Conspectus of Hegel’s Book Lectures On the History of Philosophy: Volume XIV. Volume II Of the History Of Philosophy (original) (raw)
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
Volume XIV.
Volume II Of the History Of Philosophy
Written: 1915
Source: Lenin’s Collected Works, 4th Edition, Moscow, 1976,Volume 38, pp. 269-300
Publisher: Progress Publishers
First Published: 1930 in Lenin Miscellany XII
Translated: Clemence Dutt
Edited: Stewart Smith
Transcription & Markup: Kevin Goins
Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive (2008).You may freely copy, distribute, display and perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source.
Note that this document has undergone special formating to ensure that Lenin’s sidenotes fit on the page, marking as best as possible where they were located in the original manuscript.
VOLUME XIV.
VOLUME II
OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE SOPHISTS[1]
| Speaking of the Sophists, Hegel in ex- treme detail chews over the thought that sophistry contains an element common to all culture (Bildung) in general, our own included, namely, the adducing of proofs (Gründe) and Gegengründe[2] —“reflecting reasoning”;—the finding of the most di- verse points of view in everything; ((sub- jectivity—lack of objectivity)). In discuss- ing Protagoras and his famous thesis (man is the measure of all things) Hegel places Kant close to him: | |
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| ...“Man is the measure of everything,— man, therefore, is the subject in general; the existent, consequently, is not in iso- lation, but is for my knowledge—conscious- ness is essentially the producer of the con- tent in what is objective, and subjective thinking is thereby essentially active. And this view extends even to the most modern Philosophy, as when, for instance, Kant says that we only know phenomena, i.e., that what seems to us to be objective, to be reality, is only to be considered in its relation to consciousness, and does not exist without this relation....” (31)[3] | Protagoras and Kant |
| The second “moment” is objectivity (das Allgemeine[4]), “it is posited by me, but is likewise in itself objec- tively universal, not posited by me....” (32) | |
| Diese “Relativität”[5] (32) “Every- thing has a relative truth only” (33), according to Protagoras. | the relativ- ism of the Sophist... |
| ...“Kant’s phenomenon is no more than an external impulse, an x, an unknown, which first receives these determinations through our feeling, through us. Even if there were an objective ground for our calling one thing cold and another warm, we could indeed say that they must have diversity in themselves, but warmth and cold first become what they are in our feeling. Similarly ... things are, etc. ... thus experience was called a phenome- non....“ (34) | Kant and the Sophists and Phenomenol- ogism[6] à la Mach NB |
| “The world is consequently not only phenomenal in that it is for consciousness, and thus that its Being is only one rela- tive to consciousness, but it is likewise phenomenal in itself.” (35) | not only relativism |
| ...“This scepticism reached a much deep- er point in Gorgias....” (35) | scepticism |
| ...“His _dialectic_” ... that of Gor- gias, the Sophist [many times: p. 36, idem p. 37]. | NB |
| Tiedemann said that Gorgias went fur- ther than the “common sense” of man. And Hegel makes fun of this: every philosophy goes further than “common sense” for common sense is not philosophy. Prior to Copernicus it was contrary to common sense to say that the earth goes round the sun. (36) | Hegel on “common sense” |
| “It” (der gesunde Menschenverstand[7]) “is the mode of thought of its time, con- (36) | common sense = the prejudices of its time |
| Gorgias (p. 37): 1) 2) 3) Nothing exists. Nothing is Assuming that Being is, it cannot be known. Even if it is knowable, no communication of what is known is pos- sible. | |
| ...“Gorgias is conscious that they” (Be- ing and not-Being, their mutual sublation) “are vanishing moments; the unconscious conception has this truth also, but knows nothing about it....” (40) | |
| “Vanishing moments” = Being and not-Being. That is a magnifi- cent definition of dialectics!! | |
| ...“Gorgias α) justly argues against abso- lute realism, which, because it has a no- tion, thinks it possesses the very thing itself, when actually it possesses only some- thing relative; β) falls into the bad ideal- ism of modern times: ‘what is thought is always subjective, and thus not the existent, since through thought an existent is transformed into what is thought....’” (41) | Gorgias, “absolute realism” (and Kant) |
| (and further below (p. 41 i.f.) Kant is again mentioned). |
| To be added on Gorgias[8]: He puts “either— | |
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| or” to the fundamental questions. “But that is not true dialectics; it would be necessary to prove that the object must be necessarily in one or another determi- nation, not in and for itself. The object resolves itself only into those determi- nations; but from that nothing follows regarding the nature of the object it- self.” (39) | dialectics in the object itself |
| To be added further on Gorgias[9]: | |
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| In the exposition of his view that the existent cannot be imparted, communi- cated: | |
| “Speech, by which the existent has to be expressed, is not the existent, what is imparted is thus not the existent, but only | NB |
| words.” (Sextus Empiricus, Adversus Mathematicos. VII. § 83-84)—_p. 41_— Hegel writes: “The existent is also compre- hended as non-existent, but the comprehen- sion of it is to make it universal.” (42) | cf. Feuerbach[10] |
| “This individual cannot be ex- pressed....” (42) | |
| Every word (speech) already universalises cf. Feuerbach.[11] | The senses show reality; thought and word — the universal. |
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| Final words of the section on the Soph- ists: “The Sophists thus also made dia- lectic, universal Philosophy, their object, and they were profound thinkers....” (42) |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF SOCRATES
| Socrates is a “world-famed personage” (42), the “most interesting” (ibid.) in the philosophy of antiquity—“subjectivity of thought”(42) [“freedom of self-conscious- ness” (44)]. “Herein lies the ambiguity of dia- lectics and sophistry; the objective disappears”: is the subjective contin- gent or is there in it (“an ihm selbst”[12]) the objective and universal? (43)[13] “True thought thinks in such a way that its content is as truly objective as subjec- tive” (44)—and in Socrates and Plato we see, Hegel says, not only subjectivity (“the reference of any judgment to conscious- ness is held by him”—Socrates—”in common with the Sophists”)—but also objectivity. | |
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| “Objectivity has here” (in Socrates) “the sense of the universal, existent in and for itself, and not external objectivity” (45)— | |
| idem 46: “not external objectivity but the spiritual universal.” | NB |
| And two lines further down: | |
| “Kant’s ideal is the phenomenon, not objective in itself....” (46) Socrates called his method Hebammen- kunst[14]—(p. 64) (derived from his mother, he said) ((Socrates’ mother = midwife))— to help in bringing thoughts to birth. | Kant shrewd! |
| Hegel’s example: everyone knows, he says, what Werden is, but it surprises us if we analyse (reflektierend) and find that it is “the identity of Being and not-Being”— “so great a distinction.” (67) | Werden = Nichtsein und Sein.[15] |
| Meno (Plato’s “Meno”)[16] compared Socra- tes to an electric eel (Zitteraal), which makes anyone who touches it “narkotisch”[17] (69): and I, too, am “narkotisch” and I cannot answer you.[18] | |
| ...“That which is held by me as truth and right is spirit of my spirit. But what the spirit derives thus from itself, what it so holds, must come from it as the uni- versal, as from the spirit which acts in a universal manner, and not from its pas- sions, interests, likings, whims, aims, in- clinations, etc. These, too, certainly come from something inward which is ‘implanted in us by nature,’ but they are only in a natural way our own....” (74-75) | très bien dit!![19] |
Intelligent idealism is closer to intelligent ma-
terialism than stupid materialism.
Dialectical idealism instead of intelligent;
metaphysical, undeveloped, dead, crude,
rigid instead of stupid.
| To be elaborated: Plekhanov wrote on philosophy (dialec- tics) probably about 1,000 pages (Beltov + against Bogdanov + against the Kantians + | NB |
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| fundamental questions, etc., etc.).[20] Among them, about the large Logic, in con- nection with it, its thought (i.e., dialectics proper, as philosophical sci- ence) nil!! |
| Protagoras: “man is the measure of all things.” Socrates: “man, as thinking, is the measure of all things.” (75) | Nuance! |
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| Xenophon in his Memorabilien described Socrates better, more accurately and more faithfully than Plato. (Pp. 80-81) |
THE SOCRATICS
| In connection with the sophisms about the “heap” and “bald,” Hegel repeats the transition of quantity into quality and vice versa: dialectics. (Pp. 139-140) 143-144: At length about the fact that | |
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| “language in essence expresses only the universal; what is meant, however, is the special, the particular. Hence what is meant cannot be said in speech.” (“It”? The most universal word of all.) | NB in language there is only the universal |
| Who is it? I. Every person is an I. Das Sinnliche?[21] It is a univer- sa1, etc., etc. “This”?? Everyone is “this.” | |
| Why can the particular not be named? One of the objects of a given kind (tables) is distinguished by some- thing from the rest. | |
| “That the universal should in philosophy be given a place of such importance that only the universal can be expressed, and the ‘it’ which is meant, cannot, indicates a state of consciousness and thought which the philosophical culture of our time has not yet reached.” Hegel includes here “the scepticism of our times” (143)— [Kant’s?] and those who assert that “sensuous certainty is the truth.” (143) For das Sinnliche “is a universal.” (143) | |
| Thereby Hegel hits every materialism except dialectical materialism. NB | NB |
| To call by name?—but the name is a contingent symbol and does not express Sache selbst[22] (how can the partic- ular be expressed?) (144) | |
| Hegel seriously “believed,” thought, that materialism as a philosophy was impossible, for philosophy is the science of thinking, of the universal, but the universal is a thought. Here he repeated the error of the same subjective ideal- ism that he always called “bad” ideal- ism. Objective (and still more, abso- lute) idealism came very close to ma- terialism by a zig-zag (and a somersault), even partially became transformed into it. | Hegel and dialectical materialism |
| The Cyrenaics[23] held sensation for the truth, “the truth is not what is in sensation, the content, but is itself sensation.” (151) | sensation in the theory of knowledge of the Cyrenaics... |
| “The main principle of the Cyrenaic school, therefore, is sensation, which should form the real criterion of the true and the good....” (153) “Sensation is the indeterminate unit” (154), but if thinking is added, then the universal appears and “simple subjectivity” disappears. | |
| (Phenomenologists à la Mach & Co. inevitably become idealists on the question of the universal, “law,” “ne- cessity,” etc.) | NB[24] the Cyrenaics and Mach and Co. |
| Another Cyrenaic, Hegesias, “recognised” “this incongruity between sensation and universality....” (155) | |
| They confuse sensation as a principle of the theory of knowledge and a prin- ciple of ethics. This NB. But Hegel separated the theory of knowledge. |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF PLATO
| In regard to Plato’s plan by which philosophers ought to rule the state: | |
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| ...“The territory of history is different from that of philosophy....” ...“We must recognise that action repre- sents at the same time the endeavours of the subject as such for particular ends....All those particular ends are really only means for bringing forth the Idea, because it is the absolute power.” (193) | Particular ends in history create the “Idea” (the law of history) |
| Concerning Plato’s doctrine on ideas: | |
| ...“because sensuous perception shows nothing purely, or as it is in itself” (Pha- edo)—p. 213—therefore the body is a hindrance to the soul. | “purity” (= lifeless- ness?) of universal conceptions |
| The significance of the universal is contradictory: it is dead, impure, in- complete, etc., etc., but it alone is a stage towards knowledge of the concrete, for we can never know the concrete completely. The infinite sum of general conceptions, laws, etc., gives the concrete in its completeness. | NB the dialec- tics of cognition NB ↓ |
| The movement of cognition to the object can always only proceed dia- lectically: to retreat in order to hit | ← |
| more surely—reculer pour mieux sauter (savoir?).[25] Converging and diverging lines: circles which touch one another. Knotenpunkt[26] = the practice of man- kind and of human history. (Practice = the criterion of the coin- cidence of one of the infinite aspects of the real.) | NB |
| These Knotenpunkte represent a unity of contradictions, when Be- ing and not-Being, as vanishing moments, coincide for a moment, in the given moments of the move- ment (= of technique, of history, etc.) | |
| In analysing Plato’s dialectics, Hegel once again tries to show the difference between subjective, sophistic dialectics and objective dialectics: “That everything is one, we say of each thing: ‘it is one and at the same time we show also that it is many, its many parts | “empty dialectics” in Hegel |
| and properties’—but it is thereby said: | |
| ‘it is one in quite another respect from that in which it is many’—we do not bring these thoughts together. Thus the conception and the words merely go back- | NB |
| wards and forwards from the one to the | |
| other. If this passing to and fro is performed with consciousness, it is empty dialectics, which does not unite the opposites and does not come to unity.” (232) | “empty dialectics” |
| P l a t o in the “Sophistes”: “The point of difficulty, and what we ought to aim at, is to show that what is other is the same, and what is the same is other, and indeed in the same regard and from the same point of view.” (233) | NB |
| “But we must be conscious of the fact that the Notion is neither merely the im- mediate in truth, although it is the sim ple—but it is of spiritual simplicity, essentially the thought which has re- turned into itself (immediately is only this red, etc.); nor that it is only that which reflects itself in itself, the thing of consciousness; but is also in itself, i.e., it is objective essence....” (245) | NB objectivism |
| The concept is not something imme- diate (although the concept is a “simple” thing, but this simplicity is “spiritual,” the simplicity of the Idea)—what is im- mediate is only the sensation of “red” (“this is red”), etc. The concept is not “merely the thing of consciousness”; but is the essence of the object (ge- genständliches Wesen), it is something an sich, “in itself.” | |
| ...“This conviction of the nature of the Notion, Plato did not ixpress so defi- nitely....” (245) | |
| Hegel dilates at length on Plato’s “Philosophy of Nature,” the ultra-non- sensical mysticism of ideas, such as that “triangles form the essence of sensuous things” (265), and such mystical non- sense. That is highly characteristic! The mystic-idealist-spiritualist Hegel (like all official, clerical-idealist philosophy of our day) extols and expatiates on mysticism, idealism in the history of philosophy, while ignoring and slight- ing materialism. Cf. Hegel on Democ- ritus—nil!! On Plato a huge mass of mystical slush. | idealism and mysticism in Hegel (and in Plato) |
| Speaking of Plato’s republic and of the current opinion that it is a chimera, Hegel repeats his favourite saying: | |
| ...“What is real is rational. But one must know, distinguish, exactly what is real; in common life all is real, but there is a difference between the phenomenal world and reality....” (274) | what is real is rational |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF ARISTOTLE
| Incorrect, says Hegel, is the generally held opinion that the philosophy of Aristotle is “_realism_” (299), (id. p. 311 “empiricism”) in contrast to the idealism of Plato. ((Here again, Hegel clearly squeezes in a great deal under idealism.)) | |
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| In presenting Aristotle’s polemic against Plato’s doctrine on ideas, Hegel sup- presses its materialistic features. (Cf. 322-323 and others.) | NB NB |
| He has let the cat out of the bag: “The elevation of Alexander” (Alexander of Mac- | ((merely |
| edon, Aristotle’s pupil) “... into ... a god is ... not matter for surprise ... God and | invert it)) precisely! |
| man are not at all so very wide asunder....” (305) Hegel perceives the idealism of Aris- totle in his idea of god. (326) ((Of course, it is idealism, but more ob- jective and further removed, more general than the idealism of Plato, hence in the philosophy of nature more frequently = materialism.)) | Hegel has made a com- plete mess of the critic- ism of Plato’s “ideas” in Aristotle |
| Aristotle’s criticism of Plato’s “ideas” is a criticism of idealism as ideal- ism in general: for whence concepts, abstrac- tions, are derived, thence come also “law” and “ne- cessity,” etc. The idealist Hegel in cowardly fashion fought shy of the under- mining of the foundations of idealism by Aristotle (in his criticism of Plato’s ideas). | NB | When one idealist criticises the founda- tions of idealism of another idealist, ma- terialism is always the gainer thereby. Cf. Aristotle versus Plato, etc., Hegel versus Kant, etc. |
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| “Leucippus and Plato accordingly say that motion has always existed, but they give no reason for the assertion.” (Aristot- le, Metaphysik, XII, 6 and 7.) p. 328 | ||
| Aristotle thus pitifully brings forward god against the material- ist Leucippus and the idealist Plato. There is eclecticism in Aristotle here. But Hegel conceals the weakness for the sake of mysticism! | ||
| Hegel, the supporter of dialectics, could not understand the dialec- tical transition from matter to motion, from matter to con- sciousness—especially the second. Marx corrected the error (or weak- ness?) of the mystic. | NB | Not only is the transition from matter to conscious- ness dialecti- cal, but also that from sensation to thought, etc. |
| What distinguishes the dialectical tran- sition from the undialectical transition? The leap. The contradiction. The inter- ruption of gradualness. The unity (iden- tity) of Being and not-Being. | |
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| The following passage shows especially clearly how Hegel conceals the weakness of Aristotle’s idealism: “Aristotle makes objects into thoughts; hence, in being thoughts, they exist in truth; that is their ούσία.[27] “The meaning of this is not, however, that natural objects have themselves the power of thinking, but as they are subjec- tively thought by me, my thought is thus also the Notion of the thing, which there- | |
| fore constitutes its substance. But in na- ture the Notion does not exist as thought in this freedom, but has flesh and blood; yet it has a soul, and this is its Notion. Aristotle recognises what things in and | naïve!! |
| for themselves are; and that is their ούσία. The Notion does not exist for itself, but it is stunted by externality. The ordinary def inition of truth is: ‘truth is the harmony of the conception with the object.’ But the conception itself is only a conception, I am still not at all in harmony with my conception (with its content); for when I represent to myself a house, a beam, and so on, I am by no means this content— ‘I’ is something other than the conception of house. It is only in thought that there is present a true harmony between objective and subjective; that constitutes me (Hegel’s italics). Aristotle therefore finds himself at the most advanced standpoint; nothing more profound can one desire to know.” (332-333) | |
| “In nature” concepts do not exist “in this freedom” (in the freedom of thought and the fantasy of man!!). “In nature” they (concepts) have “flesh and blood.”— That is excellent! But it is materialism. Human concepts are the soul of nature —this is only a mystical way of saying that in human concepts nature is reflect- ed in a distinctive way (this NB: in a distinctive and dialectical way!!). | |
| Pp. 318-337 solely on the Meta- physics of Aristotle!! Everything essen- tial that he has to say against Plato’s idealism is suppressed!! In particu- lar, there is suppressed the question of existence outside man and humani- ty!!! = the question of materialism! | |
| Aristotle is an empiricist, but a think- ing one. (340) “The empirical, comprehend- ed in its synthesis, is the speculative No- tion....” (341) (Hegel’s italics.) | cf. Feuer- bach: To read the gospel of senses in interconnec- tion = to think[28] |
| The coincidence of concepts with “synthesis,” with the sum, summing up of empiricism, sensations, the senses, is indubitable for the philosophers of all trends. Whence this coincidence? From God (I, the idea, thought, etc., etc.) or from (out of) nature? Engels was right in his formulation of the question.[29] | NB |
| ...“The subjective form constitutes the essence of the Kantian philosophy....” (341) | Kant |
| On the teleology of Aristotle. ...“Nature has its means in itself and these means are also end. This end in nature is its λόγοζ,[30] the truly rational.” (349) | “end” and cause, law, connection, reason |
| ...“Understanding is not only thinking with consciousness. There is contained in it also the whole, true, profound Notion of nature, of life....” (348) | |
| Reason (understanding), thought, consciousness, without nature, not in correspondence with nature is falsity = materialism! | |
| It is repulsive to read how Hegel extols Aristotle for his “true speculative notions” (373 of the “soul,” and much more besides), clearly spinning a tale of idealistic (= mys- tical) nonsense. Suppressed are all the points on which Aristotle wavers between idealism and ma- terialism!!! | |
| Regarding Aristotle’s views on the “soul,” Hegel writes: | |
| “All that is universal is in fact real, as particular, individual, existing for anoth- er” (375)—in other words, the soul. | lets the cat out of the bag in regard to “realism” |
| Aristotle. De anima, II, 5: | |
| “The difference” (between Empfinden and Erkennen[31]) “is: that which causes the sensation 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 substance. Everyone can therefore think if he wishes but sense-perception does not depend on him, since the necessary con- dition is that the object perceived be pres- ent.” (377) | sense-percep- tion and cognition Aristotle comes very close to materialism |
| The crux here—“außen ist”[32]— outside man, independent of him. That is materialism. And this founda- tion, basis, kernel of materialism, Hegel begins wegschwatzen[33]: | |
| “This is an entirely correct view of sense- perception,” writes Hegel, and he goes on to explain that there is undoubtedly “pas- | |
| sivity” in sense—perception: “it is a matter of indifference whether subjectively or objectively; in both there is contained the moment of passivity.... With this mo- ment of passivity, Aristotle does not fall | NB!! |
| short of idealism, sense-perception is al- | |
| ways in one aspect passive. That is, how- ever, a bad 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 | the idealist is caught! |
| were freedom in sense-perception; the lat- ter is a sphere of limitation”!!... (377-378) | |
| ((The idealist stops up the gap leading to materialism. No, it is not gleich- gültig[34] whether from without or from within. This is precisely the point! “From without_”—that is mat- terialism. “From within” = idealism. And with the word “_passivity,” while keeping silent about the term (“from without”) in Aristotle, Hegel descri- bed in a different way the same from without. Passivity means precisely from without!! Hegel re- places the idealism of sense-percep- tion by the idealism of thought, but equally by idealism.)) | NB |
| ...“Subjective idealism declares that there are no external things, they are a determi- nation of our Self. This must be admitted in respect to sense-perception. I am passive | |
| in sense-perception, sense-perception is subjective; it is existence, a state, a deter- mination in me, not freedom. Whether the sense-perception is external or in me, is a matter of indifference, it exists....”(378) | NB an evasion of mate- rialism |
| Then follows the famous analogy of the soul with wax, causing Hegel to twist and turn like the devil confronted with holy water, and to cry out about it having “so often occasioned misapprehension.” (378- 379) Aristotle says (De anima, II, 12): | |
| "Sense-perception is the receiving of sen- sible forms without matter” ... “as wax receives only the impress of the golden signet ring, not the gold itself, but merely its form.” | NB Soul = Wax NB |
| Hegel writes: ...“In sense-perception | |
| only the form reaches us, without matter. It is otherwise in practical life—in eating and drinking. In the practical sphere in general we behave as single individuals, | “otherwise” in practice |
| and as single individuals in a determinate Being, even a material determinate Being, we behave towards matter in a material way. Only insofar as we are of a material | a cowardly evasion of materialism |
| nature, are we able to behave in such a | |
| way; the point is that our material exist- ence comes into play:” (379) | |
| ((A close approach to materialism—and equivocation.)) Hegel gets angry and scolds on account of the “wax,” saying: “everyone can under- stand it” (380), “we do not get beyond the crude aspect of the analogy,” (379) etc. | |
| “The soul should by no means be pas- sive wax or receive determinations from without....” (380) | ha-ha! |
| ...“It” (die Seele[35]) “changes the form of the external body into its own....” (381) Aristotle, De anima, III, 2: | |
| ...“The effect of being perceived and of sense-perception is exactly one and the same; but their existence is not the same....” (381) | Aristotle |
| And Hegel comments: | |
| ...“There is a body which sounds and a subject which hears: their existence is twofold....” (382) | Hegel con- ceals the weaknesses of idealism |
| But he leaves aside the question of Being outside man!!! A sophistical dodge from materialism! | |
| Speaking about thinking, and about rea- son (νουζ), Aristotle (De anima, III, 4) says: ...“There is no sense-perception inde- | |
| pendent of the body, but νουζ is separable from it....” (385) “νουζ is like a book upon whose pages nothing is actually written” | tabula rasa |
| (386)—and Hegel again becomes irate: | |
| “another much-decried illustration” (386), the very opposite of what he means is ascribed to Aristotle, etc., etc. **((**and the | ha-ha! |
| question of Being independent of | |
| mind and of man is suppressed!!**))**—all that for the sake of proving “Aristotle is there- fore not a realist.” (389) | ha-ha! he’s afraid!! |
| Aristotle: | |
| “In this way he who perceives nothing | |
| by his senses learns nothing and under- stands nothing when he discerns anything (ΰεωρή[36]) he must necessarily discern it as a pictorial conception, for such con- ceptions are like sense-perceptions, only | Aristotle and material- ism |
| without matter....” (389) | |
| ...“Whether the understanding thinks actual objects when it is abs- tracted from all matter requires spe- cial investigation....” (389) And Hegel | |
| scrapes out of Aristotle that ostens- ibly “νουζ[37] and νοητόν[38] are one and the same” (390), etc. A model | |
| example of the idealistic misrepresen- tations of an idealist!! Distorting Aris- totle into an idealist of the eighteenth- nineteenth century!! | distortion of Aristotle |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE STOICS[39]
| In regard to the “criterion of truth” of the _Stoics_—“the conception that is laid hold of” (444-446)—Hegel says that con- sciousness only compares conception with conception (not _with the object_—(446): “truth ... is the harmony of object and consciousness” = “the celebrated definition of the truth”) and, consequently, the whole question is one of the “objective logos, the rationality of the world.” (446) | |
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| “Thought yields nothing but the form of universality and identity with itself; ...hence everything may harmonise with my thought.” (449) | Hegel against the Stoics and their criterion |
| “Reasons, however, prove to be a hum- | |
| bug; for there are good reasons for every- thing....” (469) “Which reasons should be esteemed as good thereby depends on the end and interest....” (ibidem) | there are “reasons” for everything |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF EPICURUS
| Speaking of Epicurus (342-271 B. C.), Hegel immediately (before describ- ing his views) adopts a hostile attitude to materialism and declares: | |
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| “It is already (!!) self-evident (!!) that if sense-perceived Being is regarded as the truth, the necessity for the Notion is altogether abrogated, in the absence of | Slander against materialism Why?? |
| speculative interest everything falls apart, | |
| and, on the contrary, the vulgar view of things prevails; in point of fact it does not go beyond the view of ordinary human understanding, or rather, everything is lowered to the level of ordinary human understanding”!! (473-474) | |
| Slander against materialism!! “Ne- cessity for the Notion” is not in the slightest “abrogated” by the theory of the source of cognition and the concept!! Disagreement with “common sense” is the foul quirk of an idealist. | NB |
| Epicurus gave the name of Canonic[40] to the theory of knowledge and the crite- rion of truth. After a brief exposition of it, Hegel writes: “It is so simple that nothing can well be simpler—it is abstract, but also very trivial; more or less on the level of ordi- nary consciousness that begins to reflect. It consists of ordinary psychological con- ceptions; they are quite correct. Out of | |
| sense-perceptions we make conceptions as the universal; thanks to which it becomes lasting. The conceptions themselves (bei | !!!! |
| der δόξα, Meinung[41]) are tested by means | |
| of sensations, as to whether they are last- ing, whether they repeat themselves. That is quite correct on the whole, but quite superficial; it is the first beginning, the | !!! |
| mechanics of conception with respect to the first sense-perceptions....” (483) | |
| The “first beginning” is forgotten and distorted by idealism. Dia- lectical materialism alone linked the “beginning” with the continuation and the end. | |
| NB: p. _481_—on the significance of words according to Epicurus: | |
| “Everything has its evidence, energy, distinctness, in the name first conferred on it” (Epicurus: Diogenes Laertius, X, | |
| § 33). And Hegel: “The name is something universal, belongs to thinking, makes the manifold simple.” (481) “On the objective manner in general | |
| in which the images of external things enter into us, and on our relation to exter- nal things, by which conceptions arise— | Epicurus: objects outside us |
| Epicurus has evolved the following met- aphysical explanation: | |
| “From the surfaces of things there passes off a constant stream, which cannot be detected by our senses ... and this be- cause, by reason of the counteracting re- plenishment, the thing itself in its solid- ity long preserves the same arrangement and disposition of the atoms; and the mo- tion 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.” “The sensation does not contradict such an idea, when we consider” (zusehe) “how images produce their effects; they bring us a cor- respondence, a sympathetic link with ex- ternal things. Therefore something passes out from them which within us is like something external.” “And since the ema- nation passes into us, we know of the def- initeness of a sensation; the definite lies in the object and thus flows into us” (pp. 484-485, Diogenes Laertius, X, § 48-49). | NB theory of knowledge of Epicurus... |
| The genius of Epicurus’ conjecture (300 B.C., i.e., more than 2,000 years before Hegel), e.g., on light and its velocity. | |
| Hegel completely concealed (NB) the main thing: (NB) the existence of things outside the consciousness of man and independent of it | |
| —all that Hegel suppresses and merely says: | |
| ...“This is a very trivial way of repre- senting sense-perception. Epicurus elected to take the easiest criterion of the truth—a criterion still in use—inasmuch as it is not apprehended by sight, namely: that it does not contradict 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 and hearing; [cer- tainly we manage to see and to hear some- thing different][42] but there is abundance of room for what is seen and what is conceived or imagined to exist alongside of one anoth- er. If the two are allowed to fall apart, they do not contradict each other; for it is not until we relate them that the contradic- tion becomes apparent....” (485-486) | A model of distortion and slander against materialism by an ideal- ist |
| Hegel has avoided Epicurus’ theory of cognition and begun to speak of some- thing else, which Epicurus does not touch on here and which is com- patible with materialism!! | |
| P. (486): Error, according to Epicurus, proceeds from an interruption in movement (in the movement from the object to us, to sense-perception or to conception?). “It is impossible,” Hegel writes, “to have a more meagre (theory of knowledge).” (486) | |
| Everything becomes dürftig,[43] if it is distorted and despoiled. | |
| The soul, according to Epicurus, is a “certain” arrangement of atoms. “This is what Locke also (!!!) said.... These are empty words ...“ (489) ((no, they are the guess-work of genius and signposts for science, but not for clericalism)). | This, auch,[44] is wonderful!!!! Epicurus (341- 270 B.C.), Locke (1632- 1704). Dif- ferenz[45] = 2,000 years |
| NB. NB. (489), id. (490): | |
| Epicurus ascribes to the atoms a “ krummlinigte” Bewegung,[46] this according to Hegel is “most arbitrary | and electrons? |
| and wearisome” (489) in Epicurus.— ((and the “God” of the idealists???)). | |
| “Or else Epicurus altogether denies No- tion and the Universal as the essential...” (490) although his atoms “themselves have this very nature of thought”... “the incon- sistency ... which all empiricists are guil- ty of....” (491) | nonsense! lies! slander! NB |
| This avoids the essence of materialism and material- ist dialectics. | |
| “In Epicurus there is no ... final end in the world, wisdom of a Creator; everything consists of events, which are determined by the chance (??) external (??) coming together of configurations of atoms....” (491) | he pities God!! the idealistic scoundrel!! |
| And Hegel simply hurls abuse at Epicurus: “His thoughts on particular as- pects of Nature are, however, in them- selves feeble....” (492) | !! |
| And immediately afterwards is a polemic against the “Naturwissenschaft” heute,[47] which, like Epicurus, allegedly judges “by analogy,” and “explains” (492)—e.g., light as “vibrations of the ether....” “This is an analogy quite in the manner of Epicu- rus....” (493) | and the “manner” of natural science! and its successes!! |
| ((Modern natural science ver- sus Epicurus,—against (NB) Hegel.)) | |
| In Epicurus, “the kernel of the matter, the principle, is nothing else than the principle of our usual natural science....” (495) ... “it is still the manner which lies at the basis of our natural science....” (496) | Epicurus and modern na- tural science |
| Correct is only the reference to the ignorance of dialectics in gen- eral and of the dialectics of con- cepts. But the criticism of ma- terialism is schwach.[48] | |
| “Of this method (of Epicurean philosophy) we may say in general that it likewise has a side on which it possesses value. | !NB! |
| Aristotle and the more ancient 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 is the necessary one that experience should be worked up into uni- versality, that laws should be determined; that is to say, that the result which fol- lows from the abstract Idea should coin- cide with the general conception to which experience and observation have led. The | NB!! NB NB |
| a priori is with Aristotle, for instance, most excellent, but not sufficient, because it lacks connection with and relation to experience and observation. This develop- | NB |
| ment of the particular to the general is the discovery of laws, natural forces and | |
| so on. It may be said that Epicurus is the inventor of empirical natural science, of empirical psychology. In contrast to the | NB |
| Stoic ends, conceptions of the understand- ing, is experience, the sensuous present. There we have abstract, limited understand- | |
| ing, without truth in itself, and therefore without the presence and reality of nature; here we have this sense of nature, which is more true than these other hypotheses.” (496-497) | NB |
| (THIS ALMOST COMPLETELY AP- PROACHES DIALECTICAL MAT- ERIALISM.) | NB |
| The importance of Epicurus—the strug- gle against Aberglauben[49] _of the Greeks and Romans (498)_—and modern priests?? all this nonsense about whether a hare ran across the path, etc. (and the good Lord?). | Hegel on the pros of materialism |
| “And from it” (the philosophy of Epi- curus), “more than anything, those con- ceptions which have altogether denied the supersensuous have proceeded.” (498) | NB |
| **| | ** But this is good only for “end- lichen”[50] .... “With superstition there also passed away self-dependent Con- nection and the world of the Ideal.” (499) |
| This NOTA BENE. | |
| P. 499: Epicurus on the soul: the finer (NB) atoms, their more rapid (NB) motion, their connection (NB) etc., etc., with the body (Diogenes Laertius, X, § 66; 63-64)—very naïve and good!—but Hegel becomes irate, he hurls abuse: “meaningless talk,” “empty words,” “no thoughts.” (500) | for Hegel the “soul” is also a prejudice |
| The Gods, according to Epicurus, are “das Allgemeine”[51] (506) in general—“they consist partly in number” as number, i.e., abstraction from the sensuous.... | |
| “In part, they” (the gods) “are the perfect- ed type of man, which, owing to the simi- larity of the images, arises from the con- tinuous confluence of like images on one and the same subject.” (507) | NB Gods = the perfected type of man, cf. Feuer- bach[52] |
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE SCEPTICS[53]
| Speaking of Scepticism, Hegel points to its apparent “invincibility” (Unbezwing- lichkeit) (538): | NB |
|---|---|
| “If anyone actually desires to be a Scep- tic, he cannot be convinced, or be brought to a positive philosophy, any more than he who is paralysed can be made to stand.” (539) | Bien dit!! |
| “Positive philosophy in relation to it” (den denkenden Skeptizismus[54]) “may have this consciousness: it contains in itself the negative of Scepticism; Scepticism is not opposed to it, nor outside it, but is a moment of it; but it contains the negative in its truth, as it is not present in Scepti- cism.” (539) (The relation of philosophy to Scepti- cism:) “Philosophy is dialectical, this dialectic is change; the Idea, as abstract Idea, is the inert and existent, but it is only true insofar as it grasps itself as living; this is that it is dialectical in itself, in order to transcend that quiescence and inertness. Hence the philosophic idea is dialectical in itself and not contingent; Scepticism, | |
| on the contrary, exercises its dialectic contingently—for just as the material, the content comes before it, it shows that it is negative in itself....” (540) | NB dialectics of Scepticism is “contingent” |
| The old (ancient) Sciepticism has to be distinguished from the new (only Schulze of Göttingen is named). (540) Ataraxie (imperturbability?) as the ideal of the Sceptics: | |
| “Pyrrho once pointed out to his fellow- passengers on board a ship, who were fright- ened during a storm, a pig, which remained quite indifferent and peaceably ate on, saying to them: in such imperturbahility the wise man must also abide” (Diogenes Laertius, IX, 68)—pp. 551-552. | not a bad anecdote about the Sceptics |
| “Scepticism is not doubt. Doubt is just the opposite of the tranquillity that is the result of scepticism.” (552) | NB Scepticism is not doubt |
| ...“Scepticism, on the contrary, is indif- ferent to the one as well as to the other....” (553) | |
| Schulze-Aenesidemus passes off for Scep- ticism the statement that everything sen- suous is truth (557), but the Sceptics did not say so: one must sich danach richten, | |
| orientate oneself by the sensuous, but that is not the truth. The new Scepticism does not doubt the reality of things. The old Scepticism does doubt the reality of things. | NB |
| Tropes (turns of speech, arguments, etc.) of the Sceptics: | everything in Sextus Empiricus (second cen- tury A. D.) |
| a. | The diversity of animal organisation. (558) Differences in sensations: the jaun- diced (dem Gelbsiichtigen) sees as yellow what to others appears white, etc. |
|---|---|
| b. | The diversity of mankind. “Idiosyn- crasies.” (559) Whom to believe? The majority? Fool- ish, for all men cannot be interro- gated. (560) |
| Diversity of philosophies: Stupid re- ference, Hegel waxes indignant: ... “such men see everything in a phi- losophy excepting Philosophy itself, | NB |
| 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 philos- ophies and this is what is overlooked.” (561) | NB |
| ...“All tropes proceed against the ‘is,’ but the truth is all the same not this dry ‘is,’ but essentially proc- ess....” (562) | NB |
| c. | The diversity in the constitution of the organs of sense: the various sense organs perceive differently (on a paint- ed panel something appears erha- ben[55] to the eye but not to the touch). |
| d. | The diversity of circumstances in the subject (rest, passion, etc.). |
| e. | The diversity of distances, etc. the earth going round the sun or vice versa, etc. |
| f. | Intermixture (scents in strong sun- shine and without it, etc.). |
| g. | The composition of things (pounded glass is not transparent, etc.). |
| h. | The “relativity of things.” |
| i. | The frequency, rarity of happenings, etc.; habit. |
| k. | Customs, laws, etc., their diversity.... |
| |These (10) are all old tropes | and He- gel: this is all “empirical”—“do not have to do with the Notion....” (566) This is “trivial”..., but .... “In fact, as against the dogmatism of the common human understanding they are quite valid....” (567) The five new tropes (are said by Hegel to he much more advanced, they contain dialectics, concern concepts)—also accord- ing to Sextus: |
| a. b. c. d. e. | The diversity of the opinions ... of philosophers... The falling into an infinite pro- gression (one thing depends on an- other and so on without end). Relativity (of premises). Presupposition. The dogmatists put forward unprovable presupposi- tions. Reciprocity. Circle (vicious)... |
| “These sceptical tropes, in fact, concern that which is called a dogmatic philosophy (and in accordance with its nature such a philosophy must display itself in all these forms) not in the sense of its having a positive content, but as asserting some- thing determinate as the absolute.” (575) | NB |
| Hegel against the absolute! Here we have the germ of dialectical mat- erialism. | NB |
| “To the criticism which knows nothing in itself, nothing (not nichts) (sic!!)[56] ab- solute, all knowledge of Being-in-itself, as such, is held to be dogmatism, while it is the worst dogmatism of all, because it maintains that the ‘I,’ the unity of self- consciousness, opposed to Being, is in and for itself, and that what is ‘in itself’ in the outside world is likewise so, and there- fore that the two absolutely cannot come together.” (576) | “Criticism” is the “worst dogmatism” |
| “These tropes hit dogmatic philosophy, which has this manner of representing one principle in a determinate proposition as determinateness. Such a principle is always conditioned; and consequently contains dia- lectics, the destruction within it of itself.” (577) “These tropes are a powerful weapon against the philosophy of reason.” (ib.) | Dialectics = “destruction of itself” |
| Sextus, for example, reveals the dialec- tics of the concept of a point (der Punkt). A point has no dimensions? That means that it is outside space! It is the limit of space in space, a negation of space, and | |
| at the same time “it touches space”—“but at the same time it is also in itself some- thing dialectical.” (579) | NB |
| “These tropes ... are powerless against speculative ideas, because the latter contain within themselves a dialectical moment and the abrogation of the finite.” (580) | NB |
| End of Volume XIV (p. 586). |
Notes
[1] Sophists (from the Greek _sophos_—a wise man)—the designation (since the second half of the 5th century B.C.) for professional philosophers, teachers of philosophy and rhetoric. The Sophists did not constitute a single school. The most characteristic feature common to Sophists was their belief in the relativity of all human ideas, ethical standards and values, expressed by Protagoras in the following famous statement: “Man is the measure of all things, of what is, that it is, and of what is not, that it is not.” In the first half of the 4th century B.C., sophism disintegrated and degenerated into a barren play with logical conceptions.
[2] counterproofs—Ed.
[3] Hegel, Werke, Bd. XIV, Berlin, 1833.—Ed.
[5] this “relativity”—Ed.
[6] _Phenomenologism_—a branch of subjective idealism that considers phenomena to be only the totality of man’s sensations. The Machists were phenomenalists. An important role in the Marxist criticism of phenomenologism was played by Lenin’s book Materialism and Empirio-Criticism (Collected Works, Vol. 14).
[7] common sense—Ed.
[8] This excerpt was made by Lenin somewhat later in outlining the philosophy of Socrates (pp. 43-44 of Hegel; see p. 273 of this volume).—Ed.
[9] This excerpt was made by Lenin in outlining the philosophy of Socrates (p. 69 of Hegel; see p. 274 of this volume).—Ed.
[10] See § 27 of Feuerbach’s Principles of the Philosophy of the Future for his views on being and essence.
[11] The reference is to the following statement of Feuerbach: “At the beginning of phenomenology we immediately come across a contradiction between the word which represents the universal, and the thing, which is always a particular.” (See § 28 of Feuerbach’s Principles of the Philosophy of the Future.)
[12] “in it itself”—Ed.
[13] Following this paragraph in the MS. is an excerpt on Gorgias’ philosophy, beginning with the words: “To be added on Gorgias....” (See p. 271 of this volume.)—Ed.
[14] the art of midwifery_—_Ed.
[15] Becoming = not-Being and Being.—Ed.
[16] _Meno_—Plato’s dialogue directed against the Sophists. It is considered to be one of Plato’s early works.
[17] “drugged”—Ed.
[18] Following this paragraph in the MS. is an excerpt on Gorgias’ philosophy, beginning with the words: “To be added further on Gorgias....” (See p. 272 of this volume.)—Ed.
[19] very well put—Ed.
[20] Lenin is referring to the following philosophical works by Plekhanov: N. Beltov, The Development of the Monist View of History, published as a separate volume in 1895 in St. Petersburg (see Selected Philosophical Works, Vol. 1, Moscow, 1960, pp. 542-782); articles against Bogdanov appearing in Social-Democratic periodicals and published in the collection entitled “From Defence to Attack” (1910); articles against the Kantians E. Bernstein, C. Schmidt and others appearing in the journal Die Neue Zeit and published in the collection: N. Beltov, “Criticism of Our Critics,” St. Petersburg, 1906; and “Fundamental Questions of Marxism,” published as a separate volume in 1908 in St. Petersburg.
[21] the sensuous—Ed.
[22] the very essence of the thing_—_Ed.
[23] _Cyrenaics_-adherents, of an ancient Greek school of philosophy, founded in the 5th century B.C. by Aristippus of Cyrene (North Africa). In the theory of knowledge, the Cyrenaics adhered to sensualism. They asserted that objective truth does not exist and that, with certainty, one can only speak of subjective sensations. In Cyrenaicism, the sensualist theory of knowledge is supplemented by sensualist ethics—the doctrine of sensual satisfaction as the basis of morality. The Cyrenaic school produced a number of representatives of ancient atheism.
[24] Cf. Überweg-Heinze, § 88, p. 122 (10th edition)— and also about them in Plato’s Theaetetus.[24a] Their (the Cyrenaics’) scepticism and subjectivism.—Ed.
[24a] The reference is to § 38 “The Aristippian and Cyrenaic or Hedonistic School” in Überweg’s book: Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie des Altertums. 10. Auflage, Berlin, 1909. (F. Überweg, Outline of the History of Ancient Philosophy, 10th edition, Berlin, 1909). In the dialogue Theaetetus, Plato expounds his mystical theory of knowledge, calling cognition the rise of reason into the realm of ideas; this rise is like recollection since, according to Plato, reason, the soul, by their origin, belong to this supersensual world of ideas.
[25] to fall back, the better to leap (to know?)—Ed.
[26] nodal point—Ed.
[27] substance—Ed.
[28] See L. Feuerbach, Against Dualism of Body and Soul, Flesh and Spirit.
[29] See F. Engels, Anti-Dühring, Moscow, 1959, p. 54.
[30] logos—Ed.
[31] sense-perception (sensation) and cognition—Ed.
[32] “is external”—Ed.
[33] to talk out of existence—Ed.
[34] A matter of indifference—Ed.
[35] the soul—Ed.
[36] perceives—Ed.
[37] reason—Ed.
[38] what is apprehended by reason—Ed.
[39] Stoics—adherents of an ancient Greek school of philosophy arising about the 3rd century B.C. and existing until the 6th century A.D. The Stoics recognised two elements in the universe: an enduring element—matter without quality; and an active one—reason, logos, god. In logic, the Stoics proceeded from the assumption that the source of all cognition is sensuous perception and that a conception can be true only if it is a faithful and full impression of the object. The Stoics taught, however, that perceptual judgment arises only as a result of agreement between the mind and a true conception. This the Stoics called “catalepsy” (or “seizure”) and viewed it as a criterion for truth.
[40] In the manuscript the word “Canonic” is linked by an arrow with the word “It” at the beginning of the following paragraph.—Ed.
[41] in opinion—Ed.
[42] The words in brackets are missing in Lenin’s manuscript.—Ed.
[43] meager_—_Ed.
[44] also_—_Ed.
[45] difference—Ed.
[46] “curvilinear” motion—Ed.
[47] “natural science” today—Ed.
[48] feeble—Ed.
[49] superstitions_—_Ed.
[50] “finite” things—Ed.
[51] “the universal”—Ed.
[52] See L. Feuerbach, Lectures on the Essence of Religion: “the God of man is nothing but the deified being of man.” (L. Feuerbach, Werke, Bd. 6, Berlin, 1840, S. 21.)
[53] _Sceptics_—in this case, adherents of the ancient Greek philosophical school founded by Pyrrho (c. 365-275 B.C.). The best known of the ancient Sceptics were Aenesidemus and Sextus Empiricus (2nd century A.D.). [See also: “Scepticism and Dogmatism”]
_Tropes_—the designation for the reasons for doubt advanced by the ancient Sceptics (ten tropes) and later supplemented (five tropes) by Agrippa. By means of these reasons the Sceptics tried to prove the impossibility of cognising things and the absolute relativity of all perceptions.
[54] thinking scepticism—Ed.
[55] raised—Ed.
[56] Lenin’s remark in parentheses was evoked by a misprint in the German text, which had nicht (not) instead of nichts (nothing) before the word “absolute.”—Ed.