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Hegel |
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PART
ONE |
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| I. THE DOCTRINE OF BEING | |||
| - | A. Quality | ||
| a.
Being b. Being Determinate c. Being-for-self |
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| B. Quantity | |||
| a.
Pure Quantity b. Quantum (How Much) c. Degree |
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| C. Measure | |||
| II. DOCTRINE OF ESSENCE | |||
| A. Essence as Ground of Existence | |||
| a. The pure principles or categories of Reflection | |||
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a.
Identity |
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| b. Existence | |||
| c. The Thing | |||
| B. Appearance | |||
| a.
The World of Appearance b. Content and Form c. Relation or Correlation |
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| C. Actuality | |||
| a. Relationship
of Substantiality b. Relationship of Causality c. Reciprocity or Action and Reaction |
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| III. THE DOCTRINE OF NOTION | |||
| A. The Subjective Notion | |||
| a. The Notion as Notion | |||
| b. Judgement | |||
| . |
a.
Qualitative Judgement b. Judgement of Reflection g. Judgement of Necessity d. Judgement of the Notion |
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| c. Syllogism | |||
| a.
Qualitative Syllogism b. Syllogism of Reflection g. Syllogism of Necessity |
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| B. The Object | |||
| a.
Mechanism b. Chemism c. Teleology |
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| C. The Idea | |||
| a.
Life |
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| b. Cognition in General | |||
| a.
Cognition proper b. Volition |
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| c. The Absolute Idea | |||
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PART
TWO
PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE |
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| I. MECHANICS | |||
| - | A. Space and Time | ||
| a.
Space b. Time c. Place and Motion |
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| B. Matter and Motion. Finite Mechanics | |||
| a.
Inert Matter b. Thrust c. Falling |
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| C. Absolute Mechanics |
(1) Universal
Gravitation |
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| II. PHYSICS | |||
| A. Physics of the Universal Individuality | |||
| a. The free, physical bodies | |||
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a.
The Sun, Light and its Reflection |
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| b. The Elements | |||
| a.
Air b. The Elements of Opposition (Fire and Water) g. The individual Element—Earth |
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| c. Meteorology—Process of Elements | |||
| B. Physics of the Particular Individuality | |||
| a.
Specific Gravity b. Cohesion (Adhesion, Coherence, and Elasticity) c. Sound d. Heat |
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| C. Physics of the Total Individuality | |||
| a. Shape (Shapelessness, Magnetism, Crystallography) | |||
| b. Particularization of the individual Body | |||
| a.
Relationship to Light (Transparency, Refraction of Light, Theory of Color) b. Properties of the Opposition (Smell as particularised Airiness, Taste as particularised Water) g. The Totality in the Particular Individuality—Electricity |
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| c. The Chemical Process | |||
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a. Combination 1.
Galvanism |
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| b. Dissociation | |||
| III. ORGANICS | |||
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A. Terrestrial Organism
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a.
History of the Earth |
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B. The Plant Nature
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a.
The Process of Formation |
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| C. The Animal Organism | |||
| a. Shape (Structure) | |||
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a.
Functions of the Organism b. The Systems of Shape (Nervous, Muscular, Circulatory, Digestive) g. Total Structure d. The Structural Process |
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b. Assimilation |
. | ||
| a.
The Theoretical Process
(Sense Organs) b. The Practical Relationship (Instinctive and Reflex) g. The Constructive Instinct |
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c. The Process of Genus |
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| a.
Genus and Species b. The Sex-Relation g. The Disease of the Individual d. The Self-induced Destruction of the Individual |
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PART
THREE
THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND |
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I. MIND SUBJECTIVE |
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| - | A. ANTHROPOLOGY. THE SOUL | ||
| a. The Physical Soul | |||
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a.
Physical Qualities |
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| b. The Feeling Soul | |||
| a.
The Feeling Soul in its Immediacy b. Self-feeling g. Habit |
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| c. The Actual Soul | |||
| B. PHENOMENOLOGY OF MIND. CONSCIOUSNESS | |||
| a. Consciousness proper | |||
| a.
Sensuous consciousness b. Sense-perception g. The Intellect |
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| b. Self-consciousness | |||
| a.
Appetite b. Self-consciousness Recognitive g. Universal Self-consciousness |
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| c. Reason | |||
| C. PSYCHOLOGY, MIND | |||
| a. Theoretical Mind | |||
| a.
Intuition b. Representation 1.
Recollection g. Thinking |
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| b. Mind Practical | |||
| a.
Practical Sense or Feeling b. The Impulses and Choice g. Happiness |
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| c. Free Mind | |||
| II. MIND OBJECTIVE | |||
| A. LAW | |||
| a.
Property b. Contract c. Right versus Wrong |
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| B. THE MORALITY OF CONSCIENCE | |||
| a.
Purpose b. Intention and Welfare c. Goodness and Wickedness |
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| C. THE MORAL LIFE, OR SOCIAL ETHICS | |||
| a. The Family | |||
| b. Civil Society | |||
| a.
The System of Wants b. Administration of Justice g. Police and Corporation |
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| c. The State | |||
| a.
Constitutional Law b. External Public Law g. Universal History |
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| III. ABSOLUTE MIND | |||
| A. ART | |||
| B. REVEALED RELIGION | |||
| C. PHILOSOPHY | |||