News & Letters, May 1999
From the Writings of Raya Dunayevskaya: Marxist-Humanist Archives
Rough Notes on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC
Part 4: Doctrine of NOTION
by Raya Dunayevskaya, founder of Marxist-Humanism in the U.S.
Editor's Note: The following concludes our four-part publication of Raya Dunayevskaya's
detailed commentary on Hegel's SCIENCE OF LOGIC. It was written in 1961 and
appears 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 serve as an anchor of
a nationwide series of classes News and Letters Committees is holding on
"The Dialectic of Marx's CAPITAL and Today's Global Crises."
All material in brackets as well as footnotes have been supplied by the
editors. "SLI" and "SLII" refer to the text of the SCIENCE OF LOGIC
translated by Johnston and Struthers in two volumes (Macmillan, 1929);
"SLM" refers to the translation by A.V. Miller (Humanities Press, 1969).
"LCW 38" refers to Lenin's 1914-15 commentary on Hegel's Logic, the first
such study done by a Marxist.
Dunayevskaya's text has been slightly shortened, indicated by the use of
ellipses. The original can be found in THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION,
2806.
Volume II(1):
Subjective Logic or the Doctrine of the Notion
With the Notion, we reach, at one and the same time, that which in
philosophic terms is oldest, most written about, and purely
intellectualistic; and, from a Marxist point of view, least written about,
most "feared" as idealistic, unreal, "pure" thought-in a word, a closed
ontology.
And yet it is the Doctrine of the Notion that develops the categories of
Freedom and, therefore, should mean the objective and subjective means
whereby a new society is born. It is true that CONSCIOUSLY for Hegel this
was done only in thought, while in life contradictions persisted. But what
was for Hegel consciously does not explain away the objective pull of the
future on the present, and the present as history (the French Revolution
for Hegel), and not just as the status quo of an existing state. Be that as
it [may], let's follow Hegel himself.
Before we reach Section One, there is the Introductory "On the Notion in
General." We will meet in Lenin constant references to Marx's CAPITAL from
now on. Thus, in this early section, Lenin notes that Hegel is entirely
right as against Kant on the question of thought NOT separating from truth,
but going toward it, as it emerges from the Concrete and moves to the
Abstract: "Abstraction of MATTER, of natural LAW, of VALUE, etc., in a
word, ALL scientific (correct, serious, not absurd) abstractions reflect
nature more deeply, truer, FULLER. From living observation to abstract
thinking, and from this to practice-such is the dialectic road to knowledge
of truth, the knowledge of objective reality. Kant degrades knowledge in
order to make place for belief; Hegel elevates knowledge believing that
knowledge is knowledge of God. The materialist elevates knowledge of
matter, of nature, throwing God and the philosophic rabble defending him
into the dung heap" [LCW 38, p. 171].
The section to which Lenin refers in Hegel is "It will always remain a
matter for astonishment how the Kantian philosophy knew that relation of
thought to sensuous existence, where it halted, for a merely relative
relation of bare appearance, and fully acknowledged and asserted a higher
unity of the two in the Idea in general, and, particularly, in the idea of
an intuitive understanding; but yet stopped dead at this relative relation
and at the assertion that the Notion is and remains utterly separated from
reality;-so that it affirmed as true what it pronounced to be finite
knowledge, and declared to be superfluous and improper figments of thought
that which it recognized as truth, and of which it established the definite
notion" [SLII, p. 226; SLM, p. 592].
It could also be said that Khrushchev's "peaceful coexistence" and Kant's
indifferent coexistence of Absolute and the Particular or Reason and
Understanding coincide also in the fact that Kant does see a dialectical
relationship between the two, unlike Leibniz, who saw only harmony arising
from it.
Section One: Subjectivity
Chapter I: Notion
The forms of the Notion are: Universal, Particular, Individual. These three
forms of Notion are the categories which express development in this entire
book, even as in the Doctrine of Essence it was the categories of Identity,
Difference and Contradiction; and in Being, it was Quantity, Quality and
Measure, with this difference: that the movement in the Doctrine of the
Notion from Universal to Particular to Individual could characterize the
movement of all three books of the SCIENCE OF LOGIC, thus, Being standing
for Universal, Particular standing for Essence, and Individual standing for
Notion.
It is this first meeting with U-P-I that makes Lenin say that it reminds
him of Marx's first chapter in CAPITAL. Not only that; he begins
immediately thereafter (that is, after dealing with chapter II-Judgment-and
in the Approach to chapter III on Syllogism) to make the famous aphorism:
(1) Relating to the relationship between Abstract and Concrete: "Just as
the simple value form, the individual act of exchange of a given commodity
with another already includes in undeveloped form all major contradictions
of capitalism-so the simplest generalization, the first and simplest
forming of notions (judgments, syllogisms, etc.) signifies the ever-greater
knowledge of the objective world connections. Here it is necessary to seek
the real sense, significance and role of Hegelian logic" [LCW 38, pp.
178-79]. (2) Where he rejects Plekhanov as a vulgar materialist, or at
least having criticized Kant only as a vulgar materialist. (3) Includes
himself when he says that all Marxists at the beginning of the twentieth
century had done so. (4) And where he concludes that it is impossible to
understand CAPITAL without understanding the whole of Hegel's LOGIC. (The
friends should reread the whole chapter on Lenin in MARXISM AND FREEDOM.)
I have had to skip a great deal which at another time must be studied more
carefully, both on the question of the Judgment-where Hegel lists four
major forms and a total of twelve for a sub-section-and the syllogism,
where we have three major sections, each containing four sub-sections. It
is not only because I am hurrying to get to the sections which have not
been dealt with in any great detail by Marxists, but because for OUR age
this section on Subjectivity is not the subjectivity which has absorbed all
objectivity and which we will first read in the Absolute Idea. One phrase
from the last paragraph in Hegel's section on the Syllogism will, however,
be of the Essence: "The Syllogism is Mediation-the complete Notion in its
Positedness" [SLII, p. 342; SLM, p. 704]. The key word is Mediation. It is
of the Essence in all thought, as well as in all struggles. Indeed, it
could be said that mediation IS the conflict of forces. For example, all of
Essence could be summed up in the word Mediation, or, if instead of
Essence, you're thinking concretely of production in CAPITAL, then of
course it is production relations. So that what U-P-I does in showing the
GENERAL movement in LOGIC, mediation is the CONCRETE struggle and appears
in ALL three books: in Being, it is Measure, which is, of course, the
threshold of Essence; in Essence, it is Actuality, or more specifically,
Causality which, as Reciprocity, brings us to the threshold of Notion; in
Notion, it is Action, Practice, which supersedes Subjectivity of Purpose
and THUS achieves unity of Theory and Practice.
Section Two: Objectivity
The three chapters in this section-I, Mechanism; II, Chemism; III,
Teleology-are devastating analyses of Bukharin's HISTORICAL MATERIALISM
over one hundred years before it was ever written...(2)
For us, what is important is Lenin's profound understanding in 1914, AS
AGAINST the period when HE gave the green light to vulgar materialism with
his MATERIALISM AND EMPIRIO-CRITICISM, of the fact that the mechanical,
chemical and even teleological-that is to say, subjectively purposeful-are
no substitute for the SELF-DEVELOPING subject. Lenin notes here that Hegel
laid the basis for historical materialism, quoting Hegel's statement "In
his tools man possesses power over external nature, even although,
according to his Ends, he frequently is subjected to it. But the End does
not only remain outside the Mechanical process: it also preserves itself
within it, and is its determination. The End, as the Notion which exists as
free against the object and its process and is self-determining activity,
equally is the truth which is in and for itself of Mechanism. . ." [SLII,
p. 388; SLM, p. 747].
Lenin further defends Hegel for his seeming strain to "subsume" the
purposeful activity of man under the category of logic because, as Lenin
states it: "There is here a very deep content, purely materialistic. It is
necessary to turn this around; the practical activity of man billions of
times must bring the consciousness of man to the repetition of the various
logical figures, in order that these should achieve the significance of an
AXIOM" [LCW 38, p. 190].
I believe that Hegel here is criticizing what we will much later in history
know as The Plan. Intellectual planning, or what Hegel would call
"Self-Determination applied externally,"(3) is certainly no substitute for
the self-developing subject, not even as idealistically expressed by Hegel
in the Absolute Idea.
Section Three: The Idea
Lenin notes that the introductory section to this is very nearly the best
description of the dialectic. It is in this section that we will go through
chapter I on Life; chapter II on the Idea of Cognition, which will not only
deal with Analytic and Synthetic Cognition, but will take up the question
of Practice, Volition, the Idea of the True and the Idea of the Good; and
finally, chapter III on the Absolute Idea.
It is the section in which Lenin will write, although he will not develop
it, that "man's cognition not only reflects the world, but creates it" [LCW
38, p. 212]. He will also stress over and over and over again totality,
Inter-dependence of Notions of ALL Notions, RELATIONSHIPS, Transitions,
Unity of Opposites and various ways of defining dialectics from the single
expression that it is the transformation of one into its opposite, to the
more elaborate threefold definition of dialectic, as including
Determination, Contradiction and Unity; and finally, the sixteen-point
definition of dialectic, which passes through Objectivity, Development,
Struggle and finally Negation of the Negation.
Lenin will also do a lot of "translations" of the word Idea, the word
Absolute, which in some places he uses as no different than Objective, but
in other places as the unity of Objective and Subjective. It is obvious
that Lenin is very greatly moved by the fact that Practice occupies so very
great a place in Hegel, but feels that, nevertheless, this practice is
limited to the theory of knowledge. I do not believe so. (See my original
letters on the Absolute Idea, May 12 and 20, 1953.)(4)
Let's retrace our steps back to the beginning of this whole section on the
Idea. Hegel argues against the expression "MERELY IDEAS: now if thoughts
are merely subjective and contingent they certainly have no further value.
. . And if conversely the Idea is not to be rated as true because, with
respect to phenomena, it is transcendent, and no object can be assigned to
it, in the sensuous world, to which it conforms, this is a strange lack of
understanding, for so the Idea is denied objective validity because it
lacks that which constitutes appearance, or the untrue being of the
objective world" [SLII, p. 396; SLM, p. 756]. Hegel gives Kant credit for
having rejected this "vulgar appeal" to experience, and recognized the
objective validity of thought-only to never have thought and reality meet.
Hegel breaks down the Determinations of Idea as, first, Universal; second,
a relationship of Subjectivity to Objectivity, which is an impulse to
transcend the separation; and finally, the self-identity of Identity and
Process so that "in the Idea the Notion reaches Freedom..." [SLII, p. 399;
SLM, p. 759].
On that same page, he states, in very materialistic terms indeed, that the
"Idea has its reality in some kind of matter." Hegel will then take idea
through Life through what he calls the Idea of the True and the Good as
Cognition and Volition.
In the Idea of Cognition, Hegel will inform us that his PHENOMENOLOGY OF
MIND is a science which stands between Nature and Mind, which in a way
seems contradictory since it has served as the "introduction" to his LOGIC,
and he will further summarize it when he comes to the PHILOSOPHY OF MIND.
He will hit out a great deal sharper at Jacobi than at Kant, although he
gives Jacobi credit for showing that the Kantian method of demonstration is
"simply bound within the circle of the rigid necessity of the finite, and
that freedom (that is, the Notion, and whatever is true) lies beyond its
sphere and scope" [SLII, p. 458; SLM, p. 816].
But he gets less and less interested in other philosophers, the more he
reaches the question of Freedom, Liberation, Unity of Theory and Practice:
"In this result then Cognition is reconstructed and united with the
Practical Idea; the actuality which is found as given is at the same time
determined as the realized absolute end, -not however (as in inquiring
Cognition) merely as objective world without the subjectivity of the
Notion, but as objective world whose inner ground and actual persistence is
the Notion. This is THE ABSOLUTE IDEA" [SLII, p. 465; SLM, p. 823].
This is because, in reaching this final chapter, the Absolute Idea, he is
through with all which we would politically describe as "taking over"; that
is to say, capitalism will develop all technology so perfectly for us that
all the proletariat will have to do will be to "take over." As we reject
this concept politically, Hegel rejects it philosophically. He has now so
absorbed all the other systems that, far from taking over, he is first
going back to a TOTALLY NEW BEGINNING.
Here is what I mean: Take a philosopher like Spinoza. Despite his profound
dialectical understanding that "every determination is a negation," he went
to God taking over. This concept of Absolute, Absolute Substance, Hegel
rejects, even as he rejects the Absolute Ego of Fichte and Schelling, and
the Absolute of the General Good Will of Kant. Note how every single time,
in no matter which section of the LOGIC you take, [when] Hegel reaches an
absolute for that stage, he throws it aside to start out all over again. So
that when he reaches the Notion, he is dealing with it as a new beginning
AFTER he rejected Absolute Substance, and that even his Notion has the
dialectic of further development; indeed Universal, Particular, Individual
is the absolute Mediation, or the development of the LOGIC.
If, for example, we stop in the Absolute Idea at the Expression: "the
self-determination in which alone the Idea is, is to hear itself speak"
[SLII, p. 467; SLM, p. 825], we can see that the whole Logic (both logic
and LOGIC) is a logic of self-determination and never more so than at the
VERY POINT when you have reached an Absolute-say, growing
internationalization of capital. You then go NOT to taking over, but
breaking it down to the new beginning in the self-determination of nations;
or when the state had reached the high stage of centralization, you most
certainly do not go to taking over, but rather to the destruction of the
state.
Hegel can reach these anticipations of the future because a very truly
great step in philosophic cognition is made only when a new way of reaching
freedom has become possible, as it had with the French Revolution. If at
that point you do not cramp your thoughts, then you will first be amazed on
how very close to reality-the reality of the present which includes the
elements of the future-thought really is.
To me, that is why Hegel makes so much of the method. It is not because
that is all we get from Hegel-method-but because the end and the means are
absolutely inseparable. Thus, on p. 468, Hegel writes: "The method
therefore is both soul and substance, and nothing is either conceived or
known in its truth except in so far as it is completely subject to the
method; it is the peculiar method of each individual fact because its
activity is the Notion." It isn't true, for example, as Lenin stated, that
Hegel ended this chapter at the point [SLII, p. 485; SLM, p. 843] where
Notion and reality unite AS NATURE, which Lenin translated to mean as
Practice. In this final paragraph, Hegel proceeds on to show the link back
from Nature to Mind, and of course we know that those two transitions were
in themselves two full books.(5)
Or as Hegel puts it: "The transition here therefore must rather be taken to
mean that the Idea freely releases itself in absolute self-security and
self-repose. By reason of this freedom the form of its determinateness also
is utterly free-the externality of space and time which is absolutely for
itself and without subjectivity" [SLII, p. 486; SLM, p. 843].
Marcuse thinks that it is this statement about the Idea releasing itself
freely as Nature, "this statement of putting the transition forward as an
actual process in reality that offers great difficulty in the understanding
of Hegel's system."(6) But he himself doesn't attempt to overcome these
difficulties. On the contrary, he disregards them, accepting the idea that
it is a closed ontology and the best we can do is take this method and use
it as a critical theory.
One thing is clear to me, that when Hegel wrote that the "transcendence of
the opposition between Notion and Reality, and that unity which is the
truth, rests upon this subjectivity alone" [SLII, p. 477; SLM, p. 835], the
subjectivity was certainly not to be that of the philosopher, despite all
of Hegel's hopes that it would be, but that of a new, lower, deeper layer
of "world spirit," or, to be specific, the proletariat and those
freedom-fighters in backward Africa, who just will freedom so much that
they make it come true. For what happens after [the revolution], however,
that truth must arise not only from the movement from Practice, but also
that FROM THEORY. The negation of the negation will not be a generality,
not even the generality of a new society for the old, but the specific of
self-liberation, which is the humanism of the human BEING, as well as his
philosophy.
NOTES
- Although the Doctrine of the Notion or Subjective Logic is, Hegel
writes, "the third part of the whole" [SLII, p. 209; SLM, p. 575] it was
originally published as volume two of the SCIENCE OF LOGIC in 1816. Parts
One and Two, the Doctrine of Being and the Doctrine of Essence were first
published four years earlier in volume one, entitled "The Objective Logic."
- Nikolai Bukharin, HISTORICAL MATERIALISM: A SYSTEM OF SOCIOLOGY (New
York: International Publishers, 1925). This work was attacked for its
"positivistic Aristotelianism" by Antonio Gramsci. See Gramsci, SELECTIONS
FROM PRISON NOTEBOOKS (New York: International Publishers, 1971), p. 437.
- Dunayevskaya has here apparently shortened the phrase
"self-determination is applied to them only externally" [SLII, p. 391; SLM,
p. 750].
- These letters are included in THE PHILOSOPHIC MOMENT OF MARXIST-HUMANISM
(Chicago: News and Letters, 1989).
- Hegel's PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE and PHILOSOPHY OF MIND.
- Marcuse, REASON AND REVOLUTION, p. 166.
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