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- Reference Map to Episode 057:
- (minutes 0-10min) Richard’s introductory monologue
- (minutes 10-55)
T&H Hosts Corbett Report Radio (week 2), featuring Tony Myers
and Brett Veinotte / Topic: Hegel the Individual
- Brett’s site: http://schoolsucks.podomatic.com
- Brett’s LIVE Show (Thurs. 10pm
Eastern Time): http://edu-lu-tion.com/live
- (minutes 55-1h52m) Infowars Nightly News: “The
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Sibel Edmonds conducted by Alex Jones (on YouTube)
- (1h52m-4h51m) Mae Brussell 1979 / Chronology: How the
Past Affects Our Future (on YouTube)
- (4h51m-6h13m) School Sucks Podcast episode
143: Logic Saves Lives part 1: Foundation, Attitudes, and
Values featuring Wes Bertrand of the Complete Liberty Podcast
- Wes Bertand (on Amazon):
“The
Philosophy of Liberty” (2001)
- (END)
- References & Notes for Corbett Report Radio:
Hegel the Individual
- Introduction
- 5 W’s
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (Who)
- German Philosopher (What and Where)
- August 27, 1770 – November 14, 1831
(When)
- “I believe that in the course of my own development as
a philosopher, I have recapitulated and give expression to the
“autobiography” of the Absolute.” (Why)
- Historical Context
- Timeline of released works:
- The Phenomenology of Mind (1807)
- The Science of Logic (1812)
- Philosophy of Right (1821)
- Logic: Part One -Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical
Sciences(1830)
- Philosophy of Nature: Part Two -Encyclopaedia of the
Philosophical Sciences (1817)
- Philosophy of Mind: Part Three -Encyclopaedia of the
Philosophical Sciences (1830)
- Lectures on the History of Philosophy (1833) – selections
- The Philosophy of History: Introduction (1837)
- Outlines of the Phenomenology (1840)
- Outlines of the Logic(1840)
- Sourced:
- http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/hege.htm
-
www.class.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/hegel310.htm
-
http://www.tebyan.net/Events_History/Historical_Figures/2003/8/23/25587.html
- Hegel’s Influences
- Friedrich
Hölderlin
- Idealization of Greeks – Poetry as rift between
Religion and Reason
-
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
- Jean-Jacques
Rousseau
- Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe
- Friedrich
Schiller
- French
Revolution
- Immanuel
Kant
- Critique of Pure Reason, Practical Reason, and
Judgment
- Critique
of Pure Reason asked posited the
questions:
- How do we know what we know?
- How is knowledge possible?
- What can we know?
- What can we never expect to know?
- Kantian limits to reason and knowledge
- Kant believed that he had demonstrated that we can only know
the world as it appears to us, and is experienced by us – not as it
is “in itself”. Kant had not only provided a foundation for
knowledge, he had at the same time also set limits to it. – Source:
Introduction Hegel by Lloyd Spencer and Andrzej Krauze
- The Transcendent
- Responses to Kant’s Critiques
- Johann
Gottlieb Fichte
-
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
-
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
- All sought to rectify subjective vs. objective
knowledge
- Enlightenment vs. Post Enlightenment
Thought
- Kant attacked metaphysics and sought to create an
inseparable barrier between Faith and Reason.
- Schelling and Hegel are Lutherans that ascribed to
“inner freedom”. And the French Revolution externalized that “inner
freedom”.
- German
Idealism post Kant and the
Enlightenment
-
Meaning of Idealism - The
word "idealism" has more than one meaning. The philosophical
meaning of idealism here is that the properties we discover in
objects depend on the way that those objects appear to us as
perceiving subjects, and not something they possess "in
themselves," apart from our experience of them. The very notion of
a "thing in
itself" should be understood as an option of a set of functions
for an operating mind, such that we consider something that appears
without respect to the specific manner in which it appears. The
question of what properties a thing might have "independently of
the mind" is thus incoherent for Idealism[citation
needed][clarification
needed].
- Central theme – the universe as a coherent whole and
the role freedom plays in that conception
- Differences in formulating an underlying principle to
Kant’s work
- Spinoza – Sought to show mind and matter as the same
basic substance
- Schelling – The absolute as a “neutral identity” that
underlies both the subject and the object
- Fichte – Philosophical system needs to be based on a
single underlying principle – Absolute Subjectivity – i.e. All
reality is a subjective (mind) whole
- Hegel – The Phenomenology of Spirit
- Absolute
Idealism – “Hegel. It
is Hegel's account of how being is ultimately
comprehensible as an all-inclusive whole. Hegel asserted that in
order for the thinking subject
(human reason or consciousness) to be able to know its object
(the world) at all, there must be in some sense an identity
of thought and being. Otherwise, the subject would never have
access to the object and we would have no certainty about any of
our knowledge of the world. To account for the differences between
thought and being, however, as well as the richness and diversity
of each, the unity of thought and being cannot be expressed as the
abstract identity "A=A". Absolute
idealism is the attempt to demonstrate this unity using a new
"speculative" philosophical method, which requires new concepts and
rules of logic. According to Hegel, the absolute ground of being is
essentially a dynamic, historical process of necessity that unfolds
by itself in the form of increasingly complex forms of being and of
consciousness, ultimately giving rise to all the diversity in the
world and in the concepts with which we
think and make sense of the world.
- Master-slave
dialectic - The passage describes, in
narrative form, the development of self-consciousness as such in an
encounter between what are thereby (i.e., emerging only from this
encounter) two distinct, self-conscious
beings; the essence of the dialectic is the movement or motion of
recognizing, in which the two self-consciousnesses are constituted
each in being recognized as self-conscious by the other. This
movement, inexorably taken to its extreme, takes the form of a
"struggle to the death" in which one masters the other, only to
find that such lordship makes the very recognition he had sought
impossible, since the bondsman, in this state, is not free to offer
it.It is a story or myth created by Hegel in order to explain his
idea of how self-consciousness dialectically sublates into
what he variously refers to as Absolute Knowledge, Spirit, and
Science. As a work the Phenomenology may be considered both as an
independent work, apparently considered by Hegel to be an a
priori for understanding the Science of Logic, and as a part
of the Science of Logic, where absolute knowledge is
explained.
- History as Self-Realization – Patterns where the parts
fit the whole, a fractal
- A pattern of subjective awareness of the pattern
towards freedom, both intrinsically and
extrinsically.
- The Hegelian Dialectic
- Attempted to create a new system of logic that would
supplant Aristotle’s deduction syllogism
- Dialectical Thinking –
Hegelian dialectic
- The concept of dialectics was given new life by Hegel
(following Fichte), whose dialectically dynamic model of nature and
of history made it, as it were, a fundamental aspect of the nature
of reality (instead of regarding the contradictions into which
dialectics leads as a sign of the sterility of the dialectical
method, as Kant tended to do in his Critique of Pure
Reason).[26][27] In the mid-19th century, the concept of
"dialectic" was appropriated by Marx (see, for example, Das
Kapital, published in 1867) and Engels and retooled in a
non-idealist manner, becoming a crucial notion in their philosophy
of dialectical materialism. Thus this concept has played a
prominent role on the world stage and in world history. In
contemporary polemics, "dialectics" may also refer to an
understanding of how we can or should perceive the world
(epistemology); an assertion that the nature of the world outside
one's perception is interconnected, contradictory, and dynamic
(ontology); or it can refer to a method of presentation of ideas
and conclusions (discourse).
- According to Hegel, "dialectic" is the method by which human
history unfolds; that is to say, history progresses as a
dialectical process. Hegelian dialectic, usually presented in a
threefold manner, was stated by Heinrich Moritz Chalybäus as
comprising three dialectical stages of development: a thesis,
giving rise to its reaction, an antithesis, which contradicts or
negates the thesis, and the tension between the two being resolved
by means of a synthesis. Although this model is often named after
Hegel, he himself never used that specific formulation. Hegel
ascribed that terminology to Kant.[28] Carrying on Kant's work,
Fichte greatly elaborated on the synthesis model, and popularized
it. On the other hand, Hegel did use a three-valued logical model
that is very similar to the antithesis model, but Hegel's most
usual terms were: Abstract-Negative-Concrete. Hegel used this
writing model as a backbone to accompany his points in many of his
works. The formula, Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis, does not explain
why the Thesis requires an Antithesis. However, the formula,
Abstract-Negative-Concrete, suggests a flaw in any initial
thesis—it is too abstract and lacks the negative of trial, error
and experience. For Hegel, the Concrete, the Synthesis, the
Absolute, must always pass through the phase of the Negative, that
is, Mediation. This is the actual essence of what is popularly
called Hegelian Dialectics. To describe the activity of overcoming
the negative, Hegel also often used the term Aufhebung, variously
translated into English as "sublation" or "overcoming," to conceive
of the working of the dialectic. Roughly, the term indicates
preserving the useful portion of an idea, thing, society, etc.,
while moving beyond its limitations. (Jacques Derrida's preferred
French translation of the term was relever).[29] In the Logic, for
instance, Hegel describes a dialectic of existence: first,
existence must be posited as pure Being (Sein); but pure Being,
upon examination, is found to be indistinguishable from Nothing
(Nichts). When it is realized that what is coming into being is, at
the same time, also returning to nothing (in life, for example,
one's living is also a dying), both Being and Nothing are united as
Becoming.[30] As in the Socratic dialectic, Hegel claimed to
proceed by making implicit contradictions explicit: each stage of
the process is the product of contradictions inherent or implicit
in the preceding stage.
- For Hegel, the whole of history is one tremendous dialectic,
major stages of which chart a progression from self-alienation as
slavery to self-unification and realization as the rational,
constitutional state of free and equal citizens. The Hegelian
dialectic cannot be mechanically applied for any chosen thesis.
Critics argue that the selection of any antithesis, other than the
logical negation of the thesis, is subjective. Then, if the logical
negation is used as the antithesis, there is no rigorous way to
derive a synthesis. In practice, when an antithesis is selected to
suit the user's subjective purpose, the resulting "contradictions"
are rhetorical, not logical, and the resulting synthesis is not
rigorously defensible against a multitude of other possible
syntheses. The problem with the Fichtean
"Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis" model is that it implies that
contradictions or negations come from outside of things. Hegel's
point is that they are inherent in and internal to things. This
conception of dialectics derives ultimately from Heraclitus.Hegel
has outlined that the purpose of dialectics is "to study things in
their own being and movement and thus to demonstrate the finitude
of the partial categories of understanding"[31]
- Sublation – Aristotle’s law of identity, particular
self-identities in deductive patterns – Hegel sought to dissolve
the static view in favor of a movement towards the
whole
- The whole is fractal in nature; i.e. it preserves what
it overcomes. Therefore, it preserves contradictions as a
movement towards a synthesis.
- Quantum Theory, Postmodern Cosmology, Chaos Theory,
Computer Interfacing, and Ecology, as well as Cybernetics, ascribe
to parts fitting into a whole.
- Sublation is the term that signifies the contradiction
of overcoming and at the same time preserving that which it
overcomes.
- Negation - Hegel calls this dynamic aspect of
his thinking the power of "negation". It is by means of this
"negativity" of thought that the static (or habitual) becomes
discarded or dissolved, made fluid and adaptable, and recovers its
eagerness to push on towards "the whole". Source: Introduction
Hegel by Lloyd Spencer and Andrzej Krauze
- Dialectical thinking derives its dynamic of negation from its
ability to reveal "contradictions" within almost any category or
identity.
- Hegel's "contradiction" does not simply mean a mechanical
denial or opposition. Indeed, he challenges the classical notion of
static self-identity, A = A, or A not= non-A.
- By negation or contradiction, Hegel means a wide variety of
relations difference, opposition, reflection or relation. It can
indicate the mere insufficiency of a category or its incoherence.
Most dramatically, categories are sometimes shown to be
self-contradictory.
- Three Kinds of Contradiction
- Being – Nothing / Quantity – Quality
- Essence – Inner and Outer, Intrinsic and Extrinsic, Implicit
and Explicit
- Concept – Particularity and Universality, out of which,
abstractly, we see the opposed principles produces a synthesis
called Individuality
- Thesis – Antithesis – Synthesis
- Thesis – A thought affirmed which on reflection proves
itself unsatisfactory, incomplete or contradictory…
- Antithesis – Which propels the affirmation of its
negation, the anti-thesis, which also on reflection proves
inadequate…
- Synthesis – and so is again negated
- Kant’s Dialectic vs. Hegel’s Dialectic
- Kant’s dialectic logic of transcendent noumena “things
in themselves”, which operates independently of
experience
- Hegel’s view contrary to Kant’s transcendent is that of
reality as a totality which gives true knowledge
- Absolute Knowledge - Knowing, for Hegel, is
something you do. It is an act. But it is also presence of mind.
Hegel seems to hold out the vision, even the experience, of
thinking as self-presence. Of being present to, or with, oneself of
being fully self-possessed, self-aware. Of self-consciousness as a
huge cosmic accomplishment. Source: Introduction Hegel by Lloyd
Spencer and Andrzej Krauze
- Reading Hegel gives one a sense that the movement of thought
will coincide with a vision of harmony that awaits us at the end of
the whole process. Every serious reader of Hegel can bear witness
to the intoxication of such moments.
- Absolute Knowledge, in the form of the complete
self-consciousness and self-possession of spirit, is only available
at the end-point of the think process. But there is no distinction
possible between the driving energy of thought and this sense of
harmony and fulfilment in the whole. It is ultimately the universal
which has the upper hand. As Hegel's Logic puts it ...
- Everything depends on the "identity of identity and
non-identity".
- In philosophy, the latest birth of time is the result of all
the systems that have preceded it, and must include their
principles: and so, if, on other grounds, it deserves the title of
philosophy, it will be the fullest, most comprehensive, and most
adequate system of all.
-
Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in
Outline
- Logic
- Philosophy of Nature
- Philosophy of Mind
-
Philosophy of Right
- Moral Subjectivism
- Lectures on the Philosophy of World
History
- Lectures on Aesthetics (or the Philosophy of
Art)
- Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion
- Lectures on the History of Philosophy
- According to Hegel, the will is essentially free. This
distinguishes us from the animals: having purposes and striving
deliberately to achieve them. To possess a will means wanting to be
free and therefore, to some extene,
already being so, But only abstractly. The realization of freedom –
its becoming actual – is as much social as personal. Source:
Introduction Hegel by Lloyd Spencer and Andrzej Krauze
- The Philosophy of History - Source:
Introduction Hegel by Lloyd Spencer and Andrzej Krauze
- History as showing a pattern, the logic conveys an idea, and
that idea for Hegel is freedom.
- “So progress in the unfolding of spirit toward freedom is
progress in liberation from subjection to nature”. - Hegel
- The unfolding of spirit, or freedom, in stages.
- The Three Stages of Freedom - Source:
Introduction Hegel by Lloyd Spencer and Andrzej Krauze
- Stage One – the ancient Orient – only one (the ruler) is
free.
- Stage Two – classical Antiquity – some (but not slaves) are
free.
- Stage Three – the Christian-Germanic epoch – begins with the
realization that all should be free, or, as Hegel puts it, that
“man as man is free.”
- Arriving at the French Revolution and the Enlightenment
(Illuminati?)
- Philosophies Post Hegel
- Positivism
- Existentialism
- Nihilism
- Marxism
– Property is not something natural for Hegel, but founded
on convention. This outlined Marx’s justifications for the
inequitable distribution of wealth.
Peace Revolution partner podcasts:
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journey into the dark heart of public schooling, revealing how
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Navigating Netflix (2011) our video series wherein we conduct a
critical analysis of films you might have missed; Navigating
Netflix is available for free on YouTube.
"Memories
of a Political Prisoner", an interview with Professor Chengiah
Ragaven, graduate of Oxford, Cambridge, and Sussex; AFTER he
was a political prisoner, who was exiled from South Africa, during
Apartheid. (2011)
What
You've Been Missing! (2011) is our video series focusing in on
the history of corruption in our public education system.
Top Documentary Films dot com: Hijacking
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Top Documentary Films dot com: Exposing the
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Top Documentary Films dot com: The
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