“ A Something is what it is in virtue of its quality, and losing its quality it ceases to be what it is. ”
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Science of Logic (1816). copy citation
Author | Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel |
---|---|
Source | Science of Logic |
Topic | virtue quality |
Date | 1816 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by William Wallace |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55108/55108-h/55108-h.htm |
Context
“Quality may be described as the determinate mode immediate and identical with Being—as distinguished from Quantity (to come afterwards) , which, although a mode of Being, [Pg 171] is no longer immediately identical with Being, but a mode indifferent and external to it. A Something is what it is in virtue of its quality, and losing its quality it ceases to be what it is. Quality, moreover, is completely a category only of the finite, and for that reason too it has its proper place in Nature, not in the world of Mind. Thus, for example, in Nature what are styled the elementary bodies, oxygen, nitrogen, &c., should be regarded as existing qualities.”
source