The Hegelian Dialectic (i.e. thesis, antithesis, and synthesisis), a Marxist 
construct, undermines our integrity as individuals and our sovereignty, as a 
nation .... and the NWO crowd understand this .... here's some background on 
where that concept originated .... once understood, we are much better 
prepared to stop the NWO.

Steven

P.S. Marx made this "Dialectic" truly lethal - and we suffer from it, even 
now. 
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Subj:   The Hegelian Influence of Today
Date:   Wednesday, June 23, 1999 12:59 PM
From:   John Ray  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Georg Hegel (1770-1831)

Hegel, G(eorg) W(ilhelm) F(riedrich) (1770-1831), 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 (preparatory school). 
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 (1793) 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 
(1807; trans. 1910), 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 exhausted the legacy left him by his father, Hegel became editor of 
the Bamberger Zeitung in Bavaria. He disliked journalism, however, 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. Before his marriage, Hegel had fathered an 
illegitimate son, Ludwig, who eventually came to live with the Hegels. While 
at Nuremberg, Hegel published over a period of several years The Science of 
Logic (1812, 1813, 1816; trans. 1929). 

In 1816, Hegel accepted a professorship in philosophy at the University of 
Heidelberg.  Soon after, he published in summary form a systematic statement 
of his entire philosophy entitled Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences 
in Outline (1817; trans. 1959). 

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. 
 The last full-length work published by Hegel was The Philosophy of Right 
(1821; trans. 1896), although several sets of his lecture notes, supplemented 
by students’ notes, were published after his death. Published lectures 
include The Philosophy of Fine Art (1835-38; trans. 1920), Lectures on the 
History of Philosophy (1833-36; trans. 1892-96), Lectures on the Philosophy 
of Religion (1832; trans. 1895), and Lectures on the Philosophy of History 
(1837; trans. 1858). 

Strongly influenced by Greek ideas, Hegel also read the works of the Dutch 
philosopher Baruch Spinoza, the French writer Jean Jacques Rousseau, and the 
German philosophers Immanuel Kant, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, and Schelling. 
Although he often disagreed with these philosophers, their influence is 
evident in his writings. 

Philosophical Aims 

Hegel’s aim was to set forth a philosophical system so comprehensive that it 
would encompass the ideas of his predecessors and create a conceptual 
framework in terms of which both the past and future could be philosophically 
understood. Such an aim would require nothing short of a full account of 
reality itself. Thus, Hegel conceived the subject matter of philosophy to be 
reality as a whole. This reality, or the total developmental process of 
everything that is, he referred to as the Absolute, or Absolute Spirit. 

According to Hegel, the task of philosophy is to chart the development of 
Absolute Spirit. This involves 

(1) making clear the internal rational structure of the Absolute; 

(2) demonstrating the manner in which the Absolute manifests itself in nature 
and human history; and 

(3) explicating the teleological nature of the Absolute, that is, showing the 
end or purpose toward which the Absolute is directed. 

Dialectic 

Concerning the rational structure of the Absolute, Hegel, following the 
ancient Greek philosopher Parmenides, argued that "what is rational is real 
and what is real is rational." This must be understood in terms of Hegel’s 
further claim that the Absolute must ultimately be regarded as pure Thought, 
or Spirit, or Mind, in the process of self-development (see IDEALISM). 

The logic that governs this developmental process is dialectic. The 
dialectical method involves the notion that movement, or process, or 
progress, is the result of the conflict of opposites. 

Traditionally, this dimension of Hegel’s thought has been analyzed in terms 
of the categories of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis.  Although Hegel 
tended to avoid these terms, they are helpful in understanding his concept of 
the dialectic. 

The thesis, then, might be an idea or a historical movement. Such an idea or 
movement contains within itself incompleteness that gives rise to opposition, 
or an antithesis, a conflicting idea or movement. As a result of the conflict 
a third point of view arises, a synthesis, which overcomes the conflict by 
reconciling at a higher level the truth contained in both the thesis and 
antithesis. 

This synthesis becomes a new thesis that generates another antithesis, giving 
rise to a new synthesis, and in such a fashion the process of intellectual or 
historical development is continually generated. Hegel thought that Absolute 
Spirit itself (which is to say, the sum total of reality) develops in this 
dialectical fashion toward an ultimate end or goal. 

For Hegel, therefore, reality is understood as the Absolute unfolding 
dialectically in a process of self-development. As the Absolute undergoes 
this development, it manifests itself both in nature and in human history. 
Nature is Absolute Thought or Being objectifying itself in material form. 
Finite minds and human history are the process of the Absolute manifesting 
itself in that which is most kin to itself, namely, spirit or consciousness. 

In The Phenomenology of Mind Hegel traced the stages of this manifestation 
from the simplest level of consciousness, through self-consciousness, to the 
advent of reason. 

Self-Knowledge of the Absolute 

The goal of the dialectical cosmic process can be most clearly understood at 
the level of reason. As finite reason progresses in understanding, the 
Absolute progresses toward full self-knowledge. Indeed, the Absolute comes to 
know itself through the human mind’s increased understanding of reality, or 
the Absolute. 

Hegel analyzed this human progression in understanding in terms of three 
levels: art, religion, and philosophy. Art grasps the Absolute in material 
forms, interpreting the rational through the sensible forms of beauty. Art is 
conceptually superseded by religion, which grasps the Absolute by means of 
images and symbols. 

The highest religion for Hegel is Christianity, for in Christianity the truth 
that the Absolute manifests itself in the finite is symbolically reflected in 
the incarnation.  

Philosophy, however, is conceptually supreme, because it grasps the Absolute 
rationally. Once this has been achieved, the Absolute has arrived at full 
self-consciousness, and the cosmic drama reaches its end and goal.  Only at 
this point did Hegel identify the Absolute with God. "God is God", Hegel 
argued, "only in so far as he knows himself."

Philosophy of History 

In the process of analyzing the nature of Absolute Spirit, Hegel made 
significant contributions in a variety of philosophical fields, including the 
philosophy of history and social ethics. With respect to history, his two key 
explanatory categories are reason and freedom. "The only Thought", maintained 
Hegel, "which Philosophy brings -- to the contemplation of History, is the 
simple conception of Reason; that Reason is the Sovereign of the world, that 
the history of the world, therefore, presents us with a rational process." As 
a rational process, history is a record of the development of human freedom, 
for human history is a progression from less freedom to greater freedom. 

Ethics and Politics 

Hegel’s social and political views emerge most clearly in his discussion of 
morality (Moralität) and social ethics (Sittlichkei ). At the level of 
morality, right and wrong is a matter of individual conscience. One must, 
however, move beyond this to the level of social ethics, for duty, according 
to Hegel, is not essentially the product of individual judgment.  Individuals 
are complete only in the midst of social relationships; thus, the only 
context in which duty can truly exist is a social one. 

Hegel considered membership in the state one of the individual’s highest 
duties.  Ideally, the state is the manifestation of the general will, which 
is the highest expression of the ethical spirit. Obedience to this general 
will is the act of a free and rational individual. 

Hegel emerges a "conservative", but he should not be interpreted as 
sanctioning totalitarianism, for he also argued that the abridgment of 
freedom by any actual state is morally unacceptable. 

Influence 

At the time of Hegel’s death, he was the most prominent philosopher in 
Germany. His views were widely taught, and his students were highly regarded. 
His followers soon divided into right-wing and left-wing Hegelians. 

Theologically and politically, the right-wing Hegelians offered a 
conservative interpretation of his work. They emphasized the compatibility 
between Hegel’s philosophy and Christianity. Politically, they were orthodox. 

The left-wing Hegelians eventually moved to an atheistic position. In 
politics, many of them became revolutionaries. This historically important 
left-wing group included Ludwig Feuerbach, Bruno Bauer, Friedrich Engels, and 
Karl Marx. 

Engels and Marx were particularly influenced by Hegel’s idea that history 
moves dialectically, but they replaced Hegel’s philosophical idealism with 
materialism. 

Hegel’s metaphysical idealism had a strong impact on 19th-century and early 
20th-century British philosophy, notably that of Francis Herbert Bradley, and 
on such American philosophers as Josiah Royce, and on Italian philosophy 
through Benedetto Croce. 

Hegel also influenced existentialism through the Danish philosopher Søren 
Kierkegaard. Phenomenology has been influenced by Hegel’s ideas on 
consciousness. The extensive and diverse impact of Hegel’s ideas on 
subsequent philosophy is evidence of the remarkable range and the 
extraordinary depth of his thought. 


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