Category: History - Ancient

Hegel's Lectures on the History of Philosophy: Volume 2 (of 3)

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.

Chapters

5. 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...

4. CHAPTER III

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....

6. 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...

11. 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 co...

10. 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 sub...

9. 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 j...

8. 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 itse...

3. CHAPTER III.—FIRST PERIOD, THIRD DIVISION 1

7. 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 sp...

2. VOLUME TWO

1. VOLUME TWO