News & Letters, April 1999
From the Writings of Raya Dunayevskaya: Marxist-Humanist
Archives
Rough Notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC
Part 3: Doctrine of Essence
by Raya Dunayevskaya, founder of Marxist-Humanism in the U.S.
Editor's Note: The following consists of Part 3 of Raya
Dunayevskaya's detailed commentary on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC.
Part 1, on the Prefaces and Introduction to the LOGIC, and Part
2, on the Doctrine of Being, appeared in our January-February
and March issues. Part 4, on the Doctrine of the Notion, will
appear in the May issue. These notes were first written in 1961
and appear in print for the first time.
The LOGIC is one of Hegel's most important works and was of
great service to Marx, especially in the writing of CAPITAL. It
has taken on new importance in light of the need to comprehend
the logic of contemporary capitalism and the struggles against
it. These notes will serve as an anchor of a nationwide series
of classes News and Letters Committees is holding on "The
Dialectics of Marx's CAPITAL and Today's Global Crises." To
find out about how to participate in them, see the announcement,
on page 10.
All material in brackets as well as footnotes has been supplied
by the editors. "SL" and "SLII" refer to the
text of the SCIENCE OF LOGIC as translated by Johnston and
Struthers in two volumes (Macmillan, 1929); "SLM"
refers to the translation by A.V. Miller (Humanities Press,
1969). The references to Lenin are to his 1914-15 commentary on
Hegel's LOGIC, the first such study done by a Marxist, referred
to as "LCW 38."
Dunayevskaya's text has been slightly shortened, indicated by
the use of ellipses. THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION, 2806.
Book Two: The Doctrine of Essence
Section One: Essence As Reflection Into Self
Chapter I: Show
The profundity of Hegel is seen in the fact that even where
he thinks that something is relatively unessential and is,
therefore, mere show, that even there the show is also
objective. He considers [that] "show, then, is the
PHENOMENON of skepticism...skepticism did not dare to affirm 'it
is'; modern idealism did not dare to regard cognition as a
knowledge of Thing-in-itself" [SLII, p. 22; SLM, p. 396].
Hegel hits out against all idealisms, of Leibniz, Kant, or
Fichte. Hegel writes, "It is the immediacy of NOT-BEING,
which constitutes Show; but this Not-Being is nothing else than
the Negativity of Essence in itself" [SLII, p. 23; SLM, p.
397].
In fact, [in his comments] on the page before [Hegel] said
this, when he criticized both skepticism and idealism, Lenin
noted: "You include all the manifold riches of the world in
SCHEIN [show] and you reject the objectivity of SCHEIN!!" [LCW
38, p. 131]. And again: "Show is Essence in one of its
determinations. . . Essence thus appears. Show is the phenomenon
of Essence in itself" [LCW 38, p. 133]. Lenin further notes
that in this section on the Reflection of Essence, Hegel again
accuses Kant of subjectivism and insists on the objective
validity of Show, "of the immediate given," and notes:
"The term, 'GIVEN' is common with Hegel in general. The
little philosophers dispute whether one should take as basis the
Essence or the immediately given (Kant, Hume, Machists(1)).
Hegel substitutes AND for 'or' and explains the concrete content
of this 'and'" [LCW 38, p. 134].
Chapter II: The Essentialities or Determinations of
Reflection
We will deal here with the three developments in Essence:
first, simple self-relation or Identity; secondly, Variety
[Difference]; and thirdly, Contradiction. But before Hegel
develops these three, he has an observation on so-called
"Laws of Thought," which allegedly prove that A cannot
be at one and the same time A and not be A. That is absolutely
hilarious. "Category, according to its etymology and its
Aristotelian definition, is that which is predicated or asserted
of the existent. -But a determinateness of Being is essentially
a transition into the opposite; the negative of any
determinateness is as necessary as the determinateness itself;
and each immediate determinateness is immediately opposed by the
other" [SLII, p. 36; SLM, p. 410].
When Hegel gets to Observation Two, which [Aristotle] called
the Law of the Excluded Middle, he again hits out at the idea
that something either is or is not A, that there is no third,
insisting that there IS a third in the very thesis since A can
be both +A and -A: "The something thus is itself the third
term which was supposed to be excluded" [SLII, p. 66; SLM,
p. 439], At this point, Lenin remarked: "This is very
profound. Every concrete thing, every concrete something stands
in diverse and often contradictory relations to all others,
ergo, it is itself and another" [LCW 38, p. 138].
As for the observation which follows on the law of
Contradiction where Hegel defines Contradiction as the
"root of all movement and life, and it is only insofar as
it contains a Contradiction that anything moves and has impulse
and activity" [SLII, p. 67; SLM, p. 439], Lenin copies out
in toto this entire section, at the end of which he makes his
famous generalization that the idea of movement and change was
disclosed in 1813 by Hegel, that is, by philosophy, and was
applied by Marx first in 1847 and by Darwin in 1859 [LCW 38, p.
141].
Indeed, Lenin can hardly stop himself from becoming a
complete Hegelian and stressing over and over again how stupid
it is to think that Hegel is abstract and abstruse, and how
profound is the concept of Contradiction as the force of
Movement and how different Thinking, Reason, Notion is to
ordinary understanding: "Thinking reason (notion) sharpens
the blunted difference of variety, the mere manifold of
imagination, to the ESSENTIAL difference, to OPPOSITION. Only
when the contradictions reach their peak does manifoldness
become mobile (REGSAM) and lively in relation to the
other,-acquire that negativity which is the INNER-PULSATION OF
SELF-MOVEMENT AND LIFE." [Cf. LCW 38, p. 143; SLII, p. 69;
SLM, p. 422]
Chapter III: Ground
The very first sentence-"Essence determines itself as
Ground" [SLII, p. 71; SLM, p. 444]-lets us know that we are
approaching the climax to Section One of Essence. As soon as
Hegel, in the first observation on the Law of Ground, finishes
his critique of Leibniz's Law of Sufficient Ground, he develops,
in Absolute Ground, all the essentials of Form and Essence, Form
and Matter, Form and Content where it becomes quite clear that
these cannot be separated; that Form and Matter "presuppose
one another" [SLII, p. 79; SLM, p. 452] and Content is the
"unity" of Form and Matter [SLII, p. 82; SLM, p. 454].
And as we move from Absolute to Determined [Determinate] Ground
and approach Complete Ground, it becomes quite clear that
manifoldness or content-determinations could be used
indiscriminately so that you could cite something as much FOR as
AGAINST something, which is exactly what Socrates correctly
argued against as Sophistry, because, of course, such
conclusions do not exhaust the thing-in-itself in the sense of
"grasp of the connection of things which contain them
all" [SLII, p. 94; SLM, p. 466].
It is at this point that we reach the transition from Ground
to Condition, which moves Lenin to say, "brilliant:
all-world, all-sided LIVING connection of everything with
everything else, and of the reflection of this connection-MATERIALISTISCH
AUF DEN KOPF GESTELLTER HEGEL [Hegel materialistically turned on
his head]-in the concept of man, which must be so polished, so
broken-in, flexible, mobile, relative, mutually-tied-in, united
in opposition, as to embrace the world. The continuation of the
work of Hegel and Marx must consist in the dialectical working
out of the history of human thought, science and
technique." And at the same spot, Lenin rethinks Marx's
CAPITAL, thus: "And a 'purely logical' working out? DAS
FALLT ZUSAMMEN [It coincides]. It MUST coincide as does
induction and deduction in CAPITAL" [LCW 38, p. 146].
We have now reached the third sub-section of
Ground-Condition, which could be defined as History. In 1950, G.
[Grace Lee] wrote quite a good letter on that sub-section, but
C. L. R. James was no help whatsoever; indeed, he could never
develop the strong point of Grace on philosophy. But we can gain
something by quoting her letter at this point: "The
essenceof Hegel's argument is this: It is necessary to get rid
of the concept of Ground as a SUBSTRATUM, but when you get rid
of this concept of something BEHIND the immediate you have not
by any means gotten rid of the fact that the immediate is the
result of a MEDIATING process. It is the self-mediating,
self-repelling, self-transcending relation of Ground which
externalizes itself in the immediate existent. Hence the
relentless phrasing and rephrasing of his thesis that 'The Fact
Emerges Out of Ground.'"(2)
The exact statement from Hegel reads: "When all the
Conditions of a fact are present, it enters into Existence. The
fact is before it EXISTS. . . " [SLII, p. 105; SLM, p.
477].
Now at this point, Lenin wrote: "Very good! What has the
Absolute Idea and Idealism to find here? Remarkable, this
'derivation' of Existence" [LCW 38, p. 147]. We may be bold
enough to answer the question, or better still, recognize that
Lenin answered his own question when he reached the last part of
Hegel precisely on the Absolute Idea, and therefore noted: (1)
That one must read the WHOLE of the LOGIC to understand CAPITAL;
(2) that man's cognition not only reflects the world, but
"creates" it; (3) and noted in his conclusions that
there was more sense in Idealism than in vulgar materialism,
which made him so anxious to try to get the ENCYCLOPEDIA GRANAT
to return his essay on Marx, so that he could expand the section
on dialectics.
I want to return to the question of Condition as History, as
well as to the expression that "The Fact IS before it
EXISTS." The History that Hegel had in mind was, of course,
the historic period in which he lived, following the French
Revolution, which brought not the millennium, but new
contradictions, i.e., philosophically speaking, Ground had been
transformed into Condition and we did get a totality of
Movement-the Fact-in-itself. The new contradictions will once
again show that facts, facts, facts can also hide[:] "the
unity of Form is submerged" [SLII, p. 104; SLM, p. 475].
And of course we know that our historic epoch, much more than
Hegel's, demands more of reality than just a sound of "immediates."(3)
For example, scientifically with Einstein, we get to know that
facts, too, are relative. So that once again we need
self-transcendence and therefore, in the expression "the
fact is before it exists," we recognize the process of
emergence of something new, and in its emergence we therefore
get the transition to Existence. In our terms, if we think of
the actual historical development of the working class in Marx's
CAPITAL, we have "Ground in Unity with its Condition."
Section Two: Appearance
Here again, the very first sentence is a leap forward:
"Essence must appear" [SLII, p. 107; SLM, p. 479]. So
we can no longer merely contrast Appearance to Essence, because,
while there may be much Appearance that is only
"show," it also contains Essence itself (which in turn
will soon mean we are moving to a real crisis or Actuality).
The three sub-sections on Appearance are: (1) Existence, (2)
Appearance and (3) Essential Relation.
(I might state that Sartre's Existentialism is nowhere near
this important section of Hegel's LOGIC, for in Hegel
"whatever exists has a Ground and is conditioned" [SLII,
p. 109; SLM, p. 481], whereas in Sartre, both the Ground and the
Condition are quite subordinate to the Ego's disgust with it
all.)(4)
The real tendency, as well as actuality, that we should have
before us in studying this section on Appearance is Stalinism
and its non-essential critique in Trotskyism. That is to say, if
Essence-the present stage of capitalism or the present stage of
the counter-revolutionary appearance of the labor
bureaucracy-must appear, then Stalinism, which has appeared, is
not just any old bureaucracy that has no connection with a new
economic state of world development. On the contrary, the
Appearance-Stalinism-and the Essence-state-capitalism-are one
and the same, or the Form of a new Content. Trotskyism, on the
other hand, by putting up a Chinese wall between what is mere
Appearance to what is true Essence (and to him, the Essence is
not capitalism, but the form of workers' state) has not been
able to analyze either Stalinism or state-capitalism. I mean,
either Stalinism as a mere perversion of the early Soviets, or
Stalinism as the absolute opposite of that early workers'
state.5
To get back to Hegel and Lenin's notes on Hegel, Lenin is
quite impressed with Hegel's Analysis of the Law of Appearance,
the World of Appearance and the World-in-Itself, and the
Dissolution of Appearance, which are the sub-sections of Chapter
II of this section.
Lenin keeps stressing at this point "the remarkably
materialistic" analysis that flows from this objective
analysis which will, of course, become the basis of Marx's
analysis of the economic laws of capitalism. When Hegel writes
"Law, then, is essential appearance" [SLII, p. 133;
SLM, p. 504], Lenin concludes, "Ergo, Law and Essence of
Concept are homogeneous (of one order) or, more correctly,
uniform, expressing the deepening of man's knowledge of
Appearance, the world, etc." [LCW 38, p. 152]. Finally,
"The essence here is that both the World of Appearance and
the World which is in and for itself are essentially MOMENTS of
knowledge of nature by man, stages, changes or deepening (of
knowledge). The movement of the world in itself ever further and
further FROM the world of appearance-that is what is not yet
visible in Hegel. NB. Do not the 'moments' of conception with
Hegel have significance of 'moments' of transition?" [LCW
38, p. 153].
Chapter III: Essential Relation
"The truth of Appearance is Essential Relation" [SLII,
p. 142; SLM, p. 512].
The relationship of the Whole and the Parts, you may recall
from my various lectures on Hegel, has to me been a key, not
merely to this section of Hegel, but to the entire philosophy of
both Hegel and Marx. Thus, when I say that the whole is not only
the sum total of the parts, but has a pull on the parts that are
not yet there, even as the future has a pull on the present, it
is obvious that we have moved from abstract philosophic
conceptions to the actual world, and form the actual world back
again to philosophy, but this time as enriched by the actual.
As Hegel puts it, "the Whole and the Parts therefore
CONDITION each other" [SLII, p. 145; SLM, p. 515],
"the Whole is equal to the Parts and the Parts to the
Whole. . . But further, although the Whole is equal to the
Parts, it is not equal TO THEM as Parts; the Whole is reflected
unity" [SLII, p. 146; SLM, pp. 515-16]. "Thus, the
relation of Whole and Parts has passed over into a relation of
Force(6) and its Manifestation" [SLII, p. 147; SLM, p.
517]. Indeed, we will move from that to the relation of Outer
and Inner,(7) which will become the transition to Substance and
Actuality.
On the relationship of Outer and Inner, Lenin stresses what
he calls "the unexpected slipping in of the CRITERIA of
Hegel's Dialectic"-where Hegel notes that the relationship
of Inner and Outer is apparent "in every natural,
scientific, and, generally, intellectual development" [SLII,
p. 157; SLM, p. 526]-and Lenin concludes, therefore, "that
is where lies the SEED of the deep truth in the mystical
balderdash of Hegelianism!" [LCW 38, p. 155].
Section Three: Actuality
The introductory note will stress that "Actuality is the
UNITY OF ESSENCE AND EXISTENCE. . . This unity of Inner and
Outer is ABSOLUTE ACTUALITY." He will divide Actuality into
Possibility and Necessity as the "formal moments" of
the Absolute, or its reflection. And finally, the unity of this
Absolute and its reflection will become the Absolute Relation
"or, rather, the Absolute as relation to itself,
-SUBSTANCE" [SLII, p. 160; SLM, p. 529].
At this point in the Preliminary Note [on the Absolute],
Lenin gets quite peeved at the idealist in Hegel and he divides
the expression that "there is no becoming in the
Absolute" [SLII, p. 162; SLM, p. 531] into two sentences by
stating "and other nonsense about the Absolute" [LCW
38, p. 156]. But, as usual, it will not be long before Lenin is
full of praise of Hegel and his section on Actuality.
To me, the most important part of Chapter I of Section Three,
the Absolute, is the Observation [SLII, p. 167-72; SLM, pp.
536-40] on the philosophy of Spinoza: "DETERMINATENESS IS
NEGATION-this is the absolute principle of Spinoza's philosophy,
and this true and simple insight is the foundation of the
absolute unity of Substance. But Spinoza does not pass on beyond
negation as determinateness or quality to a recognition of it as
absolute, that is, self-negating, negation" [SLII, p. 168;
SLM, p. 536]. Hegel's conclusion is that though the dialectic is
in it until Spinoza gets to Substance, it there stops:
"Substance lacks the principle of Personality" [SLII,
p. 168; SLM, p. 537]. And again later Hegel writes: "In a
similar manner in the Oriental idea of EMANATION the Absolute is
self-illuminating light" [SLII, p. 170; SLM, p. 538].
From now on, the polemical movement in the LOGIC will take a
very subordinate place; the observations will do the same.
Indeed, for the rest of the entire work, Hegel will have only
two observations, as contrasted to the beginning of the SCIENCE
OF LOGIC, where after but one single page on Being, he had no
less than four observations (really five when you consider the
one on Transcendence of Becoming) which took up no less than 23
pages.
In a word, the closer he approaches the Notion, especially
the Absolute Idea, that is to say, the climax of his system as
it has been comprehensively and profoundly developed both
historically and polemically, the more he has absorbed all that
is of value in the other systems of philosophy, rejected that
which is not, and presented a truly objective worldview of
history and philosophy, which contains the elements of a future
society inherent in the present. (We will return to this point
at the end.)
Of Chapter II on Actuality, the categories dealt
with-Contingency, or formal Actuality, Possibility and
Necessity-are all to pave the way to Chapter III, the Absolute
Relation, which is the apex of the Doctrine of Essence and will
bring us to the Notion.
Lenin begins to free himself of any residue of taking the
empiric concrete as the Real or Actual. Near [Hegel's discussion
of] the question of the relationship of Substantiality and
Causality, Lenin writes: "On the one hand, we must deepen
the knowledge of matter to the knowledge (to the concept) of
substance, in order to find the causes of appearance. On the
other hand, actual knowledge of causes is the deepening of
knowledge from externality of appearance to substance. Two types
of examples should explain this: (1) out of the history of
natural science and (2) from the history of philosophy. More
precisely: not 'examples' should be here-COMPARISON N'EST PAS
RAISON [comparison is not proof], -but the QUINTESSENCE of the
one and the other history-plus the history of technique" [LCW
38, p. 159].
A couple of pages later, Lenin will note that Hegel
"FULLY leads up to History under Causality" and again,
that the ordinary understanding of Causality fails to see that
it is "only a small part of the universal connection"
[LCW 38, p. 160] and that the small part is not subjective, but
the objectively real connection. Indeed, Lenin very nearly makes
fun, along with Hegel, of course, of Cause and Effect. Where
Hegel wrote, "Effect therefore is necessary just because it
is manifestation of Cause, or because it is that Necessity which
is Cause" [SLII, p. 192; SLM, p. 559], Lenin noted that, of
course, both Cause and Effect are "only Moments of the
universal interdependence, of the universal concatenation of
events, only links in the chain of the development of
Matter" [LCW 38, p. 159]. And by the time he has finished
with this chapter and met up with Hegel's definition of the next
and final part of the Logic, the Notion, "the Realm of
Subjectivity or of Freedom" [SLII, p. 205; SLM, p. 571],
Lenin translates this without any self-consciousness over the
word "Subjective," as follows:
"NB-Freedom=subjectivity ("or") goal,
consciousness, striving" [LCW 38, p. 164].
It is important to note that Herbert Marcuse in his REASON
AND REVOLUTION also chooses this, not only as the climax, which
it is, to the Doctrine of Essence, but more or less as the
Essence of the whole of Hegelian philosophy. Thus, on p. 153, he
states, "Without a grasp of the distinction between Reality
and Actuality, Hegel's philosophy is meaningless in its decisive
principles."
NOTES
- "Machists" refers to the followers of Ernst
Mach (1838-1916), Austrian physicist and philosopher who
argued that all knowledge is a conceptual organization
of the data of sensory experience.
- This letter of March 22, 1950 has not been located, but
extracts of it appear in notes later prepared by
Dunayevskaya. See SUPPLEMENT TO THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA
COLLECTION, 14670-72.
- Hegel writes in the same paragraph that "the
immediacy of Being essentially is only a moment of
Form" [SLII, p. 104; SLM, p. 476].
- A reference to Sartre's BEING AND NOTHINGNESS.
- Compare the discussion of form and essence in
Dunayevskaya's 1949 "Notes on Chapter 1 of Marx's
CAPITAL: Its Relation to Hegel's Logic," in
Dunayevskaya, THE MARXIST-HUMANIST THEORY OF
STATE-CAPITALISM, pp. 89-94.
- For Hegel, matter and substances do not simply possess
various forces (such as weight or magnetism), they also
are forces. This is in keeping with his overall view
that we cannot adequately apprehend the world as
substance only, but must eventually view it also as
subject. Force is not yet subject, but it does convey
motion and change, rather than simple inert
substantiality.
- Hegel writes in his observation on "the immediate
identity of inner and outer" that they are not so
separate as common sense would believe, for "each
immediately is not only its other but also the totality
of the whole" [SLII, p. 157; SLM, p. 526].
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