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shorter logic-第79部分

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the Logic of Understanding。 It is not we who frame the notions。 The notion is not something which
is originated at all。 No doubt the notion is not mere Being; or the immediate: it involves mediation;
but the mediation lies in itself。 In other words; the notion is what is mediated through itself and with
itself。 It is a mistake to imagine that the objects which form the content of our mental ideas come
first and that our subjective agency then supervenes; and by the aforesaid operation of abstraction;
and by colligating the points possessed in common by the objects; frames notions of them。 Rather
the notion is the genuine first; and things are what they are through the action of the notion;
immanent in them; and revealing itself in them。 In religious language we express this by saying that
God created the world out of nothing。 In other words; the world and finite things have issued from
the fullness of the divine thoughts and the divine decrees。 Thus religion recognises thought and
(more exactly) the notion to be the infinite form; or the free creative activity; which can realise itself
without the help of a matter that exists outside it。 



                                  § 164

The notion is concrete out and out: because the negative unity with itself; as
characterisation pure and entire; which is individuality; is just what constitutes its
self…relation; its universality。 The functions or 'moments' of the notion are to this
extent indissoluble。 The categories of 'reflection' are expected to be severally
apprehended and separately accepted as current; apart from their opposites。 But
in the notion; where their identity is expressly assumed; each of its functions can
be immediately apprehended only from and with the rest。 

Universality; particularity; and individuality are; taken in the abstract; the same as
identity; difference; and ground。 But the universal is the self…identical; with the
express qualification; that it simultaneously contains the particular and the
individual。 Again; the particular is the different or the specific character; but with
the qualification that it is in itself universal and is as an individual。 Similarly the
individual must be understood to be a subject or substratum; which involves the
genus and species in itself and possesses a substantial existence。 Such is the
explicit or realised inseparability of the functions of the notion in their difference
(§ 160)…what may be called the clearness of the notion; in which each distinction
causes no dimness or interruption; but is quite as much transparent。 

No complaint is oftener made against the notion than that it is abstract。 Of course
it is abstract; if abstract means that the medium in which the notion exists is
thought in general and not the sensible thing in its empirical concreteness。 It is
abstract also; because the notion falls short of the idea。 To this extent the
subjective notion is still formal。 This however does not mean that it ought to have
or receive another content than its own。 It is itself the absolute form; and so is all
specific character; but as that character is in its truth。 Although it be abstract
therefore; it is the concrete; concrete altogether; the subject as such。 The
absolutely concrete is the mind (see end of § 159) … the notion when it exists as
notion distinguishing itself from its objectivity; which notwithstanding the
distinction still continues to be its own。 Everything else which is concrete;
however rich it be; is not so intensely identical with itself and therefore not so
concrete on its own part … least of all what is commonly supposed to be concrete;
but is only a congeries held together by external influence。 What are called
notions; and in fact specific notions; such as man; house; animal; etc。; are simply
denotations and abstract representations。 These abstractions retain out of all the
functions of the notion only that of universality; they leave particularity and
individuality out of account and have no development in these directions。 By so
doing they just miss the notion。 



                                  § 165

It is the element of Individuality which first explicitly differentiates the elements
of the notion。 Individuality is the negative reflection of the notion into itself; and it
is in that way at first the free differentiating of it as the first negation; by which
the specific character of the notion is realised; but under the form of particularity。
That is to say; the different elements are in the first place only qualified as the
several elements of the notion; and; secondly; their identity is no less explicitly
stated; the one being said to be the other。 This realised particularity of the notion
is the Judgment。 

The ordinary classification of notions; as clear; distinct; and adequate; is no part
of the notion; it belongs to psychology。 Notions; in fact; are here synonymous
with mental representations; a clear notion is an abstract simple representation: a
distinct notion is one where; in addition to the simplicity; there is one 'mark' or
character emphasised as a sign for subjective cognition。 There is no more striking
mark of the formalism and decay of Logic than the favourite category of the
'mark'。 The adequate notion comes nearer the notion proper; or even the Idea:
but after all it expresses only the formal circumstance that a notion or
representation agrees with its object; that is; with an external thing。 The division
into what are called subordinate and coordinate notions implies a mechanical
distinction of universal from particular which allows only a mere correlation of
them in external comparison。 Again; an enumeration of such kinds as contrary
and contradictory; affirmative and negative notions; etc。; is only a chance…directed
gleaning of logical forms which properly belong to the sphere of Being or Essence
(where they have been already examined) and which have nothing to do with the
specific notional character as such。 The true distinctions in the notion; universal;
particular; and individual; may be said also to constitute species of it; but only
when they are kept severed from each other by external reflection。 The immanent
differentiating and specifying of the notion come to sight in the judgment: for to
judge is to specify the notion。 



                             (b) The Judgment
                                  § 166

The Judgment is the notion in its particularity; as a connection which is also a
distinguishing of its functions; which are put as independent and yet as identical
with themselves not with one another。 

One's first impression about the Judgment is the independence of the two
extremes; the subject and the predicate。 The former we take to be a thing or term
per se; and the predicate a general term outside the said subject and somewhere
in our heads。 The next point is for us to bring the latter into combination with the
former; and in this way frame a Judgment。 The copula 'is'; however; enunciates
the predicate of the subject; and so that external subjective e subsumption is again
put in abeyance; and the Judgment taken as a determination of the o
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