“ A sick body is not in harmony with the notion of body, and there is a want of congruity between theft and the notion of human conduct. ”
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Science of Logic (1816). copy citation
Author | Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel |
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Source | Science of Logic |
Topic | theft harmony |
Date | 1816 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by William Wallace |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55108/55108-h/55108-h.htm |
Context
“Truth, on the contrary, lies in the coincidence of the object with itself, that is, with its notion. That a person is sick, or that some one has committed a theft, may certainly be correct. But the content is untrue. A sick body is not in harmony with the notion of body, and there is a want of congruity between theft and the notion of human conduct. These instances may show that an immediate judgment, in which an abstract quality is predicated of an immediately individual thing, however correct it may be, cannot contain truth. The subject and predicate of it do not stand to each other in the relation of reality and notion.”
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