived of this, it ceases to exist. To Plato,
-accordingly, Philosophy is really the science of this implicitly
-universal, to which, as contrasted with the particular,
-he always continues to return. “When Plato spoke of
-tableness and cupness, Diogenes the Cynic said: ‘I see a
-table and a cup, to be sure, but not tableness and cupness.’
-‘Right,’ answered Plato; ‘for you have eyes wherewith to
-see the table and the cup, but mind, by which one sees
-tableness and cupness, you have not (νοῦν οὐκ ἔχεις).’”<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>
-What Socrates began was carried out by Plato, who
-acknowledged only the Universal, the Idea, the Good, as
-that which has existence. Through the presentation of his
-Ideas, Plato opened up the intellectual world, which, however,
-is not beyond reality, in heaven, in another place, but
-is the real world. With Leucippus, too, the Ideal is
-brought closer to reality, and not&mdash;metaphysically&mdash;thrust<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-away behind Nature. The essence of the doctrine of Ideas
-is thus the view that the True is not that which exists for
-the senses, but that only what has its determination in
-itself, the implicitly and explicitly Universal, truly exists in
-the world; the intellectual world is therefore the True, that
-which is worthy to be known&mdash;indeed, the Eternal, the implicitly
-and explicitly divine. The differences are not
-essential, but only transitory; yet the Absolute of Plato,
-as being the one in itself and identical with itself, is at the
-same time concrete in itself, in that it is a movement returning
-into itself, and is eternally at home with itself. But
-love for Ideas is that which Plato calls enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>The misapprehension of Plato’s Ideas takes two directions;
-one of these has to do with the thinking, which is
-formal, and holds as true reality the sensuous alone, or
-what is conceived of through the senses&mdash;this is what Plato
-asserts to be mere shadows. For when Plato speaks of
-the Universal as the real, his conception of it is met
-either by the statement that the Universal is present
-to us only as a property, and is therefore a mere thought in
-our understanding, or else that Plato takes this same Universal
-as substance, as an existence in itself, which, however,
-falls outside of us. When Plato further uses the expression
-that sensuous things are, like images (εἰκόνες), similar
-to that which has absolute existence, or that the Idea is
-their pattern and model (παραδεῖγμα), if these Ideas are
-not exactly made into things, they are made into a kind of
-transcendent existences which lie somewhere far from us in
-an understanding outside this world, and are pictures set
-up which we merely do not see; they are like the artist’s
-model, following which he works upon a given material, and
-thereon impresses the likeness of the original. And owing
-to their not only being removed from this sensuous present
-reality, which passes for truth, but also being liberated
-from the actuality of the individual consciousness, their
-subject, of which they are originally the representations,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-passes out of consciousness, and even comes to be represented
-only as something which is apart from consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>The second misapprehension that prevails with regard to
-these Ideas takes place when they are not transferred
-beyond our consciousness, but pass for ideals of our reason,
-which are no doubt necessary, but which produce nothing
-that either has reality now or can ever attain to it. As in
-the former view the Beyond is a conception that lies outside
-the world, and in which species are hypostatized, so in this
-view our reason is just such a realm beyond reality. But
-when species are looked on as if they were the forms of
-reality in us, there is again a misapprehension, just as if
-they were looked at as æsthetic in nature. By so doing,
-they are defined as intellectual perceptions which must present
-themselves immediately, and belong either to a happy
-genius or else to a condition of ecstasy or enthusiasm. In
-such a case they would be mere creations of the imagination,
-but this is not Plato’s nor the true sense. They are
-not immediately in consciousness, but they are in the apprehending
-knowledge; and they are immediate perceptions
-only in so far as they are apprehending knowledge comprehended
-in its simplicity and in relation to the result; in
-other words, the immediate perception is only the moment
-of their simplicity. Therefore we do not possess them,
-they are developed in the mind through the apprehending
-knowledge; enthusiasm is the first rude shape they take,
-but knowledge first brings them to light in rational developed
-form; they are in this form none the less real, for
-they alone are Being.</p>
-
-<p>On this account Plato first of all distinguishes Science,
-the Knowledge of the True, from opinion. “Such thinking
-(διάνοιαν) as of one who knows, we may justly call
-knowledge (γνώμην); but the other, opinion (δόξαν). Knowledge
-proceeds from that which is; opinion is opposed
-to it; but it is not the case that its content is Nothing&mdash;that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-would be ignorance&mdash;for when an opinion is held, it is
-held about Something. Opinion is thus intermediate between
-ignorance and science, its content is a mixture of
-Being and Nothing. The object of the senses, the object
-of opinion, the particular, only participates in the Beautiful,
-the Good, the Just, the Universal; but it is at the same
-time also ugly, evil, unjust, and so on. The double is at
-the same time the half. The particular is not only large
-or small, light or heavy, and any one of these opposites, but
-every particular is as much the one as the other. Such
-a mixture of Being and non-Being is the particular, the
-object of opinion;”<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>&mdash;a mixture in which the opposites
-have not resolved themselves into the Universal. The
-latter would be the speculative Idea of knowledge, while to
-opinion belongs the manner of our ordinary consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>b. Before we commence the examination of the objective
-implicitly existent content of knowledge, we must consider
-more in detail, on the one hand, the subjective existence of
-knowledge in consciousness as we find it in Plato, and, on
-the other, how the content is or appears in ordinary conception
-as soul; and the two together form the relation of
-knowledge, as the universal, to the individual consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>α. The source through which we become conscious
-of the divine is the same as that already seen in Socrates
-(Vol. I. pp. 410, 411). The spirit of man contains reality in
-itself, and in order to learn what is divine he must develop
-it out of himself and bring it to consciousness. With the
-Socratics this discussion respecting the immanent nature of
-knowledge in the mind of man takes the form of a question
-as to whether virtue can be taught or not, and with
-the sophist Protagoras of asking whether feeling is the
-truth, which is allied with the question of the content of
-scientific knowledge, and with the distinction between that
-and opinion. But Plato goes on to say that the process by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-which we come to know is not, properly speaking, learning,
-for that which we appear to learn we really only recollect.
-Plato often comes back to this subject, but in particular he
-treats of the point in the Meno, in which he asserts (p. 81,
-84 Steph.; p. 349, 355, 356 Bekk.) that nothing can,
-properly speaking, be learned, for learning is just a recollection
-of what we already possess, to which the perplexity
-in which our minds are placed, merely acts as stimulus.
-Plato here gives the question a speculative significance, in
-which the reality of knowledge, and not the empirical view
-of the acquisition of knowledge, is dealt with. For learning,
-according to the immediate ordinary conception of it,
-expresses the taking up of what is foreign into thinking
-consciousness, a mechanical mode of union and the filling
-of an empty space with things which are foreign and indifferent
-to this space itself. An external method of
-effecting increase such as this, in which the soul appears to
-be a <i>tabula rasa</i>, and which resembles the idea we form of
-growth going on in the living body through the addition
-of particles, is dead, and is incompatible with the nature of
-mind, which is subjectivity, unity, being and remaining at
-home with itself. But Plato presents the true nature of
-consciousness in asserting that it is mind in which, as mind,
-that is already present which becomes object to consciousness,
-or which it explicitly becomes. This is the Notion of
-the true universal in its movement; of the species which is
-in itself its own Becoming, in that it is already implicitly
-what it explicitly becomes&mdash;a process in which it does not
-come outside of itself. Mind is this absolute species, whose
-process is only the continual return into itself; thus nothing
-is for it which it is not in itself. According to this, the
-process of learning is not that something foreign enters in,
-but that the mind’s own essence becomes actualized, or it
-comes to the knowledge of this last. What has not yet
-learned is the soul, the consciousness represented as natural
-being. What causes the mind to turn to science is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-semblance, and the confusion caused through it, of the
-essential nature of mind being something different, or the
-negative of itself&mdash;a mode of manifestation which contradicts
-its real nature, for it has or is the inward certainty
-of being all reality. In that it abrogates this semblance
-of other-being, it comprehends the objective, <i>i.e.</i> gives itself
-immediately in it the consciousness of itself, and thus attains
-to science. Ideas of individual, temporal, transitory things
-undoubtedly come from without, but not the universal
-thoughts which, as the true, have their root in the mind and
-belong to its nature; by this means all authority is destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>In one sense recollection [Erinnerung] is certainly an
-unfortunate expression, in the sense, namely, that an idea
-is reproduced which has already existed at another time.
-But recollection has another sense, which is given by its
-etymology, namely that of making oneself inward, going
-inward, and this is the profound meaning of the word in
-thought. In this sense it may undoubtedly be said that
-knowledge of the universal is nothing but a recollection, a
-going within self, and that we make that which at first
-shows itself in external form and determined as a manifold,
-into an inward, a universal, because we go into ourselves
-and thus bring what is inward in us into consciousness.
-With Plato, however, as we cannot deny, the word recollection
-has constantly the first and empirical sense. This
-comes from the fact that Plato propounds the true Notion
-that consciousness in itself is the content of knowledge,
-partly in the form of popular idea and in that of myths.
-Hence here even, the already mentioned (p. 18) intermingling
-of idea and Notion commences. In the Meno
-(p. 82-86 Steph.; p. 350-360 Bekk.) Socrates tries to
-show, by experiment on a slave who had received no instruction,
-that learning is a recollection. Socrates merely questions
-him, leaving him to answer in his own way, without
-either teaching him or asserting the truth of any fact, and
-at length brings him to the enunciation of a geometrical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-proposition on the relation which the diagonal of a square
-bears to its side. The slave obtains the knowledge out of
-himself alone, so that it appears as though he only recollected
-what he already knew but had forgotten. Now if
-Plato here calls this coming forth of knowledge from consciousness
-a recollection, it follows that this knowledge has
-been already in this consciousness, <i>i.e.</i> that the individual
-consciousness has not only the content of knowledge implicitly,
-in accordance with its essential nature, but has also
-possessed it as this individual consciousness and not as
-universal. But this moment of individuality belongs only
-to the ordinary conception, and recollection is not thought;
-for recollection relates to man as a sensuous “this,” and
-not as a universal. The essential nature of the coming
-forth of knowledge is hence here mingled with the individual,
-with ordinary conception, and knowledge here appears in
-the form of soul, as of the implicitly existent reality, the
-one, for the soul is still only a moment of spirit. As Plato
-here passes into a conception the content of which has no
-longer the pure significance of the universal, but of the
-individual, he further depicts it in the form of a myth. He
-represents the implicit existence of mind in the form of a
-pre-existence in time, as if the truth had already been for
-us in another time. But at the same time we must remark
-that he does not propound this as a philosophic doctrine, but
-in the form of a saying received from priests and priestesses
-who comprehend what is divine. Pindar and other holy
-men say the same. According to these sayings, the human
-soul is immortal; it both ceases to be, or, as men say, it
-dies, and it comes again into existence, but in no way
-perishes. “Now if the soul is immortal and often reappears”
-(metempsychosis), “and if it has seen that which
-is here as well as in Hades,” (in unconsciousness) “and
-everything else, learning has no more meaning, for it only
-recollects what it has already known.”<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Historians seize<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-upon this allusion to what is really an Egyptian idea, and a
-sensuous conception merely, and say that Plato has laid
-down that such and such was the case. But Plato made
-no such statement whatever; what he here says has nothing
-to do with Philosophy, and more particularly nothing to do
-with his philosophy, any more than what afterwards is said
-regarding God.</p>
-
-<p>β. In other Dialogues this myth is further and more
-strikingly developed; it certainly employs remembrance in
-its ordinary sense, which is that the mind of man has in past
-time seen that which comes to his consciousness as the true
-and absolutely existent. Plato’s principal effort is, however,
-to show through this assertion of recollection, that
-the mind, the soul, thought, is on its own account free, and
-this has to the ancients, and particularly to the Platonic
-idea, a close connection with what we call immortality of the
-soul.</p>
-
-<p>αα. In the Phædrus (p. 245 Steph.; p. 38 Bekk.) Plato
-speaks of this in order to show that the Eros is a divine
-madness (μανία), and is given to us as the greatest happiness.
-It is a state of enthusiasm, which here has a powerful,
-predominating aspiration towards the Idea (<i>supra</i>, p. 30):
-but it is not an enthusiasm proceeding from the heart and
-feeling, it is not an ordinary perception, but a consciousness
-and knowledge of the ideal. Plato says that he must
-expound the nature of the divine and human soul in order
-to demonstrate the Eros. “The first point is that the soul
-is immortal. For what moves itself is immortal and eternal,
-but what obtains its movement from another is transient.
-What moves itself is the first principle, for it certainly has
-its origin and first beginning in itself and derived from no
-other. And just as little can it cease to move, for that
-alone can cease which derives its motion from another.”
-Plato thus first develops the simple Notion of the soul as of
-the self-moving, and, thus far, an element in mind; but the
-proper life of the mind in and for itself is the consciousness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-of the absolute nature and freedom of the “I.” When we
-speak of the immortality of the soul, the idea is most
-frequently present to us that the soul is like a physical thing
-which has qualities of all kinds, and while these can certainly
-be changed, it yet seems that, as being independent of
-them, it is not subject to change. Now thought is one of
-these qualities, which are thus independent of the thing;
-and thought is also here defined as a thing, and as if it could
-pass away or cease to be. As regards this point, the main
-feature of the idea is that the soul should be able to subsist
-as an imperishable thing without having imagination,
-thought, &amp;c. With Plato the immortality of the soul is,
-on the other hand, immediately connected with the fact that
-the soul is itself that which thinks; and hence that thought
-is not a quality of soul, but its substance. It is as with
-body, where the weight is not a quality, but its substance;
-for as the body would no longer exist if the weight were
-abstracted, the soul would not exist if thought were taken
-away. Thought is the activity of the universal, not an
-abstraction, but the reflection into self and the positing of
-self that takes place in all conceptions. Now because
-thought is an eternal which remains at home with itself in
-every change, soul preserves its identity in what is different,
-just as, for instance, in sensuous perception it deals with
-what is different, with outside matter, and is yet at home
-with itself. Immortality has not then the interest to Plato
-which it has to us from a religious point of view; in that
-to him it is associated in greater measure with the nature
-of thought, and with the inward freedom of the same, it is
-connected with the determination that constitutes the
-principle of what is specially characteristic of Platonic
-philosophy, it is connected with the supersensuous groundwork
-which Plato has established. To Plato the immortality
-of the soul is hence likewise of great importance.</p>
-
-<p>He proceeds: “To seek to make clear the Idea of the
-soul would involve investigation laborious for any but a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-god; but the tongue of man may speak of this more easily
-through a figure.” Here follows an allegory in which
-there is, however, something extravagant and inconsistent.
-He says: “The soul resembles the united power of a
-chariot and charioteer.” This image expresses nothing to
-us. “Now the horses” (the desires) “of the gods and the
-charioteers are good, and of a good breed. With us men,
-the charioteer at first takes the reins, but one of the horses
-only is noble and good and of noble origin; the other is
-ignoble and of ignoble origin. As might be expected,
-the driving is very difficult. How mortal differ from
-immortal creatures, we must endeavour to discover. The
-soul has the care of the inanimate everywhere, and traverses
-the whole heavens, passing from one idea to another.
-When perfect and fully winged, she soars upwards” (has
-elevated thoughts), “and is the ruler of the universe.
-But the soul whose wings droop roams about till she has
-found solid ground; then she takes an earthly form which
-is really moved by her power, and the whole, the soul and
-body, put together, is called a living creature, a mortal.”<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
-The one is thus the soul as thought, existence in and for
-itself; the other is the union with matter. This transition
-from thought to body is very difficult, too difficult for the
-ancients to understand; we shall find more about it in
-Aristotle. From what has been said, we may find the
-ground for representing Plato as maintaining the dogma
-that the soul existed independently prior to this life, and
-then lapsed into matter, united itself to it, contaminating
-itself by so doing, and that it is incumbent on it to leave
-matter again. The fact that the spiritual realizes itself from
-itself is a point not sufficiently examined by the ancients;
-they take two abstractions, soul and matter, and the connection
-is expressed only in the form of a deterioration
-on the part of soul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But as to the immortal,” continues Plato, “if we do
-not express it in accordance with an apprehending thought,
-but form an ordinary conception of it, owing to our
-lack of insight and power to comprehend the nature of
-God, we conclude that the immortal life of God is that
-which has a body and soul which, however, are united in
-one nature (συμπεφυκότα),<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> i.e. not only externally but
-intrinsically made one. Soul and body are both abstractions,
-but life is the unity of both; and because God’s nature
-is to popular conception the holding of body and soul
-unseparated in one, He is the Reason whose form and
-content are an undivided unity in themselves.” This is an
-important definition of God&mdash;a great idea which is indeed
-none other than the definition of modern times. It signifies
-the identity of subjectivity and objectivity, the inseparability
-of the ideal and real, that is, of soul and body.
-The mortal and finite is, on the contrary, correctly
-defined by Plato as that of which the existence is not
-absolutely adequate to the Idea, or, more definitely, to
-subjectivity.</p>
-
-<p>Plato now further explains what happens in the life of
-the divine Being, which drama the soul thus has before
-it, and how the wasting of its wings occurs. “The chariots
-of the gods enter in bands, led by Zeus, the mighty leader,
-from his winged chariot. An array of other gods and
-goddesses follow him, marshalled in eleven bands. They
-present&mdash;each one fulfilling his work&mdash;the noblest and
-most blessed of scenes. The colourless and formless and
-intangible essence requires thought, the lord of the soul,
-as its only spectator, and thus true knowledge takes its
-rise. For there it sees what is (τὸ ὄν), and lives in the
-contemplation of reality, because it follows in an ever-recurring
-revolution” (of ideas). “In this revolution”
-(of gods), “it beholds justice, temperance, and knowledge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-not in the form of what men call things, for it sees what
-in truth is absolute (τὸ ὄντως ὄν).” This is thus expressed
-as though it were something which had happened.
-“When the soul returns from thus beholding, the charioteer
-puts up his horses at the stall, gives them ambrosia
-to eat and nectar to drink. This is the life of the gods.
-But other souls, through fault of charioteer or horses,
-fall into confusion, with broken wings depart from these
-heavenly places, cease to behold the truth, nourish themselves
-on opinion as their food, and fall to the ground;
-according as a soul has beheld more or less of truth, it
-takes a higher or lower place. In this condition it retains
-a recollection of what it has seen, and if it perceives anything
-beautiful or right, it is rapt in amazement. The
-wings once more obtain strength, and the soul, particularly
-that of a philosopher, recollects its former condition
-in which, however, it had not seen what was beautiful,
-just, etc., but beauty and justice themselves.”<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> Thus
-because the life of the gods is for the soul, when in individual
-beauty it is reminded of the universal, it is implied
-that in the soul, as thus absolutely existing, there is the
-Idea of the beautiful, good and just, as absolute and as
-potentially and actually universal. This constitutes the
-general principle of the Platonic conception. But when
-Plato speaks of knowledge as of a recollection, he knows
-all the time that this is only putting the matter in similes
-and metaphors; he did not ask, as theologians used gravely
-to do, whether the soul had existed before its birth, and,
-if so, in what particular place. It cannot be said of Plato
-that he had any such belief, and he never speaks of the
-matter in the sense that theologians did; in the same way
-he never spoke about a Fall from a perfect state, for
-example, as if man had to look on the present life as an
-imprisonment. But what Plato expressed as the truth is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-that consciousness in the individual is in reason the
-divine reality and life; that man perceives and recognizes
-it in pure thought, and that this knowledge is itself the
-heavenly abode and movement.</p>
-
-<p>ββ. Knowledge in the form of soul, is more clearly dealt
-with in the Phædo, where Plato has further developed the
-ideas about the immortality of the soul. What in the
-Phædrus is kept definitely apart as myth and truth
-respectively, and which is made to appear as such, appears
-less evidently so in the Phædo&mdash;that celebrated dialogue in
-which Plato makes Socrates speak of the immortality of the
-soul. That Plato should have connected this discussion with
-the account of the death of Socrates has in all time been
-matter of admiration. Nothing could seem more suitable
-than to place the conviction of immortality in the mouth of
-him who is in the act of leaving life, and to make this conviction
-living to us through the scene, just as, on the other
-hand, a death-scene like this is made living to us through
-that conviction. We must at the same time remark that
-in what is fitting the following conditions are implied. It
-must first be really appropriate for the dying person to
-occupy himself with himself instead of with the universal,
-with this certainty of himself as a “this” instead of with
-the Truth. We hence here meet with the ordinary point of
-view but slightly separated from that of the Notion, but,
-although this is so, this ordinary point of view is far
-removed from sinking into that coarse conception of the
-soul which considers it to be a thing, and asks about its
-continuance or subsistence as if it were a thing. Thus we
-find Socrates expressing himself to the effect that the body
-and what relates to the body is a hindrance in striving
-after wisdom, the sole business of Philosophy, because the
-sensuous perception shows nothing purely, or as it is in
-itself, and what is true becomes known through the removal
-of the spiritual from the corporeal. For justice,
-beauty and such things are what alone exists in verity;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-they are that to which all change and decay is foreign;
-and these are not perceived through the body, but only
-in the soul.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>We see in this separation the essence of the soul not
-considered in a material category of Being, but as the
-universal; we see it still more in what follows, by which
-Plato proves immortality. A principal point in this argument
-is that already considered, that the soul has existed
-before this life, because learning is only a recollection,<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>
-and this implies that the soul is already implicitly what it
-becomes. We must not think that the bald conception of
-innate ideas is hereby indicated&mdash;such an expression
-implies the existence of ideas by nature, as though our
-thoughts were in part already implanted, and had in part
-a natural existence which did not first produce itself
-through the movement of the mind. But Plato mainly
-founds the idea of immortality on the fact that what is
-put together is liable to dissolution and decay, while the
-simple can in no manner be dissolved or destroyed; what
-is always like itself and the same, is, however, simple.
-The beautiful, the good, the like, being simple, are incapable
-of all change; that, on the contrary, in which these
-universals are, men, things, &amp;c., are the changeable. They
-are perceptible by the senses, while the former is the supersensuous.
-Hence the soul which is in thought, and which
-applies itself to this, as to what is related to it, must therefore
-be held to have itself a simple nature.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> Here, then,
-we again see that Plato does not take simplicity as the
-simplicity of a thing&mdash;not as if it were of anything like
-a chemical ingredient, for example, which can no longer be
-represented as inherently distinguished; this would only
-be empty, abstract identity or universality, the simple as an
-existent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But finally the universal really does appear to take the
-form of an existent, as Plato makes Simmias assert: a
-harmony which we hear is none else than a universal, a
-simple which is a unity of the diverse; but this harmony
-is associated with a sensuous thing and disappears with it,
-just as music does with the lyre. On the other hand Plato
-makes Socrates show that the soul is not a harmony in
-this sense, for the sensuous harmony first exists after its
-elements, and is a consequence that follows from them.
-The harmony of the soul is, however, in and for itself,
-before every sensuous thing. Sensuous harmony may
-further have diversities within it, while the harmony of the
-soul has no quantitative distinction.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> From this it is clear
-that Plato receives the reality of the soul entirely in the
-universal, and does not place its true being in sensuous
-individuality, and hence the immortality of the soul cannot
-in his case be understood in the ordinary acceptation, as
-that of an individual thing. Although later on we come
-across the myth of the sojourn of the soul after death in
-another and more brilliant earth,<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> we have seen above
-(pp. 40, 41) what kind of heaven this would be.</p>
-
-<p>γ. The development and culture of the soul must be taken
-in connection with what precedes. However the idealism of
-Plato must not be thought of as being subjective idealism,
-and as that false idealism which has made its appearance
-in modern times, and which maintains that we do not
-learn anything, are not influenced from without, but that
-all conceptions are derived from out of the subject.
-It is often said that idealism means that the individual
-produces from himself all his ideas, even the most immediate.
-But this is an unhistoric, and quite false conception;
-if we take this rude definition of idealism, there have been
-no idealists amongst the philosophers, and Platonic idealism<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-is certainly far removed from anything of the kind. In
-the seventh book of his Republic (p. 518 Steph., pp. 333,
-334 Bekk.) Plato says in connection with what I have
-already stated (pp. 27-29), and in particular reference to the
-manner in which this learning is created, by which the
-universal which before was secreted in the mind, developes
-out of it alone: “We must believe of science and learning
-(παιδείας), that its nature is not as some assert” (by
-this he means the Sophists), “who speak of culture as
-though knowledge were not contained within the soul, but
-could be implanted therein as sight into blind eyes.” The
-idea that knowledge comes entirely from without is in
-modern times found in empirical philosophies of a quite abstract
-and rude kind, which maintain that everything that
-man knows of the divine nature comes as a matter of education
-and habituation, and that mind is thus a quite indeterminate
-potentiality merely. Carried to an extreme, this is
-the doctrine of revelation in which everything is given
-from without. In the Protestant religion we do not find
-this rude idea in its abstract form, for the witness of the
-spirit is an essential part of faith, <i>i.e.</i> faith demands that the
-individual subjective spirit shall on its own account accept
-and set forth the determination which comes to it in the form
-of something given from without. Plato speaks against any
-such idea, for, in relation to the merely popularly expressed
-myth given above, he says: “Reason teaches that every
-man possesses the inherent capacities of the soul and the
-organ with which he learns. That is, just as we might
-imagine the eye not capable of turning from darkness to
-light otherwise than with the whole body, so must we be
-turned with the whole soul from the world of Becoming”
-(contingent feelings and ideas) “to that of Being, and the
-soul must gradually learn to endure this sight, and to
-behold the pure light of Being. But we say that this Being
-is the good. The art of so doing is found in culture, as
-being the art of the conversion of the soul&mdash;that is, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-manner in which a person can most easily and effectually
-be converted; it does not seek to implant (ἐμποιῆσαι)
-sight, but&mdash;inasmuch as he already possesses it only it
-has not been properly turned upon himself and hence he
-does not see the objects that he ought to see&mdash;it brings
-it into operation. The other virtues of the soul are
-more in conformity with the body; they are not originally
-in the soul, but come gradually through exercise and habit.
-Thought (τὸ φρονῆσαι) on the contrary, as divine, never
-loses its power, and only becomes good or evil through
-the manner of this conversion.” This is what Plato establishes
-in regard to the inward and the outward. Such
-ideas as that mind determines the good from out of
-itself are to us much more familiar than to Plato; but it
-was by Plato that they were first maintained.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> In that Plato places truth in that alone which is produced
-through thought, and yet the source of knowledge is
-manifold&mdash;in feelings, sensations, &amp;c.&mdash;we must state the
-different kinds of knowledge, as given by Plato. Plato is
-entirely opposed to the idea that the truth is given through
-sensuous consciousness, which is what is known and that
-from which we start; for this is the doctrine of the
-Sophists with which we met in dealing with Protagoras,
-for instance. As regards feeling, we easily make the mistake
-of placing everything in feeling, as indeed that Platonic
-rage for beauty contained the truth in the guise of feeling;
-but this is not the true form of the truth, because feeling is
-the entirely subjective consciousness. Feeling as such is
-merely a form with which men make the arbitrary will the
-principle of the truth, for what is the true content is not
-given through feeling; in it every content has a place.
-The highest content must likewise be found in feeling; to
-have a thing in thought and understanding is quite different
-from having it in heart and feeling, <i>i.e.</i> in our most inward
-subjectivity, in this “I”; and we say of the content that
-it is for the first time in its proper place when it is in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-heart, because it then is entirely identical with our individuality.
-The mistake, however, is to say that a content is
-true because it is in our feeling. Hence the importance of
-Plato’s doctrine that the content becomes filled by thought
-alone; for it is the universal which can be grasped by the
-activity of thought alone. Plato has defined this universal
-content as Idea.</p>
-
-<p>At the close of the sixth book of the Republic (pp. 509-511
-Steph.; pp. 321-325 Bekk.) Plato distinguishes the
-sensuous and the intellectual in our knowledge more exactly,
-so that in each sphere he again presents two modes
-of consciousness. “In the sensuous (ὁρατόν) the one
-division is the external manifestation, for in it are shadows,
-reflections in water, and also in solid, smooth, and polished
-bodies, and the like. The second section, of which this is
-only the resemblance, includes animals, plants” (this concrete
-life), “and everything in art. The intelligible (νοητόν)
-is also divided into two parts. In the one sub-division the
-soul uses the sensuous figures given before, and is obliged
-to work on hypotheses (ἐξ ὑποθέσεων) because it does not
-go to the principle but to the result.” Reflection, which
-is not on its own account sensuous, but undoubtedly
-belongs to thought, mingles thought with the first sensuous
-consciousness, although its object is not as yet a pure
-existence of the understanding. “The other division”
-(what is thought in the soul itself) “is that in which the
-soul, proceeding from an hypothesis, makes its way (μέθοδον)
-to a principle which is above hypotheses, not by means of
-images, as in the former cases, but through the ideas
-themselves. Those who study geometry, arithmetic, and
-kindred sciences, assume the odd and the even, the figures,
-three kinds of angles, and the like. And since they start
-from these hypotheses, they do not think it necessary to
-give any account of them, for everybody is supposed to
-know them. You further know that they make use of
-figures which are risible, and speak of them, although they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-are not thinking of them, but of the ideals which they
-represent; for they think of the” (absolute) “square itself
-and of its diagonals, and not of the” (sensuous) “images
-that they draw. And so it is with other things.” Thus,
-according to Plato, this is certainly the place where real
-knowledge begins, because we have nothing further to do
-with the sensuous as such; at the same time this is not the
-true knowledge which considers the spiritual universal on
-its own account, but the arguing and reasoning knowledge
-that forms universal laws and particular kinds or species
-out of what is sensuous. “These figures which they draw
-or make, and which also have shadows and images in
-water, they use only as images, and seek to behold their
-originals, which can only be seen with the understanding”
-(διανοίᾳ).&mdash;“That is true.”&mdash;“This I have named above
-that species of the intelligible, in inquiring into which
-the soul is compelled to use hypotheses, not proceeding
-to a first principle, because it is not able to get above
-those hypotheses, but employing those secondary images
-as images which are made absolutely similar to the
-originals in every respect”&mdash;“I understand that you are
-speaking of geometry and the kindred arts”&mdash;“Now learn
-about the other division of the intelligible in which reason
-(λόγος) itself is concerned, since by the power of the
-dialectic it makes use of hypotheses, not as principles but
-only as hypotheses&mdash;that is to say, as steps and points of
-departure in order to reach a region above hypotheses, the
-first principle of all” (which is in and for itself), “and
-clinging to this and to that which depends on this, it
-descends again to the result, for it requires no sensuous aid
-at all, but only ideas, and thus it reaches the ideas finally
-through the ideas themselves.” To know this is the
-interest and business of Philosophy; this is investigated
-by pure thought in and for itself, which only moves in such
-pure thoughts. “I understand you, but not perfectly. You
-seem to me to wish to assert that what is contemplated in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-Being and Knowledge through the science of dialectic is
-clearer than what is contemplated by the so-called sciences
-which have hypotheses as their principle, and where those
-who contemplate them have to do so with the understanding
-and not with the senses. Yet because in their contemplation
-they do not ascend to the absolute principle,
-but speculate from hypotheses, they appear not to exercise
-thought (νοῦν) upon these objects, although these objects are
-cognizable by thought if a principle is added to them (νοητῶν
-ὄντων μετὰ ἀρχῆς). The methods (ἕξιν) of geometry and its
-kindred sciences you appear to me to call understanding;
-and that because it stands midway between reason (νοῦς)
-and ‘sensuous’ opinion (δόξα).”&mdash;“You have quite grasped
-my meaning. Corresponding to these four sections, I will
-suppose four faculties (παθήματα) in the soul&mdash;conceiving
-reason (νόησις) has the highest place (ἐπὶ τῷ ἀνωτάτῳ),
-understanding the second; the third is called faith (πίστις)”&mdash;the
-true conception for animals and plants in that they
-are living, homogeneous and identical with ourselves;
-“and the last the knowledge of images (εἰκασία),” opinion.
-“Arrange them according to the fact that each stage has
-as much clearness (σαφηνείας) as that to which it is related
-has truth.” This is the distinction which forms the basis
-of Plato’s philosophy, and which came to be known from
-his writings.</p>
-
-<p>Now if we go from knowledge to its content, in which
-the Idea becomes sundered, and thereby organizes itself
-more completely into a scientific system, this content,
-according to Plato, begins to fall into three parts which
-we distinguish as the logical, natural, and mental philosophy.
-The logical Philosophy the ancients called dialectic,
-and its addition to philosophy is by the ancient writers on
-the subject ascribed to Plato (Vol. I. p. 387). This is not a
-dialectic such as we met with in the Sophists, which merely
-brings one’s ideas altogether into confusion, for this first
-branch of Platonic philosophy is the dialectic which moves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-in pure Notions&mdash;the movement of the speculatively logical,
-with which several dialogues, and particularly that of Parmenides,
-occupy themselves. The second, according to
-Plato, is a kind of natural philosophy, the principles of
-which are more especially propounded in the Timæus. The
-third is the philosophy of the mind&mdash;an ethical philosophy&mdash;and
-its representation is essentially that of a perfect
-state in the Republic. The Critias should be taken in
-connection with the Timæus and the Republic, but we need
-not make further reference to it, for it is only a fragment.
-Plato makes these three dialogues one connected conversation.
-In the Critias and the Timæus the subject is so
-divided that while the Timæus dealt with the speculative
-origin of man and of nature, the Critias was intended to
-represent the ideal history of human culture, and to be a
-philosophical history of the human race, forming the ancient
-history of the Athenians as preserved by the Egyptians.
-Of this, however, only the beginning has come down to us.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
-Hence if the Parmenides be taken along with the Republic
-and the Timæus, the three together constitute the whole
-Platonic system of philosophy divided into its three parts or
-sections. We now wish to consider the philosophy of Plato
-more in detail in accordance with these three different points
-of view.</p>
-
-
-<p><a name="c49" id="c49">1. <span class="smcap">Dialectic.</span></a></p>
-
-<p>We have already remarked by way of preparation that
-the Notion of true dialectic is to show forth the necessary
-movement of pure Notions, without thereby resolving these
-into nothing; for the result, simply expressed, is that they
-are this movement, and the universal is just the unity of these
-opposite Notions. We certainly do not find in Plato a full
-consciousness that this is the nature of dialectic, but we find
-dialectic itself present; that is, we find absolute existence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>thus recognized in pure Notions, and the representation of
-the movement of these Notions. What makes the study of
-the Platonic dialectic difficult is the development and the
-manifestation of the universal out of ordinary conceptions.
-This beginning, which appears to make knowledge easier,
-really makes the difficulty greater, since it introduces us
-into a field in which there is quite a different standard from
-what we have in reason, and makes this field present to us;
-when, on the contrary, progression and motion take place
-in pure Notions alone, the other is not remembered at all.
-But in that very way the Notions attain greater truth. For
-otherwise pure logical movement might easily appear to us to
-exist on its own account, like a private territory, which has
-another region alongside of it, also having its own particular
-place. But since both are there brought together, the
-speculative element begins to appear as it is in truth; that
-is, as being the only truth, and that, indeed, through the
-transformation of sensuous opinion into thought. For in
-our consciousness we first of all find the immediate individual,
-the sensuous real; or there are also categories of the
-understanding which are held by us to be ultimate and true.
-But contrasted with merely external reality, it is rather
-the ideal that is the most real, and it was Plato who perceived
-that it was the only real, for he characterized the
-universal or thought as the true, in opposition to what is
-sensuous.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the aim of many of Plato’s Dialogues, which conclude
-without any positive affirmation (Vol. I. p. 406; II. p. 13), is
-to show that the immediately existent, the many things that
-appear to us, although we may have quite true conceptions
-of them, are still not in themselves, in an objective sense,
-the true, because they alter and are determined through
-their relation to something else and not through themselves;
-thus we must even in the sensuous individuals consider the
-universal, or what Plato has called the Idea (p. 29). The
-sensuous, limited, and finite is, in fact, both itself and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-other, which is also considered as existent; and thus there
-is an unsolved contradiction, for the other has dominion in
-the first. We have been before reminded (Vol. I. p. 404;
-II. p. 33) that the aim of the Platonic dialectic is to confuse
-and to resolve the finite ideas of men, in order to bring about
-in their consciousness what science demands, the consideration
-of that which is. By being thus directed against the
-form of the finite, dialectic has in the first place the effect of
-confounding the particular, and this is brought about by
-the negation therein present being shown forth, so that, in
-fact, it is proved that it is not what it is, but that it passes
-into its opposite, into the limitations which are essential to it.
-But if this dialectic is laid hold of, the particular passes
-away and becomes another than that which it is taken to
-be. Formal philosophy cannot look at dialectic in any other
-way than as being the art of confusing ordinary conceptions
-or even Notions, and demonstrating their nullity, thus
-making their result to be merely negative. For this reason,
-Plato in his Republic (VII. pp. 538, 539, Steph.; pp. 370,
-371, Bekk.) advised the citizens not to allow dialectic to be
-studied before the thirtieth year, because by its means anyone
-might transform the beautiful, as he had received it
-from his masters, into that which is hateful. We find this
-dialectic a great deal in Plato, both in the more Socratic
-and moralizing dialogues, and in the many dialogues which
-relate to the conceptions of the Sophists in regard to
-science.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with this, the second part of dialectic
-makes its first aim the bringing of the universal in men to
-consciousness, which, as we formerly remarked when speaking
-of Socrates (Vol. I. p. 398), was the main interest of
-Socratic culture. From this time on, we may look at such
-an aim as having been discarded, and simply remark that a
-number of Plato’s Dialogues merely aim at bringing to consciousness
-a general conception, such as we have without
-taking any trouble at all (Vol. I. pp. 403, 404); hence this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-prolixity on Plato’s part often wearies us. This dialectic is,
-indeed, also a movement of thought, but it is really only
-necessary in an external way and for reflecting consciousness,
-in order to allow the universal, what is in and for itself, unalterable
-and immortal, to come forth. Hence these first
-two sides of the dialectic, directed as they are towards the
-dissolution of the particular and thus to the production of
-the universal, are not yet dialectic in its true form: it is a
-dialectic which Plato has in common with the Sophists, who
-understood very well how to disintegrate the particular. A
-subject which Plato very often treats of with this end in
-view, is virtue, which he proves to be only one (Vol. I.
-pp. 405, 411), and thereby he makes the universal good
-emerge from the particular virtues.</p>
-
-<p>Now because the universal which has emerged from the
-confusion of the particular, <i>i.e.</i> the true, beautiful and good,
-that which taken by itself is species, was at first undetermined
-and abstract, it is, in the third place, a principal part
-of Plato’s endeavours further to determine this universal in
-itself. This determination is the relation which the dialectic
-movement in thought bears to the universal, for through
-this movement the Idea comes to these thoughts which contain
-the opposites of the finite within themselves. For the
-Idea, as the self-determining, is the unity of these differences,
-and thus the determinate Idea. The universal is hence
-determined as that which resolves and has resolved the
-contradictions in itself, and hence it is the concrete in itself;
-thus this sublation of contradiction is the affirmative.
-Dialectic in this higher sense is the really Platonic; as
-speculative it does not conclude with a negative result, for
-it demonstrates the union of opposites which have annulled
-themselves. Here begins what is difficult for the understanding
-to grasp. The form of Plato’s methods being not
-yet, however, developed purely on its own account, this is
-the reason that his dialectic is still often merely reasoning,
-and that it proceeds from individual points of view and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-frequently remains without result. On the other hand,
-Plato’s own teaching is directed against this merely reasoning
-dialectic; yet we see that it gives him trouble properly
-to show forth the difference. The speculative dialectic
-which commences with him, is thus the most interesting
-but also the most difficult part of his work; hence acquaintance
-is not usually made with it when the Platonic writings
-are studied. Tennemann, for example, did not at all comprehend
-what was most important in the Platonic philosophy,
-and only gathered some of it together in the form of dry
-ontological determinations&mdash;for that was what he could
-comprehend. But it shows the greatest lack of intellect in
-a historian of Philosophy only to see in a great philosophic
-form whether there is anything yielding profit to himself or
-not.</p>
-
-<p>What we have thus to deal with in the dialectic of Plato is
-the pure thought of reason, from which he very clearly distinguishes
-the understanding (διάνοια), (<i>supra</i>, p. 47). We
-may have thoughts about many things&mdash;if indeed, we do
-have thought at all&mdash;but this is not what Plato means.
-Plato’s true speculative greatness, and that through
-which he forms an epoch in the history of Philosophy, and
-hence in the history of the world, lies in the fuller determination
-of the Idea; this extension of knowledge is one which
-some centuries later constituted the main element in the
-ferment which took place in universal history, and in the
-transformation which the human mind passed through. This
-fuller determination may, from what has gone before, be
-understood thus: Plato first comprehended the Absolute
-as the Being of Parmenides, but as the Universal which, as
-species, is also end, <i>i.e.</i> which rules, penetrates, and produces
-the particular and manifold. Plato, however, had not
-yet developed this self-producing activity, and hence often
-stumbled into an external teleology. As the union of the
-preceding principles, Plato further led this Being into determinateness
-and into difference, as the latter is contained in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-the triad of Pythagorean number-determinations, and expressed
-the same in thought. That is, he grasped the
-Absolute as the unity of Being and non-being&mdash;in Becoming,
-as Heraclitus says&mdash;or of the one and the many,<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> &amp;c. He
-further now took into the objective dialectic of Heraclitus
-the Eleatic dialectic, which is the external endeavour of the
-subject to show forth contradiction, so that in place of an
-external changing of things, their inward transition in themselves,
-<i>i.e.</i> in their Ideas, or, as they are here, in their categories,
-has come to pass out of and through themselves.
-Plato finally set forth the belief of Socrates, which the latter
-put forward in regard to the moral self-reflection of the subject
-only, as objective, as the Idea, which is both universal
-thought and the existent. The previous philosophies thus
-do not disappear because refuted by Plato, being absorbed
-in him.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to Being and non-being, one and many, the
-unlimited and limiting are, for instance, likewise pure
-thoughts such as these, in whose absolute contemplation, from
-an all-embracing point of view, the Platonic investigation
-occupies itself. The purely logical and quite abstruse consideration
-of such objects certainly contrasts strongly with
-our conception of the beautiful, pleasing, and attractive
-content of Plato. Such consideration to him signifies all
-that is best in Philosophy, and it is that which he everywhere
-calls the true method of Philosophy, and the
-knowledge of the truth; in it he places the distinction
-between philosophers and Sophists. The Sophists on their
-part look at appearances, and these they obtain in opinion;
-this, indeed, implies thought, but not pure thought, or what
-is in and for itself. This is one reason why many turn
-from the study of Plato’s works unsatisfied. When we
-commence a Dialogue, we find, in the free Platonic method
-of composition, beautiful scenes in nature, a superb intro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>duction
-(p. 14) that promises to lead us through flowery
-fields into Philosophy&mdash;and that the highest Philosophy, the
-Platonic. We meet with elevated thoughts, which are
-responded to more specially by youth, but these soon disappear.
-If at first we have allowed ourselves to be carried
-away by these bright scenes, they must now be all renounced,
-and as we have come to the real dialectic, and truly
-speculative, we must keep to the wearisome path, and allow
-ourselves to be pricked by the thorns and thistles of
-metaphysics. For behold, we then come to what is best and
-highest, to investigations respecting the one and many,
-Being and nothing; this was not what was anticipated, and
-men go quietly away, only wondering that Plato should seek
-knowledge here. From the most profound dialectic investigation,
-Plato then again proceeds to representations
-and images, to the description of dialogues amongst
-intelligent men. Thus in the Phædo, for example, which
-Mendelssohn has modernized and transformed into Wolffian
-metaphysics, the beginning and end are elevating and
-beautiful, and the middle deals with dialectic. Hence in
-making one’s way through Plato’s Dialogues very many
-mental qualities are called into play, and in their study we
-consequently ought to keep our minds open and free as
-regards the very various points of interest. If we read
-with interest what is speculative, we are apt to overlook
-what is most beautiful; if our interest lies in the elevation
-and culture of the mind, we forget the speculative element
-and find that it does not appeal to us. With some it is like
-the young man in the Bible, who had fulfilled his various
-duties, and who asked Christ what good thing he still had to
-do to become His follower. But when the Lord commanded
-him to sell what he had and give to the poor, the young man
-went away sorrowful; this was not what he had anticipated.
-Just in the same way many mean well as regards Philosophy;
-they study Fries, and heaven knows whom else. Their
-hearts are full of the true, good and beautiful; they would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-know and see what they ought to do, but their breasts swell
-with goodwill alone.</p>
-
-<p>While Socrates remained at the good and universal, at
-implicitly concrete thoughts, without having developed
-them or having revealed them through development, Plato
-certainly goes on to the Idea as determined. His defect,
-however, is that this determinateness and that universality
-are still outside one another. We should certainly obtain
-the determinate Idea by reducing the dialectic movement
-to its result, and that forms an important element in knowledge.
-Yet when Plato speaks of justice, beauty, goodness,
-truth, their origin is not revealed; they are not shown as
-being results, but merely as hypotheses accepted in their
-immediacy. Consciousness certainly has an innate conviction
-that they form the highest end, but this their
-determination is not discovered. Since Plato’s dogmatic
-expositions of Ideas are lost (<i>supra</i>, p. 11), the dialectic of
-pure thought is only placed before us by the Dialogues
-dealing with the subject, and these, just because they deal
-with pure thought, are amongst the most difficult, viz.: the
-Sophist, the Philebus, and, more especially, the Parmenides.
-We here pass over the Dialogues which contain only
-negative dialectic and Socratic dialogue, because they treat
-only of concrete ideas and not of dialectic in its higher
-signification; they leave us unsatisfied, because their ultimate
-end is only to confuse one’s opinions, or awaken a sense of
-the necessity for knowledge. But those three express the
-abstract speculative Idea in its pure Notion. The embracing
-of the opposites in one, and the expression of this
-unity, is chiefly lacking in the Parmenides, which has hence,
-like some other Dialogues, only a negative result. But
-both in the Sophist and the Philebus Plato expresses the
-unity also.</p>
-
-<p><i>a.</i> The fully worked-out and genuine dialectic is, however,
-contained in the Parmenides&mdash;that most famous masterpiece
-of Platonic dialectic. Parmenides and Zeno are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-there represented as meeting Socrates in Athens; but the
-most important part of it is the dialectic which is put in
-the mouths of Parmenides and Zeno. At the very beginning
-the nature of this dialectic is given in detail as follows:
-Plato makes Parmenides praise Socrates thus: “I notice
-that in conversing with Aristoteles,” (one of those present;
-it might quite well have been the philosopher, but that he
-was born sixteen years after Socrates’ death) “you were
-trying to define in what the nature of the beautiful, just and
-good, and all such ideas lay. This your endeavour is noble
-and divine. But train and exercise yourself even more in
-what the multitude call idle chatter, and look on as useless,
-as long as you are young, for otherwise the truth will escape
-you.&mdash;In what, Socrates asks, does this exercise consist?&mdash;I
-was much pleased because you said before that we must
-not be content with contemplating the sensuous and its
-illusions, but must consider that which thought alone can
-grasp, and that which alone exists.” I have before<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> remarked
-that men at all times have believed that the truth
-could be found through reflection only, for in reflection
-thought is found, and that which we have before us in the
-guise of ordinary conception and of belief is transformed
-into thought. Socrates now replies to Parmenides: “I
-believed that I should in that way best discern the like and
-unlike, and the other general determinations in things.”
-Parmenides replies, “Certainly. But if you begin from a
-point of view such as that, you must not only consider what
-follows from such an hypothesis, but also what follows from
-the opposite of that hypothesis. For example, in the case
-of the hypothesis ‘the many is,’ you have to consider what
-will be the consequences of the relation of the many to
-itself and to the one, and likewise what the consequences of
-the relation of the one to itself and to the many.” The
-marvellous fact that meets us in thought when we take
-determinations such as these by themselves, is that each one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-is turned round into the opposite of itself. “But again we
-must consider, if the many is not, as to what will be the result
-as regards the one and the many, both to themselves and
-to one another. The same consideration must be employed
-in respect of identity and non-identity, rest and motion,
-origination and passing away, and likewise in regard to
-Being and non-being. We must ask what is each of these
-in relation to itself, and what is their relation in event of
-the one or the other being accepted? In exercising yourself
-fully in this, you will learn to know real truth.”<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Plato
-thus lays great stress on the dialectical point of view, which
-is not the point of view of the merely external, but is a
-living point of view whose content is formed of pure
-thoughts only, whose movement consists in their making
-themselves the other of themselves, and thus showing that
-only their unity is what is truly justified.</p>
-
-<p>Plato makes Socrates say, as regards the meaning of the
-unity of the one and many, “If anyone proved to me that
-I am one and many, it would not surprise me. For since
-he shows me that I am a many, and points out in me the
-right and left side, an upper and lower half, a front and
-back, I partake of the manifold; and again I partake of
-unity because I am one of us seven. The case is the same
-with stone, wood, &amp;c. But if anyone, after determining the
-simple ideas of similarity and dissimilarity, multiplicity, and
-unity, rest and movement, and so on, were to show that these
-in their abstract form admit of admixture and separation, I
-should be very much surprised.”<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> The dialectic of Plato
-is, however, not to be regarded as complete in every regard.
-Though his main endeavour is to show that in every determination
-the opposite is contained, it can still not be said that
-this is strictly carried out in all his dialectic movements, for
-there are often external considerations which exercise an
-influence in his dialectic. For example, Parmenides says:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-“Are either of the two parts of the one which is&mdash;I mean
-the One and Being&mdash;ever wanting to one another? Is the
-One ever set free from <i>being</i> a part (τοῦ εἶναι μόριον) and
-Being set free from the <i>one</i> part (τοῦ ἑνὸς μόριου)? Once
-more, each part thus possesses both the one and Being, and
-the smallest part still always consists of these two parts.”<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
-In other words: “The one is; from this it follows that the
-one is not synonymous with ‘is,’ and thus the one and ‘is’
-are distinguished. There hence is in the proposition ‘the
-one is’ a distinction; the many is therefore contained in
-it, and thus even with the one I express the many.” This
-dialectic is certainly correct, but it is not quite pure,
-because it begins from this union of two determinations.</p>
-
-<p>The result of the whole investigation in the Parmenides
-is summarized at the close by saying “that whether the
-one is or is not, it, as also the many (τἆλλα), in relation to
-themselves and in relation to one another&mdash;all of them both
-are and are not, appear and do not appear.”<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> This result
-may seem strange. We are far from accepting, in our
-ordinary conception of things, quite abstract determinations
-such as the one, Being, non-being, appearance, rest, movement,
-&amp;c., as Ideas; but these universals are taken by
-Plato as Ideas, and this Dialogue thus really contains the
-pure Platonic doctrine of Ideas. He shows of the one that
-when it is as well as when it is not, whether like itself or
-not like itself, both in movement and rest, origination and
-decay, it both is and is not; or the unity as well as all these
-pure Ideas, both are and are not, the one is one as much as
-it is many. In the proposition “the one is,” it is also
-implied that “the one is not one but many;” and, conversely,
-“the many is” also indicates that “the many is
-not many, but one.” They show themselves dialectically
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>and are really the identity with their ‘other’; and this is
-the truth. An example is given in Becoming: in Becoming
-Being and non-being are in inseparable unity, and yet they
-are also present there as distinguished; for Becoming only
-exists because the one passes into the other.</p>
-
-<p>In this respect, perhaps, the result arrived at in the Parmenides
-may not satisfy us, since it seems to be negative in
-character, and not, as the negation of the negation, expressive
-of true affirmation. Nevertheless, the Neo-platonists,
-and more especially Proclus, regard the result arrived at in
-the Parmenides as the true theology, as the true revelation
-of all the mysteries of the divine essence. And it cannot
-be regarded as anything else, however little this may at
-first appear, and though Tiedemann (Platon. Argumenta,
-p. 340) speaks of these assertions as merely the wild extravagances
-of the Neo-platonists. In fact, however, we
-understand by God the absolute essence of things, which
-even in its simple Notion is the unity and movement of
-these pure realities, the Ideas of the one and many, &amp;c.
-The divine essence is the Idea in general, as it is either for
-sensuous consciousness or for thought. In as far as the
-divine Idea is the absolute self-reflection, dialectic is nothing
-more than this activity of self-reflection in itself; the Neo-Platonists
-regarded this connection as metaphysical only,
-and have recognized in it their theology, the unfolding of
-the secrets of the divine essence. But here there appears
-the double interpretation already remarked upon (p. 19),
-which has now to be more clearly expounded. It is that
-God and the essential reality of things may be understood
-in two different ways. For, on the one hand, when it is
-said that the essential reality of things is the unity of
-opposites, it would seem as though only the immediate
-essence of these immediately objective things were indicated,
-and as if this doctrine of real essence or ontology
-were distinguished from the knowledge of God, or theology.
-These simple realities and their relation and movement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-seem only to express moments of the objective and not
-mind, because there is lacking in them one element&mdash;that is
-to say, reflection into themselves&mdash;which we demand for
-the existence of the divine essence. For mind, the truly
-absolute essence, is not only the simple and immediate, but
-that which reflects itself into itself, for which in its opposition
-the unity of itself and of that which is opposed is; but
-these moments and their movement do not present it as
-such, for they make their appearance as simple abstractions.
-On the other hand, they may also be taken to be pure
-Notions, which pertain purely to reflection into itself. In this
-case Being is wanting to them, or what we likewise demand
-for reflection into itself as essential to the divine essence;
-and then their movement is esteemed an empty round of
-empty abstractions, which belong only to reflection and have
-no reality. For the solution of this contradiction we must
-know the nature of apprehension and knowledge, in order
-to obtain in the Notion everything there present. Thus
-shall we have the consciousness that the Notion is in truth
-neither the immediate only, although it is the simple, nor
-merely that which reflects itself into itself, the thing of
-consciousness; for it is of spiritual simplicity, thus really
-existent&mdash;as it is thought turned back on itself, so it is
-also Being in itself, <i>i.e.</i> objective Being, and consequently
-all reality. Plato did not state this knowledge of the
-nature of the Notion so expressly, nor did he say that this
-essential Being of things is the same as the divine essence.
-But really it is simply not put into words, for the fact is
-undoubtedly present, and the only distinction is one of
-speech as between the mode of the ordinary conception
-and that of the Notion. On the one hand, this reflection
-into itself, the spiritual, the Notion, is present in the
-speculation of Plato; for the unity of the one and many,
-&amp;c., is just this individuality in difference, this being-turned-back-within-itself
-in its opposite, this opposite which is
-implicit; the essential reality of the world is really this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-movement returning into itself of that which is turned back
-within itself. But, on the other hand, for this very reason,
-this being reflected into self&mdash;like the God of ordinary
-conception&mdash;still remains with Plato something separated;
-and in his representation of the Becoming of Nature in the
-Timæus, God, and the essential reality of things, appear as
-distinguished.</p>
-
-<p><i>b.</i> In the Sophist Plato investigated the pure Notions or
-Ideas of movement and rest, self-identity and other-being,
-Being and non-being. He here proves, as against Parmenides,
-that non-being is, and likewise that the simple self-identical
-partakes of other-being, and unity of multiplicity.
-He says of the Sophists that they never get beyond non-being,
-and he also refutes their whole ground-principle,
-which is non-being, feeling, and the many. Plato has thus
-so determined the true universal, that he makes it the unity
-of, for example, the one and many, Being and non-being;
-but at the same time he has avoided, or it was his endeavour
-to avoid, the double meaning which lies in our
-talk of the unity of Being and nothing, &amp;c. For in
-this expression we emphasize the unity, and then the
-difference disappears, just as if we merely abstracted from it.
-Plato tried, however, to preserve the difference likewise.
-The Sophist is a further development of Being and non-being,
-both of which are applicable to all things; for because
-things are different, the one being the other of the other,
-the determination of the negative is present. First of all,
-however, Plato expresses in the Sophist a clearer consciousness
-of Ideas as abstract universalities, and his conviction that
-this point of view could not endure, because it was opposed
-to the unity of the Idea with itself. Plato thus first refutes
-what is sensuous, and then even the Ideas themselves. The
-first of these points of view is what is later on called
-materialism, which makes the corporeal alone to be the
-substantial, admitting nothing to have reality excepting
-what can be laid hold of by the hand, such as rocks and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-oaks. “Let us,” says Plato, in the second place, “proceed
-to the other, to the friends of Ideas.” Their belief is that
-the substantial is incorporeal, intellectual, and they separate
-from it the region of Becoming, of change, into which the
-sensuous falls, while the universal is for itself. These represent
-Ideas as immovable, and neither active nor passive.
-Plato asserts, as against this, that movement, life, soul, and
-thought, cannot be denied to true Being (παντελῶς ὄντι),
-and that the holy reason (ἄγιον νοῦν) can be nowhere, and
-in nothing that is unmoved.<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> Plato thus has a clear consciousness
-of having got further than Parmenides when he
-says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>
-“Keep your mind from this way of inquiry,<br />
-For never will you show that non-being is.”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Plato says that Being in anyone partakes both of Being
-and non-being; but what thus participates is different both
-from Being and non-being as such.<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
-
-<p>This dialectic combats two things in particular; and in
-the first place it is antagonistic to the common dialectic
-in the ordinary sense, of which we have already spoken.
-Examples of this false dialectic to which Plato often comes
-back, are specially frequent amongst the Sophists; yet he
-did not show sufficiently clearly how they are distinguished
-from the purely dialectical knowledge which is in the
-Notion. For example, Plato expressed his dissent when
-Protagoras and others said that no determination is absolutely
-certain&mdash;that bitter is not objective, for what to one
-person is bitter, to another is sweet. Similarly, large and
-small, more and less, &amp;c., are relative, because the large
-will be, in other circumstances, small, and the small will
-be great. That is to say, the unity of opposites is present
-to us in everything we know, but the common way of looking
-at things, in which the rational does not come to consciousness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-always holds the opposites asunder, as though
-they were simply opposed in a determinate way. As in
-each thing we demonstrate unity, so do we also show its
-multiplicity, for it has many parts and qualities. In the
-Parmenides, Plato, as we saw above (p. 58), objected to this
-unity of opposites, because it must thereby be said that
-something is one in quite another respect from that in
-which it is many. We thus do not here bring these
-thoughts together, for the conception and the words merely
-go backwards and forwards from the one to the other; if
-this passing to and fro is performed with consciousness,
-it is the empty dialectic which does not really unite the
-opposites. Of this Plato says, “If anyone thinks he has
-made a wonderful discovery in ascertaining that he can
-drag thoughts this way and that, from one determination
-to another, he may be told that he has done nothing worthy
-of praise; for in so doing there is nothing excellent or
-difficult.” The dialectic that annuls a determination
-because it reveals in it some defect, and then goes on to
-establish another, is thus wrong. “The point of difficulty,
-and what we ought to aim at, is to show that what is the
-other is the same, and what is the same, is another, and
-likewise in the same regard and from the same point of
-view to show that the one has in them come into existence
-if the other determination is revealed within them. But
-to show that somehow the same is another, and the other
-also the same, that the great is also small” (<i>e.g.</i> Protagoras’s
-die), “and the like also unlike, and to delight in thus
-always proving opposites, is no true inquiry (ἔλενχος), but
-simply proves that he who uses such arguments is a
-neophyte,” in thought, “who has just begun to investigate
-truth. To separate all existences from one another is the
-crude attempt of an uncultured and unphilosophical mind.
-To cause everything to fall asunder means the perfect annihilation
-of all thought, for thought is the union of ideas.”<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-Thus Plato expressly speaks against the dialectic of showing
-how anything may be refuted from some point of view
-or another. We see that Plato, in respect of content,
-expresses nothing excepting what is called indifference in
-difference, the difference of absolute opposites and their
-unity. To this speculative knowledge he opposes the
-ordinary way of thinking, which is positive as well as negative;
-the former, not bringing the thoughts together,
-allows first one and then the other to have value in their
-separation; the latter is, indeed, conscious of a unity,
-though it is of a superficial, differentiating unity in which
-the two moments are separate, as standing in different
-aspects.</p>
-
-<p>The second point against which Plato argues is the
-dialectic of the Eleatics, and their assertion, which in
-its nature resembles that of the Sophists, that only
-Being is, and non-being is not. To the Sophists this
-means, as Plato puts it: Since the negative is not, but
-only Being is, there is nothing false; everything existent,
-everything which is for us, is thus necessarily true, and
-what is not, we do not know or feel. Plato reproaches
-the Sophists for thus doing away with the difference between
-true and false.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> Having arrived at this stage in the
-knowledge of the dialectic (and the whole matter is merely
-a difference of stages) the Sophists could allow what they
-promise&mdash;that everything that the individual, according to
-his belief, makes his end and interest, is affirmative and
-right. Hence it cannot be said that such and such an act
-is wrong, wicked, a crime; for this would be to say that
-the maxim of the action is wrong. No more can it be said
-that such and such opinion is deceptive, for in the opinion
-of the Sophists the proposition implies that what I feel or
-represent to myself, in as far as it is mine, is an affirmative
-content, and thus true and right. The proposition in itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-seems quite abstract and innocent, but we first notice what
-is involved in such abstractions when we see them in concrete
-form. According to this innocent proposition there
-would be no wickedness and no crime. The Platonic
-dialectic is essentially different from this kind of dialectic.</p>
-
-<p>What is further present to the mind of Plato is that the
-Idea, the absolute universal, good, true, and beautiful, is to
-be taken for itself. The myth, which I have already quoted
-(p. 27 <i>et seq.</i>), indeed goes to prove that we must not consider
-a good action, a noble man&mdash;not the subject of which these
-determinations are predicated. For that which appears in
-such conceptions or perceptions as predicate, must be taken
-for itself, and this is the absolute truth. This tallies with
-the nature of the dialectic which has been described. An
-action, taken in accordance with the empirical conception,
-may be called right; in another aspect, quite opposite determinations
-may be shown to be in it. But the good and true
-must be taken on their own account without such individualities,
-without this empirical and concrete character;
-and the good and true thus taken alone, constitute that
-which is. The soul which, according to the divine drama,
-is found in matter, rejoices in a beautiful and just object;
-but the only actual truth is in absolute virtue, justice, and
-beauty. It is thus the universal for itself which is further
-determined in the Platonic dialectic; of this several forms
-appear, but these forms are themselves still very general
-and abstract. Plato’s highest form is the identity of Being
-and non-being. The true is that which is, but this Being
-is not without negation. Plato’s object is thus to show
-that non-being is an essential determination in Being, and
-that the simple, self-identical, partakes of other-being.
-This unity of Being and non-being is also found in the
-Sophists; but this alone is not the end of the matter. For
-in further investigation Plato comes to the conclusion that
-non-being, further determined, is the essence of the ‘other’:
-“Ideas mingle, and Being and the other (θάτερον) go through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-everything and through one another; the other, because it
-participates (μετασχόν) in Being, certainly <i>is</i> through this
-indwelling Being, but it is not identical with that of which
-it partakes, being something different, and being other
-than Being, it is clearly non-being. But since Being likewise
-partakes of other-being, it also is different from other
-Ideas, and is not any one of them; so that there are
-thousands of ways in which it is not, and as regards all
-else, whether looked at individually or collectively, it in
-many respects is, and in many respects is not.”<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> Plato
-thus maintains that the other, as the negative, non-identical,
-is likewise in one and the same respect the self-identical;
-there are not different sides which are in mutual
-opposition.</p>
-
-<p>These are the principal points in Plato’s peculiar dialectic.
-The fact that the Idea of the divine, eternal, beautiful, is
-absolute existence, is the beginning of the elevation of
-consciousness into the spiritual, and into the consciousness
-that the universal is true. It may be enough for the
-ordinary idea to be animated and satisfied by the conception
-of the beautiful and good, but thinking knowledge
-demands the determination of this eternal and divine. And
-this determination is really only free determination which
-certainly does not prevent universality&mdash;a limitation (for
-every determination is limitation) which likewise leaves the
-universal in its infinitude free and independent. Freedom
-exists only in a return into itself; the undistinguished is
-the lifeless; the active, living, concrete universal is hence
-what inwardly distinguishes itself, but yet remains free in
-so doing. Now this determinateness consists in the one
-being identical with itself in the other, in the many, in
-what is distinguished. This constitutes the only truth, and
-the only interest for knowledge in what is called Platonic
-philosophy, and if this is not known, the main point of it
-is not known. While in the example already often quoted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-(pp. 58, 64),<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> in which Socrates is both one and many, the
-two thoughts are made to fall asunder, it is left to speculative
-thought alone to bring the thoughts together, and this
-union of what is different, of Being and non-being, of one
-and many, &amp;c., which takes place without a mere transition
-from one to another, constitutes the inmost reality and true
-greatness of Platonic philosophy. This determination is
-the esoteric element in Platonic philosophy, and the other
-is the exoteric; the distinction is doubtless an unwarranted
-one, indicating, as it seems to do, that Plato could have two
-such philosophies&mdash;one for the world, for the people, and
-the other, the inward, reserved for the initiated. But the
-esoteric is the speculative, which, even though written and
-printed, is yet, without being any secret, hidden from
-those who have not sufficient interest in it to exert themselves.
-To this esoteric portion pertain the two dialogues
-hitherto considered, along with which the Philebus may in
-the third place be taken.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> In the Philebus Plato investigates the nature of
-pleasure; and the opposition of the infinite and finite, or of
-the unlimited (ἄπειρον) and limiting (πέρας), is there more
-especially dealt with. In keeping this before us, it would
-scarcely occur to us that through the metaphysical knowledge
-of the nature of the infinite and undetermined, what
-concerns enjoyment is likewise determined; but these pure
-thoughts are the substantial through which everything,
-however concrete or seemingly remote, is decided. When
-Plato treats of pleasure and wisdom as contrasted, it is the
-opposition of finite and infinite. By pleasure we certainly
-represent to ourselves the immediately individual, the
-sensuous; but pleasure is the indeterminate in respect that
-it is the merely elementary, like fire and water, and not the
-self-determining. Only the Idea is the self-determinate, or
-self-identity. To our reflection the infinite appears to be
-what is best and highest, limitation being inferior to it;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-and ancient philosophers so determined it. By Plato,
-however, it is, on the other hand, shown that the limited is
-the true, as the self-determining, while the unlimited is
-still abstract; it certainly can be determined in many
-different ways, but when thus determined it is only the
-individual. The infinite is the formless; free form as
-activity is the finite, which finds in the infinite the material
-for self-realization. Plato thus characterizes enjoyment
-dependent on the senses as the unlimited which does not
-determine itself; reason alone is the active determination.
-But the infinite is what in itself passes over to the finite;
-thus the perfect good, according to Plato, is neither to be
-sought for in happiness or reason, but in a life of both
-combined. But wisdom, as limit, is the true cause from
-which what is excellent arises.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> As that which posits
-measure and end, it is what absolutely determines the end&mdash;the
-immanent determination with which and in which
-freedom likewise brings itself into existence.</p>
-
-<p>Plato further considers the fact that the true is the
-identity of opposites, thus. The infinite, as the indeterminate,
-is capable of a more or less, it may be more intensive
-or not; thus colder and warmer, drier and moister, quicker
-and slower, &amp;c., are all such. What is limited is the equal,
-the double, and every other measure; by this means the
-opposite ceases to be unlike and becomes uniform and harmonious.
-Through the unity of these opposites, such as cold
-and warm, dry and moist, health arises; similarly the harmony
-of music takes its origin from the limitation of high tones
-and deep, of quicker and slower movement, and, generally
-speaking, everything beautiful and perfect arises through
-the union of opposites. Health, happiness, beauty, &amp;c.,
-would thus appear to be begotten, in as far as the opposites
-are allied thereto, but they are likewise an intermingling
-of the same. The ancients make copious use of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-intermingling, participation, &amp;c., instead of individuality;
-but for us these are indefinite and inadequate expressions.
-But Plato says that the third, which is thus begotten, pre-supposes
-the cause or that from which it is formed; this is
-more excellent than those through whose instrumentality
-that third arose. Hence Plato has four determinations;
-first the unlimited, the undetermined; secondly the limited,
-measure, proportion, to which pertains wisdom; the third
-is what is mingled from both, what has only arisen; the
-fourth is cause. This is in itself nothing else than the unity
-of differences, subjectivity, power and supremacy over
-opposites, that which is able to sustain the opposites in itself;
-but it is only the spiritual which has this power and which
-sustains opposition, the highest contradiction in itself.
-Weak corporeality passes away as soon as ‘another’ comes
-into it. The cause he speaks of is divine reason, which
-governs the world; the beauty of the world which is present
-in air, fire, water, and in all that lives, is produced thereby.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>
-Thus the absolute is what in one unity is finite and infinite.</p>
-
-<p>When Plato speaks thus of the beautiful and good, these
-are concrete ideas, or rather there is only one idea. But
-we are still far from these concrete ideas when we begin
-with such abstractions as Being, non-being, unity, and
-multiplicity. If Plato, however, has not succeeded in bringing
-these abstract thoughts through further development and
-concretion, to beauty, truth, and morality, there at least
-lies in the knowledge of those abstract determinations, the
-criterion by which the concrete is determined, as also its
-sources. This transition to the concrete is made in the
-Philebus, since the principle of feeling and of pleasure is
-there considered. The ancient philosophers knew very well
-what they had of concrete in those abstract thoughts. In
-the atomic principle of multiplicity we thus find the source
-of a construction of the state, for the ultimate thought-determination
-of such state-principles is the logical. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-ancients in their pure Philosophy had not the same end
-in view as we&mdash;they had not the end of a metaphysical
-sequence placed before them like a problem. We, on the
-other hand, have something concrete before us, and desire
-to reduce it to settled order. With Plato Philosophy offers
-the path which the individual must follow in order to attain
-to any knowledge, but, generally speaking, Plato places
-absolute and explicit happiness, the blessed life itself, in
-the contemplation during life of the divine objects named
-above.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> This contemplative life seems aimless, for the
-reason that all its interests have disappeared. But to live
-in freedom in the kingdom of thought had become the
-absolute end to the ancients, and they knew that freedom
-existed only in thought.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c71" id="c71">2. <span class="smcap">Philosophy of Nature.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>With Plato Philosophy likewise commenced to devote
-more attention to the understanding of what is further
-determined, and in this way the matter of knowledge began
-to fall into divisions. In the Timæus the Idea thus makes
-its appearance as expressed in its concrete determinateness,
-and the Platonic Philosophy of Nature hence teaches us to
-have a better knowledge of the reality of the world; we
-cannot, however, enter into details, and if we did, they have
-little interest. It is more especially where Plato treats of
-physiology that his statements in no way correspond with
-what we now know, although we cannot fail to wonder at
-the brilliant glimpses of the truth there found, which have
-been only too much misconceived by the moderns. Plato
-derived a great deal from the Pythagoreans; how much is
-theirs, however, cannot be satisfactorily determined. We
-remarked before (p. 14) that the Timæus is really the
-fuller version of a Pythagorean treatise; other would-be
-wise persons have indeed said that the treatise is only an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-abstract made by a Pythagorean of the larger work of Plato,
-but the first theory is the more probable. The Timæus
-has in all times been esteemed the most difficult and
-obscure of the Platonic dialogues. This difficulty is due in
-part to the apparent mingling of conceiving knowledge and
-ordinary perception already mentioned (p. 20), just as we
-shall presently find an intermingling of Pythagorean
-numbers; and it is due still more to the philosophic nature
-of the matter in hand, of which Plato was as yet unconscious.
-The second difficulty lies in the arrangement of the whole,
-for what at once strikes one is that Plato repeatedly breaks
-off the thread of his argument, often appearing to turn back
-and begin again from the beginning.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> This moved critics
-such as August Wolff and others, who could not understand
-it philosophically, to take the Timæus to be an accumulation
-of fragments put together, or else to be several works
-which had only been loosely strung together into one, or
-into the Platonic portion of which much that is foreign had
-been introduced. Wolff accordingly thought it was evident
-from this that the dialogue, like Homer’s poems, had been,
-in its first form, spoken and not written. But although
-the connection seems unmethodical, and Plato himself
-makes what maybe called copious excuses for the confusion,
-we shall find how the whole matter really falls into natural
-divisions, and we shall also find the deep inward reason
-which makes necessary the frequent return to what apparently
-is the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>An exposition of the reality of nature or of the becoming
-of the world is introduced by Plato in the following way:
-“God is the Good,” this stands also at the head of the
-Platonic Ideas in the verbally delivered discourses (<i>supra</i>,
-p. 11); “goodness, however, has no jealousy of anything,
-and being free from jealousy, God desired to make all
-things like Himself.”<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> God here is still without determination,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-and a name which has no meaning for thought;
-nevertheless, where Plato in the Timæus again begins from
-the beginning, he is found to have a more definite idea of
-God. That God is devoid of envy undoubtedly is a great,
-beautiful, true, and childlike thought. With the ancients,
-on the contrary, we find in Nemesis, Dike, Fate, Jealousy,
-the one determination of the gods: moved by this they cast
-down the great and bring it low, and suffer not what is
-excellent and elevated to exist. The later high-minded
-philosophers controverted this doctrine. For in the mere
-idea of the Nemesis no moral determination is as yet implied,
-because punishment there is only the humiliation of what
-oversteps limits, but these limits are not yet presented as
-moral, and punishment is thus not yet a recognition of the
-moral as distinguished from the immoral. Plato’s thought
-is thus much higher than that of most of our moderns, who,
-in saying that God is a hidden God who has not revealed
-Himself to us and of whom we can know nothing, ascribe
-jealousy to God. For why should He not reveal Himself
-to us if we earnestly seek the knowledge of Him? A light
-loses nothing by another’s being kindled therefrom, and
-hence there was in Athens a punishment imposed on those
-who did not permit this to be done. If the knowledge of
-God were kept from us in order that we should know only
-the finite and not attain to the infinite, God would be a
-jealous God, or God would then become an empty name.
-Such talk means no more than that we wish to neglect
-what is higher and divine, and seek after our own petty
-interests and opinions. This humility is sin&mdash;the sin against
-the Holy Ghost.</p>
-
-<p>Plato continues: “God found the visible” (παραλαβών)&mdash;a
-mythical expression proceeding from the necessity of
-beginning with an immediate, which, however, as it presents
-itself, cannot in any way be allowed&mdash;“not at rest, but
-moving in an irregular and disorderly manner; and out of
-disorder he brought order, considering that this was far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-better than the other.” From this it appears as if Plato
-had considered that God was only the δημιοῦργος, <i>i.e.</i> the
-disposer of matter, and that this, being eternal and independent,
-was found by Him as chaos; but in view of
-what has been said, this is false. These are not the
-philosophic doctrines which Plato seriously held, for he
-speaks here only after the manner of the ordinary conception,
-and such expressions have hence no philosophic
-content. It is only the introduction of the subject, bringing
-us, as it does, to determinations such as matter. Plato
-then comes in course of his progress to further determinations,
-and in these we first have the Notion; we must
-hold to what is speculative in Plato, and not to the first-mentioned
-ordinary conception. Likewise, when he says
-that God esteemed order to be the best, the mode of
-expression is naïve. Nowadays we should ask that God
-should first be proved; and just as little should we allow
-the visible to be established without much further ado.
-What is proved by Plato from this more naïve method of
-expression is, in the first place, the true determination of
-the Idea, which only appears later on. It is further said:
-“God reflecting that of what is visible, the unintelligent
-(ἀνόητον) could not be fairer than the intelligent (νοῦς),
-and that intelligence could not exist in anything devoid of
-soul, for these reasons put intelligence in the soul, and the
-soul in the body, and so united them that the world became
-a living and intelligent system, an animal.” We have
-reality and intelligence, and the soul as the bond connecting
-the two extremes, without which intelligence could not
-have part in the visible body; we saw the true reality
-comprehended by Plato in a similar way in the Phædrus
-(<i>supra</i>, p. 39). “There is, however, only one such
-animal, for were there two or more, these would be only
-parts of the one, and only one.”<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
-
-<p>Plato now first proceeds to the determination of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-Idea of corporeal existence: “Because the world was to
-become corporeal, visible and tangible, and since without
-fire nothing can be seen, and without solidity, without
-earth, nothing can be touched, God in the beginning made
-fire and earth.” In this childlike way Plato introduces
-these extremes, solidity and life. “But two things cannot
-be united without a third, there must be a bond between
-them, uniting both”&mdash;one of Plato’s simple methods of
-expression. “The fairest bond, however, is that which
-most completely fuses itself and that which is bound by it.”
-That is a profound saying, in which the Notion is contained;
-the bond is the subjective and individual, the power which
-dominates the other, which makes itself identical with it.
-“Proportion” (ἀναλογία) is best adapted to effect such a
-fusion; that is, whenever of three numbers or magnitudes
-or powers, that which is the mean is to the last term what
-the first term is to the mean, and again when the mean is to
-the first term as the last term is to the mean (a : b = b : c)
-“then the mean having become the first and last, and the first
-and last both having become means, all things will necessarily
-come to be the same; but having come to be the same,
-everything will be one.”<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> This is excellent, we have still preserved
-this in our Philosophy; it is the distinction which is
-no distinction. This diremption from which Plato proceeds,
-is the conclusion which we know from logic; it appears in
-the form of the ordinary syllogism, in which, however, the
-whole rationality of the Idea is, at least externally, contained.
-The distinctions are the extremes, and the mean
-is the identity which in a supreme degree makes them
-one; the conclusion is thus speculative, and in the extremes
-unites itself with itself, because all the terms pass
-through all the different positions. It is hence a mistake
-to disparage the conclusion and not to recognize it as the
-highest and absolute form; in respect of the conclusions
-arrived at by the understanding, on the contrary, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-should be right in rejecting it. This last has no such mean;
-each of the differences is there recognized as different in
-its own independent form, as having a character different
-from that of the other. This, in the Platonic philosophy, is
-abrogated, and the speculative element in it constitutes the
-proper and true form of conclusion, in which the extremes
-neither remain in independence as regards themselves, nor
-as regards the mean. In the conclusion of the understanding,
-on the contrary, the unity which is constituted is only
-the unity of essentially different contents which remain
-such; for here a subject, a determination, is, through the
-mean, simply bound up with another, or “some conception is
-joined to some other conception.” In a rational conclusion,
-however, the main point of its speculative content is the
-identity of the extremes which are joined to one another;
-in this it is involved that the subject presented in the mean
-is a content which does not join itself with another, but only
-through the other and in the other with itself. In other
-words, this constitutes the essential nature of God, who,
-when made subject, is the fact that He begot His Son, the
-world; but in this reality which appears as another, He
-still remains identical with Himself, does away with the
-separation implied in the Fall, and, in the other, merely
-unites Himself to Himself and thus becomes Spirit. When
-the immediate is elevated over the mediate and it is then
-said that God’s actions are immediate, there is, indeed,
-good ground for the assertion; but the concrete fact is
-that God is a conclusion which, by differentiating itself,
-unites itself to itself, and, through the abrogation of the
-mediation, reinstates its own immediacy. In the Platonic
-philosophy we thus have what is best and highest; the
-thoughts are, indeed, merely pure thoughts, but they contain
-everything in themselves; for all concrete forms
-depend on thought-determinations alone. The Fathers
-thus found in Plato the Trinity which they wished to comprehend
-and prove in thought: with Plato the truth really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-has the same determination as the Trinity. But these
-forms have been neglected for two thousand years since
-Plato’s time, for they have not passed into the Christian religion
-as thoughts; indeed they were considered to be ideas
-which had entered in through error, until quite recent
-times, when men began to understand that the Notion is
-contained in these determinations, and that nature and
-spirit can thus be comprehended through their means.</p>
-
-<p>Plato continues: “Since what is solid requires two
-means, because it not only has breadth but also depth,
-God has placed air and water between fire and earth; and
-indeed He gave to them the same proportion, so that fire is
-related to air as air to water, and as air is to water, so is
-water to earth.”<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> Thus we have, properly speaking, four
-methods of representing space, inasmuch as the point is,
-through line and surface, closely bound up with the solid
-body. The sundered mean here discovered, again indicates
-an important thought of logical profundity; and the
-number four which here appears, is in nature a fundamental
-number. For as being the different which is turned
-towards the two extremes, the mean must be separated in
-itself. In the conclusion in which God is the One, the
-second (the mediating), the Son; the third, the Spirit; the
-mean indeed is simple. But the cause why that which
-in the rational conclusion is merely three-fold, passes
-in nature to the four-fold, rests in what is natural, because
-what in thought is immediately the one, becomes separate
-in Nature. But in order that in Nature the opposition
-should exist as opposition, it must itself be a twofold,
-and thus, when we count, we have four. This also takes
-place in the conception of God, for when we apply it to the
-world, we have nature as mean and the existent spirit as
-the way of return for nature: when the return is made,
-this is the absolute Spirit. This living process, this
-separation and unifying of differences, is the living God.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Plato says further: “Through this unity the visible and
-tangible world has been made. And it comes to pass by
-God’s having given to it these elements entire and
-unseparated, that it is perfect, and unaffected by age and
-disease. For old age and disease only arise from a body’s
-being worked upon by a superabundance of such elements
-from without. But here this is not so, for the world contains
-those elements entirely in itself, and nothing can
-come to it from without. The world is spherical in form,”
-(as it was to Parmenides and the Pythagoreans) “as being
-most perfect, and as containing all others in itself; it
-is perfectly smooth, since for it there is nothing outside,
-and it requires no limbs.” Finitude consists in this, that
-a distinction as regards something else is an externality to
-some other object. In the Idea we certainly have determination,
-limitation, difference, other-being, but it is at the
-same time dissolved, contained, gathered together, in the
-one. Thus it is a difference through which no finitude
-arises, seeing that it likewise is sublated. Finitude is
-thus in the infinite itself, and this is, indeed, a great
-thought. “God gave the world the most appropriate
-motion of all the seven, being that which harmonizes best
-with mind and consciousness, motion in a circle; the other
-six He took away from it and liberated it from their
-variations”<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> (movements backwards and forwards). This
-is only a popular way of putting it.</p>
-
-<p>We read further: “Since God wished to make the world
-a God, He gave it soul, and this was placed in the centre
-and diffused through the whole, which was also surrounded
-by it externally; and in this way He brought to pass the self-sufficing
-existence which required no other, and which needed
-no other friendship or acquaintance than itself. Through
-these means God created the world as a blessed God.” We
-may say that here, where the world is a totality through
-the world-soul, we first have the knowledge of the Idea;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-for the first time this newly-begotten God, as the mean
-and identity, is the true absolute. That first God which
-was only goodness, is, on the contrary, a mere hypothesis,
-and hence neither determined nor self-determining. “Now
-though we have spoken of the soul last,” Plato goes on, “it
-does not for that reason come last; for this is merely our
-manner of speech. The soul is the ruler, the king, and the
-body is its subject.” It is only Plato’s naïvety which ascribes
-the reversal of the order of the two to a manner of speech.
-What here appears as contingent is really necessary&mdash;that
-is, to begin with the immediate and then come to the concrete.
-We must likewise adopt this method, but with the
-consciousness that when we begin with determinations such
-as Being, or God, Space, Time, &amp;c., we speak of them in an
-immediate manner, and this content, in accordance with
-its nature, is at first immediate, and consequently undetermined
-in itself. God, for example, with whom we
-begin as an immediate, is proved only at the last, and then,
-indeed, as the true first. Thus we can, as already remarked,
-(p. 72) show Plato’s confusion of mind in such presentations;
-but it depends entirely on what Plato’s standard of
-truth is.</p>
-
-<p>Plato further shows us the nature of the Idea in one of
-the most famous and profound of passages, where in the
-essence of the soul he recognizes again the very same idea
-that he also expressed as the essence of the corporeal. For
-he says: “The soul is created in the following way: Of
-the indivisible and unchangeable and also of the divisible
-which is corporeal, God made a third kind of intermediate
-essence, which partook of the nature of the same and of the
-nature of the other or diverse.” (The divisible is to Plato
-likewise the other as such, or in itself, and not of anything
-else.) “And God in like manner made the soul a sort of
-intermediate between the indivisible and the divisible.”
-Here the abstract determinations of the one which is
-identity, of the many or non-identical, which is opposition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-and difference, once more appear. If we say: “God, the
-Absolute, is the identity of the identical and non-identical,”
-a cry is raised of barbarism and scholasticism. Those who
-speak of it so still hold Plato in high esteem, and yet it was
-thus that he determined the truth. “And taking these
-three elements as separate, God mingled them all into one
-Idea, because he forcibly compressed the incongruous nature
-of the other into the same.”<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> This is undoubtedly the
-power of the Notion, which posits the many, the separate,
-as the ideal, and that is also the force applied to the understanding
-when anything is placed before it.</p>
-
-<p>Plato now describes how the self-identical, as itself a
-moment, and the other or matter, and the third, the apparently
-dissoluble union which has not returned into the first
-unity&mdash;which three were originally separated&mdash;have now,
-in simple reflection into self and resumption of that
-beginning, been degraded into moments. “Mingling the
-identical and the other with the essence (οὐσία),” the third
-moment, “and making them all one, God again divided this
-whole into as many parts was as fitting.”<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> Since this substance
-of the soul is identical with that of the visible world,
-the one whole is for the first time the now systematized
-substance, the true matter, the absolute element which is
-internally divided, an enduring and unseparable unity of
-the one and many; and no other essence must be demanded.
-The manner and mode of the division of this subjectivity
-contain the famous Platonic numbers, which doubtless
-originally pertain to the Pythagoreans, and respecting which
-both ancients and moderns, and even Kepler himself in his
-<i>Harmonia mundi</i>, have taken much pains, but which no one
-has properly understood. To understand would mean two
-things, and in the first place, the recognition of their speculative
-significance, their Notion. But, as already remarked
-of the Pythagoreans (Vol. I. p. 224), these distinctions of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-number give only an indefinite conception of difference, and
-that only in the earlier numbers; where the relationships
-become more complicated, they are quite incapable of designating
-them more closely. In the second place, because of
-their being numbers, they express, as differences of magnitude,
-differences in what is sensuous only. The system of
-apparent magnitude&mdash;and it is in the heavenly system that
-magnitude appears most purely and freely, liberated from
-what is qualitative&mdash;must correspond to them. But these
-living number-spheres are themselves systems composed of
-many elements&mdash;both of the magnitude of distance and of
-velocity and mass. No one of these elements, taken as a
-succession of simple numbers, can be likened to the system
-of heavenly spheres, for the series corresponding to this
-system can, as to its members, contain nothing else than
-the system of all these moments. Now if the Platonic
-numbers were also the elements of each system such as this,
-it would not be only this element which would have to be
-taken into account, for the relationship of moments which
-become distinguished in movement has to be conceived
-of as a whole, and is the true object of interest and
-reason. What we have to do is to give briefly the main
-points as matter of history; we have the most thorough
-treatment of it given us by Böckh “On the Constitution
-of the World-Soul in the Timæus of Plato,” in the third
-volume of the Studies of Daub and Creuzer (p. 26 <i>et seq.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The fundamental series is very simple: “God first took
-one part out of the whole; then the second, the double of
-the first; the third is one and a half times as many as the
-second, or three times the first; the next is double the
-second; the fifth is three times the third; the sixth is eight
-times the first; the seventh is twenty-seven times greater
-than the first.” Hence the series is: 1; 2; 3; 4 = 2²;
-9 = 3²; 8 = 2³; 27 = 3³. “Then God filled up the
-double and triple intervals” (the relations 1 : 2 and 1 : 3)
-“by again abstracting portions from the whole. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-parts he placed in the intervals in such a way that in each
-interval there were two means, the one exceeding and
-exceeded by the extremes in the same ratio, the other
-being that kind of mean which by an equal number
-exceeds and is exceeded by the extremes.” That is, the
-first is a constant geometric relationship, and the other is
-an arithmetical. The first mean, brought about through
-the quadration, is thus in the relation 1 : 2, for example,
-the proportion 1 : √̅2 : 2; the other is in the same relation,
-the number 1½. Hereby new relations arise which are
-again in a specially given and more difficult method inserted
-into that first, but this is done in such a way that everywhere
-something has been left out, and the last relation of
-number to number is 256 : 243, or 2<sup>8</sup> : 3<sup>5</sup>.</p>
-
-<p>Much progress is not, however, made with these number-relations,
-for they do not present much to the speculative
-Notion. The relationships and laws of nature cannot be
-expressed by these barren numbers; they form an empirical
-relation which does not constitute the basis of the proportions
-of nature. Plato now says: “God divided this
-entire series lengthways into two parts which he set together
-crosswise like an X, and he bent their ends into a circular
-form and comprehended them in a uniform motion&mdash;forming
-an inner circle and an outer&mdash;and he called the motion
-of the outer circle the motion of the same, and that of the
-inner the motion of the diverse, giving supremacy to the
-former, and leaving it intact. But the inner motion he
-again split into seven orbits after the same relations; three
-of these he made to move with equal velocity, and four with
-unequal velocity to the three and to one another. This is the
-system of the soul within which all that is corporeal is formed;
-the soul is the centre, it penetrates the whole and envelopes
-it from without and moves in itself. Thus it has the divine
-beginning of a never-ceasing and rational life in itself.”<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-This is not quite devoid of confusion, and from it we can
-only grasp the general fact that as to Plato with the idea
-of the corporeal universe that of the soul enters in as the
-all-embracing and simple, to him the essence of the corporeal
-and of the soul is unity in difference. This double
-essence, posited in and for itself in difference, becomes
-systematized within the one in many moments, which are,
-however, movements; thus this reality and that essence
-both pertain to this whole in the antithesis of soul and
-body, and this again is one. Mind is what penetrates all,
-and to it the corporeal is opposed as truly as that it itself is
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>This is a general description of the soul which is posited
-in the world and reigns over it; and in as far as the substantial,
-which is in matter, is similar to it, their inherent
-identity is asserted. The fact that in it the same moments
-which constitute its reality are contained, merely signifies
-that God, as absolute Substance, does not see anything other
-than Himself. Plato hence describes the relation of soul to
-objective reality thus: it, if it touches any of the moments,
-whether dispersed in parts or indivisible, is stirred in all
-its powers to declare the sameness and the difference of
-that or some other thing, and how, where, and when, the
-individual is related to the other and to the universal.
-“Now when the orbit of the sensuous, moving in its due
-course, imparts knowledge of itself to its whole soul”
-(where the different orbits of the world’s course show themselves
-to correspond with the inwardness of mind) “true
-opinions and beliefs arise. But when the soul applies
-itself to the rational and the orbit of the self-identical
-makes itself known, thought is perfected into knowledge.”<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
-This is the essential reality of the world as of the inherently
-blessed God; here the Idea of the whole is for the first
-time perfected, and, in accordance with this Idea, the world<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-first makes its appearance. What had hitherto appeared
-was the reality of the sensuous only and not the world as
-sensuous, for though Plato certainly spoke before of fire,
-&amp;c. (p. 75), he there gave only the reality of the sensuous;
-he would hence have done better to have omitted these
-expressions. In them we have the reason for its appearing
-as if Plato had here begun to consider from the beginning
-that of which he has already treated (<i>supra</i>, p. 72). For
-since we must begin from the abstract in order to reach
-the true and the concrete, which first appears later on (<i>supra</i>,
-p. 79), this last, when it has been found, has the appearance
-and form of a new commencement, particularly in
-Plato’s loose style.</p>
-
-<p>Plato now goes on further, for he calls this divine world
-the pattern which is in thought (νοητόν) alone, and always
-in self-identity; but he again places this whole in opposition
-to itself, so that there is a second, the copy of the first,
-the world, which has origination and is visible. This
-second is the system of the heavenly movement, the first is
-the eternally living. The second, which has origination and
-becoming within it, cannot be made perfectly like the first,
-the eternal Idea. But it is made a self-moving image of
-the eternal that remains in the unity; and this eternal
-image that moves rhythmically, after the manner of numbers,
-is what we call time. Plato says of it that we are in the
-habit of calling the ‘was’ and ‘will be’ parts of time, and
-we transfer these indications of change which operate in
-time, into absolute essence. But the true time is eternal,
-or the present. For the substance can neither become
-older nor younger, and time, as the immediate image of
-the eternal, has neither the future nor the present in its
-parts. Time is ideal, like space, not sensuous, but the
-immediate mode in which mind comes forth in objective
-form, the sensuous non-sensuous. The real moments of
-the principle of absolute movement in what is temporal, are
-those in which changes appear. “From the mind and will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-of God in the creation of time, there arose the sun, moon,
-and five other stars which are called the planets, and which
-serve to distinguish and preserve the relations of time.”<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>
-For in them the numbers of time are realized. Thus the
-heavenly movement, as the true time, is the image of the
-eternal which yet remains in unity, <i>i.e.</i> it is that in which
-the eternal retains the determination of the ‘same.’ For
-everything is in time, that is, in negative unity which does
-not allow anything to root itself freely in itself, and thus to
-move and to be moved according to chance.</p>
-
-<p>But this eternal is also in the determinateness of the
-other reality, in the Idea of the self-changing and variable
-principle whose universal is matter. The eternal world has
-a likeness in the world which belongs to time, but opposed
-to this there is a second world where change really dwells.
-The ‘same’ and the ‘other’ are the most abstract opposes
-that we hitherto have had. The eternal world as
-posited in time has thus two forms&mdash;the form of similarity
-and the form of differentiality, of variability. The three
-moments as they appear in the last sphere, are, in the first
-place, simple essence which is begotten, which has arisen,
-or determinate matter; secondly the place in which it is
-begotten, and thirdly that in which what is begotten has
-its pattern. Plato gives them thus: “Essence (ὄν), place,
-and generation.” We thus have the conclusion in which
-space is the mean between individual generation and the
-universal. If we now oppose this principle to time in its
-negativity, the mean is this principle of the ‘other’ as the
-universal principle&mdash;“a receiving medium like a mother”&mdash;an
-essence which contains everything, gives to everything
-an independent subsistence and the power to do as is
-desired. This principle is destitute of form, yet capable
-of receiving all forms, the universal principle of all that
-appears different; it is the false passive matter that we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-understand when we speak of it&mdash;the relative substantial,
-existence generally, but external existence here, and only
-abstract Being-for-self. Form is in our reflection distinguished
-from it, and this, Plato tells us, first comes
-into existence through the mother. In this principle we
-have what we call the phenomenal, for matter is just this
-subsistence of individual generation, in which division is
-posited. But what appears herein is not to be posited as
-the individual of earthly existence, but is to be apprehended
-as the universal in such determinateness. Since matter, as
-the universal, is the principle of all that is individual,
-Plato in the first place reminds us that we cannot speak of
-these sensuous things&mdash;fire, water, earth, air, &amp;c. (which
-thus once more come before us here); for hereby they are
-expressed as a fixed determination which remains as such&mdash;but
-what remains is only their universality, or they, as
-universal, are only the fiery, earthly, &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
-
-<p>Plato further expounds the determinate reality of these
-sensuous things, or their simple determinateness. In this
-world of change form is figure in space; for as in the
-world, which is the immediate image of the eternal, time is
-the absolute principle, here the absolute ideal principle is
-pure matter as such, <i>i.e.</i> the existence of space. Space is
-the ideal essence of this phenomenal world, the mean which
-unites positivity and negativity, but its determinations are
-figures. And, indeed, of the different dimensions of space,
-it is surface which must be taken as true reality, for it is
-the absolute mean between the line and point in space, and
-in its first real limitation it is three; similarly the triangle
-is first among the figures, while the circle has no limit as
-such within it. Here Plato comes to the deduction of
-configuration, in which the triangle forms the principle;
-thus triangles form the essence of sensuous things. Hence
-he says, in Pythagorean fashion, that the compounding and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-uniting together of these triangles, as their Idea pertaining
-to the mean, constitutes once more, according to the
-original number-relations, the sensuous elements. This is
-the principle, but how Plato determines the figures of the
-elements, and the union of the triangles, I refrain from
-considering.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-
-<p>From this point Plato passes to a system of Physics and
-Physiology into which we have no intention of following
-him. It is to be regarded as a first, childlike endeavour
-to understand sensuous phenomena in their manifold character,
-but as yet it is superficial and confused. Sensuous
-manifestations, such as the parts and limbs of the body, are
-here taken into consideration, and an account of this is
-given intermingled with thoughts which resemble our
-formal explanations, and in which the Notion really vanishes.
-We have to remember the elevated nature of the Idea, as
-being the main point of excellence in his explanations,
-for, as far as the realization of the same is concerned,
-Plato merely felt and expressed it to be a necessity.
-Speculative thought is often recognizable, but, for the
-most part, consideration is directed to quite external modes
-of explanation, such as that of end. The method of treating
-Physics is a different one from ours, for while with Plato
-empirical knowledge is still deficient, in modern Physics,
-on the other hand, the deficiency is found in the Idea.
-Plato, although he does not seem to conform to our theory
-of Physics, ignoring as it does the theory of life, and though
-he proceeds to talk in a childlike way in external analogies,
-yet in certain cases gives utterance to very deep perceptions,
-which would be well worthy of our consideration
-if the contemplation of nature as living had any place with
-our physicists. His manner of relating the physiological
-to the physical would be as interesting. Certain portions of
-his system contain a general element, such as his representation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-of colours, and from this he goes on to more general
-considerations. For when Plato begins to talk on this
-subject, he says of the difficulty of distinguishing and
-recognizing the individual, that in the contemplation of
-nature there are “two causes to be distinguished, the one
-necessary and the other divine. The divine must be
-sought for in all things with the view of attaining to a
-blessed life” (this endeavour is an end in and for itself,
-and in it we find happiness) “in as far as our nature
-admits, but the necessary causes need be sought only for
-the sake of divine things, considering that without these
-necessary causes” (as conditions of knowledge) “we
-cannot know them.” Contemplation in accordance with
-necessity is the external contemplation of objects, their
-connection, relation, &amp;c. “Of the divine, God Himself
-was the creator,” the divine belongs to that first eternal
-world&mdash;not as to one beyond, but to one now present.
-“But the creation and disposition of the mortal He committed
-to His offspring (γεννήμασι).” This is a simple
-way of passing from the divine to the finite and earthly.
-“Now they, imitating the divine, because they had received
-the immortal principle of a soul, fashioned a mortal body,
-and placed in this a soul of another nature, which was
-mortal. This mortal nature was subject to violent and
-irresistible affections&mdash;the first of these was pleasure, the
-greatest incitement to evil, and then pain which is the
-deterrent (φυγάς) from doing good; also rashness (θάῤῥος)
-and fear, two foolish counsellors; anger, hope, &amp;c. These
-sensations all belong to the mortal soul. And that the
-divine might not be polluted more than necessary, the
-subordinate gods separated this mortal nature from the
-seat of the divine, and gave it a different habitation in
-another part of the body, placing the neck so as to be the
-isthmus and boundary between head and breast.” The
-sensations, affections, &amp;c., dwell in the breast or in the
-heart (we place that which is immortal in the heart); the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-spiritual is in the head. But in order to make the former
-as perfect as might be, “they placed,” for instance, “as a
-supporter to the heart which was burnt with passion, the
-lung, soft and bloodless, and which had within it hollows
-like the pores of a sponge, in order that, receiving the
-breath and drink, it might cool the heart and allow of
-refreshment and an alleviation of the heat.”<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<p>What Plato says of the liver is specially worthy of
-notice. “Since the irrational part of the soul which desires
-eating and drinking does not listen to reason, God made
-the liver so that the soul might be inspired with terror
-by the power of thought which originates from reason, and
-which descends upon the liver as on a mirror, receiving
-upon it figures and giving back images. But if this part
-of the soul is once more assuaged, in sleep it participates
-in visions. For the authors of our being, remembering
-the command of their father to make the human race as
-good as they could, thus ordered our inferior parts in order
-that they also might obtain a measure of truth, and placed
-the oracle in them.” Plato thus ascribes divination to the
-irrational, corporeal part of man, and although it is often
-thought that revelation, &amp;c., is by Plato ascribed to reason,
-this is a false idea; he says that there is a reason, but in
-irrationality. “Herein we have a conclusive proof that God
-has given the art of divination to the irrationality of man,
-for no man when in his wits, attains prophetic truth and
-inspiration, but when he receives the inspiration either his
-intelligence is enthralled by sleep or he is demented by
-some distemper or possession.” Thus Plato makes divination
-of a lower grade than conscious knowledge. “And
-when he has recovered his senses he has to remember and
-explain what he has received, for while he is demented, he
-cannot judge of it. The ancient saying is therefore very
-true, that only a man who has his wits can act or judge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-about himself or his own affairs.”<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> Plato is called the
-patron saint of mere possession, but, according to this, the
-assertion is entirely false. These are the principal points
-in Plato’s Philosophy of Nature.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c90" id="c90">3. <span class="smcap">Philosophy of Mind.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>We have already dealt generally from the theoretical
-side with the speculative nature of mind as yet unrealized,
-as well as with the highly important differences with
-respect to the kinds of knowledge (pp. 28-48). It must
-also be considered that we find in Plato as yet no developed
-consciousness of the organization of the theoretic mind,
-though certainly sensation, memory, &amp;c., are distinguished
-by him from reason; these moments of the mind are,
-however, neither accurately discriminated, nor exhibited in
-their connection, so as to show the necessary relations
-between them. The only point of interest for us then in
-Plato’s philosophy of mind is his view of man’s moral
-nature; and this real, practical side of consciousness is
-Plato’s greatest glory, and hence must now be specially
-dealt with by us. Its form certainly does not suggest that
-Plato gave himself much trouble to discover a supreme
-moral principle, as it is now called, which, for the very
-reason that it is supposed to be all-embracing, has in it a
-certain lack of content. Neither did he trouble himself
-about a natural right, which is but a trivial abstraction
-foisted on to the real practical existence, the right; but it
-is of man’s moral nature that he treats in the Republic.
-Man’s moral nature seems to us to have little to do with
-the State; to Plato, however, the reality of mind&mdash;that is,
-of mind as opposed to nature&mdash;appeared in its highest
-truth as the organization of a state which, as such, is
-essentially moral; and he recognized that the moral nature<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-(free will in its rationality) comes to its right, to its reality,
-only in an actual nation.</p>
-
-<p>We must further remark that in the Republic Plato
-introduces the investigation of his subject with the object
-of showing what justice (δικαιοσύνη) is. After much
-discussion has taken place, and several definitions of justice
-have been taken into consideration only to be rejected,
-Plato at last says in his simple way: “The present investigation
-is very like the case of a man who is required to
-read small handwriting at a distance; if it were observed
-that the same letters were to be seen at a shorter distance
-and of a larger size, he would certainly prefer to read first
-the letters where they were written larger, and then would
-be able to read more easily the small letters also. The
-same plan should be followed now with justice. Justice is
-not only in the individual, but also in the state, and the
-state is greater than the individual; justice is therefore
-imprinted on states in larger characters, and is more easily
-recognizable.” (This is different from what the Stoics say
-of the wise man.) “It is therefore preferable to consider
-justice as it is to be found in the state.”<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> By making this
-comparison Plato transforms the question anent justice into
-an investigation of the state; it is a very simple and
-graceful transition, though it seems arbitrary. It was
-great force of insight that really led the ancients to the
-truth; and what Plato brings forward as merely simplifying
-the difficulty, may, in fact, be said to exist in the nature
-of the thing. For it is not convenience which leads him to
-this position, but the fact that justice can be carried out
-only in so far as man is a member of a state, for in the
-state alone is justice present in reality and truth. Justice,
-not as the understanding, but as mind in its striving to
-realize itself, is the existence of freedom here and now, the
-actuality of the self-conscious, intelligent existence in and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-at home with itself and possessing activity&mdash;just as in
-property, for instance, I place my freedom in this particular
-thing. But the principle of the state again is the objective
-reality of justice, the reality in which the whole mind is
-present and not only the knowledge of myself as this
-individual. For as the free and reasonable will determines
-itself, there are laws of freedom; but these laws are
-nothing else than state-laws, for the Notion of the state
-implies the existence of a reasoning will. Thus laws have
-force in the state, and are there matter of practice and of
-custom; but because self-will is also there in its immediacy,
-they are not only matter of custom, but must also be a
-force operating against arbitrary self-will, and showing itself
-in the courts of justice and in governments. Thus Plato,
-in order to discern the features of justice, with the instinct
-of reason fixes his attention on their manner of representation
-in the state.</p>
-
-<p>Justice in itself is ordinarily represented by us in the
-form of a natural right, right in a condition of nature; such
-a condition of nature is, however, a direct moral impossibility.
-That which is in itself is, by those who do not
-attain to the universal, held to be something natural, as the
-necessary moments of the mind are held to be innate ideas.
-The natural is rather what should be sublated by the mind,
-and the justice of the condition of nature can only emerge
-as the absolute injustice of the mind. In contrast with the
-state, which is the real spirit, the spirit in its simple and
-as yet unrealized Notion is the abstract implicitude; this
-Notion must of course precede the construction of its
-reality; it is this which is conceived of as a condition of
-nature. We are accustomed to take our start from the
-fiction of a condition of nature, which is truly no condition
-of mind, of reasonable will, but of animals among themselves:
-wherefore Hobbes has justly remarked that the
-true state of nature is a war of every man against his
-neighbour. This implicitude of the mind is at the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-time the individual man, for in the ordinary conception the
-universal separates itself from the particular, as if the
-particular were absolutely and in and for itself what
-it certainly is, and the Universal did not make it that
-which it is in truth&mdash;as if this were not its essence, but as
-if the individual element were the most important. The
-fiction of a state of nature starts from the individuality of
-the person, his free will, and his relation to other persons
-according to this free will. Natural justice has thus been
-a term applied to that which is justice in the individual and
-for the individual; and the condition of society and of the
-state has been recognized only as a medium for the individual
-person, who is the chief end and object. Plato, in
-direct contrast with this, lays as his foundation the substantial,
-the universal, and he does this in such a way that the
-individual as such has this very universal as his end, and
-the subject has his will, activity, life and enjoyment in the
-state, so that it may be called his second nature, his habits
-and his customs. This moral substance which constitutes
-the spirit, life and Being of individuality, and which is its
-foundation, systematizes itself into a living, organic whole,
-and at the same time it differentiates itself into its
-members, whose activity signifies the production of the
-whole.</p>
-
-<p>This relation of the Notion to its reality certainly did not
-come into consciousness with Plato, and thus we do not
-find in him a philosophic method of construction, which
-shows first the absolute Idea, then the necessity, inherently
-existent, for its realization, and this realization itself. The
-judgment that has been delivered respecting Plato’s
-Republic therefore is that Plato has therein given a so-called
-ideal for the constitution of a state; this has become
-proverbial as a <i>sobriquet</i>, in the sense that this conception
-is a chimera, which may be mentally conceived of&mdash;and in
-itself, as Plato describes it, it is doubtless excellent and
-true&mdash;that it is also capable of being carried out, but only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-on the condition that men should be of an excellence such as
-may possibly be present among the dwellers in the moon,
-but that it is not realizable for men like those on the earth.
-But since men most be taken as they are, this ideal cannot
-be realized by reason of men’s wickedness; and to frame
-such an ideal is therefore altogether idle.</p>
-
-<p>As to this, the first remark to be made is that in the
-Christian world in general there passes current an ideal of
-a perfect man which certainly cannot be carried out in the
-great body of a nation. We may, perhaps, see it realized
-in monks or Quakers, or other similar pious folk, but a
-set of melancholy specimens such as these could never
-form a nation, any more than lice or parasitic plants could
-exist for themselves, or otherwise than on an organic body.
-If such men were to constitute a nation, there would have
-to be an end of this lamb-like gentleness, this vanity which
-occupies itself exclusively with its own individual self,
-which pets and pampers itself, and ever has the image and
-consciousness of its own excellence before its eyes. For
-life in the universal and for the universal demands, not that
-lame and cowardly gentleness, but gentleness combined
-with a like measure of energy, and which is not occupied
-with itself and its own sins, but with the universal and
-what is to be done for it. They before whose eyes that
-false ideal floats of course find men to be always compassed
-with weakness and depravity, and never find that ideal
-realized. For they raise into importance the veriest trifles,
-which no reasonable man would give heed to; and they think
-such weaknesses and defects are present even when they
-overlook them. But we need not esteem this forbearance
-to be generosity; for it rather implies a perception on
-their part that from what they call weakness and defect
-proceeds their own destruction, which comes to pass from
-their making such defects of importance. The man who
-has them is immediately through himself absolved from
-them, in so far as he makes nothing of them. The crime<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-is a crime only when they are real to him, and his destruction
-is in holding them to be something real. Such an
-ideal must therefore not stand in our way, whatever be the
-fairness of its form, and this even when it does not appear
-exactly as it does to monks and Quakers, but, for instance,
-when it is the principle of renouncing sensuous things, and
-abandoning energy of action, which principle must bring
-to nought much that would otherwise be held of value. It
-is contradictory to try to keep intact all our relationships,
-for in those that otherwise hold good there always is a side
-where opposition is encountered. Moreover, what I have
-already said regarding the relation between philosophy and
-the state (p. 23 <i>et seq.</i>) shows that the Platonic ideal is not
-to be taken in this sense. When an ideal has truth in
-itself through the Notion, it is no chimera, just because it
-is true, for the truth is no chimera. Such an idea is therefore
-nothing idle and powerless, but the real. It is
-certainly permissible to form wishes, but when pious wishes
-are all that a man has in regard to the great and true, he
-may be said to be godless. It is just as if we could do
-nothing, because everything was so holy and inviolable, or
-as if we refused to be anything definite, because all that is
-definite has its defects. The true ideal is not what ought
-to be real, but what is real, and the only real; if an ideal
-is held to be too good to exist, there must be some fault in
-the ideal itself, for which reality is too good. The Platonic
-Republic would thus be a chimera, not because excellence
-such as it depicts is lacking to mankind, but because it,
-this excellence, falls short of man’s requirements. For
-what is real, is rational. The point to know, however, is
-what exactly is real; in common life all is real, but there
-is a difference between the phenomenal world and reality.
-The real has also an external existence, which displays
-arbitrariness and contingency, like a tree, a house, a plant,
-which in nature come into existence. What is on the surface
-in the moral sphere, men’s action, involves much that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-is evil, and might in many ways be better; men will ever
-be wicked and depraved, but this is not the Idea. If the
-reality of the substance is recognized, the surface where
-the passions battle must be penetrated. The temporal and
-transitory certainly exists, and may cause us trouble
-enough, but in spite of that it is no true reality, any more
-than the particularity of the subject, his wishes and inclinations,
-are so.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with this observation, the distinction is to
-be called to mind which was drawn when we were speaking
-above (pp. 84, 88) of Plato’s Philosophy of Nature: the
-eternal world, as God holy in Himself, is reality, not a world
-above us or beyond, but the present world looked at in its
-truth, and not as it meets the senses of those who hear, see,
-&amp;c. When we thus study the content of the Platonic Idea,
-it will become clear that Plato has, in fact, represented Greek
-morality according to its substantial mode, for it is the
-Greek state-life which constitutes the true content of the
-Platonic Republic. Plato is not the man to dabble in
-abstract theories and principles; his truth-loving mind has
-recognized and represented the truth, and this could not
-be anything else than the truth of the world he lived in,
-the truth of the one spirit which lived in him as well as in
-Greece. No man can overleap his time, the spirit of his
-time is his spirit also; but the point at issue is, to recognize
-that spirit by its content.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, a constitution that would be perfect
-in respect to one nation, is to be regarded as not, perhaps,
-suitable for every nation. Thus, when it is said that a true
-constitution does not do for men as they now are, we must
-no doubt keep in mind that the more excellent a nation’s
-constitution is, it renders the nation also so much the more
-excellent; but, on the other hand, since the morals commonly
-practised form the living constitution, the constitution
-in its abstraction is nothing at all in its independence; it
-must relate itself to the common morality, and be filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-with the living spirit of the people. It can, therefore, certainly
-not be said that a true constitution suits any and
-every nation; and it is quite the case that for men as they
-are&mdash;for instance, as they are Iroquois, Russians, French&mdash;not
-every constitution is adapted. For the nation has its
-place in history. But as the individual man is trained in
-the state, that is, as individuality is raised into universality,
-and the child grows into a man, so is every nation trained;
-or barbarism, the condition in which the nation is a child,
-passes over into a rational condition. Men do not remain at
-a standstill, they alter, as likewise do their constitutions.
-And the question here is, What is the true constitution
-which the nation must advance towards; just as it is a
-question which is the true science of mathematics or of anything
-else, but not whether children or boys should possess
-this science, as they must rather be first so educated that
-they may be capable of understanding it. Thus the true
-constitution stands before the nation of history, so that it may
-advance towards it. Every nation in course of time makes
-such alterations in its existing constitution as will bring
-it nearer to the true constitution. The nation’s mind itself
-shakes off its leading-strings, and the constitution expresses
-the consciousness of what it is in itself,&mdash;the form of truth,
-of self-knowledge. If a nation can no longer accept as
-implicitly true what its constitution expresses to it as the
-truth, if its consciousness or Notion and its actuality are
-not at one, then the nation’s mind is torn asunder. Two
-things may then occur. First, the nation may either by a
-supreme internal effort dash into fragments this law which
-still claims authority, or it may more quietly and slowly
-effect changes on the yet operative law, which is, however,
-no longer true morality, but which the mind has already
-passed beyond. In the second place, a nation’s intelligence
-and strength may not suffice for this, and it may hold to the
-lower law; or it may happen that another nation has
-reached its higher constitution, thereby rising in the scale,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-and the first gives up its nationality and becomes subject to
-the other. Therefore it is of essential importance to know
-what the true constitution is; for what is in opposition to
-it has no stability, no truth, and passes away. It has a
-temporary existence, but cannot hold its ground; it has
-been accepted, but cannot secure permanent acceptance;
-that it must be cast aside, lies in the very nature of the
-constitution. This insight can be reached through Philosophy
-alone. Revolutions take place in a state without the
-slightest violence when the insight becomes universal;
-institutions, somehow or other, crumble and disappear,
-each man agrees to give up his right. A government
-must, however, recognize that the time for this has come;
-should it, on the contrary, knowing not the truth, cling to
-temporary institutions, taking what&mdash;though recognized&mdash;is
-unessential, to be a bulwark guarding it from the essential
-(and the essential is what is contained in the Idea), that
-government will fall, along with its institutions, before the
-force of mind. The breaking up of its government breaks
-up the nation itself; a new government arises,&mdash;or it may
-be that the government and the unessential retain the
-upper hand.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the main thought which forms the groundwork of
-Plato’s Republic is the same which is to be regarded as
-the principle of the common Greek morality, namely, that
-established morality has in general the relation of the substantial,
-and therefore is maintained as divine. This is
-without question the fundamental determination. The determination
-which stands in contrast to this substantial
-relation of the individual to established morality, is the
-subjective will of the individual, reflective morality. This
-exists when individuals, instead of being moved to action
-by respect and reverence for the institutions of the state
-and of the fatherland, from their own convictions, and after
-moral deliberation, come of themselves to a decision, and
-determine their actions accordingly. This principle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-subjective freedom is a later growth, it is the principle of
-our modern days of culture: it, however, entered also into
-the Greek world, but as the principle of the destruction of
-Greek state-life. It was looked on as a crime, because the
-spirit, political constitution, and laws of the Greeks were
-not, and could not be calculated to admit of the rise of this
-principle within them. Because these two elements were
-not homogeneous, traditional and conventional morality
-in Greece was overthrown. Plato recognized and caught
-up the true spirit of his times, and brought it forward in a
-more definite way, in that he desired to make this new
-principle an impossibility in his Republic. It is thus a
-substantial position on which Plato takes his stand, seeing
-that the substantial of his time forms his basis, but this
-standpoint is at the same time relative only, in so far as it
-is but a Greek standpoint, and the later principle is consciously
-banished. This is the universal of Plato’s ideal
-of the state, and it is from this point of view that we must
-regard it. Investigations as to whether such a state is
-possible, and the best possible, which start from quite
-modern points of view, can only lead us astray. In
-modern states we have freedom of conscience, according
-to which every individual may demand the right of following
-out his own interests; but this is excluded from the
-Platonic idea.</p>
-
-<p>a. I will now indicate more fully the main features, in
-so far as they possess philosophic interest. Though Plato
-represents what the state is in its truth, yet this state has
-a limit, which we shall learn to know, namely, that the
-individual&mdash;in formal justice&mdash;is not opposed to this universality,
-as in the dead constitution of the ideal states founded
-on the theory of legal right. The content is but the whole;
-the nature of the individual, no doubt, but as reflecting
-itself into the universal, not unbending, or as having absolute
-validity; so that practically the state and the individual
-are the same in essence. Because Plato thus takes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-his start from that justice which implies that the just man
-exists only as a moral member of the state, in dealing with
-his subject in greater detail, in order to show how this
-reality of the substantial mind is produced, he in the first
-place opens up before us the organism of the moral commonwealth,
-<i>i.e.</i> the differences which lie in the Notion of moral
-substance. Through the development of these moments
-it becomes living and existing, but these moments are not
-independent, for they are held in unity. Plato regards
-these moments of the moral organism under three aspects,
-first, as they exist in the state as classes; secondly, as
-virtues, or moments in morality; thirdly, as moments of
-the individual subject, in the empirical actions of the will.
-Plato does not preach the morality of reflection, he shows
-how traditional morality has a living movement in itself;
-he demonstrates its functions, its inward organism. For it
-is inner systematization, as in organic life, and not solid,
-dead unity, like that of metals, which comes to pass by
-means of the different functions of the organs which go to
-make up this living, self-moving unity.</p>
-
-<p>α. Without classes, without this division into great
-masses, the state has no organism; these great distinctions
-are the distinction of the substantial. The opposition
-which first comes before us in the state is that of the
-universal, in the form of state life and business, and the
-individual, as life and work for the individual; these two
-fields of activity are so distinct that one class is assigned
-to the one, and another to the other. Plato further cites
-three systems of reality in the moral, the functions (αα) of
-legislation, counsel, in short, of diligence and foresight in
-the general behalf, in the interest of the whole as such;
-(ββ) of defence of the commonwealth against foes from
-without; (γγ) of care for the individual, the supplying
-of wants, agriculture, cattle-rearing, the manufacture of
-clothing and utensils, the building of houses, &amp;c. Speaking
-generally, this is quite as it should be, and yet it appears<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-to be rather the satisfaction of external necessities, because
-such wants are found without being developed out of the
-Idea of mind itself. Further, these distinct functions are
-allotted to different systems, being assigned to a certain
-number of individuals specially set apart for the purpose,
-and this brings about the separate classes of the state, as
-Plato is altogether opposed to the superficial conception
-that one and the same must be everything at one time.
-He accordingly represents three classes, (αα) that of the
-governors, men of learning and wisdom, (ββ) that of the
-warriors, (γγ) that of the producers of necessaries, the
-husbandmen and handicraftsmen. The first he also speaks
-of as guardians (φύλακας), who are really philosophically
-educated statesmen, possessing true knowledge; they have
-the warriors to work on their behalf (ἐπικούρους τε καὶ
-βοηθούς), but in such a way that there is no line of separation
-between the civil and military classes, both being
-united,<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> and the most advanced in years are the guardians.<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a>
-Although Plato does not deduce this division of the classes,
-they follow from the constitution of the Platonic state, and
-every state is necessarily a system within itself of these
-systems. Plato then passes on to particular determinations,
-which are in some measure trifling, and might with advantage
-have been dispensed with; for instance, among other
-things, he goes so far as to settle for the highest rank
-their special titles, and he states what should be the duties
-of the nurses.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>β. Then Plato points out that the moments which are
-here realized in the classes, are moral qualities which are
-present in individuals, and form their true essence, the
-simple ethical Notion divided into its universal determinations.
-For he states as the result of this distinction of the
-classes that through such an organism all virtues are present
-in the commonwealth; he distinguishes four of these,<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-and they have been named cardinal virtues.</p>
-
-<p>αα. Wisdom (σοφία) or knowledge appears as the first
-virtue; such a state will be wise and good in counsel, not
-because of the various kinds of knowledge therein present
-which have to do with the many particular ordinary occupations
-falling to the multitude, such as the trade of blacksmith,
-and the tillage of the soil (in short, what we should
-call skill in the industrial arts, and in finance). The state
-is called wise, by reason of the true knowledge which is
-realized in the presiding and governing class, who advise
-regarding the whole state, and decide upon the policy that
-is best, both at home and in relation to foreign states.
-This faculty of perception is properly the peculiar possession
-of the smallest class.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a></p>
-
-<p>ββ. The second virtue is courage (ἀνδρία) which Plato
-defines as a firm opinion about what may justly and lawfully
-be considered an object of fear, courage which, in its
-strength of purpose, remains unshaken either by desires
-or pleasures. To this virtue corresponds the class of the
-warriors.<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a></p>
-
-<p>γγ. The third virtue is temperance (σωφροσύνη), the
-mastery over the desires and passions, which like a harmony
-pervades the whole; so that, whether understanding, or
-strength, or numbers, or wealth, or anything else be
-regarded, the weaker and the stronger work together for
-one and the same object, and are in agreement one with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-another. This virtue therefore is not, like wisdom and
-courage, confined to one part of the state, but like a harmony
-it is shared by governors and governed alike, and is
-the virtue of all classes.<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> Notwithstanding that this temperance
-is the harmony in which all work towards one end,
-it is yet peculiarly the virtue of the third class, to whom it
-is allotted to procure the necessaries of life by work,
-although at the first glance the one does not appear to have
-much correspondence with the other. But this virtue is
-present precisely when no moment, no determination or
-particularity isolates itself; or, more closely viewed in a
-moral aspect, it is when no want asserts its reality and thus
-becomes a crime. Now work is just this moment of
-activity concentrating itself on the particular, which nevertheless
-goes back into the universal, and is for it. Therefore,
-if this virtue is universal, it yet has special application
-to the third class, which at first is the only one to be
-brought into harmony, as it has not the absolute harmony
-which the other classes possess in themselves.</p>
-
-<p>δδ. Finally, the fourth virtue is justice, which was what
-Plato began by considering. This, as right-doing, is to be
-found in the state when each individual does only one kind
-of work for the state, that work for which by the original
-constitution of his nature he is best fitted; so that in this
-way each man is not a jack-of-all-trades, but all have their
-special work, young and old, women and children, bond and
-free, handicraftsmen, rulers and subjects. The first remark
-we make on this is, that Plato here places justice on a level
-with the other moments, and it thus appears as one of the
-four determinations. But he now retracts this statement
-and makes it justice which first gives to wisdom, courage
-and temperance the power to exist at all, and when they
-have once come into existence, the power to continue.
-This is the reason of his also saying that justice will be met<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-with independently, if only the other virtues spoken of are
-forthcoming.<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> To express it more definitely, the Notion of
-justice is the foundation, the Idea of the whole, which falls
-into organic divisions, so that every part is only, as it were,
-a moment in the whole, and the whole exists through it.
-Thus the classes or qualities spoken of are nothing else
-than the moments of this whole. Justice is only the
-general and all-pervading quality; but at the same time it
-implies the independence of every part, to which the state
-gives liberty of action.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place, it is clear from what he says, that
-Plato did not understand by justice the rights of property,
-the meaning which the term commonly bears in jurisprudence,
-but rather this, that the mind in its totality makes
-for itself a law as evidence of the existence of its freedom.
-In a highly abstract sense my personality, my altogether
-abstract freedom, is present in property. To explain what
-comes under this science of law, Plato considers on the
-whole superfluous (De Republica, IV. p. 425 Steph.; p. 176
-Bekk.). To be sure we find him giving laws concerning
-property, police regulations, &amp;c., “But,” he says, “to
-impose laws about such matters on men of noble character
-does not repay the trouble.” In truth, how can we expect
-to find divine laws in what contains contingencies alone?
-Even in the Laws he considers ethics chiefly, though he
-gives a certain amount of attention to the rights of property.
-But as justice, according to Plato, is really the
-entire being, which presents itself to the individual in such
-a way that each man learns to do the work he is born to do
-as well as it can be done, and does it, it is only as determined
-individuality that man reaches what is law for him;
-only thus does he belong to the universal spirit of the state,
-coming in it to the universal of himself as a “this.” While
-law is a universal with a definite content, and thus a formal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-universal only, the content in this case is the whole determined
-individuality, not this or that thing which is mine by
-the accident of possession; what I properly hold as my own
-is the perfected possession and use of my nature. To each
-particular determination justice gives its rights, and thus
-leads it back into the whole; in this way it is by the particularity
-of an individual being of necessity developed and
-brought into actuality, that each man is in his place and
-fulfils his vocation. Justice, therefore, according to its true
-conception, is in our eyes freedom in the subjective sense,
-because it is the attainment of actuality by the reason, and
-seeing that this right on the part of liberty to attain to
-actuality is universal, Plato sets up justice as the determination
-of the whole, indicating that rational freedom comes
-into existence through the organism of the state,&mdash;an
-existence which is then, as necessary, a mode of nature.</p>
-
-<p>γ. The particular subject, as subject, has in the same way
-these qualities in himself; and these moments of the subject
-correspond with the three real moments of the state. That
-there is thus one rhythm, one type, in the Idea of the state,
-forms for Plato’s state a great and grand basis. This third
-form, in which the above moments are exhibited, Plato
-characterizes in the following manner. There manifest
-themselves in the subject, first of all sundry wants and
-desires (ἐπιθυμίαι), like hunger and thirst, each of which
-has something definite as its one and only object. Work
-for the satisfaction of desires corresponds to the calling
-of the third class. But, secondly there is also at the
-same time to be found in the individual consciousness
-something else which suspends and hinders the gratification
-of these desires, and has the mastery over the temptation
-thus to gratify them; this is reasonableness (λόγος). To
-this corresponds the class of rulers, the wisdom of the state.
-Besides these two ideas of the soul there is a third, anger
-(θυμός), which on one side is allied to the desires, but of
-which it is just as true that it resists the desires and takes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-the side of reason. “It may happen that a man has done
-wrong to another, and suffers hunger and cold at the hands
-of him whom he considers entitled to inflict them upon
-him; in this case, the nobler he is, the less will his anger
-be excited. But it may also happen that he suffers a
-wrong; if this is the case, he boils and chafes, and takes
-the side of what he believes to be justice, and endures
-hunger and cold and other hardships, and overcomes them,
-and will not desist from the right until he conquers or dies,
-or is calmed down by reason, as a shepherd quiets his
-dog.” Anger corresponds with the class of the brave
-defenders in the state; as these grasp their weapons in
-behalf of reason within the state, so does anger take the
-part of reason, if it has not been perverted by an evil
-up-bringing. Therefore wisdom in the state is the same as
-in the individual, and this is true of courage also. For the
-rest, temperance is the harmony of the several moments of
-what pertains to nature; and justice, as in external matters
-it consists in each doing his own duty, so, in the inner life,
-it consists in each moment of the mind obtaining its right,
-and not interfering in the affairs of the others, but leaving
-them to do as they will.<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> We have thus the deduction of
-three moments, where the middle place between universality
-and particularity is filled by anger in its independence and
-as directed against the objective: it is the freedom which
-turns back within itself and acts negatively. Even here,
-where Plato has no consciousness of his abstract ideas, as
-he has in the Timæus, this of a truth is inwardly present
-to him, and everything is moulded thereby. This is given
-as the plan according to which Plato draws up the great
-whole. To fill up the outlines is a mere detail, which in
-itself has no further interest.</p>
-
-<p>b. In the second place Plato indicates the means of
-maintaining the state. As, speaking generally, the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-commonwealth rests on common morality as the minds of
-individuals grown into nature, this question is asked:
-How does Plato arrange that everyone takes as his own
-that form of activity for which he is specially marked out,
-and that it presents itself as the moral acting and willing
-of the individual,&mdash;that everyone, in harmony with temperance,
-submits to filling this his post? The main point is
-to train the individuals thereto. Plato would produce this
-ethical quality directly in the individuals, and first and
-foremost in the guardians, whose education is therefore the
-most important part of the whole, and constitutes the very
-foundation. For as it is to the guardians themselves that
-the care is committed of producing this ethical quality
-through maintenance of the laws, in these laws special
-attention must be given to the guardians’ education; after
-that also to the education of the warriors. The condition
-of affairs in the industrial class causes the state but little
-anxiety, “for though cobblers should prove poor and
-worthless, and should be only in appearance what they
-ought to be, that is no great misfortune for the state.”<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>
-The education of the presidents should, however, be carried
-on chiefly by means of philosophic science, which is the
-knowledge of the universal and absolute. Plato in this
-passes over the particular means of education, religion, art,
-science. Further on he speaks again and more in detail
-on the question of how far music and gymnastic are to be
-permitted as means. But the poets Homer and Hesiod he
-banishes from his state, because he thinks their representations
-of God unworthy.<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> For then began in real earnest an
-inquiry into the belief in Jupiter and the stories told by
-Homer, inasmuch as such particular representations had
-been taken as universal maxims and divine laws. At a
-certain stage of education childish tales do no harm; but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>were they to be made the foundation of the truth of
-morality, as present law, the case would be different. The
-extermination of the nations which we read of in the
-writings of the Israelites, the Old Testament, might for
-instance be taken as a standard of national rights, or we
-might try to make a precedent of the numerous base acts
-committed by David, the man of God, or of the horrors
-which the priesthood, in the person of Samuel, practised and
-authorized against Saul. Then it would be high time to
-place these records on a lower level, as something past,
-something merely historical. Plato would further have
-preambles to the laws, wherein citizens would be admonished
-as to their duties, and convinced that these exist, &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> They
-also should be shown how to choose that which is most
-excellent, in short, to choose morality.</p>
-
-<p>But here we have a circle: the public life of the state
-subsists by means of morality, and, conversely, morality
-subsists by means of institutions. Morals cannot be independent
-of institutions, that is, institutions cannot be
-brought to bear on morals through educational establishments
-or religion only. For institutions must be looked on
-as the very first condition of morality, for this is the manner
-in which institutions are subjective. Plato himself gives
-us to understand how much contradiction he expects to
-find. And even now his defect is commonly considered to
-lie in his being too idealistic, while his real deficiency
-consists in his not being ideal enough. For if reason is the
-universal force, it is essentially spiritual; thus to the
-realm of the spiritual belongs subjective freedom, which
-had already been held up as a principle in the philosophy
-of Socrates. Therefore reason ought to be the basis of
-law, and so it is, on the whole. But, on the other hand,
-conscience, personal conviction,&mdash;in short, all the forms
-of subjective freedom&mdash;are essentially therein contained.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-This subjectivity at first, it is true, stands in opposition to
-the laws and reason of the state-organism as to the
-absolute power which desires to appropriate to itself&mdash;through
-the external necessity of wants, in which, however,
-there is absolute reason&mdash;the individual of the family.
-Individual conscience proceeds from the subjectivity of
-free-will, connects itself with the whole, chooses a position
-for itself, and thus makes itself a moral fact. But this
-moment, this movement of the individual, this principle of
-subjective freedom, is sometimes ignored by Plato, and
-sometimes even intentionally disparaged, because it proved
-itself to be what had wrought the ruin of Greece; and he
-considers only how the state may best be organized, and
-not subjective individuality. In passing beyond the principle
-of Greek morality, which in its substantial liberty
-cannot brook the rise of subjective liberty, the Platonic
-philosophy at once grasps the above principle, and in so
-doing proceeds still farther.</p>
-
-<p>c. In the third place, in regard to the exclusion of the
-principle of subjective freedom, this forms a chief feature
-in the Republic of Plato, the spirit of which really consists
-in the fact, that all aspects in which particularity as such
-has established its position, are dissolved in the universal,&mdash;all
-men simply rank as man in general.</p>
-
-<p>α. It specially harmonizes with this particular quality
-of excluding the principle of subjectivity, that Plato in the
-first place does not allow individuals to choose their own
-class; this we demand as necessary to freedom. It is not,
-however, birth which marks off the different ranks, and
-determines individuals for these; but everyone is tested by
-the governors of the state, who are the elders of the first
-class, and have the education of individuals in their hands.
-According as anyone has natural ability and talents, these
-elders make choice and selection, and assign each man to
-a definite occupation.<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> This seems in direct contradiction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-to our principle, for although it is considered right that
-to a certain class there should belong a special capacity
-and skill, it always remains a matter of inclination which
-class one is to belong to; and with this inclination, as an
-apparently free choice, the class makes itself for itself.
-But it is not permitted that another individual should
-prescribe as to this, or say, for example: “Because you are
-not serviceable for anything better, you are to be a
-labourer.” Everyone may make the experiment for himself;
-he must be allowed to decide regarding his own
-affairs as subject in a subjective manner, by his own free
-will, as well as in consideration of external circumstances;
-and nothing must therefore be put in his way if he says,
-for instance: “I should like to apply myself to study.”</p>
-
-<p>β. From this determination it further follows that Plato
-(De Republica, III. pp. 416, 417 Steph.; pp. 162-164 Bekk.)
-in like manner altogether abolished in his state the principle
-of private property. For in it individuality, the
-individual consciousness, becomes absolute; or the person
-is looked on as implicit, destitute of all content. In law,
-as such, I rank as “this” implicitly and explicitly. All
-rank thus, and I rank only because all rank, or I rank
-only as universal; but the content of this universality is
-fixed particularity. When in a question of law we have to
-do with law, as such, to the judges of the case it matters
-not a whit whether this or that man actually possesses the
-house, and likewise the contending parties think nothing
-of the possession of the thing for which they strive, but of
-right for right’s sake, (as in morality duty is done for
-duty’s sake): thus a firm hold is kept of the abstraction,
-and from the content of reality abstraction is made.
-But Being to Philosophy is no abstraction, but the
-unity of the universal and reality, or its content. The
-content has therefore weight only in as far as it is
-negatively posited in the universal; thus only as returning
-into it, and not absolutely. In so far as I use things,&mdash;not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-in so far as I have them merely in my possession, or as
-they have worth for me as existent, as definitely fixed on
-me,&mdash;they stand in living relation to me. With Plato, then,
-those of the other class (cf. <i>supra</i>, p. 101, note) carry on
-handicrafts, trade, husbandry, and procure what will satisfy
-the general requirements, without acquiring personal property
-by means of their work, for they are all one family,
-wherein each has his appointed occupation; but the product
-of the work is common, and he receives as much as he
-requires both of his own and of the general product.
-Personal property is a possession which belongs to me as
-a certain person, and in which my person as such comes
-into existence, into reality; on this ground Plato excludes
-it. It remains, however, unexplained how in the development
-of industries, if there is no hope of acquiring private
-property, there can be any incentive to activity; for on my
-being a person of energy very much depends my capacity
-for holding property. That an end would be put to all
-strifes and dissensions and hatred and avarice by the abolition
-of private property, as Plato thinks, (De Republica,
-V. p. 464 Steph.; pp. 243, 244 Bekk.) may very well be
-imagined in a general way; but that is only a subordinate
-result in comparison with the higher and reasonable principle
-of the right of property: and liberty has actual existence
-only so far as property falls to the share of the
-person. In this way we see subjective freedom consciously
-removed by Plato himself from his state.</p>
-
-<p>γ. For the same reason Plato also abolishes marriage,
-because it is a connection in which persons of opposite sex,
-as such, remain mutually bound to one another, even
-beyond the mere natural connection. Plato does not admit
-into his state family life&mdash;the particular arrangement
-whereby a family forms a whole by itself,&mdash;because the
-family is nothing but an extended personality, a relationship
-to others of an exclusive character within natural
-morality,&mdash;which certainly is morality, but morality of such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-a character as belongs to the individual as particularity.
-According to the conception of subjective freedom, however,
-the family is just as necessary, yea, sacred to the individual
-as is property. Plato, on the contrary, causes children to
-be taken away from their mothers immediately after birth,
-and has them gathered together in a special establishment,
-and reared by nurses taken from among the mothers who
-gave them birth; he has them brought up in common, so
-that no mother can possibly recognize her child. There are
-certainly to be marriage celebrations, and each man is to
-have his particular wife, but in such a way that the intercourse
-of man and wife does not pre-suppose a personal
-inclination, and that it should not be their own pleasure
-which marks out individuals for one another. The women
-should bear children from the twentieth to the fortieth
-year, the men should have wives from the thirtieth to the
-fifty-fifth year. To prevent incest, all the children born at
-the time of a man’s marriage shall be known as his children.<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>
-The women, whose natural vocation is family life,
-are by this arrangement deprived of their sphere. In the
-Platonic Republic it therefore follows that as the family is
-broken up, and the women no longer manage the house,
-they are also no longer private persons, and adopt the
-manners of the man as the universal individual in the state.
-And Plato accordingly allows the women to take their part
-like the men in all manly labours, and even to share in the
-toils of war. Thus he places them on very nearly the same
-footing as the men, though all the same he has no great
-confidence in their bravery, but stations them in the rear
-only, and not even as reserve, but only as <i>arrière-garde</i>, in
-order that they may at least inspire the foe with terror
-by their numbers, and, in case of necessity, hasten to give
-aid.<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a></p>
-
-<p>These are the main features of the Platonic Republic,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-which has as its essential the suppression of the principle
-of individuality; and it would appear as though the Idea
-demanded this, and as if this were the very point on
-which Philosophy is opposed to the ordinary way of looking
-at things, which gives importance to the individual, and
-thus in the state, as also in actualized mind, looks on the
-rights of property, and the protection of persons and their
-possessions, as the basis of everything that is. Therein,
-however, lies the very limit of the Platonic Idea&mdash;to
-emerge only as abstract idea. But, in fact, the true Idea
-is nothing else than this, that every moment should perfectly
-realize and embody itself, and make itself independent,
-while at the same time, in its independence, it is for
-mind a thing sublated. In conformity with this Idea,
-individuality must fully realize itself, must have its sphere
-and domain in the state, and yet be resolved in it. The
-element of the state is the family, that is, the family is the
-natural unreasoning state; this element must, as such, be
-present. Then the Idea of the state constituted by reason
-has to realize all the moments of its Notion in such a way
-that they become classes, and the moral substance divides
-itself into portions, as the bodily substance is separated
-into intestines and organs, each of which lives on in a particular
-way of its own, yet all of which together form only
-one life. The state in general, the whole, must finally
-pervade all. But in exactly the same way the formal
-principle of justice, as abstract universality of personality
-with individual Being as its existent content, must pervade
-the whole; one class, nevertheless, specially belongs
-to it. There must, then, also be a class in which property
-is held immediately and permanently, the possession of the
-body and the possession of a piece of land alike; and in the
-next place, a class where acquisition is continually going on,
-and possession is not immediate, as in the other, but property
-is ever fluctuating and changing. These two classes
-the nation gives up as a part of itself to the principle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-individuality, and allows rights to reign here, permitting the
-constant, the universal, the implicit to be sought in this
-principle, which really is a principle of variability. This
-principle must have its full and complete reality, it must
-indeed appear in the shape of property. We have here for
-the first time the true, actual mind, with each moment
-receiving its complete independence, and the mind itself
-attaining to being-another in perfect indifference of Being.
-Nature cannot effect this production of independent life in
-her parts, except in the great system.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> This is, as we shall
-elsewhere see, the great advance of the modern world
-beyond the ancient, that in it the objective attains to
-greater, yea, to absolute independence, but for the very
-same reason returns with all the greater difficulty into the
-unity of the Idea.</p>
-
-<p>The want of subjectivity is really the want of the Greek
-moral idea. The principle which became prominent with
-Socrates had been present up to this time only in a more
-subordinate capacity; now it of necessity became an even
-absolute principle, a necessary moment in the Idea itself.
-By the exclusion of private property and of family life, by
-the suspension of freedom in the choice of the class, <i>i.e.</i> by
-the exclusion of all the determinations which relate to the
-principle of subjective freedom, Plato believes he has barred
-the doors to all the passions; he knew very well that the
-ruin of Greek life proceeded from this, that individuals, as
-such, began to assert their aims, inclinations, and interests,
-and made them dominate over the common mind. But
-since this principle is necessary through the Christian
-religion&mdash;in which the soul of the individual is an absolute
-end, and thus has entered into the world as necessary in the
-Notion of the mind&mdash;it is seen that the Platonic state-constitution
-cannot fulfil what the higher demands of a
-moral organism require. Plato has not recognized the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>knowledge, wishes, and resolutions of the individual, nor
-his self-reliance, and has not succeeded in combining them
-with his Idea; but justice demands its rights for this just
-as much as it requires the higher resolution of the same,
-and its harmony with the universal. The opposite to
-Plato’s principle is the principle of the conscious free will
-of individuals, which in later times was by Rousseau more
-especially raised to prominence: the theory that the arbitrary
-choice of the individual, the outward expression of
-the individual, is necessary. In this the principle is carried
-to the very opposite extreme, and has emerged in its utter
-one-sidedness. In opposition to this arbitrariness and culture
-there must be the implicitly and explicitly universal,
-that which is in thought, not as wise governor or morality,
-but as law, and at the same time as my Being and my
-thought, <i>i.e.</i> as subjectivity and individuality. Men must
-have brought forth from themselves the rational along with
-their interests and their passions, just as it must enter into
-reality through the necessities, opportunities, and motives
-that impel them.</p>
-
-<p>There is still another celebrated side of the Platonic
-philosophy which may be considered, namely æsthetics, the
-knowledge of the beautiful. In respect to this, Plato has
-in like manner seized the one true thought, that the essence
-of the beautiful is intellectual, the Idea of reason. When
-he speaks of a spiritual beauty, he is to be understood in the
-sense that beauty, as beauty, is sensuous beauty, which is not
-in some other place&mdash;no one knows where; but what is
-beautiful to the senses is really the spiritual. The case is
-the same here as it is with his Idea. As the essence and
-truth of phenomena in general is the Idea, the truth of
-phenomenal beauty must also be this Idea. The relation to
-the corporeal, as a relation of the desires, or of pleasure and
-utility, is no relation to it as the beautiful; it is a relation
-to it as the sensuous alone, or a relation of particular to
-particular. But the essence of the beautiful is just the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-simple Idea of reason present to the sensuous apprehension as
-a thing; the content of the thing is nothing else than this.<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a>
-The beautiful is essentially of spiritual nature; it is thus
-not merely a sensuous thing, but reality subject to the form
-of universality, to the truth. This universal does not, however,
-retain the form of universality, but the universal is the
-content whose form is the sensuous mode; and therein lies
-the determination of the beautiful. In science, the universal
-has again the form of the universal or of the Notion; but
-the beautiful appears as an actual thing&mdash;or, when put into
-words, as a popular conception, in which mode the material
-exists in mind. The nature, essence, and content of the
-beautiful is recognized and judged by reason alone, as its
-content is the same as that of Philosophy. But because
-reason appears in the beautiful in material guise, the beautiful
-ranks below knowledge, and Plato has for this very
-reason placed the true manifestation of reason in knowledge,
-where it is spiritually manifested.</p>
-
-<p>This may be regarded as the kernel of Plato’s philosophy.
-His standpoint is: first, the contingent form of speech, in
-which men of noble and unfettered nature converse without
-other interest than that of the theory which is being worked
-out; secondly, led on by the content, they reach the deepest
-Notions and the finest thoughts, like jewels on which one
-stumbles, if not exactly in a sandy desert, yet at least upon
-the arid path; in the third place, no systematic connection
-is to be found, though one interest is the source of all; in
-the fourth place, the subjectivity of the Notion is lacking
-throughout; but in the fifth place, the substantial Idea
-forms the principle.</p>
-
-<p>Plato’s philosophy had two stages through which it of
-necessity developed and worked its way up to a higher
-principle. The universal which is in reason had first to fall
-into two divisions opposed to each other in the most direct
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>and unmitigated contradiction, in the independence of
-the personal consciousness which exists for itself: thus in
-the New Academy self-consciousness goes back into
-itself, and becomes a species of scepticism&mdash;the negative
-reason, which turns against all that is universal, and fails to
-find the unity of self-consciousness and the universal, coming
-accordingly to a standstill at that point. But, in the
-second place, the Neo-Platonists constitute the return, this
-unity of self-consciousness and the absolute essence; to
-them God is directly present in reason, reasoned knowledge
-itself is the Divine Spirit, and the content of this knowledge
-is the Being of God. Both of these we shall consider
-later.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c117" id="c117">B. <span class="smcap">Aristotle.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>Here we leave Plato, and we do so with regret. But
-seeing that we pass to his disciple, Aristotle, we fear that it
-behoves us to enter even more into detail, since he was one
-of the richest and deepest of all the scientific geniuses that
-have as yet appeared&mdash;a man whose like no later age has
-ever yet produced. Because we still possess so large a
-number of his works, the extent of the material at hand is
-proportionately greater; unfortunately, however, I cannot
-give to Aristotle the amount of attention that he deserves.
-For we shall have to confine ourselves to a general view of
-his philosophy, and simply remark on one particular phase of
-it, viz. in how far Aristotle in his philosophy carried out what
-in the Platonic principle had been begun, both in reference
-to the profundity of the ideas there contained, and to their
-expansion; no one is more comprehensive and speculative
-than he, although his methods are not systematic.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the general character of Aristotle’s writings,
-he may be said to have extended his attention to the whole
-circle of human conceptions, to have penetrated all regions
-of the actual universal, and to have brought under the subjection
-of the Notion both their riches and their diversitude.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-For most of the philosophic sciences have to render thanks to
-him both for their characterization and first commencement.
-But although in this way Science throughout falls into a
-succession of intellectual determinations of determinate
-Notions, the Aristotelian philosophy still contains the profoundest
-speculative Notions. Aristotle proceeds in reference
-to the whole in the same way as in the individual case.
-But a general view of his philosophy does not give us the
-impression of its being in construction a self-systematized
-whole, of which the order and connection pertain likewise
-to the Notion; for the parts are empirically selected and
-placed together in such a way that each part is independently
-recognized as a determinate conception, without being
-taken into the connecting movement of the science. We
-need not try to demonstrate necessity from the standpoint
-of the philosophy of that time. But although Aristotle’s
-system does not appear to be developed in its parts from
-the Notion, and its parts are merely ranged side by side,
-they still form a totality of truly speculative philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>One reason for treating of Aristotle in detail rests in the
-fact that no philosopher has had so much wrong done him
-by the thoughtless traditions which have been received
-respecting his philosophy, and which are still the order of
-the day, although for centuries he was the instructor
-of all philosophers. For to him views are ascribed diametrically
-opposite to his philosophy. And while Plato is
-much read, the treasures contained in Aristotle have for
-centuries, and until quite modern times, been as good as
-unknown, and the falsest prejudices reign respecting him.
-Almost no one knows his speculative and logical works; in
-modern times more justice has been done to his writings
-regarding nature, but not to his philosophic views. For
-instance, there is a quite generally held opinion that the
-Aristotelian and Platonic philosophies are directly opposed,
-the one being idealistic and the other realistic, and that,
-indeed, in the most trivial sense. For Plato is said to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-made the ideal his principle, so that the inward idea creates
-from itself; according to Aristotle, on the contrary, we are
-told that the soul is made a <i>tabula rasa</i>, receiving all its determinations
-quite passively from the outer world; and his
-philosophy is thus mere empiricism&mdash;Locke’s philosophy at
-its worst. But we shall see how little this really is the
-case. In fact Aristotle excels Plato in speculative depth,
-for he was acquainted with the deepest kind of speculation&mdash;idealism&mdash;and
-in this upholds the most extreme empirical
-development. Quite false views respecting Aristotle
-even now exist in France. An example of how tradition
-blindly echoes opinions respecting him, without having
-observed from his works whether they are justified or not,
-is the fact that in the old Æsthetics the three unities of the
-drama&mdash;action, time and place&mdash;were held to be <i>règles
-d’Aristote, la saine doctrine</i>. But Aristotle speaks (Poet.
-c. 8 et 5)<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> only of the unity of treatment, or very occasionally
-of the unity of time; of the third unity, that of
-place, he says nothing.</p>
-
-<p>As regards Aristotle’s life, he was born at Stagira, a
-Thracian town on the Strymonian Gulf, but a Greek colony.
-Thus, though a Thracian, he was by birth a Greek. This
-Greek colony fell, however, like The rest of the country,
-under the rule of Philip of Macedon. The year of Aristotle’s
-birth is the first of the 99th Olympiad (384 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>), and if
-Plato was born in the third year of the 87th Olympiad
-(430 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>), Aristotle must have been forty-six years
-younger than he. His father Nicomachus was physician to
-the Macedonian king, Amyntas, the father of Philip. After
-the death of his parents, whom he lost early, he was brought
-up by a certain Proxenus, to whom he was ever grateful;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>and during all his life he held the memory of this friend in
-such high esteem, that he honoured it by erecting statues
-to him. He also requited Proxenus for the education given
-him, by later on bringing up his son Nicanor, adopting him
-as his own son and making him his heir. In the seventeenth
-year of his age Aristotle came to Athens, and
-remained there twenty years in company with Plato.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> He
-thus had the best possible opportunity of becoming
-thoroughly acquainted with Plato’s philosophy, and therefore,
-if we are told that he did not understand it (Vol. I
-p. 167), this is shown, by the evident facts of the case, to be
-an arbitrary and quite unfounded assumption. As regards
-the relation of Plato to Aristotle, and particularly as
-regards the fact that Plato did not select Aristotle as his
-successor in the Academy, but chose Speusippus, a near
-relative, instead, a number of idle and contradictory anecdotes
-have come to us from Diogenes (V. 2). If the continuation
-of the Platonic school was designed to express
-the hope that the philosophy of Plato, as comprehended by
-himself, was to be there satisfactorily maintained, Plato
-could certainly not designate Aristotle as his successor, and
-Speusippus was the right man to be selected. However,
-Plato had nevertheless Aristotle as his successor, for Aristotle
-understood Philosophy in Plato’s sense, though his
-philosophy was deeper and more worked out, and thus he
-carried it further. Displeasure at being thus passed over is
-said to have been the cause of Aristotle’s leaving Athens
-after Plato’s death, and living for three years with Hermias,
-the Tyrant of Atarneus in Mysia, who had been a disciple
-of Plato along with Aristotle, and who had then struck up a
-close friendship with the latter. Hermias, an independent
-prince, was, together with other absolute Greek princes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>and some Republics, brought under the subjection of a
-Persian satrap in Asia Minor. Hermias was even sent as
-prisoner to Artaxerxes in Persia, and he at once caused
-him to be crucified. In order to avoid a similar fate,
-Aristotle fled with his wife Pythias, the daughter of
-Hermias, to Mitylene, and lived there for some time. He,
-however, erected a statue to Hermias in Delphi, with an
-inscription which has been preserved. From it we know
-that it was by cunning and treachery that he came under
-the power of the Persians. Aristotle also honoured his
-name in a beautiful hymn on Virtue, which has likewise
-come down to us.<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
-
-<p>From Mitylene he was (Ol. 109, 2; 343 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>) summoned
-by Philip of Macedon to undertake the education of
-Alexander, who was then fifteen years old. Philip had
-already invited him to do this in the well-known letter that
-he addressed to him just after Alexander’s birth: “Know
-that a son is born to me, but I thank the gods less
-that they have given him to me, than that they have
-caused him to be born in your time. For I hope that
-your care and your wisdom will make him worthy of me
-and of his future kingdom.”<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> It certainly would appear
-to be a brilliant historic destiny to be the instructor of an
-Alexander, and Aristotle at this court enjoyed the favour
-and esteem of Philip and of Olympias in the highest degree.
-What became of Aristotle’s pupil is known to all, and the
-greatness of Alexander’s mind and deeds, as also his
-enduring friendship, are the best witnesses of the success,
-as also of the spirit of this up-bringing, if Aristotle required
-such testimony. Alexander’s education utterly refuted the
-common talk about the practical uselessness of speculative
-philosophy. Aristotle had in Alexander another and
-worthier pupil than Plato found in Dionysius. Plato’s great
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>interest was his Republic, the ideal of a state; he enters
-into relation with a person through whom it might be
-carried out; the individual was thus to him a medium only,
-and in so far indifferent to him. With Aristotle, on the
-other hand, this purpose was not present, he merely had
-the simple individual before him; and his end was to
-bring up and to develop the individuality as such. Aristotle
-is known to be a profound, thorough, and abstract metaphysician,
-and it is evident that he meant seriously with
-Alexander. That Aristotle did not follow with Alexander
-the ordinary superficial method of educating princes, might
-be confidently expected from the earnestness of one who
-well knew what was truth and true culture. It is also
-evident from the circumstance that Alexander, while in
-the midst of his conquests in the heart of Asia, when he
-heard that Aristotle had made known his acroamatic
-doctrines in speculative (metaphysical) writings, wrote him
-a reproachful letter, in which he said that he should not
-have made known to the common people what the two
-had worked out together. To this Aristotle replied that,
-though published, they were really just as much unpublished
-as before.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
-
-<p>This is not the place to estimate Alexander as an historic
-personage. What can be ascribed in Alexander’s education
-to Aristotle’s philosophic instruction is the fact that what
-was natural to him, the inherent greatness of his mental
-disposition, acquired inward freedom also, and became
-elevated into the perfect, self-conscious independence which
-we see in his aims and deeds. Alexander attained to that
-perfect certainty of himself which the infinite boldness of
-thought alone gives, and to an independence of particular
-and limited projects, as also to their elevation into the entirely
-universal end of bringing about in the world a social
-life and intercourse of a mutual kind, through the foundation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-of states which were free from contingent individuality.
-Alexander thus carried out the plan which his father had
-already conceived, which was, at the head of the Greeks,
-to avenge Europe upon Asia, and to subject Asia to
-Greece; so that as it was in the beginning of Greek history
-that the Greeks were united, and that only for the Trojan
-war, this union likewise brought the Greek world proper
-to an end. Alexander thereby also avenged the faithlessness
-and cruelty perpetrated by the Persians on Aristotle’s
-friend Hermias. But Alexander further disseminated
-Greek culture over Asia, in order to elevate into a Greek
-world this wild medley of utter barbarism, bent solely on
-destruction, and torn by internal dissensions, these lands
-entirely sunk in indolence, negation, and spiritual degeneracy.
-And if it be said that he was merely a conqueror
-who was unable to establish an enduring kingdom, because
-his kingdom at his death once more fell to pieces, we must
-acknowledge that, from a superficial view of the case, this
-is true, as his family did not retain their rule; Greek rule
-was, however, maintained. Thus Alexander did not found
-an extensive kingdom for his family, but he founded a
-kingdom of the Greek nation over Asia; for Greek culture
-and science have since his time taken root there. The
-Greek kingdoms of Asia Minor, and particularly of Egypt,
-were for centuries the home of science; and their influence
-may have extended as far as to India and to China.
-We certainly do not know definitely whether the Indians
-may not have obtained what is best in their sciences in
-this way, but it is probable that at least the more exact
-portion of Indian astronomy came to them from Greece.
-For it was from the Syrian kingdom, stretching into Asia
-Minor as far as to a Greek kingdom in Bactria, that there
-was doubtless conveyed to the interior of India and China,
-by means of Greek colonies migrating thither, the meagre
-scientific knowledge which has lingered there like a tradition,
-though it has never flourished. For the Chinese, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-example, are not skilful enough to make a calendar of
-their own, or to think for themselves. Yet they exhibited
-ancient instruments unsuited to any work done by them,
-and the immediate conjecture was that these had come from
-Bactria. The high idea that men had of the sciences of the
-Indians and of the Chinese hence is false.</p>
-
-<p>According to Ritter (Erdkunde, Vol. II. p. 839, of the
-first edition), Alexander did not set out merely with a view
-of conquering, but with the idea that he was the Lord.
-I do not think that Aristotle placed this notion, which was
-connected with another Oriental conception, in the mind of
-Alexander. The other idea is that in the East the name
-of Alexander still flourishes as Ispander, and as Dul-k-ar-nein,
-<i>i.e.</i> the man with two horns, just as Jupiter Ammon
-is an ancient Eastern hero. The question would now be
-whether the Macedonian kings did not, through their
-descent from the ancient race of Indian heroes, claim to
-rule this land; by this the progress of Dionysius from
-Thrace to India could likewise be explained; whether the
-“knowledge of this was not the real and fundamental
-religious idea inspiring the young hero’s soul when, before
-his journey to Asia, he found on the lower Ister (Danube)
-Indian priestly states where the immortality of the soul
-was taught, and when, certainly not without the counsel
-of Aristotle, who, through Plato and Pythagoras, was
-initiated into Indian wisdom, he began the march into the
-East, and first of all visited the Oracle of Ammonium (now
-Siwah), and then destroyed the Persian kingdom and
-burnt Persepolis, the old enemy of Indian religion, in order
-to take revenge upon it for all the violence exercised
-through Darius on the Buddhists and their co-religionists.”
-This is an ingenious theory, formed from a thorough
-investigation of the connection which exists between
-Oriental and European ideas from the higher point of view
-in history. But, in the first place, this conjecture is contrary
-to the historical basis on which I take my stand.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-Alexander’s expedition has quite another historic, military,
-and political character than this, and had not much to do
-with his going to India; it was, on the face of it, an ordinary
-conquest. In the second place, Aristotle’s metaphysic and
-philosophy is far from recognizing any such foolish and
-extravagant imaginations. The elevation of Alexander in
-the Oriental mind into an acknowledged hero and god,
-which followed later, is, in the third place, not matter for
-surprise; the Dalai-Lama is still thus honoured, and God and
-man are never so very far asunder. Greece likewise worked
-its way to the idea of a God becoming man, and that not
-as a remote and foreign image, but as a present God in a
-godless world: Demetrius Phalereus and others were thus
-soon after honoured and worshipped in Athens as God.
-Was the infinite not also now transplanted into self-consciousness?
-Fourthly, the Buddhists did not interest
-Alexander, and in his Indian expedition they do not appear;
-the destruction of Persepolis is, however, sufficiently
-justified as a measure of Greek vengeance for the destruction
-by Xerxes of the temples in Greece, especially in
-Athens.</p>
-
-<p>While Alexander accomplished this great work&mdash;for he
-was the greatest individual at the head of Greece, he ever
-kept science and art in mind. Just as in modern times we
-have once more met with warriors who thought of science
-and of art in their campaigns, we also find that Alexander
-made an arrangement whereby whatever was discovered in
-the way of animals and plants in Asia should be sent to
-Aristotle, or else drawings and descriptions of the same.
-This consideration on Alexander’s part afforded to Aristotle
-a most favourable opportunity of collecting treasures for
-his study of nature. Pliny (Histor. natur. VIII., 17 ed. Bip.)
-relates that Alexander directed about a thousand men, who
-lived by hunting, fishing and fowling, the overseers of the
-zoological gardens, aviaries, and tanks of the Persian kingdom,
-to supply Aristotle with what was remarkable from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-every place. In this way Alexander’s campaign in Asia
-had the further effect of enabling Aristotle to found the
-science of natural history, and to be the author, according
-to Pliny, of a natural history in fifty parts.</p>
-
-<p>After Alexander commenced his journey to Asia, Aristotle
-returned to Athens, and made his appearance as a public
-teacher in the Lyceum, a pleasure-ground which Pericles
-had made for the exercising of recruits; it consisted of
-a temple dedicated to Apollo (Λύκειος), and shady walks
-(περίπατοι), which were enlivened by trees, fountains and
-colonnades. It was from these walks that his school received
-the name of Peripatetics, and not from any walking
-about on the part of Aristotle&mdash;because, it is said, he delivered
-his discourses usually while walking. He lived and
-taught in Athens for thirteen years. But after the death
-of Alexander there broke out a tempest which had, as it
-appeared, been long held back through fear of Alexander;
-Aristotle was accused of impiety. The facts are differently
-stated: amongst other things it is said that his hymn to
-Hermias and the inscription on the statue dedicated to
-him were laid to his charge. When he saw the storm
-gathering, he escaped to Chalcis in Eub\na, the present
-Negropont, in order, as he himself said, that the Athenians
-should not have an opportunity of once more sinning
-against Philosophy. There he died, in the next year, in
-the sixty-third year of his age, Ol. 114, 3 (322 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>).<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
-
-<p>We derive Aristotle’s philosophy from his writings; but
-when we consider their history and nature, so far as externals
-are concerned, the difficulty of deriving a knowledge
-of his philosophy from them seems much increased. I
-cannot certainly enter into details regarding these last.
-Diogenes Laërtius (V. 21-27) mentions a very large number
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>of them, but by their titles we do not always quite know
-which of those now in our possession are indicated, since
-the titles are entirely different. Diogenes gives the number
-of lines as four hundred and forty-five thousand, two
-hundred and seventy, and, if we count about ten thousand
-lines in a printer’s alphabet, this gives us forty-four
-alphabets. What we now have might perhaps amount to
-about ten alphabets, so that we have only about the fourth
-part left to us. The history of the Aristotelian manuscripts
-has been stated to be such that it would really seem impossible,
-or almost hopeless, that any one of his writings
-should have been preserved to us in its original condition,
-and not corrupted. Doubts regarding their genuine
-character could not in such circumstances fail to exist;
-and we can only wonder at seeing them come down to us
-even in the condition in which they are. For, as we have
-said, Aristotle made them known but little during his lifetime,
-and he left his writings to Theophrastus, his successor,
-with the rest of his immense library. This, indeed, is the
-first considerable library, collected as it was by means of
-personal wealth along with Alexander’s assistance, and
-hence it also reveals to us Aristotle’s learning. Later on,
-it came partially, or in some cases in duplicate, to Alexandria,
-and formed the basis of the Ptolemaic library, which,
-on the taking of Alexandria by Julius Cæsar, became a
-prey to fire. But of the manuscripts of Aristotle himself
-it is said that Theophrastus left them by will to a certain
-Neleus, from whom they came into the hands of ignorant
-men, who either kept them without care or estimation of
-their value, or else the heirs of Neleus, in order to save
-them from the Kings of Pergamus, who were very anxious
-to collect a library, hid them in a cellar, where they lay
-forgotten for a hundred and thirty years, and thus got into
-bad condition. Finally, the descendants of Theophrastus
-found them again after long search, and sold them to
-Apellicon of Teos, who restored what had been destroyed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-by worms and mould, but who did not possess the learning
-or the capacity so to do. Hence others went over them,
-filled up the blanks as they thought best, replaced what
-was damaged, and thus they were sufficiently altered. But
-still it was not enough. Just after Apellicon’s death, the
-Roman Sulla conquered Athens, and amongst the spoil
-carried off to Rome were the works of Aristotle. The
-Romans, who had just begun to become acquainted with
-Greek science and art, but who did not yet appreciate
-Greek philosophy, did not know how to profit from this
-spoil. A Greek, named Tyrannion, later on obtained permission
-to make use of and publish the manuscripts of
-Aristotle, and he prepared an edition of them, which, however,
-also bears the reproach of being inaccurate, for here
-they had the fate of being given by the dealers into the
-hands of ignorant copyists, who introduced a number of
-additional corruptions.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></p>
-
-<p>This is the way in which the Aristotelian philosophy has
-come to us. Aristotle certainly made known much to his
-contemporaries, that is to say, the writings in the Alexandrian
-library, but even those works do not seem to have
-been widely known. In fact, many of them are most corrupt,
-imperfect, and, as, for example, the Poetics, incomplete.
-Several of them, such as the Metaphysical treatises,
-seem to be patched up from different writings, so that the
-higher criticism can give rein to all its ingenuity, and,
-according to one clever critic, the matter may with much
-show of probability be decided in one particular way, while
-another ingenious person has a different explanation to
-oppose to this.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> So much remains certain, that the writings
-of Aristotle are corrupt, and often both in their details<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-and in the main, not consistent; and we often find whole
-paragraphs almost verbally repeated. Since the evil is so
-old, no real cure can certainly be looked for; however, the
-matter is not so bad as would appear from this description.
-There are many and important works which may be considered
-to be entire and uninjured, and though there are
-others corrupt here and there, or not well arranged, yet, as
-far as the essentials are concerned, no such great harm has
-been done as might appear. What we possess therefore
-places us in a sufficiently good position to form a definite
-idea of the Aristotelian philosophy, both as a whole, and in
-many of its details.</p>
-
-<p>But there is still an historic distinction to be noted.
-For there is an old tradition that Aristotle’s teaching was
-of a twofold nature and that his writings were of two
-different kinds, viz. esoteric or acroamatic and exoteric&mdash;a
-distinction which was also made by the Pythagoreans (Vol.
-I. p 202). The esoteric teaching was given within the
-Lyceum in the morning, the exoteric in the evening; the
-latter related to practice in the art of rhetoric and in disputation,
-as also to civic business, but the other to the inward
-and more profound philosophy, to the contemplation of
-nature and to dialectic proper.<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> This circumstance is of no
-importance; we see by ourselves which of his works are
-really speculative and philosophic, and which are rather
-empirical in character; but they are not to be regarded as
-antagonistic in their content, and as if Aristotle intended
-some for the people and others for his more intimate
-disciples.</p>
-
-<p><i>a.</i> We have first to remark that the name Aristotelian
-philosophy is most ambiguous, because what is called
-Aristotelian philosophy has at different times taken very
-different forms. It first of all signifies Aristotelian philosophy
-proper. As regards the other forms of the Aristotelian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-philosophy, however, it had, in the second place, at the
-time of Cicero, and specially under the name of Peripatetic
-philosophy, more of the form of a popular philosophy, in
-which attention was principally directed to natural history
-and to morals (Vol. I. p. 479). This period does not appear
-to have taken any interest in working out and bringing to
-consciousness the deep and properly speaking speculative
-side of Aristotelian philosophy, and indeed with Cicero
-there is no notion of it present. A third form of this
-philosophy is the highly speculative form of the Alexandrine
-philosophy, which is also called the Neo-Pythagorean
-or Neo-Platonic philosophy, but which may just as
-well be called Neo-Aristotelian&mdash;the form as it is regarded
-and worked up by the Alexandrines, as being identical
-with the Platonic. An important signification of the expression,
-in the fourth place, is that which it had in the
-middle ages where, through insufficient knowledge, the
-scholastic philosophy was designated Aristotelian. The
-Scholastics occupied themselves much with it, but the form
-that the philosophy of Aristotle took with them cannot be
-held by us to be the true form. All their achievements,
-and the whole extent of the metaphysics of the understanding
-and formal logic which we discover in them, do
-not belong to Aristotle at all. Scholasticism is derived
-only from traditions of the Aristotelian doctrines. And
-it was not until the writings of Aristotle became better
-known in the West, that a fifth Aristotelian philosophy
-was formed, which was in part opposed to the Scholastic&mdash;it
-arose on the decline of scholasticism and with the revival
-of the sciences. For it was only after the Reformation
-that men went back to the fountainhead, to Aristotle himself.
-The sixth signification which Aristotelian philosophy
-bears, is found in false modern ideas and conceptions, such
-as those that we find in Tennemann, who is gifted with too
-little philosophic understanding to be able to grasp the
-Aristotelian philosophy (Vol. I. p. 113). Indeed, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-general opinion of Aristotelian philosophy now held is that
-it made what is called experience the principle of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p><i>b.</i> However false this point of view on the one hand is,
-the occasion for it may be found in the Aristotelian
-manner. Some particular passages to which in this reference
-great importance has been given, and which have
-been almost the only passages understood, are made use of
-to prove this idea. Hence we have now to speak of the
-character of the Aristotelian manner. Since in Aristotle,
-as we already said (p. 118), we need not seek a system of
-philosophy the particular parts of which have been deduced,
-but since he seems to take an external point of departure
-and to advance empirically, his manner is often that of
-ordinary ratiocination. But because in so doing Aristotle
-has a quality, altogether his own, of being throughout
-intensely speculative in his manner, it is further signified
-that in the first place he has comprehended the phenomenal
-as a thinking observer. He has the world of appearance
-before himself complete and in entirety, and sets nothing
-aside, however common it may appear. All sides of knowledge
-have entered into his mind, all have interest for him,
-and he has thoroughly dealt with all. In the empirical
-details of a phenomenon abstraction may easily be lost
-sight of, and its application may be difficult: our progress
-may be one-sided, and we may not be able to reach the root
-of the matter at all. But Aristotle, because he looks at all
-sides of the universe, takes up all those units as a speculative
-philosopher, and so works upon them that the profoundest
-speculative Notion proceeds therefrom. We saw,
-moreover, thought first proceeding from the sensuous, and,
-in Sophistry, still exercising itself immediately in the
-phenomenal. In perception, in ordinary conception, the
-categories appear: the absolute essence, the speculative
-view of these elements, is always expressed in expressing
-perceptions. This pure essence in perception Aristotle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-takes up. When, in the second place, he begins conversely
-with the universal or the simple, and passes to its determination,
-this looks as if he were enumerating the number
-of significations in which it appears; and, after dealing with
-them all, he again passes all their forms in review, even the
-quite ordinary and sensuous. He thus speaks of the many
-significations that we find, for example, is the words οὐσία,
-ἀρχή, αἰτία, ὁμοῦ, &amp;c. It is in some measure wearisome
-to follow him in this mere enumeration, which proceeds
-without any necessity being present, and in which the
-significations, of which a list is given, manifest themselves
-as comprehended only in their essence, or in that which
-is common to all, and not in their determinations; and
-thus the comprehension is only external. But, on the one
-hand, this mode presents a complete series of the moments,
-and on the other, it arouses personal investigation for the
-discovery of necessity. In the third place, Aristotle takes
-up the different thoughts which earlier philosophers have
-had, contradicts them&mdash;often empirically&mdash;justifies them,
-reasoning in all sorts of ways, and then attains to the truly
-speculative point of view. And finally, in the fourth place,
-Aristotle passes on thoughtfully to consider the object itself
-of which he treats, <i>e.g.</i> the soul, feeling, recollection,
-thought, motion, time, place, warmth, cold, &amp;c. Because
-he takes all the moments that are contained within the conception
-to be, so to speak, united, he does not omit determinations;
-he does not hold now to one determination and
-then to another, but takes them as all in one; while reflection
-of the understanding, which has identity as the
-rule by which it goes, can only preserve harmony with this
-by always, while in one determination, forgetting and
-withholding the other. But Aristotle has the patience to
-go through all conceptions and questions, and from the
-investigation of the individual determinations, we have the
-fixed, and once more restored determination of every object.
-Aristotle thus forms the Notion, and is in the highest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-degree really philosophic, while he appears to be only
-empiric. For Aristotle’s empiricism is a totality because
-he always leads it back again immediately to speculation;
-he may thus be said to be a perfect empiricist, yet at the
-same time a thinking one. If, for example, we take away
-from space all its empirical determinations, the result will
-be in the highest degree speculative, for the empirical,
-comprehended in its synthesis, is the speculative Notion.</p>
-
-<p>In this gathering up of determinations into one Notion,
-Aristotle is great and masterly, as he also is in regard to
-the simplicity of his method of progression, and in the
-giving of his decisions in few words. This is a method of
-treating of Philosophy which has great efficacy, and which
-in our time has likewise been applied, <i>e.g.</i> by the French.
-It deserves to come into larger use, for it is a good thing
-to lead the determinations of the ordinary conception from
-an object to thought, and then to unite them in a unity, in
-the Notion. But undoubtedly this method in one respect
-appears to be empirical, and that, indeed, in the acceptation
-of objects as we know them in our consciousness; for
-if no necessity is present, this still more appears merely to
-pertain to manner externally regarded. And yet it cannot
-be denied that with Aristotle the object was not to bring
-everything to a unity, or to reduce determinations to a
-unity of opposites, but, on the contrary, to retain each in
-its determination and thus to follow it up. That may, on
-the one hand, be a superficial method, <i>e.g.</i> when everything
-is brought to an empty determinateness, such as those of
-irritability and sensibility, sthenic and asthenic, but, on
-the other, it is likewise necessary to grasp reality in simple
-determinateness, though without making the latter in this
-superficial way the starting point. Aristotle, on the other
-hand, simply forsakes determination in another sphere where
-it no longer has this form; but he shows what it is like here,
-or what change has taken place within it, and thus it comes
-to pass that he often treats one determination after the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-other without showing their connection. However, in his
-genuine speculation Aristotle is as profound as Plato, and
-at the same time more developed and explicit, for with
-him the opposites receive a higher determination. Certainly
-we miss in him the beauty of Plato’s form, the melodious
-speech, or, as we might almost call it, chatting&mdash;the conversational
-tone adopted, which is as lively as it is cultured
-and human. But where in Plato we find, as we do in his
-Timæus, the speculative Idea definitely expressed in the
-thesis form, we see in it a lack both of comprehension and
-purity; the pure element escapes it, while Aristotle’s form
-of expression is marked both by purity and intelligibility.
-We learn to know the object in its determination and
-its determinate Notion; but Aristotle presses further into
-the speculative nature of the object, though in such a way
-that the latter remains in its concrete determination, and
-Aristotle seldom leads it back to abstract thought-determinations.
-The study of Aristotle is hence inexhaustible, but to
-give an account of him is difficult, because his teaching must
-be reduced to universal principles. Thus in order to set
-forth Aristotelian philosophy, the particular content of
-each thing would have to be specified. But if we would
-be serious with Philosophy, nothing would be more desirable
-than to lecture upon Aristotle, for he is of all the
-ancients the most deserving of study.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> What ought to come next is the determination of the
-Aristotelian Idea, and here we have to say, in quite a
-general way, that Aristotle commences with Philosophy
-generally, and says, in the first place, regarding the value
-of Philosophy (in the second chapter of the first book of
-the Metaphysics), that the object of Philosophy is what is
-most knowable, viz. the first and original causes, that
-is, the rational. For through these and from these all
-else is known, but principles do not become known through
-the facts which form their groundwork (ὑποκείμενα). In
-this we already have the opposite to the ordinary point of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-view. Aristotle has further declared the chief subject of
-investigation, or the most essential knowledge (ἐπιστήμη
-ἀρχικωτάτη) to be the knowledge of end; but this is the
-good in each thing and, generally speaking, the best in
-the whole of nature. This also holds good with Plato and
-Socrates; yet the end is the true, the concrete, as against
-the abstract Platonic Idea. Aristotle then says of the value
-of Philosophy, “Men have begun to philosophize through
-wonder,” for in it the knowledge of something higher is
-at least anticipated. “Thus since man, to escape from
-ignorance, began to philosophize, it is clear that for the
-sake of knowledge he followed after knowledge, and not
-for any utility which it might possess for him. This is
-also made evident by the whole course of its external
-history. For it was after men had done with all their
-absolute requirements, and with what concerns their comfort,
-that they first began to seek this philosophic knowledge.
-We hence seek it not for the sake of any outside
-utility that it may have. And thus as we say that a free
-man is he who exists on his own account and not for
-another, Philosophy is the only science that is free, because
-it alone exists for itself&mdash;it is knowledge on account of
-knowledge. Therefore in justice it will not be held to be
-a human possession,” in the sense that, as we said above,
-(p. 11) it is not in the possession of a man. “For in many
-ways the nature of man is dependent, so that, according
-to Simonides, God alone possesses the prerogative (γέρας),
-and yet it is unworthy on man’s part not to seek after the
-science that is in conformity with his own condition (τὴν
-καθ̓ αὑτὸν ἐπιστήνην). But if the poets were right, and
-envy characterized divinity, all who would aim higher
-must be unfortunate;” Nemesis punishes whatever raises
-itself above the commonplace, and makes everything
-again equal. “But the divine cannot be jealous,” <i>i.e.</i>
-cannot refuse to impart that which it is, as if this knowledge
-should not come to man (<i>supra</i>, pp. 72, 73) “and&mdash;according<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-to the proverb&mdash;the poets utter many falsehoods.
-Nor ought we to consider that any science is more entitled
-to honour than the one we now investigate, for that which
-is most divine, is also most worthy of honour.” That is to
-say, what has and imparts what is best is honoured: the
-gods are thus to be honoured because they have this knowledge.
-“God is held to be the cause and principle of
-everything, and therefore God has this science alone, or for
-the most part.” But for this reason it is not unworthy of
-man to endeavour to seek the highest good which is in
-conformity with him, this knowledge pertaining to God.
-“All other sciences are, however, more requisite than
-Philosophy, but none more excellent.”</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to give a more detailed account of the
-Aristotelian philosophy, the universal Idea with the more
-important elements, for Aristotle is much more difficult to
-comprehend than Plato. In the latter there are myths,
-and we can pass over the dialectic and yet say that we
-have read Plato; but with Aristotle we enter at once upon
-what is speculative. Aristotle always seems to have philosophized
-only respecting the individual and particular, and
-not to have risen from it to the thought of the absolute and
-universal, to the thought of God; he always goes from the
-individual to the individual. His task concerns what is,
-and is just as clearly divided off as a professor has
-his work divided into a half year’s course; and though
-in this course he examines the whole of the world of
-conception, he yet appears only to have recognized the
-truth in the particular, or only a succession of particular
-truths. This has nothing dazzling about it, for he does
-not appear to have risen to the Idea (as Plato speaks of
-the nobility of Idea), nor to have led back to it the individual.
-But if Aristotle on the one hand did not logically
-abstract the universal Idea, (for then his so-called logic,
-which is something very different, would have had as its
-principle the recognition of one Notion in all) on the other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-hand there appears in Aristotle the one Absolute, the idea
-of God, as itself a particular, in its place beside the others,
-although it is all Truth. It is as if we said, “there are
-plants, animals, men, and also God, the most excellent of
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>From the whole list of conceptions which Aristotle enumerates,
-we shall now select some for further examination, and
-I will first speak of his metaphysics and its determinations.
-Then I will deal with the particular sciences which have
-been treated by Aristotle, beginning by giving the fundamental
-conception of nature as it is constituted with
-Aristotle; in the third place I will say something of mind,
-of the soul and its conditions, and finally the logical books
-of Aristotle will follow.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c137" id="c137">1. <span class="smcap">The Metaphysics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Aristotle’s speculative Idea is chiefly to be gathered
-from his Metaphysics, especially from the last chapters of
-the twelfth book (Λ) which deal with the divine Thought.
-But this treatise has the peculiar drawback noticed above
-(p. 128) of being a compilation, several treatises having
-been combined into one. Aristotle and the ancients did
-not know this work by the name of the Metaphysics; it was
-by them called πρώτη φιλοσοφία.<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> The main portion of this
-treatise has a certain appearance of unity given to it by the
-connection of the argument,<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> but it cannot be said that the
-style is orderly and lucid. This pure philosophy Aristotle
-very clearly distinguishes (Metaph. IV. 1) from the other
-sciences as “the science of that which is, in so far as it is,
-and of what belongs to it implicitly and explicitly.” The
-main object which Aristotle has in view (Metaph. VII. 1)
-is the definition of what this substance (οὐσία) really is.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-In this ontology or, as we call it, logic, he investigates and
-minutely distinguishes four principles (Metaph. I. 3): first,
-determination or quality as such, the wherefore of anything,
-essence or form; secondly, the matter; thirdly, the principle
-of motion; and fourthly, the principle of final cause, or of
-the good. In the later part of the Metaphysics Aristotle
-returns repeatedly to the determination of the Ideas, but
-here also a want of connection of thought appears, even
-though all is subsequently united into an entirely speculative
-Notion.</p>
-
-<p>To proceed, there are two leading forms, which Aristotle
-characterizes as that of potentiality (δύναμις) and that of
-actuality (ἐνέργεια); the latter is still more closely characterized
-as entelechy (ἐντελεχεια) or free activity, which has
-the end (τὸ τέλος) in itself, and is the realization of this
-end. These are determinations which occur repeatedly in
-Aristotle, especially in the ninth book of the Metaphysics,
-and which we must be familiar with, if we would understand
-him. The expression δύναμις is with Aristotle the beginning,
-the implicit, the objective; also the abstract universal in
-general, the Idea, the matter, which can take on all forms,
-without being itself the form-giving principle. But with
-an empty abstraction such as the thing-in-itself Aristotle
-has nothing to do. It is first in energy or, more concretely,
-in subjectivity, that he finds the actualizing form, the self-relating
-negativity. When, on the other hand, we speak of
-Being, activity is not yet posited: Being is only implicit,
-only potentiality, without infinite form. To Aristotle the
-main fact about Substance is that it is not matter merely
-(Metaph. VII. 3); although in ordinary life this is what is
-generally taken to be the substantial. All that is contains
-matter, it is true, all change demands a substratum
-(ὑποκείμενον) to be affected by it; but because matter
-itself is only potentiality, and not actuality&mdash;which belongs
-to form&mdash;matter cannot truly exist without the activity of
-form (Metaph. VIII. 1, 2). With Aristotle δύναμις does<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-not therefore mean force (for force is really an imperfect
-aspect of form), but rather capacity which is not even
-undetermined possibility; ἐνέργεια is, on the other hand,
-pure, spontaneous activity. These definitions were of
-importance throughout all the middle ages. Thus, according
-to Aristotle, the essentially absolute substance has
-potentiality and actuality, form and matter, not separated
-from one another; for the true objective has most certainly
-also activity in itself, just as the true subjective has also
-potentiality.</p>
-
-<p>From this definition we now see clearly the sort of
-opposition in which the Idea of Aristotle stands to that of
-Plato, for although the Idea of Plato is in itself essentially
-concrete and determined, Aristotle goes further. In so
-far, namely, as the Idea is determined in itself, the relation
-of the moments in it can be more closely specified, and
-this relation of the moments to each other is to be conceived
-of as nothing other than activity. It is easy for us to have
-a consciousness of what is deficient in the universal, that is,
-of that which is implicit only. The universal, in that it is
-the universal, has as yet no reality, for because implicitude
-is inert, the activity of realization is not yet posited therein.
-Reason, laws, etc., are in this way abstract, but the rational,
-as realizing itself, we recognize to be necessary, and therefore
-we take such universal laws but little into account.
-Now the standpoint of Plato is in the universal; what he
-does is to express Being rather as the objective, the Good,
-the end, the universal. To this, however, the principle of
-living subjectivity, as the moment of reality, seems to be
-lacking, or it appears at least to be put in the background.
-This negative principle seems indeed not to be directly
-expressed in Plato, but it is essentially contained in his
-definition of the Absolute as the unity of opposites; for
-this unity is essentially a negative unity of those opposites,
-which abrogates their being-another, their opposition, and
-leads them back into itself. But with Aristotle this negativity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-this active efficacy, is expressly characterized as
-energy; in that it breaks up itself&mdash;this independence&mdash;abrogating
-unity, and positing separation; for, as Aristotle
-says (Metaph. VII. 13), “actuality separates.” The
-Platonic Idea, on the other hand, is rather that abrogation
-of opposites, where one of the opposites is itself unity.
-While, therefore, with Plato the main consideration is the
-affirmative principle, the Idea as only abstractly identical
-with itself, in Aristotle there is added and made conspicuous
-the moment of negativity, not as change, nor yet as nullity,
-but as difference or determination. The principle of
-individualization, not in the sense of a casual and merely
-particular subjectivity, but in that of pure subjectivity, is
-peculiar to Aristotle. Aristotle thus also makes the Good,
-as the universal end, the substantial foundation, and
-maintains this position against Heraclitus and the Eleatics.
-The Becoming of Heraclitus is a true and real determination,
-but change yet lacks the determination of identity with
-itself, the constancy of the universal. The stream is ever
-changing, yet it is nevertheless ever the same, and is really
-a universal existence. From this it is at once evident that
-Aristotle (Metaph. IV. 3-6) is controverting the opinions
-of Heraclitus and others when he says that Being and non-being
-are not the same (Vol. I. p. 282), and in connection
-with this lays down the celebrated maxim of contradiction,
-that a man is not at the same time a ship. This shows at
-once that Aristotle does not understand by this pure Being
-and non-being, this abstraction which is really only the
-transition of the one into the other; but by that which is, he
-understands Substance, the Idea, Reason, viewed likewise
-as an impelling end. As he maintains the universal against
-the principle of mere change, he puts forward activity in
-opposition to the numbers of the Pythagoreans, and to the
-Platonic Ideas. However frequently and fully Aristotle
-controverts both of these, all his objections turn on the
-remark already quoted (Vol. I. p. 213) that activity is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-to be found in these principles, and that to say that real
-things participate in Ideas is empty talk, and a poetic
-metaphor. He says also that Ideas, as abstract universal
-determinations, are only as far as numbers go equal to
-things, but are not on that account to be pointed out as
-their causes. Moreover, he maintains that there are contradictions
-involved in taking independent species, since
-in Socrates, for instance, there are several ideas included:
-man, biped, animal (Metaph. I. 7 and 9). Activity with
-Aristotle is undoubtedly also change, but change that
-is within the universal, and that remains self-identical;
-consequently a determination which is self-determination,
-and therefore the self-realizing universal end: in mere
-alteration, on the contrary, there is not yet involved the
-preservation of identity in change. This is the chief point
-which Aristotle deals with.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle distinguishes various moments in substance, in
-so far as the moments of activity and potentiality do not
-appear as one, but still in separation. The closer determination
-of this relation of energy to potentiality, of form
-to matter, and the movement of this opposition, gives the
-different modes of substance. Here Aristotle enumerates
-the substances; and to him they appear as a series of different
-kinds of substance, which he merely takes into consideration
-one by one, without bringing them together into a
-system. The three following are the chief among these:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>a.</i> The sensuous perceptible substance is that in which the
-matter is still distinguished from the efficient form. Hence
-this substance is finite; for the separation and externality
-of form and matter are precisely what constitute the nature
-of the finite. Sensuous substance, says Aristotle (Metaph.
-XII. 2), involves change, but in such a way that it passes
-over into the opposite; the opposites disappear in one
-another, and the third beyond these opposites, that which
-endures, the permanent in this change, is matter. Now the
-leading categories of change which Aristotle names are the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-four differences, in regard to the What (κατὰ τὸ τί), or in
-regard to quality (ποιόν), or in regard to quantity (ποσόν),
-or in regard to place where (ποῦ). The first change is the
-origination and decay of simple determinate Being (κατὰ
-τόδε); the second change is that of the further qualities
-(κατὰ τὸ πάθος); the third, increase and diminution; the
-fourth, motion. Matter is the dead substance on which
-take place the changes which matter passes through. “The
-change itself is from potential into actual existence; possible
-whiteness transforms itself into actual whiteness. Thus
-things do not arise casually out of nothing, but all
-arises out of what exists, though it exists only in potentiality,
-not in actuality.” The possible is thus really a general
-implicit existence, which brings about these determinations,
-without producing one out of the other. Matter is thus
-simple potentiality, which, however, is placed in opposition
-to itself, so that a thing in its actuality only becomes that
-which its matter was also in potentiality. There are thus
-three moments posited: matter, as the general substratum
-of change, neutral in respect of what is different
-(ἐξ οὗ); the opposed determinations of form, which are
-negative to each other as that which is to be abrogated and
-that which is to be posited (τι and εἴς τι); the first mover
-(ὑφ̓ οὗ), pure activity (Metaph. VII. 7; IX. 8; XII. 3).<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> But
-activity is the unity of form and matter; how these two are
-in the other, Aristotle does not, however, further explain.
-Thus in sensuous substance there appears the diversity of
-the moments, though not as yet their return into themselves;
-but activity is the negative which ideally contains
-in itself the opposite, therefore that also which is about to
-be.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-<p><i>b.</i> A higher kind of substance, according to Aristotle
-(Metaph. IX. 2; VII. 7; XII. 3), is that into which activity
-enters, which already contains that which is about to be.
-This is understanding, absolutely determined, whose content
-is the aim which it realizes through its activity, not
-merely changing as does the sensuous form. For the soul
-is essentially actuality, a general determination which
-posits itself; not only formal activity, whose content comes
-from somewhere else. But while the active posits its content
-in reality, this content yet remains the same; there is
-an activity present which is different from matter, although
-substance and activity are allied. Thus here we still have a
-matter which understanding demands as its hypothesis.
-The two extremes are matter as potentiality, and thought
-as efficiency: the former is the passive universal, and the
-latter the active universal; in sensuous substance the active
-is, on the contrary, still quite different from matter. In
-these two moments themselves change does not take place,
-for they are the implicit universal in opposed forms.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> The highest point is, however, that in which potentiality,
-activity and actuality are united; the absolute substance
-which Aristotle (Metaph. XII. 6, 7; IX. 8), defines in general
-as being the absolute (ἀϊδιον), the unmoved, which yet at
-the same time moves, and whose essence is pure activity,
-without having matter. For matter as such is passive and
-affected by change, consequently it is not simply one with
-the pure activity of this substance. Here as elsewhere we
-certainly see an instance of merely denying a predicate,
-without saying what its truth is; but matter is nothing else
-than that moment of unmoved Being. If in later times it
-has seemed something new to define absolute Being as pure
-activity, we see that this arises from ignorance as to the
-Aristotelian conception. But the Schoolmen rightly looked
-upon this as the definition of God, since they define God as
-<i>actus purus</i>; and higher idealism than this there is none.
-We may also express this as follows: God is the Substance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-which in its potentiality has reality also unseparated from
-it; therein potentiality is not distinguished from form, since
-it produces from itself the determinations of its content. In
-this Aristotle breaks away from Plato, and for this reason
-controverts number, the Idea, and the universal, because if
-this, as inert, is not defined as identical with activity, there
-is no movement. Plato’s inert Ideas and numbers thus bring
-nothing into reality; but far different is the case with the
-Absolute of Aristotle, which in its quiescence is at the same
-time absolute activity.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle further says on this subject (Metaph. XII. 6):
-“It may be that what has potentiality is not real; it is of
-no avail therefore to make substances eternal, as the
-idealists do, if they do not contain a principle which can
-effect change. And even this is insufficient, if it is not
-active, because in that case there is no change. Yea, even
-if it were active, but its substance only a potentiality, there
-would be in it no eternal movement, for it is possible that
-what is according to potentiality may not exist. We must
-therefore have a principle whose substance must be apprehended
-as activity.” Thus in mind energy is substance
-itself. “But here a doubt seems to spring up. For all
-that is active seems to be possible, but all that is possible
-does not seem to energize, so that potentiality seems to be
-antecedent,” for it is the universal. “But if this were the
-case, no one of the entities would be in existence, for it is
-possible that a thing may possess a capacity of existence,
-though it has never yet existed. But energy is higher than
-potentiality. We must thus not assert, as theologians would
-have us do, that in the eternal ages there was first chaos or
-night” (matter), “nor must we say with natural philosophers
-that everything existed simultaneously. For how
-could the First be changed, if nothing in reality were cause?
-For matter does not move itself, it is the Master who
-moves it. Leucippus and Plato accordingly say that motion
-has always existed, but they give no reason for the assertion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>”
-Pure activity is, according to Aristotle (Metaph.
-IX. 8), before potentiality, not in relation to time, but to
-essence. That is to say, time is a subordinate moment, far
-removed from the universal; for the absolute first Being
-is, as Aristotle says at the end of the sixth chapter of the
-twelfth book, “that which in like activity remains always
-identical with itself.” In the former assumption of a
-chaos and so on, an activity is posited which has to do
-with something else, not with itself, and has therefore a
-pre-supposition; but chaos is only bare possibility.</p>
-
-<p>That which moves in itself, and therefore, as Aristotle
-continues (Metaph. XII. 7), “that which has circular motion;”
-is to be posited as the true Being, “and this is evident
-not merely from thinking reason, but also from the fact
-itself.” From the definition of absolute Being as imparting
-motion, as bringing about realization, there follows that it
-exists in objectivity in visible nature. As the self-identical
-which is visible, this absolute Being is “the eternal
-heavens.” The two modes of representing the Absolute
-are thus thinking reason and the eternal heavens. The
-heavens are moved, but they also cause movement. Since
-the spherical is thus both mover and moved, there is a
-centre-point which causes movement but remains unmoved,
-and which is itself at the same time eternal and a substance
-and energy.<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> This great definition given by Aristotle of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>absolute Being as the circle of reason which returns into
-itself, is of the same tenor as modern definitions; the unmoved
-which causes movement is the Idea which remains
-self-identical, which, while it moves, remains in relation to
-itself. He explains this as follows: “Its motion is determined
-in the following manner. That moves which is
-desired and thought, whereas itself it is unmoved, and the
-original of both is the same.” That is the end whose content
-is the desire and thought; such an end is the Beautiful
-or the Good. “For the thing that is desired is that which
-appears beautiful” (or pleases): “whose first” (or end),
-“on which the will is set, is what is beautiful. But it is
-rather the case that we desire it because it appears beautiful,
-than that it appears beautiful because we desire it.”
-For if that were so, it would be simply posited by activity,
-but it is posited independently, as objective Being, through
-which our desire is first awakened. “But thought is the
-true principle in this, for thought is moved only by the
-object of thought. But the intelligible” (we scarcely
-believe our eyes) “is essentially the other co-element
-(συστοιχία)”<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> namely, that which is posited as objective,
-as absolutely existent thought, “and the substance
-of this other element is the first; but the
-first substance is simple pure activity. Such are the
-Beautiful and the Good, and the first is ever the absolutely
-best or the best possible. But the Notion shows that the
-final cause belongs to the unmoved. What is moved may
-also subsist in a different manner. Motion (φορά) is the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>first change; the first motion, again, is circular motion,
-but this is due to the above cause.” Therefore, according
-to Aristotle, the Notion, <i>principium cognoscendi</i>, is also
-that which causes movement, <i>principium essendi</i>; he expresses
-it as God, and shows the relation of God to the
-individual consciousness. “The First Cause is necessary.
-But the term necessary has three meanings: first what is
-accomplished by violence, because it goes contrary to one’s
-inclination (παρὰ τὴν ὁρμήν); secondly, that without which
-the Good does not subsist; thirdly, that which can exist in
-no other way than it does, but involves absolute existence.
-On such a principle of the unmoved the heavens depend
-and the whole of nature”&mdash;the visible that is eternal, and
-the visible that changes. This system is ever-enduring.
-“But to us” as individuals, “there is granted, for a short
-time only, a sojourn therein of surpassing excellence. For
-the system continues ever the same, but for us that is impossible.
-Now this activity is in its very self enjoyment,
-and therefore vigilance, exercise of the senses, thinking
-in general, are most productive of enjoyment; and for the
-same reason hopes and memories bring pleasure. But
-thinking, in its pure essence, is a thinking of that which
-is absolutely the most excellent;” the thought is for itself
-absolute end. The difference and contradiction in activity
-and the abrogation of the same, Aristotle expresses thus:
-“But thought thinks itself by participation (μετάληψιν) in
-that which is thought, but thought becomes thought by
-contact and apprehension, so that thought and the object
-of thought are the same.” Thought, as being the unmoved
-which causes motion, has an object, which, however,
-becomes transformed into activity, because its content is
-itself something thought, <i>i.e.</i> a product of thought, and
-thus altogether identical with the activity of thinking.
-The object of thought is first produced in the activity of
-thinking, which in this way separates the thought as an
-object. Hence, in thinking, that which is moved and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-which moves are the same; and as the substance of what
-is thought is thought, what is thought is the absolute
-cause which, itself unmoved, is identical with the thought
-which is moved by it; the separation and the relation are
-one and the same. The chief moment in Aristotle’s philosophy
-is accordingly this, that the energy of thinking and
-the object of thought are the same; “for thought is that
-which is receptive of objects of perception and the existent.
-When in possession of these it is in a condition of activity
-(ἐνεργεῖ δὲ ἔχων); and thus all this” operation by which
-it thinks itself, “is more divine than the divine possession
-which thinking reason supposes itself to have,”&mdash;the content
-of thought. It is not the object of thought that is
-the more excellent, but the very energy of thinking; the
-activity of apprehension brings that to pass which appears
-as something that is being apprehended. “Speculation
-(ἡ θεωρία) is thus the most pleasing and the best. If
-then God has eternally subsisted in such surpassing excellence
-as for a limited time pertains to us” (in whom
-this eternal Thought, which is God Himself, occurs only as
-a particular condition), “He is worthy of admiration; if
-He possesses it in a more eminent degree, His nature is
-still more admirable. But this is His mode of subsistence.
-Life is also inherent in Him, for the activity of thought is
-life. But He constitutes this efficient power; essential
-energy belongs to God as His most excellent and eternal
-life. We therefore say that with God there is life perfect
-and everlasting.” From this substance Aristotle moreover
-excludes magnitude.</p>
-
-<p>We in our way of speaking designate the Absolute, the
-True, as the unity of subjectivity and objectivity, which is
-therefore neither the one nor the other, and yet just as
-much the one as the other; and Aristotle busied himself
-with these same speculations, the deepest forms of speculation
-even of the present day, and he has expressed them
-with the greatest definiteness. With Aristotle it is thus no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-dry identity of the abstract understanding that is indicated,
-for he distinguishes subjective and objective precisely and
-decisively. Not dead identity such as this, but energy, is
-for him what is most to be reverenced, God. Unity is
-thus a poor, unphilosophic expression, and true Philosophy
-is not the system of identity; its principle is a unity which
-is activity, movement, repulsion, and thus, in being different,
-is at the same time identical with itself. If Aristotle had
-made the jejune identity of understanding, or experience,
-his principle, he would never have risen to a speculative
-Idea like this, wherein individuality and activity are placed
-higher than universal potentiality. Thought, as the object
-of thought, is nothing else than the absolute Idea regarded
-as in itself, the Father; yet this First and unmoved, as
-distinguished from activity, is, as absolute, simply activity,
-and is first through this activity set forth as true. In
-what he teaches respecting the soul we shall find Aristotle
-recurring to this speculative thought; but to Aristotle it is
-again an object, like other objects, a kind of condition which
-he separates from the other conditions of the soul which
-he understands empirically, such as sleep, or weariness.
-He does not say that it alone is truth, that all is summed
-up in Thought, but he says it is the first, the strongest,
-the most honourable. We, on the other hand, say that
-Thought, as that which relates to itself, has existence, or is
-the truth; that Thought comprehends the whole of Truth,
-even, though we ordinarily represent to ourselves sensation
-and so on, besides thought, as having reality. Thus,
-although Aristotle does not express himself in modern
-philosophic language, he has yet throughout the same
-fundamental theory; he speaks not of a special kind of
-reason, but of the universal Reason. The speculative
-philosophy of Aristotle simply means the direction of
-thought on all kinds of objects, thus transforming these
-into thoughts; hence, in being thoughts, they exist in truth.
-The meaning of this is not, however, that natural objects<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-have thus themselves the power of thinking, but as they are
-subjectively thought by me, my thought is thus also the
-Notion of the thing, which therefore constitutes its absolute
-substance. But in Nature the Notion does not exist explicitly
-as thought in this freedom, but has flesh and blood,
-and is oppressed by externalities; yet this flesh and blood
-has a soul, and this is its Notion. The ordinary definition
-of truth, according to which it is “the harmony of the
-conception with the object,” is certainly not borne out by
-the conception; for when I represent to myself a house, a
-beam, and so on, I am by no means this content, but
-something entirely different, and therefore very far from
-being in harmony with the object of my conception. It is
-only in thought that there is present a true harmony
-between objective and subjective; that constitutes me.
-Aristotle therefore finds himself at the highest standpoint;
-nothing deeper can we desire to know, although he has
-always the appearance of making ordinary conceptions his
-starting-point.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle (Metaph. XII. 9) now solves many other doubtful
-questions, for instance, whether thought is compound,
-and whether science is the object of science itself. “Some
-further doubts arise as to thought (νοῦς), which seems to
-be of all things the most divine; but it is only with
-difficulty that we can conceive under what conditions
-(πῶς δ̓ ἔχων) it is a thing of this sort. When it thinks of
-nothing, but is in a state like that of a sleeper, what constitutes
-its superiority? And when it thinks, but something
-else is dominant all the time (ἄλλο κύριον), that which
-is its substance is not thought (νόησις), but a potentiality;”
-it would not be in eternal activity. “In this way it would
-not be the highest substance; for it is” (active) “thought
-(τὸ νοεῖν) that gives it its high rank. If now, further,
-thought or thinking is its substance, what does it think?
-Itself or another? And if another, is it always the same,
-or something different? Does it also not make a difference,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-whether it thinks of what is beautiful or what is casual?
-In the first place, if thought is not thinking, but only the
-power to think, continuous thinking would be laborious for
-it,” for every power wears itself out. “In the next place,
-something else would be more excellent than thought,
-namely that which is thought (νοούμενον); and thinking
-and thought (τὸ νοεῖν καὶ ἡ νόησις) will be present to the
-mind in understanding what is most inferior. As this is
-to be avoided (in the same way that it is better not to see
-some things than to see them), thinking would not constitute
-the best. Thought is therefore this, to think itself,
-because it is the most excellent; and it is the thinking,
-which is the thinking of thinking. For understanding and
-sensation and opinion and deliberation seem always to
-have an object other than themselves, and to be their own
-objects only in a secondary sense. Further, if thinking
-and being thought of are different, in relation to which of
-the two is the Good inherent in thought? For the Notion<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a>
-of thinking and that of the object of thought are not the
-same. Or, in the case of some things, does the science
-itself constitute that which is the object of science? In
-what is practical the thing is the immaterial substance and
-the determination of the end (ἡ οὐσία καὶ τὸ τί ἦν εἶναι),
-and in what is theoretical it is the reason and the thinking.
-As therefore thought and the object of thought are not
-different, these opposites, so far as they involve no connection
-with matter, are the same thing, and there is only a
-thought of the thing thought of.” Reason which thinks
-itself, is the absolute end or the Good, for it only exists for
-its own sake. “There still remains a doubt whether that
-which thinks is of composite nature or not; for it might
-undergo change in the parts of the whole. But the Good
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>is not in this or that part, for it is the best in the universe,
-as distinguished from it. In this way the Thought which
-is its own object subsists to all eternity.”</p>
-
-<p>As this speculative Idea, which is the best and most free,
-is also to be seen in nature, and not only in thinking
-reason, Aristotle (Metaph. XII. 8) in this connection passes
-on to the visible God, which is the heavens. God, as living
-God, is the universe; and thus in the universe God, as
-living God, shows Himself forth. He comes forth as
-manifesting Himself or as causing motion, and it is in
-manifestation alone that the difference between the cause
-of motion and that which is moved comes to pass. “The
-principle and the first cause of that which is, is itself
-unmoved, but brings to pass the original and eternal and
-single motion,” that is, the heaven of the fixed stars.
-“We see that besides the simple revolution of the universe,
-which is brought about by the first unmoved substance,
-there are other eternal motions, those of the planets.”
-We must not, however, enter into further details on this
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding the organization of the universe in general,
-Aristotle says (Metaph. XII. 10), “We must investigate
-in what manner the nature of the whole has within it the
-Good and the Best; whether as something set apart and
-absolute, or as an order, or in both ways, as in the case of
-an army. For the good condition of an army depends
-upon the order enforced, as much as on the general, and
-the general is the cause of the army’s good condition in all
-the greater degree from the fact of the order being through
-him, and not from his being through the order. All things
-are co-ordinated in a certain way, but not all in the same
-way: take, for example, animals which swim, and those
-which fly, and plants; they are not so constituted that one
-of them is not related to another, but they stand in mutual
-relations. For all are co-ordinated into one system just
-as in a house it is by no means permitted to the free<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-inmates to do freely whatever they like, but all that they
-do, or the most of it, is done according to orderly arrangement.
-By slaves and animals, on the contrary, little is done
-for the general good, but they do much that is casual. For
-the principle of each is his own nature. In the same way
-it is necessary that all should attain to a position where
-distinction is drawn” (the seat of judgment) “but there
-are some things so constituted that all participate in them for
-the formation of a whole.” Aristotle then goes on to refute
-some other notions; showing, for instance, the embarrassments
-into which they fall who make all things proceed from
-oppositions, and he corroborates, on the other hand, the unity
-of the principle by quoting Homer’s line (Iliad II. 204):</p>
-
-<p class="pp6q p1">“It is not good that many govern; let one alone bear rule.”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c153" id="c153">2. <span class="smcap">Philosophy of Nature.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Amongst the special sciences treated by Aristotle, the
-Physics is contained in a whole series of physical treatises,
-which form a tolerably complete system of what constitutes
-the Philosophy of Nature in its whole extent. We shall try
-to give their general plan. Aristotle’s first work is his
-Treatise, in eight books, on Physics, or on the Principles
-(φυσικὴ ἀκρόασις ἢ περὶ ἀρχῶν). In this he deals, as is
-fitting, with the doctrine of the Notion of nature generally,
-with movement, and with space and time. The first
-manifestation of absolute substance is movement, and its
-moments are space and time; this conception of its
-manifestation is the universal, which realizes itself first in
-the corporeal world, passing into the principle of separation.
-Aristotle’s Physics is what for present physicists
-would, properly speaking, be the Metaphysics of Nature;
-for our physicists only say what they have seen, what delicate
-and excellent instruments they have made, and not
-what they have thought. This first work by Aristotle is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-followed by his treatises concerning the Heavens, which
-deal with the nature of body and the first real bodies, the
-earth and heavenly bodies in general, as also with the
-general abstract relation of bodies to one another through
-mechanical weight and lightness, or what we should call
-attraction; and finally, with the determination of abstract
-real bodies or elements. Then follow the treatises on Production
-and Destruction, the physical process of change,
-while formerly the ideal process of movement was considered.
-Besides the physical elements, moments which
-are only posited in process, as such, now enter in: for
-instance, warmth, cold, &amp;c. Those elements are the real
-existent facts, while these determinations are the moments
-of becoming or of passing away, which exist only in movement.
-Then comes the Meteorology; it represents the
-universal physical process in its most real forms. Here
-particular determinations appear, such as rain, the saltness
-of the sea, clouds, dew, hail, snow, hoar-frost, winds, rainbows,
-boiling, cooking, roasting, colours, &amp;c. On certain
-matters, such as the colours, Aristotle wrote particular
-treatises. Nothing is forgotten, and yet the presentation
-is, on the whole, empiric. The book On the Universe,
-which forms the conclusion, is said not to be genuine; it
-is a separate dissertation, addressed to Alexander, which
-contains in part the doctrine of the universality of things,
-a doctrine found already in the other treatises; hence this
-book does not belong to this series.</p>
-
-<p>From this point Aristotle proceeds to organic nature,
-and here his works not only contain a natural history, but
-also a physiology and anatomy. To the anatomy pertain
-his works on the Locomotion of Animals, and on the Parts
-of Animals. He deals with physiology in the works on
-the Generation of Animals, on the common Movement of
-Animals; and then he comes to the distinction between
-Youth and Age, Sleeping and Waking, and treats of
-Breathing, Dreaming, the Shortness and Length of Life,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-&amp;c., all of which he deals with partly in an empiric, and
-partly in a more speculative manner. Finally, there comes
-the History of Animals, not merely as a history of Nature,
-but also as the history of the animal in its entirety&mdash;what
-we may call a kind of physiologico-anatomical anatomy.
-There is likewise a botanical work On Plants (περὶ φυτῶν)
-which is ascribed to him. Thus we here find natural
-philosophy in the whole extent of its outward content.</p>
-
-<p>As regards this plan, there is no question that this is not
-the necessary order in which natural philosophy or physics
-must be treated. It is long since physics adopted in its
-conception the form and tendency derived from Aristotle,
-of deducing the parts of the science from the whole; and
-thus even what is not speculative still retains this connection
-as far as outward order goes. This is plainly to be preferred
-to the arrangement in our modern text-books, which is a
-wholly irrational succession of doctrines accidentally put
-together, and is undoubtedly more suitable to that method
-of contemplating nature, which grasps the sensuous manifestation
-of nature quite irrespective of sense or reason.
-Physics before this contained some metaphysics, but the experience
-which was met with in endeavouring unsuccessfully
-to work it out, determined the physicists, so far as possible,
-to keep it at a distance, and to devote their attention to
-what they call experience, for they think that here they
-come across genuine truth, unspoiled by thought, fresh
-from the hand of nature; it is in their hands and before
-their faces. They can certainly not dispense with the
-Notion, but through a kind of tacit agreement they allow
-certain conceptions, such as forces, subsistence in parts,
-&amp;c., to be valid, and make use of these without in the least
-knowing whether they have truth and how they have truth.
-But in regard to the content they express no better the
-truth of things, but only the sensuous manifestation. Aristotle
-and the ancients understand by physics, on the other
-hand, the comprehension of nature&mdash;the universal; and for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-this reason Aristotle also calls it the doctrine of principles.
-For in the manifestation of nature this distinction between
-the principle and what follows it, manifestation, really commences,
-and it is abrogated only in genuine speculation.
-Yet if, on the one hand, what is physical in Aristotle is
-mainly philosophic and not experimental, he yet proceeded
-in his Physics in what may be called an empiric way.
-Thus, as it has been already remarked of the Aristotelian
-philosophy in general that the different parts fall into a
-series of independently determined conceptions, so we find
-that this is the case here also; hence an account can only
-be given of a part of them. One part is not universal
-enough to embrace the other part, for each is independent.
-But that which follows, and which has in great measure
-reference to what is individual, no longer comes under the
-dominion of the Notion, but becomes a superficial suggestion
-of reasons, and an explanation from the proximate
-causes, such as we find in our physics.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the general conception of nature, we must
-say that Aristotle represents it in the highest and truest
-manner. For in the Idea of nature Aristotle (Phys. II. 8)
-really relies on two determinations: the conception of end
-and the conception of necessity. Aristotle at once grasps
-the whole matter in its principles, and this constitutes the
-old contradiction and divergence of view existing between
-necessity (<i>causæ efficientes</i>) and end (<i>causæ finales</i>), which
-we have inherited. The first mode of consideration is that
-in accordance with external necessity, which is the same as
-chance&mdash;the conception that all that pertains to nature is
-determined from without by means of natural causes. The
-other mode of consideration is the teleological, but conformity
-to end is either inward or outward, and in the
-more recent culture the latter has long retained the supremacy.
-Thus men vibrate in their opinion between
-these two points of view, seek external causes, and war
-against the form of an external teleology which places the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-end outside of nature. These determinations were known
-to Aristotle, and he thoroughly investigates them and considers
-what they are and mean. Aristotle’s conception of
-nature is, however, nobler than that of to-day, for with
-him the principal point is the determination of end as the
-inward determinateness of natural things. Thus he comprehended
-nature as life, <i>i.e.</i> as that which has its end
-within itself, is unity with itself, which does not pass into
-another, but, through this principle of activity, determines
-changes in conformity with its own content, and in this way
-maintains itself therein. In this doctrine Aristotle has before
-his eyes the inward immanent end, to which he considers
-necessity an external condition. Thus, on the one hand,
-Aristotle determines nature as the final cause, which is to
-be distinguished from what is luck or chance; it is thus
-opposed by him to what is necessary, which it also contains
-within itself; and then he considers how necessity is
-present in natural things. In nature we usually think of
-necessity first, and understand as the essentially natural
-that which is not determined through end. For long men
-thought that they determined nature both philosophically
-and truly in limiting it to necessity. But the aspect of
-nature has had a stigma removed from it, because, by means
-of its conformity to the end in view, it is elevated above
-the commonplace. The two moments which we have considered
-in substance, the active form and matter, correspond
-with these two determinations.</p>
-
-<p>We must first consider the conception of adaptation to
-end as the ideal moment in substance. Aristotle begins
-(Phys. II. 8) with the fact that the natural is the self-maintaining,
-all that is difficult is its comprehension. “The
-first cause of perplexity is, what hinders nature from not
-operating for the sake of an end, and because it is better
-so to operate, but” being, for example, “like Jupiter,
-who rains, not that the corn may grow, but from necessity.
-The vapour driven upwards cools, and the water resulting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-from this cooling falls as rain, and it happens that the
-corn is thereby made to grow. In like manner, if the corn
-of any one is destroyed, it does not rain for the sake of
-this destruction, but this is an accidental circumstance.”
-That is to say, there is a necessary connection which, however,
-is an external relation, and this is the contingency of
-the cause as well as of the effect. “But if this be so,”
-Aristotle asks, “what hinders us from assuming that what
-appears as parts” (the parts of an animal, for instance)
-“may thus subsist in nature, too, as contingent? That,
-for example, the front teeth are sharp and adapted for
-dividing, and that the back teeth, on the contrary, are
-broad and adapted for grinding the food in pieces, may be
-an accidental circumstance, not necessarily brought about
-for these particular ends. And the same is true with
-respect to the other parts of the body which appear to be
-adapted for some end; therefore those living things in
-which all was accidentally constituted as if for some end,
-are now, having once been so existent, preserved, although
-originally they had arisen by chance, in accordance with
-external necessity.” Aristotle adds that Empedocles
-especially had these reflections, and represented the first
-beginnings of things as a world composed of all sorts of
-monstrosities, such as bulls with human heads; such, however,
-could not continue to subsist, but disappeared because
-they were not originally constituted so that they should
-endure; and this went on until what was in conformity
-with purpose came together. Without going back to the
-fabulous monstrosities of the ancients, we likewise know of
-a number of animal tribes which have died out, just because
-they could not preserve the race. Thus we also require to
-use the expression development (an unthinking evolution),
-in our present-day natural philosophy. The conception that
-the first productions were, so to speak, attempts, of which
-those which did not show themselves to be suitable could
-not endure, is easily arrived at by natural philosophy. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-nature, as <i>entelecheia</i> or realization, is what brings forth
-itself. Aristotle hence replies: “It is impossible to believe
-this. For what is produced in accordance with nature is
-always, or at least for the most part, produced” (external
-universality as the constant recurrence of what has passed
-away), “but this is not so with what happens through
-fortune or through chance. That in which there is an end
-(τέλος), equally in its character as something which precedes
-and as something which follows, is made into end;
-as therefore a thing is made, so is its nature, and as is its
-nature, so is it made; it exists therefore for the sake of
-this.” The meaning of nature is that as something is, it
-was in the beginning; it means this inward universality
-and adaptation to end that realizes itself; and thus cause
-and effect are identical, since all individual parts are related
-to this unity of end. “He who assumes contingent and
-accidental forms, subverts, on the other hand, both nature
-itself and that which subsists from nature, for that subsists
-from nature which has a principle within itself, by whose
-means, and being continually moved, it attains its end.” In
-this expression of Aristotle’s we now find the whole of the
-true profound Notion of life, which must be considered as
-an end in itself&mdash;a self-identity that independently impels
-itself on, and in its manifestation remains identical
-with its Notion: thus it is the self-effectuating Idea.
-Leaves, blossoms, roots thus bring the plant into evidence
-and go back into it; and that which they bring to pass
-is already present in the seed from which they took
-their origin. The chemical product, on the contrary, does
-not appear to have itself similarly present, for from acid
-and base a third appears to come forth; but here, likewise,
-the essence of both these sides, their relationship, is already
-present, though it is there mere potentiality, as it is in the
-product merely a thing. But the self-maintaining activity
-of life really brings forth this unity in all relationships.
-What has here been said is already contained in that which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-was asserted by those who do not represent nature in this
-way, but say, “that which is constituted as though it were
-constituted for an end, will endure.” For this is the self-productive
-action of nature. In the modern way of looking
-at life this conception becomes lost in two different ways;
-either through a mechanical philosophy, in which we always
-find as principle pressure, impulse, chemical relationships
-and forces, or external relations generally&mdash;which certainly
-seem to be inherent in nature, but not to proceed from the
-nature of the body, seeing that they are an added, foreign
-appendage, such as colour in a fluid; or else theological
-physics maintain the thoughts of an understanding outside
-of the world to be the causes. In the Kantian philosophy
-we for the first time have that conception once more
-awakened in us, for organic nature at least; life has there
-been made an end to itself. In Kant this indeed had only
-the subjective form which constitutes the essence of the
-Kantian philosophy, in which it seems as though life were
-only so determined by reason of our subjective reasoning;
-but still the whole truth is there contained that the organic
-creation is the self-maintaining. The fact that most recent
-times have brought back the rational view of the matter
-into our remembrance, is thus none else than a justification
-of the Aristotelian Idea.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle also speaks of the end which is represented
-by organic nature in itself, in relation to the means, of which
-he says (Phys. II. 8): “If the swallow builds her nest, and
-the spider spreads her web, and trees root themselves in
-the earth, for the sake of nutriment, there is present in
-them a self-maintaining cause of this kind, or an end.”
-For this instinctive action exhibits an operation of self-preservation,
-as a means whereby natural existence becomes
-shut up and reflected into itself. Aristotle then brings
-what is here said into relation with general conceptions
-which he had earlier maintained (p. 138): “Since nature
-is twofold as matter and form, but since the latter is end,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-and the rest are on account of the end, this is final cause.”
-For the active form has a content, which, as content of
-potentiality, contains the means which make their appearance
-as adapted for an end, <i>i.e.</i> as moments established
-through the determinate Notion. However much we may,
-in the modern way of regarding things, struggle against
-the idea of an immanent end, from reluctance to accept it,
-we must, in the case of animals and plants, acknowledge
-such a conception, always re-establishing itself in another.
-For example, because the animal lives in water or in air, it
-is so constructed that it can maintain its existence in air or
-water; thus it requires water to explain the gills of fishes;
-and, on the other hand, because the animal is so constructed,
-it lives in water. This activity in transformation thus does
-not depend in a contingent way on life; it is aroused
-through the outward powers, but only in as far as conformity
-with the soul of the animal permits.</p>
-
-<p>In passing, Aristotle here (Phys. II. 8) makes a comparison
-between nature and art, which also connects what
-results with what goes before, in accordance with ends.
-“Nature may commit an error as well as art; for as a
-grammarian sometimes makes a mistake in writing, and a
-physician in mixing a medicinal draught, nature, too, sometimes
-does not attain its ends. Its errors are monstrosities
-and deformities, which, however, are only the errors of that
-which operates for an end. In the production of animals
-and plants, an animal is not at first produced, but the seed,
-and even in it corruption is possible.” For the seed is the
-mean, as being the not as yet established, independent,
-indifferent, free actuality. In this comparison of nature
-with art we ordinarily have before us the external adaptation
-to end, the teleological point of view, the making for
-definite ends. And Aristotle declaims against this, while
-he remarks that if nature is activity for a certain end, or if
-it is the implicitly universal, “it is absurd to deny that
-action is in conformity with end, because that which moves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-cannot be seen to have deliberated and considered.” The
-understanding comes forward with the determination of
-this end, and with its instruments and tools, to operate on
-matter, and we carry this conception of an external teleology
-over into nature. “But art also,” says Aristotle, “does
-not deliberate. If the form of a ship were the particular
-inward principle of the timber, it would act as nature
-prompted. The action of nature is very similar to the
-exercise of the art whereby anyone heals himself.” Through
-an inward instinct the animal avoids what is evil, and does
-what is good for him; health is thus essentially present to
-him, not as a conscious end, but as an understanding
-which accomplishes its ends without conscious thought.</p>
-
-<p>As Aristotle has hitherto combated an external teleology,
-he directs another equally applicable remark (Phys. II. 9)
-against merely external necessity, and thus we come to the
-other side, or to how necessity exists in nature. He says
-in this regard: “Men fancy that necessity exists in this
-way in generation, just as if it were thought that a house
-existed from necessity, because heavy things were naturally
-carried downwards, and light things upwards, and that,
-therefore, the stones and foundation, on account of their
-weight, were under the earth, and the earth, because it was
-lighter, was further up, and the wood in the highest place
-because it is the lightest.” But Aristotle thus explains
-the facts of the case. “The house is certainly not made
-without these materials, but not on account of, or through
-them (unless the material so demands), but it is made for
-the sake of concealing and preserving certain things. The
-same takes place in everything which has an end in itself;
-for it is not without that which is necessary to its nature,
-and yet it is not on account of this, unless the matter so
-demands, but on account of an end. Hence the necessary
-is from hypothesis only, and not as end, for necessity is in
-matter, but end is in reason (λόγῳ). Thus it is clear that
-matter and its movement are necessity in natural things;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-both have to be set forth as principle, but end is the
-higher principle.” It undoubtedly requires necessity, but
-it retains it in its own power, does not allow it to give vent
-to itself, but controls external necessity. The principle of
-matter is thus turned into the truly active ground of end,
-which means the overthrow of necessity, so that that which
-is natural shall maintain itself in the end. Necessity is the
-objective manifestation of the action of its moments as
-separated, just as in chemistry the essential reality of both
-the extremes&mdash;the base and the acid&mdash;is the necessity of
-their relation.</p>
-
-<p>This is the main conception of Aristotelian Physics. Its
-further development concerns the conceptions of the
-different objects of nature, a material for speculative
-philosophy which we have spoken of above (pp. 153-155),
-and regarding which Aristotle puts before us reflections
-both difficult and profound. Thus he at first (Phys. III.
-1-3) proceeds from this point to movement (κίνησις), and
-says that it is essential that a philosophy of nature should
-speak of it, but that it is difficult to grasp; in fact, it is
-one of the most difficult conceptions. Aristotle thus sets
-to work to understand movement in general, not merely
-in space and time, but also in its reality; and in this sense
-he calls it “the activity of an existent thing which is in
-capacity, so far as it is in capacity.” He explains this
-thus: “Brass is in capacity a statue; yet the motion to
-become a statue is not a motion of the brass so far as it is
-brass, but a motion of itself, as the capacity to become a
-statue. Hence this activity is an imperfect one (ἀτελής),”
-<i>i.e.</i> it has not its end within itself, “for mere capacity,
-whose activity is movement, is imperfect.” The absolute
-substance, the moving immovable, the existent ground of
-heaven which we saw as end, is, on the contrary, both
-activity itself and the content and object of activity. But
-Aristotle distinguishes from this what falls under the form
-of this opposition, “That moving is also moved which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-has movement as a capacity, and whose immobility is rest.
-That in which movement is present has immobility as rest;
-for activity in rest, as such, is movement.” That is to say,
-rest is capacity for motion. “Hence movement is the
-activity of that which is movable (κινητοῦ),<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> so far as it is
-movable; but this happens from the contact of that which
-is motive (κινητικοῦ), so that at the same time it is posited
-as passive likewise. But that which moves always introduces
-a certain form or end (εἶδος), either this particular
-thing (τόδε), or a quality or a quantity, which is the
-principle and cause of the motion when it moves; thus
-man, as he is in energy, makes man from man as he is in
-capacity. Thus, too, it is evident that movement is in the
-movable thing: for it is the activity of this, and is derived
-from that which is motive. The activity of that which is
-motive is likewise not different, for both are necessarily
-activity. It is motive because it has the capacity for being
-so; but it causes motion because it energizes. But it is
-the energetic of the moveable (ἔστιν ἐνεργητικὸν τοῦ κινετοῦ),
-so that there is one energy of both; just as the relation
-between one and two is the same as that between two and
-one, and there also is the same relation between acclivity
-and declivity, so the way from Thebes to Athens is the
-same as from Athens to Thebes. Activity and passivity
-are not originally (κυρίως) the same, but in what they are
-inherent, in motion, they are the same. In Being (τῷ εἶναι)
-they are identical, but activity, in so far as it is activity of
-this in this” (what is moved), “and the activity of this
-from this” (what moves), “is different as regards its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>conception (τῷ λόγῳ).” Aristotle subsequently deals with
-the infinite (Phys. III. 4-8).</p>
-
-<p>“In like manner it is necessary,” says Aristotle (Phys.
-IV. 1-5), “that the natural philosopher should consider
-the subject of place (τόπος).” Here come various definitions
-and determinations under which space generally and
-particular space or place appear. “Is place a body? It
-cannot be a body, for then there would be in one and the
-same, two bodies. Again, if it is the place and receptacle
-(χώρα) of this body, it is evident that it is so also of the
-superficies and the remaining boundaries; but the same
-reasoning applies to these, for where the superficies of
-water were before, there will now be the superficies of air,”
-and thus the places of both superficies would be in one.
-“But in truth there is no difference between the point and
-the place of the point, so that if place is not different from
-the other forms of limitation, neither is it something outside
-of them. It is not an element, and neither consists of
-corporeal nor of incorporeal elements, for it possesses magnitude,
-but not body. The elements of bodies are, however,
-themselves bodies, and no magnitude is produced
-from intelligible elements. Place is not the material of
-things, for nothing consists of it&mdash;neither the form, nor
-the Notion, nor the end, nor the moving cause; and yet
-it is something.” Aristotle now determines place as the
-first unmoved limit of that which is the comprehending:
-it comprehends the body whose place it is, and has nothing
-of the thing in itself; yet it co-exists with the thing,
-because the limits and the limited co-exist. The uttermost
-ends of what comprehends and of what is comprehended
-are identical, for both are bounds; but they are not
-bounds of the same, for form is the boundary of the thing,
-place is that of the embracing body. Place, as the comprehending,
-remains unchangeably passive while the thing
-which is moved is moved away; from which we see that
-place must be separable from the thing. Or place, according<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-to Aristotle, is the boundary, the negation of a body,
-the assertion of difference, of discretion; but it likewise
-does not merely belong to this body, but also to that which
-comprehends. There is thus no difference at all, but unchangeable
-continuity. “Place is neither the universal
-(κοινός) in which all bodies are” (heaven), “nor the particular
-(ἴδιος), in which they are as the first (πρώτῳ).”
-Aristotle also speaks of above and below in space, in relation
-to heaven as that which contains, and earth as what is
-beneath. “That body, outside of which is a comprehending
-body, is in space. But the whole heavens are not anywhere,
-since no body comprehends them. Outside the
-universe nothing is, and hence everything is in the heavens,
-for the heavens are the whole. Place, however, is not the
-heavens, but its external quiescent boundary which touches
-the body moved. Hence the earth is in water, water in
-air, air in ether, but ether in the heavens.”</p>
-
-<p>From this point Aristotle goes on (Phys. IV. 6, 7) to
-empty space, in which an old question is involved which
-physicists even now cannot explain: they could do so if
-they studied Aristotle, but as far as they are concerned
-there might have been no thought nor Aristotle in the world.
-“Vacuum, according to ordinary ideas, is a space in which
-there is no body, and, fancying that all Being is body, they
-say that vacuum is that in which there is nothing at all.
-The conception of a vacuum has its justification for one thing
-in the fact that a vacuum,” the negative to an existent
-form, “is essential to motion; for a body could not move
-in a plenum,” and in the place to which it does move there
-must be nothing. “The other argument in favour of a
-vacuum is found in the compression of bodies, in which
-the parts press into the empty spaces.” This is the conception
-of varying density and the alteration of the same,
-in accordance with which an equal weight might consist of
-an equal number of parts, but these, as being separated by
-vacuum, might present a greater volume. Aristotle confutes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-these reasonings most adroitly, and first of all in this
-way; “The plenum could be changed, and bodies could
-yield to one another even if no interval of vacuum separated
-them. Liquids as well as solids are not condensed into a
-vacuum; something that they contained is expelled, just as
-air is expelled if water is compressed.”</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle deals more thoroughly, in the first place (Phys.
-IV. 8), with the erroneous conception that the vacuum is
-the cause of movement. For, on the one hand, he shows
-that the vacuum really abolishes motion, and consequently
-in vacuum a universal rest would reign. He calls it perfect
-indifference as to the greater or less distance to which a
-thing is moved; in vacuum there are no distinctions. It
-is pure negation without object or difference; there is no
-reason for standing still or going on. But body is in
-movement, and that, indeed, as distinguished; it has a
-positive relation, and not one merely to nothing. On the
-other hand, Aristotle refutes the idea that movement is in
-vacuum because compression is possible. But this does not
-happen in a vacuum; there would be established in it not
-one movement, but a movement towards all sides, a general
-annihilation, an absolute yielding, where no cohesion would
-remain in the body. “Again, a weight or a body is borne
-along more swiftly or more slowly from two causes; either
-because there is a difference in that through which it is
-borne along, as when it moves through air or water or
-earth, or because that which is borne along differs through
-excess of weight or lightness.” As regards difference of
-movement on account of the first difference&mdash;that in the
-density of the medium&mdash;Aristotle says: “The medium
-through which the body is borne along is the cause of the
-resistance encountered, which is greater if the medium is
-moving in a contrary direction (and less if it is at rest);
-resistance is increased also if the medium is not easily
-divided. The difference in velocity is in inverse ratio to
-the specific gravity of the medium, air and water, so that if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-the medium has only half the density, the rate of progress
-will be double as quick. But vacuum has to body no such
-relation of differences of specific gravity. Body can no
-more contain a vacuum within its dimensions than a line
-can contain a point, unless the line were composed of points.
-The vacuum has no ratio to the plenum.” But as to the
-other case, the difference in weight and lightness, which
-has to be considered as being in bodies themselves, whereby
-one moves more quickly than another through the same
-space: “this distinction exists only in the plenum, for the
-heavy body, by reason of its power, divides the plenum
-more quickly.” This point of view is quite correct, and it
-is mainly directed against a number of conceptions that
-prevail in our physics. The conception of equal movement
-of the heavy and the light, as that of pure weight, pure
-matter, is an abstraction, being taken as though they were
-inherently like, only differing through the accidental
-resistance of the air.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle (Phys. IV. 9) now comes to the second point, to
-the proof of the vacuum because of the difference in specific
-gravity. “Many believe that the vacuum exists because of
-the rare and the dense;” the former is said to be a rare
-body, and the latter a perfect continuity; or they at least
-differ quantitatively from one another through greater or
-less density. “For if air should be generated from a
-quantity of water, a given quantity of water must produce
-a quantity of air the same in bulk, or there must necessarily
-be a vacuum; for it is only on the hypothesis of a vacuum
-that compression and rarefaction are explicable. Now if,
-as they say, the less dense were that which has many separate
-void spaces, it is evident that since a vacuum cannot be
-separated any more than a space can have intervals, neither
-can the rare subsist in this manner. But if it is not separable,
-and yet a vacuum is said to exist in the body, in the
-first place movement could thus only be upwards; for the
-rare is the light, and hence they say that fire is rare,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>”
-because it always moves upwards. “In the next place the
-vacuum cannot be the cause of motion as that in which
-something moves, but must resemble bladders that carry
-up that which adheres to them. But how is it possible that
-a vacuum can move, or that there can be a place where
-there is a vacuum? For that into which it is carried would
-be the vacuum of a vacuum. In short, as there can be no
-movement in vacuum, so also a vacuum cannot move.”
-Aristotle set against these ideas the true state of matters,
-and states generally the ideal conception of nature: “that
-the opposites, hot and cold, and the other physical contraries,
-have one and the same matter, and that from what
-is in capacity that which is in energy is produced; that
-matter is not separable though it is different in essence<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a>
-(τῷ εἶναι), and that it remains one and the same in number
-(ἀριθμῷ) even if it possesses colour, or is hot and cold. And
-again, the matter of a small body and a large is the same,
-because at one time a greater proceeds from a smaller, and
-at another time a smaller from a greater. If air is
-generated from water it is expanded, but the matter
-remains the same and without taking to itself anything else;
-for that which it was in capacity it becomes in actuality.
-In a similar way if air is compressed from a greater into a
-less volume, the process will be reversed, and air will
-similarly pass into water, because the matter which is in
-capacity both air and water, also becomes both.” Aristotle
-likewise asserts that increase and decrease of warmth, and
-its transition into cold, is no addition or otherwise of warm
-matter, and also one and the same is both dense and rare.
-This is very different from the physical conceptions which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>assert more or less matter to correspond with more or less
-density, thus comprehending the difference in specific weight
-as the external addition of matter. Aristotle, on the contrary,
-takes this dynamically, though certainly not in the sense
-in which dynamics are to-day understood, viz. as an increase
-of intensity or as a degree, for he accepts intensity in its
-truth as universal capacity. Undoubtedly the difference
-must also be taken as a difference in amount, but not as an
-increase and decrease, or as an alteration in the absolute
-quantity of the matter. For here intensity means force, but
-again not as being a thing of thought separated from matter,
-but as indicating that if anything has become more intensive,
-it has had its actuality diminished, having, however,
-according to Aristotle, attained to a greater capacity. If
-the intensity is again directed outwards, and compared
-with other things, it undoubtedly becomes degree, and
-therefore magnitude immediately enters in. It then is indifferent
-whether greater intension or greater extension is
-posited; more air is capable of being warmed to the same
-degree as less, through the greater intensity of the warmth;
-or the same air can thereby become intensively warmer.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the investigation of time, Aristotle remarks
-(Phys. IV. 10, 11, 13) that if time is externally (exoterically,
-ἐξωτερικῶς) regarded, we are inevitably led to doubt
-(διαπορῆσαι) whether it has any being whatever, or whether
-it has bare existence, as feeble (μόλις καὶ ἀμυδρῶς) as if it
-were only a potentiality. “For one part of it was and is
-not: another part will be and is not as yet; but of these
-parts infinite and everlasting (ἀεὶ λαμβανόμενος), time is
-composed. But it now appears that time, if composed of
-things that are not, may be incapable of existence. And
-also as regards everything divisible, if it exists, either some
-or all of its parts must be. Time is certainly divisible; but
-some of the parts are past, others are future, and no part
-is present. For the <i>now</i> is no part, since a part has a
-measure, and the whole must consist of the parts; but time<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-does not appear to consist of the Now.” That is to say,
-because the Now is indivisible, it has no quantitative determination
-which could be measured. “Besides it is not
-easy to decide whether the Now remains, or always becomes
-another and another. Again, time is not a movement and
-change, for movement and change occur in that which is
-moved and changed, or accompany time in its course;
-but time is everywhere alike. Besides change is swifter
-and slower, but time is not. But it is not without change
-and motion” (which is just the moment of pure negativity
-in the same) “for when we perceive no change, it appears
-as if no time had elapsed, as in sleep. Time is hence in
-motion but not motion itself.” Aristotle defines it thus:
-“We say that time is, when we perceive the before and
-after in movement; but these are so distinguished that we
-apprehend them to be another and another, and conceive
-that there is something between, as a middle. Now when
-we understand that the extremes of the conclusion are
-different from the middle, and the soul says that the Now
-has two instants, the one prior and the other posterior,
-then we say that this is time. What is determined through
-the Now, we call time, and this is the fundamental principle.
-But when we are sensible of the Now as one, and not as a
-prior and posterior in motion, nor as the identity of an earlier
-or later, then there does not appear to us to have been any
-time, because neither was there any motion.” Tedium is
-thus ever the same. “Time is hence the number of motion,
-according to priority and posteriority; it is not motion
-itself, unless so far as motion has number. We judge of
-the more or less through number, but of a greater or less
-motion by time. But we call number that which can be
-numbered, as well as that with which we number; but time
-is not the number with which we number, but that which
-is numbered, and, like motion, always is changing. The
-Now is, which is the unity of number, and it measures time.
-The whole of time is the same, for the Now which was is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-the same” (universality as the Now destroyed) “but in
-Being it is another. Time thus is through the Now both
-continuous (συνεχής) and discrete (διῇρηται). It thereby
-resembles the point, for that also is the continuity of the
-line and its division, its principle and limit; but the Now
-is not an enduring point. As continuity of time the Now
-connects the past and the future, but it likewise divides
-time in capacity,” the Now is only divisibility and the
-moments only ideal. “And in as far as it is such, it is
-always another; but, in as far as it unites, it is ever one
-and the same. Similarly, in as far as we divide the line,
-other and yet other points always arise for thought; but
-in as far as it is one, there is only one point. Thus the
-Now is both the division of time in capacity, and the limit
-and union of both” <i>i.e.</i> of the prior and posterior. The
-universally dividing point is only one as actual; but this
-actual is not permanently one, but ever and again another, so
-that individuality has universality, as its negativity, within
-it. “But division and union are the same, and similarly
-related; however their Notion (τὸ εἶναι)<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> is different.” In
-one and the same respect the absolute opposite of what was
-posited is immediately set forth as existent; in space, on
-the other hand, the moments are not set forth as existent,
-but in it first appears this being and its motion and contradiction.
-Thus the identity of the understanding is not
-a principle with Aristotle, for identity and non-identity to
-him are one and the same. Because the Now is only now,
-past and future are different from it, but they are likewise
-necessarily connected in the Now, which is not without
-before and after; thus they are in one, and the Now, as
-their limit, is both their union and their division.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-<p>Aristotle (Phys. V. 1) then goes on to movement as
-realized in a thing, to change (μεταβολή) or to the physical
-processes&mdash;while before we had pure movement. “In movement
-there is first something which moves, also something
-which is moved, and the time in which it is moved; besides
-these, that from which, and that into which it is moved.”
-(Cf. <i>supra</i>, p. 141.) “For all motion is from something and
-into something; but there is a difference between that
-which is first moved and that into which and from which it
-is moved, as, for instance, wood, warmth and cold. The
-motion is in the wood and not in the form; for neither form
-nor place, nor quantity moves or is moved, but” (in the
-order in which they follow) “there is that which is moved
-and that which moves, and that into which it is moved.
-That to which movement is made, more than that out of
-which movement is made, is named change. Hence to
-pass into non-being is also change, although what passes
-away is changed from Being: and generation is a mutation
-into Being, even though it is from non-being.” The remark
-is to be interpreted as meaning that for the first time in
-real becoming motion, <i>i.e.</i> in change, the relation <i>whereto</i>
-enters, while the relation <i>wherefrom</i> is that in which change
-is still the mere ideal motion. Besides this first form of difference
-between motion and change, Aristotle further gives
-another, since he divides change into three: “into change
-from a subject (ἐξ ὑποκειμένον) into a subject; or from a
-subject into a non-subject; or from a non-subject into a
-subject.” The fourth, “from a non-subject into a non-subject,”
-which may also appear in the general division,
-“is no mutation, for it contains no opposition.” It may
-certainly be merely thought or ideal, but Aristotle indicates
-the actual phenomenon. “The mutation from a non-subject
-into a subject is generation (γένεσις); that from a subject
-into a non-subject is corruption (φθορά); that from a
-subject into a subject, is motion as such;” because that
-which is transformed remains the same, there is no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-becoming-another of the actual, but a merely formal
-becoming-another. This opposition of the materialized
-motion as mutation, and of merely formal motion, is noteworthy.</p>
-
-<p>In the sixth book Aristotle comes to the consideration of
-the dialectic of this motion and change as advanced by
-Zeno, that is, to the endless divisibility which we have
-already (Vol. I. pp. 266-277) considered. Aristotle
-solves it through the universal. He says that they are the
-contradiction of the universal turned against itself; the
-unity in which its moments dissolve is not a nothing, so
-that motion and change are nothing, but a negative universal,
-where the negative is itself again posited as positive,
-and that is the essence of divisibility.</p>
-
-<p>Of the further details into which Aristotle enters, I shall
-only give the following. As against atoms and their motion,
-he remarks (Phys. VI. 10) that the indivisible has no motion
-and mutation, which is the direct opposite of the proposition
-of Zeno that only simple indivisible Being and no
-motion exists. For as Zeno argues from the indivisibility
-of atoms against motion, Aristotle argues from motion
-against atoms. “Everything which moves or changes is in
-the first division of this time partly here and partly there.
-The atom, as simple indivisible Being, can, however, not
-have any part of it in both points in space, because it
-then would be divisible. The indivisible could thus only
-move if time consisted of the Now; this is, however, impossible,
-as we proved before.” Because atoms thus neither
-have change in themselves, nor can this come to them from
-without through impulse, &amp;c., they are really without
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>The determination of the pure ideality of change is
-important. Aristotle says of this (Phys. VII. 3), “That
-which is changed is alone the sensuous and perceptible
-(αἰσθητόν); and forms and figures, as also capacities, are
-not changed, they arise and disappear in a thing only,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-without being themselves changed.” In other words: the
-content of change is unchangeable; change as such belongs
-to mere form. “Virtues or vices belong, for example,
-to habits acquired. Virtue is the perfection (τελείωσις) in
-which something has reached the end of its nature. Vice,
-however, is the corruption and non-attainment of this.
-They are not changes, for they only arise and pass away while
-another alters.” Or the difference becomes a difference of
-Being and non-being, <i>i.e.</i> a merely sensuous difference.</p>
-
-<p>From these conceptions Aristotle now comes nearer to the
-first real or physical motion (Phys. VIII. 6, 8, 9; De
-C\nlo, I. 4): The first principle of motion is itself unmoved.
-An endless motion in a straight line is an empty
-creation of thought; for motion is necessarily an effort after
-something. The absolute motion is the circular, because
-it is without opposition. For because movement has to be
-considered in regard to the starting-place and the end in
-view, in the straight movement the directions from A to B
-and from B to A are opposed, but in motion in a circle they
-are the same. The idea that heavenly bodies would of
-themselves have moved in a straight line, but that they
-accidentally came into the sphere of solar attraction, is an
-empty reflection which is far from occurring to Aristotle.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle then shows (De C\nlo, II. I; I. 3) that “the
-whole heavens neither arose nor can pass away, for they are
-one and eternal: they neither have beginning nor end in
-eternal time, for they contain infinite time shut up within
-them.” All the other ideas are sensuous which try to speak
-of essential reality, and in them there always is that present
-which they think they have excluded. For when they
-assert a vacuum before the beginning of generation, this is
-the quiescent, self-identical, <i>i.e.</i> the eternal matter, which is
-thus already established before origination; they will not
-allow that before origination nothing exists. But in fact a
-thing does not exist before its origination, <i>i.e.</i> in movement
-there is something to move, and where reality is, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-is motion. They do not, however, bring together that
-vacuum, the self-identical, the un-originated matter and this
-nothing. “That which has this absolute circular movement
-is neither heavy nor light; for the heavy is what moves
-downwards, and the light what moves upwards.” In modern
-physics the heavenly bodies, on the other hand, are
-endowed with weight, and seek to rush into the sun, but
-cannot do so on account of another force. “It is indestructible
-and ungenerated, without decrease or increase, without
-any change. It is different from earth, fire, air and water;
-it is what the ancients called ether, as the highest place,
-from its continuous course (ἀεὶ θεῖν) in infinite time.”
-This ether thus appears to be eternal matter which does not,
-however, take such a definite form, but which remains as it
-is, just as the heavens do in our conception, although here
-the juxtaposition begins ever to strike us more forcibly.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle (De C\nlo, III. 6) shows further that the
-elements do not proceed from one body, but from one
-another; for in generation they neither proceed from what is
-incorporeal, nor from what is corporeal. In the first case
-they would have sprung from the vacuum, for the vacuum
-is the immediate incorporeal; but in that case the vacuum
-must have existed independently as that in which determinate
-corporeality arose. But neither do the elements arise
-from a corporeal, for else this body itself would be a
-corporeal element before the elements. Thus it only remains
-that the elements must spring from one another. Regarding
-this we must remark that Aristotle understands by origination,
-actual origination&mdash;not the transition from the universal
-to the individual, but the origination of one determinate
-corporeal, not from its principle, but from the opposite as
-such. Aristotle does not consider the universal as it contains
-the negative within it; else the universal would be the
-absolute matter whose universality, as negativity, is set
-forth, or is real.</p>
-
-<p>From this point Aristotle comes (De C\nlo, IV. I-5) to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-a kind of deduction of the elements, which is noteworthy.
-He shows that there must be four of them, in the following
-way&mdash;because he starts from the fundamental conceptions
-of weight and of lightness, or what we should call attraction
-and centrifugal force. The corporeal, he says, in its motion
-is neither light nor heavy, and, indeed, it is not only relative
-but also absolute. The relatively light and heavy is what,
-while equal in volume, descends more slowly or quickly.
-Absolute lightness goes up to the extremity of the heavens,
-absolute weight down into the middle. These extremes
-are fire and earth. Between these there are mediums,
-other than they, which relate to one another like them;
-and these are air and water, the one of which has weight,
-and the other lightness, but only relatively. For water is
-suspended under everything except earth, and air over
-everything except fire. “Hence,” Aristotle concludes,
-“there now are these four matters, but they are four in such
-a way that they have one in common; more particularly,
-because they arise out of one another, but exist as different.”
-Yet it is not the ether that Aristotle designates as this
-common matter. We must in this regard remark that
-however little these first determinations may be exhaustive,
-Aristotle is still far further on than the moderns, since he
-had not the conception of elements which prevails at the
-present time, according to which the element is made
-to subsist as simple. But any such simple determination
-of Being is an abstraction and has no reality, because such
-existence would be capable of no motion and change; the
-element must itself have reality, and it thus is, as the union
-of opposites, resolvable. Aristotle hence makes the elements,
-as we have already seen with those who went before
-(Vol. I., pp. 181, 182; 290-293; 336), arise out of one
-another and pass into one another; and this is entirely
-opposed to our Physics, which understands by elements an
-indelible, self-identical simplicity only. Hence men are
-wonderfully discerning in reproaching us for calling water,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-air, &amp;c., elements! Nor yet in the expression “neutrality”
-have the modern physicists been able to grasp a universality
-conceived of as a unity, such as Aristotle ascribes to the
-elements; in fact, however, the acid which unites with
-a base is no longer, as is asserted, present within it as such.
-But however removed Aristotle may be from understanding
-simplicity as an abstraction, just as little does he recognize
-here the arid conception of consisting of parts. Quite the
-contrary. He strives enough against this, as, for instance,
-in relation to Anaxagoras (De C\nl. III. 4).</p>
-
-<p>I shall further mention the moments of the real process
-in relation to motion, in which Aristotle finally passes on
-(De gen. et corr. II. 2-4) to the “principles of perceptible
-body”; we here see the elements in process, as formerly in
-their restful determinateness. Aristotle excludes the relations
-which concern sight, smell, &amp;c., and brings forward
-the others as being those which are of sensible weight or
-lightness. He gives as these fundamental principles&mdash;warmth
-and cold, dryness and moisture; they are the
-sensible differences for others, while weight and lightness
-are different for themselves. Now in order to prepare for
-the transition of the elements into sensible relations, Aristotle
-says: “Because there are those four principles, and
-four things have properly six relations to one another, but
-the opposite cannot here be connected (the moist cannot be
-connected with the dry, or the warm with the cold), there
-are four connections of these principles, warm and dry,
-warm and moist, cold and moist, cold and dry. And these
-connections follow those first elements, so that thus fire is
-warm and dry, air warm and moist (vapour), water cold
-and moist, earth cold and dry.” From this Aristotle now
-makes the reciprocal transformation of the elements into
-one another comprehensible thus: Origination and decay
-proceed from the opposite and into the opposite. All elements
-have a mutual opposite; each is as non-being to the
-Being of the other, and one is thus distinguished from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-other as actuality and capacity. Now amongst these some
-have an equal part in common; fire and water, for example,
-have warmth; thus if in fire dryness were overcome by
-moisture, out of fire air would arise. On the contrary, as
-regards those which have nothing in common with one
-another, like earth, which is cold and dry, and air, which is
-warm and moist, the transition goes more slowly forward.
-The transition of all elements into one another, the whole
-process of nature, is thus to Aristotle the constant rotation
-of their changes. This is unsatisfactory, because neither
-are the individual elements comprehended nor is the
-remainder rounded into a whole.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, Aristotle now goes on, in meteorology,
-to the consideration of the universal process of nature.
-But here we have reached his limits. Here, in the natural
-process, the simple determination as such&mdash;this system of
-progressive determination&mdash;ceases to hold good, and its
-whole interest is lost. For it is in the real process that these
-determinate conceptions always lose their signification again
-and become their opposite, and in it also this contingent
-succession is forced together and united. In determining
-time and motion, we certainly saw Aristotle himself uniting
-opposite determinations; but movement, in its true determination,
-must take space and time back into itself; it
-must represent itself as being the unity of these its real
-moments and in them; that is, as the realization of this ideal.
-But still more must the following moments, moisture,
-warmth, &amp;c., themselves come back under the conception
-of process. But the sensuous manifestation here begins to
-obtain the upper hand; for the empirical has the nature of
-the isolated form, which is to fall out of relation. The
-empirical manifestation thus outstrips thought, which merely
-continues everywhere to stamp it as its own, but which has
-no longer power to permeate the manifestation, since it
-withdraws out of the sphere of the ideal, while it is still in
-the region of time, space and movement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="c180a" id="c180a">3. <span class="smcap">The Philosophy of Mind.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>As regards the other side from the Philosophy of Nature,
-the Philosophy of Mind, we find that Aristotle has constituted
-in it also a separation into special sciences, in a
-series of works which I shall name. In the first place, his
-three books “On the Soul” deal partly with the abstract
-universal nature of the soul, though mainly in an antagonistic
-spirit; and even more, and in a fashion both profound
-and speculative, they deal with the soul’s essential
-nature&mdash;not with its Being, but with the determinate
-manner and potentiality of its energy; for this is to
-Aristotle the Being and essence of the soul. Thus there
-are several different treatises, viz.: On Sense-perception
-and the Sensible, On Memory and Recollection, On Sleeping
-and Waking, On Dreams, On Divination (μαντική)
-through Dreams, besides a treatise on Physiognomy; there
-is no empirical point of view or phenomenon, either in the
-natural or the spiritual world, that Aristotle has considered
-beneath his notice. With respect to the practical side, he
-in like manner devotes his attention to man in his capacity
-of householder, in a work on economics (οἰκονομικά); then
-he takes into his consideration the individual human being,
-in a moral treatise (ἠθικά), which is partly an inquiry
-into the highest good or the absolute end, and partly a
-dissertation on special virtues. The manner of treatment
-is almost invariably speculative, and sound understanding
-is displayed throughout. Finally, in his Politics, he gives
-a representation of the true constitution of a state and the
-different kinds of constitution, which he deals with from the
-empirical point of view; and in his Politics an account is
-given of the most important states, of which we are, however,
-told very little.</p>
-
-<h4><a name="c180b" id="c180b">a. <span class="smcap">Psychology.</span></a></h4>
-
-<p>In Aristotle’s teaching on this subject we must not
-expect to find so-called metaphysics of the soul. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-metaphysical handling such as this really pre-supposes the
-soul as a thing, and asks, for example, what sort of a thing
-it is, whether it is simple, and so on. Aristotle did not
-busy his concrete, speculative mind with abstract questions
-such as these, but, as already remarked, he deals rather
-with the manner of the soul’s activity; and though this
-appears in a general way as a series of progressive determinations
-which are not necessarily blended into a whole,
-each determination is yet apprehended in its own sphere
-with as much correctness as depth.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle (De Anima, I. 1) makes in the first place the
-general remark that it appears as if the soul must, on the
-one hand, be regarded in its freedom as independent and as
-separable from the body, since in thinking it is independent;
-and, on the other hand, since in the emotions it appears to
-be united with the body and not separate, it must also be
-looked on as being inseparable from it; for the emotions
-show themselves as materialized Notions (λόγοι ἔνυλοι), as
-material modes of what is spiritual. With this a twofold
-method of considering the soul, also known to Aristotle,
-comes into play, namely the purely rational or logical view,
-on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the physical or
-physiological; these we still see practised side by side.
-According to the one view, anger, for instance, is looked
-on as an eager desire for retaliation or the like; according
-to the other view it is the surging upward of the heart-blood
-and the warm element in man. The former is the
-rational, the latter the material view of anger; just as one
-man may define a house as a shelter against wind, rain, and
-other destructive agencies, while another defines it as consisting
-of wood and stone; that is to say, the former gives
-the determination and the form, or the purpose of the thing,
-while the latter specifies the material it is made of, and its
-necessary conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle characterizes the nature of the soul more closely
-(De Anima, II. 1) by referring to the three moments of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-existence: “First there is matter (ὕλη), which is in itself
-no individual thing; secondly, the form and the universal
-(μορφὴ καὶ εἶδος), which give a thing individuality; thirdly,
-the result produced by both, in which matter is potentiality
-and form is energy (ἐντελέχεια);” matter thus does not exist
-as matter, but only implicitly. “The soul is substance, as
-being the form of the physical organic body which is
-possessed potentially of life; but its substance is energy
-(ἐντελέχεια), the energy of a body such as has been described”
-(endowed with life). “This energy appears in
-twofold form: either as knowledge (ἐπιστήμη) or as active
-observation (τὸ θεωρεῖν). But it is evident that here it is
-to be regarded as the former of these. For the soul is
-present with us both when we sleep and when we wake;
-waking corresponds with active observation, and sleep with
-possession and passivity. But knowledge is in origination
-prior to all else. The soul is thus the first energy of a
-physical but organic body.” It is in respect of this that
-Aristotle gives to the soul the definition of being the
-entelechy (<i>supra</i>, pp. 143, 144).</p>
-
-<p>In the same chapter Aristotle comes to the question
-of the mutual relation of body and soul. “For this
-reason” (because soul is form) “we must no more ask
-if soul and body are one than we ask if wax and its
-form are one, or, in general, if matter and its forms are
-one. For though unity and Being are used in various
-senses. Being is essentially energy.” Were we, namely,
-to pronounce body and soul one in the same way that
-a house, which consists of a number of parts, or as a
-thing and its properties, or the subject and predicate, and
-so on, are called one, where both are regarded as things,
-materialism results. An identity such as this is an altogether
-abstract, and therefore a superficial and empty
-determination, and a term which it is a mistake to employ,
-for form and material do not rank equally as regards Being;
-identity truly worthy of the name is to be apprehended as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-nothing else than energy such as has been described. The
-only question that now arises is whether activity and the
-organ it employs are one; and our idea is to answer in the
-affirmative. The more definite explanation of this relation
-is to be found in the following; “The soul is substance,
-but only according to the Notion (κατὰ τὸν λόγον); but
-that is the substantial form (τὸ τί ἦν εἶναι)<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> for such and
-such a body. For suppose that an instrument, such as
-an axe, were a natural body, this form, this axehood, would
-be its substance, and this its form would be its soul, for if
-this were to be taken away from it, it would no longer be
-an axe, the name only would remain. But soul is not the
-substantial form and Notion of such a body as an axe, but
-of a body which has within itself the principle of movement
-and of rest.” The axe has not the principle of its
-form in itself, it does not make itself an axe, nor does its
-form, its Notion, in itself constitute its substance, as its
-activity is not through itself. “If, for instance, the eye
-were in itself a living thing, vision would be its soul, for
-vision is the reality which expresses the Notion of the eye.
-But the eye, as such, is only the material instrument of
-vision, for if vision were lost, the eye would be an eye only
-in name, like an eye of stone or a painted eye.” Thus
-to the question, What is the substance of the eye?
-Aristotle answers: Are the nerves, humours, tissues, its
-substance? On the contrary, sight itself is its substance,
-these material substances are only an empty name. “As
-this is the case in the part, so it also holds good of the
-body as a whole. The potentiality of life is not in any
-such thing as has lost its soul, but in that which still
-possesses it. The seed or the fruit is such and such a body
-potentially. Like hewing and seeing,” in the axe and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>eye, “waking” in general “is activity; but the corporeal
-is only potentiality. But as the” living “eye is both
-vision and the eyeball” (the two being connected as
-actuality and potentiality), “so also are soul and body the
-living animal, the two are not to be separated. But it is
-not yet clear whether the soul is the activity of the body
-in the same way as the steersman is of the ship.” That
-the active form is the true substance, while matter is so only
-potentially, is a true speculative Notion.</p>
-
-<p>As settling the question asked in the above-mentioned
-metaphor, we may quote what Aristotle says later (De
-Anima, II. 4): “As the principle of motion and as end
-(οὗ ἕνεκα), and as substance of living bodies, the soul is the
-cause. For substance is to all objects the cause of their
-existence, but life is the existence of the living, and its
-cause and principle is the soul; and further, its energy is
-the existing Notion of what has potential existence. The
-soul is cause also as end,” that is, as self-determining
-universality, “for nature, like thought, acts for the sake of
-an object, which object is its end, but in living beings this
-is soul. All the parts of the body are thus the organs of
-the soul, and hence exist for its sake.” In like manner
-Aristotle shows that the soul is the cause of motion.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle (De Anima, II. 2, 3) further states that the
-soul is to be determined in three ways, namely as nutrient
-or vegetable, as sensitive, and as intelligent, corresponding
-with plant life, animal life and human life. The nutrient
-soul, when it is alone, belongs to plants; when it is at the
-same time capable of sense-perception, it is the animal soul;
-and when at once nutrient, sensitive and intelligent, it is
-the mind of man. Man has thus three natures united in
-himself; a thought which is also expressed in modern
-Natural Philosophy by saying that a man is also both an
-animal and a plant, and which is directed against the division
-and separation of the differences in these forms. That
-difference has also been revived in recent times in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-observation of the organic, and it is highly important to
-keep these sides separate. The only question (and it is
-Aristotle who raises it) is how far these, as parts, are
-separable. As to what concerns more nearly the relation
-of the three souls, as they may be termed (though they are
-incorrectly thus distinguished), Aristotle says of them, with
-perfect truth, that we need look for no one soul in which
-all these are found, and which in a definite and simple form
-is conformable with any one of them. This is a profound
-observation, by means of which truly speculative thought
-marks itself out from the thought which is merely logical
-and formal. Similarly among figures only the triangle and
-the other definite figures, like the square, the parallelogram,
-&amp;c., are truly anything; for what is common to them, the
-universal figure, is an empty thing of thought, a mere
-abstraction. On the other hand, the triangle is the first,
-the truly universal figure, which appears also in the square,
-&amp;c., as the figure which can be led back to the simplest
-determination. Therefore, on the one hand, the triangle
-stands alongside of the square, pentagon, &amp;c., as a particular
-figure, but&mdash;and this is Aristotle’s main contention&mdash;it
-is the truly universal figure. In the same way the
-soul must not be sought for as an abstraction, for in the
-animate being the nutritive and the sensitive soul are included
-in the intelligent, but only as its object or its
-potentiality; similarly, the nutritive soul, which constitutes
-the nature of plants, is also present in the sensitive soul,
-but likewise only as being implicit in it, or as the universal.
-Or the lower soul inheres only in the higher, as a predicate
-in a subject: and this mere ideal is not to be ranked very
-high, as is indeed the case in formal thought; that which
-is for itself is, on the contrary, the never-ceasing return
-into itself, to which actuality belongs. We can determine
-these expressions even more particularly. For if we speak
-of soul and body, we term the corporeal the objective and
-the soul the subjective; and the misfortune of nature is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-just this, that it is objective, that is, it is the Notion only
-implicitly, and not explicitly. In the natural there is, no
-doubt, a certain activity, but again this whole sphere is
-only the objective, the implicit element in one higher. As,
-moreover, the implicit in its sphere appears as a reality for
-the development of the Idea, it has two sides; the universal
-is already itself an actual, as, for example, the vegetative
-soul. Aristotle’s meaning is therefore this: an empty
-universal is that which does not itself exist, or is not itself
-species. All that is universal is in fact real, as particular,
-individual, existing for another. But that universal is real,
-in that by itself, without further change, it constitutes its
-first species, and when further developed it belongs, not to
-this, but to a higher stage. These are the general determinations
-which are of the greatest importance, and which,
-if developed, would lead to all true views of the organic,
-&amp;c., since they give a correct general representation of the
-principle of realization.</p>
-
-<p>α. The nutritive or vegetative soul is therefore, according
-to Aristotle (De Anima, II. 4), to be conceived as the first,
-which is energy, the general Notion of the soul itself, just
-as it is, without further determination; or, as we should
-say, plant life is the Notion of the organic. What Aristotle
-goes on to say of nourishment, for instance, whether the
-like is nourished by the like, or by the opposite, is of little
-importance. It may, however, be mentioned that Aristotle
-(De Anima, II. 12) says of the vegetative soul that it is
-related only to matter, and that only after a material
-manner, as when we eat and drink, but that it cannot
-take up into itself the forms of sensible things: we, too,
-ourselves in practical matters are related as particular individuals
-to a material existence here and now, in which
-our own material existence comes into activity.</p>
-
-<p>β. There is more to interest us in Aristotle’s determination
-of sense-perception (De Anima, II. 5), as to which
-I shall make some further quotations. Sense-perception<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-is in general a potentiality (we should say a receptivity),
-but this potentiality is also activity; it is therefore not
-to be conceived as mere passivity. Passivity and activity
-pertain to one and the same, or passivity has two senses.
-“On the one hand a passivity is the destruction of one
-state by its opposite; on the other hand, it is a preservation
-of what is merely potential by means of what is actual.”
-The one case occurs in the acquisition of knowledge, which
-is a passivity in so far as a change takes place from one
-condition (ἕξις) into an opposite condition; but there is
-another passivity, in which something only potentially
-posited is maintained, therefore knowledge is knowing in
-an active sense (<i>supra</i>, p. 182). From this Aristotle concludes:
-“There is one change which is privative; and
-another which acts on the nature and the permanent
-energy (ἕξις). The first change in the subject of perception
-(αἰσθητικοῦ) is caused by that which produces the
-perception; but, once produced, the perception is possessed
-as knowledge (επιστήμη).” Because that which produces
-the change is different from the result, perception is passivity;
-but it is just as much spontaneity, “and sense-perception,
-like knowledge (θεωρεῖν), has to do with this
-aspect of activity. But the difference is, that what causes
-the perception is external. The cause of this is that perceptive
-activity is directed on the particular, while knowledge
-has as its object the universal; but the universal is,
-to a certain extent, in the soul itself as its substance.
-Everyone can therefore think when he will,” and for this
-very reason thought is free, “but perception does not
-depend on him, having the necessary condition that the
-object perceived be present.” The influence from without,
-as a passivity, comes therefore first; but there follows the
-activity of making this passive content one’s own. This is
-doubtless the correct point from which to view perception,
-whatever be the manner of further development preferred,
-subjective idealism, or any other way. For it is a matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-of perfect indifference whether we find ourselves subjectively
-or objectively determined; in both there is contained the
-moment of passivity, by which the perception comes to
-pass. The monad of Leibnitz appears, it is true, to be an
-idea opposed to this, since every monad, every point of
-my finger, as atom or individual, is an entire universe, the
-whole of which develops in itself without reference to
-other monads. Here seems to be asserted the highest
-idealistic freedom, but it is of no avail to imagine that all
-in me develops out of me; for we must always recollect
-that what is thus developed in me is passive, and not free.
-With this moment of passivity Aristotle does not fall short
-of idealism; sensation is always in one aspect passive.
-That is, however, a false idealism which thinks that the
-passivity and spontaneity of the mind depend on whether
-the determination given is from within or from without,
-as if there were freedom in sense-perception, whereas it
-is itself a sphere of limitation. It is one thing when the
-matter&mdash;whether it be sensation, light, colour, seeing or
-hearing&mdash;is apprehended from the Idea, for it is then
-shown that it comes to pass from the self-determination of
-the Idea. But it is different when, in so far as I exist as
-an individual subject, the Idea exists in me as this particular
-individual; there we have the standpoint of finitude
-established, and therefore of passivity. Thus there need
-be no standing on ceremony with sense-perception, nor can
-a system of idealism be based on the theory that nothing
-comes to us from without: as Fichte’s theory about himself
-was, that when he put on his coat, he constituted it in
-part by drawing it on, or even by looking at it. The
-individual element in sensation is the sphere of the individuality
-of consciousness; it is present therein in the form
-of one thing as much as of another, and its individuality
-consists in this fact, that other things exist for it. Aristotle
-continues: “Speaking generally, the difference is that
-potentiality is twofold; as we say a boy may become a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-general, and a grown man may also become so,” for the
-latter has the effective power. “This is the nature of the
-faculty of sense-perception (αἰσθητικόν); it is in potentiality
-what the object of sense (αἰσθητόν) is in actuality. Sense-perception
-is therefore passive, in so far as it does not
-resemble its object, but after the impression has been
-made it becomes similar to its object, and is identified with
-it.” The reaction of sense-perception consists therefore in
-this active receiving into itself of that which is perceived;
-but this is simply activity in passivity, the spontaneity
-which abrogates the receptivity in sense-perception. Sense-perception,
-as made like to itself, has, while appearing to
-be brought to pass by means of an influence working on
-it, brought to pass the identity of itself and its object.
-If then subjective idealism declares that there are no
-external things, that they are but a determination of our
-self, this must be admitted in respect to pure sense-perception,
-since sense-perception is a subjective existence or
-state in me, which yet, however, is not for that reason
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p>In speaking of sense-perception, Aristotle (De Anima,
-II. 12) makes use of his celebrated simile, which has so
-often occasioned misapprehension, because it has been
-understood quite incorrectly. His words are: “Sense-perception
-is the receiving of sensible forms without matter,
-as wax receives only the impress of the golden signet ring,
-not the gold itself, but merely its form.” For the form is
-the object as universal; and theoretically we are in the
-position, not of the individual and sensuous, but of the
-universal. The case is different with us in our practical
-relations, where the influence working upon us pre-supposes
-in return the contact of the material, for which
-reason, as Aristotle asserts, plants do not perceive (<i>supra</i>,
-p. 186). On the other hand, in receiving form, the material
-is lost sight of; for the receiving of form indicates no
-positive relation to the matter, which is no longer something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-offering resistance. If, therefore, sense-perceptions
-are termed in general sensuous impressions, we, in matter-of-fact
-fashion, do not get beyond this crude way of putting
-it; and in making the transition to soul, we take
-refuge behind popular conceptions, which are partly ill-defined
-Notions, and partly not Notions at all. Thus it is
-said that all sense-perceptions are impressed on the soul by
-external things, just as the matter of the signet ring works
-on the matter of the wax; and then we hear it alleged that
-this is Aristotle’s philosophy. It is the same with most
-other philosophers; if they give any sort of illustration
-that appeals to the senses, everyone can understand it, and
-everyone takes the content of the comparison in its full extent:
-as if all that is contained in this sensuous relationship
-should also hold good of the spiritual. No great importance
-is therefore to be attached to this conception, as it is
-only an illustration, professing to show by a side comparison
-that the passive element in sense-perception is in its passivity
-for pure form only; this form alone is taken up into the
-percipient subject, and finds a place in the soul. It does not,
-however, remain in the same relation to it as that in which
-the form stands to the wax, nor is it as in chemistry where
-one element is permeated by another as regards its matter.
-The chief circumstance, therefore, and that which constitutes
-the difference between this illustration and the condition
-of the soul is altogether overlooked. That is to say,
-the wax does not, indeed, take in the form, for the impression
-remains on it as external figure and contour, without
-being a form of its real Being; if it were to become such,
-it would cease to be wax; therefore, because in the illustration
-there is lacking this reception of form into the Being,
-no thought is given to it. The soul, on the contrary, assimilates
-this form into its own substance, and for the
-very reason, that the soul is in itself, to a certain extent,
-the sum of all that is perceived by the senses (<i>infra</i>,
-p. 198): as it was said above (p. 183), if the axe had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-its form in the determination of substance, this form
-would be the soul of the axe. The illustration of the wax
-has reference to nothing but the fact that only the form
-comes to the soul; and has nothing to do with the form
-being external to the wax and remaining so, or with the
-soul having, like wax, no independent form. The soul is
-by no means said to be passive wax and to receive its
-determinations from without; but Aristotle, as we shall soon
-see (p. 194), really says that the spirit repels matter from
-itself, and maintains itself against it, having relation only
-to form. In sense-perception the soul is certainly passive,
-but the manner in which it receives is not like that of the
-wax, being just as truly activity of the soul; for after the
-perceptive faculty has received the impression, it abrogates
-the passivity, and remains thenceforth free from it (<i>supra</i>,
-p. 187). The soul therefore changes the form of the external
-body into its own, and is identical with an abstract
-quality such as this, for the sole reason that it itself is this
-universal form.</p>
-
-<p>This description of sense-perception Aristotle explains
-more fully in what follows (De Anima, III. 2), and expatiates
-upon this unity and its contrasts, in the course of
-which explanation there appear many clear and far-reaching
-glimpses into the Nature of consciousness. “The bodily
-organ of each sense-perception receives the object perceived
-without matter. Hence, when the object of sense is removed,
-the perceptions and the images which represent
-them remain in the organs. In the act of sense-perception
-the object perceived is no doubt identical with the subject
-that perceives, but they do not exist<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> as the same; for
-instance, sound and the hearing are the same when in active
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>exercise, but that which has hearing does not always hear,
-and that which has sound is not always sounding. When
-that which is the potentiality of hearing comes into exercise,
-and likewise that which is the potentiality of sound, hearing
-and sound, being in full activity, coincide,” they do not
-remain separate energies. “If then movement and action,
-as well as passivity, have a place in the object on which
-activity is exercised (ἐν τῷ ποιουμένῳ), it follows necessarily
-that the energy of hearing and sound is contained in that
-which potentially is hearing, for the energy of the active and
-moving is in the passive. As therefore activity and passivity
-are manifested in the subject which receives the effect, and
-not in the object which produces it (ποιοῦντι), the energy
-both of the object and of the faculty of sense-perception is
-in the faculty itself. For hearing and sounding there are
-two words, for seeing only one; seeing is the activity of
-the person who sees, but the activity of the colour is without
-name. Since the energy of that which is perceived and
-that which perceives is one energy, and the aspect they
-present is alone different, the so-called sounding and hearing
-must cease simultaneously.” There is a body which
-sounds and a subject which hears; they are twofold in the
-aspect they present, but hearing, taken by itself, is intrinsically
-an activity of both. In like manner, when I have by
-sense the perception of redness and hardness, my perception
-is itself red and hard: that is, I find myself determined in
-that way, even though reflection says that outside of me
-there is a red, hard thing, and that it and my finger are
-two; but they are also one, my eye is red and the thing.
-It is upon this difference and this identity that everything
-depends; and Aristotle demonstrates this in the most
-emphatic way, and holds firmly to his point. The later distinction
-of subjective and objective is the reflection of consciousness;
-sense-perception is simply the abrogation of this
-separation, it is that form of identity which abstracts from
-subjectivity and objectivity. What is simple, the soul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-proper or the I, is in sense-perception unity in difference.
-“Further, every sense-perception is in its organ, and distinguishes
-everything that is perceived, like black and white,
-and so on. It is thus not possible for separate perceptions,
-white and sweet, to be distinguished as separate indifferent
-moments, for both must be present (δῆλα) to one subject.
-This one subject must therefore determine one thing to be
-different from another. This, as distinguished, can also not be
-in a different place or time, for it must be undivided and in
-undivided time. But it is impossible that one and the same
-thing should be affected by contrary movements, in so far
-as it is undivided and in undivided time. If sweetness
-affects sense-perception in one way, and bitterness in the
-contrary way, and whiteness in yet another way, the power
-of judging is numerically not discrete nor divisible, but
-according to the Notion (τῷ εἶναι)<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> it is distinguished. That
-which is the same and indivisible thus possesses in potentiality
-opposite qualities; but with its true existence (τῷ
-εἶναι) that cannot be the case, for in its activity it is separable,
-and cannot at the same time be both white and black.
-Sense-perception and thinking are like that which some term
-a point, which, in so far as it is one, is inseparable, and
-in so far as it is two, is separable. So far as it is undivided,
-the judging faculty is one and acts in a single point
-of time, but so far as it is divided” (not one) “it employs the
-same sign twice simultaneously. So far as it employs two,
-it by limitation distinguishes two, and separates them as
-having separate origin; but so far as it is one, it judges by
-one act in one single point of time” (<i>supra</i>, p. 172). For as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>the point in time, which resembles the point in space,
-contains future and past, and thus is something different
-and at the same time one and the same, since it is in one
-and the same respect separation and union; sense-perception
-is also one and at the same time separation, separated
-and not separated, seeing that the faculty of perception has
-before it in one unity the distinct sense-perception, which by
-this means receives for the first time a determinate content.
-Another example is that of number; one and two are different,
-and, at the same time, even in two one is used and
-posited as one.</p>
-
-<p>γ. From sense-perception Aristotle passes on to thought,
-and becomes here really speculative. “Thinking,” he says
-(De Anima, III. 4) “is not passive (ἀπαθές), but receptive
-of the form, and is in potentiality similar to it. Therefore
-the understanding (νοῦς), because it thinks all things, is
-free from all admixture (ἀμιγής), in order that it may overcome
-(κρατῇ), as Anaxagoras says, that is, in order that it
-may acquire knowledge; for, coming forth in its energy
-(παρεμφαινόμενον), it holds back what is alien to it, and
-fortifies itself against it (ἀντιφράττει). Therefore the nature
-of the understanding is none other than this potentiality.”
-But potentiality itself is here not matter; that is to say,
-the understanding has no matter, for potentiality pertains to
-its very substance. For thinking is really the not being
-implicit; and on account of its purity its reality is not the
-being-for-another, but its potentiality is itself a being-for-self.
-A thing is real because it is this determinate thing;
-the opposite determination, its potentiality to be, for instance,
-smoke, ashes, and so on, is not posited in it. In
-the corporeal, therefore, matter, as potentiality, and external
-form, as reality, are opposed to one another; but the soul
-is, in contrast with this, universal potentiality itself, without
-matter, because its essence is energy. “Understanding,
-then, in the soul, as that which possesses consciousness, is
-nothing in reality before it thinks;” it is absolute activity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-but exists only when it is active. “It is therefore not
-incorporated with the body. For what should it be like,
-warm or cold? Or should it be an organ? But it is none
-of these. That it is, however, different from the faculty of
-sense-perception is clear. For sense-perception cannot
-perceive after a violent perception; for instance, it cannot
-smell nor see after experiencing strong smells or colours.
-But the understanding, after it has thought something
-which can only be thought with difficulty, will not have
-more but less difficulty in thinking of something that is
-easier. For there is no sense-perception independent of
-the body, but the understanding is separable from it.
-When it has then become something individual, like him
-who is really possessed of a faculty of knowing (and this
-happens when he can energize through himself), it then is
-also in a certain degree according to potentiality, but yet
-not so in the same manner as it was before learning and
-finding.” (<i>Cf.</i> <i>supra</i>, pp. 182, 187.)</p>
-
-<p>Thinking makes itself into passive understanding, that is,
-into what is for it the objective; and thus it here becomes
-plain to what extent the dictum <i>nihil est in intellectu quod
-non fuerit in sensu</i> expresses Aristotle’s meaning. Aristotle,
-raising difficulties, goes on to ask, “If reason is
-simple and unaffected by impressions, and has nothing in
-common with other objects, how can it think, since thinking
-is certainly a state of receptivity?” That is to say, in
-thinking there is a reference to an object distinct from
-itself. “For it is when two objects have something in
-common that the one appears to produce and the other to
-receive an impression. There is a further difficulty,
-whether understanding can itself be the object of thought.
-In that case understanding would either be inherent in
-other things&mdash;unless it is the object of thought in a different
-sense from that in which other things are so, but
-there is only one sense in which things can be objects of
-thought&mdash;or, on the other hand, it would have something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-compounded with it, making it an object of thought as
-other things are. Now it has been already said that
-passivity is so determined that understanding is in potentiality
-all that thought is exercised on: but at the same time
-it is in actuality nothing before the exercise of thought.”
-That is to say, thought is implicitly the content of the
-object of what is thought, and in coming into existence it
-only coincides with itself; but the self-conscious understanding
-is not merely implicit, but essentially explicit,
-since it is within itself all things. That is an idealistic way
-of expressing it; and yet they say that Aristotle is an
-empiricist.</p>
-
-<p>The passivity of understanding has therefore here only
-the sense of potentiality before actuality, and that is the
-great principle of Aristotle; in regard to this he brings
-forward at the end of the same chapter another much-decried
-illustration, which has been just as much misunderstood
-as the preceding. “Reason is like a book upon
-whose pages nothing is actually written;” that is, however,
-paper, but not a book. All Aristotle’s thoughts are
-overlooked, and only external illustrations such as this are
-comprehended. A book on which nothing is written everyone
-can understand. And the technical term is the well-known
-<i>tabula rasa</i>, which is to be found wherever
-Aristotle is spoken of: Aristotle is said to have alleged
-that the mind is a blank page, on which characters are first
-traced by external objects, so that thinking thus comes to
-it from without.<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> But that is the very opposite of what
-Aristotle says. Instead of the Notion being adhered to,
-casual comparisons such as these have been caught up here
-and there by the imagination, as if they expressed the
-matter itself. But Aristotle did not in the least intend
-that the analogy should be pushed to its furthest extent:
-the understanding is of a surety not a thing, and has not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-the passivity of a writing-tablet; it is itself the energy,
-which is not, as it would be in the case of a tablet, external
-to it. The analogy is therefore confined to this, that the
-soul has a content only in so far as actual thought is
-exercised. The soul is this book unwritten on, and the
-meaning consequently is that the soul is all things
-implicitly, but it is not in itself this totality; it is like a
-book that contains all things potentially, but in reality
-contains nothing before it is written on. Before real
-activity nothing truly exists; or “Understanding itself can
-enter thought, like the objects of thought in general. For
-in that which is without matter” (in mind), “the thinker”
-(the subjective) “and the thought” (the objective) “are
-the same; theoretical knowledge and that which comes
-to be known are the same. In that which is material,
-thinking is only in potentiality, so that understanding itself
-does not belong to it; for understanding is a potentiality
-without matter, but the object of thought exists in it,”
-while Nature contains the Idea only implicitly. It is plain
-from this that the above illustration has been taken in
-quite a false sense, utterly contrary to Aristotle’s meaning.</p>
-
-<p>Until now we have spoken of the passive understanding,
-which is the nature of the soul, but also in equal degree
-its faculty of sense-perception and imagination. Aristotle
-now proceeds to distinguish active understanding from this,
-as follows (De Anima, III. 5): “In nature as a whole there
-is present in every species of things, on the one hand,
-matter, which in potentiality is the whole of this species,
-and, on the other hand, cause and energy, operative in all
-things, in the same way that art is related to matter. It
-therefore necessarily follows that in the soul also these
-different elements should be present. The faculty of
-understanding is thus, in one view of it, the capacity of
-becoming all things; but in another view it is the capacity
-of creating all things, as is done by an efficient power (ἕξις),
-light, for instance, which first causes the colours which exist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-in potentiality to exist in reality. This understanding is
-absolute (χωριστός), uncompounded, and not influenced
-from without, as it is essentially activity. For the active
-is always more in honour than the passive, and the principle
-more in honour than the matter that it forms. Knowledge,
-when in active exercise, is identical with the thing (πρᾶγμα)
-known; but what is in potentiality” (that is, external
-reason, imagination, sense-perception) “is certainly prior in
-respect of time in one and the same individual, but in the
-universal (ὅλως) it is not even so in respect of time.
-Active understanding is not such that it sometimes thinks
-and sometimes does not. When it is absolute, it is the one
-and only existence; and this alone is eternal and immortal.
-We, however, do not remember this process, because this
-understanding is unaffected from without; but the passive
-understanding is transitory, and without the former it is
-incapable of thought.”</p>
-
-<p>The seventh and eighth chapters are expositions of the
-maxims contained in the fourth and fifth; they begin
-with these maxims, and have the appearance of being from
-the hand of a commentator. “The soul,” says Aristotle
-(De Anima, III. 8), “is in a certain sense the whole of
-existence. For existent objects are either perceived by
-the senses or thought; but knowledge itself is in a manner
-the object of knowledge, and perception the object of perception.
-What are known and perceived are either the
-things themselves or their forms. Knowledge and sense-perception
-are not the things themselves (the stone is not
-in the soul), but their form; so that the soul is like the
-hand. As this is the instrument by which we grasp instruments,
-so the understanding is the form by which we apprehend
-forms, and sense-perception the form of the objects cf
-sense.” Before this Aristotle had remarked (De Anima,
-III. 4): “It has been truly said that the soul is the <i>place
-of ideas</i> (τόπος εἰδῶν): not the whole soul, but only the
-thinking soul, and these ideas do not exist in the soul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-actually, but only potentially.” That is to say, the ideas
-are at first only quiescent forms, not activities, and so
-Aristotle is not a realist. But the understanding makes
-these forms, like those of external nature, its objects, its
-thoughts, its potentiality, Aristotle therefore says in the
-seventh chapter: “The understanding thinks the abstract
-(τὰ ἐν ἀφαιρέσει λεγόμενα), just as it conceives snubnosedness
-not as snubnosedness that cannot be separated from
-the flesh, but as hollowness.” Then in the eighth chapter
-Aristotle goes on to say: “But as no object is separated
-from its perceived dimensions, so in the forms perceived by
-sense there are also objects of thought, both abstract conceptions
-and the qualities (ἕξεις) and determinations of the
-objects of sense. In this way he who perceives nothing
-by his senses learns nothing and understands nothing;
-when he discerns anything (θεωρῇ), he must necessarily
-discern it as a pictorial conception, for such conceptions
-are like sense-perceptions, only without matter. In what
-way then are our primary ideas distinguished, so as not to
-be mistaken for conceptions? Or is it not the case also
-that other thoughts even are not pictorial conceptions, but
-only that they are never found unassociated with such
-conceptions?” Since what follows contains no answer to
-the questions raised here at the very end, this would seem
-an additional indication that these portions follow later.<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
-Aristotle concludes the seventh chapter with the words:
-“Speaking generally, the understanding is the faculty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>which thinks things in their real activity. Whether, however,
-it can think the absolute or not, unless it be itself
-separated from the sensuous, we shall inquire later (ὕστερον).”
-This “later” Buhle considers to have reference to the
-“highest philosophy.”<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a></p>
-
-<p>This identity of the subjective and objective, which
-is present in the active understanding&mdash;while finite
-things and mental states are respectively one separated
-from the other, because there the understanding is
-only in potentiality&mdash;is the highest point which speculation
-can reach: and in it Aristotle reverts to his metaphysical
-principles (p. 147), where he termed self-thinking
-reason absolute Thought, divine Understanding, or Mind
-in its absolute character. It is only in appearance that
-thought is spoken of as on a level with what is other than
-thought; this fashion of bringing what is different into
-conjunction certainly appears in Aristotle. But what he
-says of thought is explicitly and absolutely speculative,
-and is not on the same level with anything else, such as
-sense-perception, which has only potentiality for thought.
-This fact is moreover involved, that reason is implicitly the
-true totality, but in that case thought is in truth the
-activity which is independent and absolute existence; that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>is, the thought of Thought, which is determined thus
-abstractly, but which constitutes the nature of absolute
-mind explicitly. These are the main points which are to
-be taken note of in Aristotle with regard to his speculative
-ideas, which it is impossible for us, however, to treat in
-greater detail.</p>
-
-<p>We have now to pass on to what follows, which is a
-practical philosophy, and in doing so we must first establish
-firmly the conception of desire, which is really the turning
-round of thought into its negative side, wherein it becomes
-practical. Aristotle (De Anima, III. 7 and 6) says: “The
-object of knowledge and active knowledge are one and the
-same; what is in potentiality is in the individual prior in
-point of time, although not so in itself. For all that comes
-into being originates from that which operates actively.
-The object perceived by sense appears as that which causes
-the faculty of perception in potentiality to become the
-faculty of perception in actuality, for the latter is not
-receptive of influence, and does not undergo change. On
-that account it has a different kind of movement from the
-ordinary, for movement, as we have seen (p. 163) is the
-activity of an unaccomplished end (ἐνέργεια ἀτελοῦς); pure
-activity (ἁπλῶς ἐνέργεια), on the contrary, is that of the
-accomplished end (τοῦ τετελεσμένον).”&mdash;“The simple
-thoughts of the soul are such that in regard to them there
-can be no falsity; but that in which there is falsity or
-truth is a combination of thoughts as constituting one conception;
-for example, ‘the diameter is incommensurate.’
-Or if by mistake white has been stated to be not white,
-not-white has been brought into connection with it. All
-this process may, however, just as well be termed separation.
-But that which makes everything one is reason,
-which in the form of its thinking thinks the undivided in
-undivided time and with the undivided action of the
-soul.”&mdash;“Sense-perception resembles simple assertion and
-thought, but pleasant or unpleasant sense-perception has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-the relation of affirmation or negation,” therefore of the
-positive and negative determination of thought. “And to
-perceive the pleasant or unpleasant is to employ the
-activity” (spontaneity) “of the middle state of sense-perception
-upon good or evil, in so far as they are such.
-But desire and aversion are the same in energy; it is only
-in manifestation that they are different. To the reasoning
-soul pictorial conceptions take the place of sense-perceptions,
-and when the mind affirms or denies something
-to be good or bad, it desires or avoids its object. It has
-the relation both of unity and limit. The understanding,”
-as that which determines opposites, “recognizes the forms
-underlying pictorial conceptions; and in the same manner
-as what is desirable in them and what is to be avoided
-have been determined for it, so it also is determined independently
-of actual sense-perceptions when it is in
-mental conceptions. And when, in dealing with conception
-or thought, as if seeing them, it compares the
-future with the present and passes judgment accordingly,
-and determines what is pleasant or unpleasant in this
-respect; it desires or seeks to avoid it, and in general it
-finds itself in practical operation. But independently of
-action true and false are of the same character as good or
-evil.”</p>
-
-<h4><a name="c202a" id="c202a">b. <span class="smcap">Practical Philosophy.</span></a></h4>
-
-<p>From this the conception of will, or the practical element
-is shown to us, and it has to be reckoned as still
-belonging to the Philosophy of Mind. Aristotle has
-treated it in several works which we now possess.</p>
-
-
-<h5><a name="c202b" id="c202b">α. <span class="smcap">Ethics.</span></a></h5>
-
-<p>We have three great ethical works: the Nicomachean
-Ethics (Ἠθικὰ Νικομάχεια) in ten books, the Magna
-Moralia (Ἠθικὰ μεγάλα) in two books, and the Eudemean<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-Ethics (Ἠθικὰ Εὐδήμια) in seven books; the last deals for
-the most part with particular virtues, while in the first two
-general investigations on the principles are contained. Just as
-the best that we even now possess in reference to psychology
-is what we have obtained from Aristotle, so is it with his
-reflections on the actual agent in volition, on freedom, and
-the further determinations of imputation, intention, &amp;c. We
-must simply give ourselves the trouble to understand these,
-and to translate them into our own form of speech, conception
-and thought; and this is certainly difficult. Aristotle
-follows the same course here as in his Physics, determining
-one after the other, in the most thorough and accurate
-fashion, the many moments which appear in desire: the
-purpose, the decision, voluntary or forced action, the act
-of ignorance, guilt, moral responsibility, &amp;c. I cannot enter
-upon this somewhat psychological presentation of the subject.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a>
-I shall only make the following remarks on the
-Aristotelian definitions.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> defines the principle of morality or the highest
-good, as happiness (εὐδαιμονία), which later on became a
-much disputed expression. It is good generally, not as
-abstract idea, but in such a way that the moment of realization
-is what actually answers to it. Aristotle thus does not
-content himself with the Platonic idea of the good, because
-it is only general; with him the question is taken in its
-determinateness. Aristotle then says that the good is what
-has its end in itself (τέλειον). If we tried to translate
-τέλειον by “perfect” here, we should translate it badly;
-it is that which, as having its end (τὸ τέλος) in itself, is not
-desired for the sake of anything else, but for its own sake
-(<i>supra</i>, pp. 162, 201). Aristotle determines happiness in this
-regard as the absolute end existing in and for itself, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-gives the following definition of it: It is “the energy of
-the life that has its end in itself in accordance with absolute
-virtue (ζωῆς τελείας ἐνέργεια κατ̓ ἀρετὴν).” He makes
-rational insight an essential condition; all action arising
-from sensuous desires, or from lack of freedom generally, indicates
-lack of insight; it is an irrational action, or an action
-which does not proceed from thought as such. But the
-absolute rational activity is alone knowledge, the action
-which in itself satisfies itself, and this is hence divine happiness;
-with the other virtues, on the contrary, only human
-happiness is obtained, just as from a theoretic point of view
-feeling is finite as compared with divine thought. Aristotle
-goes on to say much that is good and beautiful about
-virtue and the good and happiness in general, and states
-that happiness, as the good attainable by us, is not to be
-found without virtue, &amp;c.; in all of which there is no
-profound insight from a speculative point of view.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the conception of virtue I should like to
-say something more. From a practical point of view,
-Aristotle<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> first of all distinguishes in soul a rational and an
-irrational side; in the latter reason only exists potentially;
-under it come the feelings, passions and affections. On
-the rational side understanding, wisdom, discretion, knowledge,
-have their place; but they still do not constitute
-virtue, which first subsists in the unity of the rational and
-the irrational sides. When the inclinations are so related
-to virtue that they carry out its dictates, this, according to
-Aristotle, is virtue. When the perception is either bad or
-altogether lacking, but the heart is good, goodwill may
-be there, but not virtue, because the principle&mdash;that is
-reason&mdash;which is essential to virtue, is wanting. Aristotle
-thus places virtue in knowledge, yet reason is not, as many
-believe, the principle of virtue purely in itself, for it is rather
-the rational impulse towards what is good; both desire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-and reason are thus necessary moments in virtue. Hence
-it cannot be said of virtue that it is misemployed, for it itself
-is the employer. Thus Aristotle, as we have already seen
-(Vol. I. pp. 412-414), blames Socrates, because he places
-virtue in perception alone. There must be an irrational
-impulse towards what is good, but reason comes in addition
-as that which judges and determines the impulse; yet when
-a beginning from virtue has been made, it does not
-necessarily follow that the passions are in accordance, since
-often enough they are quite the reverse. Thus in virtue,
-because it has realization as its aim, and pertains to the
-individual, reason is not the solitary principle; for inclination
-is the force that impels, the particular, which as far as
-the practical side of the individual subject is concerned,
-is what makes for realization. But then the subject must,
-in this separation of his activity, bring likewise his passions
-under the subjection of the universal, and this unity, in
-which the rational is pre-eminent, is virtue. This is the
-correct determination; on the one hand this definition is
-opposed to these ideals of the utter subjection of the
-passions, by which men are guided from their youth up, and,
-on the other, it is opposed to the point of view that declares
-desires to be good in themselves. Both these extreme
-views have been frequent in modern times, just as sometimes
-we hear that the man who by nature is beauteous and
-noble, is better than he who acts from duty; and then it
-is said that duty must be performed as duty, without
-taking into account the particular point of view as a moment
-of the whole.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle then passes through the particular virtues at
-great length. Because the virtues, considered as the union
-of the desiring or realizing with the rational, have an
-illogical moment within them, Aristotle places<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> their principle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-on the side of feeling in a mean, so that virtue is
-the mean between two extremes; <i>e.g.</i> liberality is the mean
-between avarice and prodigality; gentleness between passion
-and passive endurance; bravery between rashness and
-cowardice; friendship between egotism and self-effacement,
-&amp;c. For the good, and specially that good which has to do
-with the senses, which would suffer if affected to an excessive
-degree (<i>supra</i>, p. 195), is therefore a mean, just because
-the sensuous is an ingredient in it. This does not appear
-to be a sufficient definition, and it is merely a quantitative
-determination, just because it is not only the Notion that
-determines, but the empirical side is also present. Virtue
-is not absolutely determined in itself, but likewise has a
-material element, the nature of which is capable of a more
-or a less. Thus if it has been objected to Aristotle’s definition
-of virtue as a difference in degree, that it is unsatisfactory
-and vague, we may say that this really is involved
-in the nature of the thing. Virtue, and determinate virtue
-in its entirety, enters into a sphere where that which is
-quantitative has a place; thought here is no more as such at
-home with itself, and the quantitative limit undetermined.
-The nature of particular virtues is of such a kind, that they
-are capable of no more exact determination; they can only
-be spoken of in general, and for them there is no further
-determination than just this indefinite one.<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> But in our
-way of looking at things, duty is something absolutely existent
-in itself, and not a mean between existent extremes
-through which it is determined; but this universal
-likewise results in being empty, or rather undetermined,
-while that determinate content is a moment of being that
-immediately involves us in conflicting duties. It is in practice
-that man seeks a necessity in man as individual, and
-endeavours to express it; but it is either formal, or as in
-particular virtues, a definite content, which, in so being,
-falls a prey to empiricism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-<h5><a name="c207" id="c207">β. <span class="smcap">Politics.</span></a></h5>
-
-<p>We have still to speak of Aristotle’s Politics; he was
-conscious more or less that the positive substance, the
-necessary organization and realization of practical spirit,
-is the state, which is actualized through subjective activity,
-so that this last finds in it its determination and end.
-Aristotle hence also looks on political philosophy as the
-sum total of practical philosophy, the end of the state as
-general happiness. “All science and all capacity (δύναμις),”
-he says (Magn. Mor. I. 1), “have an end, and this is the
-good: the more excellent they are, the more excellent is
-their end; but the most excellent capacity is the political,
-and hence its end is also the good.” Of Ethics Aristotle
-recognizes that it indubitably also applies to the individual,
-though its perfection is attained in the nation as a whole.
-“Even if the highest good is the same for an individual and
-for a whole state, it would yet surely be greater and more
-glorious to win and maintain it for a state; to do this for
-an individual were meritorious, but to do it for a nation
-and for whole states were more noble and godlike still.
-Such is the object of practical science, and this pertains in
-a measure to politics.”<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a></p>
-
-<p>Aristotle indeed appreciates so highly the state, that he
-starts at once (Polit. I. 2) by defining man as “a political
-animal, having reason. Hence he alone has a knowledge
-of good and evil, of justice and injustice, and not the beast,”
-for the beast does not think, and yet in modern times men
-rest the distinction which exists in these determinations on
-sensation, which beasts have equally with men. There is
-also the sense of good and evil, &amp;c., and Aristotle knows
-this aspect as well (<i>supra</i>, p. 202); but that through which
-it is not animal sensation merely, is thought. Hence
-rational perception is also to Aristotle the essential condition
-of virtue, and thus the harmony between the sensational<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-point of view and that of reason is an essential moment in
-his eudæmonism. After Aristotle so determines man, he
-says: “The common intercourse of these, forms the family
-and the state; in the understanding, however, that the state,
-in the order of nature” (<i>i.e.</i> in its Notion, in regard to
-reason and truth, not to time) “is prior to the family”
-(the natural relation, not the rational) “and to the individual
-among us.” Aristotle does not place the individual
-and his rights first, but recognizes the state as what in its
-essence is higher than the individual and the family, for the
-very reason that it constitutes their substantiality. “For
-the whole must be prior to its parts. If, for example, you
-take away the whole body, there is not a foot or hand
-remaining, excepting in name, and as if anyone should call
-a hand of stone a hand; for a hand destroyed is like a
-hand of stone.” If the man is dead, all the parts perish.
-“For everything is defined according to its energy and
-inherent powers, so that when these no longer remain such
-as they were, it cannot be said that anything is the same
-excepting in name. The state is likewise the essence of
-the individuals; the individual when separate from the
-whole, is just as little complete in himself as any other
-organic part separated from the whole.” This is directly
-antagonistic to the modern principle in which the particular
-will of the individual, as absolute, is made the starting-point;
-so that all men by giving their votes, decide
-what is to be the law, and thereby a commonweal is
-brought into existence. But with Aristotle, as with Plato,
-the state is the <i>prius</i>, the substantial, the chief, for its end
-is the highest in respect of the practical. “But whoever
-was incapable of this society, or so complete in himself as
-not to want it, would be either a beast or a god.”</p>
-
-<p>From these few remarks it is clear that Aristotle could
-not have had any thought of a so-called natural right (if a
-natural right be wanted), that is, the idea of the abstract
-man outside of any actual relation to others. For the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-rest, his Politics contain points of view even now full of
-instruction for us, respecting the inward elements of a
-state,<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> and a description of the various constitutions;<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> the
-latter, however, has no longer the same interest, on account
-of the different principle at the base of ancient and modern
-states. No land was so rich as Greece, alike in the number
-of its constitutions, and in the frequent changes from one
-to another of these in a single state; but the Greeks were
-still unacquainted with the abstract right of our modern
-states, that isolates the individual, allows of his acting as
-such, and yet, as an invisible spirit, holds all its parts
-together. This is done in such a way, however, that in no
-one is there properly speaking either the consciousness of,
-or the activity for the whole; but because the individual
-is really held to be a person, and all his concern is the
-protection of his individuality, he works for the whole
-without knowing how. It is a divided activity in which
-each has only his part, just as in a factory no one makes a
-whole, but only a part, and does not possess skill in other
-departments, because only a few are employed in fitting
-the different parts together. It is free nations alone that
-have the consciousness of and activity for the whole; in
-modern times the individual is only free for himself as
-such, and enjoys citizen freedom alone&mdash;in the sense of
-that of a <i>bourgeois</i> and not of a <i>citoyen</i>. We do not possess
-two separate words to mark this distinction. The freedom
-of citizens in this signification is the dispensing with
-universality, the principle of isolation; but it is a necessary
-moment unknown to ancient states. It is the perfect
-independence of the points, and therefore the greater
-independence of the whole, which constitutes the higher
-organic life. After the state received this principle into
-itself, the higher freedom could come forth. These other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-states are sports and products of nature which depend
-upon chance and upon the caprice of the individual, but
-now, for the first time, the inward subsistence and indestructible
-universality, which is real and consolidated in
-its parts, is rendered possible.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle for the rest has not tried like Plato to describe
-such a state, but in respect of the constitution he merely points
-out that the best must rule. But this always takes place,
-let men do as they will, and hence he has not so very much
-to do with determining the forms of the constitution. By
-way of proving that the best must rule, Aristotle says this:
-“The best would suffer injustice if rated on an equality
-with the others inferior to them in virtue and political
-abilities, for a notable man is like a god amongst men.”
-Here Alexander is no doubt in Aristotle’s mind, as one who
-must rule as though he were a god, and over whom no one, and
-not even law, could maintain its supremacy. “For him there
-is no law, for he himself is law. Such a man could perhaps
-be turned out of the state, but not subjected to control
-any more than Jupiter. Nothing remains but, what is
-natural to all, quietly to submit to such an one, and to let
-men like this be absolutely and perpetually (ἀΐδιοι) kings
-in the states”<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> The Greek Democracy had then entirely
-fallen into decay, so that Aristotle could no longer ascribe
-to it any merit.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c210" id="c210">4. <span class="smcap">The Logic.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>On the other side of the Philosophy of Mind, we have
-still Aristotle’s science of abstract thought, a Logic, to consider.
-For hundreds and thousands of years it was just as
-much honoured as it is despised now. Aristotle has been
-regarded as the originator of Logic: his logical works are the
-source of, and authority for the logical treatises of all times;
-which last were, in great measure, only special developments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-or deductions, and must have been dull, insipid, imperfect,
-and purely formal. And even in quite recent
-times, Kant has said that since the age of Aristotle, logic&mdash;like
-pure geometry since Euclid’s day&mdash;has been a complete
-and perfect science which has kept its place even down to
-the present day, without attaining to any further scientific
-improvements or alteration. Although logic is here mentioned
-for the first time, and in the whole of the history of
-Philosophy that is to come no other can be mentioned (for
-no other has existed, unless we count the negation of
-Scepticism), we cannot here speak more precisely of its
-content, but merely find room for its general characterization.
-The forms he gives to us come from Aristotle
-both in reference to the Notion and to the judgment and
-conclusion. As in natural history, animals, such as the
-unicorn, mammoth, beetle, mollusc, &amp;c., are considered, and
-their nature described, so Aristotle is, so to speak, the describer
-of the nature of these spiritual forms of thought;
-but in this inference of the one from the other, Aristotle
-has only presented thought as defined in its finite application
-and aspect, and his logic is thus a natural history of
-finite thought. Because it is a knowledge and consciousness
-of the abstract activity of pure understanding, it is not
-a knowledge of this and that concrete fact, being pure form.
-This knowledge is in fact marvellous, and even more
-marvellous is the manner in which it is constituted: this
-logic is hence a work which does the greatest honour to the
-deep thought of its discoverer and to the power of his abstraction.
-For the greatest cohesive power in thought is found
-in separating it from what is material and thus securing it;
-and the strength shows itself almost more, if thus secured
-when it, amalgamated with matter, turns about in manifold
-ways and is seen to be capable of numberless alterations
-and applications. Aristotle also considers, in fact, not
-only the movement of thought, but likewise of thought in
-ordinary conception. The Logic of Aristotle is contained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-in five books, which are collected together under the name
-Ὀργανον.</p>
-
-<p><i>a.</i> The Categories (κατηγορίαι), of which the first work
-treats, are the universal determinations, that which is predicated
-of existent things (κατηγορεῖται): as well that
-which we call conceptions of the understanding, as the
-simple realities of things. This may be called an ontology,
-as pertaining to metaphysics; hence these determinations
-also appear in Aristotle’s Metaphysics. Aristotle (Categor.
-I.) now says: “Things are termed homonyms (ὁμώνυμα)
-of which the name alone is common, but which have a different
-substantial definition (λόγος τῆς οὐσίας); thus a horse
-and the picture of a horse are both called an animal.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Notion (λόγος) is opposed to the homonym;
-and since Aristotle deduces herefrom τὰ λεγόμενα, of which
-the second chapter treats, it is clear that this last expression
-indicates more than mere predication, and is here
-to be taken as determinate Notions. “Determinate conceptions
-are either enunciated after a complex (κατὰ
-συμπλοκήν) or after an incomplex manner (ἄνευ συμπλοκῆς);
-the first as ‘a man conquers,’ ‘the ox runs,’ and the other
-as ‘man,’ ‘ox,’ ‘to conquer,’ ‘to run.’” In the first
-rank of this division Aristotle places τὰ ὄντα, which
-are undoubtedly purely subjective relations of such as
-exist <i>per se</i>, so that the relation is not in them but
-external to them. Now although τὰ λεγόμενα and τὰ ὄντα
-are again distinguished from one another, Aristotle yet
-again employs both λέγεται, and ἐστί of the ὄντα, so that
-λέγεται is predicated of a species, in relation to its particular;
-ἐστί is, on the contrary, employed of a universal, which
-is not Idea but only simple. For Aristotle says, “There
-are predicates (ὄντα) which can be assigned to a certain
-subject (καθ̓ ὑποκειμένον), yet are in no subject, as
-‘man’ is predicated of ‘some certain man,’ and yet he
-is no particular man. Others are in a subject (ἐν ὑποκειμένῳ
-ἐστί) yet are not predicated of any subject (I mean by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-thing being in a subject, that it is in any thing not as a
-part, but as unable to subsist without that in which it is), as
-‘a grammatical art’ (τὶς γραμματική) is in a subject, ‘the
-soul,’ but cannot be predicated of any,’ or related as genus
-to a subject. Some are predicated of a subject (λέγεται) and
-are in it; science is in the soul and is predicated of the grammatical
-art. Some again are neither in, nor are predicated
-of any subject, as ‘a certain man,’ the individual, the one in
-number; but some of them can be in a subject like ‘a certain
-grammatical art.’” Instead of subject we should do
-better to speak of substratum, for it is that to which the
-Notion necessarily relates, <i>i.e.</i> that which is neglected in
-abstraction, and thus the individual opposed to the Notion.
-We can see that Aristotle has the difference of the genus or
-universal and the individual present to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing which Aristotle has indicated in the foregoing
-is thus the genus, which is predicated of a man, but
-which is not in him, at least not as a particular quality; the
-brave man, for example, is an actual, but expressed as a universal
-conception. In formal logic and its conceptions and
-definitions there is always present opposition to an actual;
-and the logical actual is in itself something thought,
-bravery thus being, for example, a pure form of abstraction.
-This logic of the understanding seeks, however, in
-its three stages to imitate the categories of the absolute.
-The conception or definition is a logical actual, and thus
-in itself merely something thought, <i>i.e.</i> possible. In the
-judgment this logic calls a conception A the actual subject
-and connects with it another actual as the conception B; B is
-said to be the conception and A to be dependent on it&mdash;but
-B is only the more general conception. In the syllogism
-necessity is said to be simulated: even in a judgment there
-is a synthesis of a conception and something whose existence
-is assumed; in the syllogism it should bear the form of
-necessity, because both the opposites are set forth in a third
-as through the <i>medius terminus</i> of reason, <i>e.g.</i> as was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-case with the mean of virtue (<i>supra</i>, p. 206). The major
-term expresses logical being and the minor term logical
-potentiality, for Caius is a mere potentiality for logic; the
-conclusion unites both. But it is to reason that life first
-unfolds itself, for it is true reality. What comes second in
-Aristotle is the universal, which is not the genus, <i>i.e.</i> it is
-not in itself the unity of universal and particular&mdash;nor is it
-absolute individuality and hence infinitude. This is the
-moment or predicate in a subject certainly, but it is not absolutely
-in and for itself. This relation is now expressed
-through οὐ λέγεται; for ὅ λέγεται is that which, as universal
-in itself, is likewise infinite. The third is the particular
-which is predicated: just as science in itself is infinite and
-thus the genus, <i>e.g.</i> of the grammatical art; but at the same
-time as universal, or as not individual, it is the moment of
-a subject. The fourth indicated by Aristotle is what is
-called immediate conception&mdash;the individual. The reservation
-that something such as a definite grammatical art is
-also in a subject, has no place here, for the definite grammatical
-art is not really in itself individual.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle, himself,<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> makes the following remarks on this
-matter: “When one thing is predicated (κατηγορεῖται) of
-another, as of a subject, whatever things are said (λέγεται) of
-the predicate,” <i>i.e.</i> what is related to it as a universal, “may
-be also said of the subject.” This is the ordinary conclusion;
-from this we see, since this matter is so speedily despatched,
-that the real conclusion has with Aristotle a much greater
-significance. “The different genera not arranged under one
-another (μὴ ὑπ̓ ἄλλμλα τεταγμένα), such as ‘animal’ and
-‘science,’ differ in their species (διαφοράς). For instance,
-animals are divided into beasts, bird, fishes&mdash;but science
-has no such distinction. In subordinate genera, however,
-there may be the same distinctions; for the superior genera
-are predicated of the inferior, so that as many distinctions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-as there are of the predicate, so many will there be of the
-subject.”</p>
-
-<p>After Aristotle had thus far spoken of what is enunciated
-respecting that which is connected, or the complex, he now
-comes to “that which is predicated without any connection,”
-or the incomplex; for as we saw (p. 212) this was
-the division which he laid down in the second chapter.
-That which is predicated without any connection he treats
-of more fully as the categories proper, in what follows; yet
-the work in which these categories are laid down is not to
-be regarded as complete. Aristotle<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> takes ten of them;
-“Each conception enunciated signifies either Substance
-(οὐσίαν), or Quality (ποιόν), or Quantity (ποσόν),” matter,
-“or Relation (πρός τι), or Where (ποῦ), or When (ποτέ), or
-Position (κεῖσθαι), or Possession (ἕχειν), or Action (ποιεῖν),
-or Passion (πάσχειν). None of these is considered by
-itself an affirmation (κατάφασις) or a negation (κατάφασις),
-<i>i.e.</i> none is either true or false.” Aristotle adds to these
-predicables five post predicaments, but he only ranges them
-all side by side.<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> The categories of relation are the syntheses
-of quality and quantity, and consequently they belonged to
-reason; but in as far as they are posited as mere relation,
-they belong to the understanding and are forms of finitude.
-Being, essence, takes the first place in them; next to it is
-possibility, as accident or what is caused; the two are, however,
-separated. In substance A is Being, B, potentiality; in
-the relation of causality A and B are Being, but A is posited
-in B as being posited in a postulation of A. A of substance
-is logical Being; it is its essence opposed to its existence, and
-this existence is in logic mere potentiality. In the category
-of causality the Being of A in B is a mere Being of
-reflection; B is for itself another. But in reason A is the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>Being of B as well as of A, and A is the whole Being of A
-as well as of B.</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> goes on to speak of Substance; first Substance,
-“in its strictest (κυριώτατα), first and chief sense” is to
-him the individual, the fourth class of the divisions
-enunciated above (pp. 212-214). “Secondary substances are
-those in which as species (εἴδεσι) these first are contained,
-that is to say, both these and the genera of these species.
-Of the subject both name and definition (λόγος) of all
-things predicated of a subject (τῶν καθ̓ ὑποκειμένον
-λεγομένον)&mdash;of secondary substances&mdash;are predicated; for
-example of the particular man, as subject, both the name
-and the definition of ‘man’ (living being) are also predicated.
-But of things which are in a subject (ἐν ὑποκειμένῳ
-ὄντος) it is impossible to predicate the definition of the”
-subordinate “subjects, yet with some we predicate the
-name: the definition of ‘whiteness’ thus is not of the
-body in which it is, but only the name. All other things
-however,” besides Definition (λόγος) and “in most cases
-name, are related to primary substances as subjects” (the
-individual), “or are inherent in them. Thus without the
-primary substances none of the rest could exist, for they
-are the basis (ὑποκεῖσθαι) of all else. Of secondary substances,
-species is more substance than genus; for it is
-nearer to the primary substance, and genus is predicated
-of the species and not the other way.” For species is here
-the subject, or what does not always require to be something
-really determined as individual, but which also
-signifies that which is generally speaking subordinate.
-“But the species are not more substance one than another,
-just as in primary substances one is not more substance
-than the other. Species and genera are likewise, before
-the rest” (qualities or accidents) “to be called secondary
-substances: the definition ‘man’ before the fact that he is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-‘white’ or ‘runs.’” Abstraction has thus two kinds of
-objects; ‘man’ and ‘learned’ are both qualities of a
-certain individual; but the former only abstracts from the
-individuality and leaves the totality, and is thus the elevation
-of the individual into the rational, where nothing
-is lost but the opposition of reflection. “What is true
-of substances is also true of differences; for as synonyms
-(συνώνυμα) they have both name and definition in
-common.”</p>
-
-<p><i>b.</i> The second treatise is on Interpretation (περὶ
-ἑρμηνείας); it is the doctrine of judgments and propositions.
-Propositions exist where affirmation and negation,
-falsehood and truth are enunciated;<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> they do not
-relate to pure thought when reason itself thinks; they are
-not universal but individual.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> The Analytics come third, and there are two parts of
-them, the Prior and the Posterior; they deal most fully
-with proof (ἀπόδειξις) and the syllogisms of the understanding.
-“The syllogism is a reason (λόγος) in which if
-one thing is maintained, another than what was maintained
-follows of necessity.”<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> Aristotle’s logic has treated the
-general theory of conclusions in the main very accurately,
-but they do not by any means constitute the universal form
-of truth; in his metaphysics, physics, psychology, &amp;c.,
-Aristotle has not formed conclusions, but thought the Notion
-in and for itself.</p>
-
-<p><i>d.</i> The Topics (τοπικά) which treat of ‘places’ (τόποι)
-come fourth; in them the points of view from which anything
-can be considered are enumerated. Cicero and
-Giordano Bruno worked this out more fully. Aristotle
-gives a large number of general points of view which can
-be taken of an object, a proposition or a problem; each
-problem can be directly reduced to these different points of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-view, that must everywhere appear. Thus these ‘places’
-are, so to speak, a system of many aspects under which an
-object can be regarded in investigating it; this constitutes
-a work which seems specially suitable and requisite for the
-training of orators and for ordinary conversation, because
-the knowledge of points of view at once places in our hands
-the possibility of arriving at the various aspects of a
-subject, and embracing its whole extent in accordance with
-these points of view (Vol. I. p. 358). This, according to
-Aristotle, is the function of Dialectic, which he calls an
-instrument for finding propositions and conclusions out of
-probabilities.<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> Such ‘places’ are either of a general kind,
-such as difference, similarity, opposition, relation, and comparison,<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a>
-or special in nature, such as ‘places’ which prove
-that something is better or more to be desired, since in it
-we have the longer duration of time, that which the one wise
-man or several would choose, the genus as against the
-species, that which is desirable for itself; also because it
-is present with the more honourable, because it is end,
-what approximates to end, the more beautiful and praiseworthy,
-&amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> Aristotle (Topic VIII. 2) says that we must
-make use of the syllogism by preference, with the dialectician,
-but of induction with the multitude. In the same
-way Aristotle separates<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> the dialectic and demonstrative
-syllogisms from the rhetorical and every kind of persuasion,
-but he counts induction as belonging to what is
-rhetorical.</p>
-
-<p><i>e.</i> The fifth treatise, finally, deals with the Sophistical
-Elenchi (σοφιστικοὶ ἔλεγχοι), or ‘On Refutations,’ as in the unconscious
-escape of thought in its categories to the material
-side of popular conception, it arrives at constant contradiction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-with itself. The sophistical elenchi betray the unconscious
-ordinary idea into these contradictions, and make it conscious
-of them, in order to entrap and puzzle it; they were
-mentioned by us in connection with Zeno, and the Sophists
-sought them out, but it was the Megarics who were specially
-strong in them. Aristotle goes through a number of such
-contradictions by the way of solving them; in so doing he
-proceeds quietly and carefully, and spares no pains, though
-they might have been made more dramatic. We have before
-(Vol. I. pp. 456-459) found specimens of these in treating
-of the Megarics, and we have seen how Aristotle solves
-such contradictions through distinction and determination.</p>
-
-<p>Of these five parts of the Aristotelian Organon, what is
-produced in our ordinary systems of logic is, as a matter of
-fact, of the slightest and most trivial description, consisting
-as it does mainly of what is contained in the introduction
-of Porphyry. More particularly in the first parts, in
-the Interpretation and in the Analytics, this Aristotelian logic
-contains these representations of universal forms of thought,
-such as are now dealt with in ordinary logic, and really form
-the basis of what in modern times is known as logic. Aristotle has
-rendered a never-ending service in having recognized
-and determined the forms which thought assumes within us.
-For what interests us is the concrete thought immersed as
-it is in externalities; these forms constitute a net of eternal
-activity sunk within it, and the operation of setting in their
-places those fine threads which are drawn throughout everything,
-is a masterpiece of empiricism, and this knowledge
-is absolutely valuable. Even contemplation, or a knowledge
-of the numerous forms and modes assumed by this
-activity, is interesting and important enough. For however
-dry and contentless the enumeration of the different
-kinds of judgments and conclusions, and their numerous
-limitations may appear to us to be, and though they may
-not seem to serve their purpose of discovering the truth, at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-least no other science in opposition to this one can be elevated
-into its place. For instance, if it is held to be a worthy
-endeavour to gain a knowledge of the infinite number of
-animals, such as one hundred and sixty-seven kinds of
-cuckoo, in which one may have the tuft on his head
-differently shaped from another, or to make acquaintance
-with some miserable new species of a miserable kind of
-moss which is no better than a scab, or with an insect,
-vermin, bug, &amp;c., in some learned work on entomology, it is
-much more important to be acquainted with the manifold
-kinds of movement present in thought, than to know about
-such creatures. The best of what is stated respecting the
-forms of judgment, conclusion, &amp;c., in ordinary logic, is
-taken from the works of Aristotle; as far as details are
-concerned, much has been spun out and added to it, but
-the truth is to be found with Aristotle.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the real philosophic nature of the Aristotelian
-logic, it has received in our text-books a position and
-significance as though it gave expression only to the
-activity of the understanding as consciousness; hence it
-is said to direct us how to think correctly. Thus it
-appears as though the movement of thought were something
-independent, unaffected by the object of thought;
-in other words, as if it contained the so-called laws of
-thought of our understanding, through which we attain to
-perception, but through a medium which was not the
-movement of things themselves. The result must certainly
-be truth, so that things are constituted as we bring them
-forth according to the laws of thought; but the manner of
-this knowledge has merely a subjective significance, and
-the judgment and conclusion are not a judgment and conclusion
-of things themselves. Now if, according to this
-point of view, thought is considered on its own account, it
-does not make its appearance implicitly as knowledge, nor
-is it without content in and for itself; for it is a formal
-activity which certainly is exercised, but whose content is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-one given to it. Thought in this sense becomes something
-subjective; these judgments and conclusions are in and
-for themselves quite true, or rather correct&mdash;this no one
-ever doubted; but because content is lacking to them,
-these judgments and conclusions do not suffice for the
-knowledge of the truth. Thus by logicians they are held
-to be forms whose content is something entirely different,
-because they have not even the form of the content;
-and the meaning which is given to them&mdash;namely that they
-are forms&mdash;is found fault with. The worst thing said of
-them, however, is that their only error is their being
-formal; both the laws of thought as such, and also its
-determinations, the categories, are either determinations of
-the judgment only, or merely subjective forms of the understanding,
-while the thing-in-itself is very different. But in
-that point of view and in the blame awarded the truth
-itself is missed, for untruth is the form of opposition
-between subject and object, and the lack of unity in them;
-in this case the question is not put at all as to whether
-anything is absolutely true or not. These determinations
-have certainly no empirical content, but thought and its
-movement is itself the content&mdash;and, indeed, as interesting
-a content as any other that can be given; consequently
-this science of thought is on its own account a
-true science. But here again we come across the drawback
-pertaining to the whole Aristotelian manner, as also to all
-succeeding logic&mdash;and that indeed in the highest degree&mdash;that
-in thought and in the movement of thought as such,
-the individual moments fall asunder; there are a number
-of kinds of judgment and conclusion, each of which is held
-to be independent, and is supposed to have absolute truth
-as such. Thus they are simply content, for they then have
-an indifferent, undistinguished existence, such as we see
-in the famous laws of contradiction, conclusions, &amp;c. In
-this isolation they have, however, no truth; for their
-totality alone is the truth of thought, because this totality<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-is at once subjective and objective. Thus they are only
-the material of truth, the formless content; their deficiency
-is hence not that they are only forms but rather that form
-is lacking to them, and that they are in too great a degree
-content. Thus as many individual qualities of a thing
-are not anything, such as red, hard, &amp;c., if taken by themselves,
-but only in their unity constitute a real thing, so it
-is with the unity of the forms of judgment and conclusion,
-which individually have as little truth as such a quality, or
-as a rhythm or melody. The form of a conclusion, as also
-its content, may be quite correct, and yet the conclusion
-arrived at may be untrue, because this form as such has
-no truth of its own; but from this point of view these
-forms have never been considered, and the scorn of logic
-rests simply on the false assumption that there is a lack of
-content. Now this content is none other than the speculative
-Idea. Conceptions of the understanding or of reason
-constitute the essence of things, not certainly for that
-point of view, but in truth; and thus also for Aristotle the
-conceptions of the understanding, namely the categories,
-constitute the essential realities of Being. If they are
-thus in and for themselves true, they themselves are their
-own, and thus the highest content. But in ordinary logic
-this is not the case, and even as these are represented in
-the Aristotelian works they are only universal thought-determinations,
-between which the abstract understanding
-makes distinctions. This, however, is not the logic of
-speculative thought, <i>i.e.</i> of reason as distinguished from
-understanding; for there the identity of the understanding
-which allows nothing to contradict itself is fundamental.
-However little this logic of the finite may be speculative
-in nature, yet we must make ourselves acquainted with it,
-for it is everywhere discovered in finite relationships.
-There are many sciences, subjects of knowledge, &amp;c., that
-know and apply no other forms of thought than these
-forms of finite thought, which constitute in fact the general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-method of dealing with the finite sciences. Mathematics,
-for instance, is a constant series of syllogisms; jurisprudence
-is the bringing of the particular under the general,
-the uniting together of both these sides. Within these
-relationships of finite determinations the syllogism has
-now, indeed, on account of its terms being three in number,
-been called the totality of these determinations, and hence
-by Kant (Kritik der reinen Vernunft, p. 261) also the
-rational conclusion; but this syllogism addressed to the
-intelligence as it appears in the ordinary logical form, is
-only the intelligible form of rationality, and, as we saw
-above (p. 76), is very different from the rational syllogism
-proper. Aristotle is thus the originator of the logic of the
-understanding; its forms only concern the relationship of
-finite to finite, and in them the truth cannot be grasped.
-But it must be remarked that Aristotle’s philosophy is not
-by any means founded on this relationship of the understanding;
-thus it must not be thought that it is in accordance
-with these syllogisms that Aristotle has thought. If
-Aristotle did so, he would not be the speculative philosopher
-that we have recognized him to be; none of his
-propositions could have been laid down, and he could not
-have made any step forward, if he had kept to the forms
-of this ordinary logic.</p>
-
-<p>Like the whole of Aristotle’s philosophy, his logic really
-requires recasting, so that all his determinations should be
-brought into a necessary systematic whole&mdash;not a systematic
-whole which is correctly divided into its parts, and in
-which no part is forgotten, all being set forth in their
-proper order, but one in which there is one living organic
-whole, in which each part is held to be a part, and the
-whole alone as such is true. Aristotle, in the Politics, for
-instance (<i>supra</i>, pp. 207-208), often gives expression to this
-truth. For this reason the individual logical form has in
-itself no truth, not because it is the form of thought, but
-because it is determinate thought, individual form, and to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-esteemed as such. But as system and absolute form ruling
-this content, thought has its content as a distinction in
-itself, being speculative philosophy in which subject and
-object are immediately identical, and the Notion and the
-universal are the realities of things. Just as duty certainly
-expresses the absolute, but, as determinate, a determinate
-absolute which is only a moment and must be able again to
-abrogate its determination, the logical form which abrogates
-itself as this determinate in this very way gives up its claim
-to be in and for itself. But in this case logic is the science
-of reason, speculative philosophy of the pure Idea of absolute
-existence, which is not entangled in the opposition of
-subject and object, but remains an opposition in thought
-itself. Yet we certainly may allow that much in logic is
-an indifferent form.</p>
-
-<p>At this point we would leave off as far as the Aristotelian
-philosophy is concerned, and from this it is difficult to
-break away. For the further we go into its details, the
-more interesting it becomes, and the more do we find the
-connection which exists among the subjects. The fulness
-with which I have set forth the principal content of the
-Aristotelian philosophy is justified both by the importance
-of the matter itself, because it offers to us a content of its
-own, and also by the circumstances already mentioned
-(p. 118), that against no philosophy have modern times
-sinned so much as against this, and none of the ancient
-philosophers have so much need of being defended as
-Aristotle.</p>
-
-<p>One of the immediate followers of Aristotle was Theophrastus,
-born Ol 102, 2 (371 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>); though a man of distinction,
-he can still only be esteemed a commentator on
-Aristotle. For Aristotle is so rich a treasure-house of
-philosophic conceptions, that much material is found in him
-which is ready for further working upon, which may be put
-forward more abstractly, and in which individual propositions
-may be brought into prominence. However Aristotle’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-manner of procedure, which is to take an empirical starting
-point of ratiocination [Raisonnement], and to comprehend
-this in the focus of the speculative Notion, is characteristic
-of his mind, without being one which, on its own account,
-can be freely elevated into a method and a principle. Thus
-of Theophrastus as of many others (Dicæarchus of Messina,
-for instance), amongst whom Strato of Lampsacus, the successor
-of Theophrastus, is best known, there is not much to
-tell. As regards Dicæarchus, Cicero says, (Tusc. Quæst. I.
-31, 10) that he controverted the immortality of the soul,
-for he asserted that “the soul is no more than an empty
-name, and the whole of the capacities and powers with
-which we act and feel are equally extended over all living
-bodies, and inseparable from the body; for it is nothing
-but the body so constituted as to live and feel through a
-certain symmetry and proportion in its body.” Cicero
-gives in an historical manner a result as he made it comprehensible
-to himself, without any speculative conception.
-Stobæus (Eclog. phys. p. 796), on the other hand, quotes
-from Dicæarchus that he held the soul to be “a harmony of
-the four elements.” We have only a little general information
-to give of Strato, that he acquired great fame as
-a physicist, and that his conception of nature went upon
-mechanical lines, and yet not on those of Leucippus and
-Democritus, and later, of Epicurus; for, according to
-Stobæus (Eclog. phys. p. 298), he made warmth and cold
-into elements. Hence, if what is said of him is accurate,
-he was most unfaithful to the beliefs of Aristotle, because
-he led everything back to mechanism and chance and did
-away with the immanent end, without accepting the false
-teleology of modern times. At least, Cicero (De nat. Deor.
-I. 13) relates of him that he maintained that “divine
-strength lies altogether in nature, which has in itself the
-causes of origination, of growth, and of decay, but lacks
-all sensation and conformation.” The other Peripatetics
-occupied themselves more with working up individual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-doctrines of Aristotle, with bringing out his works in a
-commentated form, which is more or less rhetorical in
-character, though similar in content. But in practical life
-the Peripatetic school maintained as the principle of happiness,
-the unity of reason and inclination. We thus may set
-aside any further expansion of the Peripatetic philosophy,
-because it has no longer the same interest, and later on
-tended to become a popular philosophy (Vol. I. p. 479, Vol.
-II. p. 130); in this mode it no longer remained an Aristotelian
-philosophy, although this, too, as what is really
-speculative, must coincide most closely with actuality.
-This decay of the Aristotelian philosophy is, indeed, closely
-connected with the circumstance already mentioned (pp.
-126-128), that the Aristotelian writings soon disappeared,
-and that the Aristotelian philosophy did not retain its place
-so much through these documents as through the traditions
-in the school, whereby they soon underwent material
-changes; and amplifications of Aristotle’s doctrines were
-brought about, as to which it is not known whether some
-may not have slipped into what pass for his works.</p>
-
-<p>Since Aristotle’s leading thought has penetrated all
-spheres of consciousness, and this isolation in the determination
-through the Notion, because it is likewise necessary,
-contains in every sphere the profoundest of true thoughts,
-Aristotle, to anticipate here the external history of his
-philosophy as a whole, for many centuries was the constant
-mainstay of the cultivation of thought. When in the
-Christian West science disappeared amongst the Christians,
-the fame of Aristotle shone forth with equal brilliance
-amongst the Arabians, from whom, in later times, his
-philosophy was again passed over to the West. The
-triumph which was celebrated upon the revival of learning,
-on account of the Aristotelian philosophy having been expelled
-from the schools, from the sciences, and specially
-from theology, as from the philosophy which deals with
-absolute existence, must be regarded in two different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-aspects. In the first place we must remember that it was
-not the Aristotelian philosophy which was expelled, so
-much as the principle of the science of theology which
-supported itself thereon, according to which the first truth
-is one which is given and revealed&mdash;an hypothesis which is
-once for all a fundamental one, and by which reason and
-thought have the right and power to move to and fro only
-superficially. In this form the thought which was awakened
-in the Middle Ages reconstructed its theology more especially,
-entered into all dialectic movements and determinations,
-and erected an edifice where the material that was
-given was only superficially worked up, disposed and
-secured. The triumph over this system was thus a triumph
-over that principle, and consequently the triumph of free,
-spontaneous thought. But another side of this triumph is
-the triumph of the commonplace point of view that broke
-free from the Notion and shook off the yoke of thought.
-Formerly, and even nowadays, enough has been heard of
-Aristotle’s scholastic subtleties; in using this name, men
-thought that they had a right to spare themselves from
-entering on abstraction, and, in place of the Notion, they
-thought that it justified them in seeing, hearing, and thus
-making their escape to what is called healthy human understanding.
-In science, too, in place of subtle thoughts,
-subtle sight has commenced; a beetle or a species of bird
-is distinguished with as great minuteness as were formerly
-conceptions and thoughts. Such subtleties as whether a
-species of bird is red or green in colour, or has a more or
-less perfect tail, are found more easy than the differences
-in thought; and in the meantime, until a people has educated
-itself up to the labour of thought, in order to be able
-thus to support the universal, the former is a useful preparation,
-or rather it is a moment in this course of culture.</p>
-
-<p>But inasmuch as the deficiency in the Aristotelian
-philosophy rests in the fact, that after the manifold of phenomena
-was through it raised into the Notion, though this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-last again fell asunder into a succession of determinate
-Notions, the unity of the absolute Notion which unites
-them was not emphasized, and this is what succeeding
-time had to accomplish. What now appears is that the
-unity of the Notion which is absolute existence, makes its
-appearance as necessity, and it presents itself first as the
-unity of self-consciousness and consciousness, as pure
-thought. The unity of existence as existence is objective
-unity, thought, as that which is thought. But unity, as
-Notion, the implicitly universal negative unity, time as
-absolutely fulfilled time, and in its fulfilment as being unity,
-is pure self-consciousness. Hence we see it come to pass,
-that pure self-consciousness makes itself reality, but, at the
-same time, it first of all does so with subjective significance
-as a self-consciousness that has taken up its position as
-such, and that separates itself from objective existence,
-and hence is first of all subject to a difference which it
-does not overcome.</p>
-
-<p>Here we have concluded the first division of Greek
-philosophy, and we have now to pass to the second period.
-The first period of Greek philosophy extended to Aristotle,
-to the attainment of a scientific form in which knowledge
-has reached the standing of free thought. Thus in Plato
-and Aristotle the result was the Idea; yet we saw in Plato
-the universal made the principle in a somewhat abstract
-way as the unmoved Idea; in Aristotle, on the other hand,
-thought in activity became absolutely concrete as the
-thought which thinks itself. The next essential, one which
-now is immediately before us, must be contained in that
-into which Philosophy under Plato and Aristotle had
-formed itself. This necessity is none other than the fact
-that the universal must now be proclaimed free for itself as
-the universality of the principle, so that the particular may
-be recognized through this universal; or the necessity of a
-systematic philosophy immediately enters in, what we formerly
-called one in accordance with the unity of the Notion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-We may speak of the Platonic and Aristotelian systems, but
-they are not in the form of a system; for that it is requisite
-that one principle should be maintained and consistently
-carried through the particular. In the perfect complex of
-the conception of the universe as it is to Aristotle, where
-everything is in the highest form of scientific knowledge
-led back to what is speculative, however empiric may be
-his manner of setting to work, there certainly is one principle
-brought forward, and that a speculative one, though
-it is not brought forward as being one. The nature of the
-speculative has not been explicitly brought to consciousness
-as the Notion&mdash;as containing in itself the development
-of the manifold nature of the natural and spiritual universe,
-consequently it is not set forth as the universal, from which
-the particular was developed. Aristotle’s logic is really
-the opposite of this. He in great measure passes through
-a series of the living and the dead, makes them confront
-his objective, that is, conceiving thought, and grasps them
-in his understanding; each object is on its own account a
-conception which is laid open in its determinations, and yet
-he also brings these reflections together, and thereby is
-speculative. If even Plato on the whole proceeded in an
-empiric way, taking up this and that idea, each of which is
-in turn examined, with Aristotle this loose method of procedure
-appears still more clearly. In the Aristotelian teaching
-the Idea of the self-reflecting thought is thus grasped
-as the highest truth; but its realization, the knowledge of
-the natural and spiritual universe, constitutes outside of
-that Idea a long series of particular conceptions, which are
-external to one another, and in which a unifying principle,
-led through the particular, is wanting. The highest Idea
-with Aristotle consequently once more stands only as a
-particular in its own place and without being the principle
-of his whole philosophy. Hence the next necessity in
-Philosophy is that the whole extent of what is known must
-appear as one organization of the Notion; that in this way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-the manifold reality may be related to that Idea as the
-universal, and thereby determined. This is the standpoint
-which we find in this second period.</p>
-
-<p>A systematic philosophy such as this becomes in the
-first place dogmatism, in antagonism to which, because of
-its one-sided character, scepticism immediately arises. In
-the same way the French call what is dogmatic <i>systématique</i>,
-and <i>système</i> that in which all the conceptions must consistently
-proceed from one determination; hence to them
-<i>systématique</i> is synonymous with one-sided. But the philosophies
-that ensue are one-sided, because in them it was
-only the necessity of one principle that was recognized, without
-their meanwhile developing from themselves, as might
-well have come to pass in and for itself, the Idea as the
-real universal, and thus comprehending the world in such
-a way that the content is only grasped as the determination
-of the self-reflective thought. Hence this principle stands
-up formally and abstractly, and the particular is not yet
-deduced from it, for the universal is only applied to the
-particular and the rules for this application sought out. In
-Aristotle the Idea is at least implicitly concrete, as the
-consciousness of the unity of subjective and objective, and
-therefore it is not one-sided. Should the Idea be truly
-concrete, the particular must be developed from it. The
-other relation would be the mere bringing of the particular
-under the universal, so that both should be mutually distinguished;
-in such a case the universal is only a formal
-principle, and such a philosophy is therefore one-sided.
-But the true difficulty is that the two endeavours, the
-development of the particular from the Idea, and the bringing
-of the particular under the universal, collide with one
-another. The manifestations of the physical and spiritual
-world must first, from their respective sides, be prepared
-for and worked into the Notion, so that the other sciences
-can form therefrom universal laws and principles. Then
-for the first time can speculative reason present itself in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-determinate thoughts, and bring perfectly to consciousness
-the inwardly existing connection between them. As dogmatic,
-however, those philosophies, it may be further said,
-are assertive likewise, because in such a method the principle
-is only asserted and is not truly proved. For a principle
-is demanded under which everything is subsumed;
-thus it is only pre-supposed as the first principle. Before
-this we have had abstract principles such as pure Being,
-but here the particular, with which begins the distinction
-from what is different, became posited as the purely negative.
-That necessity, on the other hand, makes for
-a universal which must likewise be in the particular, so that
-this should not be set aside, but should have its determinate
-character through the universal.</p>
-
-<p>This demand for a universal, even though still unproved
-principle, is henceforth present to knowledge. What
-answers to this demand now appears in the world through
-the inward necessity of mind&mdash;not externally, but as being
-in conformity with the Notion. This necessity has produced
-the philosophy of the Stoics, Epicureans, New
-Academy, and Sceptics, which we have now to consider.
-If we have remained too long in the consideration of this
-period, we may now make amends for this protraction, for
-in the next period we may be brief.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4"><a name="c232" id="c232">SECTION TWO</a><br />
-
-<span class="smcap head">Second Period: Dogmatism and Scepticism.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="pn2"><span class="smcap">In</span> this second period, which precedes the Alexandrian philosophy,
-we have to consider Dogmatism and Scepticism&mdash;the
-Dogmatism which separates itself into the two philosophies,
-the Stoic and the Epicurean; and the third philosophy,
-of which both partake and which yet differs from
-them both, Scepticism. Along with this last we would
-take the New Academy, which has entirely merged in it&mdash;while
-in the Older Academy, Plato’s philosophy indubitably
-still maintained its purity. We saw at the close of the
-previous period the consciousness of the Idea, or of the
-Universal, which is an end in itself&mdash;a principle, universal
-indeed, but at the same time determined in itself, which is
-thus capable of subsuming the particular, and of being
-applied thereto. The application of universal to particular
-is here the relationship that prevails, for the reflection
-that from the universal itself the separation of the totality
-is developed, is not yet present. There always is in such a
-relationship the necessity of a system and of systematization;
-that is to say, one determinate principle must consistently
-be applied to the particular, so that the truth of
-all that is particular should be determined according to
-this abstract principle, and be at the same time likewise
-recognized. Now since this is what we have in so-called
-Dogmatism, it is a philosophizing of the understanding, in
-which Plato’s and Aristotle’s speculative greatness is no
-longer present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In respect of this relationship, the task of Philosophy
-now comes to be summed up in the twofold question
-which we spoke of earlier (Vol. I. pp. 474, 475), and which
-has regard to a criterion of truth and to the wise man. At
-this point we may better than before, and also from a
-different point of view, explain the necessity for this phenomenon.
-For because truth has now become conceived as
-the harmony of thought and reality, or rather as the
-identity of the Notion, as the subjective, with the objective,
-the first question is what the universal principle for judging
-and determining this harmony is; but a principle
-through which the true is judged (κρίνεται) to be true, is
-simply the criterion. Yet because this question had only
-been formally and dogmatically answered, the dialectic of
-Scepticism, or the knowledge of the one-sidedness of this
-principle as a dogmatic principle, at once appeared. A
-further result of this mode of philosophizing is that the
-principle, as formal, is subjective, and consequently it
-has taken the real significance of the subjectivity of self-consciousness.
-Because of the external manner in which
-the manifold is received, the highest point, that in which
-thought finds itself in its most determinate form, is self-consciousness.
-The pure relation of self-consciousness to
-itself is thus the principle in all these philosophies, since
-in it alone does the Idea find satisfaction, just as the
-formalism of the understanding of the present so-called
-philosophizing seeks to find its fulfilment, the concrete
-which is opposed to this formalism, in the subjective heart,
-in the inward feelings and beliefs. Nature and the political
-world are certainly also concrete, but externally concrete;
-the arbitrary concrete is, on the other hand, not in the
-determinate universal Idea, but only in self-consciousness
-and as being personal. The second ruling determination is
-consequently that of the wise men. Not reason alone, but
-everything must be something thought, that is, subjectively
-speaking, my thought; that which is thought, on the contrary,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-is only implicit, that is to say, it is itself objective
-in so far as it appears in the form of the formal identity of
-thought with itself. The thought of the criterion as of the
-one principle is, in its immediate actuality, the subject
-itself; thought and the thinker are thus immediately connected.
-Because the principle of this philosophy is not
-objective but dogmatic, and rests on the impulse of self-consciousness
-towards self-satisfaction, it is the subject
-whose interests are to be considered. The subject seeks on
-its own account a principle for its freedom, namely, immovability
-in itself; it must be conformable to the
-criterion, <i>i.e.</i> to this quite universal principle, in order to
-be able to raise itself into this abstract independence.
-Self-consciousness lives in the solitude of its thought, and
-finds therein its satisfaction. These are the fundamental
-determinations in the following philosophies: the exposition
-of their main principles will come next, but to go into
-details is not advisable.</p>
-
-<p>Although, as no doubt is the case, these philosophies, as
-regards their origin, pertain to Greece, and their great
-teachers were always Greeks, they were yet transferred to
-the Roman world; thus Philosophy passed into the Roman
-world and these systems in particular constituted under
-Roman rule the philosophy of the Roman world, in opposition
-to which world, unsuited as it was to the rational
-practical self-consciousness, this last, driven back into
-itself from external actuality, could only seek for reason in
-itself and could only care for its individuality&mdash;just as
-abstract Christians only care for their own salvation. In
-the bright Grecian world the individual attached himself
-more to his state or to his world, and was more at home in
-it. The concrete morality, the impulse towards the introduction
-of the principle into the world through the constitution
-of the state, which we see in Plato, the concrete
-science that we find in Aristotle, here disappear. In the
-wave of adversity which came across the Roman world,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-everything beautiful and noble in spiritual individuality
-was rudely swept away. In this condition of disunion in
-the world, when man is driven within his inmost self, he
-has to seek the unity and satisfaction, no longer to be found
-in the world, in an abstract way. The Roman world is
-thus the world of abstraction, where one cold rule was
-extended over all the civilized world. The living individualities
-of national spirit in the nations have been
-stifled and killed; a foreign power, as an abstract universal,
-has pressed hard upon individuals. In such a condition of
-dismemberment it was necessary to fly to this abstraction
-as to the thought of an existent subject, that is, to this
-inward freedom of the subject as such. As what was held
-in estimation was the abstract will of the individual ruler
-of the world, the inward principle of thought also had to
-be an abstraction which could bring forth a formal, subjective
-reconciliation only. A dogmatism erected on a
-principle made effectual through the form of the understanding
-could alone satisfy the Roman mind. These
-philosophies are thus conformable to the spirit of the
-Roman world, as indeed Philosophy in general ever stands
-in close connection with the world in its ordinary aspect
-(Vol. I. pp. 53, 54). The Roman world has, indeed, produced
-a formal patriotism and corresponding virtue, as
-also a developed system of law; but speculative philosophy
-could not proceed from such dead material&mdash;we could only
-expect good advocates and the morality of a Tacitus.
-These philosophies, always excepting Stoicism, also arose
-amongst the Romans in opposition to their ancient superstitions,
-just as now Philosophy comes forward in the place
-of religion.</p>
-
-<p>The three principles of Stoicism, Epicureanism and
-Scepticism are necessary; in the first there is the principle
-of thought or of universality itself, but yet determined in
-itself; the abstract thought is here the determining
-criterion of the truth. There is opposed to thought, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-the second place, the determinate as such, the principle of
-individuality, feeling generally, sensuous perception and
-observation. These two form the principles of the Stoic
-and Epicurean philosophies. Both principles are one-sided
-and, as positive, become sciences of the understanding;
-just because this thought is not in itself concrete but
-abstract, the determinateness falls outside of thought and
-must be made a principle for itself; for it has an absolute
-right as against abstract thought. Besides Stoicism and
-Epicureanism, there is, in the third place, Scepticism, the
-negation of these two one-sided philosophies which must
-be recognized as such. The principle of Scepticism is
-thus the active negation of every criterion, of all determinate
-principles of whatever kind they be, whether knowledge
-derived from the senses, or from reflection on ordinary
-conceptions, or from thought. Thus the next result arrived
-at is that nothing can be known. Yet the imperturbability
-and uniformity of mind in itself, which suffers through
-nothing, and which is affected neither by enjoyment, pain,
-nor any other bond, is the common standpoint and the common
-end of all these philosophies. Thus however gloomy
-men may consider Scepticism, and however low a view
-they take of Epicureanism, all these have in this way been
-philosophies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c236" id="c236">A. <span class="smcap">The Philosophy of the Stoics.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>We must, first of all, and in a general way, remark of
-Stoicism, as also of Epicureanism, that they came in the
-place of the philosophy of the Cynics and Cyrenaics as
-their counterpart, just as Scepticism took the place of the
-Academy. But in adopting the principle of these philosophies,
-they at the same time perfected it and elevated
-it more into the form of scientific thought. Yet because in
-them, just as in the others, the content is a fixed and
-definite one, since self-consciousness therein sets itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-apart, this circumstance really puts an end to speculation,
-which knows nothing of any such rigidity, which rather
-abolishes it and treats the object as absolute Notion, as in
-its difference an unseparated whole. Hence with the Stoics,
-as also really with the Epicureans, instead of genuine
-speculation, we only meet with an application of the one-sided,
-limited principle, and thus we require in both to
-enter merely upon a general view of their principle. Now
-if Cynicism made reality for consciousness the fact of
-being immediately natural (where immediate naturalness
-was the simplicity of the individual, so that he is independent
-and, in the manifold movement of desire, of
-enjoyment, of holding many things to be reality, and of
-working for the same, really keeps up the external simple
-life) the Stoic elevation of this simplicity into thought consists
-in the assertion, not that immediate naturalness and
-spontaneity is the content and the form of the true Being
-of consciousness, but that the rationality of nature is
-grasped through thought, so that everything is true or
-good in the simplicity of thought. But while with Aristotle
-what underlies everything is the absolute Idea as unlimited
-and not set forth in a determinate character and with a
-difference&mdash;and its deficiency is only the deficiency which is
-present in realization, the not being united into one
-Notion&mdash;here the one Notion is undoubtedly set forth as real
-existence, and everything is related to it, and hence the
-requisite relation is undoubtedly present; but that in which
-everything is one is not the true. With Aristotle each
-conception is considered absolutely in its determination and
-as separate from any other; here the conception certainly
-is in this relation and is not absolute, but at the same time
-it is not in and for itself. Because thus the individual is
-not considered absolutely but only relatively, the whole
-working out is not interesting, for it is only an external
-relation. Likewise with Aristotle the individual only is
-taken into consideration, but this consideration is lost sight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-of by the speculative treatment adopted: here, however,
-the individual is taken up and the treatment is likewise
-external. This relation is not even consistent, if, as also
-happens, something such as nature is considered in itself;
-for the absolute falls outside of it, since its consideration is
-only a system of reasoning from indeterminate principles, or
-from principles which are only the first that come to hand.</p>
-
-<p>As a contribution to the history of the philosophy of the
-Stoics, we first of all desire to mention the more eminent
-Stoics. The founder of the Stoic School is Zeno (who must
-be distinguished from the Eleatic); he belonged to
-Cittium, a town in Cyprus, and was born about the 109th
-Olympiad. His father was a merchant who, from his
-business visits to Athens, then, and for long afterwards, the
-home of Philosophy and of a large number of philosophers,
-brought with him books, particularly those of the Socratics,
-whereby a love and craving for knowledge was awakened
-in his son. Zeno himself travelled to Athens, and, according
-to some, he found a further motive to live for
-Philosophy, in that he lost all his possessions by a shipwreck.
-What he did not lose was the cultured nobility of
-his mind and his love of rational understanding. Zeno
-visited several sections of the Socratics, and particularly
-Xenocrates, a man belonging to the Platonic School, who,
-on account of the strictness of his morality and the austerity
-of his whole demeanour, was very celebrated. Thus he
-underwent the same ordeals as those to which the holy
-Francis of Assisi subjected himself, and succumbed to them
-just as little. This may be seen by the fact that while no
-testimony was given without oath in Athens, the oath was
-in his case dispensed with, and his simple word believed&mdash;and
-his teacher Plato is said often to have remarked to him
-that he might sacrifice to the Graces. Then Zeno also
-visited Stilpo, a Megaric, whom we already know about
-(Vol. I. p. 464), and with whom he studied dialectic for
-ten years. Philosophy was considered as the business of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-his life, and of his whole life, and not studied as it is by a
-student who hurries through his lectures on Philosophy in
-order to hasten on to something else. But although Zeno
-principally cultivated dialectic and practical philosophy, he
-did not, like other Socratics, neglect physical philosophy,
-for he studied very specially Heraclitus’ work on Nature,
-and finally came forward as an independent teacher in a
-porch called Poecile (στοὰ ποικίλη), which was decorated
-with the paintings of Polygnotus. From this his school
-received the name of Stoic. Like Aristotle his principal
-endeavour was to unite Philosophy into one whole. As his
-method was characterized by special dialectic skill and
-training, and by the acuteness of his argumentation, so he
-himself was distinguished, in respect of his personality, by
-stern morality, which resembles somewhat that of the
-Cynics, though he did not, like the Cynics, try to attract
-attention. Hence with less vanity his temperance in the
-satisfaction of his absolute wants was almost as great, for
-he lived on nothing but water, bread, figs and honey.
-Thus amongst his contemporaries Zeno was accorded general
-respect; even King Antigonus of Macedonia often visited
-him and dined with him, and he invited him to come to him
-in a letter quoted by Diogenes: this invitation, however,
-Zeno in his reply refused, because he was now eighty years
-of age. But the circumstance that the Athenians trusted
-to him the key of their fortress, speaks for the greatness of
-their confidence in him; indeed, according to Diogenes, the
-following resolution was passed at a meeting of the people:
-“Because Zeno, the son of Mnaseas, has lived for many
-years in our town as a philosopher, and, for the rest, has
-proved himself to be a good man, and has kept the youths
-who followed him in paths of virtue and of temperance,
-having led the way thereto with his own excellent example,
-the citizens decide to confer on him a public eulogy, and to
-present him with a golden crown, on account both of his
-virtue and his temperance. In addition to this he shall be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-publicly buried in the Ceramicus. And for the crown and
-the building of the tomb, a commission of five men shall
-be appointed.” Zeno flourished about the 120th Olympiad
-(about 300 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>) at the same time as Epicurus, Arcesilaus
-of the New Academy, and others. He died at a great age,
-being ninety-eight years of age (though some say he was
-only seventy-two), in the 129th Olympiad; for being tired
-of life, he put an end to it himself either by strangulation
-or by starvation&mdash;just because he had broken his toe.<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
-
-<p>Amongst the succeeding Stoics Cleanthes must be
-specially singled out; he was a disciple and the successor
-of Zeno in the Stoa, and author of a celebrated Hymn to
-God, which Stobæus has preserved. He is well known by
-an anecdote told respecting him. It is said that he was
-called in accordance with the law before a court of justice
-in Athens to give an account of the means by which he
-maintained himself. He then proved that at night he carried
-water for a gardener, and by means of this occupation,
-earned as much as he required in order in the day to be in
-Zeno’s company&mdash;as to which the only point which is not
-quite comprehensible to us is how, even in such a way,
-philosophy, of all things, could be studied. And when for
-this a gratuity was voted to him from the public treasury,
-he refused it at Zeno’s instigation. Like his teacher,
-Cleanthes also died voluntarily, in his eighty-first year, by
-abstaining from food.<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></p>
-
-<p>Of the later Stoics there were many more who could be
-named as having been famous. More distinguished in
-science than Cleanthes was his disciple, Chrysippus of
-Cilicia, born Ol. 125, 1 (474 <span class="smcap">A.U.C.</span>; 280 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>), who likewise
-lived in Athens, and who was specially active in promoting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-the wide cultivation and extension of the philosophy of the
-Stoics. His logic and dialectic were what contributed
-most largely to his fame, and hence it was said that if the
-gods made use of dialectic, they would use none other than
-that of Chrysippus. His literary activity is likewise admired,
-for the number of his works, as Diogenes Laërtius
-tells us, amounted to seven hundred and five. It is said of
-him in this regard that he wrote five hundred lines every
-day. But the manner in which his writings were composed
-detracts very much from our wonder at this facility in
-writing, and shows that most of his works consisted of
-compilations and repetitions. He often wrote over again
-respecting the very same thing; whatever occurred to him he
-put down on paper, dragging in a great variety of evidence.
-Thus he quoted almost entire books by other writers; and
-someone gave expression to the belief that if all that belonged
-to others were taken away from his books, only
-white paper would be left. But of course it is not so bad
-as all this, as we may see by all the quotations from the
-Stoics, where the name of Chrysippus is placed at the head,
-as it always is, and his conclusions and explanations are
-used by preference. His writings, of which Diogenes
-Laërtius mentions a long list, have, however, all been lost
-to us; so much is nevertheless correct, that he was the
-main constructor of the Stoic logic. While it is to be regretted
-that some of his best works have not come down
-to us, it is, perhaps, a good thing that all are not preserved;
-if we had to choose between having all or none, the decision
-would be a hard one. He died in the 143rd Olympiad
-(212 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>).<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the period immediately following, Diogenes of Seleucia
-in Babylonia is a distinguished figure; Carneades,
-the celebrated Academic, is said to have learned dialectic
-from him, and he is also noteworthy because with this Carneades<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-and Critolaus, a Peripatetic thinker, in Olympiad
-156, 2 (598 <span class="smcap">A.U.C.</span>, or 156 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>) and in the time of the elder
-Cato, he was sent as Athenian ambassador to Rome&mdash;an
-embassy which first caused the Romans to make acquaintance
-with Greek philosophy, dialectic and rhetoric, in Rome
-itself. For those philosophers there gave lectures and
-discourses.<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></p>
-
-<p>Besides these, Panaetius is well known as having been
-Cicero’s instructor; the latter wrote his treatise, <i>De Officiis</i>,
-after Panaetius. Finally, we have Posidonius, another
-equally famous teacher, who lived for long in Rome in the
-time of Cicero.<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a></p>
-
-<p>Later on we see the philosophy of the Stoics pass over
-to the Romans, that is to say, it became the philosophy of
-many Romans, though this philosophy did not gain anything
-as a science by so doing. On the contrary, as in the
-case of Seneca and the later Stoics, in Epictetus or Antoninus,
-all speculative interest was really lost, and a rhetorical
-and hortatory disposition shown, of which mention
-cannot be made in a history of Philosophy any more than
-of our sermons. Epictetus of Hierapolis in Phrygia, born
-at the end of the first century after Christ, was first of all
-the slave of Epaphroditus, who, however, freed him, after
-which he betook himself to Rome. When Domitian banished
-the philosophers, poisoners and astrologers from Rome
-(94 <span class="smcap">A.D.</span>), Epictetus went to Nicopolis, in Epirus, and taught
-there publicly. From his lectures Arrian compiled the
-voluminous <i>Dissertationes Epicteteæ</i>, which we still possess,
-and also the manual ἐγχειρίδιον of Stoicism.<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> We still have
-the Meditations εἰς ἑαυτόν of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>Antoninus, in twelve books; he first of all ruled along
-with Lucius Aurelius Verus from 161 to 169 <span class="smcap">A.D.</span>, and then
-from 169 to 180 alone and he conducted a war with the
-Marcomanni. In his Meditations he always speaks to himself;
-these reflections are not, however, speculative in
-nature, being admonitions, such as that man should exercise
-himself in every virtue.</p>
-
-<p>We have no other original works by the older Stoics.
-For the Stoic Philosophy, too, the sources on which we
-formerly could count are cut off. The sources from which a
-knowledge of the philosophy of the Stoics is to be derived
-are, however, well known. There is Cicero, who was himself
-a Stoic, though in his representation there is great
-difficulty in discovering how, for instance, the principle of
-Stoic morality is to be distinguished from that which constitutes
-the principle of the morality of the Peripatetics.
-And, more particularly, we have Sextus Empiricus, whose
-treatment is mainly theoretic, and is thus interesting from
-a philosophic point of view. For Scepticism has had to do
-with Stoicism more especially. But also Seneca, Antoninus,
-Arrian, the manual of Epictetus, and Diogenes Laërtius
-must really be called into council.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the philosophy of the Stoics themselves, they
-definitely separated it into those three parts which we have
-already met with (Vol. I. p. 387, Vol. II. pp. 48, 49), and
-which will, generally speaking, be always found. There
-is Logic in the first place; secondly, Physics, or Natural
-Philosophy; and thirdly, Ethics, or the Philosophy of
-Mind, on the practical side especially. The content of
-their philosophy has, however, not much that is original or
-productive.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c243" id="c243">1. <span class="smcap">Physics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>As regards the Physics of the Stoics, we may in the first
-place say that it does not contain much that is peculiar to
-itself, since it is rather a compendium of the Physics of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-older times, and more especially of that of Heraclitus.
-However, each of the three schools now being dealt with
-has had a very characteristic and definite terminology,
-which is more than can be altogether said of the philosophy
-of Plato and Aristotle. Thus we must now make ourselves
-familiar with the particular expressions used and with
-their significance. The following is the essence of the
-Physics of the Stoics: The determining reason (λόγος)
-is the ruling, all-productive substance and activity, extended
-throughout all, and constituting the basis of all
-natural forms; this preponderating substance, in its rational
-effectuating activity, they call God. It is a world-soul
-endowed with intelligence, and, since they called it God,
-this is really Pantheism. But all Philosophy is pantheistic,
-for it goes to prove that the rational Notion is in the world.
-The hymn of Cleanthes is to this effect: “Nothing
-happens on earth without thee, O Dæmon, neither in the
-ethereal pole of the heavens, nor in the sea, excepting what
-the wicked do through their own foolishness. But thou
-knowest how to make crooked things straight, and thou
-orderest that which is without order, and the inimical is
-friendly to thee. For thus hast thou united everything
-into one, the good to the evil; thus one Notion (λόγος)
-is in everything that ever was, from which those mortals
-who are evil flee. How unhappy are they, too, who, ever
-longing to possess the good, do not perceive God’s universal
-law, nor listen thereto, the which if they but obeyed
-with reason, (σὺν νῷ) they would attain a good and
-happy life!”<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> The Stoics thus believed the study of
-nature to be essential, in order to know in nature its
-universal laws, which constitute the universal reason, in
-order that we might also know therefrom our duties, the
-law for man, and live conformably to the universal laws of
-nature. “Zeno,” according to Cicero (De nat. Deor. I.
-14), “holds this natural law to be divine, and believes that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-it has the power to dictate the right and prohibit what is
-wrong.” Thus the Stoics desired to know this rational
-Notion which rules in nature not altogether on its own
-account; and the study of nature was consequently to
-them rather a mere matter of utility.</p>
-
-<p>If we are now to give some further idea of what these
-Physics are, we may say that the Stoics distinguish in the
-corporeal&mdash;although nature is only the manifestation of
-one common law&mdash;the moment of activity and that of
-passivity; the former is, according to Aristotle, active
-reason, or, according to Spinoza, <i>natura naturans</i>; the latter
-passive reason, or <i>natura naturata</i>. The latter is matter,
-substance without quality, for quality is, generally speaking,
-form, <i>i.e.</i> that which forms universal matter into something
-particular. This is indeed the reason likewise that
-with the Greeks quality is called τὸ ποιόν, just as we in
-German derive <i>Beschaffenheit</i> from <i>Schaffen</i>&mdash;that which is
-posited, the negative moment. But the actuating, as the
-totality of forms, is, according to the Stoics, the Notion in
-matter; and this is God. (Diog. Laërt. VII. 134.)</p>
-
-<p>As regards the further nature of these forms, these
-universal laws of nature, and the formation of the world, the
-Stoics have in the main adopted the ideas of Heraclitus, for
-Zeno studied him very particularly (<i>supra</i>, p. 239). They
-thus make fire the real Notion, the active principle which
-passes into the other elements as its forms. The world
-arises by the self-existent gods driving the universal
-material substance (οὐσίαν) out of the fire, through the air,
-into the water; and as in all generation the moisture which
-surrounds a seed comes first as the begetter of all that is
-particular, so that conception, which in this respect is called
-seed-containing (σπερματικός), remains in the water and
-then actuates the indeterminate Being of matter into the
-origination of the other determinations. The elements, fire,
-water, air and earth, are consequently primary. Respecting
-them the Stoics speak in a manner which has no longer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-any philosophic interest. “The coagulation of the denser
-parts of the world forms the earth; the thinner portion
-becomes air, and if this becomes more and more rarefied, it
-produces fire. From the combination of these elements are
-produced plants, animals, and other kinds of things.” The
-thinking soul is, according to them, of a similar fiery nature,
-and all human souls, the animal principle of life, and also
-plants, are parts of the universal world-soul, of the universal
-fire; and this central point is that which rules and impels.
-Or, as it is put, souls are a fiery breath. Sight, in the
-same way, is a breath of the ruling body (ἡγεμονικοῦ)
-transmitted to the eyes; similarly hearing is an extended,
-penetrating breath, sent from the ruling body to the ears.<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
-
-<p>Respecting the process of nature we may further say this:
-Fire, Stobæus tells us (Eclog. phys. I. p. 312), is called by
-the Stoics an element in a pre-eminent sense, because from
-it, as the primary element, all else arises through a transformation,
-and in it, as in an ultimate, everything is
-fused and becomes dissolved. Thus Heraclitus and Stoicism
-rightly comprehended this process as a universal and eternal
-one. This has even been done by Cicero, though in a more
-superficial way; in this reflection he falsely sees the conflagration
-of the world in time and the end of the world,
-which is quite another matter. For in his work <i>De natura
-Deorum</i> (II. 46) he makes a Stoic speak thus: “In the end
-(<i>ad extremum</i>) everything will be consumed by fire; for if
-all moisture becomes exhausted the earth can neither be
-nourished, nor can air return into existence. Thus nothing
-but fire remains, through whose reanimation and through
-God the world will be renewed and the same order will
-return.” This is spoken after the manner of the ordinary
-conception. But to the Stoics everything is merely a
-Becoming. However deficient this may be, God, as the
-fiery principle, is yet to them the whole activity of nature, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>likewise the rational order of the same, and in this lies the
-perfect pantheism of the Stoic conception of nature. Not
-only do they call this ordering force God, but also nature,
-fate or necessity (εἱμαρμένην), likewise Jupiter, the moving
-force of matter, reason (νοῦν) and foresight (πρόνοιαν);
-to them all these are synonymous.<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> Because the rational
-brings forth all, the Stoics compare this impelling activity
-to a seed, and say: “The seed which sends forth something
-rational (λογικόν) is itself rational. The world sends forth
-the seeds of the rational and is thus in itself rational;”
-that is to say, rational both generally, in the whole, and in
-each particular existent form. “All beginning of movement
-in any nature and soul rises from a ruling principle,
-and all powers which are sent forth upon the individual
-parts of the whole proceed from the ruling power as from a
-source; so that each force that is in the part is also in the
-whole, because the force is distributed by the ruling power
-in it. The world embraces the seed-containing conceptions
-of the life which is in conformity with the conception,” <i>i.e.</i>
-all particular principles.<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> The Physics of the Stoics is thus
-Heraclitean, though the logical element is entirely at one
-with Aristotle; and we may regard it as being such.
-However, speaking generally, only those belonging to
-earlier times had a physical element in their philosophy:
-those coming later neglected Physics entirely and kept
-alone to Logic and to Ethics.</p>
-
-<p>The Stoics again speak of God and the gods according
-to the popular manner of regarding them. They say that
-“God is the ungenerated and imperishable maker of all this
-disposition of things, who after certain periods of time
-absorbs all substance in Himself, and then reproduces it
-from Himself.”<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> There no definite perception is reached,
-and even the above relation of God, as absolute form, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-matter has attained no developed clearness. The universe
-is at one time the unity of form and matter, and God is the
-soul of the world; at another time, the universe, as nature,
-is the Being of the constituted matter, and that soul is
-antagonistic to it, but the activity of God is a disposition of
-the original forms of matter.<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> This opposition is devoid of
-the essentials of union and division.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Stoics remain at the general conception that
-each individual is comprehended in a Notion, and this again
-in the universal Notion, which is the world itself. But because
-the Stoics recognized the rational as the active principle in
-nature, they took its phenomena in their individuality as
-manifestations of the divine; and their pantheism has thereby
-associated itself with the common ideas about the gods as
-with the superstitions which are connected therewith (p.
-235), with belief in all sorts of miracles and with divination&mdash;that
-is to say, they believe that in nature there are
-intimations given which men must receive through divine
-rites and worship. Epicureanism, on the contrary, proceeds
-towards the liberation of men from this superstition
-to which the Stoics are entirely given over. Thus Cicero,
-in his work <i>De divinatione</i>, has taken the most part of his
-material from them, and much is expressly given as being
-the reasoning of the Stoics. When, for example, he speaks
-of the premonitory signs given in connection with human
-events, all this is conformable with the Stoic philosophy.
-The fact that an eagle flies to the right, the Stoics accepted
-as a revelation of God, believing that thereby it was
-intimated to men what it was advisable for them to do in
-some particular circumstances. Just as we find the Stoics
-speaking of God as having universal necessity, to them God,
-as Notion, has hence a relation to men and human ends
-likewise, and in this respect He is providence; thus they
-now arrived at the conception of particular gods also.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>Cicero says in the work quoted above (II. 49): “Chrysippus,
-Diogenes and Antipater argued thus: If gods exist, and
-if they do not let men know beforehand what is to happen
-in the future, they cannot love men, or else they themselves
-do not know what stands before them in the future, or they
-are of opinion that it does not signify whether man knows
-it or not, or they consider such a revelation beneath the
-dignity of their majesty, or they cannot make it comprehensible
-to men.” All this they refute, for amongst other
-things they say that nothing can exceed the beneficence of
-the gods, &amp;c. Thus they draw the conclusion that “the
-gods make known to men the future”&mdash;a system of reasoning
-in which the entirely particular ends of individuals also
-form the interests of the gods. To make men know and
-comprehend at one time and not at another, is an inconsistency,
-<i>i.e.</i> an incomprehensibility, but this very incomprehensibility,
-this obscurity, is the triumph of the common
-way of regarding religions affairs. Thus in the Stoics all
-the superstitions of Rome had their strongest supporters;
-all external, teleological superstition is taken under their
-protection and justified. Because the Stoics started from
-the assertion that reason is God (it certainly is divine,
-but it does not exhaust divinity), they immediately made a
-bound from this universal to the revelation of that which
-operates for the sake of individual ends. The truly rational
-is doubtless revealed to men as the law of God; but the
-useful, what is in conformity with individual ends, is not
-revealed in this truly divine revelation.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c249" id="c249">2. <span class="smcap">Logic.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>In the second place, as to the intellectual side of the
-philosophy, we must first of all. consider the principle of
-the Stoics in answering the question of what the true and
-rational is. In regard to the source of our knowledge of
-truth, or of the criterion, which in those times used to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-discussed (Vol. I. p. 474, Vol. II. p. 233), the Stoics
-decided that the scientific principle is the conception that
-is laid hold of (φαντασία καταληπτική), for the true as
-well as for the good; for the true and good are set forth as
-content or as the existent. Thus a unity of apprehending
-thought and Being is set forth in which neither can exist
-without the other; by this is meant not sensuous conception
-as such, but that which has returned into thought and
-become proper to consciousness. Some of the older
-Stoics, amongst whom we certainly find Zeno, called this
-criterion the very truth of reason (ὀρθὸς λόγος). Ordinary
-conception on its own account (φαντασία) is an impression
-(τύπωσις), and for it Chrysippus used the expression
-alteration (ἐτεροίωσις).<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> But that the conception should be
-true, it must be comprehended; it begins with feeling,
-whereby in fact the type of another is brought into us;
-the second step is that we should transform this into part
-of ourselves, and this first of all occurs through thought.</p>
-
-<p>According to Cicero’s account (Academ. Quæst. IV. 47),
-Zeno illustrated the moments of this appropriation by a
-movement of the hand. When he showed the open palm
-he said that this was a sensuous perception; when he bent
-the fingers somewhat, this was a mental assent through
-which the conception is declared to be mine; when he
-pressed them quite together and formed a fist, this was
-comprehension (κατάληψις), just as in German we speak of
-comprehension [Begreifen] when by means of our senses
-we lay hold of anything in a similar way; when he then
-brought the left hand into play and pressed together that
-fist firmly and forcibly, he said that this was science, in
-which no one but the wise man participated. This double
-pressure, my pressing with the other hand that which is
-grasped, is said to signify conviction, my being conscious of
-the identity of thought with the content. “But who this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-wise man is or has been the Stoics never say,” adds
-Cicero; and of this we shall afterwards have to speak in
-greater detail. In fact, the matter is not made clear
-through this gesticulation of Zeno’s. The first action, the
-open hand, is sensuous apprehension, immediate seeing,
-hearing, &amp;c.; the first motion of the hand is then, speaking
-generally, spontaneity in grasping. This first assent is
-likewise given by fools; it is weak, and may be false.
-The next moment is the closing of the hand, comprehension,
-taking something in; this makes the ordinary conception
-truth, because the ordinary conception becomes identical
-with thought. By this my identity with this determination
-is indeed set forth, but this is not yet scientific knowledge,
-for science is a firm, secure, unchangeable comprehension
-through reason or thought, which is that which rules or
-directs the soul. Midway between scientific knowledge
-and folly is the true Notion as the criterion, although as
-yet it is not itself science; in it thought gives its approbation
-to existence and recognizes itself, for approbation is
-the harmony of a thing with itself. But in scientific
-knowledge a perception of the first elements and determinate
-knowledge through thought of the object is contained.
-Thus the ordinary conception as apprehended is thought;
-scientific knowledge is the consciousness of thought, the
-knowledge of that harmony.</p>
-
-<p>We may also give our assent to these conclusions of the
-Stoics with their various stages, since in them there is a
-perception which is undoubtedly true. In this we have an
-expression of the celebrated definition of the truth, by
-which it is made the harmony of object and consciousness;
-but at the same time it is well to remark that this is
-to be understood simply, and not as indicating that
-consciousness had a conception, and that on the other side
-stood an object, which two had to harmonize with one
-another, and hence that a third was necessarily brought
-into existence which had to compare them. Now this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-would be consciousness itself, but what this last can compare
-is nothing more than its conception, and&mdash;not the object, but&mdash;its
-conception again. Consciousness thus really accepts
-the conception of the object; it is by this approbation that
-the conception actually receives truth&mdash;the testimony of
-mind to the objective rationality of the world. It is not,
-as is ordinarily represented, that a round object here
-impresses itself upon wax, that a third compares the form
-of the round and of the wax and, finding them to be similar,
-judges that the impress must have been correct, and the
-conception and the thing have harmonized. For the action
-of thought consists in this, that thought in and for itself
-gives its approbation and recognizes the object as being in
-conformity with itself; this it is in which lies the power of
-truth&mdash;or approbation is the expression of this harmony,
-or judgment itself. In this, say the Stoics, the truth is
-contained; it is an object which is likewise thought, so
-that the thought that gives its assent is the ruling thought
-which posits the harmony of subject with content. The
-fact that anything is or has truth is thus not because it is
-(for this moment of Being is only ordinary conception),
-but the fact that it is, has its power in the approbation of
-consciousness. But this thought alone and for itself is not
-the truth, nor is the truth as such contained in it, for the
-Notion requires the objective element and is only the
-rational consciousness respecting the truth. But the truth
-of the object itself is contained in the fact that this objective
-corresponds to thought, and not the thought to the
-objective; for this last may be sensuous, changeable, false,
-and contingent, and thus it is untrue for mind. This is
-the main point as far as the Stoics are concerned, and even if
-we discover the Stoic speculative doctrines from their
-antagonists better than from their originators and advocates,
-yet from them, too, this idea of unity proceeds; and while
-both sides of this unity are opposed, both are necessary,
-but thought is essential reality. Sextus Empiricus (adv.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-Math. VIII. 10) understands this thus: “The Stoics say
-that as regards the perceptible and that which is thought
-some things alone are true; what is felt, however, is not
-immediate (έξ εὐθείας), for it becomes true for the first time
-through its relation to the thought that corresponds to it.”
-Thus neither is immediate thought the true, excepting in
-so far us it corresponds to the Notion and is known through
-the working out of rational thought.</p>
-
-<p>This general idea is the only one which is interesting in
-the Stoics, but even in this very principle, limitations are
-found to be present. It merely expresses the truth as subsisting
-in the object, as thought of, yet for that very reason it
-is still a very formal determination, or not in itself the real
-Idea. From this point of view Sextus Empiricus (adv. Math.
-X. 183) examines the Stoics, and he considers and discusses
-them in all sorts of ways. The most striking thing
-that he says is what relates to the following. The fact that
-anything is, rests in its being thought&mdash;the fact that it is
-thought in something being there; the one is the pre-supposition
-of the other. That is to say, the Stoics assert
-that a thing exists, not because it is, but through thought;
-but consciousness for its existence requires another, for
-thought is likewise one-sided. In this criticism by Sextus
-it is indicated that thought requires an object as an
-external to which it gives its approbation. There can be
-no talk of its being here indicated that the thinking mind
-in order to exist as consciousness does not require the
-object; this is really inherent in its conception. But the
-“this” of the object as an external is only a moment which
-is not the only one or the essential. It is the manifestation
-of mind, and mind exists only in that it appears; this
-therefore must come to pass in it, that it must have its
-object as external and give its approbation to it&mdash;that is, it
-must withdraw from this relationship into itself and therein
-recognize its unity. But likewise, having gone into itself,
-it has now from itself to beget its object and give itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-the content which it sends forth from itself. Stoicism
-is only this return of mind into itself, positing the unity
-of itself and the object, and recognizing the harmony;
-but not the going forth again to the extension of the real
-knowledge of a content from itself. We do not find
-Stoicism getting any farther, for it stops short at making
-the consciousness of this unity its object, without developing
-it in the slightest; thus reason remains the simple
-form which does not go on to the distinction of the content
-itself. Hence the formalism of this celebrated standard,
-and of the standpoint from which all truth of content is
-judged, rests farther in the fact that the thought of
-thought, as what is highest, finds this content indeed conformable
-to itself and appropriates it, since it transforms it
-into the universal, but its determinations are given. For if
-thought predominates, still it is always universal form
-alone. On account of this universality thought yields
-nothing but the form of identity with itself; the ultimate
-criterion is thus only the formal identity of the thought
-which discovers harmony. But it may be asked, with
-what? For there no absolute self-determination, no content
-that proceeds from thought as such is to be found; and
-hence everything may harmonize with my thought. The
-criterion of the Stoics is consequently only the principle of
-contradiction; yet when we remove the contradiction from
-absolute reality, it is indeed self-identical, but for that very
-reason empty. The harmony must be a higher one; there
-must be harmony with self in what is other than self, in
-content, in determination; and thus it must be harmony
-with harmony.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with this recognition of the principle of
-the Stoics, both their logic and their morality is judged;
-neither the one nor the other arrives at being immanent
-free science. We have already remarked (p. 241) that they
-also occupied themselves with logical definitions, and since
-they made abstract thought the principle, they have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-brought formal logic to great perfection. Logic is hence
-to them logic in the sense that it expresses the activity of
-the understanding as of conscious understanding; it is
-no longer as with Aristotle, at least in regard to the categories,
-undecided as to whether the forms of the understanding
-are not at the same time the realities of things;
-for the forms of thought are set forth as such for themselves.
-Then along with this comes in, for the first time,
-the question respecting the harmony of thought and object
-or the demand that an appropriate content of thought be
-shown. However, since all given content may be taken
-into thought and posited as something thought without
-therefore losing its determinate character, and this determinate
-character contradicts and does not support the
-simplicity of thought, the taking of it up does not help at
-all; for its opposite may also be taken up and set forth as
-something thought. The opposition is thereby, however,
-only in another form; for instead of the content
-being in outward sensation as something not pertaining
-to thought and not true, as it formerly was, it now pertains
-to thought, but is unlike it in its determinateness, seeing
-that thought is the simple. Thus what was formerly
-excluded from the simple Notion, now comes into it again;
-this separation between activity of the understanding and
-object must indeed be made, but likewise the unity in the
-object as such has to be shown, if it is only something
-thought. Hence Scepticism cast up this opposition more
-especially to the Stoics, and the Stoics amongst themselves
-had always to improve on their conceptions. As we
-have just seen (p. 250) in Sextus Empiricus, they did not
-quite know whether they should define conception as impression
-or alteration, or in some other way. Now if this
-conception is admitted into that which directs the soul,
-into pure consciousness, Sextus further asks (since thought
-<i>in abstracto</i> is the simple and self-identical which, as incorporeal,
-is neither passive nor active), How can an alteration,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-an impression, be made on this? Then the thought-forms
-are themselves incorporeal. But, according to the
-Stoics, only the corporeal can make an impression or bring
-about an alteration.<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> That is to say, on the one hand,
-because corporeal and incorporeal are unlike they cannot
-be one; and, on the other, incorporeal thought-forms, as
-capable of no alteration, are not the content, for this last is
-the corporeal only.</p>
-
-<p>If the thought-forms could in fact have attained the form
-of content, they would have been a content of thought in
-itself. But as they were they had value as laws of thought
-(λεκτά)<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> merely. The Stoics indeed had a system of
-immanent determinations of thought, and actually did a
-great deal in this direction; for Chrysippus specially developed
-and worked out this logical aspect of things, and is
-stated to have been a master in it (<i>supra</i>, pp. 240, 241).
-But this development took a very formal direction; there
-are the ordinary well-known forms of inference, five of
-which are given by Chrysippus, while others give sometimes
-more and sometimes fewer. One of them is the
-hypothetical syllogism through remotion, “When it is day
-it is light, but now it is night and hence it is not light.”
-These logical forms of thought are by the Stoics held to be
-the unproved that requires no proof; but they are likewise
-only formal forms which determine no content as such.
-The wise man is specially skilful in dialectic, we are
-told by the Stoics, for all things, both physical and ethical,
-are perceived through a knowledge of logic.<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> But thus
-they have ascribed this perception to a subject, without
-stating who this wise man is (p. 250). Since objective
-grounds by which to determine the truth are wanting, the
-ultimate decision is attributed to the will of the subject;
-and this talk about the wise man consequently has its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-ground in nothing but the indefiniteness of the criterion,
-from which we cannot get to the determination of content.</p>
-
-<p>It would be superfluous to speak further of their logic
-any more than of their theory of judgments, which in part
-coincides with it, and in part is a grammar and a rhetoric;
-by it no real scientific content can be reached. For this
-logic is not, like Plato’s dialectic, the speculative science
-of the absolute Idea; but, as formal logic, as we saw above
-(p. 254), it is science as the firm, secure, unalterable comprehension
-of reasons, and stops short at the perception of
-the same. This logical element, whose essence consists pre-eminently
-in escaping to the simplicity of the conception
-to that which is not in opposition to itself nor falls into
-contradiction, obtains the upper hand. This simplicity,
-which has not negativity and content in itself, requires a
-given content which it may not abrogate&mdash;but consequently
-it cannot thus attain to a genuine “other” through itself.
-The Stoics have constituted their logic often in the most
-isolated fashion; the principal point that is established
-here is that the objective corresponds to thought, and they
-investigated this thought more closely. If in a manner it
-is quite correct to say that the universal is the true, and
-that thought has a definite content that must also be concrete,
-the main difficulty, which is to deduce the particular
-determination from the universal, so that in this self-determination
-it may remain identical with itself, has not been
-solved by the Stoics: and this the Sceptics brought to
-consciousness. This is the point of view most important
-in the philosophy of the Stoics; it thus showed itself in
-their physics also.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c257" id="c257">3. <span class="smcap">Ethics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Since the theory of mind, the doctrine of knowledge, came
-before us in the investigation of the criterion, we have, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-the third and last place, to speak of the morality of the
-Stoics, to which is due their greatest fame, but which does
-not rise above this formal element any more than what
-precedes, although it cannot be denied that in presenting it
-they have taken a course which seems very plausible to the
-popular conception, but which in fact is to a great extent
-external and empiric.</p>
-
-<p>a. In order, in the first place, to find the definition of
-virtue, Chrysippus gives some good expositions of practical
-ethics which Diogenes Laërtius (VII. 85, 86) quotes at considerable
-length; they are psychological in character and in
-them Chrysippus establishes his formal harmony with himself.
-For according to him the Stoics say: “The first
-desire (ὁρμή) of the animal is for self-preservation, because
-nature from the beginning reconciled each existence with
-itself. This first object innate in every animal” (immanent
-desire) “is thus the harmony of the animal with itself, and
-the consciousness of the same,” the self-consciousness
-through which “the animal is not alienated from itself. Thus
-it repels what is injurious and accepts what is serviceable
-to it.” This is Aristotle’s conception of the nature of
-adaptation to an end, in which, as the principle of activity,
-both the opposite and its sublation are contained. “Enjoyment
-is not the first object, for it” (the sense of satisfaction)
-“is only for the first time added when the nature of an
-animal that seeks itself through itself, receives into itself
-that which is in conformity with its harmony with itself.”
-This is likewise worthy of approbation: self-consciousness,
-enjoyment, is just this return into self, the consciousness of
-this unity in which I enjoy something and thereby have
-my unity as this individual in the objective element. The
-case is similar in regard to man; his end is self-preservation,
-but with a conscious end, with consideration, according to
-reason. “In plants nature operates without voluntary
-inclination (ὁρμῆς) or sense-perception, but some things
-in us take place in the same manner as in plants.” For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-in the plant there also is the seed-containing conception,
-but it is not in it as end, nor as its object, for it knows
-nothing about it. “In animals inclination comes in; in
-them nature makes their impulses conformable to their first
-principle;” <i>i.e.</i> the end of inclination is simply the first
-principle of their nature, and that through which they make
-for their own preservation. “Rational creatures likewise
-make nature their end, but this is to live according to
-reason, for reason becomes in them the artist who produces
-inclination,” <i>i.e.</i> it makes a work of art in man from what
-in the animal is desire merely. To live in accordance with
-nature is thus, to the Stoics, to live rationally.</p>
-
-<p>This now appears somewhat like certain receipts given
-by the Stoics for the purpose of discovering right motive
-forces in regard to virtue. For their principle put generally
-is this: “Men must live in conformity with nature,
-<i>i.e.</i> with virtue; for to it” (rational) “nature leads us.”
-That is the highest good, the end of everything&mdash;a most
-important form in Stoic morality, which appears in Cicero
-as <i>finis bonorum</i> or <i>summum bonum</i>. With the Stoics right
-reason and the securing of it on its own account, is the
-highest principle. But here, too, we immediately see that
-we are thereby merely led round in a circle in a manner
-altogether formal, because virtue, conformity to nature, and
-reason, are only determined through one another. Virtue
-consists in living conformably with nature, and what is
-conformable to nature is virtue. Likewise thought must
-further determine what is in conformity with nature, but
-conformity with nature again is that alone which is determined
-through reason. The Stoics further say, according
-to Diogenes Laërtius (VII. 87, 88) “To live according to
-nature is to live according to that which experience teaches
-us of the laws both of universal nature and of our own
-nature, by doing nothing which universal law forbids;
-and that law is the right reason which pervades everything,
-being the same with Jupiter, the disposer (καθηγεμόνι) of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-the existing system of things. The virtue of the happy
-man is when everything occurs according to the harmony
-of the genius (δαίμονος) of each individual with reference
-to the will of the disposer of all things.” Thus everything
-remains as it was in a universal formalism.</p>
-
-<p>We must throughout allow to the Stoics that virtue
-consists in following thought, <i>i.e.</i> the universal law, right
-reason; anything is moral and right only in as far as a
-universal end is in it fulfilled and brought into evidence.
-This last is the substantial, the essential nature of a relationship,
-and in it we have that which is really in
-thought alone. The universal which must be the ultimate
-determination in action, is, however, not abstract, but the
-universal in this relationship, just as, for example, in
-property the particular is placed on one side. Because
-man, as a man of thought and culture, acts according to
-his perception, he subordinates his impulses and desires to
-the universal; for they are individual. There is in each
-human action an individual and particular element; but
-there is a distinction as to whether the particular as such
-is solely insisted upon or whether in this particular
-the universal is secured. It is to the securing of this
-universal that the energy of Stoicism is directed. But this
-universal has still no content and is undetermined, and
-thereby the Stoic doctrines of virtue are incomplete, empty,
-meaningless and tedious. Virtue indeed is commended in
-a forcible, lively and edifying manner, but as to what this
-universal law of virtue is, we have no indications given us.</p>
-
-<p>b. The other side as regards the good is external existence,
-and the agreement of circumstances, of external
-nature, with the end aimed at by man. For although the
-Stoics have expressed the good as being conformity with
-law, in relation to the practical will, they yet defined it,
-according to Diogenes Laërtius (VII. 94, 95), as being at
-the same time the useful, “either absolutely and immediately
-useful or not contrary to utility,” so that generally speaking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-the useful is, as it were, the accident of virtue. “The
-Stoics likewise distinguished manifold good into good
-having reference to the soul, and external good; the former
-indicates virtues and their actions; the latter the fact of
-pertaining to a noble country, having a virtuous friend, and
-so on. In the third place it is neither external nor is it a
-matter of self-consciousness alone, when the self-same man
-is virtuous and happy.” These conclusions are quite good.
-Morality does not require to look so coldly on what
-concerns utility, for every good action is in fact useful,
-<i>i.e.</i> it has actuality and brings forth something good. An
-action which is good without being useful is no action and
-has no actuality. That which in itself is useless in the
-good is its abstraction as being a non-reality. Men not
-only may, but must have the consciousness of utility; for it
-is true that it is useful to know the good. Utility means
-nothing else but that men have a consciousness respecting
-their actions. If this consciousness is blameworthy, it is
-still more so to know much of the good of one’s action and to
-consider it less in the form of necessity. Thus the question
-was raised as to how virtue and happiness are related to one
-another, a theme of which the Epicureans have also treated.
-Here it was, as in more recent times, regarded as the great
-problem to discover whether virtue gives happiness, taken
-altogether by itself, whether the conception of happiness
-is included in its conception. That union of virtue and
-happiness, as the mean, is thus rightly represented as
-being perfect, neither pertaining only to self-consciousness
-nor to externality.</p>
-
-<p>α. In order to be able to give a general answer to this
-question, we most recollect what was said above of the
-principle of self-preservation, according to which virtue has
-to do with the rational nature. The fulfilment of its end is
-happiness as finding itself realized, and as the knowledge or
-intuitive perception of itself as an external&mdash;a harmony of
-its Notion or its genius with its Being or its reality. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-harmony of virtue with happiness thus means that the
-virtuous action realizes itself in and for itself, man becomes
-in it an immediate object to himself, and he comes to the
-perception of himself as objective, or of the objective as
-himself. This rests in the conception of action and particularly
-of good action. For the bad destroys reality and is
-opposed to self-preservation; but the good is what makes
-for its self-preservation and effectuates it&mdash;the good end is
-thus the content that realizes itself in action. But in this
-general answer to that question, properly speaking, the
-consciousness of the implicitly existent end has not sufficiently
-exactly the signification of virtue, nor has action
-proceeding from the same exactly the signification of
-virtuous action, neither has the reality which it attains the
-signification of happiness. The distinction rests in the
-fact that the Stoics have merely remained at this general
-conception, and set it forth immediately as actuality; in it
-however, the conception of virtuous action is merely
-expressed, and not reality.</p>
-
-<p>β. A further point is that just because the Stoics have
-remained at this position, the opposition between virtue
-and happiness immediately enters in, or, in abstract form,
-that between thought and its determination. These opposites
-are with Cicero <i>honestum</i> and <i>utile</i>, and their union is the
-question dealt with.<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> Virtue, which is living in accordance
-with the universal law of nature, is confronted by the
-satisfaction of the subject as such in his particularity. The
-two sides are, in the first place, this particularity of the
-individual, which, in the most varied aspects has existence
-in me as the abstract “this,” for example, in the pre-supposition
-of determinate inclinations; and here we have
-pleasure and enjoyment in which my existence harmonizes
-with the demands of my particularity. In the second
-place, I, as the will that fulfils law, am only the formal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-character which has to carry out the universal; and thus,
-as willing the universal, I am in accord with myself as
-thinking. The two now come into collision, and because I
-seek the one satisfaction or the other, I am in collision with
-myself, because I am also individual. As to this we may
-hear many trivial things said, such as that things often go
-badly with the virtuous and well with the wicked, and that
-the latter is happy, &amp;c. By going well all external circumstances
-are understood, and on the whole the content is
-quite uninteresting, for it is constituted by the attainment
-of commonplace ends, points of view and interests. Such
-at once show themselves, however, to be merely contingent
-and external; hence we soon get past this standpoint in
-the problem, and thus external enjoyment, riches, noble
-birth, &amp;c., do not accord with virtue or happiness. The
-Stoics indeed said: “The implicitly good is the perfect”
-(that which fulfils its end) “in accordance with the nature
-of the rational; now virtue is such, but enjoyment, pleasure
-and such-like are its accessories”<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a>&mdash;the end of the satisfaction
-of the individual on his own account. Thus these
-may be the concomitants of virtue, although it is a matter
-of indifference whether they are so or not, for since this
-satisfaction is not end, it is equally a matter of indifference
-if pain is the concomitant of virtue. Conduct which is
-according to reason only, thus further contains man’s
-abstract concentration within himself, and the fact that the
-consciousness of the true enters into him, so that he
-renounces everything that belongs to immediate desires,
-feelings, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>In this quite formal principle of holding oneself in a pure
-harmony with oneself of a merely thinking nature, there
-now rests the power of becoming indifferent to every particular
-enjoyment, desire, passion and interest. Because this
-following of the determinations of reason is in opposition
-to enjoyment, man should seek his end or satisfaction in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-nothing else than in the satisfaction of his reason, in
-satisfying himself in himself, but not in anything outwardly
-conditioned. Hence much has been said by the Stoics in
-respect of that which pertains to the passions being
-something that is contradictory. The writings of Seneca
-and Antoninus contain much that is true in this regard,
-and they may be most helpful to those who have not attained
-to the higher degree of conviction. Seneca’s talent must
-be recognized, but we must also be convinced that it does
-not suffice. Antoninus (VIII. 7) shows psychologically that
-happiness or pleasure is not a good. “Regret is a certain
-self-blame, because something useful has failed, the good
-must be something useful, and the noble and good man
-must make the same his interest. But no noble and good
-man will feel regret that he has fallen short in pleasure;
-pleasure is thus neither useful nor good. The man who
-has the desire for glory after his death does not recollect
-that he who holds him in remembrance himself dies also,
-and again he who follows this one, until all recollection
-through these admiring ones who have passed away, has
-been extinguished.” Even if this independence and freedom
-is merely formal, we must still recognize the greatness of this
-principle. However, in this determination of the abstract
-inward independence and freedom of the character in itself
-lies the power which has made the Stoics famous; this
-Stoic force of character which says that man has only to
-seek to remain like himself, thus coincides with the formal
-element which I have already given (p. 254). For if the
-consciousness of freedom is my end, in this universal end of
-the pure consciousness of my independence all particular
-determinations of freedom which are constituted by duties
-and laws, have disappeared. The strength of will of
-Stoicism has therefore decided not to regard the particular
-as its essence, but to withdraw itself therefrom; we see
-on the one hand, that this is a true principle, but on the
-other, it is at the same time abstract still.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Now because the principle of the Stoic morality professes
-to be the harmony of mind with itself, what should be
-done is not to let this remain formal, and therefore not to let
-what is not contained in this self-contained be any longer
-shut out of it. That freedom which the Stoics ascribe to
-man is not without relation to what is other than himself;
-thus he is really dependent, and under this category
-happiness really falls. My independence is only one side, to
-which the other side, the particular side of my existence,
-hence does not yet correspond. The old question, which
-at this time again came up, thus concerns the harmony
-between virtue and happiness. We speak of morality
-rather than virtue, because that according to which I ought
-to direct my actions is not, as in virtue, my will, as it has
-become custom. Morality really contains my subjective
-conviction that that which I do is in conformity with
-rational determinations of will, with universal duties. That
-question is a necessary one, a problem which even in Kant’s
-time occupied men, and in endeavouring to solve it we
-must begin by considering what is to be understood by
-happiness. Much more is afterwards said of that in which
-satisfaction is to be sought. However, from what is
-external and exposed to chance we must at once break free.
-Happiness in general means nothing more than the feeling
-of harmony with self. That which is pleasing to the senses
-is pleasing because a harmony with ourselves is therein
-contained. The contrary and unpleasing is, on the other
-hand, a negation, a lack of correspondence with our desires.
-The Stoics have posited as the very essence of enjoyment
-this harmony of our inner nature with itself, but only as
-inward freedom and the consciousness, or even only the
-feeling of this harmony, so that enjoyment such as this is
-contained in virtue itself. Yet this enjoyment ever remains
-a secondary matter, a consequence, which in so far as it is
-so cannot be made end, but should only be considered as
-an accessory. The Stoics said in this regard that virtue is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-alone to be sought, but with virtue happiness on its own
-account is found, for it confers blessing explicitly as such.
-This happiness is true and imperturbable even if man is in
-misfortune;<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> thus the greatness of the Stoic philosophy
-consists in the fact that if the will thus holds together
-within itself, nothing can break into it, that everything else
-is kept outside of it, for even the removal of pain cannot be
-an end. The Stoics have been laughed at because they
-said that pain is no evil.<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> But toothache and the like are
-not in question as regards this problem. We cannot but
-know we are subject to such; pain like this, and unhappiness
-are, however, two different things. Thus the problem
-throughout is only to be understood as the demand for a
-harmony of the rational will with external reality. To this
-reality there also belongs the sphere of particular existence,
-of subjectivity, of personality, of particular interests. But of
-these interests the universal alone truly pertains to this reality,
-for only in so far as it is universal, can it harmonize with
-the rationality of the will. It is thus quite right to say that
-suffering, pain, &amp;c., are no evil, whereby the conformity
-with myself, my freedom, might be destroyed; I am elevated
-over such in the union which is maintained with myself,
-and even if I may feel them, they can still not make me at
-variance with myself. This inward unity with myself as
-felt, is happiness, and this is not destroyed by outward
-evil.</p>
-
-<p>γ. Another opposition is that within virtue itself. Because
-the universal law of right reason is alone to be taken
-as the standard of action, there is no longer any really
-absolutely fixed determination, for all duty is always, so to
-speak, a particular content, which can plainly be grasped in
-universal form, without this, however, in any way affecting
-the content. Because virtue is thus that which is conformable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-to the real essence or law of things, in a general sense
-the Stoics called virtue everything, in every department,
-which is in conformity with law in that department. Hence,
-Diogenes tells us (VII. 92), they also speak of logical
-and physical virtues, just as their morality represents
-individual duties (τὰ καθήκοντα) by passing in review the
-individual natural relationships in which man stands, and
-showing what in them is rational.<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> But this is only a
-kind of quibbling such as we have also seen in Cicero’s
-case. Thus in as far as an ultimate deciding criterion of
-that which is good cannot be set up, the principle being
-destitute of determination, the ultimate decision rests with
-the subject, Just as before this it was the oracle that
-decided, at the commencement of this profounder inwardness
-the subject was given the power of deciding as to what is
-right. For since Socrates’ time the determination of what
-was right by the standard of customary morality had ceased
-in Athens to be ultimate; hence with the Stoics all external
-determination falls away, and the power of decision can only
-be placed in the subject as such, which in the last instance
-determines from itself as conscience. Although much
-that is elevated and edifying may find its support here, an
-actual determination is still wanting; hence there is according
-to the Stoics only one virtue,<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a> and the wise man is
-the virtuous.</p>
-
-<p>c. The Stoics have thus in the third place likewise been
-in the way of representing an ideal of the wise man which,
-however, is nothing more than the will of the subject which
-in itself only wills itself, remains at the thought of the
-good, because it is good, allows itself in its steadfastness to
-be moved by nothing different from itself, such as desires,
-pain, &amp;c., desires its freedom alone, and is prepared to give
-up all else&mdash;which thus, if it experiences outward pain and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>misfortune, yet separates these from the inwardness of its
-consciousness. The question of why the expression of
-rel morality has with the Stoics the form of the ideal of
-the wise man finds its answer, however, in the fact that
-the mere conception of virtuous consciousness, of action
-with respect to an implicitly existent end, finds in
-individual consciousness alone the element of moral reality.
-For if the Stoics had gone beyond the mere conception of
-action for the implicitly existent end, and had reached to
-the knowledge of the content, they would not have required
-to express this as a subject. To them rational
-self-preservation is virtue. But if we ask what it is that is
-evolved by virtue, the answer is to the effect that it is just
-rational self-preservation; and thus they have not by this
-expression got beyond that formal circle. Moral reality
-is not expressed as that which is enduring, which is
-evolved and ever evolving itself. And moral reality is just
-this, to exist; for as nature is an enduring and existent
-system, the spiritual as such must be an objective world.
-To this reality the Stoics have, however, not reached. Or
-we may understand this thus. Their moral reality is only
-the wise man, an ideal and not a reality&mdash;in fact the mere
-conception whose reality is not set forth.</p>
-
-<p>This subjectivity is already contained in the fact that
-moral reality, expressed as virtue, thereby immediately
-presents the appearance of being present only as a quality
-of the individual. This virtue, as such, in as far as only the
-moral reality of the individual is indicated, cannot attain
-to happiness in and for itself, even though happiness,
-regarded in the light of realization, were only the realization
-of the individual. For this happiness would be just
-the enjoyment of the individual as the harmony of existence
-with him as individual; but with him as individual
-true happiness does not harmonize, but only with him as
-universal man. Man must likewise not in the least
-desire that it should harmonize with him as individual man,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-that is, he must be indifferent to the individuality of his
-existence, and to the harmony with the individual as much
-as to the want of harmony; he must be able to dispense
-with happiness just as, if he possesses it, he must be free
-from it; or it is only a harmony of him with himself as a
-universal. If merely the subjective conception of morality
-is therein contained, its true relationship is yet thereby
-expressed; for it is this freedom of consciousness which
-in its enjoyment rests in itself and is independent of objects,&mdash;what
-we expressed above (p. 264) as the special
-characteristic of the Stoic morality. Stoic self-consciousness
-has not here to deal with its individuality as such, but
-solely with the freedom in which it is conscious of itself
-only as the universal. Now could one call this happiness, in
-distinction to the other, true happiness, happiness would
-still, on the whole, remain a wrong expression. The satisfaction
-of rational consciousness in itself as an immediate
-universal, is a state of being which is simulated by the
-determination of happiness; for in happiness we have the
-moment of self-consciousness as an individuality. But this
-differentiated consciousness is not present in that self-satisfaction;
-for in that freedom the individual has rather
-the sense of his universality only. Striving after happiness,
-after spiritual enjoyment, and talking of the excellence of
-the pleasures of science and art, is hence dull and insipid,
-for the matter with which we are occupied has no longer
-the form of enjoyment, or it does away with that conception.
-This sort of talk has indeed passed away and it no longer
-has any interest. The true point of view is to concern
-oneself with the matter itself and not with enjoyment, that
-is, not with the constant reflection on the relation to oneself
-as individual, but with the matter as a matter, and as
-implicitly universal. We must take care besides that
-things are tolerable to us as individuals, and the pleasanter
-the better. But no further notice or speech about this is
-requisite, nor are we to imagine that there is much that is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-rational and important within it. But the Stoic consciousness
-does not get beyond this individuality to the reality of
-the universal, and therefore it has only to express the form,
-the real as an individual, or the wise man.</p>
-
-<p>The highest point reached by Aristotle, the thought of
-thought, is also present in Stoicism, but in such a way
-that it does not stand in its individual capacity as it appears
-to do in Aristotle, having what is different beside it, but as
-being quite alone. Thus in the Stoic consciousness there
-is just this freedom, this negative moment of abstraction
-from existence, an independence which is capable of giving
-up everything, but not as an empty passivity and self-abnegation,
-as though everything could be taken from it,
-but an independence which can resign it voluntarily, without
-thereby losing its reality; for its reality is really just
-the simple rationality, the pure thought of itself. Here
-pure consciousness thus attains to being its own object,
-and because reality is to it only this simple object, its
-object annuls in itself all modes of existence, and is nothing
-in and for itself, being therein only in the form of something
-abrogated.</p>
-
-<p>All is merged into this: the simplicity of the Notion, or
-its pure negativity, is posited in relation to everything.
-But the real filling in, the objective mode, is wanting, and in
-order to enter into this, Stoicism requires that the content
-should be given. Hence the Stoics depicted the ideal of
-the wise man in specially eloquent terms, telling how perfectly
-sufficient in himself and independent he is, for what
-the wise man does is right. The description of the ideal
-formed by the Stoics is hence a common subject of discussion
-and is even devoid of interest; or at least the negative
-element in it is alone noteworthy. “The wise man is free
-and likewise in chains, for he acts from himself, uncorrupted
-by fear or desire.” Everything which belongs to desire
-and fear he does not reckon to himself, he gives to such the
-position of being something foreign to him; for no particular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-existence is secure to him. “The wise man is alone king,
-for he alone is not bound to laws, and he is debtor to no one.”
-Thus we here see the autonomy and autocracy of the wise
-man, who, merely following reason, is absolved from all
-established laws which are recognized, and for which no
-rational ground can be given, or which appear to rest somewhat
-on a natural aversion or instinct. For even in relation
-to actual conduct no definite law has properly speaking
-reality for him, and least of all those which appear to
-belong to nature as such alone, <i>e.g.</i> the prohibition against
-entering into marriage relations which are considered
-incestuous, the prohibition of intercourse between man and
-man, for in reason the same thing is fitting as regards the
-one which is so as regards the others. Similarly the wise
-man may eat human flesh,<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> &amp;c. But a universal reason is
-something quite indeterminate. Thus the Stoics have not
-passed beyond their abstract understanding in the transgression
-of these laws, and therefore they have allowed
-their king to do much that was immoral; for if incest,
-pederasty, the eating of human flesh, were at first forbidden
-as though through a natural instinct only, they likewise can
-by no means exist before the judgment-seat of reason. The
-Stoic wise man is thus also ‘enlightened,’ in the sense that
-where he did not know how to bring the natural instinct
-into the form of a rational reason, he trampled upon nature.
-Thus that which is called natural law or natural instinct
-comes into opposition with what is set forth as immediately
-and universally rational. For example, those first actions
-seem to rest on natural feelings, and we must remember that
-feelings are certainly not the object of thought; as opposed
-to this, property is something thought, universal in itself, a
-recognition of my possession from all, and thus it indeed
-belongs to the region of the understanding. But should
-the wise man hence not be bound by the former because it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>is not something immediately thought, this is merely the
-fault of his want of comprehension. As we have, however,
-seen that in the sphere of theory the thought-out
-simplicity of the truth is capable of all content, so we find
-this also to be the case with the good, that which is practically
-thought-out, without therefore being any content in
-itself. To wish to justify such a content through a reason
-thus indicates a confusion between the perception of the
-individual and that of all reality, it means a superficiality of
-perception which does not acknowledge a certain thing
-because it is not known in this and that regard. But this
-is so for the reason that it only seeks out and knows the
-most immediate grounds and cannot know whether there
-are not other aspects and other grounds. Such grounds as
-these allow of reasons for and against everything being
-found&mdash;on the one hand a positive relation to something
-which, though in other cases necessary, as such can also be
-again sublated; and, on the other hand, a negative relation
-to something necessary, which can likewise again be held
-to be valid.</p>
-
-<p>Because the Stoics indeed placed virtue in thought, but
-found no concrete principle of rational self-determination
-whereby determinateness and difference developed, they, in
-the first place, have carried on a reasoning by means of
-grounds to which they lead back virtue. They draw
-deductions from facts, connections, consequences, from a
-contradiction or opposition; and this Antoninus and Seneca
-do in an edifying way and with great ingenuity. Reasons,
-however, prove to be a nose of wax; for there are good
-grounds for everything, such as “These instincts, implanted
-as they are by nature,” or “Short life,” &amp;c. Which
-reasons should be esteemed as good thereby depends on
-the end and interest which form the pre-supposition giving
-them their power. Hence reasons are as a whole subjective.
-This method of reflecting on self and on what we should
-do, leads to the giving to our ends the breadth of reflection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-due to penetrative insight, the enlargement of the sphere
-of consciousness. It is thus I who bring forward these wise
-and good grounds. They do not constitute the thing, the
-objective itself, but the thing of my own will, of my desire,
-a bauble through which I set up before me the nobility of
-my mind; the opposite of this is self-oblivion in the thing.
-In Seneca himself there is more folly and bombast in the
-way of moral reflection than genuine truth; and thus there
-has been brought up against him both his riches, the splendour
-of his manner of life, his having allowed Nero to give
-him wealth untold, and also the fact that he had Nero as his
-pupil; for the latter delivered orations composed by Seneca.<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>
-This reasoning is often brilliant, as with Seneca: we find
-much that awakens and strengthens the mind, clever antitheses
-and rhetoric, but we likewise feel the coldness and
-tediousness of these moral discourses. We are stimulated
-but not often satisfied, and this may be deemed the character
-of sophistry: if acuteness in forming distinctions and sincere
-opinion must be there recognized, yet final conviction is ever
-lacking.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place there is in the Stoic standpoint the
-higher, although negatively formal principle, that what is
-thought is alone as such the end and the good, and therefore
-that in this form of abstract thought alone, as in Kant’s
-principle of duty, there is contained that by which man must
-establish and secure his self-consciousness, so that he can
-esteem and follow nothing in himself in as far as it has
-any other content for itself. “The happy life,” says
-Seneca (De vita beata, 5), “is unalterably grounded on a
-right and secure judgment.” The formal security of the
-mind which abstracts from everything, sets up for us no
-development of objective principles, but a subject which
-maintains itself in this constancy, and in an indifference
-not due to stupidity, but studied; and this is the infinitude
-of self-consciousness in itself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Because the moral principle of the Stoics remains at this
-formalism, all that they treat of is comprised in this. For
-their thoughts are the constant leading back of consciousness
-to its unity with itself. The power of despising existence
-is great, the strength of this negative attitude sublime.
-The Stoic principle is a necessary moment in the Idea of
-absolute consciousness; it is also a necessary manifestation
-in time. For if, as in the Roman world, the life of the
-real mind is lost in the abstract universal; the consciousness,
-where real universality is destroyed, must go back into its
-individuality and maintain itself in its thoughts. Hence,
-when the political existence and moral actuality of Greece
-had perished, and when in later times the Roman Empire also
-became dissatisfied with the present, it withdrew into itself,
-and there sought the right and moral which had already
-disappeared from ordinary life. It is thus herein implied,
-not that the condition of the world is a rational and right
-one, but only that the subject as such should assert his
-freedom in himself. Everything that is outward, world,
-relationships, &amp;c., are so disposed as to be capable of being
-abrogated; in it there is thus no demand for the real
-harmony of reason and existence; or that which we might
-term objective morality and rectitude is not found in it.
-Plato has set up the ideal of a Republic, <i>i.e.</i> of a rational
-condition of mankind in the state; for this esteem for right,
-morality and custom which is to him the principal matter,
-constitutes the side of reality in that which is rational; and
-it is only through a rational condition of the world such
-as this, that the harmony of the external with the internal
-is in this concrete sense present. In regard to morality
-and power of willing the good, nothing more excellent can
-be read than what Marcus Aurelius has written in his
-Meditations on himself; he was Emperor of the whole of
-the then known civilized world, and likewise bore himself
-nobly and justly as a private individual. But the condition
-of the Roman Empire was not altered by this philosophic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-emperor, and his successor, who was of a different character,
-was restrained by nothing from inaugurating a condition
-of things as bad as his own wicked caprice might direct.
-It is something much higher when the inward principle of
-the mind, of the rational will, likewise realizes itself, so
-that there arises a rational constitution, a condition of things
-in accordance with culture and law. Through such objectivity
-of reason, the determinations which come together
-in the ideal of the wise man are first consolidated. There
-then is present a system of moral relationships which are
-duties; each determination is then in its place, the one
-subordinated to the other, and the higher is predominant.
-Hence it comes to pass that the conscience becomes
-bound (which is a higher point than the Stoic freedom),
-that the objective relationships which we call duties are
-consolidated after the manner of a just condition of things,
-as well as being held by mind to be fixed determinations.
-Because these duties do not merely appear to hold good in
-a general sense, but are also recognized in my conscience
-as having the character of the universal, the harmony of
-the rational will and reality is established. On the one
-hand, the objective system of freedom as necessity exists,
-and, on the other, the rational in me is real as conscience.
-The Stoic principle has not yet reached to this more concrete
-attitude, as being on the one hand abstract morality,
-and, on the other, the subject that has a conscience. The
-freedom of self-consciousness in itself is the principle, but
-it has not yet attained to its concrete form, and its relation
-to happiness exists only in its determination as indifferent
-and contingent, which relation must be given up. In the
-concrete principle of rationality the condition of the world,
-as of my conscience, is not, however, indifferent.</p>
-
-<p>This is a general description of Stoic morality; the main
-point is to recognize its point of view and chief relationships.
-Because in the Roman world a perfectly consistent
-position, and one conformable to existing conditions, has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-attained to the consciousness of itself, the philosophy of
-the Stoics has more specially found its home in the Roman
-world. The noble Romans have hence only proved the
-negative, an indifference to life and to all that is external;
-they could be great only in a subjective or negative
-manner&mdash;in the manner of a private individual. The
-Roman jurists are also said to have been likewise Stoic
-philosophers, but, on the one hand, we find that our teachers
-of Roman law only speak ill of Philosophy, and, on the
-other, they are yet sufficiently inconsistent to state it to
-the credit of the Roman jurists that they were philosophers.
-So far as I understand law, I can find in it, among the
-Romans, nothing either of thought, Philosophy or the
-Notion. If we are to call the reasoning of the understanding
-logical thought, they may indeed be held to be
-philosophers, but this is also present in the reasoning
-of Master Hugo, who certainly does not claim to be a
-philosopher. The reasoning of the understanding and the
-philosophic Notion are two different things. We shall now
-proceed to what is in direct contrast to the Stoic philosophy,
-Epicureanism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c276" id="c276">B. <span class="smcap">Epicurus.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>The Epicurean philosophy, which forms the counterpart
-to Stoicism, was just as much elaborated as the Stoic, if,
-indeed, it were not more so. While the latter posited as
-truth existence for thought&mdash;the universal Notion&mdash;and
-held firmly to this principle, Epicurus, the founder of the
-other system, held a directly opposite view, regarding as
-the true essence not Being in general, but Being as sensation,
-that is, consciousness in the form of immediate particularity.
-As the Stoics did not seek the principle of the
-Cynics&mdash;that man must confine himself to the simplicity of
-nature&mdash;in man’s requirements, but placed it in universal
-reason, so Epicurus elevated the principle that happiness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-should be our chief end into the region of thought, by
-seeking pleasure in a universal which is determined through
-thought. And though, in so doing, he may have given a
-higher scientific form to the doctrines of the Cyrenaics. it
-is yet self-evident that if existence for sensation is to be
-regarded as the truth, the necessity for the Notion is
-altogether abrogated, and in the absence of speculative
-interest things cease to form a united whole, all things
-being in point of fact lowered to the point of view of the
-ordinary human understanding. Notwithstanding this
-proviso, before we take this philosophy into consideration,
-we must carefully divest ourselves of all the ideas commonly
-prevalent regarding Epicureanism.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the life of Epicurus, he was born in the
-Athenian village of Gargettus in Ol. 109, 3 (<span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 342), and
-therefore before the death of Aristotle, which took place in
-Ol. 114, 3. His opponents, especially the Stoics, have
-raked up against him more accusations than I can tell of, and
-have invented the most trivial anecdotes respecting his
-doings. He had poor parents; his father, Neocles, was
-village schoolmaster, and Chærestrata, his mother, was a
-sorceress: that is, she earned money, like the women of
-Thrace and Thessaly, by furnishing spells and incantations,
-as was quite common in those days. The father, taking
-Epicurus with him, migrated with an Athenian colony to
-Samos, but here also he was obliged to give instruction to
-children, because his plot of land was not sufficient for the
-maintenance of his family. At the age of about eighteen
-years, just about the time when Aristotle was living in
-Chalcis, Epicurus returned to Athens. He had already, in
-Samos, made the philosophy of Democritus a special subject
-of study, and now in Athens he devoted himself to it more
-than ever; in addition to this, he was on intimate terms
-with several of the philosophers then flourishing, such as
-Xenocrates, the Platonist, and Theophrastus, a follower of
-Aristotle. When Epicurus was twelve years old, he read<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-with his teacher Hesiod’s account of Chaos, the source of all
-things; and this was perhaps not without influence on his
-philosophic views. Otherwise he professed to be self-taught,
-in the sense that he produced his philosophy
-entirely from himself; but we are not to suppose from this
-that he did not attend the lectures or study the writings of
-other philosophers. Neither is it to be understood that he
-was altogether original in his philosophy as far as content
-was concerned; for, as will be noted later, his physical
-philosophy especially is that of Leucippus and Democritus.
-It was at Mitylene in Lesbos that he first came forward as
-teacher of an original philosophic system, and then again at
-Lampsacus in Asia Minor; he did not, however, find very
-many hearers. After having for some years led an unsettled
-life, he returned in about the six and thirtieth year
-of his age to Athens, to the very centre of all Philosophy;
-and there, some time after, he bought for himself a garden,
-where he lived and taught in the midst of his friends.
-Though so frail in body that for many years he was unable
-to rise from his chair, in his manner of living he was most
-regular and frugal, and he devoted himself entirely to
-science, to the exclusion of all other interests. Even Cicero,
-though in other respects he has little to say in his favour,
-bears testimony to the warmth of his friendships, and adds
-that no one can deny he was a good, a humane, and a kindly
-man. Diogenes Laërtius gives special commendation to
-his reverence towards his parents, his generosity to his
-brothers, and his benevolence to all. He died of stone in
-the seventy-first year of his age. Just before his death he
-had himself placed in a warm bath, drank a cup of wine,
-and charged his friends to remember what he had taught
-them.<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a></p>
-
-<p>No other teacher has ever been loved and reverenced by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>his scholars as much as Epicurus; they lived on such intimate
-terms of friendship that they determined to make
-common stock of their possessions with him, and so continue
-in a permanent association, like a kind of Pythagorean
-brotherhood. This they were, however, forbidden to do by
-Epicurus himself, because it would have betrayed a distrust
-in their readiness to share what they had with one another;
-but where distrust is possible, there neither friendship, nor
-unity, nor constancy of attachment can find a place. After
-his death he was held in honoured remembrance by his
-disciples: they carried about with them everywhere his
-likeness, engraved on rings or drinking-cups, and remained
-so faithful to his teaching that they considered it almost a
-crime to make any alteration in it (while in the Stoic
-philosophy development was continually going on), and his
-school, in respect of his doctrines, resembled a closely-barricaded
-state to which all entrance was denied. The
-reason for this lies, as we shall presently see, in his system
-itself; and the further result, from a scientific point of view,
-ensued that we can name no celebrated disciples of his who
-carried on and completed his teaching on their own account.
-For his disciples could only have gained distinction for
-themselves by going further than Epicurus did. But to go
-further would have been to reach the Notion, which would
-only have confused the system of Epicurus; for what is
-devoid of thought is thrown into confusion by the introduction
-of the Notion, and it is this very lack of thought which
-has been made a principle. Not that it is in itself without
-thought, but the use made of thought is to hold back
-thought, and thought thus takes up a negative position in
-regard to itself; and the philosophic activity of Epicurus is
-thus directed towards the restoration and maintaining
-of what is sensuous through the very Notion which renders
-it confused. Therefore his philosophy has not advanced nor
-developed, but it must also be said that it has not retrograded;
-a certain Metrodorus alone is said to have carried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-it on further in some directions. It is also told to the
-credit of the Epicurean philosophy that this Metrodorus
-was the only disciple of Epicurus who went over to
-Carneades; for the rest, it surpassed all others in its
-unbroken continuity of doctrine and its long duration; for
-all of them became degenerate or suffered interruption.
-When some one called the attention of Arcesilaus to this
-attachment to Epicurus, by the remark that while so many
-had gone over from other philosophers to Epicurus, scarcely
-a single example was known of any one passing over from
-the Epicurean system to another, Arcesilaus made the witty
-rejoinder: “Men may become eunuchs, but eunuchs can
-never again become men.”<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a></p>
-
-<p>Epicurus himself produced in his lifetime an immense
-number of works, being a much more prolific author than
-Chrysippus, who vied with him in the number of his
-writings,<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> if we deduct from the latter his compilations
-from the works of others or from his own. The number of
-his writings is said to have amounted to three hundred; it
-is scarcely to be regretted that they are lost to us. We
-may rather thank Heaven that they no longer exist; philologists
-at any rate would have had great trouble with them.
-The main source of our knowledge of Epicurus is the whole
-of the tenth book of Diogenes Laërtius, which after all
-gives us but scanty information, though it deals with the
-subject at great length. We should, of course, have been
-better off had we possessed the philosopher’s own writings,
-but we know enough of him to make us honour the whole.
-For, besides this, we know a good deal about the philosophy
-of Epicurus through Cicero, Sextus Empiricus and
-Seneca; and so accurate are the accounts they give of him,
-that the fragment of one of Epicurus’s own writings, found
-some years ago in Herculaneum, and reprinted by Orelli<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-from the Neapolitan edition (Epicuri Fragmenta libri II.
-et XI. De natura, illustr. Orellius, Lipsiæ 1818), has neither
-extended nor enriched our knowledge; so that we must in
-all earnestness deprecate the finding of the remaining
-writings.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the Epicurean philosophy, it is by no
-means to be looked on as setting forth a system of Notions,
-but, on the contrary, as a system of ordinary conceptions or
-even of sensuous existence, which, looked at from the
-ordinary point of view as perceived by the senses, Epicurus
-has made the very foundation and standard of truth (p. 277).
-A detailed explanation of how sensation can be such, he
-has given in his so-called Canonic. As in the case of the
-Stoics, we have first to speak of the manner which Epicurus
-adopted of determining the criterion of truth; secondly, of
-his philosophy of nature; and thirdly and lastly, of his
-moral teaching.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c281" id="c281">1. <span class="smcap">Canonical Philosophy.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Epicurus gave the name of Canonic to what is really a
-system of logic, in which he defines the criteria of truth, in
-regard to the theoretic, as in fact sensuous perceptions,
-and, further, as conceptions or anticipations (προλήψεις);
-in regard to the practical, as the passions, impulses, and
-affections.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></p>
-
-<p>a. On the theoretic side the criterion, closely considered,
-has, according to Epicurus, three moments, which are the
-three stages of knowledge; first, sensuous perception, as
-the side of the external; secondly, ordinary conception, as
-the side of the internal; thirdly, opinion (δόξα), as the
-union of the two.</p>
-
-<p>α. “Sensuous perception is devoid of reason,” being
-what is given absolutely. “For it is not moved by itself,
-nor can it, if if is moved by something else, take away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-from or add to” that which it is, but it is exactly what it
-is. “It is beyond criticism or refutation. For neither
-can one sensation judge another, both being alike, since
-both have equal authority;”&mdash;when the presentations of
-sight are of the same kind, every one of them must admit
-the truth of all the rest. “Nor can one of them pass judgment
-on another when they are unlike, for they each have
-their value as differing;” red and blue, for example, are
-each something individual. “Nor can one sensation pass
-judgment on another when they are heterogeneous; for
-we give heed to all. Thought, in the same way, cannot
-criticize the senses; for all thought itself depends on the
-sensation,” which forms its content. But sensuous perception
-may go far wrong. “The truth of what our senses
-perceive is first evinced by this, that the power of perception
-remains with us; sight and hearing are permanent
-powers of this kind as much as the capacity of feeling pain.
-In this way even the unknown” (the unperceived) “may
-be indicated by means of that which appears” (perception).
-Of this conception of objects of perception which are not
-immediate we shall have to speak more particularly hereafter
-(p. 292) in dealing with physical science. “Thus all”
-(unknown, imperceptible) “thoughts originated in the
-senses either directly in respect of their chance origin or in
-respect of relationship, analogy, and combination; to these
-operations thought also contributes something,” namely as
-the formal connection of the sensuous conceptions. “The
-fancies of the insane or of our dreams are also true; for
-they act upon us, but that which is not real does not act.”<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a>
-Thus every sensuous perception is explicitly true, in so far
-as it shows itself to be abiding, and that which is not
-apparent to our senses must be apprehended after the same
-manner as the perception known to us. We hear Epicurus
-say, just as we hear it said in everyday life: What I see
-and hear, or, speaking generally, what I perceive by my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-senses, comprises the existent; every such object of sense
-exists on its own account, one of them does not contradict
-the other, but all are on the same level of validity, and
-reciprocally indifferent. These objects of perception are
-themselves the material and content of thought, inasmuch
-as thought is continually making use of the images of these
-things.</p>
-
-<p>β. “Ordinary conception is now a sort of comprehension
-(κατάληψις), or correct opinion or thought, or the universal
-indwelling power of thinking; that is to say, it is the
-recollection of that which has often appeared to us,”&mdash;the
-picture. “For instance, when I say, ‘this is a man,’ I,
-with the help of previous perceptions, at once by my power
-of representation recognize his form.” By dint of this
-repetition the sensuous perception becomes a permanent
-conception in me, which asserts itself; that is the real
-foundation of all that we hold true. These representations
-are universal, but certainly the Epicureans have not placed
-universality in the form of thinking, but only said it is
-caused by frequency of appearance. This is further confirmed
-by the name which is given to the image which has
-thus arisen within us. “Everything has its evidence
-(ἐναργές) in the name first conferred on it.”<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> The
-name is the ratification of the perception. The evidence
-which Epicurus terms ἐνάργεια is just the recognition of
-the sensuous through subsumption under the conceptions
-already possessed, and to which the name gives permanence;
-the evidence of a conception is therefore this, that
-we affirm an object perceptible by the senses to correspond
-with the image. That is the acquiescence which we have
-found taking place with the Stoics when thought gives
-its assent to a content; thought, however, which recognizes
-the thing as its own, and receives it into itself,
-with the Stoics remained formal only. With Epicurus the
-unity of the conception of the object with itself exists also as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-a remembrance in consciousness, which, however, proceeds
-from the senses; the image, the conception, is what harmonizes
-with a sense-perception. The recognition of the
-object is here an apprehension, not as an object of thought,
-but as an object of imagination; for apprehension belongs
-to recollection, to memory. The name, it is true, is something
-universal, belongs to thinking, makes the manifold
-simple, yea, is in a high degree ideal; but in such a way
-that its meaning and its content are the sensuous, and are
-not thus to be counted as simple, but as sensuous. In this
-way opinion is established instead of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>γ. In the last place, opinion is nothing but the reference
-of that general conception, which we have within us, to
-an object, a perception, or to the testimony of the senses;
-and that is the passing of a judgment. For in a conception
-we have anticipated that which comes directly before our
-eyes; and by this standard we pronounce whether something
-is a man, a tree, or not. “Opinion depends on
-something already evident to us, to which we refer when
-we ask how we know that this is a man or not. This opinion
-is also itself termed conception, and it may be either true or
-false:&mdash;true, when what we see before our eyes is corroborated
-or not contradicted by the testimony of the conception;
-false in the opposite case.”<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> That is to say, in opinion we
-apply a conception which we already possess, or the type,
-to an object which is before us, and which we then examine
-to see if it corresponds with our mental representation of it.
-Opinion is true if it corresponds with the type; and it has
-its criterion in perceiving whether it repeats itself as it was
-before or not. This is the whole of the ordinary process in
-consciousness, when it begins to reflect. When we have the
-conception, it requires the testimony that we have seen or still
-see the object in question. From the sensuous perceptions
-blue, sour, sweet, and so on, the general conceptions which
-we possess are formed; and when an object again comes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-before us, we recognize that this image corresponds with
-this object. This is the whole criterion, and a very trivial
-process it is; for it goes no further than the first beginnings
-of the sensuous consciousness, the immediate perception
-of an object. The next stage is without doubt this,
-that the first perception forms itself into a general image,
-and then the object which is present is subsumed under
-the general image. That kind of truth which anything
-has of which it can only be said that the evidence of the
-senses does not contradict it, is possessed by the conceptions
-of the unseen, for instance, the apprehension of
-heavenly phenomena: here we cannot approach nearer, we
-can see something indeed, but we cannot have the sensuous
-perception of it in its completeness; we therefore apply
-to it what we already know by other perceptions, if there
-is but some circumstance therein which is also present in
-that other perception or conception (<i>supra</i>, p. 282).</p>
-
-<p>b. From these external perceptions of objects presently
-existing, with which we here began, the affections, the
-internal perceptions, which give the criteria for practical
-life are however distinguished; they are of two kinds,
-either pleasant or unpleasant. That is to say, they have
-as their content pleasure or satisfaction, and pain: the
-first, as that which peculiarly belongs to the perceiver,
-is the positive; but pain, as something alien to him, is the
-negative. It is these sensuous perceptions which determine
-action; they are the material from which general
-conceptions regarding what causes me pain or pleasure are
-formed; as being permanent they are therefore again conceptions,
-and opinion is again this reference of conception
-to perception, according to which I pass judgment on
-objects&mdash;affections, desires, and so on.<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> It is by this
-opinion, therefore, that the decision to do or to avoid
-anything is arrived at.</p>
-
-<p>This constitutes the whole Canon of Epicurus, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-universal standard of truth; it is so simple that nothing
-can well be simpler, and yet it is very abstract. It consists
-of ordinary psychological conceptions which are correct on
-the whole, but quite superficial; it is the mechanical
-view of conception having respect to the first beginnings
-of observation. But beyond this there lies another and
-quite different sphere, a field that contains determinations
-in themselves; and these are the criteria by which the
-statements of Epicurus must be judged. Nowadays even
-Sceptics are fond of speaking of facts of consciousness;
-this sort of talk goes no further than the Epicurean Canon.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c286" id="c286">2. <span class="smcap">Metaphysics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>In the second place, Epicurus enters on a metaphysical
-explanation of how we are related to the object; for
-sensuous perception and outside impressions he unhesitatingly
-regards as our relation to external things, so that
-he places the conceptions in me, the objects outside of me.
-In raising the question of how we come by our conceptions,
-there lies a double question: on the one hand, since
-sense-perceptions are not like conceptions, but require an
-external object, what is the objective manner in which the
-images of external things enter into us? On the other
-hand, it may be asked how conceptions of such things as
-are not matter of perception arise in us; this seems to be
-an activity of thought, which derives conceptions such
-as these from other conceptions; we shall, however, see
-presently (pp. 287, 288) and more in detail, how the soul,
-which is here related to the object in independent activity,
-arrives at such a point.</p>
-
-<p>“From the surfaces of things,” says Epicurus in the
-first place, “there passes off a constant stream, which cannot
-be detected by our senses” (for things would in any other
-case decrease in size) and which is very fine; “and
-this because, by reason of the counteracting replenishment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-the thing itself in its solidity long preserves the same
-arrangement and disposition of the atoms; and the motion
-through the air of these surfaces which detach themselves
-is of the utmost rapidity, because it is not necessary that
-what is detached should have any thickness;” it is only a
-surface. Epicurus says, “Such a conception does not
-contradict our senses, when we take into consideration how
-pictures produce their effects in a very similar way, I mean
-by bringing us into sympathy with external things.
-Therefore emanations, like pictures, pass out from them
-into us, so that we see and know the forms and colours of
-things.”<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> This is a very trivial way of representing sense-perception.
-Epicurus took for himself the easiest criterion
-of the truth that is not seen, a criterion still in use, namely
-that it is not contradicted by what we see or hear. For in
-truth such matters of thought as atoms, the detachment
-of surfaces, and so forth, are beyond our powers of sight.
-Certainly we manage to see and to hear something different;
-but there is abundance of room for what is seen and what is
-conceived or imagined to exist alongside of one another.
-If the two are allowed to fall apart, they do not contradict
-each other; for it is not until we relate them that the
-contradiction becomes apparent.</p>
-
-<p>“Error,” as Epicurus goes on to say on the second point
-“comes to pass when, through the movement that takes
-place within us on the conception therein wrought, such a
-change is effected that the conception can no longer obtain
-for itself the testimony of perception. There would be no
-truth, no likeness of our perceptions, which we receive as
-in pictures or in dreams or in any other way, if there were
-nothing on which we, as it were, put out our faculty of
-observation. There would be no untruth if we did not
-receive into ourselves another movement, which, to be
-sure, is conformable to the entering in of the conception,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-but which has at the same time an interruption.”<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> Error is
-therefore, according to Epicurus, only a displacement of
-the pictures in us, which does not proceed from the movement
-of perception, but rather from this, that we check
-their influence by a movement originating in ourselves;
-how this interruption is brought about will be shown more
-fully later on (pp. 290, 300).</p>
-
-<p>The Epicurean theory of knowledge reduces itself to
-these few passages, some of which are also obscurely
-expressed, or else not very happily selected or quoted by
-Diogenes Laërtius; it is impossible to have a theory less
-explicitly stated. Knowledge, on the side of thought, is
-determined merely as a particular movement which makes
-an interruption; and as Epicurus, as we have already seen,
-looks on things as made up of a multitude of atoms,
-thought is the moment which is different from the atoms,
-the vacuum, the pores, whereby resistance to this stream
-of atoms is rendered possible. If this negative is also
-again, as soul, affirmative, Epicurus in the notional determination
-of thinking has only reached this negativity, that
-we look away from something, <i>i.e.</i> we interrupt that inflowing
-stream. The answer to the question of what this
-interrupting movement exactly is, when taken for itself, is
-connected with the more advanced conceptions of Epicurus;
-and in order to discuss them more in detail, we must go
-back to the implicit basis of his system.</p>
-
-<p>This constitutes on the whole the metaphysic of Epicurus;
-in it he has expounded his doctrine of the atom,
-but not with greater definiteness than did Leucippus and
-Democritus. The essence and the truth of things were to
-him, as they were to them, atoms and vacuum: “Atoms
-have no properties except figure, weight and magnitude.”
-Atoms, as atoms, must remain undetermined; but the
-Atomists have been forced to take the inconsistent course
-of ascribing properties to them: the quantitative properties<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-of magnitude and figure, the qualitative property of
-weight. But that which is in itself altogether indivisible
-can have neither figure nor magnitude; and even weight,
-direction upon something else, is opposed to the abstract
-repulsion of the atom. Epicurus even says: “Every
-property is liable to change, but the atoms change not. In
-all dissolutions of the composite, something must remain a
-constant and indissoluble, which no change can transform
-into that which is not, or bring from non-being into
-Being. This unchangeable element, therefore, is constituted
-by some bodies and figures. The properties are a certain
-relation of atoms to each other.”<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> In like manner we have
-already seen with Aristotle (p. 178) that the tangible is
-the foundation of properties: a distinction which under
-various forms is still always made and is in common use.
-We mean by this that an opposition is established between
-fundamental properties, such as we here have in weight,
-figure and magnitude, and sensuous properties, which are
-only in relation to us, and are derived from the former
-original differences. This has frequently been understood
-as if weight were in things, while the other properties
-were only in our senses: but, in general, the former is the
-moment of the implicit, or the abstract essence of the
-thing, while the latter is its concrete existence, which
-expresses its relation to other things.</p>
-
-<p>The important matter now would be to indicate the
-relation of atoms to sensuous appearance, to allow essence
-to pass over into the negative: but here Epicurus rambles
-amidst the indeterminate which expresses nothing; for we
-perceive in him, as in the other physicists, nothing but an
-unconscious medley of abstract ideas and realities. All
-particular forms, all objects, light, colour, &amp;c., the soul
-itself even, are nothing but a certain arrangement of these
-atoms. This is what Locke also said, and even now
-Physical Science declares that the basis of things is found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-in molecules, which are arranged in a certain manner in
-space. But these are empty words, and a crystal, for
-instance, is not a certain arrangement of parts, which gives
-this figure. It is thus not worth while to deal with this
-relation of atoms; for it is an altogether formal way of
-speaking, as when Epicurus again concedes that figure and
-magnitude, in so far as pertaining to atoms, are something
-different from what they are as they appear in things.
-The two are not altogether unlike; the one, implicit
-magnitude, has something in common with apparent magnitude.
-The latter is transitory, variable; the former has no
-interrupted parts,<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> that is, nothing negative. But the
-determination of the atoms, as originally formed in this or
-that fashion, and having original magnitude of such and
-such a kind, is a purely arbitrary invention. That interruption,
-which we regarded above (p. 288) as the other
-side to atoms, or as vacuum, is the principle of movement:
-for the movement of thought is also like this and has
-interruptions. Thought in man is the very same as atoms
-and vacuum are in things, namely their inward essence;
-that is to say, atoms and vacuum belong to the movement
-of thought, or exist for this in the same way as things are
-in their essential nature. The movement of thinking is
-thus the province of the atoms of the soul; so that there
-takes place simultaneously therein an interruption of the
-inward flow of atoms from without. There is therefore
-nothing further to be seen in this than the general principle
-of the positive and negative, so that even thought
-is affected by a negative principle, the moment of interruption.
-This principle of the Epicurean system,
-further applied to the difference in things, is the most
-arbitrary and therefore the most wearisome that can be
-imagined.</p>
-
-<p>Besides their different figures, atoms have also, as the
-fundamental mode in which they are affected, a difference<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-of movement, caused by their weight; but this movement
-to some extent deviates from the straight line in its direction.
-That is to say, Epicurus ascribes to atoms a curvilinear
-movement, in order that they may impinge on one
-another and so on.<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> In this way there arise particular
-accumulations and configurations; and these are things.</p>
-
-<p>Other physical properties, such as taste and smell, have
-their basis again in another arrangement of the molecules.
-But there is no bridge from this to that, or what results is
-simply empty tautology, according to which the parts are
-arranged and combined as is requisite in order that their
-appearance may be what it is. The transition to bodies of
-concrete appearance Epicurus has either not made at all,
-or what has been cited from him as far as this matter is
-concerned, taken by itself, is extremely meagre.</p>
-
-<p>The opinion that one hears expressed respecting the
-Epicurean philosophy is in other respects not unfavourable;
-and for this reason some further details must be given
-regarding it. For since absolute Being is constituted by
-atoms scattered and disintegrated, and by vacuum, it
-directly follows that Epicurus denies to these atoms any
-relationship to one another which implies purpose. All
-that we call forms and organisms, or generally speaking,
-the unity of Nature’s end, in his way of thinking, belongs
-to qualities, to an external connection of the configurations
-of the atoms, which in this way is merely an accident,
-brought about by their chance-directed motion; the atoms
-accordingly form a merely superficial unity, and one which
-is not essential to them. Or else Epicurus altogether
-denies that Notion and the Universal are the essential, and
-because all originations are to him chance combinations, for
-him their resolution is just as much a matter of chance.
-The divided is the first and the truly existent, but at the
-same time chance or external necessity is the law which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>dominates all cohesion. That Epicurus should in this
-fashion declare himself against a universal end in the world,
-against every relation of purpose&mdash;as, for instance, the
-inherent conformity to purpose of the organism&mdash;and,
-further, against the teleological representations of the
-wisdom of a Creator in the world, his government, &amp;c., is
-a matter of course; for he abrogates unity, whatever be
-the manner in which we represent it, whether as Nature’s
-end in itself, or as end which is in another, but is carried
-out in Nature. In contrast to this, the teleological view
-enters largely into the philosophy of the Stoics, and is there
-very fully developed. To show that conformity to an end
-is lacking, Epicurus brings forward the most trivial
-examples; for instance, that worms and so on are produced
-by chance from mud through the warmth of the sun.
-Taken in their entirety, they may very well be the work of
-chance in relation to others; but what is implicit in them,
-their Notion and essence is something organic: and the
-comprehension of this is what we have now to consider. But
-Epicurus banishes thought as implicit, without its occurring
-to him that his atoms themselves have this very nature of
-thought; that is, their existence in time is not immediate
-but essentially mediate, and thus negative or universal;&mdash;the
-first and only inconsistency that we find in Epicurus,
-and one which all empiricists are guilty of. The Stoics
-take the opposite course of finding essential Being in the
-object of thought or the universal; and they fail equally in
-reaching the content, temporal existence, which, however,
-they most inconsistently assume. We have here the
-metaphysics of Epicurus; nothing that he says farther on
-this head is of interest.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c292" id="c292">3. <span class="smcap">Physics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>The natural philosophy of Epicurus is based on the above
-foundation; but an aspect of interest is given it by the fact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-that it is still peculiarly the method of our times; his
-thoughts on particular aspects of Nature are, however, in
-themselves feeble and of little weight, containing nothing
-but an ill-considered medley of all manner of loose conceptions.
-Going further, the principle of the manner in which
-Epicurus looks on nature, lies in the conceptions he forms,
-which we have already had before us (pp. 282, 285). That is
-to say, the general representations which we receive through
-the repetition of several perceptions, and to which we
-relate such perceptions in forming an opinion, must be
-then applied to that which is not exactly matter of perception,
-but yet has something in common with what we
-can perceive. In this way it comes about that by such
-images we can apprehend the unknown which does not lend
-itself immediately to perception; for from what is known
-we must argue to what is unknown. This is nothing else
-but saying that Epicurus judged by analogy, or that he
-makes so-called evidence the principle of his view of
-Nature; and this is the principle which to this day has
-authority in ordinary physical science. We go through
-experiences and make observations, these arising from the
-sensuous perceptions which are apt to be overlooked.
-Thus we reach general concepts, laws, forces, and so on,
-electricity and magnetism, for instance, and these are then
-applied by us to such objects and activities as we cannot
-ourselves directly perceive. As an example, we know
-about the nerves and their connection with the brain; in
-order that there may be feeling and so on, it is said that a
-transmission from the finger-tips to the brain takes place.
-But how can we represent this to ourselves? We cannot
-make it a matter of observation. By anatomy we can
-lay bare the nerves, it is true, but not the manner of their
-working. We represent these to ourselves on the analogy
-of other phenomena of transmission, for instance as the
-vibration of a tense string that passes through the nerves
-to the brain. As in the well-known phenomenon of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-number of billiard balls set close together in a row, the last
-of which rolls away when the first is struck, while those in
-the middle, through each of which the effect of the stroke
-has been communicated to the next, scarcely seem to move,
-so we represent to ourselves the nerves as consisting of
-tiny balls which are invisible even through the strongest
-magnifying glass, and fancy that at every touch, &amp;c., the
-last springs off and strikes the soul. In the same way
-light is represented as filaments, rays, or as vibrations of
-the ether, or as globules of ether, each of which strikes on
-the other. This is an analogy quite in the manner of
-Epicurus.</p>
-
-<p>In giving such explanations as those above, Epicurus
-professed to be most liberal, fair and tolerant, saying
-that all the different conceptions which occur to us in
-relation to sensuous objects&mdash;at our pleasure, we may say,&mdash;can
-be referred to that which we cannot ourselves directly
-observe; we should not assert any one way to be the right
-one, for many ways may be so. In so saying, Epicurus is
-talking idly; his words fall on the ear and the fancy, but
-looked on more narrowly they disappear. So, for instance,
-we see the moon shine, without being able to have any
-nearer experience of it. On this subject Epicurus says:
-“The moon may have its own light, or a light borrowed
-from the sun; for even on earth we see things which shine
-of themselves, and many which are illuminated by others.
-Nothing hinders us from observing heavenly things in the
-light of various previous experiences, and from adopting
-hypotheses and explanations in accordance with these. The
-waxing and waning of the moon may also be caused by the
-revolution of this body, or through changes in the air”
-(according as vapour is modified in one way or another),
-“or also by means of adding and taking away somewhat:
-in short, in all the ways whereby that which has a certain
-appearance to us is caused to show such appearance.” Thus
-there are to be found in Epicurus all these trivialities of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-friction, concussion, &amp;c., as when he gives his opinion of
-lightning on the analogy of how we see fire of other kinds
-kindled: “Lightning is explained by quite a large number
-of possible conceptions; for instance, that through the
-friction and collision of clouds the figuration of fire is
-emitted, and lightning is produced.” In precisely the same
-way modern physicists transfer the production of an electric
-spark, when glass and silk are rubbed against each other,
-to the clouds. For, as we see a spark both in lightning
-and electricity, we conclude from this circumstance common
-to both that the two are analogical; therefore, we come to
-the conclusion that lightning also is an electric phenomenon.
-But clouds are not hard bodies, and by moisture electricity
-is more likely to be dispersed; therefore, such talk has
-just as little truth in it as the fancy of Epicurus. He goes
-on to say: “Or lightning may also be produced by being
-expelled from the clouds by means of the airy bodies which
-form lightning&mdash;by being struck out when the clouds are
-pressed together either by each other or by the wind,” &amp;c.
-With the Stoics things are not much better. Application
-of sensuous conceptions according to analogy is often
-termed comprehension or explanation, but in reality there
-is in such a process not the faintest approach to thought
-or comprehension. “One man,” adds Epicurus, “may select;
-one of these modes, and reject the others, not considering
-what is possible for man to know, and what is impossible,
-and therefore striving to attain to a knowledge of the
-unknowable.”<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p>
-
-<p>This application of sensuous images to what has a certain
-similarity to them, is pronounced to be the basis and the
-knowledge of the cause, because, in his opinion, a transference
-such as this cannot be corroborated by the testimony
-of mere immediate sensation; thus the Stoic method of
-seeking a basis in thought is excluded, and in this respect
-the mode of explanation adopted by Epicurus is directly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-opposed to that of the Stoics. One circumstance which
-strikes us at once in Epicurus is the lack of observation and
-experience with regard to the mutual relations of bodies:
-but the kernel of the matter, the principle, is nothing else
-than the principle of modern physics. This method of
-Epicurus has been attacked and derided, but on this score
-no one need be ashamed of or fight shy of it, if he is a
-physicist; for what Epicurus says is not a whit worse than
-what the moderns assert. Indeed, in the case of Epicurus
-the satisfactory assurance is likewise always present of
-his emphasizing the fact most strongly that just because the
-evidence of the senses is found to be lacking, we must not
-take our stand on any one analogy. Elsewhere he in the
-same way makes light of analogy, and when one person
-accepts this possibility and another that other possibility,
-he admires the cleverness of the second and troubles himself
-little about the explanation given by the first; it may
-be so, or it may not be so.<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> This is a method devoid of
-reason, which reaches no further than to general conceptions.
-Nevertheless, if Physical Science is considered to
-relate to immediate experience on the one hand, and, on
-the other hand&mdash;in respect of that which cannot be immediately
-experienced&mdash;to relate to the application of the above
-according to a resemblance existing between it and that
-which is not matter of experience, in that case Epicurus
-may well be looked on as the chief promoter, if not the
-originator of this method, and also as having asserted that
-it is identical with knowledge. Of the Epicurean method
-in philosophy we may say this, that it likewise has a side on
-which it possesses value, and we may in some measure
-assent when we hear, as we frequently do, the Epicurean
-physics favourably spoken of. Aristotle and the earlier
-philosophers took their start in natural philosophy from
-universal thought <i>a priori</i>, and from this developed the
-Notion; this is the one side. The other side, which is just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-as necessary, demands that experience should be worked up
-into universality, that laws should be found out; that is to
-say, that the result which follows from the abstract Idea
-should coincide with the general conception to which experience
-and observation have led up. The <i>a priori</i> is with
-Aristotle, for instance, most excellent but not sufficient,
-because to it there is lacking connection with and relation
-to experience and observation. This leading up of the
-particular to the universal is the finding out of laws, natural
-forces, and so on. It may thus be said that Epicurus is the
-inventor of empiric Natural Science, of empiric Psychology.
-In contrast to the Stoic ends, conceptions of the understanding,
-experience is the present as it appears to
-the senses: there we have abstract limited understanding,
-without truth in itself, and therefore without the present in
-time and the reality of Nature; here we have this sense of
-Nature, which is more true than these other hypotheses.</p>
-
-<p>The same effect which followed the rise of a knowledge
-of natural laws, &amp;c., in the modern world was produced by
-the Epicurean philosophy in its own sphere, that is to say,
-in so far as it is directed against the arbitrary invention of
-causes. The more, in later times, men made acquaintance
-with the laws of Nature, the more superstition, miracles,
-astrology, &amp;c. disappeared; all this fades away owing to
-the contradiction offered to it by the knowledge of natural
-laws. The method of Epicurus was directed more especially
-against the senseless superstition of astrology, &amp;c., in
-whose methods there is neither reason nor thought, for it is
-quite a thing of the imagination, downright fabrication
-being resorted to, or what we may even term lying. In
-contrast with this, the way in which Epicurus works, when
-the conceptions and not thought are concerned, accords
-with truth. For it does not go beyond what is perceived
-by the sight, and hearing, and the other senses, but keeps
-to what is present and not alien to the mind, not speaking
-of certain things as if they could be seen and heard, when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-that is quite impossible, seeing that the things are pure inventions.
-The effect of the Epicurean philosophy in its
-own time was therefore this, that it set itself against the
-superstition of the Greeks and Romans, and elevated men
-above it.<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> All the nonsense about birds flying to right or
-to left, or a hare running across the path, or men deciding
-how they are to act according to the entrails of animals, or
-according as chickens are lively or dull&mdash;all that kind of
-superstition the Epicurean philosophy made short work of,
-by permitting that only to be accepted as truth which is
-counted as true by sense perception through the instrumentality
-of anticipations; and from it more than anything
-those conceptions which have altogether denied the supersensuous
-have proceeded. The physics of Epicurus were
-therefore famous for the reason that they introduced more
-enlightened views in regard to what is physical, and
-banished the fear of the gods. Superstition passes straightway
-from immediate appearances to God, angels, demons;
-or it expects from finite things other effects than the conditions
-admit of, phenomena of a higher kind. To this the
-Epicurean natural philosophy is utterly opposed, because
-in the sphere of the finite it refuses to go beyond the finite,
-and admits finite causes alone; for the so-called enlightenment
-is the fact of remaining in the sphere of the finite.
-There connection is sought for in other finite things, in
-conditions which are themselves conditioned; superstition,
-on the contrary, rightly or wrongly, passes at once to what
-is above us. However correct the Epicurean method may
-be in the sphere of the conditioned, it is not so in other
-spheres. Thus if I say that electricity comes from God,
-I am right and yet wrong. For if I ask for a cause in this
-same sphere of the conditioned, and give God as answer,
-I say too much; though this answer fits all questions,
-since God is the cause of everything, what I would know
-here is the particular connection of the phenomenon. On<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-the other hand, in this sphere even the Notion is already
-something higher; but this loftier way of looking at things
-which we met with in the earlier philosophers, was quite
-put an end to by Epicurus, since with superstition there
-also passed away self-dependent connection and the world
-of the Ideal.</p>
-
-<p>To the natural philosophy of Epicurus there also belongs
-his conception of the soul, which he looks on as having
-the nature of a thing, just as the theories of our own day
-regard it as nerve-filaments, cords in tension, or rows of
-minute balls (p. 294). His description of the soul has
-therefore but little meaning, since here also he draws his
-conclusion by analogy, and connects therewith the metaphysical
-theory of atoms: “The soul consists of the finest
-and roundest atoms, which are something quite different
-from fire, being a fine spirit which is distributed through the
-whole aggregate of the body, and partakes of its warmth.”
-Epicurus has consequently established a quantitative
-difference only, since these finest atoms are surrounded by
-a mass of coarser atoms and dispersed through this larger
-aggregate. “The part which is devoid of reason is dispersed
-in the body” as the principle of life, “but the
-self-conscious part (τὸ λογικόν) is in the breast, as may be
-perceived from joy and sadness. The soul is capable of
-much change in itself, owing to the fineness of its parts,
-which can move very rapidly: it sympathizes with the rest
-of the aggregate, as we see by the thoughts, emotions and
-so on; but when it is taken away from us we die. But the
-soul, on its part, has also the greatest sympathy with
-sensuous perception; yet it would have nothing in common
-with it, were it not in a certain measure covered by the
-rest of the aggregate” (the body)&mdash;an utterly illogical
-conception. “The rest of this aggregate, which this
-principle provides for the soul, is thereby also partaker, on
-its part, of a like condition” (sensuous perception), “yet
-not of all that the former possesses; therefore, when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-soul escapes, sensuous perception exists no more for it.
-The aggregate spoken of above has not this power in
-itself, but derives it from the other which is brought into
-union with it, and the sentient movement comes to pass
-through the flow of sympathy which they have in common.”<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a>
-Of such conceptions it is impossible to make anything.
-The above-mentioned (p. 287) interruption of the streaming
-together of images of external things with our organs,
-as the ground of error, is now explained by the theory
-that the soul consists of peculiar atoms, and the atoms are
-separated from one another by vacuum. With such empty
-words and meaningless conceptions we shall no longer
-detain ourselves; we can have no respect for the philosophic
-thoughts of Epicurus, or rather he has no thoughts for us
-to respect.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c300" id="c300">4. <span class="smcap">Ethics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Besides this description of the soul the philosophy of
-mind contains the ethics of Epicurus, which of all his
-doctrines are the most decried, and therefore the most
-interesting; they may, however, also be said to constitute
-the best part of that philosophy. The practical
-philosophy of Epicurus depends on the individuality of
-self-consciousness, just as much as does that of the Stoics;
-and the end of his ethics is in a measure the same, the
-unshaken tranquillity of the soul, and more particularly an
-undisturbed pure enjoyment of itself. Of course, if we
-regard the abstract principle involved in the ethics of
-Epicurus, our verdict cannot be other than exceedingly
-unfavourable. For if sensation, the feeling of pain and
-pleasure, is the criterion for the right, good, true, for that
-which man should make his aim in life, morality is really
-abrogated, or the moral principle is in fact not moral; at
-least we hold that the way is thereby opened up to all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-manner of arbitrariness in action. If it is now alleged that
-feeling is the ground of action, and that because I find a
-certain impulse in myself it is for that reason right&mdash;this
-is Epicurean reasoning. Everyone may have different feelings,
-and the same person, may feel differently at different
-times; in the same way with Epicurus it may be left to the
-subjectivity of the individual to determine the course of
-action. But it is of importance to notice this, that when
-Epicurus sets tip pleasure as the end, he concedes this only
-so far as its enjoyment is the result of philosophy. We
-have before now remarked (vol. i., p. 470) that even with the
-Cyrenaics, while on the one hand sensation was certainly
-made the principle, on the other hand it was essential that
-thought should be in intimate connection with it. Similarly
-it is the case with Epicurus that while he designated
-pleasure as the criterion of the good, he demanded a highly
-cultured consciousness, a power of reflection, which weighs
-pleasure to see if it is not combined with a greater degree
-of pain, and in this way forms a correct estimate of
-what it is. Diogenes Laërtius (X. 144) quotes from him
-with regard to this point of view: “The wise man owes but
-little to chance; Reason attains what is of the greatest
-consequence, and both directs it and will direct it his whole
-life long.” The particular pleasure is therefore regarded
-only with reference to the whole, and sensuous perception
-is not the one and only principle of the Epicureans; but
-while they made pleasure the principle, they made a
-principle at the same time of that happiness which is
-attained, and only attainable by reason; so that this
-happiness is to be sought in such a way that it may be free
-and independent of external contingencies, the contingencies
-of sensation. The true Epicureans were therefore, just as
-much as the Stoics, raised above all particular ties,
-for Epicurus, too, made his aim the undisturbed tranquillity
-of the wise man. In order to be free from superstition
-Epicurus specially requires physical science, as it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-sets men free from all the opinions which most disturb
-their rest&mdash;opinions regarding the gods, and their punishments,
-and more particularly from the thought of death.<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a>
-Freed from all this fear, and from the imaginings of the
-men who make any particular object their end and aim, the
-wise man seeks pleasure only as something universal, and
-holds this alone to be positive. Here the universal and the
-particular meet; or the particular, regarded only in its
-bearings to the whole, is raised into the form of universality.
-Thus it happens that, while materially, or as to content,
-Epicurus makes individuality a principle, on the other hand
-he requires the universality of thinking, and his philosophy
-is thus in accordance with that of the Stoics.</p>
-
-<p>Seneca, who is known as a thorough-going and uncompromising
-Stoic, when in his treatise <i>De Vita Beata</i> (c. 12,
-13) he happens to speak of the Epicureans, gives testimony
-which is above suspicion to the ethical system of Epicurus:
-“My verdict is, however&mdash;and in thus speaking I go, to
-some extent, against many of my own countrymen&mdash;that
-the moral precepts of Epicurus prescribe a way of life that
-is holy and just, and, when closely considered, even sorrowful.
-For every pleasure of Epicurus turns on something
-very paltry and poor, and we scarcely know how restricted
-it is, and how insipid. The self-same law which we lay down
-for virtue he prescribes for pleasure; he requires that
-Nature be obeyed; but very little in the way of luxury is
-required to satisfy Nature. What have we then here? He
-who calls a lazy, self-indulgent, and dissolute life happiness
-merely seeks a good authority for a thing that is evil, and
-while, drawn on by a dazzling name, he turns in the direction
-where he hears the praise of pleasure sounding, he
-does not follow the pleasures to which he is invited by
-Epicurus, but those which he himself brings with him.
-Men who thus abandon themselves to crime seek only to
-hide their wickedness under the mantle of philosophy, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-to furnish for their excesses a pretext and an excuse. Thus
-it is by no means permitted that youth should hold up its
-head again for the reason that to the laxity of its morality
-an honourable title has been affixed.” By the employment
-of our reflective powers, which keep guard over pleasure
-and consider whether there can be any enjoyment in that
-which is fraught with dangers, fear, anxiety and other
-troubles, the possibility of our obtaining pleasure pure and
-unalloyed is reduced to a minimum. The principle of
-Epicurus is to live in freedom and ease, and with the
-mind at rest, and to this end it is needful to renounce much
-of that which men allow to sway them, and in which they
-find their pleasure. The life of a Stoic is therefore but
-little different from that of an Epicurean who keeps well
-before his eyes what Epicurus enjoins.</p>
-
-<p>It might perhaps occur to us that the Cyrenaics had the
-same moral principle as the Epicureans, but Diogenes
-Laërtius (X. 139, 136, 137) shows us the difference that there
-was between them. The Cyrenaics rather made pleasure
-as a particular thing their end, while Epicurus, on the contrary,
-regarded it as a means, since he asserted painlessness
-to be pleasure, and allowed of no intermediate state.
-“Neither do the Cyrenaics recognize pleasure in rest
-(καταστηματικήν), but only in the determination of motion,”
-or as something affirmative, that consists in the enjoyment
-of the pleasant; “Epicurus, on the contrary, admits both&mdash;the
-pleasure of the body as well as that of the soul.” He
-meant by this that pleasure in rest is negative, as the absence
-of the unpleasant, and also an inward contentment,
-whereby rest is maintained within the mind. Epicurus
-explained these two kinds of pleasure more clearly as follows:
-“Freedom from fear and desire (ἀταραξία) and from
-pain and trouble (ἀπονία) are the passive pleasures (καταστηματικὶα
-ἡδοναί),”&mdash;the setting of our affections on nothing
-which we may run the risk of losing; pleasures of the
-senses, on the other hand, like “joy and mirth (χαρὰ δὲ καὶ<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-εὐφροσύνη), are pleasures involving movement (κατὰ κίνησιν
-ἐνεργείᾳ βλέπονται.9)” The former pleasures Epicurus held
-to be the truest and highest. “Besides this, pain of the
-body was held by the Cyrenaics to be worse than sorrow of
-the soul, while with the Epicureans this is reversed.”</p>
-
-<p>The main teaching of Epicurus in respect of morals is
-contained in a letter to Men\nceus, which Diogenes Laërtius
-has preserved, and in which Epicurus expresses himself as
-follows: “The youth must neither be slow to study philosophy,
-nor must the old man feel it a burden, for no one is
-either too young or too old to study the health of his soul.
-We must therefore endeavour to find out wherein the happy
-life consists; the following are its elements: First, we
-must hold that God is a living Being, incorruptible and
-happy, as the general belief supposes Him to be; and that
-nothing is lacking to His incorruptibility nor to His happiness.
-But though the existence of the gods is known to be
-a fact, yet they are not such as the multitude suppose them
-to be. He is therefore not impious who discards his faith
-in the gods of the multitude, but he who applies to them
-the opinions entertained of them by the mass.” By these
-gods of Epicurus we can understand nothing else than the
-Holy, the Universal, in concrete form. The Stoics held
-more to the ordinary conception, without indeed giving
-much thought to the Being of God; with the Epicureans,
-on the other hand, the gods express an immediate Idea of
-the system. Epicurus says: “That which is holy and incorruptible
-has itself no trouble nor causes it to others;
-therefore it is unstirred by either anger or show of favour,
-for it is in weakness only that such find a place. The gods
-may be known by means of Reason; they consist partly in
-Number; others are the perfected type of man, which, owing
-to the similarity of the images, arises from the continuous
-confluence of like images on one and the same subject.”<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a>
-The gods are thus the altogether general images which we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-receive into ourselves; and Cicero says (De Natura Deorum,
-18, 38) that they come singly upon us in sleep. This
-general image, which is at the same time an anthropomorphic
-conception, is the same to which we give the name
-of Ideal, only that here the source assigned to it is the
-reiterated occurrence of images. The gods thus seem to
-Epicurus to be Ideals of the holy life; they are also existent
-things, consisting of the finest atoms; they are, however,
-pure souls, unmixed with any grosser element, and therefore
-exempt from toil and trouble and pain. Their self-enjoyment
-is wholly passive, as it must be if consistent, for action
-has always in it something alien, the opposition of itself
-and reality, and the toil and trouble which are involved in
-it really represent the aspect of consciousness of opposition
-rather than that of realization. The gods lead an existence
-of pure and passive self enjoyment, and trouble themselves
-not with the affairs of the world and of men. Epicurus
-goes on to say: “Men must pay reverence to the gods on
-account of the perfection of their nature and their surpassing
-holiness, not in order to gain from them some special
-good, or for the sake of this or that advantage,”<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> The
-manner in which Epicurus represents the gods as corporeal
-Beings in human likeness has been much derided;
-thus Cicero, for instance, in the passage quoted (c. 18)
-laughs at Epicurus for alleging that the gods have
-only <i>quasi</i> bodies, flesh and blood. But from this
-there follows only that they are, as it were, the implicit,
-as we see it stated of the soul and things palpable to the
-senses, that they have behind them what is implicit. Our
-talk of qualities is no better; for if justice, goodness, and
-so on, are to be taken <i>in sensu eminentiori</i>, and not as they
-are with men, we have in God a Being in the same way
-possessed of only something resembling justice and the other
-qualities. With this there is closely connected the theory of
-Epicurus that the gods dwell in vacant space, in the intermediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-spaces of the world, where they are exposed neither
-to rain or wind or snow or the like.<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> For the intermediate
-spaces are the vacuum, wherein, as the principle of movement,
-are the atoms in themselves. Worlds, as phenomena, are
-complete continuous concretions of such atoms, but concretions
-which are only external relations. Between them, as in
-vacuum, there are thus these Beings also, which themselves
-are certainly concretions of atoms, but concretions which
-remain implicit. Yet this leads only to confusion, if a closer
-definition is given, for concretion constitutes what is for
-the senses, but the gods, even if they were concretions,
-would not be realities exactly such as these. In illogical
-fashion the general, the implicit, is taken out of reality and
-set above it, not as atoms, but just as before, as a combination
-of these atoms; in this way this combination is not itself
-the sensuous. This seems ridiculous, but it is connected
-with the interruptions spoken of, and with the relation of the
-vacuum to the plenum, the atom. So far, therefore, the
-gods belong to the category of negativity as against sensuality,
-and as this negative is thought, in that sense what
-Epicurus said of the gods may still to some extent be said.
-To this determination of God a larger measure of objectivity
-of course belongs, but it is a perfectly correct assertion that
-God, as Thought, is a holy Being, to whom reverence is due
-for His own sake alone. The first element in a happy life
-is therefore reverence for the gods, uninfluenced by fear or
-hope.</p>
-
-<p>Further, a second point with Epicurus is the contemplation
-of death, the negative of existence, of self-consciousness
-in man; he requires us to have a true conception
-of death, because otherwise it disturbs our tranquillity. He
-accordingly says: “Accustom thyself then to the thought
-that death concerns us not; for all good and evil is a
-matter of sensation, but death is a deprivation (στέρησις)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-of sensation. Therefore the true reflection that death is
-no concern of ours, makes our mortal life one of enjoyment,
-since this thought does not add an endless length of days,
-but does away with the longing after immortality. For
-nothing in life has terrors for him who has once truly
-recognized the fact that not to live is not a matter of
-dread. Thus it is a vain thing to fear death, not because
-its presence but because the anticipation of it brings us
-pain. For how can the anticipation of a thing pain us
-when its reality does not? There is therefore in death
-nothing to trouble us. For when we are in life, death is
-not there, and when death is there, we are not. Therefore
-death does not concern either the living or the dead.”
-This is quite correct, if we look at the immediate; it is a
-thought full of meaning, and drives away fear. Mere
-privation, which death is, is not to be confounded with the
-feeling of being alive, which is positive; and there is no
-reason for worrying oneself about it. “But the future in
-general is neither ours, nor is it not ours; hence we must not
-count upon it as something that will come to pass, nor yet
-despair of it, as if it would not come to pass.”<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> It is no
-concern of ours either that it is or that it is not; and it
-need not therefore cause us uneasiness. This the right way
-in which to regard the future also.</p>
-
-<p>Epicurus passes on to speak of impulses, saying: “This
-moreover is to be kept in mind, that amongst impulses some
-are natural, but others are vain; and of those that are
-natural some are necessary while others are natural only.
-Those that are necessary are either necessary to happiness,
-or tend to save the body from pain, or to self-preservation
-in general. The perfect theory teaches how to choose that
-which promotes health of body and steadfastness of soul,
-and how to reject what impairs them, this being the aim of
-the holy life. This is the end of all our actions, to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-neither pain of body nor uneasiness of mind. If we but
-attain to this, all turmoil of the soul is stilled, since the
-life no longer has to strive after something which it needs,
-and no longer has to seek anything outside of itself by
-which the welfare of soul and body is arrived at. But
-even on the supposition that pleasure is the first and
-the inborn good, we do not for that reason choose all
-pleasures, but many we renounce, when they are more than
-counterbalanced by their painful results; and many pains
-we prefer to pleasures, if there follows from them a pleasure
-that is greater. Contentment we hold to be a good, not
-that we may aim at merely reducing our requirements to a
-minimum, as the Cynics did, but that we may seek not to be
-discontented even when we have not very much, knowing
-that they most enjoy abundance who can do without it,
-and that what is naturally desired is easy to procure, while
-what is a mere idle fancy can be procured only with difficulty.
-Simple dishes afford just as much enjoyment as
-costly banquets, if they appease hunger. Therefore when
-we make pleasure our aim, it is not the enjoyments of the
-gourmand, as is often falsely thought, but freedom from
-both pain of body and uneasiness of mind. We attain to
-this life of happiness by sober reason alone, which examines
-the grounds of all choice and all rejection, and expels the
-thoughts by which the soul’s rest is most disturbed. It is
-surely better to be unhappy and reasonable than to be
-happy and unreasonable; for it is better that in our actions
-we should judge correctly than that we should be favoured
-by luck. Meditate on this day and night, and let thyself
-be shaken by nought from thy peace of soul, that thou
-mayest live as a god amongst men; for the man who lives
-amongst such imperishable treasures has nothing in common
-with mortal men. Of all those the first and foremost
-is reasonableness (φρόνησις), which on this account is still
-more excellent than philosophy; from it spring all the
-other virtues. For they show that one cannot live happily,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-unless he lives wisely and honourably and justly: nor can
-he live wisely and honourably and justly without living
-happily.”<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-<p>Therefore, although at first sight there seems not much
-to be said for the principle of Epicurus, nevertheless by
-means of the inversion of making the guiding principle to
-be found in thought proceeding from Reason, it passes
-into Stoicism, as even Seneca himself has admitted (<i>v. supra</i>,
-pp. 302, 303); and actually the same result is reached as
-with the Stoics. Hence the Epicureans describe their wise
-man in at least as glowing terms as the Stoics do theirs;
-and in both these systems the wise man is depicted with
-the same qualities, these being negative. With the Stoics
-the Universal is the essential principle,&mdash;not pleasure, the
-self-consciousness of the particular as particular; but the
-reality of this self-consciousness is equally something
-pleasant. With the Epicureans pleasure is the essential
-principle, but pleasure sought and enjoyed in such a way
-that it is pure and unalloyed, that is to say, in accordance
-with sound judgment, and with no greater evil following
-to destroy it: therefore pleasure is regarded in its whole
-extent, that is, as being itself a universal. In Diogenes
-Laërtius, however (X. 117-121), the Epicurean delineation
-of the wise man has a character of greater mildness; he
-shapes his conduct more according to laws already in
-operation, while the Stoic wise man, on the other hand,
-does not take these into account at all. The Epicurean
-wise man is less combative than the Stoic, because the
-latter makes his starting-point the thought of self-dependence,
-which, while denying self, exercises activity:
-the Epicureans, on the other hand, proceed from the
-thought of existence, which is not so exacting, and seeks
-not so much this activity directed outwards, as rest; this,
-however, is not won by lethargy, but by the highest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-mental culture. Yet although the content of the Epicurean
-philosophy, its aim and result, stands thus on as high a
-level as the Stoic philosophy, and is its exact parallel, the
-two are nevertheless in other respects directly opposed to
-one another; but each of these systems is one-sided, and
-therefore both of them are dogmatisms inconsistent with
-themselves by the necessity of the Notion, that is, they
-contain the contrary principle within them. The Stoics take
-the content of their thought from Being, from the sensuous,
-demanding that thought should be the thought of something
-existent: the Epicureans, on the contrary, extend
-their particularity of existence to the atoms which are only
-things of thought, and to pleasure as a universal; but in
-accordance with their respective principles, both schools
-know themselves to be definitely opposed to each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>The negative mean to these one-sided principles is the
-Notion, which, abrogating fixed extremes of determination
-such as these, moves them and sets them free from a
-mere state of opposition. This movement of the Notion,
-the revival of dialectic&mdash;directed as it is against these one-sided
-principles of abstract thinking and sensation&mdash;we
-now see in its negative aspect, both in the New Academy
-and in the Sceptics. Even the Stoics, as having their principle
-in thought, cultivated dialectic, though theirs was (pp.
-254, 255) a common logic, in which the form of simplicity
-passes for the Notion, while the Notion, as such, represents
-the negative element in it, and dissolves the determinations,
-which are taken up into that simplicity. There is a higher
-form of the Notion of dialectic reality, which not only
-applies itself to sensuous existence, but also to determinate
-Notions, and which brings to consciousness the opposition
-between thought and existence; not expressing the Universal
-as simple Idea, but as a universality in which all
-comes back into consciousness as an essential moment of
-existence. In Scepticism we now really have an abrogation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-of the two one-sided systems that we have hitherto dealt
-with; but this negative remains negative only, and is incapable
-of passing into an affirmative.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c311" id="c311">C. <span class="smcap">The New Academy.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>As opposed to the Stoic and Epicurean Dogmatism, we
-first of all have the New Academy, which is a continuation
-of Plato’s Academy in as far as the followers of Plato are
-divided into the Old, Middle, and New Academies; some
-indeed allow of a fourth Academy and even a fifth.<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> The
-most noteworthy figures here are those of Arcesilaus and
-Carneades. The establishment of the Middle Academy is
-ascribed to Arcesilaus, and the New Academy is said to
-contain the philosophy of Carneades; but this distinction
-has no signification. Both of these are closely connected
-with Scepticism, and the Sceptics themselves have often
-trouble in distinguishing their standpoint from the
-Academic principle. Both have been claimed by Scepticism
-as Sceptics, but between the Academics and pure Scepticism
-a distinction has been drawn, which is certainly very
-formal, and has but little signification, but to which the
-Sceptics in their subtlety undoubtedly attached some
-meaning. The distinction often consists in the meanings
-of words only, and in quite external differences.</p>
-
-<p>The standpoint of the Academics is that they express
-the truth as a subjective conviction of self-consciousness;
-and this tallies with the subjective idealism of modern
-times. The truth, in so far as it is only a subjective
-conviction, has hence been called, by the New Academy,
-the <i>probable</i>. Although followers of Plato, and hence,
-Platonists, the Academicians did not remain at the standpoint
-of Plato, nor could they have done so. But we easily
-see the connection of this principle with the Platonic
-doctrines, if we recollect that with Plato the Idea has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-the principle, and that, indeed, on the whole, in the form
-of universality. Plato remained, as we saw above (pp. 139,
-140), in the abstract Idea; to him the one great matter in
-Philosophy is to combine the infinite and finite. Plato’s
-Ideas are derived from the necessities of reason, from
-enthusiasm for the truth, but they are in themselves devoid
-of movement, and only universal, while Aristotle demands
-actuality, self-determining activity. Plato’s dialectic has
-only attempted to assert the universal as such, and to
-demonstrate the determinate and particular to be null,
-thus leaving nothing at all but abstract universality. His
-dialectic has hence very often a negative result, in which
-determinations are merely done away with and annulled.
-With Plato the working out of the concrete has thus not
-gone far, and where he, as in the Timæus, proceeds into the
-determinate, <i>e.g.</i> of organic life, he becomes infinitely trivial
-and quite unspeculative, while with Aristotle matters are
-very different. The necessity for a scientific ground has
-necessarily caused us to be carried on beyond this Platonic
-point of view. The Stoics and Epicureans were imbued
-with the scientific necessity, not yet recognized by Plato, of
-giving a content to the universal of the Idea, <i>i.e.</i> of
-grasping particular determinateness, but the succeeding
-Academicians stand in a negative attitude to them in this
-regard. To the end they made a point of holding to the
-Platonic universality, uniting to this the Platonic dialectic
-also. The principle of the New Academy could thus, like
-the Platonic dialectic, possess a dialectic attitude and
-bearing which proceeded to nothing affirmative; as, indeed,
-in many of Plato’s dialogues, mere confusion is what is
-arrived at. But while with Plato the affirmative result is
-essentially the result of dialectic, so that with him we have
-really found the universal Idea as species, during all this
-time, on the other hand, the tendency to abstract apprehension
-is predominant; and as this showed itself in the Stoic
-and Epicurean philosophy, it has also extended to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-Platonic Idea and degraded it into being a form of the
-understanding. Plato’s Ideas were thus torn from their rest
-through thought, because in such universality thought has not
-yet recognized itself as self-consciousness. Self-consciousness
-confronted them with great pretensions, actuality in
-general asserted itself against universality; and the rest of
-the Idea necessarily passed into the movement of thought.
-This movement now, however, in the New Academy turned
-dialectically against the determination of the Stoics and
-Epicureans, which rested on the fact that the criterion of
-the truth ought to be a concrete. For example, in the
-conception as comprehended by the Stoics, there is a
-thought which likewise has a content, although, again,
-this union still remains very formal. But the two forms
-in which the dialectic of the New Academy turns against
-this concrete, are represented by Arcesilaus and Carneades.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c313" id="c313">1. <span class="smcap">Arcesilaus.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Arcesilaus kept to the abstraction of the Idea as against
-the criterion; for though in the Idea of Plato, <i>i.e.</i> in the
-Timæus and in his dialectic, the concrete was derived from
-quite another source, this was only admitted for the first
-time later on by the Neo-platonists, who really recognized
-the unity of the Platonic and the Aristotelian principles.
-The opposition to the Dogmatists thus does not in the case
-of Arcesilaus proceed from the dialectic of the Sceptics, but
-from keeping to abstraction; and here we perceive the
-gulf marking out this epoch from any other.</p>
-
-<p>Arcesilaus was born at Pitane in Æolia in the 116th
-Olympiad (318 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>), and was a contemporary of Epicurus
-and Zeno. Though he originally belonged to the Old
-Academy, yet the spirit of the time and the progressive
-development of Philosophy did not now admit of the simplicity
-of the Platonic manner. He possessed considerable
-means, and devoted himself entirely to the studies requisite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-for the education of a noble Greek, viz. to rhetoric, poetry,
-music, mathematics, &amp;c. Mainly for the purpose of
-exercising himself in rhetoric, he came to Athens, here was
-introduced to Philosophy, and lived henceforth for its sake
-alone; he held intercourse with Theophrastus, Zeno, &amp;c.,
-and it is a subject of dispute whether he did not hear
-Pyrrho also. Arcesilaus, familiar with all the Philosophy
-of those days, was by his contemporaries held to be as noble
-a man as he was a subtle and acute philosopher; being
-without pride in himself, he recognized the merits of others.
-He lived in Athens, occupied the post of scholarch in the
-Academy, and was thus a successor of Plato. After the
-death of Crates, the successor of Speusippus, the place of
-honour in the Academy devolved on Sosicrates, but he
-willingly gave it up in favour of Arcesilaus on account of
-the superiority of the latter in talent and philosophy. What
-really happened as regards the transference of the chair to
-others, is, for the rest, unknown to us. He filled this
-office, in which he made use of the method of disputation,
-with approbation and applause, until his death, which took
-place in Olympiad 134, 4 (244 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>), in the seventy-fourth
-year of his age.<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
-
-<p>The principal points in the philosophy of Arcesilaus are
-preserved by Cicero in his <i>Academics Quæstiones</i>, but
-Sextus Empiricus is more valuable as an authority, for he
-is more thorough, definite, philosophic and systematic.</p>
-
-<p><i>a.</i> This philosophy is specially known to us as being a
-dialectic directed against Stoicism, with which Arcesilaus
-had much to do, and its result, as far as its main principles
-are concerned, is expressed thus: “The wise man must
-restrain his approbation and assent.”<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> This principle was
-called ἐποχή, and it is the same as that of the Sceptics; on
-the other hand this expression is connected with the principle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-of the Stoics as follows. Because to Stoic philosophy
-truth consists in the fact that thought declares some
-content of existence to be its own, and the conception as
-comprehended gives its approbation to this content, the
-content of our conceptions, principles and thoughts undoubtedly
-appears to be different from thought, and the
-union of the two, which is the concrete, only arises by
-means of some determinate content being taken up into
-the form of thought and thus being expressed as the truth.
-But Arcesilaus saw this consequence, and his saying that
-approbation most be withheld is thus as much as saying
-that by thus taking up the content no truth comes to pass,
-but only phenomenon; and this is true, because, as Arcesilaus
-puts it, conception and thought likewise remain apart.
-Arcesilaus has certainly unthinkingly allowed that this
-content united to consciousness is a concrete such as was
-indicated, only he has asserted that this connection merely
-gives a perception with a good ground, and not what he
-calls truth. This is called probability, but not quite
-appropriately; it is a universal set forth through the form
-of thought, and is only formal, having no absolute truth.
-Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, § 233) puts this plainly in
-saying that “Arcesilaus has declared the withholding of
-approbation in relation to parts, to be a good, but the
-assenting to parts to be an evil,” because the assent only
-concerns <i>parts</i>. That is, if thought is to be retained as a
-universal, it cannot come to be a criterion; and that is the
-meaning of Arcesilaus when he asks that the wise man
-should remain at the universal, and not go on to the determinate
-as if this determinate were the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Sextus Empiricus gives us (adv. Math. VII. 155,
-151-153) a more particular explanation of this philosophy,
-which is preserved to us only as being in opposition to
-the Stoics. Arcesilaus asserted as against the Stoics, that
-everything is incomprehensible (ἀκατάληπτα). He thus combated
-the conception of thought (καταληπτικὴν φαντασίαν),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-which to the Stoics is the point of most importance and
-the concrete truth. Arcesilaus further attacked the Stoics
-thus: “They themselves say that the conception of
-thought is the mean between scientific knowledge and
-opinion, the one of which pertains alone to fools and the
-other alone to wise men; the conception of thought is
-common to both, and the criterion of the truth. Arcesilaus
-here argued in such a way as to show that between scientific
-knowledge and opinion the conception of thought is no
-criterion, for it is either in the wise man or the fool, and in
-the former it is knowledge, and in the latter, opinion. If it
-is nothing excepting these, there remains to it nothing but
-an empty name.” For knowledge must be a developed
-consciousness derived from reasons, but these reasons,
-as conceptions of thought, Arcesilaus states to be just such
-thoughts as those of the fool. They are thus, no doubt,
-the concrete directing power which constitutes the principal
-content of our consciousness; but it is not proved
-that they are the truth. Thus this mean, as judging
-between reason and opinion, pertains equally to the wise
-man and the fool, and may be error or truth equally; and
-thus the wise man and the fool have the same criterion, and
-yet they must, in relation to the truth, be distinguished
-from one another.</p>
-
-<p>Arcesilaus further gives effect to the distinctions which
-are more particularly brought up in modern times, and
-relied upon. “If comprehension is the assent given to a
-conception of thought, it does not exist. For, in the first
-place, the assent is not on account of a conception, but of
-a reason; that is to say, it is only as regards axioms that
-this assent holds good.”<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> That is good; more fully the
-purport would be something like this: Thought, as subjective,
-is made to assent to an existence which is a determinate
-content of the conception. A sensuous image such
-as this, however, is foreign to thought, and with it thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-cannot accord, because it is something different from it,
-something from which thought, on the contrary, holds
-itself aloof. It is, in general, only to a thought that thought
-finds itself conformable, and only in a thought that it
-finds itself; thus only a universal axiom is capable of such
-accord, for only such abstract principles are immediately
-pure thoughts. Arcesilaus thus holds it up against the
-Stoics that their principle contains a contradiction within
-itself, because the conception of thought is made to be the
-thought of another, but thought can only think itself. This
-is a thought which concerns the inmost essence of the
-thing. Arcesilaus thus here makes the same celebrated
-distinction as in recent times has again been brought forward
-with so much force as the opposition between thought
-and Being, ideality and reality, subjective and objective.
-Things are something different from me. How can I
-attain to things? Thought is the independent determination
-of a content as universal; but a given content is
-individual and hence we cannot assent to such. The one
-is here, the other there; subjective and objective cannot
-pass to one another&mdash;this is a form of thought upon which
-for long the whole culture of modern philosophy has
-turned, and which we still find to-day. It is important to
-have a consciousness of this difference, and to assert this
-consciousness against the principle of the Stoics. It was
-of this unity of thought and reality that the Stoics ought
-to have given an account; and this they did not do, and
-indeed it was never done in ancient times. For the ancients
-did not prove that the subjective element of thought and
-this objective content are really in their diversity the passing
-into one another, and that this identity is their truth;
-this was only found in Plato in an abstract form and as a
-first commencement. The unity of thought and conception
-is the difficult matter; thus if thought, as such, is the
-principle, it is abstract. The logic of the Stoics hence remained
-formal merely, and the attainment of a content<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-could not be demonstrated. Thought and Being are themselves
-such abstractions, and we may move to and fro
-between them for long without arriving at any determination.
-Thus this unity of universal and particular cannot
-be the criterion. With the Stoics the conception as comprehended
-appears to be immediately asserted; it is a
-concrete, but it is not shown that this is the truth of these
-distinct elements. Against this immediately accepted
-concrete, the assertion of the difference of the two is thus
-quite consistent.</p>
-
-<p>“In the second place,” says Arcesilaus, “there is no
-apprehended conception that is not also false, as has been
-confirmed many times and oft,” just as the Stoics themselves
-say that the apprehended conception could be both
-true and false. Determinate content has its opposite in a
-determinate which must likewise as an object of thought
-be true; and this destroys itself. In this consists the
-blind wandering about in thoughts and reasons such as
-these, which are not grasped as Idea, as the unity of opposites,
-but in one of the opposites asserts one thing, and
-then, with as good reason, the opposite. The truth of the
-world is, on the contrary, quite different, the universal law
-of reason which is as such for thought. Reasons are relatively
-ultimate for a content, but not absolutely ultimate;
-they can only be regarded as good reasons, as probability,
-as the Academics express it. This is a great truth which
-Arcesilaus had attained. But because no unity can thus
-come forth, he then draws the conclusion that the wise man
-must withhold his assent, that is, not that he should not
-think, but that he must not merely for that reason regard
-as true that which is thought. “For since nothing is comprehensible,
-he will, if he assents, assent to an incomprehensible;
-now because such an assent is opinion, the wise
-man will only be wise in opinion.”<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> We still likewise hear
-this said: Man thinks, but does not thereby arrive at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-truth; it remains beyond. Cicero (Acad. Quæst. IV. 24)
-thus expresses this: “Neither the false nor the true can be
-known, if the true were simply to be such as is the false.”</p>
-
-<p><i>b.</i> In relation to what is practical, Arcesilaus says:
-“But since the conduct of life without a criterion of the
-true or the false is impossible, and the end of life, or happiness,
-can only be determined through such grounds, the
-wise man, not withholding his approbation regarding
-everything, will, as regards what has to be done and left
-undone, direct his actions in accordance with the probable
-(εὔλογον),” as the subjectively convincing conception.
-What is right in this is that the good ground does not
-extend as far as truth. “Happiness is brought about by
-discretion (φρόνησις), and rational conduct operates in
-fitting and right action (κατορθώμασι); that is rightly done
-which is permitted by a well-grounded justification,” so
-that it appears to be true. “Thus, he who regards what
-is well-founded will do rightly and be happy,” but for this
-culture and intelligent thought are requisite. Arcesilaus
-thus remains at the indeterminate, at subjectivity of
-conviction, and a probability justified by good grounds.
-Thus we see that in regard to what is positive, Arcesilaus
-does not really get any further than the Stoics, nor say anything
-different from what they do; only the form is
-different, because, what the Stoics call true, Arcesilaus
-calls well-founded or probable. But, on the whole, he
-possessed a higher kind of knowledge than the Stoics,
-because what is thus founded cannot be held to have the
-significance of an implicit existence, but only a relative
-truth in consciousness.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c319" id="c319">2. <span class="smcap">Carneades.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Carneades was equally famous; he was one of the
-followers of Arcesilaus in the Academy, and he also lived in
-Athens, though considerably later. He was born in Cyrene
-in Ol. 141, 3 (217 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>), and died in Ol. 162, 4 (132 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-thus being eighty-five years old; though, according to
-others he was as much as ninety.<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> During the already
-mentioned (pp. 241, 242) embassy of the three philosophers
-to Rome, it was chiefly Carneades’ quickness, eloquence, and
-power of conviction, as also his great fame, which aroused
-remark, attracted men together, and gained great approbation
-in Rome. For he here held, after the manner of
-the Academics, two discourses on justice; the one for and
-the other against justice. That on which both generally
-speaking rested, can easily be discovered. In the justification
-of justice he took the universal as principle; but in
-showing its nullity, he laid weight on the principle of
-individuality, of self-interest. To the young Romans who
-knew little of the opposition in the Notion, this was something
-new; they had no idea of such methods of applying
-thought, were much attracted by them, and were soon won
-over to them. But the older Romans, and particularly the
-elder Cato, the Censor, who was then still living, saw this
-very unwillingly, and declaimed much against it, because
-the youths were thereby turned away from the strictness of
-ideas and virtues which prevailed in Rome. As the evil
-gained ground, Caius Acilius made a proposition in the
-Senate to banish all philosophers from the city, amongst
-whom, naturally, without their names being mentioned,
-those three ambassadors were included. The elder Cato,
-however, moved the Senate to conclude the business with
-the ambassadors as quickly as possible, so that they might
-again set forth, and return to their schools, and might henceforth
-instruct only the sons of the Greeks. The Roman
-youths might then as formerly give ear to their laws and
-magistrates, and learn wisdom from intercourse with the
-senators.<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> But this taint can no more be avoided than
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>could in Paradise the desire for knowledge. The knowledge
-which is a necessary moment in the culture of a
-people, thus makes its appearance as the Fall from innocence,
-and as corruption. An epoch such as this, in which
-thought appears to veer about, is then regarded as an evil
-as far as the security of the ancient constitution is concerned.
-But this evil of thought cannot be prevented by
-laws, &amp;c.; it can and must be the healer of itself through
-itself alone, if thought through thought itself is truly
-brought to pass.</p>
-
-<p>a. The philosophy of Carneades has been given to us in
-most detail by Sextus Empiricus; and all else of Carneades
-that we possess is likewise directed against the dogmatism
-of the Stoic and Epicurean philosophy. The fact that the
-nature of consciousness is what is most particularly considered
-makes his propositions interesting. While in
-Arcesilaus we still found a good reason or argument maintained,
-the principle which Carneades supported is expressed
-as that “in the first place there is absolutely no
-criterion of the truth, neither feeling, conception, nor
-thought, nor any other such thing; for all this put together
-deceives us.” This general empirical proposition is
-still in vogue. In developing the matter further, Carneades
-proves what he says from reasons, and we have the
-nature of consciousness more definitely expressed in the
-following: “In the second place he shows that even if such
-a criterion existed, it could not be without an affection
-(πάθος) of consciousness, which proceeds from perception.”<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a>
-For this, speaking generally, is his principal reflection, that
-every criterion must be constituted so that it has two
-elements, one being the objective, existent, immediately
-determined, while the other element is an affection, an
-activity, an attribute of consciousness, and belongs to the
-sensitive, conceiving or thinking subject&mdash;but as such it
-could not be the criterion. For this activity of consciousness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-consists in the fact that it changes the objective, and
-thus does not allow the objective as it is to come to us
-immediately. Hence the same attitude of separation is
-pre-supposed as formerly, viz. that the understanding is to
-be regarded as an ultimate and clearly absolute relationship.</p>
-
-<p>α. As against the Epicureans, Carneades maintains this:
-“Because the living is distinguished from the dead through
-the activity of sensation, by this means it will comprehend
-itself and what is external. But this sensation which,” as
-Epicurus puts it (<i>supra</i>, p. 281), “remains unmoved and is
-impassive and unchangeable, is neither sensation nor
-does it comprehend anything. For not until they have
-been changed and determined by the invasion of the actual
-does sensation show forth things.”<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> The sensation of
-Epicurus is an existent, but there is in it no principle of
-judgment, because each sensation is independent. But
-sensation must be analyzed in accordance with the two
-points of view there present, for as the soul is therein,
-determined, so likewise is that which determines determined
-by the energy of the conscious subject. Because I,
-as a living being, have sensation, a change in my consciousness
-takes place, which means that I am determined from
-without and from within. Consequently the criterion cannot
-be a simple determinateness, for it is really an implicit
-relationship in which two moments, sensation and thought,
-must be distinguished.</p>
-
-<p>β. Since to Carneades sensation is merely what comes
-first, he then says: “The criterion is thus to be sought
-for in the affection of the soul by actuality.” For it is
-only in the mean between the energy of the soul and that of
-outward things that the criterion can fall. A determinate
-content of sensation such as this, which is at the same time
-again determined through consciousness, this passivity and
-activity of consciousness, this third something, Carneades
-called the conception which constituted to the Stoics the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-content of thought. Respecting this criterion, he says:
-“This being determined must, however, be an indication
-both of itself and of the apparent, or of the thing through
-which it is affected; this affection is none other than the
-conception. Hence in life the conception is something
-which presents both itself and the other. If we see something,
-the sight has an affection, and it no longer is just as
-it was before seeing. Through an alteration such as this
-there arise in us two things: first change itself, <i>i.e.</i> the
-ordinary conception” (the subjective side) “and then that
-which change produced, what is seen” (the objective).
-“Now just as the light shows itself and everything in it,
-the conception reigns over knowledge in the animal, and it
-must, like the light, make itself evident, and reveal the
-actual through which consciousness is affected.” This is
-quite the correct standpoint for consciousness, and it is in
-itself comprehensible, but it is only for the phenomenal
-mind that the other in the determinateness of consciousness
-is present. We now expect a development of this opposition;
-but Carneades passes into the region of empiricism
-without giving this further development. “Since the
-conception,” he continues, “does not always point to the
-truth, but often lies, and resembles bad messengers in that
-it misrepresents what it proceeds from, it follows that not
-every conception can give a criterion of the truth, but only
-that which is true, if any are so. But because none is
-so constituted that it might not also be false, conceptions
-are likewise a common criterion of the true as of the false,
-or they form no criterion.” Carneades also appealed to
-the fact of a conception proceeding even from something
-not existing, or&mdash;if the Stoics asserted that what in the
-objective is thinkingly apprehended is an existent&mdash;to the
-fact that the false may also be apprehended.<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> In a popular
-way that is stated thus: There are also conceptions of
-untruth. Although I am convinced, it is still my conception<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-merely, even if men think they have said something
-by saying that they have this conviction. They likewise
-say that insight or objective knowledge is still only
-the conviction of difference, but really the content is in its
-nature universal.</p>
-
-<p>γ. Finally, “because no conception is a criterion, neither
-can thought be taken as such, for this depends on conception”&mdash;and
-must hence be just as uncertain as it is.
-“For to thought, that respecting which it judges must be
-conception; but conception cannot exist without unthinking
-sensation”&mdash;this may, however, be either true or false, “so
-that there is no criterion.”<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> This constitutes the principle
-in the Academic philosophy&mdash;that on the one hand the
-conception is in itself this distinction of thought and
-existence, and that there is likewise a unity of both, which,
-however, is no absolutely existing unity. Philosophic
-culture of those times remained at this standpoint, and in
-modern times Reinhold also arrived at the same result.</p>
-
-<p>b. Now what Carneades gave expression to of an affirmative
-nature respecting the criterion, is found in the
-statement that undoubtedly criteria are to be maintained
-for the conduct of life and for the acquisition of happiness,
-but not for the speculative consideration of what is in and
-for itself. Thus Carneades passes more into what is
-psychological, and into finite forms of the understanding
-consciousness; this is consequently no criterion respecting
-truth, but respecting the subjective habits and customs of
-the individual, and hence it also is of subjective truth alone,
-although it still remains a concrete end. “The conception
-is a conception of something; of that from which it comes
-as of the externally perceived object, and of the subject in
-which it is, <i>e.g.</i> of man. In this way it has two relationships&mdash;on
-the one hand to the object, and, on the other, to
-that which forms the conception. According to the former
-relationship it is either true or false; true if it harmonizes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-with what is conceived of, false if this is not so.” But this
-point of view cannot here in any way come under consideration,
-for the judgment respecting this harmony is
-most certainly not in a position to separate the matter
-itself from the matter as conceived. “According to the
-relationship to that which conceives, the one is conceived
-(φαινομένε) to be true, but the other is not conceived to be
-true.” Merely this relationship to the conceiver, however,
-comes under the consideration of the Academicians. “That
-conceived of as true is called by the Academician appearance
-(ἔμφασις) and conviction, and convincing conception;
-but what is not conceived as true is called incongruity
-(ἀπέμφασις) and non-conviction and non-convincing conception.
-For neither that which is presented to us through
-itself as untrue, nor what is true but is not presented to us,
-convinces us.”<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a></p>
-
-<p>Carneades thus determines the leading principle very
-much as does Arcesilaus, for he recognizes it merely in the
-form of a “convincing conception;” but as convincing it
-is “likewise a firm and a developed conception,” if it is to
-be a criterion of life. These distinctions, on the whole,
-pertain to a correct analysis, and likewise approximately
-appear in formal logic; they are very much the same
-stages as are found, according to Wolff, in the clear,
-distinct, and adequate conception. “We have now shortly
-to show what is the distinction between these three
-steps.”<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
-
-<p>α. “A convincing conception (πιθανή) is that which appears
-to be true and which is sufficiently obvious; it has a
-certain breadth as well, and may be applied in many ways
-and in a great variety of cases; ever verifying itself more
-through repetitions,” as in the case of Epicurus, “it makes
-itself ever more convincing and trustworthy.” No further
-account of its content is given, but what is so frequently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-produced is, as empirical universality, made the first
-criterion.<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> But this is only an individual and, speaking
-generally, an immediate and quite simple conception.</p>
-
-<p>β. “Because, however, a conception is never for itself
-alone, but one depends on another as in a chain, the second
-criterion is added, viz. that it should be both convincing
-and secure (ἀπερίσπαστος),” <i>i.e.</i> connected and determined
-on all sides, so that it cannot be changed, nor drawn
-this way and that and made variable by circumstances; and
-other conceptions do not contradict it, because it is known
-in this connection with others. This is quite a correct
-determination, which everywhere appears in the universal.
-Nothing is seen or said alone, for a number of circumstances
-stand in connection with it. “For example, in the conception
-of a man much is contained, both as to what concerns
-himself and what surrounds him: as to the former, there is
-colour, size, form, movement, dress, &amp;c.; and in reference
-to the latter, air, light, friends, and the like. If none of
-such circumstances make us uncertain or cause us to think
-the others false, but when all uniformly agree, the conception
-is the more convincing.”<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> Thus when a conception is
-in harmony with the manifold circumstances in which it
-stands, it is secure. A cord may be thought to be a snake,
-but all the circumstances of the same have not been considered.
-“Thus, as in judging of an illness all the symptoms
-must be brought under our consideration, so the fixed
-conception has conviction because all circumstances agree.”<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
-
-<p>γ. “Even more trustworthy than the fixed conception is
-the conception as developed (διεξωδευμένη), which brings
-about perfect conviction,” the third moment. “While in
-the case of the fixed conception we only investigate whether
-the circumstances agree with one another, in the developed
-conception each one of the circumstances existing in harmony<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-is strictly inquired into on its own account. Thus
-he who judges as well as what is judged and that according
-to which judgment is given, are subject to investigations.
-Just as in common life in some unimportant matter one
-witness satisfies us, in one more important several are required,
-and in a case which is more material still the individual
-witnesses are themselves examined through a
-comparison of their testimonies, so in less important matters
-a general convincing conception satisfies us, in things of
-a certain importance one which is established, but in those
-which pertain to a good and happy life one which is investigated
-in its parts is required.”<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> We thus see&mdash;in contradistinction
-to those who place truth in what is immediate,
-and, especially in recent times, in sensuous perception, in
-an immediate knowledge, whether as inward revelation or
-outward perception&mdash;that this kind of certainty with
-Carneades rightly takes the lowest place; the conception
-worked out and developed really is to him the essential one,
-and yet it appears in a formal manner only. In fact, the
-truth is only in thinking knowledge, and if Carneades does
-not exhaust all that can be said of the nature of this knowledge,
-he still has rightly emphasized an essential moment
-in it, the opening out and the judging movements of the
-moments.</p>
-
-<p>In the New Academy we see the subjective side of conviction
-expressed, or the belief that not the truth as truth,
-but its manifestation, or really what it is to the conception,
-is present in consciousness. Thus only subjective certainty
-is demanded; of the truth nothing more is said, for only
-what is relative in respect of consciousness is considered.
-Just as the Academic principle limited itself to the subjective
-act of the convincing conception, so likewise did the
-Stoics really place implicit existence in thought, and Epicurus
-in perception; but they called this the truth. The
-Academicians, on the contrary, set it up against the truth,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-and asserted that it is not the existent as such. They had
-thus a consciousness that the implicit really has the moment
-of consciousness in it, and that without this it cannot exist;
-this was also a fundamental principle to the former, but
-they were not conscious of it. Though, according to this,
-the implicit has now an essential relation to consciousness,
-this last is still in contrast with the truth; to conscious
-knowledge, as to the moment of explicitude, the implicit
-thus still stands in the background, it still confronts it, but
-at the same time it includes the explicit as an essential
-moment, even in antagonism to itself; in other words,
-consciousness is not yet set forth in and for itself. Now,
-if this Academic standpoint is driven to its ultimate
-limit, it amounts to this, that everything is clearly for
-consciousness alone, and that the form of an existent,
-and of the knowledge of existence, also quite disappears as
-form; this, however, is Scepticism. Thus if the Academicians
-still preferred one conviction, one estimate of truth to
-another, as that in which the aim of a self-existent truth
-might be said to dwell, or float before their eyes, there
-still remains this simple belief in the validity of opinion
-without distinction, or the fact that everything is in
-like manner only related to consciousness, and is, in fact,
-phenomenal alone. Thus the Academy had no longer any
-fixed subsistence, but hereby really passed into Scepticism,
-which merely asserted a subjective belief in truth, so that
-all objective truth has really been denied.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c328" id="c328">D. <span class="smcap">Scepticism.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>Scepticism completed the theory of the subjectivity of
-all knowledge by the fact that in knowledge it universally
-substituted for Being the expression <i>appearance</i>. Now
-this Scepticism undoubtedly appears to be something
-most impressive, to which great respect is due from man.
-In all times as now, it has been held to be the most formidable,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-and, indeed, the invincible opponent of Philosophy,
-because it signifies the art of dissolving all that is determinate,
-and showing it in its nullity. Thus it might
-almost appear as though it were held to be in itself invincible,
-and as though the only difference in convictions were
-whether the individual decided for it or for a positive,
-dogmatic philosophy. Its result undoubtedly is the disintegration
-of the truth, and, consequently, of all content,
-and thus perfect negation. The invincibility of Scepticism
-must undoubtedly be granted, only, however, in a subjective
-sense as regards the individual, who may keep to the
-point of view of taking no notice of Philosophy, and only
-asserting the negative. Scepticism in this way seems to
-be something to which men give themselves over, and we
-have the impression that we are not able to get within
-reach of anyone who thus throws himself entirely into
-Scepticism; another man, however, simply rests content
-with his philosophy, because he takes no notice of Scepticism,
-and this is really what he ought to do, for, properly speaking,
-it cannot be refuted. Certainly if we were merely to
-escape from it, it would not in reality have been defeated,
-for on its side it would remain where it was, and in possession
-of the field. For positive philosophy allows Scepticism
-to exist beside it; Scepticism, on the other hand, encroaches
-upon the domain of positive philosophy, for Scepticism
-has power to overcome the other, while positive philosophy
-cannot do the same to it. If anyone actually desires to be
-a Sceptic, he cannot be convinced, or be brought to
-a positive philosophy,<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> any more than he who is paralyzed
-in all his limbs can be made to stand. Scepticism is, in
-fact, such paralysis&mdash;an incapacity for truth which can only
-reach certainty of self, and not of the universal, remaining
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>merely in the negative, and in individual self-consciousness.
-To keep oneself in individuality depends on the will of the
-individual; no one can prevent a man from doing this,
-because no one can possibly drive another out of nothing.
-But thinking Scepticism is quite different; it is the demonstration
-that all that is determinate and finite is unstable.
-As to this, positive philosophy may have the consciousness
-that it has the negation to Scepticism in itself; thus it does
-not oppose it, nor is it outside of it, for Scepticism is a
-moment in it. But this is true in such a way that this
-philosophy comprehends in itself the negative in its truth,
-as it is not present in Scepticism.</p>
-
-<p>The relation of Scepticism to Philosophy is further this,
-that the former is the dialectic of all that is determinate.
-The finitude of all conceptions of truth can be shown, for
-they contain in themselves a negation, and consequently a
-contradiction. The ordinary universal and infinite is not
-exalted over this, for the universal which confronts the
-particular, the indeterminate which opposes the determinate,
-the infinite which confronts the finite, each form only the
-one side, and, as such, are only a determinate. Scepticism
-is similarly directed against the thought of the ordinary
-understanding which makes determinate differences appear
-to be ultimate and existent. But the logical Notion is
-itself this dialectic of Scepticism, for this negativity which
-is characteristic of Scepticism likewise belongs to the true
-knowledge of the Idea. The only difference is that the
-sceptics remain at the result as negative, saying, “This
-and this has an internal contradiction, it thus disintegrates
-itself, and consequently does not exist.” But this result as
-merely negative is itself again a one-sided determinateness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>opposed to the positive; <i>i.e.</i> Scepticism only holds its
-place as abstract understanding. It makes the mistake of
-thinking that this negation is likewise a determinate
-affirmative content in itself; for it is, as the negation of
-negation, the self-relating negativity or infinite affirmation.
-This, put quite abstractly, is the relation of Philosophy to
-Scepticism. The Idea, as abstract Idea, is the quiescent
-and inert; it only is in truth in as far as it grasps itself as
-living. This occurs because it is implicitly dialectic, in
-order to abrogate that inert quiescence, and to change itself.
-But if the philosophic Idea is thus implicitly dialectic, it is
-not so in a contingent manner. Scepticism, on the contrary,
-exercises its dialectic contingently, for just as the
-material comes up before it, it shows in the same that
-implicitly it is negative.</p>
-
-<p>The older Scepticism must further be distinguished from
-the modern, and it is only with the former that we have to
-do, for it alone is of a true, profound nature; the modern
-more resembles Epicureanism. Thus Schulze of Göttingen
-has in recent times boasted of his Scepticism; he wrote
-an “Ænesidemus” in order thus to compare himself with
-that sceptic; and in other works, too, he put forward
-Scepticism in opposition to Leibnitz and to Kant. Nevertheless,
-he ignores entirely the true position of Scepticism as
-it has just been described, and instead of representing the
-true distinction which exists between his Scepticism and the
-ancient, Schulze recognizes nothing but Dogmatism and
-Scepticism, and not the third philosophy at all. Schulze
-and others make it fundamental that we must consider
-sensuous Being, what is given to us by sensuous consciousness,
-to be true; all else must be doubted. What we
-think is ultimate, the facts of consciousness. The older
-sceptics, indeed, allowed that men must direct their actions
-in accordance with this last, but to assert it to be the truth
-did not occur to them. Modern Scepticism is only directed
-against thought, against the Notion and the Idea, and thus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-against what is in a higher sense philosophic; it consequently
-leaves the reality of things quite unquestioned, and
-merely asserts that from it nothing can be argued as regards
-thought. But that is not even a peasants’ philosophy, for
-they know that all earthly things are transient, and that thus
-their Being is as good as their non-being. Modern
-Scepticism is the subjectivity and vanity of consciousness,
-which is undoubtedly invincible, not, however, to science
-and truth, but merely to itself, this subjectivity. For it
-goes no further than saying, “This is held by me to be
-true, my feeling, my heart is ultimate to me.” But here
-certainty is alone in question, and not truth; and, indeed,
-this nowadays is no longer called Scepticism. But the
-conviction of this individual subject expresses nothing at
-all, however high the matter which we talk of is supposed
-to be. Thus because on the one hand it is said that the
-truth is merely the conviction of another, and on the other
-hand personal conviction, which is also a ‘merely,’ is set on
-high, we must leave this subject alone, first on account of
-its high pretensions, and then on account of its lowliness.
-The result of the older Scepticism is indeed the subjectivity
-of knowledge only, but this is founded on an elaborately
-thought out annihilation of everything which is held to be
-true and existent, so that everything is made transient.</p>
-
-<p>According to this, the function of Scepticism is wrongly
-termed the inculcation of proneness to doubt; nor can we
-translate σκέψις by Doubt, if Scepticism was also called
-by Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. 3, § 7) ephectic (ἐφεκτική)
-because one of its chief points was that judgment must be
-suspended. Doubt, however, is only uncertainty, irresolution,
-indecision, the thought which is opposed to something
-held to be valid. Doubt proceeds from the fact of there being
-two; it is a passing to and fro between two or more points
-of view, so that we neither rest at the one nor the other&mdash;and
-yet we ought to remain at one point or another. Thus
-doubt in man is quite likely to involve a rending asunder of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-mind and spirit; it gives unrest and brings unhappiness
-with it; doubts, for instance, arise respecting the immortality
-of the soul and the existence of God. Forty years
-ago,<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> much was written about this; in poetry, too, we found
-the situation of the doubter was a subject of the greatest
-interest, the unhappiness of doubt being depicted to us as
-in the “Messias.” This supposes a deep interest in a
-content, and the desire of the mind that this content should
-either be established in it or not, because it desires to find
-its rest either in the one or the other. Such doubt is said
-to betoken a keen and sharp-witted thinker, but it is only
-vanity and simple verbiage, or a feebleness that can never
-arrive at anything. This Scepticism has nowadays entered
-into our life, and it thus makes itself of account as this
-universal negativity. But the older Scepticism does not
-doubt, being certain of untruth, and indifferent to the one
-as to the other; it does not only flit to and fro with thoughts
-that leave the possibility that something may still be true,
-but it proves with certainty the untruth of all. Or its
-doubt to it is certainty which has not the intention of
-attaining to truth, nor does it leave this matter undecided,
-for it is completely at a point, and perfectly decided,
-although this decision is not truth to it. This certainty of
-itself thus has as result the rest and security of the mind in
-itself, which is not touched with any grief, and of which
-doubt is the direct opposite. This is the standpoint of the
-imperturbability of Scepticism.</p>
-
-<p>Now what has to be considered even before treating of
-Scepticism itself, is its external history. As regards the
-origin of Scepticism the Sceptics say that it is very old,
-that is, if we take it in the quite indeterminate and universal
-sense, in so far as to say “Things are, but their
-Being is not true, for it likewise involves their non-being;
-or they are changeable. For example, this day is to-day,
-but to-morrow is also to-day, &amp;c.; it is day now but night<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-is also now, &amp;c.” Thus of what in this way is allowed to
-be a determinate, the opposite is also expressed. Now if it
-be said that all things are transient, things may in the
-first place be changed; however this is not only possible,
-but the fact that all things are transient really means when
-taken in its universality:&mdash;“Nothing exists in itself, for its
-reality is the abrogation of self, because things in themselves,
-in accordance with their necessity, are transient.
-Only now are they thus; at another time they are different,
-and this time, the now, is itself no more while I am speaking
-of it; for time is not itself fixed, and it makes nothing
-fixed.” This uncertainty in what is sensuous represents a
-long-standing belief amongst the unphilosophic public as
-well as amongst philosophers up to this time; and this
-negativity in all determinations likewise constitutes the
-characteristic feature of Scepticism. The Sceptics have
-also presented this position in an historic way, and they
-show that even Homer was a sceptic, because he speaks of
-the same things in opposite ways. They also count in this
-category Bias, with his maxim “Pledge thyself never.”
-For this has the general sense “Do not consider anything
-to be anything, do not attach yourself to any object to which
-you devote yourself, do not believe in the security of any
-relationship, &amp;c.” Likewise the negative aspect of the
-philosophy of Zeno and Xenophanes is said to be sceptical,
-and further, Heraclitus, too, with his principle that everything
-flows, that everything is consequently contradictory
-and transient; finally Plato and the Academy are sceptical,
-only here Scepticism is not yet quite clearly expressed.<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>
-All this may be taken as being in part the sceptical uncertainty
-of everything; but that is not its real meaning.
-It is not this conscious and universal negativity; as conscious,
-it must prove, as universal, it must extend the untruth
-of the objective to everything; thus it is not a
-negativity which says definitely that everything is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-implicit but is only for self-consciousness, and everything
-merely goes back into the certainty of itself. As philosophic
-consciousness Scepticism is consequently of later
-date. By Scepticism we must understand a specially constituted
-consciousness for which in some measure not only
-sensuous Being, but also Being for thought does not hold
-true, and which can then with consciousness account for
-the nullity of that which is asserted to be reality; and
-finally, in a general way, it not only annuls this and that
-sensuous fact or thought, but is adapted for the recognition
-in everything of its untruth.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Scepticism, properly so called, is usually
-commenced with Pyrrho as being its founder; and from
-him the names Pyrrhonism and Pyrrhonic are derived.
-Sextus Empiricus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 3, § 7) says of him
-“that he went into Scepticism more fully (σωματικώτερον)
-and clearly than did his predecessors.” He is earlier than
-some of the philosophers already considered; but because
-Scepticism is to be taken as a whole, Pyrrho’s Scepticism,
-even if it is merely aimed against the immediate truth both
-of the senses and of morality, must be taken along with the
-later Scepticism, which directs its attention rather against
-the truth as thought, as will be farther shown on a closer
-consideration; for this last was the first, properly speaking,
-to make a sensation. As to the events of Pyrrho’s life,
-they appear to be as much a matter of doubt as his doctrine;
-for they are without any connection, and little is
-known for certain concerning them. Pyrrho lived in the
-time of Aristotle and was born at Elis. I shall not give
-the names of his instructors; Anaxarchus, a disciple
-of Democritus, is specially mentioned amongst them. We
-cannot discover where he really lived, for the most part at
-least. As a proof of how very much he was esteemed during
-his life, it is said that his native town chose him as head
-priest, and the town of Athens gave him the right of citizenship.
-It is finally stated that he accompanied Alexander<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-the Great in his journey to Asia; and that there he had
-considerable dealings with magicians and Brahmins. We
-are told that Alexander had him put to death because he
-desired the death of a Persian satrap; and this fate
-befel him in his ninetieth year. If all this is to be accepted,
-since Alexander spent between twelve and fourteen years
-in Asia, Pyrrho must at the earliest have set out on his
-travels in his seventy-eighth year. Pyrrho does not appear
-to have come forward as a public teacher, but merely to
-have left behind him individual friends who had been educated
-by him. Anecdotes are told, not so much about the
-circumstances of his life as about the sceptical manner in
-which he conducted himself, and in them his behaviour is
-made to look ridiculous; in this the universal of Scepticism
-is set against a particular case, so that what is absurd
-shoots up as of itself into relationships which appear to be
-consistent. For because he asserted that the reality of
-sensuous things has no truth, it is, for instance, said that
-were he walking he would go out of the way of no object,
-no waggon or horse that came towards him; or he would
-go straight up against a wall, completely disbelieving in the
-reality of sensuous sensations and such like. They also
-said that it was only the friends surrounding him who drew
-him away from such dangers and saved him.<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> But such
-anecdotes are evidently extravagant, because, for one thing,
-it is not conceivable that he could have followed Alexander
-to Asia at ninety years of age. It is also very clear that
-such stories are simply invented with the object of ridiculing
-the sceptical philosophy, by following out its principle to
-such extreme consequences. To the Sceptics sensuous
-existence undoubtedly holds good as phenomenal in so far
-as the regulation of ordinary conduct is concerned (<i>infra</i>,
-p. 343), but not in as far as it is held to be the truth; for
-even the followers of the New Academy said that men must
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>not only direct their lives in accordance with rules of
-prudence, but also in accordance with the laws of sensuous
-manifestation (<i>supra</i>, pp. 319, 324).</p>
-
-<p>After Pyrrho, Timon of Phliasis, the sillographist, became
-specially famous.<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> Of his Silli, <i>i.e.</i> biting remarks respecting
-all philosophies, many are quoted by the ancients; they
-are certainly bitter and disdainful enough, but many of
-them are not very witty or worthy of being preserved. Dr.
-Paul collected them in an essay, but in it much is given
-that is meaningless. Goethe and Schiller certainly show
-more capacity in works of a similar nature. The Pyrrhonians
-hereupon disappear,&mdash;they seem in general only to have
-shown themselves in a more or less isolated way; for a
-long time after this we read in history of the Peripatetics,
-Stoics and Epicureans being confronted only by the
-Academicians and perhaps some of the older Sceptics who
-are mentioned likewise.</p>
-
-<p>Ænesidemus was the first to reawaken Scepticism;
-he was of Cnossus in Crete, and lived in Cicero’s time in
-Alexandria,<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> which soon began to compete with Athens for
-the honour of being the seat of Philosophy and the sciences.
-Subsequently, when the Academy lost itself in Scepticism,
-we see the latter, from which the former is all the same only
-separated by a thin partition, taking up a position of predominance
-as representing the purely negative point of
-view. But a scepticism such as that of Pyrrho, which does
-not as yet show much culture or tendency towards thought,
-but which is directed only against what is sensuous, could
-have no interest in the culture of Philosophy as it is found
-in Stoicism, Epicureanism, Platonism, &amp;c. Thus it is
-requisite, in order that Scepticism should appear with the
-dignity pertaining to Philosophy, that it should itself be
-developed on its philosophic side; and this was first done
-by Ænesidemus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>However, one of the most celebrated of the Sceptics,
-whose works we still in great measure possess, and who
-for us is by far the most important writer upon Scepticism,
-because he gives us detailed accounts of this philosophy,
-is Sextus Empiricus, of whose life unfortunately as good
-as nothing is known. He was a physician, and that he
-was an empirical physician, who did not act according to
-theory but in accordance with what appears, his name
-tells us. He lived and taught about the middle of the
-second century after Christ.<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> His works are divided into
-two parts: first, his <i>Pyrrhoniæ Hypotyposes</i>, in three books,
-which give us somewhat of a general presentation of
-Scepticism, and secondly his books <i>adversus Mathematicos</i>,
-<i>i.e.</i> against scientific knowledge generally, and more especially
-against the geometricians, arithmeticians, grammarians,
-musicians, logicians, physicists, and moral philosophers.
-There were in all eleven books, six of which are actually
-directed against mathematicians, but the other five against
-the philosophers.</p>
-
-<p>The distinction between the Academy and Scepticism
-was a matter as to which the Sceptics exercised themselves
-much. The New Academy really bordered so closely
-upon Scepticism, that the Sceptics had enough to do
-to dissociate themselves from it, and in the Sceptic
-school a long and important battle raged as to whether
-Plato, and subsequently the New Academy, belonged to
-Scepticism or not;<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> in the course of this we also see that
-Sextus did not really know what to make of Plato. The
-Sceptics are, on the whole, very careful to distinguish
-their own from other systems. Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I.
-c. 1, §§ 1-4) distinguishes three philosophies: “He who
-seeks an object must either find it or deny that it can be
-found, or persevere in the search. Now the same holds
-good with philosophic investigations; some assert that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-they have found the truth; others deny that it can be
-grasped; a third set are still engaged in search. The
-first, like Aristotle, Epicurus, the Stoics, and others, are
-the so-called Dogmatists; those who assert incomprehensibility
-are the Academicians; the Sceptics still continue
-to seek. Hence there are three philosophies: the Dogmatic,
-the Academic and the Sceptical.” For this reason, the
-Sceptics called themselves the seekers (ζητητικοί), and their
-philosophy the seeking (ζητητική).<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> However, the distinction
-between Scepticism and the New Academy rests in
-the form of expression only, and is thus not a great one:
-indeed it is founded only on the mania of the Sceptics to
-cut off and to shun any sort of assertive statement. Sextus
-(Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 7, § 13; c 10, §§ 19-20) says: “The
-Sceptic does not dogmatize, but only assents to the
-affections into which he is impelled, not of his own will,
-by the conceptions; thus, if for example, he is warm or
-cold, he will certainly not say, I seem not to be cold or
-warm. But if it be asked if the subject is as it appears,
-we allow appearance (φαίνεσθαι); yet we do not investigate
-the thing that appears, but only the predicate predicate (ὃ λέγεται)<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a>
-expressing its appearance. Thus, whether anything is sweet
-or not, we consider only as regards the Notion Notion (ὄσον ἐπὶ
-τῷ λόγῳ); but that is not what appears, but what is said
-of what appears. But if we institute direct investigations
-respecting what appears, we do so not in order to destroy
-what appears, but in order to condemn the rashness
-(προπέτειαν) of the dogmatists.” Thus the Sceptics
-endeavour to bring about the result that in what they say
-no expression of a Being can be demonstrated, so that, for
-example, in a proposition, they always set appearance in the
-place of existence. According to Sextus they say (Pyrrh.
-Hyp. I. c. 7, § 14; c. 28, § 206): “The Sceptic makes use
-of his propositions&mdash;for example, determine nothing (οὐδὲν<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-ὁρίζειν), not the more (οὐδὲν μᾶλλον), nothing is true, &amp;c.&mdash;not
-as if they really did exist. For he believes, for
-instance, that the proposition, everything is false, asserts
-that itself as well as the others is false, and consequently
-limits it (συμπεριγράφει). Thus we must similarly in all
-sceptical propositions recollect that we do not at all assert
-their truth; for we say that they may destroy themselves,
-since that limits them of which they are predicated.”
-Now, the New Academy of Carneades does not express
-anything as being the true and existent, or as anything to
-which thought could agree; the Sceptics thus come very
-near to the Academy. Pure Scepticism merely makes
-this objection to the Academy, that it is still impure.
-Sextus says (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, §§ 226-233): “But
-clearly they differ from us in the judgment of good and
-evil. For they assert that something is good or evil,”
-that is to say, the former is the withholding of assent, and
-the latter the granting of it (<i>supra</i>, p. 315), “whereby
-they are convinced of its being probable that what of good
-is attributed to the predicate, is more likely to be good
-than the opposite.” Thus they have not elevated themselves
-to the purity of Scepticism, because they speak of
-<i>existence</i>, and not of <i>appearance</i>. But this is nothing more
-than a mere form, for the content immediately destroys
-that which in form appears to be an assertion. If we
-say: “Something is a good, thought assents to it,” and
-then ask, “But what is the good to which thought assents?”
-the content here is that it should not assent. Hence the
-form is, “It is a good,” but the content is that nothing
-should be held to be good or true. Thus the Sceptics
-also assert this: To the Sceptics “all conceptions are
-alike in trustworthiness or untrustworthiness in relation
-to the ground,” to truth. “But the Academicians say
-that some are probable, and others improbable, and
-amongst the probable, some again are to be preferred to
-the others.” Preference is thus one of the forms which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-the Sceptics also object to (<i>infra</i>, p. 345); for such expressions
-strike them as still too positive.</p>
-
-<p>Now, speaking generally, the essential nature of
-Scepticism consists in its considering that to self-consciousness
-on its own account, there proceeds from the disappearance
-of all that is objective, all that is held to be true,
-existent or universal, all that is definite, all that is affirmative,
-through the withholding of assent, the immovability
-and security of mind, this imperturbability in itself.
-Hence the same result is obtained, that we have already
-seen in systems of philosophy immediately preceding this.
-Thus as soon as anything is held to be truth to self-consciousness,
-we find the result that to self-consciousness
-this truth is the universal reality, passing beyond itself,
-and in regard to this, self-consciousness esteems itself as
-nothing. But this external and determinate truth, as
-finite, is not implicitly existent, so that its necessity is to
-vacillate and give way. Then when this security disappears,
-self-consciousness itself loses its equilibrium, and
-becomes driven hither and thither in unrest, fear and
-anguish; for its stability and rest is the permanence of
-its existence and truth. But sceptical self-consciousness is
-just this subjective liberation from all the truth of objective
-Being, and from the placing of its existence in anything of
-the kind; Scepticism thus makes its end the doing away
-with the unconscious servitude in which the natural self-consciousness
-is confined, the returning into its simplicity,
-and, in so far as thought establishes itself in a content,
-the curing it of having a content such as this established
-in thought. “The effective principle of Scepticism,” Sextus
-hence tells us (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 6, § 12, c. 12, §§ 25-30), “is
-the hope of attaining to security. Men of distinguished
-excellence, disquieted through the instability of things,
-and dubious as to which should in preference be given
-assent to, began the investigation of what is the truth and
-what false in things, as if they could reach imperturbability<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-through the decision of such matters. But while engaged
-in this investigation, man attains the knowledge that
-opposite determinations,” desires, customs, &amp;c., “have equal
-power,” and thus resolve themselves; “since in this way he
-cannot decide between them, he really only then attains
-to imperturbability when he withholds his judgment. For
-if he holds anything to be good or evil by nature, he never
-is at rest, whether it be that he does not possess what he
-holds to be good, or that he thinks himself vexed and
-assailed by natural evil. But he who is undecided respecting
-that which is good and beautiful in nature, neither
-shuns nor seeks anything with zeal; and thus he remains
-unmoved. What happened to the painter Apelles, befalls
-the Sceptic. For it is told that when he was painting a
-horse, and was altogether unsuccessful in rendering the
-foam, he finally in anger threw the sponge on which he had
-wiped his brushes, and in which every colour was therefore
-mixed, against the picture, and thereby formed a true
-representation of foam.” Thus, the Sceptics find in the
-mingling of all that exists, and of all thoughts, the simple
-self-identity of self-consciousness which “follows mind as
-the shadow does the body,” and is only acquired, and can
-only be acquired through reason. “Hence we say that
-the end of the Sceptic is imperturbability in the conceptions
-and moderation in the affections which he is compelled
-to have.” This is the indifference which the animals
-have by nature, and the possession of which through
-reason distinguishes men from animals. Thus, Pyrrho
-once showed to his fellow-passengers on board a ship, who
-were afraid during a storm, a pig, which remained quite
-indifferent and peacefully ate on, saying to them: in such
-indifference the wise man must also abide.<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> However the
-indifference must not be like that of the pig, but must be
-born of reason. But if to Scepticism existence was only
-a manifestation or conception, it was yet esteemed by it as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-that in respect to which the Sceptics directed their conduct,
-both in what they did, and what they left undone.
-The above-quoted (p. 336) anecdotes about Pyrrho are
-thus opposed to what the Sceptics themselves said on the
-subject: “We undoubtedly direct our conduct in accordance
-with a reason which, in conformity with sensuous
-phenomena, teaches us to live conformably to the customs
-and laws of our country, and in consonance with recognized
-institutions and personal affections.”<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> But for them this
-had only the significance of a subjective certainty and
-conviction, and not the value of an absolute truth.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the universal method of Scepticism was, as
-Sextus Empiricus puts it (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 4, §§ 8-10; c.
-6, § 12): “a power of in some way or other setting what
-is felt, and what is thought, in opposition, whether it be
-the sensuous to the sensuous, and what is thought to
-what is thought, or what is sensuous to what is thought,
-or what is thought to what is sensuous, <i>i.e.</i> showing
-that any one of these has as much force and weight
-as its opposite, and is hence equivalent as far as conviction
-and non-conviction are concerned. From this the suspension
-of judgment (ἐποχή) results, in conformity with
-which we select and posit nothing, and thereby complete
-freedom from all mental emotion is attained. The
-principle of Scepticism is thus found in the proposition
-that each reason is confronted by another, which holds
-equally good. We do not, however, necessarily accept
-affirmation and negation as opposite grounds, but merely
-those that conflict with one another.” That which is felt
-is really existence for sensuous certainty, which simply
-accepts it as truth; or it is that which is felt in the Epicurean
-form, which consciously asserts it to be true. What is
-thought is in the Stoic form a determinate Notion, a
-content in a simple form of thought; both these classes,
-immediate consciousness and thinking consciousness, comprehend<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-everything which is in any way to be set in
-opposition. In as far as Scepticism limits itself to this, it
-is a moment in Philosophy itself, which last, having an
-attitude of negativity in relation to both, only recognizes
-them as true in their abrogation. But Scepticism thinks
-that it reaches further; it sets up a pretension of venturing
-against the speculative Idea and conquering it; Philosophy,
-however, since Scepticism itself is present in it as a moment,
-rather overcomes it (<i>supra</i>, p. 330). As far as what is
-sensuous and what is thought in their separation are
-concerned, it certainly may conquer, but the Idea is neither
-the one nor the other, and it does not touch on the rational
-at all. The perpetual misunderstanding which those who
-do not know the nature of the Idea are under concerning
-Scepticism, is that they think that the truth necessarily
-falls into the one form or the other, and is thus either a
-determinate Notion or a determinate Being. Against the
-Notion as Notion, <i>i.e.</i> against the absolute Notion, Scepticism
-does not in any way proceed; the absolute Notion is rather
-its weapon of defence, though Scepticism has no consciousness
-of this. We shall on the one hand see Scepticism use
-that weapon against the finite, and on the other, how it
-tries its skill upon the rational.</p>
-
-<p>But though, according to this, Scepticism always expresses
-itself as if everything were in appearance only, the Sceptics
-go further than those who support the newer and purely
-formal idealism. For they deal with content, and demonstrate
-of all content that it is either experienced by the
-senses or thought, and consequently that it has something
-in opposition to it. Thus they show in the same thing the
-contradiction that exists, so that of everything that is presented
-the opposite also holds good. This is the objective
-element in Scepticism in its manifestation, and that through
-which it is not subjective idealism. Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I.
-c. 13, §§ 32, 33) says: “Thus, for instance, the sensuous is
-set against the sensuous by our being reminded of the fact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-that the same tower when looked at near is square and
-when regarded in the distance looks round;” and hence the
-one assertion is as good as the other. This, indeed, is a
-very trivial example, but its interest lies in the thought that
-is present in it. “Or what is thought is set in opposition
-to what is thought. As to the fact that there is a providence,”
-which rewards the good and punishes the evil,
-“men appeal,” as against those who deny it, “to the system
-of the heavenly bodies; to this it is objected that the good
-often fare badly and the evil well, from which we demonstrate
-that there is no providence.” As to the “opposition
-of what is thought to the sensuous,” Sextus adduces the
-conclusion of Anaxagoras, who asserts of the snow, that
-although it appears to be white, regarded in relation to the
-reasons given by reflection it is black. For it is frozen
-water, but water has no colour and hence is black; consequently
-snow must be the same.</p>
-
-<p>We must now consider further the method in which the
-Sceptics proceed, and it consists in this, that they have
-brought the universal principle that each definite assertion
-has to be set over against its ‘other,’ into certain forms,
-not propositions. Thus, in view of the nature of Scepticism,
-we cannot ask for any system of propositions, nor will this
-philosophy really be a system; just as little did it lie in the
-spirit of Scepticism to form a school, properly speaking, but
-only an external connection in the wider sense of the word.
-Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 8, § 16, c. 3, § 7) hence says that
-Scepticism is no selection (αἵρεσις) of dogmas, it is not a
-preference for certain propositions, but only that which
-leads, or rather which directs us (ἀγωγή) to live rightly and
-think correctly; thus it is in this way rather a method or
-manner by which only universal modes of that opposition are
-shown. Now since what sort of thoughts reveal themselves
-is a matter of contingency, the manner and mode of
-grasping them is contingent likewise; for in one the contradiction
-appears thus and in another otherwise. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-determinate modes of opposition, whereby the withholding
-of assent comes to pass, the Sceptics called tropes (τρόποι),
-which are turned upon everything that is thought and felt
-in order to show that this is not what it is implicitly, but
-only in relation to another&mdash;that it thus itself appears in
-another, and allows this other to appear in it, and consequently
-that, speaking generally, what is, only seems;
-and this, indeed, follows directly from the matter in itself,
-and not from another which is assumed as true. If, for
-example, men say that empiric science has no truth because
-truth exists only in reason, this is only assuming the
-opposite of empiricism; likewise the truth of reason proved
-in itself is not a refutation of empiric science, for this last
-stands alongside of the former with equal rights as, and
-within the same.</p>
-
-<p>Now since the sceptical doctrine consists in the art of
-demonstrating contradictions through these <i>tropes</i>, we only
-require to elucidate these modes. The Sceptics themselves,
-like Sextus, for example (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, 15) distinguish
-in these forms the earlier and the later: ten of them
-belong to the elder Sceptics, that is to say to Pyrrho, and
-five were afterwards added by the later Sceptics, and
-Diogenes Laertius indeed tells us (IX. 88) that this was
-first done by Agrippa. From a specification of these it will
-be shown that the earlier are directed against the ordinary
-consciousness generally and belong to a thought of little
-culture, to a consciousness which has sensuous existence
-immediately before it. For they proceed against what we
-call common belief in the immediate truth of things, and
-refute it in a manner which is immediate likewise, not
-through the Notion but through the existence which is
-opposed to it. In their enumeration, too, there is this
-same absence of the Notion. But the five others appear
-to be better, have more interest, and are manifestly of later
-origin; they proceed against reflection, <i>i.e.</i> against a consciousness
-which relates itself to the developed understanding,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-and thus specially against thought-forms, scientific
-categories, the thought of the sensuous, and the determination
-of the same through Notions. Now though the most
-part of these may appear to us to be quite trivial, we must
-still be indulgent towards them, for they are historically, and
-consequently really, directed against the form “it is.” But
-without doubt it is a very abstract consciousness that makes
-this abstract form “it is” its object and combats it. However
-trivial then and commonplace these tropes may always
-appear to be, even more trivial and commonplace is the
-reality of the so-called external objects, that is, immediate
-knowledge, as when, for instance, I say “This is yellow.”
-Men ought not to talk about philosophy, if in this innocent
-way they assert the reality of such determinations. But
-this Scepticism was really far from holding things of immediate
-certainty to be true; thus it actually stands in contrast
-to modern Scepticism, in which it is believed that what is
-in our immediate consciousness, or indeed, all that is
-sensuous, is a truth (<i>supra</i>, pp. 331, 332). As distinguished
-from this, the older Scepticism, the modes of which we would
-now consider further, is directed against the reality of
-things.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c347" id="c347">1. <span class="smcap">The Earlier Tropes.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>In the earlier tropes we see the lack of abstraction appearing
-as the incapacity to grasp their diversitude under more
-simple general points of view, although they all, in fact,
-partly under a simple conception and partly in their
-difference, do in fact converge into some necessary simple
-determinations. From all alike, in relation to immediate
-knowledge, is the insecurity demonstrated of that of which
-we say “it is.” Sextus Empiricus (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14,
-§ 38) even remarks, that “all the tropes may be summed
-up in three: the one is the judging subject; the other
-that respecting which the judgment is made; the third
-that which contains both sides”&mdash;the relation of subject<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-and object. If thought is developed further, it embraces
-things in these more general determinations.</p>
-
-<p>a. “The first trope is the diversitude in animal organization,
-according to which different living beings experience
-different conceptions and sensations respecting the same
-object. This the Sceptics conclude from the different
-nature of their origin, because some are brought into being
-through copulation and others without copulation” (from a
-<i>generatio æquivoca</i>): “but of the first some are hatched
-from eggs, and others come immediately living into the
-world, &amp;c. Thus it is a matter of no doubt that this
-difference of origin produces opposite constitutions, temperaments,
-&amp;c. The variety in the parts of the body, and
-particularly in those which are given to the animal for
-purposes of distinguishing and feeling, thus produces in
-them the greatest differences in conceptions. For instance,
-the jaundiced patient sees as yellow what to others appears
-white,” and as green, what to the latter seems blue.
-“Similarly the eyes of animals are differently constructed
-in different species, and have different colours, being pale,
-grey or red; consequently what is perceived thereby must
-be different.”<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a></p>
-
-<p>This difference in the subject undoubtedly establishes
-a difference in perception, and this last a difference
-between the conception and the nature of the object of
-perception. But if we say “That is,” we mean something
-fixed, maintaining itself under all conditions; whereas in
-opposition to this the Sceptics show that everything is
-variable. But if they thereby destroy similarity and
-identity for the senses, and consequently <i>this</i> universality,
-another steps in, for universality or existence rests simply
-in the fact of men knowing that, in the hackneyed example
-of the jaundiced man, things appear so to him, <i>i.e.</i> the
-necessary law is known whereby a change of sensation
-arises for him. But certainly it is implied in this that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-first sensuous universality is not true universality, because
-it is one immediate and unknown; and in it as sensuous
-existence, its non-universality is rightly demonstrated
-within itself through another universality. As against the
-statement “This is blue because I see it as such,” which
-clearly makes sight the ground of its being asserted to be
-blue, it is quite fair to point to another who has immediate
-perception of the object and for whom it is not blue.</p>
-
-<p>b. The second trope, the diversitude of mankind in
-reference to feelings and conditions, amounts very much
-to the same thing as in the first case. In respect to
-difference in constitution of body, the Sceptics discover
-many idiosyncrasies. As regards the proposition “Shade
-is cool,” for instance, they say that someone felt cold in
-the sunlight, but warm in shadow; as against the statement
-“Hemlock is poisonous,” they instance an old woman
-in Attica who could swallow a large dose of hemlock
-without harm&mdash;thus the predicate poisonous is not objective,
-because it suits the one and not the other. Because such
-great bodily differences are present amongst men, and the
-body is the image of the soul, men must have a diversity of
-mind likewise and give the most contradictory judgments,
-so that no one can know whom to believe. To judge by
-the greater number would be foolish, for all men cannot be
-inquired of.<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> This trope again relates to the immediate;
-if, therefore, what has to be done is merely to believe some
-statement inasmuch as it is made by others, undoubtedly
-nothing but contradiction takes place. But a belief like
-this, that is ready to believe anything, is, as a matter of
-fact, incapable of understanding what is said; it is an
-immediate acceptance of an immediate proposition. For
-it did not demand the reason; but the reason is, in the
-first place, the mediation and the meaning of the words of
-the immediate proposition. Diversitude in men is really
-something which now likewise appears in other forms. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-is said that men differ in regard to taste, religion, &amp;c.; that
-religion must be left for each to decide for himself; that
-each, from a standpoint of his own, must settle how things
-are to be regarded as far as religion is concerned. The consequence
-of this is that in regard to religion there is
-nothing objective or true, everything ends in subjectivity,
-and the result is indifference to all truth. For then there
-is no longer a church; each man has a church and a
-liturgy of his own, each has his own religion. The Sceptics
-more particularly&mdash;as those who in all times spare themselves
-the trouble of philosophizing, on some sort of
-pretext, and who try to justify this evasion&mdash;persistently
-preach the diversity of philosophies; Sextus Empiricus
-does this very expressly, and it may even be brought
-forward here, although it will appear more definitely as the
-first of the later tropes. If the principle of the Stoics, as
-it is in its immediacy, holds good, the opposite principle,
-that of the Epicureans, has just as much truth, and holds
-equally good. In this way, when it is said that some
-particular philosophy asserts and maintains certain propositions,
-the greatest diversity is undoubtedly to be found.
-For here we have the talk which we censured earlier
-(Vol. I. p. 16): “Since the greatest men of all times have
-thought so differently and have not been able to come to
-an agreement, it would be presumptuous on our part to
-believe we had found what they could not attain to,” and
-with those who speak thus, the timid shrinking from knowledge
-makes out the inertness of their reason to be a
-virtue. Now if the diversity cannot be denied, because it
-is a fact that the philosophies of Thales, Plato, and Aristotle
-were different, and that this was not merely apparently the
-case, but that they contradicted one another, this way of
-wishing in such statements of them to gain a knowledge of
-the philosophies, shows a want of understanding as regards
-Philosophy; for such propositions are not Philosophy, nor
-do they give expression to it. Philosophy is quite the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-reverse of this immediacy of a proposition, because in that
-the very knowledge that is essential is not taken into
-account; hence such men see everything in a philosophy
-excepting Philosophy itself, and this is overlooked. However
-different the philosophic systems may be, they are
-not as different as white and sweet, green and rough; for
-they agree in the fact that they are philosophies, and this
-is what is overlooked. But as regards the difference
-in philosophies, we must likewise remark upon this
-immediate validity accorded to them, and upon the
-form, that the essence of Philosophy is expressed in an
-immediate manner. As regards this ‘is’ the trope undoubtedly
-does its work, for all tropes proceed against the
-‘is,’ but the truth is all the time not this dry ‘is,’ but
-genuine process. The relative difference in philosophies is,
-in their mutual attitude towards one another (see the fifth
-trope), always to be comprehended as a connection, and
-therefore not as an ‘is.’</p>
-
-<p>c. The third trope turns on the difference in the constitution
-of the organs of sense as related to one another;
-<i>e.g.</i> in a picture something appears raised to the eye but
-not to the touch, to which it is smooth, &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> This is,
-properly speaking, a subordinate trope, for in fact a determination
-such as this coming through some sense, does not
-constitute the truth of the thing, what it is in itself. The
-consciousness is required that the unthinking description
-which ascribes existence to blue, square, &amp;c., one after the
-other, does not exhaust and express the Being of the thing;
-they are only predicates which do not express the thing as
-subject. It is always important to keep in mind that the
-different senses grasp the same thing in contradictory ways,
-for by this the nullity of sensuous certainty is revealed.</p>
-
-<p>d. The fourth trope deals with the diversitude of circumstances
-in the subject, in reference to its condition, the
-changes taking place in it, which must prevent our making<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-an assertion respecting any particular thing. The same
-thing manifests itself differently to the same man, according
-as he, for instance, is at rest or moving, asleep or awake,
-moved by hatred or love, sober or drunk, young or old, &amp;c.
-In the diversitude of these circumstances very different
-judgments are passed regarding one and the same object,
-hence we must not talk of anything as being more than a
-manifestation.<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a></p>
-
-<p>e. The fifth trope relates to the different positions,
-distances and places, for from every different standpoint
-the object appears to be different. In respect to position,
-a long passage appears to the man who stands at the one
-end to taper to a point at the other; but if he goes there
-he finds it to be of the same breadth at that end as it was
-at the other. Distance is likewise, properly speaking, a
-difference in the greatness and smallness of objects. In
-respect to place, the light in a lantern is quite feeble in the
-sunshine, and yet in darkness it shines quite brightly.
-Pigeons’ necks, regarded from different points of view,
-shimmer quite differently.<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> In regard to motion in particular
-very different views prevail. The best known example
-of such is found in the course of the sun round the earth,
-or the earth round the sun. As the earth is said to go
-round the sun, even though the opposite appears to be the
-case, the former assertion is based on reasons. This example
-does not, however, come in here, but this trope will
-show that because one sensuous feeling contradicts another,
-existence is not expressed in it.</p>
-
-<p>f. The sixth trope is taken from intermixture, because
-nothing comes within the scope of the sense alone and
-isolated, but only as mingled with something else; this
-admixture with something else, however, causes change,
-just as scents are stronger in the sunshine than in cold air,
-&amp;c. Further, through the subject himself, this admixture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-comes in; the eyes consist of various tunics and humours, the
-ear has different passages, &amp;c., consequently they cannot
-allow sensations&mdash;the light or the voice&mdash;to come to us in
-their purity, for the sensuous element comes to us first of
-all modified by these tunics of the eye and likewise by the
-passages of the ear.<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> But if we are to express ourselves
-in this particular manner, the direct opposite might likewise
-be maintained, that the sensuous element there present is
-simply purified; the apprehending ear, for example, again
-purifies the voice that comes in bodily form from a soul.</p>
-
-<p>g. The seventh trope is the cohesion, the size or quantity
-of things, through which they appear different; for instance,
-we see how glass is transparent, but loses this transparency
-when it is pounded, and thus has its cohesion altered.
-Shavings of goat’s-horn appear to be white, but the whole
-piece looks black; or Carrara marble ground into powder
-looks white, though the whole piece is yellow. The same
-holds good as regards quantity. A moderate portion of
-wine fortifies and exhilarates, a large quantity of it destroys
-the body, and the case is similar with drugs.<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> If the
-quantity is not to be spoken of as the substance, it is still
-an abstraction that quantity and combination are matters
-of indifference as regards quality and disintegration; the
-change of quantity likewise changes the quality.</p>
-
-<p>h. The eighth trope arises from the relativity of things,
-and is thus the universal trope of relationship. This relativity
-of everything existent and thought is a more inward,
-real determinateness, and all the tropes already mentioned
-really aim at it. “According to this trope,” says Sextus
-(Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 135, 136), “we conclude that since
-everything is in relation to something, we must withhold
-our judgment as to what it is on its own account and in its
-nature. But it must be remarked that we here make use of
-‘is’ in the sense of appearance only. Relationship is used in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-two respects: first in relation to the judging subject,” and
-this difference we saw in the previous tropes, “and in the
-second place in relation to the object which is to be judged,
-like right and left.” Sextus, in the passage above (§§ 137,
-140), argues as follows: “As regards what is set forth on
-its own account and separate from others, is it distinguished
-from the mere relative or not? If it were not different
-from it, it would itself be a relative. If it is different, it
-again is a relative. That is to say, what is different is related
-to something, for it is set forth in relation to that
-from which it is distinguished.” Relativity, generally, is
-present in what is absolutely predicated, for relationship
-is a relationship in itself and not to another. Relationship
-contains opposition: what is in relation to another is on
-the one hand independent on its own account, but on the
-other, because it is in relationship, it is likewise not independent.
-For if anything is only in relation to something
-else, the other likewise belongs to it; it is thus not on its
-own account. But if its other already belongs to it, its
-non-being also already belongs to it, and it is a contradictory
-as soon as it is not without its other. “But because we cannot
-separate the relative from its other, we likewise do not
-know what it is on its own account and in its nature, and
-we must consequently suspend our judgment.”</p>
-
-<p>i. The ninth trope is the more or less frequent occurrence
-of things, which likewise alters one’s judgment upon the
-things. What happens seldom is more highly esteemed
-than what comes to pass frequently; and custom brings
-about the fact that one judges in this way and the other in
-that way. Custom is thus made a circumstance which also
-permits us to say that things appear so and so to us, but not
-universally and generally that they are so.<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> When men
-say of any particular things that “this is so,” circumstances
-may be instanced in which the opposite predicate is applicable
-to them also. If, for example, we remain at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-abstraction of the man, does it really signify whether or
-not we have a prince?&mdash;No. States?&mdash;No. A republic?&mdash;No,
-and so on, for they are here and not there.</p>
-
-<p>k. The tenth trope mainly concerns ethics and is related
-to manners, customs and laws. What is moral and legal
-is likewise not such; for what is here considered to be
-right is elsewhere held to be wrong. The attitude of
-Scepticism in this regard is to show that the opposite of
-what is maintained as valid law holds equally good.
-As regards the ordinary understanding respecting
-the validity of this and that maxim, <i>e.g.</i> that the
-son has to pay the debts of his father, the ultimate
-and indeed only ground lies in its being said that
-this is true in its immediacy, for it holds good as law or
-custom. As against this the Sceptics likewise prove the
-opposite, saying for instance, that the son has, indeed, to
-undertake the debts of the father by the law of Rhodes;
-but in Rome he does not require to do so, if he has renounced
-his claim on the paternal goods.<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> As in the
-existence of what is determined, which is held to be true
-because it is, the opposite is shown to exist; so in the
-case of laws, if their ground is that they are in force, their
-opposite can be demonstrated. The natural man has no
-consciousness of the presence of opposites; he lives quite
-unconsciously in his own particular way, in conformity with
-the morality of his town, without ever having reflected on
-the fact that he practises this morality. If he then comes
-into a foreign land, he is much surprised, for through encountering
-the opposite he for the first time experiences
-the fact that he has these customs, and he immediately
-arrives at uncertainty as to whether his point of view or
-the opposite is wrong. For the opposite of what held good
-to him holds equally good, and he does not possess any
-further ground for his practice; so that since the one holds
-good equally with the other, neither holds good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We now see in these modes that, properly speaking, they
-are not logical modes at all, nor have they to do with the
-Notion, for they proceed directly against empiricism.
-Something is by immediate certainty given out as being
-true, the opposite of this last is from some other point of
-view demonstrated to be equally true, and thus its other-being
-is set forth as valid. The different modes in which
-the non-validity of the first and the validity of the other-being
-relate to one another, are ranged under the above
-heads. If we now classify these ten tropes in conformity
-with the plan indicated above by Sextus (p. 347), we find in
-the first four tropes the dissimilarity of the object to
-depend on the judging subject, because that which judges
-is either the animal or the man or one of his senses or
-particular dispositions in him. Or the dissimilarity depends
-on the object, and here we come to the seventh and tenth
-tropes, since first the amount makes a thing into something
-quite different, and then the code of morals in different
-places makes itself the only absolute, excluding and prohibiting
-any other. The fifth, sixth, eighth and ninth tropes
-finally deal with a union of both sides, or these all together
-contain the relationship; this is a demonstration that the
-object does not present itself in itself, but in relation to
-something else.</p>
-
-<p>From content and form we see in these modes their early
-origin; for the content, which has only to deal with Being,
-shows its change only, takes up only the variability of its
-manifestation, without showing its contradiction in itself,
-<i>i.e.</i> in its Notion. But in form they show an unpractised
-thought, which does not yet bring the whole of these
-examples under their universal points of view, as is done by
-Sextus, or which places the universal, relativity, alongside
-of its particular modes. On account of their dulness we are
-not accustomed to lay great stress on such methods, nor
-esteem them of any value; but, in fact, as against the
-dogmatism of the common human understanding they are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-quite valid. This last says directly, “This is so because it
-is so,” taking experience as authority. Now through these
-modes this understanding will be shown that its belief has
-contingencies and differences within it, which at one time
-present a thing in this way and at another time in that way;
-and thereby it will be made aware that it itself, or another
-subject, with equal immediacy and on the same ground (on
-none at all), says: “It is not so, for it really is the opposite,”
-Thus the signification of these tropes has still its
-value. Should faith or right be founded on a feeling, this
-feeling is in me, and then others may say: “It is not in
-me.” If one person’s tastes are to be accepted as authoritative,
-it is not difficult to demonstrate that another person’s
-tastes are utterly opposite, but Being is thereby degraded
-into seeming, for in every assurance such as that, the
-opposite holds equally good.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c357" id="c357">2. <span class="smcap">The Later Tropes.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>The five other sceptical tropes have an entirely different
-character, and it is at once evident that they indicate quite
-another point of view and degree of culture as regards
-philosophic thought; for they pertain more to thinking
-reflection, and contain the dialectic which the determinate
-Notion has within it. Sextus Empiricus<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> sets them forth
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>a. The first trope is the diversitude in opinions (ἀπὸ τῆς
-διαφωνίας), and that not among animals and men, but expressly
-among philosophers; of this matter we have just
-spoken above (pp. 349, 350). Sextus, and an Epicurean
-quoted by Cicero (Vol. I. p. 16), adduce the manifold nature
-of dogmas, and from this the conclusion is drawn that the
-one has just as much support as the other. Philosophers
-and others still make copious use of this sceptical trope,
-which is consequently in great favour: on account of the
-diversitude in philosophies, they say, Philosophy has no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-value, and truth is unattainable because men have thought
-about it in ways so contradictory. This diversitude in
-philosophic opinion is said to be an invincible weapon
-against Philosophy; but the category of difference is very
-barren, and we have said in the introduction (Vol. I.
-pp. 17-19) how it is to be understood. The Idea of Philosophy
-is to all philosophers one and the same, even if they
-themselves are not aware of it; but those who speak so
-much of this diversity know as little about it. The true
-difference is not a substantial one, but a difference in the
-different stages of development; and if the difference implies
-a one-sided view, as it does with the Stoics, Epicureans,
-and Sceptics, in their totality undoubtedly we first reach
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>b. A very important trope is that of failing into an
-infinite progression (ἡ εἰς ἄπειρον ἔκπτωσις); by it the
-Sceptics show that the reason which is brought forward for
-an assertion itself again requires a reason, and this again
-another, and so on into infinitude; from this suspension of
-judgment thus likewise follows, for there is nothing which
-can furnish a solid foundation. Consequently no permanent
-ground can be pointed out, for each continues to press
-further and further back, and yet finally a cessation must
-be made. In more recent times many have plumed themselves
-on this trope, and, in fact, it is as regards the
-understanding and the so-called syllogism (<i>supra</i>, pp. 222,
-223), a trope of great force. For if deduction from reasons
-is made the power of knowledge, we must, on the other
-hand, remember that by so doing we have premises which
-are quite ungrounded.</p>
-
-<p>c. The trope of Relationship, the relativity of determinations
-(ὀ ἀπὸ τοῦ πρός τι), has already been found among
-those mentioned above (p. 353). It is that what is maintained
-shows itself as it appears, partly merely in relation
-to the judging subject and partly to other things, but not
-as it is in itself by nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>d. The fourth trope is that of Pre-supposition (ὀ ἐξ ὑποθέσεως):
-“When the dogmatists see that they are thrown
-back into the infinite, they put forward something as
-principle which they do not prove, but wish to have
-conceded to them simply and without proof:” that is an
-axiom. If the dogmatist has the right to pre-suppose an
-axiom as unproved, the sceptic has equally the right, or, if
-we choose to say so, equally no right, to pre-suppose the
-opposite as unproved. One is as good as the other. Thus
-all definitions are pre-suppositions. For instance, Spinoza
-pre-supposes definitions of the infinite, of substance, of
-attribute, &amp;c.; and the rest follows consistently from them.
-Nowadays men prefer to give assurances and speak of facts
-of consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>e. The last trope is that of Reciprocity (διάλληλος), or
-proof in a circle. “That which is dealt with is grounded
-on something which itself again requires something else as
-its ground; now that which has been said to be proved
-by it is used for this purpose, so that each is proved through
-the other.” When we would avoid infinite progression and
-the making of pre-suppositions, we use again that which
-was proved to prove its own proof. To the question,
-“What is the ground of the phenomenon?” the reply is
-“Power,” but this is itself merely deduced from the
-moments of the phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p>Now Sextus shows (Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 15, §§ 169-177) in
-the following way that, speaking generally, all sceptical
-investigations pass into these five modes of reasoning; and
-from this it is likewise clear that Scepticism is not really a
-reasoning against anything from reasons which can be found,
-which quick-wittedness discovers in the particular object,
-but that it has a profound knowledge of the categories. (α)
-“The object before us is either one felt” (according to
-Epicurus), “or one thought” (according to the Stoics).
-“But however it may be determined, there always is a
-difference of opinion respecting it,” and specially of sophic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-opinions. This is the first trope. “For some believe
-what is felt and others what is thought to be alone the
-truth,” <i>i.e.</i> the criterion; “others, however, again accept
-partly what is thought and partly what is felt.” There
-consequently is a contradiction present here. “Now is it
-possible to harmonize this contradiction or not? If not,
-we must withhold our judgment. But if it is to be solved,
-the question is, ‘How shall we decide?’” What is to contain
-the criterion, the standard, the implicit? “Is what
-is felt to be judged by what is felt, or by what is thought?”
-(β) Either side, individually considered as the implicit,
-passes, according to the Sceptics, into the infinite; but
-this is a description which must necessarily be proved
-on its own account. “If what is felt is to be judged by
-what is felt, it is allowed (since feeling is in question) that
-this sensation requires another sensation as its reason;”
-for the conviction of its truth is not without contradiction.
-“But if that which constitutes the reason is again a feeling,
-that which is said to be a reason must have a reason just as
-much; thus we go on into infinitude”&mdash;and here we have
-the second trope. The case is, however, similar if what is
-thought is the criterion, or if the implicit is made to rest
-on it. “If to what is thought is given the power of judging
-what is felt, this likewise, since it is that respecting which
-no harmony prevails, requires another as its ground.
-This reason is, however, something thought likewise, and
-it again requires a reason; thus this, too, passes into the
-infinite.” From effect men thus reach cause; nevertheless
-this too is not original, but is itself an effect; and so on.
-But if men thus progress into infinitude, they have no first
-original ground to stand on, for what is accepted as first
-cause is itself merely effect; and since they merely progress
-continually, it is implied that no ultimate is posited.
-The false belief that this progression is a true category, is
-also to be found in Kant and Fichte; but there is really
-no true ultimate, or, what is the same, no true first. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-understanding represents infinite progression as something
-great; but its contradiction is that men speak of a first cause
-and it is then shown that it is only an effect. Men only attain
-to the contradiction and constant repetition of the same,
-but not to the solution of it, and consequently to the true
-<i>prius</i>. (γ) But should this endless progression not satisfy
-us&mdash;which the Sceptics indeed perceived&mdash;and therefore
-have to be put a stop to, this may happen by what is or what
-is felt having its foundation in thought, and, on the other
-hand, by likewise taking for the foundation of thought that
-which is felt. In this way each would be founded without
-there having been a progression into infinitude; but then
-that which founds would also be that which is founded,
-and there would merely be a passing from one to the other.
-Thus, in the third place, this falls into the trope of Reciprocity,
-in which, however, there is no more than there was
-before any true foundation. For in it each merely exists
-through the other, neither is really set forth absolutely,
-but each is the implicit only for the other, and this is self-abrogation.
-(δ) But if this is avoided by an unproved axiom
-which is taken as an implicit fact, a first and absolute ground,
-this way of arguing falls into the mode of Pre-supposition&mdash;the
-fourth trope. But if an assumption such as this were
-to be allowed, it would also be legitimate for anyone to
-assume the contrary. Thus against the absolute assertion
-of idealism, “The Absolute is the I,” it is with equal force
-maintained that “The Absolute is existence.” The one
-man says in the immediate certainty of himself: “I am
-absolute to myself;” another man likewise in certainty of
-himself says, “It is absolutely certain to me that things
-exist.” Idealism did not prove the former, nor did it destroy
-the latter; it takes its stand alongside of it, and only bases
-its assertions on its own principle. Everything, however,
-then, comes round to this, that because the ‘I’ is absolute,
-the ‘not-I’ cannot be absolute. On the other hand it may
-be said as justly: “Because the thing is absolute, the ‘I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>’
-cannot be absolute.” If it is legitimate, Sextus further
-says, immediately to pre-suppose something as unproved,
-it is absurd to pre-suppose anything else as proof of that
-on whose behalf it is pre-supposed; we only require to
-posit straightway the implicit existence of that which is in
-question. But as it is absurd to do so, so also is the other
-absurd. Men set to work in the finite sciences in a similar
-way. But when, as in a dogmatism like this, a man asserts
-his right of pre-supposing something, every other man
-has equally the right of pre-supposing something. Consequently
-the modern immediate revelation of the subject
-now appears. It does no good for any man to affirm, for
-example, that he finds in his consciousness that God
-exists; since anyone has the right to say that he finds in
-his consciousness that God does not exist. In modern
-times men have not got very far with this immediate knowledge&mdash;perhaps
-not further than the ancients, (ε) In the
-fifth place everything perceived has, according to the trope
-of Relationship, a relation to something else, to what perceives;
-its Notion is just that of being for another. The
-same holds good with what is thought; as the universal
-object of thought it likewise has the form of being something
-for another.</p>
-
-<p>If we sum this up in a general way, the determinate,
-whether it is existent or thought, is (α) really, as determinate,
-the negative of another, <i>i.e.</i> it is related to another
-and exists for the same, and is thus in relationship; in this
-everything is really exhausted. (β) In this relationship to
-another this last, posited as its universality, is its reason;
-but this reason, as opposed to that which is proved, is itself
-a determinate, and consequently has its reality only in
-what is proved. And for the reason that I really again
-consider this universal as a determinate, it is conditioned
-by another like the one that goes before, and so on into
-infinity. (γ) In order that this determinate for which, as
-in consciousness, the other is, should have existence, this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-other must exist, for in this it has its reality; and because
-this its object is likewise for another, they mutually condition
-each other and are mediated through one another,
-neither being self-existent. And if the universal as the
-basis has its reality in the existent, and this existent its
-reality in the universal, this forms the Reciprocity whereby
-what in themselves are opposites mutually establish one
-another. (δ) But what is implicit is something which is
-not mediated through another; as the immediate, that is
-because it is, it is, however, an Hypothesis. (ε) Now if
-this determinate is taken as pre-supposed, so also may
-another be. Or we might say more shortly that the
-deficiency in all metaphysics of the understanding lies
-partly in (α) the Demonstration, by which it falls into the
-infinite; and partly in (β) the Hypotheses, which constitute
-an immediate knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>These tropes thus form an effective weapon against the
-philosophy of the ordinary understanding, and the Sceptics
-directed them with great acuteness, sometimes against the
-common acceptation of things, and sometimes against
-principles of philosophic reflection. These sceptical tropes,
-in fact, concern that which is called a dogmatic philosophy&mdash;not
-in the sense of its having a positive content, but as
-asserting something determinate as the absolute; and in
-accordance with its nature, such a philosophy must display
-itself in all these forms. To the Sceptics, the Notion of
-dogmatic philosophy is in effect that something is asserted
-as the implicit; it is thus opposed to idealism by the fact
-of its maintaining that an existence is the absolute. But
-there is a misunderstanding or a formal understanding in
-considering that all philosophy that is not Scepticism is
-Dogmatism. Dogmatism, as the Sceptics quite correctly
-describe it, consists in the assertion that something
-determinate, such as ‘I’ or ‘Being,’ ‘Thought’ or
-‘Sensation,’ is the truth. In the talk about idealism, to
-which dogmatism has been opposed, just as many mistakes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-have been made, and misunderstandings taken place.
-To the criticism which knows no implicit, nothing absolute,
-all knowledge of implicit existence as such is held to be
-dogmatism, while it is the most wanton dogmatism of all,
-because it maintains that the ‘I,’ the unity of self-consciousness,
-is opposed to Being, is in and for itself, and
-that the implicit in the outside world is likewise so, and
-therefore that the two absolutely cannot come together.
-By idealism that is likewise held to be dogmatism in which,
-as is the case in Plato and Spinoza, the absolute has been
-made the unity of self-consciousness and existence, and
-not self-consciousness opposed to existence. Speculative
-philosophy thus, indeed, asserts, but does not assert a
-determinate; or it cannot express its truth in the simple
-form of a proposition, although Philosophy is often falsely
-understood as pre-supposing an original principle from
-which all others are to be deduced. But though its principle
-can be given the form of a proposition, to the Idea
-what pertains to the proposition as such is not essential,
-and the content is of such a nature that it really
-abrogates this immediate existence, as we find with the
-Academicians. As a matter of fact, that which is now
-called a proposition, absolutely requires a mediation or a
-ground; for it is an immediate determinate that has another
-proposition in opposition to it, which last is again of a
-similar nature, and so on into infinitude. Consequently,
-each, as being a proposition, is the union of two moments
-between which there is an inherent difference, and whose
-union has to be mediated. Now dogmatic philosophy,
-which has this way of representing one principle in a determinate
-proposition as a fundamental principle, believes
-that it is therefore universal, and that the other is in subordination
-to it. And undoubtedly this is so. But at the
-same time, this its determinateness rests in the fact that it
-is <i>only</i> universal; hence such a principle is always conditioned,
-and consequently contains within it a destructive
-dialectic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As against all these dogmatic philosophies, such criticism
-and idealism not excepted, the sceptical tropes possess the
-negative capacity of demonstrating that what the former
-maintain to be the implicit is not really so. For implicitude
-such as this is a determinate, and cannot resist
-negativity, its abrogation. To Scepticism is due the honour
-of having obtained this knowledge of the negative, and of
-having so definitely thought out the forms of negativity.
-Scepticism does not operate by bringing forward what is
-called a difficulty, a possibility of representing the matter
-otherwise; that would merely indicate some sort of fancy
-which is contingent as regards this asserted knowledge.
-Scepticism is not an empiric matter such as this, for it
-contains a scientific aim, its tropes turn on the Notion, the
-very essence of determinateness, and are exhaustive as
-regards the determinate. In these moments Scepticism
-desires to assert itself, and the Sceptic therein recognizes
-the fancied greatness of his individuality; these tropes
-prove a more cultivated dialectic knowledge in the process
-of argumentation than is found in ordinary logic, the logic
-of the Stoics, or the canon of Epicurus. These tropes are
-necessary contradictions into which the understanding
-falls; even in our time progression into infinitude and
-pre-supposition (immediate knowledge) are particularly
-common (<i>supra</i>, p. 363).</p>
-
-<p>Now, speaking generally, this is the method of Scepticism,
-and it is most important. Because the sceptical conscience
-demonstrates that in all that is immediately accepted
-there is nothing secure and absolute, the Sceptics have
-taken in hand all particular determinations of the individual
-sciences, and have shown that they are not fixed.
-The further details of this application to the different
-sciences do not concern us here: this far-seeing power of
-abstraction is also requisite in order to recognize these
-determinations of negation or of opposition everywhere
-present in all concrete matter, and in all that is thought,
-and to find in this determinate its limits. Sextus, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-example, takes up the individual sciences concretely,
-thereby demonstrating much capacity for abstraction, and
-he shows in all their determinations the opposite of themselves.
-Thus he sets the definitions of mathematics against
-one another, and that not externally, but as they are in
-themselves; he lays hold of the fact (adv. Math. III. 20-22)
-that there is said to be a point, space, line, surface, one,
-&amp;c. We unquestioningly allow the point to rank as a
-simple unit in space, according to which it has no dimension;
-but if it has no dimension, it is not in space, and
-therefore is no longer a point. On the one hand it is the
-negation of space, and, on the other, inasmuch as it is the
-limit of space, it touches space. Thus this negation of
-space participates in space, itself occupies space, and thus
-it is in itself null, but at the same time it is also in
-itself a dialectic. Scepticism has thus also treated of
-ideas which are, properly speaking, speculative, and demonstrated
-their importance; for the demonstration of the
-contradiction in the finite is an essential point in the
-speculatively philosophic method.</p>
-
-<p>The two formal moments in this sceptical culture are
-firstly the power of consciousness to go back from itself,
-and to take as its object the whole that is present, itself and
-its operation included. The second moment is to grasp
-the form in which a proposition, with whose content our consciousness
-is in any way occupied, exists. An undeveloped
-consciousness, on the other hand, usually knows nothing
-of what is present in addition to the content. For instance,
-in the judgment “This thing is one,” attention is
-paid only to the one and the thing, and not to the circumstance
-that here something, a determinate, is related to the
-one. But this relation is the essential, and the form of the
-determinate; it is that whereby this house which is an
-individual, makes itself one with the universal that is
-different from it. It is this logical element, <i>i.e.</i> the essential
-element, that Scepticism brings to consciousness, and on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-this it depends; an example of this is number, the one, as
-the hypothetical basis of arithmetic. Scepticism does not
-attempt to give the thing, nor does it dispute as to whether
-it is thus or thus, but whether the thing itself is something;
-it grasps the essence of what is expressed, and lays hold
-of the whole principle of the assertion. As to God, for
-example, the Sceptics do not inquire whether He has such
-and such qualities, but turn to what is most inward, to what
-lies at the ground of this conception, and they ask whether
-this has reality. “Since we do not know the reality of
-God,” says Sextus (Pyrrh. Hyp. III. c. I, § 4), “we shall
-not be able to know and perceive His qualities.” Likewise
-in the preceding books (II. c. 4, sqq.), inquiry is made as to
-whether the criterion of truth as fixed by the understanding
-is anything, whether we know the thing in itself, or whether
-the ‘I’ is to itself the only absolute certainty. This is the
-way to penetrate to reality.</p>
-
-<p>In these ways the operations of Scepticism are undoubtedly
-directed against the finite. But however much
-force these moments of its negative dialectic may have
-against the properly-speaking dogmatic knowledge of the
-understanding, its attacks against the true infinite of the
-speculative Idea are most feeble and unsatisfactory. For
-this last is in its nature nothing finite or determinate, it has
-not the one-sided character which pertains to the proposition,
-for it has the absolute negative in itself; in itself
-it is round, it contains this determinate and its opposite in
-their ideality in itself. In so far as this Idea, as the unity
-of these opposites, is itself again outwardly a determinate,
-it stands exposed to the power of the negative; indeed its
-nature and reality is just to move continually on, so that
-as determinate it again places itself in unity with the
-determinates opposed to it, and thus organizes itself into a
-whole whose starting-point again coincides with the final
-result. This identity is quite different from that of the
-understanding; the object as concrete in itself, is, at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-same time, opposed to itself; but the dialectic solution of
-this finite and other is likewise already contained in the
-speculative, without Scepticism having first had to demonstrate
-this; for the rational, as comprehended, does, as
-regards the determinate, just what Scepticism tries to do.
-However, if Scepticism attempts to deal with this properly
-speculative element, it can in no way lay hold of it, nor
-make any progress except by doing violence to the speculative
-itself; thus the method of its procedure against the
-rational is this, that it makes the latter into a determinate,
-and always first of all introduces into it a finite thought-determination
-or idea of relationship to which it adheres,
-but which is not really in the infinite at all; and then it
-argues against the same. That is to say it comprehends it
-falsely and then proceeds to contradict it. Or it first of all
-gives the infinite the itch in order to be able to scratch it.
-The Scepticism of modern times, with which for crudity of
-comprehension and false teaching the old cannot compare,
-is specially noteworthy in this respect. Even now what is
-speculative is transformed into something crude; it is
-possible to remain faithful to the letter, and yet to
-pervert the whole matter, because the identity of the determinate
-has been carried over to the speculative. What
-here appears to be most natural and impartial is to have an
-investigation made of what the principle of a speculative
-philosophy is; its essential nature seems to be expressed
-thereby, and nothing is apparently added or imputed to it,
-nor does any change appear to be effected in it. Now,
-here, according to the conception of the non-speculative
-sciences, it is placed in this dilemma: the principle is either
-an unproved hypothesis or demands a proof which in turn
-implies the principle. The proof that is demanded of
-this principle itself pre-supposes something else, such as
-the logical laws of proof; these rules of logic are, however,
-themselves propositions such as required to be proved; and
-so it goes on into infinitude, if an absolute hypothesis to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-which another can be opposed is not made (<i>supra</i>, p. 362).
-But these forms of proposition, of consecutive proof, &amp;c.,
-do not in this form apply to what is speculative (<i>supra</i>,
-p. 364) as though the proposition were before us here, and
-the proof were something separate from it there; for in
-this case the proof comes within the proposition. The
-Notion is a self-movement, and not, as in a proposition, a
-desire to rest; nor is it true that the proof brings forward
-another ground or middle term and is another movement;
-for it has this movement in itself.</p>
-
-<p>Sextus Empiricus (adv. Math. VII., 310-312), for example,
-thus reaches the speculative Idea regarding reason,
-which, as the thought of thought, comprehends itself, and
-is thus in its freedom at home with itself. We saw this
-(pp. 147-151) with Aristotle. In order to refute this idea,
-Sextus argues in the following way: “The reason that
-comprehends is either the whole or it is only a part.” But
-to know the speculative it is requisite that there should be,
-besides the ‘either ... or,’ a third; this last is ‘both ...
-and’ and ‘neither ... nor.’ “If reason as the comprehending
-is the whole, nothing else remains to be comprehended.
-If the comprehending reason is, however, only a
-part which comprehends itself, this part again, as that
-which comprehends, either is the whole (and in that case
-again nothing at all remains to be comprehended), or else,
-supposing what comprehends to be a part in the sense that
-what is comprehended is the other part, that which comprehends
-does not comprehend itself,” &amp;c. In the first
-place, however, it is clear that by arguing thus nothing is
-shown further than the fact that here Scepticism in the
-first place brings into the relationship of thought thinking
-about thought, the very superficial category of the relationship
-of the whole and the parts, as understood by the ordinary
-understanding, which last is not found in that Idea,
-although as regards finite things the whole is simply composed
-of all the parts, and these parts constitute the whole,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
-the parts and the whole being consequently identical. But
-the relationship of whole and part is not a relationship of
-reason to itself, being much too unimportant, and quite
-unworthy of being brought into the speculative Idea. In
-the second place Scepticism is wrong in allowing this
-relationship to hold good immediately, as it does in the
-ordinary and arid conception, where we make no objection
-to it. When reflection speaks of a whole, there is for it
-beyond this nothing else remaining. But the whole is
-just the being opposed to itself. On the one hand it is as
-whole simply identical with its parts, and, on the other
-hand, the parts are identical with the whole, since they
-together constitute the whole. The self-comprehension of
-reason is just like the comprehension by the whole of all
-its parts, if it is taken in its real speculative significance;
-and only in this sense could this relationship be dealt with
-here. But in the sense implied by Sextus, that there is
-nothing except the whole, the two sides, the whole and the
-parts, remain in mutual, isolated opposition; in the region
-of speculation the two indeed are different, but they are
-likewise not different, for the difference is ideal. Outside
-of the whole there thus undoubtedly remains another,
-namely itself as the manifold of its parts. The whole
-argument thus rests upon the fact that a foreign determination
-is first of all brought within the Idea, and then
-arguments against the Idea are brought forward, after it
-has been thus corrupted by the isolation of a one-sided
-determination unaccompanied by the other moment of the
-determination. The case is similar when it is said; “Objectivity
-and subjectivity are different, and thus their unity
-cannot be expressed.” It is indeed maintained that the
-words are literally adhered to; but even as contained in
-these words, the determination is one-sided, and the other
-also pertains to it. Hence this difference is not what
-remains good, but what has to be abrogated.</p>
-
-<p>We may perhaps have said enough about the scientific<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-nature of Scepticism, and we have concluded therewith the
-second section of Greek philosophy. The general point
-of view adopted by self-consciousness in this second period,
-the attainment of the freedom of self-consciousness through
-thought, is common to all these philosophies. In Scepticism
-we now find that reason has got so far that all that is objective,
-whether of Being or of the universal, has disappeared
-for self-consciousness. The abyss of the self-consciousness
-of pure thought has swallowed up everything, and made
-entirely clear the basis of thought. It not only has comprehended
-thought and outside of it a universe in its entirety,
-but the result, positively expressed, is that self-consciousness
-itself is reality. External objectivity is not an
-objective existence nor a universal thought; for it merely
-is the fact that the individual consciousness exists, and that
-it is universal. But though for us there is an object, yet
-this is for it no object, and thus it still has itself the mode
-of objectivity. Scepticism deduces no result, nor does it
-express its negation as anything positive. But the positive
-is in no way different from the simple; or if Scepticism
-aims at the disappearance of all that is universal, its condition,
-as immovability of spirit, is itself in fact this universal,
-simple, self-identical&mdash;but a universality (or a Being) which
-is the universality of the individual consciousness. Sceptical
-self-consciousness, however, is this divided consciousness
-to which on the one hand motion is a confusion of its content;
-it is this movement which annuls for itself all things,
-in which what is offered to it is quite contingent and
-indifferent; it acts according to laws which are not held
-by it to be true, and is a perfectly empiric existence. On
-another side its simple thought is the immovability of self-identity,
-but its reality, its unity with itself is something
-that is perfectly empty, and the actual filling in is any
-content that one chooses. As this simplicity, and at the
-same time pure confusion, Scepticism is in fact the wholly
-self-abrogating contradiction. For in it the mind has got<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-so far as to immerse itself in itself as that which thinks;
-now it can comprehend itself in the consciousness of its
-infinitude as the ultimate. In this way Scepticism flourishes
-in the Roman world, because, as we saw (p. 281), in this
-external, dead abstraction of the Roman principle (in the
-principle of Republicanism and imperial Despotism) the
-spirit has flown from an existence here and now, that could
-give it no satisfaction, into intellectuality. Then because
-here the mind can only seek reconciliation and eudæmonism
-inwardly through cultured thought, and the whole
-aim of the world is merely the satisfaction of the individual,
-good can only be brought forth as individual work in each
-particular case. Under the Roman emperors we certainly
-find famous men, principally Stoics, such as Marcus
-Aurelius and others; they, however, only considered the
-satisfaction of their individual selves, and did not attain to
-the thought of giving rationality to actuality through
-institutions, laws and constitutions. This solitude of mind
-within itself is then truly Philosophy; but the thought is
-abstractly at home with itself as dead rigidity, and as to outward
-things it is passive. If it moves it only moves while
-bearing with it a contempt of all distinctions. Scepticism
-thus belongs to the decay both of Philosophy and of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>The stage next reached by self-consciousness is that it
-receives a consciousness respecting that which it has thus
-become, or its essential nature becomes its object. Self-consciousness
-is to itself simple essence; there is for it no
-longer any other reality than this, which its self-consciousness
-is. In Scepticism this reality is not yet an
-object to it, for to it its object is merely confusion.
-Because it is consciousness, something is for it; in this
-opposition only the vanishing content is for the sceptical
-consciousness, without its having been comprehended in
-its simple permanence. Its truth, however, is its immersion
-in self-consciousness, and the fact of self-consciousness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-becoming an object to itself. Thus reality has indeed
-the form of a universal in existence or in thought, but in
-this its self-consciousness is really not a foreign thing as it
-is in Scepticism. In the first place it is not simple as
-immediate and merely existent, a complete ‘other,’ as when
-we speak of the soul being simple; for this last is the
-simple negative that turns back out of movement, out of
-difference, as the universal, into itself. In the second place
-this universal power that expresses that “I am at home
-with myself,” has likewise the significance of the Being,
-which, as objective reality, has a permanence for consciousness,
-and does not merely, as with the Sceptics,
-disappear; for reason in it alone knows how to possess and
-to find itself. This inwardness of mind at home with itself
-has built in itself an ideal world, has laid the foundation
-and groundwork of the intellectual world, of a kingdom
-of God which has come down into actuality and is in unity
-with it, and this is the standpoint of the Alexandrian
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4"><a name="c374" id="c374">SECTION THREE</a><br />
-
-<span class="head smcap">Third Period: The Neo-Platonists.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="pn2"><span class="smcap">Since</span> Scepticism is the annulling of the opposites which
-in Stoicism and Epicureanism were accepted as the
-universal principles from which all other opposites took
-their rise, it likewise is the unity in which these opposites
-are found as ideal determinations, so that the Idea must
-now come into consciousness as concrete in itself. With
-this third development, which is the concrete result of all
-that has gone before, an entirely new epoch begins.
-Philosophy is now on quite a different footing, since, with
-the rejection of the criterion for subjective knowledge,
-finite principles in general also disappear; for it is with
-these that the criterion has to do. This then is the form
-which Philosophy takes with the Neo-Platonists, and which
-is closely connected with the revolution which was caused
-in the world by Christianity. The last stage which we
-reached&mdash;that subjective contentment and return of self-consciousness
-into itself which is attained by the renunciation
-of all that is fixed and objective, by flight into the
-pure, infinite abstraction in itself, by the absolute dearth
-of all determinate content&mdash;this stage had come to perfection
-in Scepticism, although the Stoic and Epicurean
-systems have the same end in view. But with this complete
-entering into and abiding within itself of infinite
-subjectivity, Philosophy had reached the standpoint at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-which self-consciousness knew itself in its thought to be
-the Absolute (Vol. II. p. 372); and since Philosophy
-now rejected the subjective and finite attitude of self-consciousness,
-and its manner of distinguishing itself from
-an unmeaning external object, it comprehended in itself
-the difference, and perfected the truth into an intelligible
-world. The consciousness of this, expressing itself as it
-did in the spirit of the world, now constitutes the object of
-Philosophy; it was principally brought about by employing
-and reasoning from Platonic conceptions and expressions,
-but also by making use of those of the Aristotelians and
-Pythagoreans.</p>
-
-<p>The idea which had now come home to men that absolute
-existence is nothing alien to self-consciousness, that nothing
-really exists for it in which self-consciousness is not itself
-immediately present&mdash;this is the principle which is now
-found as the universal of the world-spirit, as the universal
-belief and knowledge of all men; at once it changes the
-world’s whole aspect, destroying all that went before, and
-bringing about a regeneration of the world. The manifold
-forms which this knowledge assumes do not belong
-to the history of Philosophy, but to the history of consciousness
-and culture. This principle appears as a
-universal principle of justice, by which the individual man,
-in virtue of his existence, has absolute value as a universal
-being recognized by all. Thus, as far as external politics
-are concerned, this is the period of the development of
-private rights relating to the property of individual persons.
-But the character of Roman culture, under which this form
-of philosophy falls, was at the same time abstract universality
-(Vol. II. p. 235), in the lifelessness of which
-all characteristic poetry and philosophy, and all citizen life
-perished. Cicero, for example, shows, as few philosophers
-do, an utter want of appreciation of the state of affairs in
-his country. Thus the world has in its existence separated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-into two parts; on the one side we have the atoms, private
-individuals, and on the other side a bond connecting them,
-though only externally, which, as power, had been relegated
-to one subject, the emperor. The Roman power is thus
-the real Scepticism. In the domain of thought we find an
-exact counterpart to this species of abstract universality,
-which, as perfect despotism, is in the decline of national
-life directly connected with the isolation of the atom,
-showing itself as the withdrawal into the aims and interests
-of private life.</p>
-
-<p>It is at this point that mind once more rises above the
-ruin, and again goes forth from its subjectivity to the
-objective, but at the same time to an intellectual objectivity,
-which does not appear in the outward form of individual
-objects, nor in the form of duties and individual morality,
-but which, as absolute objectivity, is torn of mind and
-of the veritable truth. Or, in other words, we see here on
-the one hand the return to God, on the other hand the
-manifestation of God, as He comes before the human mind
-absolutely in His truth. This forms the transition to the
-mind’s restoration, by the fact of thought, which had conceived
-itself only subjectively, now becoming objective to
-itself. Thus in the Roman world the necessity became
-more and more keenly felt of forsaking the evil present,
-this ungodly, unrighteous, immoral world, and withdrawing
-into mind, in order here to seek what there no longer
-can be found. For in the Greek world the joy of spiritual
-activity has flown away, and sorrow for the breach that
-has been made has taken its place. These philosophies
-are thus not only moments in the development of reason,
-but also in that of humanity; they are forms in which
-the whole condition of the world expresses itself through
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>But in other forms some measure of contempt for nature
-here began to show itself, inasmuch as nature is no longer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-anything for itself, seeing that her powers are merely the
-servants of man, who, like a magician, can make them
-yield obedience, and be subservient to his wishes. Up to
-this time oracles had been given through the medium of
-trees, animals, &amp;c., in which divine knowledge, as knowledge
-of the eternal, was not distinguished from knowledge
-of the contingent. Now it no longer is the gods that work
-their wonders, but men, who, setting at defiance the necessities
-of nature, bring about in the same that which
-is inconsistent with nature as such. To this belief in
-miracle, which is at the same time disbelief in present
-nature, there is thus allied a disbelief in the past, or a
-disbelief that history was just what it was. All the actual
-history and mythology of Romans, Greeks, Jews, even
-single words and letters, receive a different meaning; they
-are inwardly broken asunder, having an inner significance
-which is their essence, and an empty literal
-meaning, which is their appearance. Mankind living in
-actuality have here forgotten altogether how to see and to
-hear, and have indeed lost all their understanding of the
-present. Sensuous truth is no longer accepted by them;
-they constantly deceive us, for they are incapable of comprehending
-what is real, since it has lost all meaning for
-their minds. Others forsake the world, because in it they
-can now find nothing, the real they discover in themselves
-alone. As all the gods meet together in one Pantheon, so
-all religions rush into one, all modes of representation are
-absorbed in one; it is this, that self-consciousness&mdash;an
-actual human being&mdash;is absolute existence. It is to Rome
-that all these mysterious cults throng, but the real liberation
-of the spirit appeared in Christianity, for it is therein that
-its true nature is reached. Now it is revealed to man what
-absolute reality is; it is a man, but not yet Man or self-consciousness
-in general.</p>
-
-<p>The one form of this principle is therefore the infinitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-in itself of the consciousness that knows itself, distinguishes
-itself in itself, but yet remains in perfectly transparent
-unity with itself; and only as this concretely self-determining
-thought has mind any meaning. An actual self-consciousness
-is the fact that the Absolute is now known in
-the form of self-consciousness, so that the determinations of
-the former are manifested in all the forms of the latter;
-this sphere does not properly belong to Philosophy, but
-is the sphere of Religion, which knows God in this particular
-human being. This knowledge, that self-consciousness
-is absolute reality, or that absolute reality is self-consciousness,
-is the World-spirit. It is this knowledge, but knows
-this knowledge not; it has merely an intuition of it, or
-knows it only immediately, not in thought. Knowing it only
-immediately means that to the World-spirit this reality as
-spirit is doubtless absolute self-consciousness, but in existent
-immediacy it is an individual man. It is this individual
-man, who has lived at a particular time and in a particular
-place, and not the Notion of self-consciousness, that is for
-the World-spirit absolute spirit: or self-consciousness is not
-yet known nor comprehended. As an immediacy of thought,
-absolute reality is immediate in self-consciousness, or only
-like an inward intuition, in the same way that we have
-pictures present in our mind.</p>
-
-<p>The other form is that this concrete is grasped in a more
-abstract way, as the pure identity of thought, and thus
-there is lost to thought the point of self-hood pertaining to
-the concrete. This aspect, expressed as absolute reality in
-the form of mind in conceiving thought, but yet as in
-some measure existing immediately in self-consciousness as
-absolute reality, comes under Philosophy. But spirit, if
-complete in every aspect, must have also the natural aspect,
-which in this form of philosophy is still lacking. Now as
-in Christianity universal history makes this advance of mind
-in the consciousness of itself, so in the innermost mysteries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-of the same, in Philosophy, this same change must just
-as inevitably take place; in fact, Philosophy in her further
-development does nothing else than grasp this Idea of
-absolute reality, which in Christianity is merely shadowed
-forth. Absolute Spirit implies eternal self-identical existence
-that is transformed into another and knows this to be
-itself; the unchangeable, which is unchangeable in as far as
-it always, from being something different, returns into
-itself. It signifies the sceptical movement of consciousness,
-but in such a form that the transient objective element at
-the same time remains permanent, or in its permanence has
-the signification of self-consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>In the Christian religion this spiritual reality was first of
-all represented as indicating that eternal reality becomes
-for itself something different, that it creates the world,
-which is posited purely as something different. To this
-there is added later this moment, that the other element in
-itself is not anything different from eternal reality, but that
-eternal reality manifests itself therein. In the third place
-there is implied the identity of the other and eternal reality,
-Spirit, the return of the other into the first: and the other
-is here to be understood as not only the other at that point
-where eternal reality manifested itself, but as the other in a
-universal sense. The world recognizes itself in this absolute
-reality which becomes manifest; it is the world, therefore,
-which has returned into reality; and spirit is universal
-Spirit. But since this Idea of spirit appeared to the Christians
-first of all in the bare form of ordinary conception,
-God, the simple reality of the Jews, was for them beyond
-consciousness; such a God doubtless thinks, but He is not
-Thought, for He remains beyond reality, and He is only
-that which is distinguished from the world that our senses
-perceive. There likewise stands in opposition to the same
-an individual man&mdash;the moment of unity of the world and
-reality, and spirit, the universality of this unity, as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-believing community, which possesses this unity only in
-the form of ordinary conception, but its reality in the hope
-of a future.</p>
-
-<p>The Idea in pure Thought&mdash;that God’s way of working is
-not external, as if He were a subject, and therefore that
-all this does not come to pass as a casual resolution and decree
-of God, to whom the thought of so acting happened to
-occur, but that God is this movement as the self-revealing
-moments of His essence, as His eternal necessity in Himself,
-which is not at all conditioned by chance&mdash;this we find
-expressed in the writings of philosophic or expressly Platonic
-Jews. The place where this point of view took its origin happens
-to be the country where East and West have met in conflict;
-for the free universality of the East and the determinateness
-of Europe, when intermingled, constitute Thought.
-With the Stoics the universality of thought has a place, but
-it is opposed to sensation, to external existence. Oriental
-universality is, on the contrary, entirely free; and the principle
-of universality, posited as particular, is Western
-Thought. In Alexandria more especially this form of
-philosophy was cultivated, but at the same time regard was
-had to the earlier development of thought, in which lie the
-partially concealed beginnings of the building up in thought
-of the concrete, which is now the point mainly regarded.
-Even in the Pythagorean philosophy we found difference
-present as the Triad; then in Plato we saw the simple Idea
-of spirit as the unity of indivisible substance and other-being,
-though it was only as a compound of both. That is the
-concrete, but only in simple moments, not in the comprehensive
-manner in which other-being is in general all reality
-of nature and of consciousness,&mdash;and the unity which has
-returned as this self-consciousness is not only a thought, but
-living God. With Aristotle, finally, the concrete is ἐνέργεια,
-Thought which is its own object, the concrete. Therefore
-although this philosophy is known as Neo-Pythagorean and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-Neo-Platonic, it may also be termed Neo-Aristotelian; for
-the Alexandrians studied Aristotle just as much as Plato,
-and valued both very highly, later on combining their
-philosophies in one unity.</p>
-
-<p>But we must have a clearer grasp of the difference
-between this point of view and the earlier. Already in the
-earlier philosophies we have seen, that νοῦς is the essence
-of the world, and similarly Aristotle comprehended the
-whole series of things endued with life and mind in such
-a way as to recognize the Notion to be the truth of these
-things. In the case of the Stoics this unity, this system,
-was most definitely brought forward, while Aristotle rather
-followed up the particulars. This unity of thought we saw
-among the Stoics more especially on the one side as the
-return of self-consciousness into itself, so that spirit
-through the purity of thought is independent in itself; on
-the other hand we have seen there an objectivity in which
-the λόγος became essentially the all-penetrating basis of
-the whole world. With the Stoics, however, this basis
-remained as substance only, and thus took on the form of
-Pantheism, for that is the first idea that we light on when
-we determine the universal to be the true. Pantheism is
-the beginning of the elevation of spirit, in that it conceives
-everything in the world to be a life of the Idea. For
-when self-consciousness emerges from itself, from its
-infinitude, from its thought directed on self, and turns to
-particular things, duties, relationships; or when thought,
-which thinks this universal substance, passes over from it
-to the particular, and makes the heavens, the stars, or man
-its object, it descends from the universal immediately into
-the particular, or immediately into the finite, since all
-these are finite forms. But the concrete is the universal
-which makes itself particular, and in this making of itself
-particular and finite yet remains eternally at home with
-itself. In Pantheism, on the contrary, the one universal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-substance merely makes itself finite, and thereby lowers
-itself. That is the mode of emanation, according to which
-the universal, in making itself the particular, or God in
-creating the world, by becoming particular becomes debased
-or deteriorated and sets a limit to Himself; so that this
-making of Himself finite is incompatible with any return
-into Himself. The same relation is also found in the
-mythology of the Greeks and Romans; the giving definiteness
-and form to God, who remains no empty abstraction,
-is a rendering finite of God, who thus becomes a mere work
-of art; but the Beautiful itself remains a finite form, which
-is not brought to such a point as to express the free Idea.
-The determination, the specialization, the reality of
-objectivity, must now be of such a nature that it shall be
-adequate to the absolute universal; the forms of the gods,
-as also natural forms and the forms which are known as
-duties, fail to be thus adequate.</p>
-
-<p>What is therefore now required is that the knowing
-mind, which thus out of objectivity returns into itself and
-its inwardness, should reconcile with itself the world which
-it has left, so that the world’s objectivity may of course be
-distinct from mind, yet adequate thereto. This concrete
-standpoint which, as it is that of the world, is also that of
-Philosophy, is the development of Mind, for it is requisite
-to Mind that it should not merely be pure thought, but
-that it should be thought which makes itself objective, and
-therein maintains itself and is at home with itself. The
-earlier efforts of thought towards objectivity constitute a
-passing into determinateness and finitude merely, and not
-into an objective world adequate to absolute existence.
-The universal standpoint of the Neo-Platonic or Alexandrian
-philosophy now is from the loss of the world to produce a
-world which in its outwardness shall still remain an inward
-world, and thus a world reconciled; and this is the world
-of spirituality, which here begins. Thus the fundamental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-Idea was Thought which is its own object, and which is
-therefore identical with its object, with what is thought;
-so that we have the one and the other, and the unity of
-both.</p>
-
-<p>This concrete Idea has again come to the front, and in
-the development of Christianity, as thought also penetrated
-there, it became known as the Trinity; and this Idea is
-absolute reality. This Idea did not develop directly from
-Plato and Aristotle, but took the circuitous path of Dogmatism.
-With the earlier thinkers it doubtless immediately
-emerged as supreme; but beside and beyond it appears the
-other content in addition, the riches of the thoughts of
-Mind and of Nature; and so it is conceived. Aristotle has
-thus comprehended the kingdom of Nature; and with
-Plato development is represented only in a loose multiplicity.
-But in order that the Idea should appear as the
-truth that encompasses and includes all within itself, it was
-requisite that this finite, this wider content of determinations
-which had been collected, should be comprehended on
-its finite side also, that is, in the finite form of a universal
-opposition. That was the function of Dogmatism, which
-was then dissolved by Scepticism. The dissolution of all
-that is particular and finite, which constitutes the essence
-of the latter, was not taken in hand by Plato and Aristotle,
-and therefore the Idea was not posited by them as all-inclusive.
-Now the contradiction is done away with, and
-Mind has attained to its negative rest. The affirmative,
-on the other hand, is the repose of mind in itself, and to
-this freedom from all that is particular Mind now proceeds.
-It is the knowledge of what Mind is in itself, after it has
-come to be reconciled in itself through the dissolution of all
-finality. This eternal rest of Mind in itself now constitutes
-its object; it is aware of the fact, and strives to
-determine and develop it further by thought. In this we
-likewise possess the principle of evolution, of free development;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-everything except Mind is only finite and transitory.
-When therefore Mind goes forth to the particular, the
-particular is determined as something plainly contained in
-this ideality, which Mind knows as something subject to
-itself. That is the affirmative result of sceptical philosophy.
-It is evident that, starting from this point of view,
-an utterly different opinion will be expressed. God, as
-absolute pure Mind in and for Himself, and His activity
-in Himself, are now the object. But God is no longer known
-as the Abstract, but as the Concrete in Himself, and this
-Concrete is nothing but Mind. God is living, the One
-and the Other and the unity of these distinct determinations;
-for the abstract is only the simple, but the living
-has difference in itself, and is yet therein at home with itself.</p>
-
-<p>Further, the following points have specially claimed the
-attention of Mind; firstly, that this consciousness which
-has become subjective makes its object the absolute as
-truth, placing this absolute outside of itself; or that it
-attains to faith in God, that God is now manifested, and
-reveals Himself, that is, exists for consciousness. The
-absolute, altogether universal, posited at the same time as
-objective, is God. Here comes in the relation of man to
-this his object, to absolute truth. This new standpoint,
-which from this time acquires an absolute interest, is therefore
-not a relation to external things, duties and the like;
-these are all determined, limited, they are not the all-embracing
-determination, as that is which has just been
-spoken of. In this relation the mere turning of the subject
-on himself, this talk of the wise man. in his one-sidedness,
-is likewise done away with. The same liberty,
-happiness, steadfastness, which were the aim of Epicureanism,
-Stoicism and Scepticism are doubtless still to be
-reached by the subject, but now this can only be brought
-about by turning to God, by giving heed to absolute
-truth, not by fleeing from the objective; so that by means<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-of the objective itself, liberty and happiness are attained
-for the subject. This is the standpoint of reverencing and
-fearing God, so that by man’s turning to this his object,
-which stands before him free and firm, the object of the
-subject’s own freedom is attained.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place, there are contradictions herein
-contained which necessarily attract the attention of mind,
-and whose reconciliation is essential. If we adopt this
-one-sided position, God is on the one side, and man in
-his freedom is on the other. A freedom such as this,
-standing in contrast to the objective, a freedom in which
-man, as thinking self-consciousness, conceives as the absolute
-the relation of his pure inwardness to himself, is, however,
-only formally, and not concretely absolute. In so
-far then as the human will determines itself negatively
-towards the objective, we have the origin of sin, evil in
-contrast to the absolute Affirmative.</p>
-
-<p>A third essential point of interest is the form in which
-God must now be apprehended in general, for since it
-pertains essentially to the Notion of Mind to determine
-God as concrete, living God, it is indispensable that God
-should be thought of in relation to the world and to man.
-This relation to the world is then a relation to an ‘other,’
-which thereby at first appears to be outside of God; but
-because this relation is <i>His</i> activity, the fact of having this
-relation in Himself is a moment of Himself. Because the
-connection of God with the world is a determination in
-Himself, so the being another from the one, the duality, the
-negative, the distinction, the self-determination in general,
-is essentially to be thought of as a moment in Him, or God
-reveals Himself in Himself, and therefore establishes distinct
-determinations in Himself. This distinction in Himself,
-His concrete nature, is the point where the absolute
-comes into connection with man, with the world, and is
-reconciled with the same. We say God has created man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-and the world, this is His determination in Himself, and
-at the same time the point of commencement, the root of
-the finite in God Himself. In this manner, therefore, that
-which afterwards appears finite is yet produced by Him in
-Himself&mdash;the particular Ideas, the world in God Himself,
-the Divine world, where God has begun to separate Himself,
-and has His connection with the temporal world. In the
-fact that God is represented as concrete, we have immediately
-a Divine world in Himself.</p>
-
-<p>Since the Divine forms, as natural and political, have
-now separated themselves from the True, and the temporal
-world has appeared to men as the negative, the untrue, so,
-in the fourth place, man recognizes God in Mind; he has
-recognized that natural things and the State are not, as in
-mythology, the mode in which God exists, but that the
-mode, as an intelligible world, exists in Himself. The
-unhappiness of the Roman world lay in its abstraction from
-that in which man had hitherto found his satisfaction; this
-satisfaction arose out of that pantheism, in which man
-found his highest truth in natural things, such as air and
-fire and water, and further in his duties, in the political life
-of the State. Now, on the contrary, in the world’s grief over
-her present woes, despair has entered in, and disbelief in
-these forms of the natural finite world and in the moral
-world of citizen life; to this form of reality, in its external
-and outwardly moral character, man has proved untrue.
-That condition which man terms the life of man in unity
-with nature, and in which man meets with God in nature
-because he finds his satisfaction there, has ceased to exist.
-The unity of man with the world is for this end broken,
-that it may be restored in a higher unity, that the world, as
-an intelligible world, may be received into God. The
-relation of man to God thereby reveals itself in the way
-provided for our salvation in worship, but more particularly
-it likewise shows itself in Philosophy; and that with the
-express consciousness of the aim that the individual should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-render himself capable of belonging to this intelligible
-world. The manner in which man represents to himself
-his relation to God is more particularly determined by the
-manner in which man represents to himself God. What
-is now often said, that man need not know God, and may
-yet have the knowledge of this relation, is false. Since God
-is the First, He determines the relation, and therefore in
-order to know what is the truth of the relation, man must
-know God. Since therefore thought goes so far as to deny
-the natural, what we are now concerned with is not to
-seek truth in any existing mode, but from our inner Being
-to go forth again to a true objective, which derives its
-determination from the intrinsic nature of thought.</p>
-
-<p>These are the chief moments of the present standpoint,
-and the reflections of the Neo-Platonists belong to it.
-Before entering upon them we must, however, make
-cursory mention of Philo the Jew, and also notice sundry
-moments appearing in the history of the Church.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c387" id="c387">A. <span class="smcap">Philo.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>Philo, a learned Jew of Alexandria, lived before and
-after the birth of Christ, in the reigns of the first Roman
-Emperors; that is to say, he was born <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 20, but lived
-until after Christ’s death. In him we for the first time see
-the application of the universal consciousness as philosophical
-consciousness. In the reign of Caligula, before
-whom very heinous charges against the Jews had been
-brought by Apion, he was, when advanced in years, sent
-to Rome as ambassador from his people, in order to give to
-the Romans a more favourable account of the Jews. There
-is a tradition that he came also in the reign of the Emperor
-Claudius to Rome, and there fell in with the Apostle
-Peter.<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span></p>
-<p>Philo wrote a long series of works, many of which we
-still possess; for instance, those on The Creation of the
-World, on Rewards and Punishments, the Offerers of Sacrifices,
-the Law of Allegories, Dreams, the Immutability of
-God, &amp;c.; they were published in folio at Frankfort in
-1691, and afterwards by Pfeiffer at Erlangen. Philo was
-famous for the great extent of his learning, and was well
-acquainted with Greek philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>He is more especially distinguished for his Platonic philosophy,
-and also for the pains he took to demonstrate the
-presence of Philosophy in the sacred writings of the Jews.
-In his explanation of the history of the Jewish nation, the
-narratives and statements therein contained have lost for
-him the immediate significance of reality. He reads into
-them throughout a mystical and allegorical meaning, and
-finds Plato present in Moses; in short, the endeavour of
-Philo resembled that of the Alexandrians when they recognized
-philosophic dogmas in Greek mythology. He treats
-of the nature of Mind, not, indeed, as comprehended in the
-element of thought, but as expressed therein, and this
-expression is still both far from pure and is associated
-with all sorts of imageries. By the spirit of Philosophy
-the Jews were compelled to seek in their sacred books, as
-the heathen sought in Homer and in the popular religion,
-a deeper speculative meaning, and to represent their
-religious writings as a perfect system of divine wisdom.
-That is the character of the time, in consequence of which
-all that appealed to the finite understanding in popular
-conceptions has not endured. The important point, then,
-is that on the one hand the popular conception is here
-still allied with the forms of reality; but as, on the other
-hand, what these forms express only immediately is no
-longer sufficient, the desire arises to understand them in a
-deeper sense. Although in the external histories of the
-Jewish and heathen religions men had the authority and
-starting-point of truth, they yet grasped the thought that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-truth cannot be given externally. Therefore, men read
-deep thoughts into history, as the expression is, or they
-read them out of it, and this latter is the true conception.
-For in the case of the Divine Book, whose author is the
-Spirit, it cannot be said that this spirituality is absent.
-The point of importance comes to be, whether this spirituality
-lies deeper down or nearer to the surface; therefore,
-even if the man who wrote the book had not the thoughts,
-they are implicitly contained in the inward nature of the
-relation. There is, generally speaking, a great difference
-between that which is present therein and that which is
-expressed. In history, art, philosophy, and the like, the
-point of importance is that what is contained therein should
-also be expressed; the real work of the mind is wholly and
-solely that of bringing to consciousness what is contained
-therein. The other side of the matter is that although all
-that lies within a form, a-religion, &amp;c., does not come before
-consciousness, one can still not say that it did not enter
-into the human mind; it was not in consciousness, neither
-did it come into the form of the ordinary conception, and
-yet it was in mind. On the one side, the bringing of
-thought into definite consciousness is a bringing in from
-without, but on the other side, as far as matter is concerned,
-there is nothing brought in from without. Philo’s methods
-present this aspect in a pre-eminent sense. All that is
-prosaic has disappeared, and, therefore, in writers of the
-period that follows, miracles are of common occurrence,
-inasmuch as external connection is no longer required as a
-matter of necessity. The fundamental conceptions of
-Philo, and these alone need be taken into consideration, are
-then somewhat as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. With Philo the main point is the knowledge of God.
-In regard to this, he says, in the first place: God can be
-known only by the eye of the soul, only by Beholding
-(ὅρασις). This he also calls rapture, ecstasy, God’s influence;
-we often find these terms. For this it is requisite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-that the soul should break loose from the body, and should
-give up its sensuous existence, thus rising to the pure
-object of thought, where it finds itself nearer to God. We
-may term this a beholding by the intelligence. But the
-other side is that God cannot be discerned by the eye of
-the soul; the soul can only know that He is, and not what
-He is. His essence is the primordial light.<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> Philo here
-speaks in quite Oriental fashion; for light is certainly
-simple, in contrast with which perception has the signification
-of knowing something as determined, as concrete in
-itself. So long, therefore, as the determination of simplicity
-is adhered to, this First Light permits not itself to
-be known, and since Philo says, “This One is God as such,”
-we cannot know what God is. In Christianity, on the contrary,
-simplicity is only a moment, and only in the Whole
-do we find God the Spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Philo continues: “The First is the space of the universe,
-encompassing and filling it; this existence is itself place,
-and is filled by itself. God is sufficient for Himself; all
-other things are paltry and meaningless; He fills all other
-things and gives them coherence, but He Himself is surrounded
-by nothing, because He Himself is One and All.
-Similarly, God exists in the primordial form of time
-(αἰών),”<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> that is, in the pure Notion of time. Why is it
-necessary that God should fill Himself with Himself? Even
-the subjective and abstract has need also of an object.
-But the all is likewise, as with Parmenides, the abstract,
-because it is only substance, which remains empty beside
-that which fills it. Absolute fulness, on the other hand,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>is the concrete, and we reach this first in the λόγος, in
-which we have that which fills, that which is filled, and a
-third composed of both.</p>
-
-<p>2. To this Philo now comes in the second place: “God’s
-image and reflection is thinking reason (λόγος), the Firstborn
-Son, who rules and regulates the world. This λόγος
-is the innermost meaning of all Ideas; God Himself, in
-contrast to this, as the One, as such, is pure Being (τὸ ὄν)
-only<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a>&mdash;an expression which Plato also used. Here verily we
-come upon a contradiction; for the image can only represent
-what the thing is; if therefore the image is concrete,
-its original must also be understood to be concrete. For
-the rest, it is therefore only logical, after Philo has once
-limited the name of God to the First Light or to pure Being,
-to assert that only the Son can be known. For as this
-Being God is only abstract existence, or only His own
-Notion; and it is quite true that the soul cannot perceive
-what this Being is, since it is really only an empty abstraction.
-What can be perceived is that pure existence is only
-an abstraction, and consequently a nothing, and not the
-true God. Of God as the One it may therefore be said
-that the only thing perceived is that He does exist. Perception
-is the knowledge of the concrete self-determination
-of the living God. If we therefore desire to know God,
-we must add to Being, as the First, this other moment also;
-the former is defective, and as abstract as when we say,
-‘God the Father,’” that is, this undisclosed One, this indeterminate
-in Himself, who has not yet created anything;
-the other moment is, however, the determination
-and distinction of Himself in Himself, the begetting.
-What is begotten is His other, which at the same time is
-in Him, and belongs to Him, and is thus a moment of
-Himself, if God is to be thought of as concrete and living
-it is this that is here by Philo called λόγος. In Christianity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>the name of God is therefore not limited to Essence, but
-the Son is conceived of as a determination which itself
-belongs to the true Essence of God. That which God is,
-He is therefore as Spirit only, and that is the unity of these
-moments.</p>
-
-<p>God’s differences therefore, according to Philo, constitute
-the finite understanding (λόγος) itself, which is then the
-archangel (ἀρχάγγελος), a realm of thought which contains
-determinateness. That is man as heavenly man, primeval
-man, who is also represented under the name of Wisdom
-(σοφία, תגמה), as Adam Kadmon, as the rising of the
-sun&mdash;man in God. This finite understanding now separates
-itself into Ideas, which by Philo are also named angels or
-messengers (ἄγγελοι). This mode of conception is not yet
-conception in pure thought, for forms of the imagination
-are still interwoven with it. Moreover there comes in here
-for the first time that which determines, where God is
-looked on as activity, which so far Being was not. This
-λόγος is therefore itself, we might say, the first restful world
-of thought, although it is already differentiated; but
-another λόγος is that which gives utterance (λόγος προφορικός)
-as speech. That is the activity, the creation of the world,
-as the former is its preservation, its permanent understanding.
-Speech has always been regarded as a manifestation
-of God, because it is not corporeal; as sound it is momentary
-and immediately disappears; its existence is therefore immaterial.
-“God created by the word of His month, interposing
-nothing;” what He created remains ideal, like
-speech. “If we would express the dogma in a still truer
-form, the Logos is the ‘Work of God.’”<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></p>
-
-<p>This Logos is at the same time the teacher of wisdom for
-self-consciousness. For natural things are upheld only
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>in their laws; but self-conscious beings know also of these
-laws, and this is wisdom. Thus the λόγος is the high
-priest, who is the mediator between God and man, the
-Spirit of the Godhead, who teaches man&mdash;even the self-conscious
-return of God into Himself, into that first unity
-of the primordial light. That is the pure intelligible world
-of truth itself, which is nothing other than the Word of
-God.<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a></p>
-
-<p>3. In the third place, since thought has come to
-negativity, the sensuous existent world stands in opposition
-to this ideal world. Its principle with Philo, as with Plato,
-is matter, the negative (οὐκ ὄν).<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> As God is Being, so the
-essence of matter is non-being; it is not nothing, as when
-we say that God created the world out of nothing, for non-being,
-the opposite of Being, is itself a positive, and as
-good as Being. It exists, in so far as there is placed within
-it a resemblance to implicit truth. Philo had the true perception
-that the opposite of Being is just as positive as
-Being. If this seems absurd to anyone, he need only be
-reminded that really when we posit Being, the negative of
-Being is thinking&mdash;which is something very positive. But
-the next step, the Notion of this opposition, and the passing
-of Being into non-being, is not to be found in Philo.
-In general this philosophy is less a metaphysic of the
-Notion or of Thought itself, than a philosophy in which
-Mind appears only in pure Thought, and not here in the
-mode of ordinary conception&mdash;Notions and Ideas are still
-represented as independent forms. Thus, for instance, it
-is said: “In the beginning the Word of God created the
-heavens, which consist of the purest Being and are the
-dwelling-place of the purest angels, which do not appear,
-and are not perceptible by the senses,” but by thought alone;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>these are the Ideas. “The Creator before the whole of the intelligible
-world made the incorporeal heavens and the non-sensuous
-earth, and the Idea of the air and of the void, and
-after this the incorporeal essence of the water and an incorporeal
-light, and a non-sensuous archetype (ἀρχέτυπος) of the
-sun and all the stars;”<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a> and the sensuous world is the anti-type
-of this. Philo now proceeds according to the Mosaic
-record. In the Old Testament history of creation, grass,
-plants, and trees are created on the third day, and on the
-fourth day lights in the firmament of heaven, the sun and
-moon. Philo therefore says (De mundi opificio, pp. 9, 10)
-that on the fourth day a number adorned the heavens, the
-four, the tetractys, the most perfect, &amp;c. These are the
-main points in Philo’s philosophy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c394a" id="c394a">B. <span class="smcap">Cabala and Gnosticism.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>The Cabalistic philosophy and the Gnostic theology both
-occupied themselves with these same conceptions which
-Philo also had. To them also the First is the abstract,
-the unknown, the nameless; the Second is the unveiling,
-the concrete, which goes forth into emanation. But there
-is also to be found in some degree the return to unity,
-especially among Christian philosophers: and this return,
-which is accepted as the Third, belongs to the λόγος; so
-with Philo Wisdom, the teacher, the high priest, was that
-which in the contemplation of God leads back the Third to
-the First.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c394b" id="c394b">1. <span class="smcap">Cabalistic Philosophy.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Cabala is the name given to the secret wisdom of the
-Jews, with which, however, much that is dark and mysterious
-is mingled; regarding its origin also many fables are
-related. We are told of it that it is contained in two books,
-<i>Jezirah</i> (Creation) and <i>Sohar</i> (Brightness). <i>Jezirah</i>, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>more important of these two books, is ascribed to a certain
-Rabbi Akibha; it is about to be published in a more complete
-form by Herr von Mayer, in Frankfort. The book has
-certain very interesting general principles, and this better
-portion of it consists of ideas, which in some respects
-resemble those of Philo, though they are more fancifully
-presented, and often sink into the fantastic. It is not of
-the antiquity which those who reverence the Cabala would
-assign to it; for they relate that this heavenly book was
-given to Adam to console him after his fall. It is a medley
-of astronomy, magic, medicine, and prophecy; sundry
-traces followed up historically indicate that such were cultivated
-in Egypt. Akibha lived soon after the destruction
-of Jerusalem, and took an active part in a revolt of the Jews
-against Hadrian, in the course of which they collected an
-army two hundred thousand strong, in order to establish
-Barcochba as the Messiah; the revolt was, however, suppressed,
-and the Rabbi was flayed alive. The second book
-is said to have been the work of his disciple, Rabbi Simeon
-Ben Jochai, who was called the Great Light, the Spark of
-Moses.<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> Both books were translated into Latin in the seventeenth
-century. A speculative Israelite, Rabbi Abraham
-Cohen Irira, also wrote a book, the Door of Heaven (<i>Porta
-c\nlorum</i>); it is later, dating from the fifteenth century,
-and sundry references to the Arabians and Scholastics
-are contained in it. These are the sources of the high
-cabalistic wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>In earlier times there is no representation among the
-Jews of God as being in His essence Light, of an opposite
-to God, Darkness and Evil, which is at strife with the
-Light; there is nothing of good and evil angels, of the Fall
-of the wicked, of their condemnation, of their being in Hell,
-of a future day of judgment for the good and the evil, of
-the corruption of the flesh. It was not until this time that
-the Jews began to carry their thoughts beyond their reality;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-only now does a world of spirit, or at least of spirits, begin
-to open itself up before them; before this these Jews cared
-only for themselves, being sunk in the filth and self-conceit
-of their present existence, and in the maintenance of their
-nation and tribes.</p>
-
-<p>Further particulars of the Cabala are these. One is expressed
-as the principle of all things, as it is likewise the first
-source of all numbers. As unity itself is not one number
-among the rest, so is it with God, the basis of all things,
-the <i>En-Soph</i>. The emanation therewith connected is the
-effect of the first cause by the limitation of that first infinite
-whose boundary (ὅρος) it is. In this one cause all is
-contained <i>eminenter</i>, not <i>formaliter</i> but <i>causaliter</i>. The
-second element of importance is the Adam Kadmon, the
-first man, <i>Kether</i>, the first that arose, the highest crown, the
-microcosm, the macrocosm, with which the world that emanated
-stands in connection as the efflux of light. By further
-expansion the other spheres or circles of the world came into
-being; and this emanation is represented as streams of
-light. In the first place there come forth ten of such emanations,
-<i>Sephiroth</i>, forming the pure world <i>Azilah</i>, which
-exists in itself and changes not. The second is the world
-<i>Beriah</i>, which does change. The third is the created world,
-<i>Jezirah</i>, the world of pure spirits set in matter, the souls of
-the stars&mdash;that is, further distinctions into which this dark
-and mysterious philosophy proceeds. In the fourth place
-comes the created world, the <i>Asijja</i>: it is the lowest, the
-vegetative and sensible world.<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="c396" id="c396">2. <span class="smcap">The Gnostics.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Though there are various sects of the Gnostics, we find
-certain common determinations constituting their basis.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span></p>
-<p>\Joe Cooper\roddr\charliehoward\&mdash;
-Professor Neander has with great learning made a collection
-of these, and elaborated them exhaustively; some of
-the forms correspond with those which we have given.
-Their general aim was that of knowledge (γνῶσις); whence
-they also derived their name.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most distinguished Gnostics is Basilides. For
-him, too, the First is the unspeakable God (θεὸς ἄῤῥητος)&mdash;the
-<i>En-Soph</i> of the Cabala; He is, as with Philo also, that which
-is (τὸ ὄν), He who is (ὁ ὤν), the nameless one (ἀνωνόμαστος)&mdash;that
-is, the immediate. The second is then the Spirit
-(νοῦς), the first-born, also λόγος, the Wisdom (σοφία),
-Power (δύναμις): more closely defined, it is Righteousness
-(δικαιοσύνη), and Peace (εἰρήνη). These are followed by
-principles still further determined, which Basilides names
-archons, heads of spiritual kingdoms. One main point in
-this is likewise the return, the refining process of the
-soul, the economy of purification (οἰκονονία καθάρσεων): the
-soul from matter must come back to wisdom, to peace. The
-First Essence bears all perfection sealed up in Himself, but
-only in potentiality; Spirit, the first-born, is the first revelation
-of the latent. It is, moreover, only through being
-made one with God that all created beings can attain to a
-share in true righteousness and the peace which flows therefrom.<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Gnostics, for instance Marcus, term the First also the
-Unthinkable (ἀνεννόητος), even the Non-existent (ἀνούσιος)
-which proceeds not to determinateness, the Solitude (μονότης),
-and the pure Silence (σιγή); the Ideas, the angels,
-the æons, then form the Other. These are termed the
-Notions, roots, seeds of particular fulfillings (πληρώματα),
-the fruit; every æon in this bears its own special world in
-itself.<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a></p>
-
-<p>With others, as for instance Valentinus, the First is also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
-termed “the completed æon in the heights that cannot be
-seen or named,” or the unfathomable, the primordial cause,
-the absolute abyss (ἄβυσσον, βῦθος), wherein all is, as abrogated:
-also what is even before the beginning (προάρχη),
-before the Father (προπάτωρ). The active transition of
-the One signifies then the differentiation (διάθεσις) of this
-abyss; and this development is also termed the making itself
-comprehensible of the incomprehensible (κατάληψις τοῦ
-ἀκαταλήπτου), in the same way that we found comprehension
-spoken of by the Stoics (Vol. II. p. 250). Æons, particular
-expositions, are Notions. The second step is likewise
-termed limitation (ὅρος); and inasmuch as the development
-of life is conceived more clearly by contrast, the key to this is
-stated to be contained in two principles, which appear in the
-form of male and female. The one is required to perfect
-the other, each has its complement (σύζυγος) in the other;
-from their conjunction (σύνθεσις, συξυγία), which first constitutes
-the real, a perfect whole proceeds. The inward significance
-of these fulfilments generally is the world of æons,
-the universal filling of the abyss, which therefore, inasmuch
-as what was distinguished in it was still unrevealed, is also
-termed hermaphrodite, man-woman (ἀῤῥενόθηλυς),<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a>&mdash;very
-much the same theory as was held long before by the
-Pythagoreans (Vol. I. p. 221).</p>
-
-<p>Ptolemæus assigns two conjunctions (σύζυγους) to the
-abyss, and two separations, which are pre-supposed throughout
-all temporal existence, Will and Perception (θέλημα
-καὶ ἔννοια). Complicated and motley forms here appear,
-but the fundamental determination is the same throughout,
-and abyss and revelation are the most important matters.
-The revelation which has come down is also conceived as
-the glory (δόξα, Shekinah) of God; as heavenly wisdom,
-which is itself a beholding of God; as unbegotten powers
-which encircle Him and are radiant with the most brilliant
-light. To these Ideas the name of God is more especially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>
-given, and in this regard He is also called the many-named
-(πολυώνυμος), the demiurge; this is the manifestation, the
-determination of God.<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></p>
-
-<p>All these forms pass into the mysterious, but they have
-on the whole the same determinations as principle; and
-the general necessity which forms their basis is a profound
-necessity of reason, namely, the determination and comprehension
-of what is absolute as the concrete. I have, however,
-merely been desirous of calling these forms to remembrance,
-in order to indicate their connection with the universal.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c399" id="c399">C. <span class="smcap">Alexandrian Philosophy.</span></a></h2>
-
-<p>The unity of self-consciousness and Being appears in
-more philosophical and intelligent form in the Alexandrian
-School, which constitutes the most important, and at the
-same time the most characteristic form of philosophy pertaining
-to this sphere. For Alexandria had for some time
-past, mainly through the Ptolemies, become the principal
-seat of the sciences. Here, as if in their centre-point, all
-the popular religions and mythologies of the East and West,
-and likewise their history, came into touch and intermingled
-with one another in various forms and shapes.
-Religions were compared with one another: in each of
-them there was, on the one hand, a searching for and
-putting together of that which was contained also in the
-other, and, on the other hand, there was the more important
-task of reading into the popular conceptions of religion a
-deeper meaning, and of giving to them a universal allegorical
-signification. This endeavour has doubtless given
-birth to much that is dim and mystical; its purer product
-is the Alexandrian Philosophy. The bringing together of
-the philosophies naturally succeeded better than those connections
-which, on the side of religion, are only the mystic
-products of a Reason that as yet is unintelligible to itself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
-For while in fact there is but one Idea in Philosophy, it
-annuls by its own means the special form which it has
-adopted, the one-sidedness in which it expresses itself. In
-Scepticism had been reached this negative stage of seeing
-annulled the definite modes of Being in which the Absolute
-was posited.</p>
-
-<p>Since the form of philosophy which arose in Alexandria
-did not attach itself to any of the earlier philosophic schools,
-but recognized all the different systems of philosophy, and
-more especially the Pythagorean, Platonic, and Aristotelian,
-to be in their various forms but one, it was frequently
-asserted to be Eclecticism. Brucker (Hist. crit. phil. T. II.,
-p. 193) is the first to do so, as I have found, and Diogenes
-Laërtius gave him the occasion thereto, by speaking (Pr\nmium,
-§ 21) of a certain Potamo of Alexandria, who not
-so very long before (ρπὸ ὀλίγου) had selected from the
-different philosophies their principal maxims and the best
-of their teaching. Then Diogenes goes on to quote several
-passages from Potamo, saying that this writer had produced
-an eclectic philosophy; but these maxims drawn from
-Aristotle, Plato, and the Stoics are not of importance, and
-the distinguishing characteristics of the Alexandrians
-cannot be recognized therein. Diogenes is also earlier
-than the Alexandrian School; but Potamo, according to
-Suidas (s.v. Ποτάμον, T. III., p. 161), was tutor of the
-stepsons of Augustus, and for the instructor of princes
-eclecticism is a very suitable creed. Therefore, because
-this Potamo is an Alexandrian, Brucker has bestowed on
-the Alexandrian philosophy the name of Eclectic; but that
-is neither consistent with fact, nor is it true to history.
-Eclecticism is something to be utterly condemned, if it is
-understood in the sense of one thing being taken out of
-this philosophy, and another thing out of that philosophy,
-altogether regardless of their consistency or connection, as
-when a garment is patched together of pieces of different
-colours or stuffs. Such an eclecticism gives nothing but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-an aggregate which lacks all inward consistency. Eclectics
-of this kind are sometimes ordinary uncultured men, in
-whose heads the most contradictory ideas find a place side by
-side, without their ever bringing these thoughts together and
-becoming conscious of the contradictions involved; sometimes
-they are men of intelligence who act thus with their
-eyes open, thinking that they attain the best when, as they
-say, they take the good from every system, and so provide
-themselves with a <i>vade mecum</i> of reflections, in which they
-have everything good except consecutiveness of thought,
-and consequently thought itself. An eclectic philosophy is
-something that is altogether meaningless and inconsequent:
-and such a philosophy the Alexandrian philosophy is not.
-In France the Alexandrians are still called Eclectics; and
-there, where <i>système</i> is synonymous with narrowness of
-views, and where indeed one must have the name which
-sounds least systematic and suspicious, that may be borne
-with.</p>
-
-<p>In the better sense of the word the Alexandrians may,
-however, very well be called eclectic philosophers, though
-it is quite superfluous to give them this designation at all.
-For the Alexandrians took as their groundwork the philosophy
-of Plato, but availed themselves of the general
-development of Philosophy, which after Plato they became
-acquainted with through Aristotle and all the following
-philosophies, and especially through the Stoics; that is to
-say, they reinstated it, but as invested with a higher
-culture. Therefore we find in them no refutation of the
-views of the philosophers whom they quote. To this higher
-culture there more especially belongs the deeper principle
-that absolute essence must be apprehended as self-consciousness,
-that its very essence is to be self-consciousness,
-and that it is therefore in the individual consciousness.
-This is not to be understood as signifying that God is a
-Spirit who is outside of the world and outside self-consciousness,
-as is often said, but as indicating that His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
-existence as self-conscious spirit is really self-consciousness
-itself. The Platonic universal, which is in thought, accordingly
-receives the signification of being as such
-absolute essence. In the higher sense a wider point of
-view as regards the Idea thus signifies its concretely
-blending into one the preceding principles, which contain
-only single one-sided moments of the Idea. This really
-indicates a deeper knowledge of the philosophical Idea
-which is known concretely in itself, so that the more
-abstract principles are contained in the deeper form of the
-Idea. For after some divergence has taken place in the
-past it must from time to time come about that the implicit
-identity of the divergent views is recognized, so that
-difference has force only as form. In this sense even Plato
-is eclectic, since he harmonized Pythagoras, Heraclitus,
-and Parmenides; and the Alexandrians are also thus
-eclectics, seeing that they were just as much Pythagoreans
-as Platonists and Aristotelians; the only thing is that this
-term always at once calls up the idea of an arbitrary
-selection.</p>
-
-<p>All earlier philosophies could therefore find a place in
-that of the Alexandrians. For in Alexandria the Ptolemies
-had attracted to themselves science and the learned, partly
-by reason of their own interest in science, and partly on
-account of the excellence of their institutions. They
-founded the great and celebrated library for which the
-Greek translation of the Old Testament was made; after
-Cæsar had destroyed it, it was again restored. There was
-also there a museum, or what would nowadays be called an
-Academy of Science, where philosophers and men of special
-learning received payments of money, and had no other
-duties than that of prosecuting scientific study. In later
-times such foundations were instituted in Athens also, and
-each philosophic school had its own public establishment,<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a>
-without favour being shown to one philosophy or to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
-other. Thus the Neo-Platonic philosophy arose beside the
-others, and partly upon their ruins, and overshadowed the
-rest, until finally all earlier systems were merged therein.
-It, therefore, did not constitute an individual philosophical
-school similar to those which went before; but, while it
-united them all in itself, it had as its leading characteristic
-the study of Plato, of Aristotle, and of the Pythagoreans.</p>
-
-<p>With this study was combined an interpretation of the
-writings of these men, which aimed at exhibiting their
-philosophic ideas in their unity; and the principal mode in
-which the Neo-Platonic teachers carried on and elaborated
-Philosophy consisted in their explaining the various philosophical
-works, especially the writings of Plato and Aristotle,
-or giving sketches of these philosophies. These
-commentaries on the early philosophers were either given
-in lectures or written; and many of them have come down to
-us, some in the number being excellent. Aristotle’s works
-were commented on by Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Andronicus
-Rhodius, Nicolaus Damascenus, and also Porphyrius.
-Plato had as commentators Numenius and Maximus Tyrius.
-Other Alexandrians combined a commentary on Plato with
-study of the other philosophic maxims or philosophies, and
-managed to grasp the point of unity of the various modes
-of the Idea very successfully. The best commentaries date
-from this period; most of the works of Proclus are commentaries
-on single dialogues of Plato and similar subjects.
-This school has the further peculiarity of expressing speculation
-as actual divine Being and life, and, therefore, it
-makes this appear to be mystical and magical.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c403" id="c403">1. <span class="smcap">Ammonius Saccas.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Ammonius Saccas, that is, the sack-bearer, is named as
-one of the first or most celebrated teachers of this school;
-he died <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 243.<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> But we have none of his writings, nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
-have any traditions regarding his philosophy come down to
-us. Among his very numerous disciples Ammonius had
-many men celebrated in other branches of science, for example,
-Longinus and Origen; it is, however, uncertain if
-this were the Christian Father of that name. But his most
-renowned disciple in philosophy is Plotinus, through whose
-writings as they are preserved to us we derive our chief
-knowledge of the Neo-Platonic philosophy. The systematized
-fabric of this philosophy is, indeed, ascribed to him by
-those who came after, and this philosophy is known specially
-as his philosophy.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c404" id="c404">2. <span class="smcap">Plotinus.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>As the disciples of Ammonius had, by their master’s
-desire, made an agreement not to commit his philosophy to
-writing, it was not until late in life that Plotinus wrote; or,
-rather, the works received from him were published after
-his death by Porphyrius, one of his disciples. From the
-same disciple we have an account of the life of Plotinus;
-what is remarkable in it is that the strictly historical facts
-recounted are mixed up with a great variety of marvellous
-episodes. This is certainly the period when the marvellous
-plays a prominent part; but when the pure system of Philosophy,
-the pure meaning of such a man, is known, it is
-impossible to express all one’s astonishment at anecdotes of
-this kind. Plotinus was an Egyptian; he was born at
-Lycopolis about <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 205, in the reign of Septimius Severus.
-After he had attended the lectures of many teachers of
-Philosophy, he became melancholy and absorbed in thought;
-at the age of eight and twenty he came to Ammonius, and,
-finding here at last what satisfied him, he remained for
-eleven years under his instruction. As at that time
-wonderful accounts of Indian and Brahminical wisdom were
-being circulated, Plotinus set out on his way to Persia in
-the army of the Emperor Gordian; but the campaign ended
-so disastrously that Plotinus did not attain his object, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
-had difficulty even in procuring his own safety. At the
-age of forty he proceeded to Rome, and remained there
-until his death, twenty-six years later. In Rome his outward
-demeanour was most remarkable; in accordance with
-the ancient Pythagorean practice, he refrained from partaking
-of flesh, and often imposed fasts on himself; he wore,
-also, the ancient Pythagorean dress. As a public lecturer,
-however, he gained a high reputation among all classes.
-The Emperor of those days, Gallienus, whose favour
-Plotinus enjoyed, as well as that of the Empress, is said to
-have been inclined to hand over to him a town in Campania,
-where he thought to realize the Platonic Republic. The
-ministers, however, prevented the carrying out of this plan,
-and therein they showed themselves men of sense, for in
-such an outlying spot of the Roman Empire, and considering
-the utter change in the human mind since Plato’s days,
-when another spiritual principle had of necessity to make
-itself universal, this was an enterprise which was far less
-calculated than in Plato’s time to bring honour to the
-Platonic Republic. It does little credit to the sagacity of
-Plotinus that this idea ever entered into his head; but
-we do not exactly know if his plan were limited to the
-Platonic Republic, or if it did not admit of some extension
-or modification thereof. Of course an actual Platonic
-state was contrary to the nature of things; for the Platonic
-state is free and independent, which such an one as this,
-within the Roman Empire, could of course not be. Plotinus
-died at Rome, in the sixty-sixth year of his age, <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 270.<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></p>
-
-<p>The writings of Plotinus are originally for the most part
-answers given as occasion required to questions proposed
-by his auditors; he committed them to writing during the
-last sixteen years of his life, and Porphyrius edited them
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>some time later. In his teaching Plotinus adopted, as has
-been already mentioned, the method of commenting in his
-lectures on the writings of various earlier philosophers.
-The writings of Plotinus are known as Enneads, and are
-six in number, each of them containing nine separate
-treatises. We thus have altogether fifty-four of such
-treatises or books, which are subdivided into many
-chapters; it is consequently a voluminous work. The
-books do not, however, form a connected whole; but in
-each book, in fact, there are special matters brought forward
-and philosophically handled; and it is thus laborious to go
-through them. The first Ennead has for the most part a
-moral character; the first book proposes the question of
-what animals are, and what man is; the second deals with
-the virtues; the third with dialectic; the fourth with happiness
-(περὶ εὐδαιμονίας); the fifth investigates whether
-happiness consists in protraction of time (παρατάσει χρόνου);
-the sixth speaks of the beautiful; the seventh of the
-highest (πρώτου) good and of the other goods; the eighth
-inquires into the origin of evil; the ninth treats of a
-rational departure from life. Other Enneads are of a
-metaphysical nature. Porphyrius says in his Life of
-Plotinus (pp. 3-5, 9, 17-19) that they are unequal. He
-states that twenty-one of these books were already in
-written form before he came to Plotinus, which was when
-the latter was fifty-nine years of age; and in that year and
-the five following, which Porphyrius spent with Plotinus
-as his disciple, other four-and-twenty were added. During
-the absence of Porphyrius in Sicily, Plotinus wrote nine
-more books, in the last years before his death, which later
-books are weaker. Creuzer is preparing to bring out an
-edition of Plotinus. To give an account of him would be
-a difficult task, and would amount to a systematic explanation.
-The mind of Plotinus hovers over each of the
-particular matters that he deals with; he treats them
-rationally and dialectically, but traces them all back to one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
-Idea. Many beautiful detached quotations could be made
-from Plotinus, but as there is in his works a continual
-repetition of certain leading thoughts, the reading of them
-is apt to prove wearisome. Since then it is the manner of
-Plotinus to lead the particular, which he makes his starting-point,
-always back again to the universal, it is possible to
-grasp the ideas of Plotinus from some of his books, knowing
-that the reading of those remaining would not reveal
-to us any particular advance. Plato’s ideas and expressions
-are predominant with him, but we find also many very
-lengthy expositions quite in the manner of Aristotle; for
-he makes constant use of terms borrowed from Aristotle&mdash;force,
-energy, &amp;c.&mdash;and their relations are essentially the
-object of his meditations. The main point is that he is
-not to be taken as placing Plato and Aristotle in opposition;
-on the contrary, he went so far as to adopt even the
-Logos of the Stoics.</p>
-
-<p>It is very difficult to give a systematic account of his
-philosophy. For it is not the aim of Plotinus, as it was of
-Aristotle, to comprehend objects in their special determinations,
-but rather to emphasize the truth of the substantial
-in them as against the phenomenal. The point of greatest
-importance and the leading characteristic in Plotinus is his
-high, pure enthusiasm for the elevation of mind to what is
-good and true, to the absolute. He lays hold of knowledge,
-the simply ideal, and of intellectual thought, which is
-implicitly life, but not silent nor sealed. His whole philosophy
-is on the one hand metaphysics, but the tendency
-which is therein dominant is not so much an anxiety to
-explain and interpret and comprehend what forces itself on
-our attention as reality, or to demonstrate the position and
-the origin of these individual objects, and perhaps, for
-instance, to offer a deduction of matter, of evil; but rather
-to separate the mind from these externals, and give it its
-central place in the simple, clear Idea. The whole tenor
-of his philosophy thus leads up to virtue and to the intellectual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span>
-contemplation of the eternal, as source of the same;
-so that the soul is brought to happiness of life therein.
-Plotinus then enters to some extent on special considerations
-of virtue, with the view of cleansing the soul from passions,
-from false and impure conceptions of evil and destiny,
-and also from incredulity and superstition, from astrology
-and magic and all their train. This gives some idea of the
-general drift of his teaching.</p>
-
-<p>If we now go on to consider the philosophy of Plotinus
-in detail, we find that there is no longer any talk of the
-criterion, as with the Stoics and Epicureans,&mdash;that is all
-settled; but a strenuous effort is made to take up a position
-in the centre of things, in pure contemplation, in pure
-thought. Thus what with the Stoics and Epicureans is the
-aim, the unity of the soul with itself in untroubled peace, is
-here the point of departure; Plotinus takes up the position
-of bringing this to pass in himself as a condition of ecstasy
-(ἔκστασις), as he calls it, or as an inspiration. Partly in this
-name and partly in the facts themselves, a reason has been
-found for calling Plotinus a fanatic and visionary, and this is
-the cry universally raised against this philosophy; to this
-assertion the fact that for the Alexandrian school all
-truth lies in reason and comprehension alone, presents a
-very marked antithesis and contradiction.</p>
-
-<p>And firstly, with regard to the term ecstasy, those who
-call Plotinus a fanatic associate with the idea nothing
-but that condition into which crazy Indians, Brahmins,
-monks and nuns fall, when, in order to bring about an
-entire retreat into themselves, they seek to blot out from
-their minds all ordinary ideas and all perception of reality;
-thus this in some measure exists as a permanent and fixed
-condition; and again as a steady gaze into vacuity it
-appears as light or as darkness, devoid of motion, distinction,
-and, in a word, of thought. Fanaticism like this
-places truth in an existence which stands midway between
-reality and the Notion, but is neither the one nor the other,&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
-therefore only a creature of the imagination.
-From this view of ecstasy, however, Plotinus is far
-removed.</p>
-
-<p>But in the second place there is something in the thing
-itself which has contributed to bring upon him this reproach,
-and it is this, that very often the name of fanaticism
-is given to anything that transcends sensuous consciousness
-or the fixed notions of the finite understanding, which
-in their limitation are held to constitute real existence.
-Partly, however, the imputation is due to the manner in
-which Plotinus speaks in general of Notions, spiritual
-moments as such, as if they had a substantial existence of
-their own. That is to say, Plotinus sometimes introduces
-sensuous modes, modes of ordinary conception, into the
-world of Notions, and sometimes he brings down Ideas
-into the sphere of the sensuous, since, for instance, he
-utilizes the necessary relations of things for purposes
-of magic. For the magician is just he who attributes to
-certain words and particular sensuous signs a universal
-efficacy, and who attempts by prayers, &amp;c., to lift them up
-to the universal. Such a universal this is not, however, in
-itself, in its own nature: universality is only attributed to
-it; or the universal of thought has not yet given itself
-therein a universal reality, while the thought, the act of a
-hero is the true, the universal, whose effects and whose
-means have equal greatness and universality. In a certain
-sense therefore the Neo-Platonists have well deserved the
-reproach of fanaticism, for in the biographies of the great
-teachers of this school, Plotinus, Porphyrius and Iamblichus
-we certainly find much recounted that comes under
-the category of miracle-working and sorcery, just as we
-found it in the case of Pythagoras (Vol. I. p. 200).
-Upholding as they did the belief in the gods of heathendom,
-they asserted in reference to the worship of images that
-these really were filled with the divine power and presence.
-Thus the Alexandrian school cannot be altogether absolved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-from the charge of superstition.<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> For in the whole of that
-period of the world’s history, among Christians and heathen
-alike, the belief in miracle-working prevailed, because the
-mind, absorbed in itself and filled with astonishment at the
-infinite power and majesty of this self, paid no heed to the
-natural connection of events, and made the interference of
-a supreme power seem easy. But what the philosophers
-taught is utterly remote therefrom; except the quite
-theoretical observation regarding the images of the gods
-which we mentioned above, the writings of Plotinus contain
-nothing in any way related thereto.</p>
-
-<p>He then who gives the name of fanaticism to every
-effort of the soul to rise to the supersensuous, to every
-belief that man can have in the virtuous, the noble, the
-divine, the eternal, to every religious conviction,&mdash;may
-count the Neo-Platonists as being fanatics; but fanaticism
-is in this case an empty name employed only by the dull
-finite understanding, and by unbelief in all that is high
-and noble. If we, however, give the name of fanatics to
-those who rise to speculative truths which contradict the
-categories of the finite understanding, the Alexandrians
-have indeed incurred this imputation, but with quite equal
-reason may the Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy be
-also termed fanaticism. For Plato most certainly speaks
-with enthusiasm of the elevation of the spirit into thought,
-or rather the Platonic enthusiasm proper consists in rising
-into the sphere of the movement of thought. Those who
-are convinced that the absolute essence in thought is not
-thought itself, constantly reiterate that God is beyond
-consciousness, and that the thought of Him is the notion
-of One whose existence or reality is nevertheless an utterly
-different thing; just as, when we think of or imagine an
-animal or a stone, our notion or imagination is something
-quite different from the animal itself,&mdash;which is making this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>last to be the truth. But we are not speaking of this or
-that animal perceived by our senses, but of its essential
-reality, and this is the Notion of it. The essential
-reality of the animal is not present as such in the animal of
-our senses, but as being one with the objective individuality,
-as a mode of that universal; as essence it is our Notion,
-which indeed alone is true, whereas what the senses perceive
-is negative. Thus our Notion of absolute essence is the
-essence itself, when it is the Notion of absolute essence,
-not of something else. But this essence does not seem to
-be co-extensive with the idea of God; for He is not only
-Essence or His Notion, but His existence. His existence,
-as pure essence, is our thought of Him; but His real
-existence is Nature. In this real existence the ‘I’ is that
-which has the faculty of individual thought; it belongs to
-this existence as a moment present in it, but does not
-constitute it. From the existence of essence as essence
-we must pass over to existence, to real existence as such.
-As such, God is doubtless a Beyond to individual self-consciousness,
-that is to say, of course, in the capacity of
-essence or pure thought; thus to a certain extent He, as
-individual reality, is Nature which is beyond thought.
-But even this objective mode comes back into essence, or
-the individuality of consciousness is overcome. Therefore
-what has brought upon Plotinus the reproach of fanaticism
-is this, that he had the thought of the essence of God
-being Thought itself and present in Thought. As the
-Christians said that He was once present to sensuous
-perception at a certain time and in a certain place&mdash;but
-also that He ever dwells in His people and is their Spirit&mdash;so
-Plotinus said that absolute essence is present in the
-self-consciousness that thinks, and exists in it as essence,
-or Thought itself is the Divine.</p>
-
-<p>In further defining the relation of individual self-consciousness
-to the knowledge of absolute essence, Plotinus
-asserts (Ennead. VI. l. 7, c. 35, 36) that the soul which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span>
-withdraws from the corporeal and loses every conception
-but that of pure essence brings itself nigh to the Deity.
-The principle of the philosophy of Plotinus is therefore the
-Reason which is in and for itself. The condition of ecstasy
-through which alone that which has true Being comes to
-be known, is named by Plotinus (Ennead. VI. l. 9, c. 11) a
-simplification of the soul, through which it is brought into
-a state of blissful repose, because its object is itself simple
-and at rest. But it is evident that we are not to imagine
-this simplification of self-consciousness to be a condition
-of fanaticism, seeing that even an immediate knowledge
-of God such as this is a thinking of Him and a
-comprehension of Him, and not a vacant feeling, or what
-is quite as vacant, an intuition. This withdrawal of the
-soul from the body takes place through pure thought;
-thought is the activity and at the same time the object.
-It is thus a tranquil state, without any wild turmoil of the
-blood or of the imagination. Ecstasy is not a mere
-rapturous condition of the senses and fancy, but rather a
-passing beyond the content of sensuous consciousness; it is
-pure thought that is at home with itself, and is its own
-object. Plotinus often speaks of this condition in the same
-way as in the following passage: “Often when I out of the
-body awaken to myself, and am beyond the other,” the external,
-“and have entered into my inmost nature, and have
-a wondrous intuition, and live a godlike life,” &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> In this
-way Plotinus certainly approaches to the intuitive point of
-view. Yet his figurative mode of expression separates
-itself still more from the, in great measure, confused
-mythical ideas. The Idea of the philosophy of Plotinus is
-thus an intellectualism or a higher idealism, which indeed
-from the side of the Notion is not yet a perfect idealism;
-that of which Plotinus becomes conscious in his ecstasy is,
-however, philosophic thought, speculative Notions and
-Ideas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As for the determinate principle of Plotinus, the objective,
-the content, which is at home with itself in this
-ecstasy, in this Being of Thought&mdash;this content, as regards
-its chief moments in the universal, is that already dealt
-with. The three principles are for him the One, the νοῦς
-and the soul.</p>
-
-<p>a. The first, the absolute, the basis, is here, as with
-Philo, pure Being, the unchangeable, which is the basis
-and the cause of all Being that appears, whose potentiality
-is not apart from its actuality, but is absolute actuality
-in itself. It is the unity which is likewise essence, or unity
-as the essence of all essence. The true principle is not the
-multiplicity of present Being, the ordinary substantiality of
-things, according to which each appears as one separated
-from the others, for really and truly their unity is their
-essence. This unity is, properly speaking, not All; for All
-is nothing but the result of the units, the comprehension
-of them&mdash;forming the basis, as they do, as essence&mdash;in a
-unity which is strange to them. Nor is it before all; for
-it is not different from the all in actual existence, since
-otherwise it would again be only something thought.<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> The
-later unity, as regulative of the Reason, has the force of a
-subjective principle; but Plotinus establishes it as the
-highest objectivity, as Being.</p>
-
-<p>This unity has no multiplicity in it, or multiplicity is not
-implicit; unity is only as it was for Parmenides and Zeno,
-absolute, pure Being; or else the absolute Good, in the
-sense in which the absolute was spoken of in the writings
-of Plato and especially in those of Aristotle. In the first
-place, what is the Good?&mdash;“It is that on which all depends
-(ἀνήρτηται),<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> and which all things desire (ἐφίεται)”&mdash;also
-according to Aristotle&mdash;“and have as principle, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>which they are all in want of, while itself it has lack of
-nothing, is sufficient for itself, and is the measure and
-limit of all, which out of itself gives the νοῦς and essence
-(οὐσίαν) and soul and life, and the activity of reason (περὶ
-νοῦν ἐνήργειαν). And up to this point all is beautiful,
-but <i>it</i> is more than beautiful (ὑπέρκαλος) and better than
-the best (ἐπέκεινα τῶν ἀρίστων), the superlatively good,
-bearing free rule, exercising royal rights in Thought
-(βασιλεύων ἐν τῷ νοητῷ). But it is itself by no means that
-whose principle it is. For when thou hast said “the
-Good,” add nothing thereto, and think of nothing beyond.
-When thou hast abrogated Being itself, and takest it in
-this wise, astonishment will seize thee; and, making this
-thy aim and resting therein, thou wilt understand it and
-its greatness by what is derived from it. And when thou
-hast Being thus before thee, and regardest it in this purity,
-wonder will lay hold of thee.”<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></p>
-
-<p>Of absolute Being Plotinus then asserted that it is unknowable&mdash;which
-Philo also said&mdash;and that it remains in
-itself. On this point Plotinus expatiates at great length,
-and frequently recurs to the fact that the soul must really
-first attain to the thought of this unity through negative
-movement, which is something different from mere assertion,
-and is rather sceptical movement which makes trial of
-all predicates and finds nothing except this One. All such
-predicates as Being and substance do not conform to it in
-the opinion of Plotinus; for they express some determination
-or other. There is no sensation, no thought, no consciousness;
-for in all these there lies a distinction. Because
-the determination of the One is the main point, with
-Plotinus the Good is the aim for subjective thought
-as well as for practical; but although the Good is the
-absolutely free, it is nevertheless without resolution and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>will; for will has in it the distinction of itself and the
-Good.<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a></p>
-
-<p>That Being is and remains God, and is not outside of
-Him, but is His very self: “Absolute unity upholds things
-that they fall not asunder; it is the firm bond of unity in
-all, penetrating all&mdash;bringing together and unifying things
-which in mutual opposition were in danger of separation.
-We term it the One and the Good. It neither <i>is</i>, nor is it
-something, nor is it anything, but it is over all. All these
-categories are negatived; it has no magnitude, is not
-infinite. It is the middle point of the universe, the eternal
-source of virtue and the origin of divine love, around which
-all moves, by which every thing directs its course, in
-which νοῦς and self-consciousness ever have their beginning
-and their end.”<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> To this substance Plotinus leads back
-everything; it alone is the true, and in all remains simply
-identical with itself.</p>
-
-<p>But out of this First all proceeds, owing to its revealing
-itself; that is the connection with creation and all production.
-But the Absolute cannot be conceived as creative, if it is
-determinate as an abstract, and is not rather comprehended
-as the One which has energy in itself. This transition
-to the determinate is thus not made by Plotinus philosophically
-or dialectically, but the necessity of it is expressed in
-representations and images. Thus he says (Ennead. III.
-l. 8, c. 9) of the νοῦς, his second principle, “The one absolute
-Good is a source which has no other principle, but is
-the principle for all streams, so that it is not swallowed up
-by these, but as source remains at rest in itself,” and thus
-contains these streams as such in itself; so that they, “flowing
-out in one direction and another, have yet not flowed
-away, but know whence and whither they are flowing.”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>This distinction is the point to which Plotinus often returns,
-and this advance from the unrevealed to the revelation, this
-production, is a point of importance.</p>
-
-<p>b. Now what is first begotten by this Unity, the Son,
-is finite understanding (νοῦς), the second Divine Being,
-the other principle. Here the main difficulty confronts
-us&mdash;the task known and recognized long years ago&mdash;the
-comprehension of how the One came to the decision to
-determine itself; and the endeavour to elucidate this fact
-still constitutes the essential point of interest. The ancients
-did not frame this question in the definite form in which
-we have it; but they nevertheless occupied themselves with
-it. For the νοῦς is nothing more or less than the self-finding
-of self; it is the pure duality (δυάς), itself and its
-object; it contains all that is thought, it is this distinction,
-but pure distinction that remains at the same time identical
-with itself. Simple unity is, however, the First. Plotinus
-thus also says in a somewhat Pythagorean fashion that
-things are as numbers in this λόγος. “But number is not
-the First, for unity is not a number. The first number is
-the two, but as indeterminate duality; and the one is what
-determines it; the two is also the soul. Number is the
-solid; what sensuous perception takes to be existent, is a
-later development.”<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a></p>
-
-<p>Plotinus has here (Ennead. V. l. 1, c. 6) all sorts of modes
-of representation in order to make clear to himself the
-development out of the One: “How then this process is
-accomplished, how out of unity proceed two and plurality
-in general&mdash;if we would know how to express this, we
-must call on God, not, however, with audible voice, but
-pouring out our soul in prayer to Him; this we can do
-only by coming all alone to Him who is alone. He who
-contemplates must retire into his secret heart as into a
-temple, and remain there at rest, being elevated above all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span>things, and in such contemplation as admits of no change.”
-This is always the mood of the thinking soul, to which
-Plotinus exhorts and would lead everything back. In this
-pure thought or contemplation the νοῦς is actual; and this
-is divine activity itself.</p>
-
-<p>Plotinus continues: “This production is not a movement
-nor a change; change and what comes to pass through
-change, the changeable, we arrive at only in the third
-place;” change implies other-Being and is directed to
-something else, νοῦς is still the remaining at home with
-self of meditation. “The finite understanding originating
-thus from absolute essence, yet without change, is the immediate
-reflection of the same; it is not established by an
-act of will or a resolution. But God,” as One, the Good,
-“is the immovable; and production is a light proceeding
-from Him who endures. The One sheds light round about
-Himself; the finite understanding flows from Him, the
-enduring one, just as the light from the sun encircles it.
-All things which are permanent give forth and diffuse
-from their substance an essence which is dependent upon
-them;” or, as Plotinus really says, it is identical with
-them. “As fire diffuses warmth, and snow cold, around
-itself, but especially as the fragrance of things clings
-round them,” so does νοῦς, like light, diffuse Being around.
-“That which has come to perfection passes into the
-emanation, into the circle of light,” spreads a fragrance
-around.<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> For this going forth (πρόοδον) or production,
-Plotinus also employs the image of overflowing, whereby,
-however, the One remains simply one. “Because it is
-complete in itself, without anything lacking, it overflows;
-and this overflow is what is produced. This that is produced
-merely, however, returns to the One,” the Good,
-“which is its object, content and fulfilling; and this is
-finite understanding,”&mdash;this the reversion of what is produced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>
-to the original unity. “The first state of Being that
-is restful is absolute essence, and finite understanding is
-the contemplation of this essence;” or it comes into existence
-by means of the first essence, through return upon
-itself, seeing itself, by its being a seeing seeing. The light
-shed around is a contemplation of the One; this reflection
-of self on self (ἐπιστρέφειν) is then thought, or the νοῦς is
-this movement in a circle (ἐπιστροφή).<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a></p>
-
-<p>These are the main principles of Plotinus; and he has in
-this way truly determined the nature of the Idea in all its
-moments. Only there is a difficulty here which makes us
-pause; and it is found in this development. We can
-imagine the infinite disclosing itself in a variety of ways;
-in later times there has been much talk of an issuing-forth
-from God, which, however, is still a sensuous conception
-or something quite immediate. The necessity of
-self-disclosure is not expressed thereby, for it is stated
-only as something having come to pass. That the Father
-begets the eternal Son satisfies the imagination; the Idea
-is according to its content quite correctly conceived as the
-Trinity, and this is an important matter. But although
-these determinations are true, the form of the immediacy of
-movement is at the same time neither sufficient nor satisfying
-for the Notion. For because the Becoming of the
-simple unity, as the abrogation of all predicates, is that
-same absolute negativity which is implicitly the production
-of itself, we must not begin with unity and only then pass
-over into duality, but we must grasp them both as one.
-For, according to Plotinus, the object of the finite understanding
-is clearly nothing which is alien or opposite to
-this or to itself; the manifold Ideas are alone the content
-of the same. God therefore through distinction and extension
-is likewise a return to Himself, that is, this very
-duality is simply in the unity, and is its object. What is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>
-thought is not outside of νοῦς in thought νοῦς merely
-possesses itself as thinking. The object of thought, that
-to which thought turns back, is absolute unity; into this,
-however, as such, there is no forcing a way, and it is not
-determined, but remains the unknown. Since thinking is,
-however, only the fact of having itself as object, it has
-thus already an object which contains mediation and
-activity, or, to speak generally, duality in itself. This is
-Thought as the thought of Thought. Or in the perfecting
-of this thought in itself, inasmuch as it is its own object,
-there lies for Plotinus the first and truly intellectual world,
-which thus stands to the world of sense in such a relation
-that the latter is only a distant imitation of the former.
-Things, looked at as they exist in this absolute Thought,
-are their own Notions and essence (λόγοι); and these are
-the patterns of sensuous existences, as Plato also expressed
-it.<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a></p>
-
-<p>That the nature of thought is to think itself, is a quite
-Aristotelian definition. But with Plotinus and the Alexandrians
-it is likewise the case that the true universe, the
-intellectual worlds is produced from thought; what Plato
-termed the Ideas, is here the understanding that forms,
-the intelligence that produces, which is actual in that
-which is produced, and has itself as object, thinks itself.
-Of the relation of these many Notions in the understanding,
-Plotinus states that they are present there, just as
-the elements are present in a thing, and therefore not as
-mutually indifferent species, but as being diverse and yet
-entirely one. They are not indifferent through space, but
-only differ through an inner difference, that is, not in the
-manner of existent parts.<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> The finite understanding is
-thereby expressed as negative unity. But it is utterly inappropriate
-when the relation of the elements which constitute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>
-a thing is defined as that of the parts of which the
-whole consists, and each of which is absolute&mdash;for instance,
-when it is represented that in a crystal, water, flint, &amp;c.,
-are still present as such. Their Being is really neutrality,
-in which each of them is abrogated as indifferent and
-existent: therefore their unity is negative unity, the inner
-essence, the principle of individuality as containing in
-itself elements that differ.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> The world that changes, which is subject to difference,
-arises from this, that the multiplicity of these forms is not
-only implicitly in the understanding, but they also exist for it
-in the form of its object. Further, there is for it a three-fold
-mode of thinking: in the first place it thinks the unchangeable,
-its unity, as object. This first mode is the simple undifferentiated
-contemplation of its object, or it is light; not
-matter, but pure form, activity. Space is the abstract pure
-continuity of this activity of light, not the activity itself, but
-the form of its uninterruptedness. The understanding, as
-the thought of this light, is itself light, but light real in
-itself, or the light of light.<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> In the second place the understanding
-thinks the difference between itself and essence;
-the differentiated multiplicity of the existent is object for it.
-It is the creation of the world; in it everything has its
-determinate form in regard to everything else, and this
-constitutes the substance of things. Since, in the third
-place, substantiality or permanency in the faculty of thought
-is determination, its production, or the flowing out of all
-things from it, is of such a nature that it remains filled
-with all things, or likewise absorbs all immediately. It is
-the abrogation of these differences, or the passing over from
-one to another; this is its manner of thinking itself, or it is
-object to itself in this fashion. This is change; thinking
-has thus the three principles in it. Inasmuch as νοῦς
-thinks of itself as changing, but yet in change remaining<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span>
-simple and at home with itself, the subject of its thought is
-life as a whole; and the fact of its establishing its moments
-as existing in opposition to each other is the true, living
-universe. This turning round on itself of the outflow from
-itself, this thinking of itself, is the eternal creation of the
-world.<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> It is plain that in these thoughts of Plotinus the
-Being-another, the foreign element, is abrogated, existent
-things are implicitly Notions. The Divine understanding is
-the thinking of them, and their existence is nothing else
-than this very fact of their being the object of thought of
-the Divine understanding; they are moments of thought
-and, for this very reason, of Being. Plotinus thus distinguishes
-in νοῦς thinking (νοῦς), the object thought of
-(νοητόν), and thought (νόησις), so that νοῦς is one,
-and at the same time all; but thought is the unity of
-what had been distinguished.<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> We would term thought
-not so much unity as product; yet even thought, that
-is, the subject, soars upwards to God. The distinction
-between thought and an external God is thus doubtless at
-an end; for this reason the Neo-Platonists are accused of
-being visionaries, and in truth they do themselves propound
-wondrous things.</p>
-
-<p>α. Plotinus now goes on to describe the third principle,
-the soul: “Νοῦς is eternally active in exactly the same
-way as now. The movement to it and around it is the
-activity of the soul. Reason (λόγος), which passes from it
-to the soul, confers on the soul a power of thought, placing
-nothing between them. Thinking (νοῦς) is not a manifold;
-thinking is simple, and consists in the very fact of thinking.
-The true νοῦς (not ours, as it is found, for instance, in desire)
-thinks in thoughts, and the object of its thought is
-not beyond it; for it is itself the object of its thought, has
-of necessity itself in thought and sees itself; and sees itself
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>not as non-thinking, but as thinking. Our soul is partly in
-the eternal” (light), “a part of the universal soul; this itself
-is in part in the eternal, and flows out thence, remaining in
-contemplation of itself, without any designed regulation. The
-embellishment of the whole gives to every corporeal object
-what in view of its determination and nature it is capable
-of carrying out, just as a central fire diffuses warmth all
-around it. The One must not be solitary, for were it so all
-things would be hidden, and would have no form present
-in them; nothing of what exists would exist if the One stood
-by itself, neither would there be the multitude of existent
-things, produced by the One, if those who have attained to
-the order of souls had not received the power to go forth.
-Similarly souls must not exist alone, as if what is produced
-through them should not appear, for in every nature it is immanent
-to make and bring to light something in conformity
-with itself, as the seed does from an undivided beginning.
-There is nothing to prevent all from having a share in the
-nature of the Good.”<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> Plotinus leaves the corporeal and
-sensuous on one side, as it were, and does not take pains
-to explain it, his sole and constant aim being to purify
-therefrom, in order that the universal soul and our soul
-may not be thereby endangered.</p>
-
-<p>β. Plotinus speaks, moreover, of the principle of the sensuous
-world, which is matter, and with which the origin of
-evil is closely connected. He dwells much on this subject
-of matter in his philosophy. Matter is the non-existent
-(οῦκ ὄν), which presents an image of the existent.
-Things differ in their pure form, the difference that distinguishes
-them; the universal of difference is the negative,
-and this is matter. As Being is the first absolute unity,
-this unity of the objective is the pure negative; it lacks all
-predicates and properties, figure, &amp;c. It is thus itself a
-thought or pure Notion, and indeed the Notion of pure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>
-indeterminateness; or it is universal potentiality without
-energy. Plotinus describes this pure potentiality very
-well, and defines it as the negative principle. He says,
-“Brass is a statue only in potentiality; for in what is not
-permanent, the possible, as we have seen, was something
-utterly different. But when the grammarian in potentiality
-becomes the grammarian in actuality, the potential is the
-same as the actual. The ignorant man may be a grammarian,
-as it were by accident (κατὰ συμβεβηκός), and it is not in
-virtue of his present ignorance that he has the possibility of
-knowledge. It is for the very reason of its possessing
-a certain measure of knowledge that the soul which is
-actual attains to what it was potentially. It would not
-be inappropriate to give the name of form and idea to
-energy, in so far as it exists as energy and not as mere
-potentiality&mdash;not simply as energy, but as the energy of
-something determinate. For we might give the name
-more properly, perhaps, to another energy, namely that
-which is opposed to the potentiality which leads to actuality,
-for the possible has the possibility of being something else
-in actuality. But through possibility the possible has also
-in itself actuality, just as skill has the activity related
-thereto, and as bravery has brave action. When in the
-object of thought (ἐν τοῖς νοηντοῖς)<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> there is no matter,&mdash;as
-in the case of something existing in potentiality&mdash;and it
-does not become something that does not yet exist, nor
-something that changes into something else, nor something
-that&mdash;itself permanent&mdash;produces another, or emerging
-from itself permits another to exist in its place&mdash;in that
-case we have then no mere potential but the existent, which
-has eternity and not time. Should we consider matter to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>be there as form, as even the soul, although a form, is matter
-in respect to what is different? But, speaking generally,
-matter is not in actuality, it is what exists in potentiality.
-Its Being only announces a Becoming, so that its Being
-has always to do with future Being. That which is in
-potentiality is thus not something, but everything;” energy
-alone is determinate. “Matter consequently always leans
-towards something else, or is a potentiality for what follows;
-it is left behind as a feeble and dim image that cannot take
-shape. Is it then an image in respect to reality, and therefore
-a deception? This is the same as a true deception,
-this is the true non-existent;” it is untrue by reason of
-energy. “That is therefore not existent in actuality which
-has its truth in the non-existent;” it exists not in truth,
-for “it has its Being in non-Being. If you take away from
-the false its falseness, you take away all the existence that
-it has. Similarly, if you introduce actuality into that
-which has its Being and its essence in potentiality, you
-destroy the cause of its substance (ὑποστάσεως), because
-Being consisted for it in potentiality. If we would therefore
-retain matter uninjured, we must keep it as matter;
-apparently we must therefore say that it is only in potentiality,
-in order that it may remain what it is.”<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a></p>
-
-<p>In accordance with this, therefore, Plotinus (Ennead. III.
-l. 6, c. 7, 8) defines it: “Matter is truly non-existent, a
-motion which abrogates itself, absolute unrest, yet itself at
-rest&mdash;what is opposed in itself; it is the great which is
-small, the small which is great, the more which is less, the
-less which is more. When defined in one mode, it is really
-rather the opposite; that is to say, when looked at and
-fixed, it is not fixed and escapes, or when not fixed it is
-fixed&mdash;the simply illusory.” Matter itself is therefore imperishable;
-there is nothing into which it can change.
-The Idea of change is itself imperishable, but what is implied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>
-in this Idea is changeable. This matter is nevertheless
-not without form; and we have seen that the finite
-understanding has a third relationship to its object, namely
-in reference to differences. As now this relation and
-alteration, this transition, is the life of the universe, the
-universal soul of the same, its Being is in like manner not
-a change which takes place in the understanding, for its
-Being is its being the immediate object of thought through
-the understanding.</p>
-
-<p>γ. The Evil likewise, as contrasted with the Good, now
-begins to be the object of consideration, for the question of
-the origin of evil must always be a matter of interest to the
-human consciousness. These Alexandrians set up as matter
-the negative of thought, but since the consciousness of the
-concrete mind entered in, the abstract negative is apprehended
-in this concrete fashion as within the mind itself,
-therefore as the mentally negative. Plotinus regards this
-question of evil from many sides; but thoughtful consideration
-of this subject does not yet go very far. The following
-conceptions are those that prevail at this time: “The
-Good is νοῦς, but not the understanding in the sense it used
-to bear for us, which from a pre-supposition both satisfies
-itself and understands what is said to it, which forms a
-conclusion and from what follows draws up a theory, and
-from the consequence comes to a knowledge of what is, having
-now obtained something not formerly possessed; for before
-this its knowledge was empty, although it was understanding.
-But νοῦς, as we now understand it, contains all things in
-itself, is all things, and is at home with itself; it has all
-things while not having them,” because it is in itself ideal.
-“But it does not possess all in the sense in which we regard
-what we possess as something different or alien from ourselves;
-what is possessed is not distinguished from itself.
-For it is each thing and everything and not confounded,
-but absolute. What partakes of the same does not partake
-of all things at once, but partakes in so far as it can. Νοῦς<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>
-is the first energy and the first substance of the soul, which
-has activity in regard thereto. The soul, externally revolving
-round νοῦς, contemplating it and gazing into its depths,
-beholds God by means of it; and this is the life of the
-gods, free from evil and filled with blessedness”&mdash;in so far
-as the intelligence which goes forth from itself has in its
-difference to do only with itself, and remains in its divine
-unity. “If it remained thus constant there would be no
-evil. But there are goods of the first and second and third
-rank, all surrounding the King over all; and He is the
-originator of all good, and all is His, and those of the second
-rank revolve round the second, and those of the third round
-the third. If this is the existent and something even higher
-than the existent, evil is not included in what is existent
-or higher than the existent; for this is the good. Nothing
-remains then but that evil, if it exists, is in the non-existent,
-as a form of the non-existent&mdash;but the non-existent not as
-altogether non-existent, but only as something other than
-the existent.” Evil is no absolute principle independent
-of God, as the Manichæans held it to be. “It is not non-existent
-in the same way that motion and rest are existent,
-but is like an image of the existent, or non-existent in an
-even greater degree; it is the sensuous universe.”<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a>. Thus
-evil has its root in the non-existent.</p>
-
-<p>In the eighth book of the first Ennead Plotinus says
-(c. 9, 3, 4, 7): “But how is evil recognized? It is owing
-to thought turning away from itself that matter arises; it
-exists only through the abstraction of what is other than
-itself. What remains behind when we take away the Ideas
-is, we say, matter; thought accordingly becomes different,
-the opposite of thought, since it dares to direct itself on
-that which is not within its province. Like the eye turning
-away from the light in order to see the darkness which in
-the light it does not see&mdash;and this is a seeing which yet is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span>
-non-seeing&mdash;so thought experiences the opposite of what it
-is, in order that it may see what is opposed to itself.” This
-abstract other is nothing but matter, and it is also evil; the
-seeing of the less measure is nothing but a non-seeing.
-“The sensuous in regard to measure, or the limited, is the
-less measure, the boundless, the undefined, unresting, insatiable,
-the utterly deficient; such is not accidental to it, but
-its substance.” Its aim is always Becoming; we cannot
-say that it is, but only that it is always about to be. “The
-soul which makes νοῦς its aim is pure, holds off matter and all
-that is indeterminate and measureless. But why then, when
-there is the Good, is there also necessarily Evil? Because
-there must be matter in the whole, because the whole
-necessarily consists of opposites. It would not be there,
-if matter were not present; the nature of the world is compounded
-of νοῦς and necessity. To be with the gods means
-to be in thought; for they are immortal. We may also
-apprehend the necessity of evil in this wise: As the Good
-cannot exist alone, matter is a counterpart to the Good,
-necessary to its production. Or we might also say that Evil
-is that which by reason of constant deterioration and decay
-has sunk until it can sink no lower; but something is necessary
-after the first, so that the extreme is also necessary.
-But that is matter, which has no longer any element of good
-in it; and this is the necessity of evil.”</p>
-
-<p>With Plotinus, as with Pythagoras, the leading of the
-soul to virtue is also an important subject. Plotinus has
-for this reason blamed the Gnostics frequently, especially
-in the ninth book of the second Ennead (c. 15), because
-“they make no mention at all of virtue and the Good, nor
-of how they may be reached, and the soul rendered better
-and purer. For no purpose is served by saying,<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> ‘Look
-unto God;’ it must also be shown how we can succeed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>in causing man thus to behold God. For it may be
-asked, What is to prevent a man from beholding, while at
-the same time he refrains from the gratification of no
-desire, and allows anger to take possession of him? Virtue,
-which sets a final end before itself and dwells in the soul
-with wisdom, manifests God; but without true virtue God
-is an empty word.” The Gnostics limit truth to the mental
-and intellectual; to this mere intellectuality Plotinus declares
-himself distinctly opposed, and holds firmly to the essential
-connection of the intelligible and the real. Plotinus
-honoured the heathen gods, attributing to them a deep
-meaning and a profound efficacy. He says in the same
-treatise (c. 16), “It is not by despising the world and the
-gods in it, and all else that is beautiful, that man attains to
-goodness. The wicked man holds the gods in contempt,
-and it is only when he has completely reached this stage
-that he becomes utterly depraved. The above-mentioned
-reverence of the Gnostics for the intelligible gods (νοητοὺς
-θεούς) is nothing corresponding with this (ἀσυμπαθὴς ἂν
-γένοιτο):” that is to say, there is no harmony between
-thoughts and the real world, when one does not go beyond
-the object of thought. “He who loves anything loves also
-all things related to the same, therefore also the children of
-the father whom he loves. Every soul is the daughter of
-this father. But souls in the heavenly spheres are more
-intelligible, and better, and far more nearly related to the
-higher Power than our souls are. For how could this
-world of reality be cut off from that higher sphere? Those
-who despise that which is related thereto know it only in
-name. How could it be pious to believe that Divine providence
-(πρόνοια) does not reach to matters here below? Why
-is God not also here? For how otherwise could He know
-what takes place within this sphere? Therefore He is
-universally present, and is in this world, in whatever way
-it be, so that the world participates in Him. If He is at a
-distance from the world, He is at a distance also from us,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>
-and you could say nothing of Him or of what He produces.
-This world also partakes of Him, and is not forsaken by
-Him, and never will be so. For the whole partakes of the
-divine much more than the part does, and the world-soul
-shares in it to a still greater degree. The Being and the
-rationality of the world are a proof of this.”</p>
-
-<p>In this we have the main ideas on which the intellectualism
-of Plotinus is based, the general conceptions to which
-everything particular is led back; the instances in which
-this is done are often, however, figurative. What, in the
-first place, is lacking in them, as we have already remarked,
-is the Notion. Severance, emanation, effluence or process,
-emergence, occurrence, are words which in modern times
-have also had to stand for much, but in fact nothing is
-expressed by them. Scepticism and dogmatism, as consciousness
-or knowledge, establish the opposition of subjectivity
-and objectivity. Plotinus has rejected it, has
-soared upwards into the highest region, into the Aristotelian
-thought of Thought; he has much more in common with
-Aristotle than with Plato, and thereby he is not dialectic,
-nor does he proceed out of himself, nor as consciousness
-does he go back out of himself into himself again. With
-this, in the second place, there is connected the fact that
-the further descent either to nature or to manifested consciousness,
-even when expressed as the operation of the
-higher soul, yet contains much that is arbitrary, and is
-devoid of the necessity of the Notion; for that which ought
-to be defined in Notions is expressed in many-coloured
-pictures, in the form of a reality; and this, to say the least,
-is a useless and inadequate expression. I quote one example
-only: our soul belongs not only to the sphere of the finite
-understanding, where it was perfect, happy, lacking nothing;
-its power of thought alone belongs to the first, the finite
-understanding. Its power of motion, or itself looked on as
-life, had as its source the intelligent world-soul, but sensation
-had its source in the soul of the world of sensation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
-That is to say, Plotinus makes the first world-soul to be the
-immediate activity of the finite understanding, which is an
-object to itself; it is pure soul above the sublunar region,
-and dwells in the upper heaven of the fixed stars. This
-world-soul has power to originate; from it again there flows
-an entirely sensuous soul. The desire of the individual and
-particular soul separated from the whole gives it a body;
-this it receives in the higher region of the heavens. With
-this body it obtains fancy and memory. At last it repairs
-to the soul of the sensible world; and from this it acquires
-sensation, desires, and the life that is vegetative in nature.<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a></p>
-
-<p>This declension, this further step towards the corporeality
-of the soul, is described by the followers of Plotinus as if
-the soul sank from the Milky Way and the Zodiac into the
-orbits of planets which have their place lower down, and in
-each of these it receives new powers, and in each begins
-also to exercise these powers. In Saturn the soul first
-acquires the power of forming conclusions with regard to
-things; in Jupiter it receives the power of effectiveness of
-the will; in Mars, affections and impulses; in the Sun,
-sensation, opinion, and imagination; in Venus, sensuous
-desires aiming at the particular; in the Moon, lastly, the
-power of production.<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> In such a way as this Plotinus
-makes into a particular existence for the spiritual the very
-things that he declares to be, on the one hand, intelligible
-moments. The soul which only has desires is the beast;
-that which only vegetates, which has only power of reproduction,
-is the plant. But what we spoke of above are not
-particular conditions of mind, outside of the universal spirit,
-in the world-spirit’s particular stages of its self-consciousness
-regarding itself; and Saturn and Jupiter have nothing
-further to do with it. When they in their potency are expressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span>
-as moments of the soul, this is not a whit better
-than when each of them was supposed to express a particular
-metal. As Saturn expresses lead, Jupiter tin, and so forth,
-so Saturn also expresses argumentation, Jupiter will, &amp;c.
-It is doubtless easier to say that Saturn corresponds with
-lead, &amp;c., that it is the power of drawing conclusions, or that
-it represents lead and the power of drawing conclusions, or
-anything else you like, instead of expressing its Notion, its
-essence. The above is a comparison with a thing that in
-like manner does not express a Notion, but is apparent
-to the senses, which is laid hold of out of the air, or rather
-indeed from the ground. Such representations are warped
-and false; for if we say that this is lead, we mean thereby
-the essence or the implicitness of lead, with which the soul
-has an affinity; but this is no longer the sensuous Being
-which is known as lead, nor has this moment of such a
-state any reality for the soul.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c431" id="c431">3. <span class="smcap">Porphyry and Iamblichus.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Porphyry and Iamblichus, who have already been mentioned
-as the biographers of Pythagoras (Vol. I. p. 197), are
-distinguished followers of Plotinus. The first, a Syrian,
-died in 304: the latter, likewise of Syria, in the year 333.<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a>
-Amongst other works by Porphyrius, we possess an “Introduction
-to the Organon of Aristotle on Genera, Species,
-and Judgments,” in which his logic is propounded in its principal
-elements. This work is one which has at all times
-been the text-book of Aristotelian Logic, and also an
-authority from which the knowledge of its form has been
-derived; and our ordinary books of logic contain little more
-than what is found in this Introduction. The fact that
-Porphyry devoted himself to logic shows that a determinate
-form of thought was coming into favour with the Neo-Platonists;
-but this is something pertaining altogether to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span>
-the understanding and very formal. Thus we here have the
-characteristic fact that with the Neo-Platonists the logic of
-the understanding, the quite empiric treatment of the
-sciences, is found in conjunction with the entirely speculative
-Idea, and in respect of practical life with a belief in theurgy,
-the marvellous and strange: in his life of Plotinus,
-Porphyry, indeed, describes him a miracle-worker, which
-statement we, however, must set aside as appertaining to
-literature.</p>
-
-<p>Iamblichus evinces more mistiness and confusion still;
-he certainly was a teacher highly esteemed in his time, so
-that he even received the name of divine instructor; but
-his philosophic writings form a compilation without much
-specially to characterize them, and his biography of
-Pythagoras does not do much credit to his understanding.
-It was likewise in the Pythagorean philosophy that the
-Neo-Platonists gloried, and more particularly they revived
-the form of number-determination which pertains to it.
-In Iamblichus thought sinks into imagination, the intellectual
-universe to a kingdom of demons and angels with a
-classification of the same, and speculation comes down to the
-methods of magic. The Neo-Platonists called this theurgy
-(θεουργία); for in the miracle speculation, the divine Idea, is,
-so to speak, brought into immediate contact with actuality,
-and not set forth in a universal way. As to the work <i>De
-mysteriis Ægyptiorum</i>, it is not known for certain whether
-it had Iamblichus as its author or not; later on Proclus
-makes great ado concerning him, and testifies that he was
-indebted to Iamblichus for his main ideas.<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="c432" id="c432">4. <span class="smcap">Proclus.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Proclus, a later Neo-Platonist who has still to be mentioned,
-is more important. He was born in 412 at Constantinople,
-but carried on his studies and spent most of his life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span>
-with Plutarchus in Athens, where he also died in 485. His
-life is written by Marinus, in a style similar to that of the
-biographies just mentioned. According to this his parents
-came from Xanthus in Lycia, a district of Asia Minor; and
-since Apollo and Minerva were the tutelary deities of this
-town, he rendered grateful worship to them. They, themselves,
-vouchsafed to him, as their favourite, particular
-regard and personal manifestations; indeed, he was healed
-of an illness by Apollo touching his head; by Minerva, however,
-he was called upon to go to Athens. First of all he
-went to Alexandria to study rhetoric and philosophy, and
-then to Athens, to be with Plutarchus and Syrianus, the
-Platonists. Here he first studied Aristotelian and then
-Platonic philosophy. Above all the daughter of Plutarchus,
-Asclepigenia, initiated him into the profound secrets of
-philosophy; she, as Marinus assures us, was the only individual
-at that time who retained the knowledge, transmitted
-to her by her father, of the mystic ceremonies and
-of the whole theurgic discipline. Proclus studied everything
-pertaining to the mysteries, the Orphic hymns, the
-writings of Hermes, and religious institutions of every
-kind, so that, wherever he went, he understood the ceremonies
-of the pagan worship better than the priests who
-were placed there for the purpose of performing them.
-Proclus is said to have had himself initiated into all the
-pagan mysteries. He himself kept all the religious festivals
-and observances pertaining to nations the most various; he
-was even familiar with the Egyptian form of worship, observed
-the Egyptian days of purification and festivals, and
-spent certain fast days in offering up prayers and praise.
-Proclus himself composed many hymns&mdash;of which we still
-possess some that are very beautiful&mdash;both in honour of
-the better known divinities and of those whose fame is
-entirely local. Of the circumstance that he&mdash;“the most
-God-fearing man”&mdash;had dealings with so many religions,
-he himself says: “It is not fitting for a philosopher to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span>
-minister (θεραπευτήν) to the worship of one town or of what
-pertains to the few, for he should be the universal hierophant
-of the whole world.” He considered Orpheus to be the originator
-of all Greek theology, and set a specially high value
-on the Orphic and Chaldaic oracles. It was in Athens that
-he taught. Of course his biographer, Marinus, relates the
-most marvellous things about him, that he brought down
-rain from heaven and tempered great heat, that he stilled
-the earthquake, healed diseases, and beheld visions of the
-divine.<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a></p>
-
-<p>Proclus led a most intellectual life; he was a profoundly
-speculative man, and the scope of his knowledge
-was very great. In his case, as also in that of Plotinus,
-the contrast between the insight of such philosophers and
-what their disciples relate of them in biographies, must
-strike one very forcibly, for of the wonders described by the
-biographers few traces are to be found in the works of the
-subjects themselves. Proclus left behind him a great number
-of writings, many of which we now possess; he was the
-author of several mathematical works which we also have,
-such as that on the Sphere. His more important philosophic
-works are the Commentaries on Plato’s Dialogues, certain of
-which have been published from time to time; that on the
-Timæus was the most famous. But several were only found
-in manuscript, and of these Cousin issued in Paris the Commentaries
-on the Alcibiades (Vols. II. III.), and the Parmenides
-(Vols. IV.-VI.) for the first time. The first volume
-of Cousin’s edition contains some writings by Proclus which
-now exist only in Latin, on Freedom, Providence, and Evil.
-Works separately published are his important writings,
-The Platonic Theology (εἰς τὲν Πλάτωνος θεολογίαν) and his
-Theological Elements (συοιχείωσις θεολογική); the latter
-short work Creuzer has had re-published, as also some of
-the before-mentioned Commentaries.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span></p>
-<p>Proclus lived, so to speak, in the worship of science. We
-cannot fail to see in him great profundity of perception, and
-greater capacity for working a matter out and clearness of
-expression than are found in Plotinus; scientific development
-also advanced with him, and on the whole he possesses
-an excellent manner of expression. His philosophy, like
-that of Plotinus, has the form of a Commentary on Plato;
-his book “On the Theology of Plato,” is in this respect his
-most interesting work. The main ideas of his philosophy
-may easily be recognized from this work, which possesses
-many difficulties for this reason in particular, that in it the
-pagan gods are considered, and philosophic significations
-derived from them. But he distinguishes himself entirely
-from Plotinus by the fact that with him the Neo-Platonic
-philosophy, as a whole, has at least reached a more systematic
-order, and also a more developed form; thus in
-his Platonic theology especially (dialectic as the work undoubtedly
-is) a more distinct progression and distinction
-between the spheres in the Idea is to be found, than is
-noticeable in Plotinus. His philosophy is an intellectual
-system; we must see how we can work it out. His way of
-putting it is not perfectly clear, but leaves much to be
-desired.</p>
-
-<p>Proclus differs first of all from Plotinus in not making
-Being his principle or purely abstract moment, but by
-beginning from unity, and for the first time understanding
-Being or subsistence as the third; thus to him everything
-has a much more concrete form. But the self-development
-of this unity is not made the necessity of the Notion with
-Proclus any more than with Plotinus; we must once for all
-give up seeking here for the Notion of disunion. Proclus
-(Theol. Plat. II. p. 95) says, “The one is in itself inexpressible
-and unknowable; but it is comprehended from its
-issuing forth and retiring into itself.” Proclus in the same
-place (pp. 107, 108) defines this self-differentiation, the
-first characteristic of unity, as a production (παράγειν), a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span>
-going forth (πρόοδος), and also as a representation or
-demonstration. The relation to difference of the unity
-which brings forth is, however, not an issuing forth from
-self, for an issuing forth would be a change, and unity
-would be posited as no more self-identical. Hence through
-its bringing forth unity suffers no loss or diminution, for it
-is the thought that suffers no deterioration through the
-creation of a determinate thought, but remains the same,
-and also receives what is brought forth into itself.<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> As far
-as this goes, the Notion is, properly speaking, no clearer
-than with Plotinus.</p>
-
-<p>What distinguishes Plotinus is his more profound study of
-the Platonic dialectic; in this way he occupies himself in his
-Platonic theology with the most acute and far-reaching
-dialectic of the One. It is necessary for him to demonstrate
-the many as one and the one as many, to show forth the
-forms which the One adopts. But it is a dialectic which to
-a greater or less extent is externally worked out, and which
-is most wearisome. But while with Plato these pure
-notions of unity, multiplicity, Being, &amp;c., appear naturally,
-and so to speak devoid of other significance than that
-which they immediately possess (for we designate them as
-universal ideas which are present in our thought), with
-Proclus they have another and higher meaning; and hence
-it comes to pass that, as we have seen (pp. 59, 60), he found
-in the apparently negative result of the Platonic Parmenides
-the nature of absolute existence particularly and expressly
-recognized. Proclus now shows, according to the Platonic
-dialectic, how all determinations, and particularly that of
-multiplicity, are resolved into themselves and return into
-unity. What to the conceiving consciousness is one of its
-most important truths&mdash;that many substances exist, or that
-the many things, each of which is termed a one, and hence
-substance, exist in truth in themselves&mdash;is lost in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span>
-dialectic, and the result ensues that only unity is true
-existence, all other determinations are merely vanishing
-magnitudes, merely moments, and thus their Being is only
-an immediate thought. But since we now ascribe no
-substantiality, no proper Being to a thought, all such
-determinations are only moments of a thing in thought.
-The objection at this point made and constantly maintained
-against the Neo-Platonists and Proclus is this, that certainly
-for thought everything goes back within unity, but that
-this is a logical unity alone, a unity of thought and not of
-actuality, and that consequently there can be no arguing
-from the formal to actuality. From this they say it by no
-means follows that all actual things are not actual substances,
-that they have not different principles independent
-of one another, and even that they are not different substances,
-each of which is separated from the other and in
-and for itself. That is to say, this contradiction always
-begins the whole matter over again when it says of actuality
-that it is something implicit, for those who do this call
-actuality a thing, a substance, a one&mdash;which last are merely
-thoughts; in short they always again bring forward, as
-something implicitly existent, that whose disappearance or
-non-implicitude has been already demonstrated.</p>
-
-<p>But in this regard Proclus displays great sagacity in a
-remark he makes on the manner in which this mode of
-production appears in the Parmenides of Plato, who shows
-in a negative way in this Dialogue that if the existence of
-unity is affirmed, the existence of multiplicity, &amp;c., must be
-denied. Respecting these negations (ἀποφάσεις) Proclus
-now says (Theol. Plat. II. pp. 108, 109) that they do not
-signify an abrogation of the content (στερητικαὶ τῶν
-ὑποκειμένων) of which they are predicated, but are the
-creation of determinatives in accordance with their opposites
-(γεννητικαὶ τῶν οἷον ἀντικειμένων). “Thus if Plato shows
-that the first is not many, this has the significance that the
-many proceed from the first; if he shows that it is not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span>
-whole, it proves that the fact of being a whole proceeds
-from it. The mode (τρόπος) of negations is thus to be taken
-as perfection which remains in unity, issues forth from
-everything, and is in an inexpressible and ineffable preponderance
-of simplicity. On the other hand, God must
-likewise be derived from these negations; else there would
-be no Notion (λόγος) of them, and also no negation. The
-Notion of the inexpressible revolves round itself, never
-resting, and it strives with itself;” <i>i.e.</i> the one implies its
-determinations ideally, the whole is contained in the one.
-Multiplicity is not taken empirically and then merely
-abrogated; the negative, as dividing, producing, and active,
-not merely contains what is privative, but also affirmative
-determinations. In this way the Platonic dialectic wins
-for Proclus a positive significance; through dialectic he
-would lead all differences back to unity. With this
-dialectic of the one and many Proclus makes much ado,
-more especially in his famous elementary doctrines. The
-submersion of everything in unity remains, however, merely
-beyond this unity, instead of which this very negativity
-must really be grasped as signifying its production.</p>
-
-<p>That which brings forth, according to Proclus, furthermore
-brings forth through a superfluity of power. There
-certainly also is a bringing forth through want; all need,
-all desire, for example, becomes cause through want; and
-its bringing forth is its satisfaction. The end here is
-incomplete, and the energy arises from the endeavour to
-complete itself, so that only in production the need becomes
-less, the desire ceases to be such, or its abstract Being-for-self
-disappears. Unity, on the other hand, goes forth out
-of itself through the superfluity of potentiality, and this
-superabundant potentiality is actuality generally: this
-reflection of Proclus is quite Aristotelian. Hence the
-coming forth of the unity consists in the fact that it
-multiplies itself, pure number comes forth; but this
-multiplication does not negate or diminish that first unity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span>
-but rather takes place in the method of unity (ἑνιαίως).
-The many partakes of the unity, but the unity does not
-partake of multiplicity.<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> The absolute unity which multiplies
-itself into many ones has consequently generated
-multiplicity as it is in these ones. Proclus makes use of a
-many-sided dialectic to show that the many does not exist
-in itself, is not the creator of the many, that everything
-goes back into unity, and thus unity is also the originator
-of the many. It is, however, not made clear how this is
-the negative relation of the one to itself; what we see
-is then a manifold dialectic, which merely passes backwards
-and forwards over the relationship of the one to the
-many.</p>
-
-<p>To Proclus an important characteristic of this progression
-is the fact that it takes place through analogy, and what
-is dissimilar to the truth is the further removed from the
-same. The many partakes of unity, but it is in a measure
-likewise not one, but dissimilar to one. But since the many
-is also similar to what produces it, it likewise has unity as
-its essence; hence the many are independent unities (ἑνάδες).
-They contain the principle of unity within themselves, for
-if as being many they are likewise different, they are, so to
-speak, only many for a third, being in and for themselves
-unities. These unities again beget others which must,
-however, be less perfect, for the effect is not exactly like
-the cause, that which is brought forth is not quite similar
-to what brings it forth. These next unities are wholes, <i>i.e.</i>,
-they are no longer real unities, unities in themselves, since
-in them the unity is only an accident. But because things
-themselves are in their synthetic nature merely wholes
-because their souls bind them together, they are dissimilar
-to the first unity, and cannot be immediately united to it.
-The abstractly conceived multiplicity is thus their mean;
-multiplicity is analogous to absolute unity, and is that which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span>unites unity with the whole universe. Pure multiplicity
-makes the different elements like one another, and hence
-unites them to unity; but things only have similarity to
-unity. Thus things that are begotten ever remove themselves
-more and more from unity, and partake of it less and
-less.<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a></p>
-
-<p>The further determination of the Idea is known as the
-trinity (τριάς). Of this Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. p. 140)
-first of all gives the abstract definition that its three forms
-are three gods, and now we have more especially to find
-out how he defined the trinity. This trinity is certainly
-interesting in the Neo-Platonists, but it is specially so in
-the case of Proclus, because he did not leave it in its abstract
-moments. For he again considers these three abstract
-determinations of the absolute, each on its own account,
-as a totality of triunity, whereby he obtains one real trinity.
-Thus in the whole there are three spheres, separated from
-one another, which constitute the totality, but in such a
-way that each has again to be considered as complete and
-concrete in itself; and this must be acknowledged as a
-perfectly correct point of view which has been reached.
-Because each of these differences in the Idea, as remaining
-in unity with itself, is really again the whole of these
-moments, there are different orders in production; and the
-whole is the process of the three totalities establishing
-themselves in one another as identical. It will be shown
-directly which orders these are, and Proclus occupies himself
-much with these, because he tries to demonstrate the
-different powers again in them. Proclus is hence much
-more detailed, and he went much further than did Plotinus;
-it may indeed be said that in this respect we find in him
-the most excellent and best that was formulated by any of
-the Neo-Platonists.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the further details of his trinity there are,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span>according to his account, three abstract moments present
-in it, which are worked out in his Platonic theology&mdash;the
-one, the infinite and the limitation; the last two we have
-likewise seen in Plato (p. 68). The first, God, is just the
-absolute unity already frequently discussed, which by itself
-is unknowable and undisclosed, because it is a mere abstraction;
-it can only be known that it is an abstraction,
-since it is not yet activity. This unity is the super-substantial
-(ὑπερούσιον), and in the second place its first production
-is the many ones (ἑνάδες) of things, pure numbers.
-In these we have the thinking principles of things, through
-which they partake of absolute unity; but each partakes of
-it only through a single individual unity, through the one,
-while souls do so through thought-out, universal unities.
-To this Proclus refers the forms of ancient mythology.
-That is to say, as he calls that first unity God, he calls
-these numerous unities of thought that flow from it, gods,
-but the following moments are likewise so called. He says,
-(Institut. theol. c. 162): “The gods are named in accordance
-with what depends upon the orders (τάξεων); hence
-it is possible to know from this their unknowable substances,
-which constitute their determinate nature. For
-everything divine is inexpressible on its own account and
-unknowable as forming part of the inexpressible one; but
-from differentiation, from change, it comes to pass that we
-know its characteristics. Thus there are gods capable of
-being known, which radiate true Being; hence true Being
-is the knowable divine, and the incommunicable is made
-manifest for the νοῦς.” But there always remains a compulsion
-to represent mythology in the determinateness of the
-Notion. These gods or unities do not correspond to the
-order of things in such a way that there are just as many
-and such unities (ἑνάδες) or gods as there are things; for
-these unities only unite things with the absolute unity.
-The third is just the limit which holds these unities (ἑνάδες)
-together, and constitutes their unity with the absolute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span>
-unity; the limit asserts the unity of the many and the
-one.<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a></p>
-
-<p>This is better expressed by what follows, in which Proclus
-takes up the three fundamental principles&mdash;the limit, the
-infinite and what is mingled&mdash;of Plato’s Philebus, because
-the opposition is thus more clearly determined; and therefore
-these appear to be the original gods. But to such
-abstractions the name gods is not applicable, for it is as
-returning that we first of all see them as divine. Proclus
-says (Theol. Plat. III. pp. 133-134): “From that first
-limit (πέρας),” the absolute one, “things have (ἐξέρτηται)
-union, entirety and community,” the principle of individuality,
-“and divine measure. All separation and
-fertility and what makes for multiplicity, on the contrary,
-rest on the first infinitude (ἄπειρον);” the infinite is thus
-quantity, the indeterminate, just as Plato in the Philebus
-calls the infinite the evil, and pleasure the untrue, because
-no reason is present in it (pp. 68, 69). “Hence when we
-speak of the process of anything divine, it is implied that
-in the individuals it remains steadfastly one, and only progresses
-towards infinitude,” continuity as self-production,
-“and has at the same time the one and multiplicity present
-in it&mdash;the former from the principle of limitation, and the
-latter from the principle of infinitude. In all opposition
-which is found in species that are divine, what is more
-excellent belongs to limitation, and what is less excellent
-to the infinite. From these two principles everything
-derives its progress until it steps forth into Being. Thus
-the eternal, in so far as it is measure as intellectual, partakes
-of limitation, but in so far as it is the cause of
-unceasing effort after Being, of infinitude. Thus the understanding
-in so far as it has the standard (ραραδειγματικὰ
-μέτρα) within it, is a product of limitation; in so far as
-it eternally produces everything, it has undiminished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span>
-capacity for infinitude.” Multiplicity as Notion, not as the
-many, is itself unity; it is duality, or the determinateness
-which stands over against indeterminateness. Now
-according to Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. p. 137) the
-third is a whole, the unity of determinate and indeterminate,
-or that which is mingled (μικτόν). “This is first of
-all everything existent, a monad of many possibilities, a
-completed reality, a many in one (ἓν πολλά).” The expression
-“mingled” is not very suitable, is indeed faulty,
-because mixture at first expresses only an external union,
-while here the concrete, the unity of opposites, and even
-more the subjective, is properly speaking indicated.</p>
-
-<p>Now if we consider further the nature of what is mingled
-we find the three triads likewise, for each of those three
-abstract principles is itself a similar complete triad, but
-under one or these particular forms. Proclus says (Theol.
-Plat. III. p. 135); “The first Being (τὸ πρώτως ὄν) is the
-mingled, the unity of the triad with itself; it is the Being
-of the life as well as of the understanding. The first of
-what is mingled is the first of all existence, the life and the
-spirit are the two other orders; everything is consequently
-in triads. These three triads determine themselves thus as
-absolute Being, life and spirit; and they are spiritual and
-to be grasped in thought.” According to this only the
-intelligible world is true for Proclus. But that Proclus did
-not make the understanding proceed immediately from the
-unity, is the second point in which he differs from Plotinus;
-in this Proclus is more logical, and he follows Plato more
-closely. His sequence is excellent, and he is right in placing
-the understanding, as the richer, last, since it is not until
-after the development of the moments which are present in
-life that the understanding springs forth, and from it in
-turn the soul.<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> Proclus says (Theol. Plat. I. pp. 21, 22, 28)
-that certainly in the first unity all agree, but that Plotinus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span>
-makes the thinking nature appear just after the unity; yet the
-instructor of Proclus, who led him into all divine truth, limited
-better this indefinite way of looking at things adopted by
-the ancients, and differentiated this disorderly confusion
-of various orders into a comprehensible plan, and
-succeeded in satisfactorily following and maintaining the
-distinction of determinations. As a matter of fact we find
-more distinction and clearness in Proclus than in the turbidity
-of Plotinus; he is quite correct in recognizing the
-νοῦς as the third, for it is, that which turns back.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding the relationship of the three orders Proclus
-now expresses himself in the passage already quoted (Theol.
-Plat. III. pp. 135-136) thus: “These three are themselves
-really contained in the existent, for in it is substance,
-life, the νοῦς and<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> what is the culminating point of
-all existence (ἀκρότης τῶν ὄντων),” the individuality of the
-self, the existent on its own account, the subjective, the
-point of negative unity. “The life that is grasped by
-thought is the very centre-point of existence. But the
-understanding is the limit of the existent, and it is thought as
-known (ὁ νοητὸς νοῦς), for in what is thought is thinking, and
-in thinking what is thought. But in what is thought thinking
-is in the mode of thought (νοητῶς), in thinking what is
-thought is in the mode of thinking (νοερῶς). Substance is
-the enduring element in existence and that which is interwoven
-with the first principles and which does not proceed
-from the one.” The second, “the life, is however that
-which proceeds from the principles and is born with infinite
-capacity;” it is itself the whole totality in the determination
-of infinitude, so that it is a concrete manifold.
-“The understanding is, again, the limit which leads back
-once more to the principles, brings about conformity with
-the principle, and accomplishes an intellectual circle. Now
-since it is a three-fold in itself, in part it is the substantial
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span>in itself, in part the living, in part the intellectual, but
-everything is substantially contained in it, and hence it is
-the foremost in existence, that which is united from
-the first principles.” That is the first reality. Excellent!
-“I call it substance, since the first substance
-(αὐτοουσία) is supreme over all existence and is, so to speak,
-the monad of everything. The understanding itself is that
-which knows, but life is thinking, and Being is just what is
-thought. Now if the whole of what exists is mingled, but
-the first existence (τὸ αὐτοόν) is substance, the substance
-that comes from the three principles (ὑφισταμένε) is
-mingled. What is mingled is thus substance as thought;
-it is from God, from whom also come the infinite and limitation.
-There are thus four moments, since what is mingled
-is the fourth.” The first is the monad, the absolute one,
-then come the many which themselves are units, the infinite
-of Plato; the third is limitation. The one is clearly all-penetrating,
-remaining at home with itself, all-embracing; it
-does not thus appear as one of the three moments, for Proclus
-adds a fourth which then likewise appears as the third
-moment, since it is the totality. “This united one is not
-only derived from those principles which are according to
-the one, but it also goes forth from them and is three-fold.”
-It is one trinity and three trinities. The limit and the
-infinite are, according to Proclus (Theol. Plat. III. pp. 138,
-139), before substance and again in it; and this unity of
-moments is what comes first in all existence (πρωτίστη οὐσία).
-In the abstract trinity everything is thus contained in itself.
-Proclus says (Theol. Plat. III. pp. 139, 140): “The truly
-existent has the trinity of Beauty, Truth, and Symmetry in
-itself” (this is the way in which, like Plato, he names these
-three triads), “Beauty for order, Truth for purity, and
-Symmetry for the unity of what is joined together. Symmetry
-gives the cause that the existent is unity; Truth, that it
-is Being; Beauty, that it is thought.” Proclus shows that in
-each of the three triads, limit, the unlimited, and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span>
-which is mingled, are contained; each order is thus the
-same, but set forth in one of the three forms which constitute
-the first triad.</p>
-
-<p><i>a.</i> Proclus says (Theol. Plat. III. p. 140): “Now this is
-the first triad of all that is thought&mdash;the limit, the infinite,
-and that which is mingled. The limit is God going forth
-to the culminating point of thought from the uncommunicable
-and first God, measuring and determining everything,
-admitting all that is paternal and coherent, and the unblemished
-race of gods. But the infinite” (quantity) “is
-the inexhaustible potentiality of this God, that which makes
-all productions and orders to appear, and the whole infinitude,
-the primeval essence as well as the substantial, and
-even the ultimate matter. What is mingled is, however,
-the first and highest order (διάκοσμος) of the gods, and it is
-that which holds everything concealed in itself, completed
-in accordance with the intelligible and all-embracing triad,
-comprehending in simple form the cause of all that exists,
-and establishing in the first objects of thought the culminating
-point which is derived from the wholes.” The first
-order is thus in its culminating point the abstract substance
-in which the three determinations as such are shut up without
-development and maintained in strict isolation; this
-pure reality is in so far the undisclosed. It is the greatest
-height reached by thought and likewise really the turning
-back, as this likewise appears in Plotinus; and this first
-begets in its culminating point the second order which in
-the whole is life, and culminates in its turn in the νοῦς.</p>
-
-<p><i>b.</i> This second triad is placed in the determination of the
-infinite. On making this step forward Proclus (Theol. Plat.
-III. pp. 141, 142) breaks into a transport of bacchanalian
-ecstasy, and says, “After this first triad which remains in
-unity, let us now in hymns praise the second which
-proceeds from this, and is brought to pass through the
-abolition of that which comes before it. As the first unity
-begets the culminating point of existence, the middle unity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span>
-begets the middle existence; for it is likewise begetting
-and self-retaining.” In the second order three moments
-again appear as before: “Here the principle or the first is
-the substance which was the completion of the first triad;
-the second, which was there the infinite, is here potentiality
-(δύναμις). The unity of both these is Life (ζωή),” the centre,
-or what gives determinateness to the whole order; “the
-second existence is life as thought, for in the most external
-thought Ideas have their subsistence (ὑπόστασιν). The
-second order is a triad analogous to the first, for the second
-is likewise a God.” The relationship of these trinities is
-hence this: “As the first triad is everything, but is so
-intellectually (νοητῶς) and as proceeding immediately from
-the one (ἑνκαίως), and remaining within limits (περατοειδῶς), so
-the second is likewise everything, but in living fashion and
-in the principle of infinitude (ζωτικῶς καὶ ἀπειροειδῶς), and
-similarly the third has proceeded after the manner of what
-is mingled. Limitation determines the first trinity, the
-unlimited the second, the concrete (μικτόν) the third. Each
-determination of unity, the one placed beside the other,
-also explains the intelligible order of gods; each contains
-all three moments subordinate to itself, and each is this
-trinity set forth under one of these moments.” These
-three orders are the highest gods; later on, we find in
-Proclus (in Timæum, pp. 291, 299) four orders of gods
-appearing.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> Proclus comes (Theol. Plat. III. p. 143) to the third
-triad, which is thought itself as such, the νούς: “The third
-monad places round itself the νούς as thought, and fills it
-with divine unity; it places the middle between itself and
-absolute existence, fills this last by means of the middle and
-turns it to itself. This third triad does not resemble cause
-(κατ̓ αἰτίαν), like the first existence, nor does it reveal the
-all like the second; but it is all as act and expression
-(ἐκφανῶς); hence it is also the limit of all that is thought.
-The first triad remains concealed in limit itself, and has all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span>
-subsistence of intellectuality fixed in it. The second is
-likewise enduring, and at the same time steps forward;”
-the living appears, but is in so doing led back to unity.
-“The third after progression shifts and turns the intelligible
-limit back to the beginning, and bends the order back into
-itself; for the understanding is the turning back to what is
-thought” (to unity), “and the giving of conformity with it.
-And all this is one thought, one Idea: persistence, progression
-and return.” Each is a totality on its own
-account, but all three are led back into one. In the νοῦς
-the first two triads are themselves only moments; for spirit
-is just the grasping in itself of the totality of the first two
-spheres. “Now these three trinities announce in mystic
-form the entirely unknown (ἄγνωστον) cause of the first and
-unimparted (ἀμεθεκτοῦ) God,” who is the principle of the
-first unity, but is manifested in the three: “the one has
-inexpressible unity, the second the superfluity of all powers,
-but the third the perfect birth of all existence.” In this
-the mystic element is that these differences which are
-determined as totalities, as gods, become comprehended as
-one. The expression “mystic” often appears with the
-Neo-Platonists. Thus Proclus for example says (Theol.
-Plat. III. p. 131): “Let us once more obtain initiation
-into the mysteries (μυσταγωγίαν) of the one.” Mysticism
-is just this speculative consideration of Philosophy, this
-Being in thought, this self-satisfaction and this sensuous
-perception. However, μυστήριον has not to the Alexandrians
-the meaning that it has to us, for to them it indicates
-speculative philosophy generally. The mysteries in
-Christianity have likewise been to the understanding an
-incomprehensible secret, but because they are speculative,
-reason comprehends them, and they are not really secret,
-for they have been revealed.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, Proclus institutes a comparison between
-these triads. “In the first order the concrete is itself
-substance, in the second it is life, and in the third the thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>
-that is known.” Proclus calls substance likewise Ἑστία,
-the fixed, the principle. “The first trinity is the God of
-thought (θεὸς νοητός); the second the thought of and
-thinking (θεὸς νοητὸς καὶ νοερός)” the active; “the third
-the” pure, “thinking God (θεὸς νοερός),” who is in himself
-this return to unity in which, as return, all three are
-contained; for “God is the whole in them.” These three
-are thus clearly the absolute one, and this then constitutes
-one absolute concrete God. “God knows the divided as
-undivided, what pertains to time as timeless, what is not
-necessary as necessary, the changeable as unchangeable,
-and, speaking generally, all things more excellently than in
-accordance with their order. Whose are the thoughts, his
-also are the substances, because the thought of every man
-is identical with the existence of every man, and each is
-both the thought and the existence,” and so on.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a></p>
-
-<p>These are the principal points in the theology of Proclus,
-and it only remains to us to give some external facts. The
-individuality of consciousness is partially in the form of an
-actuality, as magic and theurgy; this often appears among
-the Neo-Platonists and with Proclus, and is called making a
-god. The element of theurgy is thus brought into relation
-with the heathen divinities: “The first and chief names of
-the gods, one must admit, are founded in the gods themselves.
-Divine thought makes names of its thoughts, and
-finally shows the images of the gods; each name gives
-rise, so to speak, to an image of a god. Now as theurgy
-through certain symbols calls forth the unenvying goodness
-of God to the light of the images of the artist, the science
-of thought makes the hidden reality of God appear through
-the uniting and separating of the tones.”<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> Thus the statues
-and pictures of artists show the inward speculative thought,
-the being replete with the divinity that brings itself into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span>
-externality; thus the consecration of images is likewise
-represented. This connecting fact&mdash;that the Neo-Platonists
-have even inspired the mythical element with the divine&mdash;is
-thereby expressed, so that in images, &amp;c., the divine
-power is present. Nevertheless I have only wished to call
-this moment to mind because it plays a great part at this
-particular time.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="c450" id="c450">5. <span class="smcap">The Successors of Proclus.</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>In Proclus we have the culminating point of the Neo-Platonic
-philosophy; this method in philosophy is carried
-into later times, continuing even through the whole of the
-Middle Ages. Proclus had several successors who were
-scholarchs at Athens&mdash;Marinus, his biographer, and then
-Isidorus of Gaza, and finally Damascius. Of the latter we
-still possess some very interesting writings; he was the
-last teacher of the Neo-Platonic philosophy in the Academy.
-For in 529 <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> the Emperor Justinian caused this school
-to be closed, and drove all heathen philosophers from his
-kingdom: amongst these was Simplicius, a celebrated commentator
-on Aristotle, several of whose commentaries are
-not yet printed. They sought and found protection and
-freedom in Persia under Chosroïs. After some time they
-ventured to return to the Roman Empire, but they could
-no longer form any school at Athens; thus as far as its
-external existence is concerned, the heathen philosophy
-went utterly to ruin.<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> Eunapius treats of this last period,
-and Cousin has dealt with it in a short treatise. Although
-the Neo-Platonic school ceased to exist outwardly, ideas
-of the Neo-Platonists, and specially the philosophy of
-Proclus, were long maintained and preserved in the
-Church; and later on we shall on several occasions refer to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span>it. In the earlier, purer, mystical scholastics we find the
-same ideas as are seen in Proclus, and until comparatively
-recent times, when in the Catholic Church God is spoken
-of in a profound and mystical way, the ideas expressed are
-Neo-Platonic.</p>
-
-<p>In the examples given by us perhaps the best of the
-Neo-Platonic philosophy is found; in it the world of
-thought has, so to speak, consolidated itself, not as though
-the Neo-Platonists had possessed this world of thought
-alongside of a sensuous world, for the sensuous world has
-disappeared and the whole been raised into spirit, and this
-whole has been called God and His life in it. Here we
-witness a great revolution, and with this the first period,
-that of Greek philosophy, closes. The Greek principle is
-freedom as beauty, reconciliation in imagination, natural
-free reconciliation that is immediately realized, and thus
-represents an Idea in sensuous guise. Through philosophy
-thought, however, desires to tear itself away from what is
-sensuous, for philosophy is the constitution of thought into
-a totality beyond the sensuous and the imaginary. Herein
-is this simple progression contained, and the points of view
-which we have noticed are, as cursorily surveyed, the
-following.</p>
-
-<p>First of all we saw the abstract in natural form: then
-abstract thought in its immediacy, and thus the one, Being.
-These are pure thoughts, but thought is not yet comprehended
-as thought; for us these thoughts are merely
-universal thoughts to which the consciousness of thought is
-still lacking. Socrates is the second stage, in which thought
-appears as self, the absolute is the thought of itself; the
-content is not only determined, <i>e.g.</i> Being, the atom, but
-is concrete thought, determined in itself and subjective.
-The self is the most simple form of the concrete, but it is
-still devoid of content; in as far as it is determined it is
-concrete, like the Platonic Idea. This content, however, is
-only implicitly concrete and is not yet known as such;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span>
-Plato, beginning with what is given, takes the more determinate
-content out of sensuous perception. Aristotle attains
-to the highest idea; the thought about thought takes the
-highest place of all; but the content of the world is still
-outside of it. Now in as far as this manifold concrete is
-led back to the self as to the ultimate simple unity of the
-concrete, or, on the other hand, the abstract principle has
-content given to it, we saw the systems of dogmatism arising.
-That thought of thought is in Stoicism the principle of the
-whole world, and it has made the attempt to comprehend
-the world as thought. Scepticism, on the other hand,
-denies all content, for it is self-consciousness, thought, in
-its pure solitude with itself, and likewise reflection on that
-beginning of pre-suppositions. In the third place the
-absolute is known as concrete, and this is as far as Greek
-philosophy goes. That is to say, while in the system of
-Stoics the relation of difference to unity is present only as
-an “ought,” as an inward demand, without the identity
-coming to pass, in the Neo-Platonist school the absolute is
-finally set forth in its entirely concrete determination, the
-Idea consequently as a trinity, as a trinity of trinities, so
-that these ever continue to emanate more and more. But
-each sphere is a trinity in itself, so that each of the abstract
-moments of this triad is itself likewise grasped as a totality.
-Only that which manifests itself, and therein retains itself
-as the one, is held to be true. The Alexandrians thus represent
-the concrete totality in itself, and they have recognized
-the nature of spirit; they have, however, neither
-gone forth from the depths of infinite subjectivity and its
-absolute chasm, nor have they grasped the absolute, or, if
-we will, abstract freedom of the “I” as the infinite value of
-the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The Neo-Platonic standpoint is thus not a philosophic
-freak, but a forward advance on the part of the human
-mind, the world and the world-spirit. The revelation of God
-has not come to it as from an alien source. What we here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span>
-consider so dry and abstract is concrete. “Such rubbish,”
-it is said, “as we consider when in our study we see
-philosophers dispute and argue, and settle things this way
-and that at will, are verbal abstractions only.” No, no;
-they are the deeds of the world-spirit, gentlemen, and
-therefore of fate. The philosophers are in so doing nearer
-to God than those nurtured upon spiritual crumbs; they
-read or write the orders as they receive them in the
-original; they are obliged to continue writing on. Philosophers
-are the initiated ones&mdash;those who have taken part
-in the advance which has been made into the inmost
-sanctuary; others have their particular interests&mdash;this
-dominion, these riches, this girl. Hundreds and thousands
-of years are required by the world-spirit to reach the
-point which we attain more quickly, because we have the
-advantage of having objects which are past and of dealing
-with abstraction.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a><br /><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a><br /><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a><br /><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. III. 1-4 (Tennemann, Vol. I. p. 416; II. p. 190).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. III. 5, 29.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Epist. VII, p. 324-326 (p. 428-431); Diog. Laërt. III.,
-5, 6, 8.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. III, 6, 7, 9, 18-21; Plat. Epist. VII., p. 326, 327
-(p. 431-433).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Epist. VII. p. 327-330 (p. 433-439); III. p. 316, 317
-(p. 410, 411).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a></span>
-This circumstance is assigned by Diogenes Laërtius, in the
-passage quoted (III. 21, 22), not to the time of Plato’s second journey
-to Dionysius the younger, <i>i.e.</i> of his third visit to Sicily, where it is
-placed by the writers of Plato’s Letters, but to the second journey of
-Plato to Sicily, which corresponds with his first visit to Dionysius
-the younger.&mdash;[Editor’s note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Epist. VII. p. 337-342 (p. 453-461), p. 344-350 (p. 466-477);
-III. p. 317, 318 (p. 411-415).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Epist. VII. p. 326 (p. 431).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a></span>
-From the lectures of 1825.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. III. 23 (Menag. ad h.l.); Ælian Var. Histor. II.
-42; Plutarch, ad principem ineruditum, init. p. 779, ed. Xyl.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. III. 2; Bruckeri Hist. Crit. Philos. Vol. I, p. 653.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a></span>
-Compare Vol. I. p. 47-53.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a></span>
-Brandis: De perditis Aristotelis libris de ideis et de bono, sive
-philosophia, p. 1-13. (Compare Michelet: Examen critique de
-l’ouvrage d’Aristote intitulé Métaphysique, 1835, p. 28-78.)&mdash;[Editor’s
-note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a></span>
-Scholia in Timæum, p. 423, 424 (ed. Bekk: Commentar crit. in
-Plat. Vol. II.).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, V. p. 471-474 (p. 257-261).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica VII. pp. 514-516 (pp. 326-328).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a></span>
-Plato De Republica, V. p. 475, 476 (p. 265, 266).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VI. 53; cf. Plato De Rep. VI. p. 508 (p. 319).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republ. V. p. 476-479 (p. 266-273).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Meno, p. 81 (p. 348, 349).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phædrus, p. 246 (p. 39, 40).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phædrus, p. 246 (p. 40).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phædrus, pp. 246-251 (pp. 40-50).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phædo, pp. 65-67 (pp. 18-23).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. p. 72 (p. 35), p. 75 (p. 41).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. pp. 78-80 (pp. 46-51).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phædo, pp. 85, 86 (pp. 62, 63), pp. 92-94 (pp. 74-80).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. pp. 110-114 (pp. 111-120).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, p. 20 <i>et seq.</i> (p. 10 <i>seq.</i>); Critias, p. 108 <i>seq.</i>
-(p. 149 <i>seq.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Vol. I. pp. 318, 319, and the remarks there made. [Editor’s
-Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a></span>
-Hegel’s Werke, Vol. VI., Pt. I, p. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Parmenides, pp. 135, 136 (pp. 21-23).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. p. 129 (pp. 9, 10).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Parmenides, p. 142 (pp. 35, 36); cf. Arist. Eth. Nicom. ed.
-Michelet, T. I. Præf. p. VII. sqq.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Parmenides, p. 166 (p. 84); cf. Zeller; Platonische Studien,
-p. 165.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Sophist, pp. 246-249 (pp. 190-196).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. p. 258 (p. 219).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Sophist. p. 259 (pp. 220, 221).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Sophist. pp. 260, 261 (pp. 222-224).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Sophist. pp. 258, 259 (pp. 218-220).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a></span>
-Cf. also Plat. Phileb. p. 14 (p. 138).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phileb. pp. 11-23 (pp. 131-156); pp. 27, 28 (pp. 166, 167).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phileb. pp. 23-30 (pp. 156-172).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Phileb. p. 33 (p. 178).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Plat. Tim. p. 34 (p. 31); p. 48 (pp. 56, 57); p. 69 (p. 96).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. p. 29 (p. 25).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, p. 30, 31 (pp. 25-27).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, pp. 31, 32 (pp. 27, 28).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus p. 32 (p. 28).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, pp. 32-34 (pp. 28-31).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, p. 35 (p. 32).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a></span>
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, pp. 35, 36 (pp. 32-34).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, p. 37 (p. 35).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, p. 48 (p. 57); pp. 37, 38 (pp. 36, 37).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a></span>
-Plat, Timæus, pp. 47-53 (pp. 55-66).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, pp. 53-56 (pp. 66-72).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus, pp. 67-70 (pp. 93-99).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Timæus pp. 70-72 (pp. 99-102).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, II., pp. 368, 369 (p. 78.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a></span>
-Following the outline here given by Plato, Hegel, in an earlier
-attempt to treat the philosophy of Justice (Werke, Vol. I. pp. 380,
-381), included in one these two classes, and later named them the
-general class (Werke, Vol. VIII. p. 267); the “other” class (as Hegel
-expresses it, in the first of the passages referred to above), which by
-Plato is not included in this, Hegel divided, however, in both his
-narratives, into the second class (that of city handicraftsmen), and
-the third (that of tillers of the soil).&mdash;[Editor’s note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a></span>
-Plat. de Republica, II. pp. 369-376 (pp. 79-93); III. p. 414
-(pp. 158, 159).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, V. p. 463, (p. 241,); p. 460 (p. 236).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, IX. pp. 427, 428 (pp. 179-181).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. IV. pp. 428, 429 (pp. 181, 182).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. pp. 429, 430 (pp. 182-185).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 430-432 (pp. 185-188).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 432, 433 (pp. 188-191).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 437-443 (pp. 198-210).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, IV. p. 421 (pp. 167, 168).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. II. p.376-III. p. 412 (pp. 93-155); V. p. 472-VII. fin.
-(pp. 258-375).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Legibus, IV. pp. 722, 723 (pp. 367-369).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, III. pp. 412-415 (pp. 155-161.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a></span>
-Plat. De Republica, V. pp. 457-461 (pp. 230-239).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. pp. 451-457 (pp. 219-230); p. 471 (p. 257).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Hegel: On the Scientific Modes of treating Natural Law
-(Werke, Vol. I.), pp. 383-386.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a></span>
-Plat. Hippias Major, p. 292 (p. 433); p. 295 sqq. (p. 439 sqq.)
-p. 302 (pp. 455, 456).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a></span>
-In quoting the chapters of Aristotle both hitherto and in future,
-Becker’s edition is adopted; where a second number is placed in
-brackets after the first, different editions are indicated, <i>e.g.</i>, for the
-Organon, Buhle’s edition, for the Nicomachiean Ethics those of Zell
-and the editor, &amp;c.&mdash;[Editor’s note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. V. 1, 9, 12, 15; Buhle: Aristotelis vita (ante Arist.
-Opera, T. I.) pp. 81, 82; Ammonius Saccas: Aristotelis vita (ed.
-Buhle in. Arist. Op. T. I.), pp. 43, 44.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. V. 3, 4; 7, 8; Buhle: Aristotel. vita, pp. 90-92.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a></span>
-Aristotelis Opera (ed. Pac. Aurel. Allobrog, 1607), T. I., in fine:
-Aristotelis Fragmenta. (Cf. Stahr. Aristotelia, Pt. I. pp. 85-91.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a></span>
-Aulus Gellius: Noctis Atticæ, XX. 5</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. V. 5, 6; Suidas, s. v. Aristoteles; Buhle: Aristot.
-vit. p. 100; Ammon. Saccas: Arist. vit. pp. 47, 48; Menag. ad.
-Diog. Laërt. V. 2; Stahr. Aristotelia, Pt. I. pp. 108, 109; Bruckeri
-Hist. crit. phil. T. I. pp. 788, 789.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a></span>
-Strabo, XIII. p. 419 (ed. Casaub. 1587); Plutarch in Sulla, c.
-26; Brucker. Hist. crit. phil. T. I. pp. 798-800 (cf. Michelet: Examen
-critique de l’ouvrage d’Aristote, intitulé Métaphysique, pp. 5-16.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Michelet: Examen critique, &amp;c., pp. 17-23; 28-114; 199-241.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a></span>
-Gellius: Noct. Atticæ, XX. 5; Stahr: Aristotelia, Pt. I. pp
-110-112.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Metaphys. VI. 1; Physic. II. 2; I. 9. (Cf. Michelet:
-Examen critique, etc., pp. 23-27.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a></span>
-Michelet: Examen critique, pp. 115-198.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a></span>
-Not only the form which is to be abrogated, but also matter is
-spoken of by Aristotle as τι, because in truth the form which is to be
-abrogated serves only as material for the form which is to be posited;
-so that he in the first passage names the three moments ἔκ τινος,
-τι, ὑπό τινος, and in the last passage names them τι, εἴς τι, ὑπό
-τινος.&mdash;[Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a></span>
-As this explanation by Hegel of Aristotle’s celebrated passage
-has so many authorities to support it, the editor cannot here, as
-frequently elsewhere in these lectures, remain faithful to the directions
-of his colleagues, quietly to set right anything that is
-incorrect. It is, nevertheless, clear that Aristotle is speaking of
-three substances: a sublunar world, which the heavens move; the
-heavens as the centre which is both mover and moved; and God,
-the unmoved Mover. The passage must therefore, on the authority
-of Alexander of Aphrodisias (Schol. in Arist. ed. Brandis, p. 804 <i>b</i>),
-of Cardinal Bessarion (Aristoteles lat. ed. Bekk. p. 525 <i>b</i>) and
-others, be thus read: ἔστι τοίνυν τι καὶ ὃ κινεῖ (sc. ὁ οὐρανός)· ἐπεὶ δε
-τὸ κινούμενον καὶ κινοῦν καὶ μέσον τοίνυν, ἔυτι τι ὃ οὐ κινούμενον
-κινεῖ. The translation, if this reading be adopted, would be as
-follows: Besides the heavens in perpetual motion “there is something
-which the heavens move. But since that which at the same
-time is moved and causes movement cannot be other than a centre,
-there is also a mover that is unmoved.” (Cf. Michelet: Examen
-critique, etc., p. 192; Jahrbücher für wisseuschaftliche Kritik,
-November, 1841, No. 84, pp. 668, 669). [Editor’s note]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a></span>
-συστοιχία is a good word, and might also mean an element which
-is itself its own element, and determines itself only through itself.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a></span>
-The word τὸ εἶναι, when it governs the dative (τὸ εἶναι νοήσεί καὶ
-νοουμένῳ) invariably expresses the Notion, while, when it governs
-the accusative, it denotes concrete existence. (Trendelenburg:
-Comment, in Arist. De anima, III. 4, p. 473.) [Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a></span>
-Aristotle here distinguishes four determinations: what is moved
-in capacity, or the movable [das Bewegbare] (κινητόν); what is
-moved in actuality (κινούμενον); the moving in capacity (κινητικόν),
-or what Hegel calls the motive [das Bewegliche]; the moving in
-actuality (κινοῦν). It might have been better to translate κινητόν by
-motive [Beweglich] and κινητικόν by mobile [Bewegerisch].&mdash;[Editor’s
-note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a></span>
-While above (p. 164) we must take the expression τὸ εἶναι as
-immediate existence because it is opposed to the Notion, here it has
-the meaning of Notion, because it stands in opposition to immediate
-existence (καὶ οὺ χωριστὴ μὲν ὕλη, δ̓ εἶναι, καὶ μία τῷ
-ἀριθμῷ). Cf. Michelet: Comment. in Arist. Eth. Nicom. V. I., pp.
-209-214.&mdash;[Editor’s note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a></span>
-Here τὸ εἶναι has again the signification of Notion, as above
-(p. 169), because in the preceding words (ἔστι δὲ ταὐτὸ καὶ κατὰ ταὐτὸ ἡ
-διαίρεσις καὶ ἥ ἕνωσις) immediate existence is expressed.&mdash;[Editor’s
-note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a></span>
-The editor has considered himself justified in adopting this
-rendering, which was commonly used by the Scholastics, and revived
-by Leibnitz. (Cf. Michelet, Examen Critique, &amp;c., pp. 165, 261,
-265.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a></span>
-Here and once again on this page τὸ εἶναι is the immediate existence
-of the separate sides of sense-perception, therefore their mere
-potentiality; while, on the other hand, the active unity of the perceived
-and the percipient may be expressed as the true Notion of
-sense-perception.&mdash;[Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a></span>
-<i>Cf.</i> <i>supra</i>, p. 169, and note there given. The two significations of
-τῷ εἶναι here come into immediate contact with one another, being
-likewise intermingled; for immediate existence (ἀριθμῷ ἀδιαίρετον καὶ
-ἀχωριστον), which is opposed to the Notion (τῷ εἶναι) becomes in what
-directly follows mere possibility, to which the true reality (δυνάμει μὲν γὰρ τὸ αὐτὸ καὶ ἀδιαίρετον εἶναι) is
-opposed (δυνάμει μὲν γὰρ τὸ αὐτὸ καὶ ἀδιαίρετον τἀναντία, δ̓ εἶναι ου,
-ἀλλα τῷ ἐνεργεῖσθαι διαίρετον).&mdash;[Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Tenneman, Vol. III. p. 198.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a></span>
-While Aristotle’s reply is short, and given in the manner usually
-adopted by him, that of following up by a second question the first
-question proposed (ἢ οὐδὲ τἆλλα φαντάσματα, ἀλλʹ οὐκ ἄνευ φαντασμάτον;),
-this answer seems quite sufficient. For Aristotle’s words certainly bear
-the meaning that the original thoughts of the active understanding
-(the reason), in contradistinction to those of the passive understanding,
-have quite obliterated in themselves the element of pictorial
-conception; while in the latter this has not been thoroughly carried
-out, though even in them pictorial conception is not the essential
-moment.&mdash;[Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a></span>
-Against this we have only to remember that in Aristotle’s way of
-speaking ὕστερον and πρότερον always refer to the work they occur in,
-while he marks quotations from his other writings by the words:
-ἐν ἄλλοις, ἐν ἑτέροις, ἄλλοτε, or εἰς ἐκεῖνον τὸν καιρὸν ἀποκείσθω (De
-Ausc. phys. I. 9). And if it be said, as it may be with truth, that
-all the physical and psychological works, including the Metaphysics,
-form one great scientific system, so that ὕστερον and πρότερον may
-very well be used in relating these works to one another, I have yet
-proved that the treatise περὶ ψυχῆς must be placed much later than
-the Metaphysics (Michelet: Examen Critique, &amp;c., pp. 209-222).
-Might not then the expression ὕστερον refer to the following chapter?
-In truth, the difficulty raised at the end of the seventh chapter seems
-completely solved by the words of the eighth chapter quoted above
-(pp. 198, 199).&mdash;[Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a></span>
-See Michelet, De doli et culpæ in jure criminali notionibus;
-System der philosophischen Moral. Book II. Part I; Afzelius,
-Aristotelis De imputatione actionum doctrina.&mdash;[Editor’s Note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a></span>
-Ethic, Nicom. I. 2-12 (4-12); X. 6-8; Eth. Eudem. II. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a></span>
-Magn. Moral. I. 5, 35; Eth. Nic. I. 13; Eth. Eud. II. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a></span>
-Ethic. Nicomach. II. 5-7 (6, 7); Maga. Moral. I. 5-9; Eth.
-Eud. II. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Arist. Ethic. Nicom. I. 1 (3).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Eth. Nic. I. 1 (2).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Polit. III. 1; IV. 14-16.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. III. 7 (5)-IV. 13.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Polit. III. 13 (8-9).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a></span>
-Categor. c. 3 (c. 2, § 3-5.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a></span>
-Categor. c. 4 (c. 2, § 6-8).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a></span>
-Categor. c. 10-14 (8-11); cf. Kant, Kritik der reinen Vernunft,
-p. 79 (6th Ed.).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a></span>
-Categor. c. 5 (3).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Categor. c. 4 (2); De Interpretat. c. 4-6.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Analytic. prior. I. 1; Topic I. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a></span>
-Arist. Topic I. 13 (11) et 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. I. 16-18 (14-16); II. 7, 8, 10.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. III. 1; Buhle, Argum. p. 18.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a></span>
-Analyt. prior. II. 23 (25).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. I, 12, 31, 32, 5, 2 (IV. 6, 7), 13, 6-11, 28, 29.
-Tennemann, Vol. IV. p. 4; Vol. II. pp. 532, 534; Bruck. Hist.
-Crit. Phil. T. I. pp. 895, 897-899. (<i>Cf.</i> Fabric. Biblioth. Græc. T. II.
-p. 413), 901.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt, VII. 168, 169, 176.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 179-181, 184, 189-202; Tennemann, Vol. IV.
-p. 443.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VI. 81; Cicer. Acad. Quæst. IV. 30; De Oratore
-II. 37, 38; De Senectute, c. 7; Tennemann, Vol. IV. p. 444.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a></span>
-Cic. De Officiis III. 2; De Nat. Deor. I. 3; Suidas: s. v. Posidonius,
-T. III. p. 159.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a></span>
-Aul. Gell. Noct. Att. I. 2 (Gronovius ad h. 1.); II. 18; XV. 11;
-XIX. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a></span>
-Stob. Eclog. phys. I. p. 32.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 136, 142, 156, 157; Plutarch, de plac. philos.
-IV. 21.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 135; Stob. Eclog. phys. I. p. 178.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. IX. 101-103.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 137.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 234; Diog. Laërt. VII. 138-140,
-147, 148.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 54, 46; Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 227-230.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VIII. 403, sqq.; cf. Senec. Epist. 107.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 63; Sext. Emp. adv. Math. VIII. 70.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 79, 80, 83.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a></span>
-Cicer. De Officiis I. 3, III.; Diog. Laërt. VII. 98, 99.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 94.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 127, 128; Cicer. Paradox, 2.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a></span>
-Cicer. De finibus III. 13; Tusculan. Quæst. II. 25.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 107, 108.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a></span>
-Plutarch. De Stoicorum repugnantia, p. 1031 (ed. Xyl.); Stob.
-Eclog. ethic. P. II. p. 110 Diog. Laërt. VII. 125.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. VII. 121, 122, 116, 117, 129; Sext. Empir. adv.
-Math. XI. 190-194.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a></span>
-Tacit. Annal. XIV. 53; XIII. 42, 3.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 1-8, 10-15; Cic. De Nat. Deor. I. 26; De
-Finibus, II. 25; Bruck. Hist. Crit. Phil. T. I. pp. 1230, 1231, 1233,
-1236; Sext. Emp. adv. Math. X. 18; I. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 11, 24, 9; IV. 43; Cic. De Finib. V. 1; Euseb.
-Præp. evangel. XIV. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 26.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 31.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 31, 32.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 33.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 33, 34.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 34.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 48, 49.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 50, 51.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 54, 55.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 55-58.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 43, 44, 60, 61; Cic. De fato, c. 10; De finibus,
-l. 6; Plutarch. De animæ procreat. e Timæo, p. 1015.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 78-80, 86, 87, 93-96, 101, 97.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 113, 114.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a></span>
-Cicer. De natura Deorum, I. 20.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 66, 63, 64.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 141-143.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 122, 123, 139.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a></span>
-Cicer. De nat. Deor. I. 17, 19, 20.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a></span>
-Cicer. De divinat. II. 17; De nat. Deor. I. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 124, 125, 127.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. X. 127-132 (119, 135).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, § 220.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IV. 28-33, 36-38, 42, 44; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil.
-T. I. p. 746; Tennemann, Vol. IV. p. 443; Cic. De finib. II. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 33, § 232; Diog. Laërt. IV. 32.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 154.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 154-156.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IV. 62, 65; Tennemann, Vol. IV. pp. 334, 443, 444;
-Cicer. Acad. Quæst. II. 6; Valer. Maxim. VIII. 7, ext. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a></span>
-Plutarch. Cato major, c. 22; Gell. Noct. Attic. VII. 14; Cic. De
-orat. II. 37, 38; Aelian. Var. hist. III. 17; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil.
-T. I. p. 763.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 159, 160.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 160, 161.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 161-164, 402.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 165.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 166-169.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. 166, 167.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 173-175.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. 176, 177; 187-189; 179.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. 176, 177; 179; 187-189.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. adv. Math. VII. 181-184.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a></span>
-As it is used here and shortly afterwards, “positive philosophy”
-has quite an opposite meaning from what we have just seen it to bear
-in two previous passages (p. 329), because speculation certainly stands
-in opposition to dogmatism; and at the same time we must in Hegel
-distinguish altogether this expression in its double significance from
-the positivism so prevalent in modern times, which, merely escaping
-from the necessity for thinking knowledge, finally throws itself into
-the arms of revelation and simple faith, whether it tries to call itself
-free thought or not.&mdash;[Editor’s note.]</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a></span>
-
-Lectures of 1825-1826.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IX. 71-73; cf. Vol. I. pp. 161, 246, 284.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IX. 61-65, 69, 70; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T. I. pp.
-1320-1323.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IX. 109.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IX. 116; Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T. I. p. 1328.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a></span>
-Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 631-636.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 39, §§ 221-225.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 3, § 7; Diog. Laërt. IX. 69, 70.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a></span>
-Cf. <i>supra</i>, p. 212.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a></span>
-Diog. Laërt. IX. 68.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hypot. I. c. 8, § 17.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 40-44.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp, Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 79-82, 85-89.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 91, 92.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 100, 112.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a></span>
-Ibid, §§ 118-120.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 124-126.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. §§ 129-131, 133.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 141-144.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a></span>
-Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 14, §§ 145, 148, 149.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a></span>
-Pyrrh. Hyp. I. c. 15, §§ 164-169. (Diog. Laërt. IX. 88, 89.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a></span>
-Bruck. Hist. crit. philos. T. II. pp. 797, 799, et notæ; Phil. De
-legatione ad Cajum, p. 992 (ed. Francf. 1691): Joseph. Antiq. Jud.
-XVIII. c. 10, p. 649; Euseb. Hist, eccles. II. c. 18; <i>cf.</i> Fabric
-Biblioth. Gr. Vol. III. p. 115 (Hamburg, 1708).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a></span>
-Phil. De confusione linguarum, p. 358; De special. legib. II.
-pp. 806, 807; De mundi opificio, p. 15; De migratione Abrahami,
-pp. 393, 417, 418; Quis. rer. divin. hæres. p. 518; Quod Deus sit
-immutabilis, pp. 301, 302; De monarchia, I. p. 816; De nominum
-mutatione, p. 1045; De Cherub. p. 124; De somniis, p. 576.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a></span>
-Phil. De somniis, pp. 574, 575; Liber legis allegoriarum, I.
-p. 48; Quod Deus sit immut. p. 298.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a></span>
-Phil. De mundi opificio, pp. 4-6; De agricultura, p. 195; De
-somniis, pp. 597, 599.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a></span>
-Phil. Leg. allegor. I. p. 46, et II. p. 93; Quod deterius potiori
-insidiari soleat, p. 165; De temulentia, p. 244; De somniis, pp. 578,
-586, 588; De confus. ling. pp. 341, 345; Euseb. Præp. ev. VII.
-c. 13; Phil. De vita Mosis, III. p. 672; De sacrif. Abel., p. 140.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a></span>
-Buhle: Lehrbuch d. Gesch. d. Phil. Pt. IV. p. 124; Phil. De
-mundi opificio, p. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a></span>
-Phil. De mund. opific. p. 4; De victimas offerentibus, p. 857
-(Buhle, ibid. p. 125).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a></span>
-De mundi opificio, pp. 5, 6 (Brucker Hist. crit. phil. Tom. II.
-pp. 802, 803).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a></span>
-Brucker Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 834-840, 924-927.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a></span>
-Irira: Porta c\nlorum, Dissertatio I. c. 4; c. 6, § 13 et c. 7, § 2;
-IV. c. 4, sqq.; II. c. 1; V. c. 7, 8; Tiedemann: Geist der speculat.
-Philosophie, Pt. III. pp. 149, 150, 155-157; Buhle: Lehrbuch der
-Gesch. der Phil. Pt. IV. pp. 156, 162, 160, 157.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a></span>
-Neander: Genetische Entwickelung der vornehmsten gnostischen
-Systeme, pp. 10, 33, 34; Philo De nominum mutat. p. 1046.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a></span>
-Neander: Genet. Entwickelung, &amp;c., pp. 168, 170, 171.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a></span>
-Neander: Genet. Entwickelung, &amp;c., pp. 94-97.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a></span>
-Ibid. pp. 160, 10-13; Phil. Quod Deus sit immut. p. 304.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil. Pt. IV. pp. 195-200.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a></span>
-Brucker, Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 205, 213, 214.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a></span>
-Porphyrius, Vita Plotini (præmissa Ennead. Plot. Basil. 1580),
-pp. 2, 3, 5-8; Brucker, Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 218-221; Tiedemann,
-Geist d. spec. Phil. Vol. III. p. 272; Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil.
-Pt. IV. p. 306.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Plotin. Ennead. I. l. 6, c. 7; IV. l. 4, c. 39-43; Procli
-Theol. Plat. I. pp. 69, 70 (ed. Aem. Portus, Hamburg, 1618).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. IV. l. 8, c. 1; cf. <i>ibidem</i>, c. 4-7.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. III. l. 6, c. 6; VI. l. 9, c. 1, 2; III. l. 8, c. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a></span>
-This Aristotelian word, and also ἐξέρτηται (Procl. Theol. Plat.
-III. p. 133), often occur in the Neo-Platonists.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. I. l. 8: Περὶ τοῦ τίνα καὶ πόθεν τὰ κακά, c. 2 (VI. l. 9,
-c. 6); III. l. 8, c. 9, 10.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. V. l. 3, c. 13, 14; l. 2, c. 1; VI. l. 2, c. 9, 10; l. 8,
-c. 8, 9; l. 9, c. 3, VI. l. 9, c. 6; l. 8, c. 7 (13, 21).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a></span>
-Steinhart: Quæstiones de dialectica Plotini ratione, p. 21;
-Plotini Ennead. VI. l. 9, c. 1-9, <i>passim</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. III. l. 8, c. 10 fin.; IV. l. 3, c. 17; V. l. 1, c. 4, 5;
-c. 7; l. 4, c. 2; l. 5, c. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. V. l. 1, c. 6 (IV. l. 3, c. 17).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. V. l. 2, c. 1; l. 1, c. 7; VI. l. 9, c. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. V. l. 3, c. 5; VI. l. 2, c. 8; II. l. 4, c. 4; VI. l. 4,
-c. 2; V. l. 9, c. 8, 9.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. VI. l. 2, c. 2; V. l. 9, c. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. IV. l. 3, c. 17.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. V. l. 1, c. 7; l. 2, c. 1, 2; l. 6, c. 4; VI. l. 2,
-c. 22.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. V. l. 3, c. 5; ἕν ἅμα πάντα ἔσται, νοῦς, νόησις, τὸ νοητόν.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a></span>
-
-Plot. Ennead. II. l. 9, c. 1-3, 6.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a></span>
-
-If we were to translate this by “in the intelligible world,” the
-expression would be misleading; for “the world” is nowhere.
-Neither may we say, “intelligible things,” as if there were things of
-some other kind; such distinctions and definitions are nowhere
-found.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. II. l. 4, c. 4, 12-15; l. 5, c. 2-5.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a></span>
-Plot. Ennead. I. l. 8, c. 2, 3.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a></span>
-Instead of δεῖ in the sentence οὐ γὰρ δεῖ τὸ εἰπεῖν we should certainly
-read δή, or something of the kind.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a></span>
-Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil. Part IV. pp. 418, 419; Tiedemann,
-Geist. d. spec. Phil. Vol. III. pp. 421-423; cf. Plotini
-Ennead. IV. l. 3 et 8 passim.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a></span>
-Buhle, Lehrb. d. Gesch. d. Phil. Part IV. pp. 419, 420.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a></span>
-Brucker: Hist. crit. phil. T. II. pp. 248, 268.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a></span>
-Cf. Procli. Theol. Plat. III. p. 140.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a></span>
-Brucker: Hist. cr. phil. T. II. p. 320; Tennemann, Vol. VI. pp.
-284-289; Marinus: Vita Procli, passim (præm. Theol. Plat.).</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a></span>
-Procli Institutionis theologicæ, c. 26.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a></span>
-Procli Institut. theol. c. 27; Theol. Plat. III. p. 119; II.
-pp. 101, 102; III. p. 121; Institut. theol. c. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a></span>
-Procli Institut. theol. c. 1-2; c. 28; Theol. Plat. III. pp. 118,
-122-125; II. pp. 108, 109.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a></span>
-Procli Theol. Plat. III. pp. 123-124.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a></span>
-Procli Theol. Plat. III. pp. 141, 127; Instit. theol. c. 192.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a></span>
-It is doubtful whether the καὶ should not be omitted, so that
-ἡ ἁκρότης τῶν ὄντων would stand in apposition to νοῦς.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a></span>
-
-Procli Theol. Plat. III. p. 144 (VI. p. 403); Instit. theol. c. 124,
-170.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a></span>
-Procli Theol. Plat. I. pp. 69, 70.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a></span>
-Brucker: Hist. cr. phil. T. II. pp. 350, 347; Joan. Malala: Hist.
-chron. P. II. p. 187; Nic. Alemannus ad Procopii anecdot. c. 26.
-p. 377.</p></div></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote p4">
-<p class="pc large">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-<p class="ptn">&mdash;Obvious print and punctuation errors were corrected.</p>
-<p class="ptn">&mdash;The transcriber of this project created the book cover
-image using the title page of the original book. The image
-is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hegel's Lectures on the History of
-Philosophy: Volume Two (of 3), by Georg Wilhelm Hegel
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEGEL'S LECTURES--HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 2 ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51636-h.htm or 51636-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/6/3/51636/
-
-Produced by Giovanni Fini, Fritz Ohrenschall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/51636-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/51636-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2f786f5..0000000
--- a/old/51636-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51636-h/images/logo.jpg b/old/51636-h/images/logo.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e2d9e10..0000000
--- a/old/51636-h/images/logo.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ