第 41 节
作者:匆匆      更新:2021-02-27 02:11      字数:9322
  the judgment in which it was lost in the extremes。 Through this impregnation of the copula the
  judgment has become the syllogism。
  THE DOCTRINE OF THE NOTION
  Section One: Subjectivity
  Chapter 3 The Syllogism
  We have found the syllogism to be the restoration of the Notion in the judgment; and
  consequently the unity and truth of both。 The Notion as such holds its moments sublated in unity;
  in the judgment this unity is internal or; what is the same thing; external; and the moments; although
  related; are posited as self…subsistent extremes。 In the syllogism the Notion determinations are
  like the extremes of the judgment; and at the same time their determinate unity is posited。
  Thus the syllogism is the completely posited Notion; it is therefore the rational。 The understanding
  is regarded as the faculty of the determinate Notion which is held fast in isolation by abstraction
  and the form of universality。 But in reason the determinate Notions are posited in their totality
  and unity。 Therefore; not only is the syllogism rational; but everything rational is a syllogism。
  The syllogistic process has for a long time been ascribed to reason; yet on the other hand reason in
  and for itself; rational principles and laws; are spoken of in such a way that it is not clear what is
  the connection between the former reason which syllogises and the latter reason which is the
  source of laws and other eternal truths and absolute thoughts。 If the former is supposed to be
  merely formal reason; while the latter is supposed to be creative of content; then according to this
  distinction it is precisely the form of reason; the syllogism; that must not be lacking in the latter。
  Nevertheless; to such a degree are the two commonly held apart; and not mentioned together; that
  it seems as though the reason of absolute thoughts was ashamed of the reason of the syllogism and
  as though it was only in deference to tradition that the syllogism was also adduced as an activity of
  reason。 Yet it is obvious; as we have just remarked; that the logical reason; if it is regarded as
  formal reason; must essentially be recognisable also in the reason that is concerned with a content;
  the fact is that no content can be rational except through the rational form。 In this matter we cannot
  look for any help in the common chatter about reason; for this refrains from stating what is to be
  understood by reason; this supposedly rational cognition is mostly so busy with its objects that it
  forgets to cognise reason itself and only distinguishes and characterises it by the objects that it
  possesses。 If reason is supposed to be the cognition that knows about God; freedom; right and
  duty; the infinite; unconditioned; supersensuous; or even gives only ideas and feelings of these
  objects; then for one thing these latter are only negative objects; and for another thing the first
  question still remains; what it is in all these objects that makes them rational。 It is this; that the
  infinitude of these objects is not the empty abstraction from the finite; not the universality that lacks
  content and determinateness; but the universality that is fulfilled or realised; the Notion that is
  determinate and possesses its determinateness in this true way; namely; that it differentiates itself
  within itself and is the unity of these fixed and determinate differences。 It is only thus that reason
  rises above the finite; conditioned; sensuous; call it what you will; and in this negativity is
  essentially pregnant with content; for it is the unity of determinate extremes; as such; however;
  the rational is nothing but the syllogism。
  Now the syllogism; like the judgment; is in the first instance immediate; hence its determinations
  are simple; abstract determinatenesses; in this form it is the syllogism of the understanding。 If
  we stop short at this form of the syllogism; then the rationality in it; although undoubtedly present
  and posited; is not apparent。 The essential feature of the syllogism is the unity of the extremes; the
  middle term which unites them; and the ground which supports them。 Abstraction; in holding
  rigidly to the self…subsistence of the extremes; opposes this unity to them as a determinateness
  which likewise is fixed and self…subsistent; and in this way apprehends it rather as non…unity than
  as unity。 The expression middle term is taken from spatial representation and contributes its share
  to the stopping short at the mutual externality of the terms。 Now if the syllogism consists in the
  unity of the extremes being posited in it; and if; all the same; this unity is simply taken on the one
  hand as a particular on its own; and on the other hand as a merely external relation; and non…unity
  is made the essential relationship of the syllogism; then the reason which constitutes the syllogism
  contributes nothing to rationality。
  First; the syllogism of existence in which the terms are thus immediately and abstractly
  determined; demonstrates in itself (since; like the judgment; it is their relation) that they are not in
  fact such abstract terms; but that each contains the relation to the other and that the middle term
  is not particularity as opposed to the determinations of the extremes but contains these terms
  posited in it。
  Through this its dialectic it is converted into the syllogism of reflection; into the second syllogism。
  The terms of this are such that each essentially shows in; or is reflected into; the other; in other
  words they are posited as mediated; which they are supposed to be in accordance with the nature
  of the syllogism in general。
  Thirdly; in that this reflecting or mediatedness of the extremes is reflected into itself; the syllogism
  is determined as the syllogism of necessity; in which the mediating element is the objective nature
  of the thing。 As this syllogism determines the extremes of the Notion equally as totalities; the
  syllogism has attained to the correspondence of its Notion or the middle term; and its existence of
  the difference of its extremes; that is; it has attained to its truth and in doing so has passed out of
  subjectivity into objectivity。
  A The Syllogism of Existence
  1。 The syllogism in its immediate form has for its moments the determinations of the Notion as
  immediate。 Hence they are the abstract determinatenesses of form; which are not yet developed
  by mediation into concretion; but are only single determinatenesses。 The first syllogism is;
  therefore; strictly the formal syllogism。 The formalism of the syllogising process consists in
  stopping short at the determination of this first syllogism。 The Notion; differentiated into its
  abstract moments; has individuality and universality for its extremes; and appears itself as the
  particularity standing between them。 On account of their immediacy they are merely self…related
  determinatenesses; and one and all a single content。 Particularity constitutes the middle term in
  the first instance since it unites immediately within itself the two moments of individuality and
  universality。 On account of its determinateness it is on the one hand subsumed under the universal;
  while on the other hand the individual; as against which it possesses universality; is subsumed
  under it。 But this concretion is in the first instance merely a duality of aspect; on account of the
  immediacy in which the middle term presents itself in the immediate syllogism。 it appears as a
  simple determinateness; and the mediation which it constitutes is not yet posited。 Now the
  dialectical movement of the syllogism of existence consists in the positing in its moments of the
  mediation that alone constitutes the syllogism。
  (a) First Figure of the Syllogism I…P…U
  (b) The Second Figure P…I…U
  (c) The Third Figure I…U…P
  (d) The Fourth Figure U…U…U
  B The Syllogism of Reflection
  The course of the qualitative syllogism has sublated what was abstract in its terms with the result
  that the term has posited itself as a determinateness in which the other determinateness is also
  reflected。 Besides the abstract terms; the syllogism also contains their relation; and in the
  conclusion this relation is posited as mediated and necessary; therefore each determinateness is in
  truth posited not as an individual; separate one; but as a relation to the other; as a concrete
  determinateness。
  The middle term was abstract particularity; by itself a simple determinateness; and was a middle
  term only externally and relatively to the self…subsistent extremes。 Now it is posited as the totality
  of the terms; as such it is the posited unity of the extremes; but in the first instance it is the unity of
  reflection which embraces them within itself…an inclusion which; as the first sublating of immediacy
  and the first relating of the terms; is not yet the absolute identity of the Notion。
  The extremes are the determinations of the judgment of reflection; individuality proper and
  universality as a connective determination or a reflection embracing a manifold within itself。 But
  the individual subject also contains; as we have seen in the case of the judgment of reflection;
  besides the bare individuality which belongs to form; determinateness as unive