George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel In 1770 A.D. an inspiring German
idealist philosopher, who became one of the most influential thinkers of the
19th century. Hegel was born in Stuttgart on August 27, 1770, the son of a
revenue officer with the civil service. He was brought up in an atmosphere of
Protestant Pietism and became thoroughly acquainted with the Greek and Roman
classics while studying at the Stuttgart gymnasium. Encouraged by his father to
become a clergyman, Hegel entered the seminary at the University of Tübingen in
1788. There he developed friendships with the poet Friedrich Hölderlin and the
philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling. Having completed a course of
study in philosophy and theology and having decided not to enter the ministry,
Hegel became a private tutor in Berne, Switzerland. In 1797, he assumed a
similar position in Frankfurt. Two years later his father died, leaving a
financial legacy that was sufficient to free him from tutoring.
In 1801,
Hegel went to the University of Jena, where he studied, wrote, and eventually
became a lecturer. At Jena, he completed The Phenomenology of Mind, one of his
most important works. He remained at Jena until October 1806, when the city was
taken by the French and he was forced to flee. Having spent the entire legacy
left to him by his father, Hegel became editor of the Bamberger Zeitung in
Bavaria. However, he disliked journalism, and moved to Nuremberg, where he
served for eight years as headmaster of a Gymnasium. During the Nuremberg years
Hegel met and married Marie von Tucher. Three children were born to the Hegels,
a daughter, who died soon after birth, and two sons, Karl and Immanuel. While at
Nuremberg, Hegel published over a period of several years The Science of Logic.
In 1816, Hegel accepted a professorship in philosophy at the University of
Heidelberg. Soon after, he published a summary of a systematic statement of his
entire philosophy entitled Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in
Outline. In 1818, Hegel was invited to teach at the University of Berlin, where
he was to remain. He died in Berlin on November 14, 1831, during a cholera
epidemic.
After Hegel's death there was a great clash of intellectuals which
the Hegelian theologian David Strauss called the clash between "the Left
Hegelians and the Right Hegelians." The Left Hegelians were atheists, led by the
ex-minister Bruno Bauer and his famous follower, Karl Marx, and by the radical
editor Arnold Ruge. The Right Hegelians were Christian fundamentalists. They
found Christian inspiration in Hegel's philosophy, and they condemned David
Strauss' progressive New Testament critique, THE LIFE OF JESUS. Strauss also
took his inspiration from Hegel. He showed how the earliest Christian
communities altered the Gospels with their local traditions. Scholars for
generations have reviewed the arguments of the Left and Right Hegelians, and are
still divided on the question: Was Hegel a Christian or an atheist?
Hegel
believed that by studying the relationships of concrete objects, which he held
to be inter-related throughout the universe, genuine "rational" truths would be
discovered. Hegel taught that abstraction inherently leads to the isolation of
parts from the whole, until no further isolation is possible. Eventually,
abstraction leads to the point where physical items and phenomenal concepts have
no value. For example, “the atoms that make a man are just atoms by themselves,
with no inherent value.” It is the whole that must be evaluated.
“This is
the meaning of reality for Hegel -- that reality is the whole truth, grasped by
our rational concepts. Reality is the absolute truth, it is the totality and
synthesis of all partial and limited truth. Reality, properly understood, is the
totality of truth of absolute mind. This breathtaking vision of absolute total
reality is linked to the method by which it is known. This is the famous method
of dialectic....”
- From Socrates to Sartre; Lavine, p. 210
The idea
that the whole is more valuable to understand than the parts came to be known as
the organic theory of truth / reality. Hegel made truth dynamic, an
ever-changing collection of related events. Hegel came to accept the belief that
a logical order existed to the universe and its evolution. He named this logic
the "Welt Geist" or World Spirit. The development of all things, according to
Hegel, is directed by the World Spirit.
The nineteenth and twentieth
centuries are marked by political instability and conflicting political
theories. Hegel contributed a great deal to the shaping of political theory,
especially the formation of Communism by Karl Marx. In Hegel's works we find two
opposing views of the State: the State as Absolute Power and the State as
inhumane. Most radical was Hegels' condemnation of the State for restraining
freedom. In First Programme for a System of German Idealism, co-authored with
Schelling, Hegel seems to be encouraging revolt against the State.
It is
easy to recognize existentialism's emphasis upon freedom in the preceding
passage. Because as an end goal communism promises to end the State, it is easy
to see how Marx's theories were based upon some of the opinions expressed by
Hegel.
Hegel considered the State a symbol the Absolute Truth. He held that
the State should be worshipped as the will of God. Furthermore, he suggested
that the ideal form of government was a constitutional monarchy. While placing
limits upon the monarch, thereby preventing a tyranny, it allows a single person
to act for the good of the State. A constitution codifies the will of the people
and the rights of the individual. By melding the "I" and the "We" into a common
set of principals, the constitution represents the Absolute Mind -- as close to
Absolute Truth as humans can be. The monarch is limited to actions in accord
with divine logic, Hegel concluded.
To be brief and to the point, I think
Georg Hegel was a very intelligent man, but a hypocrite. From my research, it
seems he just keeps changing his opinions or beliefs on things.
It just
bothered me, to read about how he thought about it this way then years later he
changes it, very troubling.
Works Cited
1.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hegel/#Conc
2. http://www.hegel.org/
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