Spinoza, Kant and the Transition to Hegel’s Subjective Logic:
Arguing for and against Philosophical Systems 1
FINAL DRAFT
Please cite published version at:
Hegel Bulletin, 40/1, 1–28
https://www-cambridge-org.ccl.idm.oclc.org/core/journals/hegel-bulletin/article/spinozakant-and-the-transition-to-hegels-subjective-logic-arguing-for-and-against-philosophicalsystems/0EABF3BD578E482294F5CF30100FC528/share/b6d330e69c00c416d1d8d02465e1043
2c037fffa
James Kreines,
[email protected]
My focus in this paper is on this question: how does Hegel’s Science of Logic use
argument to support a philosophical system? As a main focus text, I take the important transition
from the Objective to the Subjective Logic, or the concluding part of the book. One thing that
makes this stretch of text so promising is that we find here discussions of Spinoza and Kant’s
systems. On the one hand, the comparisons promise to help us to triangulate towards an
understanding of how Hegel understands his own systematic project. On the other hand, Hegel’s
comparisons here also quickly bring us into the difficulties involved in my focus question. For
Hegel sets a very high bar in this text, when it comes to refuting a rival system in defense of
one’s own, and it is hard to see how he could hope to succeed, relative to this standard, in his
responses to Spinoza and Kant. And, further, Hegel takes refutation to require internal
engagement with rival systems, so that further development of the rivals somehow grows them
1
I would like to thank the editors of this volume, Dean Moyar, and an anonymous referee, for generous and helpful
comments and suggestions—and participants and audience members at the conference “Reconsidering Hegel’s Logic” at
the University of Pittsburgh for their feedback.
1
naturally into Hegel’s own system; but it is hard to see how one, unified systematic project could
really be an extension of both of two alternatives that are so radically different as Spinoza’s and
Kant’s.
My solution to this problem turns on the proposal that Hegel builds his philosophy
around the fundamentally metaphysical issues and arguments of Kant’s “Transcendental
Dialectic” of the first Critique. This will explain how Hegel’s own system is supposed to grow
out of both Spinoza’s and Kant’s, and how such engagement is supposed to allow an argument
for a system.
I should note that I am here also working out a new route to a better formulation of an old
thesis of mine, concerning the centrality of Kant’s Dialectic; and I am defending this approach
from my (2015) against opposing criticisms that appeal to the transition from the Objective to the
Subjective Logic. On the one hand, there are those think that the point of the transition to a
subjective Logic is to finally bring the book to a successful conclusion with something like the
perspective of Kant’s “Transcendental Analytic”, focused on issues about the possibility of
cognition of objects; they worry that my “metaphysics first” approach will fail to make sense of
this transition and the priority they see there of “epistemic-cum-semantic issues”. 2 On the other
hand, some would read Hegel’s metaphysics as more specifically Spinozist than I would; they
worry I will have a hard time incorporating Hegel’s (in many ways positive) discussions of
Spinoza, including those toward the end of the Objective Logic. 3 So as a secondary aim I here
take on both sides, while also pursuing the primary aim of resolving philosophical problems
concerning how to argue for and against systems of philosophy.
2
Redding (2016, 716-7)—and see related worries in Gabriel (2016, 200-1 and 204) and Moyar (2018, 608f.)—on Kreines
(2015).
3
Knappik (2016) and Bowman (2017) pursue these worries, in light of multiple texts touching on Spinoza and monism.
2
1. Spinoza and the Problem of Systematic Argument
Hegel aims to defend a philosophical system. For my purposes here, it is enough to think
of two senses of systematicity:
a. Hegel aims for a whole philosophy with some unifying organization, rather
than just a heap of arguments.
b. Hegel aims for some kind of comprehensiveness, so that what he is doing,
especially in the Logic, should have implications everywhere in philosophy.
While we have readily accessible models to explain how arguments work, I do not think they can
on their own explain how Hegel even hopes to argue for a philosophical system, in these senses.
We can of course spell out arguments in premise-conclusion form. We can explain, in
this way, Descartes’ conceivability argument for substance dualism. But this is clearly just one
argument, and anything similar to this is not yet really trying to explain how an argument might
aim for comprehensiveness. We can of course think of another argument in premise-conclusion
form—say, Hume’s argument from perceptual variation against direct realism. Does it make
sense to think of aiming to compile a list of such argument explanations so long that it aims for
comprehensiveness? It hardly seems to matter, because the farther we go in this direction, the
farther we seem to move away from any organizing unity, and so in this respect away from a
philosophical system. Perhaps we would do better, with organization, if we restrict ourselves to
arguments addressing only one kind of philosophical issue—say, issues concerning perception—
but then we clearly seem to do worse with respect to comprehensiveness, resulting in a kind of
narrowness. If the argument for a system is still lacking, then we can try to imagine it is just
another argument explicable in premise-conclusion form, which we could add to our list; but
since the problem concerns in part what organizes or unifies all of the items on the list, it is hard
to see how adding another element to our flat list could provide what is needed. And so it seems
3
from the beginning difficult to see how one might hope to explain how argument could support a
system.
We can explore the problem further by asking: if there is an argument supporting Hegel’s
system, then what would be the specific issues addressed by this argument? For example, would
they be the epistemological issues at stake in Descartes’ argument for dreaming skepticism? Or
some other set of issues? With respect to the Logic, there is a proposal that is entirely natural, but
in fact makes no progress toward resolving our problem. The natural proposal is that the central
issues in the systematic argument of the book concern self-determination or freedom. For the
transition to the final part of the Logic is clearly a transition to this topic: The conclusion of the
Doctrine of Essence is supposed to show that Spinoza’s “necessity is elevated to freedom” (WL
11:408/504). And this gives the Subjective Logic or the Doctrine of the Concept its topic: “the
concept, the realm of subjectivity or of freedom” (WL 11:409/505).4
But what is the argument suggested by the natural proposal? On the face it, the very
broad strokes of the argument would be something like this:
a. Spinoza’s account of the absolute as substance precludes a sufficient account of
freedom.
b. Thus, Spinoza’s philosophy is incomplete, and substance must also be selfdetermining subjectivity.
This too is a natural way of thinking. After all, Spinoza is radical in dismissing at least some
senses of freedom, including freedom of the will, even in the case of God (e.g. E1P32); Hegel’s
interpretation of Spinoza, following Jacobi, is specifically as a determinist and fatalist; and Hegel
is certainly eager to contrast his metaphysics with Spinoza’s on this score. But the question here
is one of argument, and if we start with this argument structure, then I think that any way of
4
Or, later, “The concept, as absolutely self-identical negativity, is self-determining” (WL 12:128/626).
4
filling in the details will still fall short of supporting Hegel’s system. This is for reasons that
Hegel himself highlights in the transition to the Subjective Logic. For here Hegel says that the
Spinozist can resist any refutation from outside:
any refutation would have to come not from outside, that is, not proceed from
assumptions lying outside the system and irrelevant to it. The system need only
refuse to recognize those assumptions… Effective refutation must infiltrate the
opponent’s stronghold and meet him on his own ground; there is no point in
attacking him outside his territory… (WL 12:15/512)5
The kind of argument I just sketched cannot meet this standard: for all it makes explicit, it
merely assumes that there is freedom in some sense ruled out by Spinoza’s system. And this
assumption is what Hegel singles out for complaint, alluding to Fichte:
..it has been said that there cannot be any refutation of Spinozism for anyone who
does not presuppose a commitment to freedom and the independence of a selfconscious subject…
Since the natural proposal about self-determination does not explain how an argument in Hegel
hopes to really engage and impact Spinoza’s system, it certainly does not yet explain how an
argument in Hegel hopes to impact comprehensively everything.
The results are similar, I think, if we take the currently popular route of treating the Logic
as focused on issues concerning what is now called “normativity”. Perhaps there is some sense in
which Spinoza leaves no place for some kind of normativity. But if we explain by saying that the
basic issue-focus, all the way down, is on that kind of normativity, then it looks as if the
Spinozist can declare whatever part of this she cannot reconstruct within her system as
something external and indifferent to her system.
5
Hegel points out that the problem is yet more difficult, since Spinoza’s system can give an account of subjectivity in
terms of the attribute of thought; Spinoza need only reject as irrelevant any aspects of subjectivity or freedom that do not
survive his reconstruction.
5
I am not sure if anyone would be tempted, in the face of these difficulties, to hold that
Hegel is somehow beyond arguments or refutations; but it is important to note that Hegel himself
clearly conceives of philosophy as requiring argument. This is clear, for example, in what his
criticisms of Schelling—right or wrong about Schelling—tell us about Hegel’s own
commitments. Hegel says that “[w]hat is lacking in Schelling's philosophy” is that its central
claims are “absolutely presupposed, without any attempt being made at proving that this is the
truth.” Schelling is supposed to appeal to “intellectual intuition” in a specific manner amounting
to only bare assertion of authority or privilege, so that in response,
[o]ne can say nothing else than: you do not have intellectual intuition, if this
appears false to you… The proving of anything, making it comprehensible,
disappears.
Hegel, by contrast, says that “[w]hen we philosophize, we want to have proven that it is so”. 6
Setting aside Schelling interpretation, if there any philosophers claiming to be somehow beyond
argument, this seems to me a powerful response, and certainly makes clear Hegel’s view of
philosophy as committed to argument. So it is worth focusing interpretive efforts on Hegel’s
systematic argument, and working to broaden our appreciation of the forms that arguments can
take, until we can make sense of this. 7
2. Transcendental Analytic Model of Systematic Argument
My focus on these problems so far is not meant to suggest that we have no model of how
Hegel’s systematic argument might work. I think there is one familiar kind of interpretation that
can in fact provide us with a powerful model. This will not be my approach to Hegel, and I do
6
VGP 20:435/3:525–26. Note that Hegel saves room here for notions like that of intellectual intuition to figure in other
ways in philosophy, without this specific failing.
7
Compare Hegel: “philosophy permits neither a mere offering of assurances, nor imaginings, nor the arbitrary back-andforth thinking characteristic of rationalization [Räsonnement]” (§77).
6
not mean here to get bogged down in interpreting interpreters. My aim is to start with some
familiar and powerful ideas,8 and to extrapolate a model of how an argument for a system could
work, and draw some positive lessons from this.
The key text here is the praise, in the introduction to the Subjective Logic, of Kant’s
discussions of the transcendental unity of apperception, including the account of in these terms
of the constitution of “objective validity”; this “is one of the profoundest and truest insights
which constitutes the essence of the concept” (WL 12.18/515). Of course, Hegel also here
criticizes of Kant; for example, Kant is supposed to fail to systematically derive the categories
from the fundamental principle of apperception (WL 12:28/525). But one approach would be to
understand this as a basically Kantian attempt to improve Kant’s execution.
Now the idea that Hegel’s systematic arguments might focus on the topic of
transcendental unity of apperception does not automatically resolve the problem noted in the
previous section, concerning comprehensiveness and the relation to Spinoza’s system. We can
certainly imagine arguing that Spinoza’s system does not leave room for something about a
transcendental unity of apperception, or perhaps a kind of spontaneity associated with
apperception.9 But whatever that something is, precisely to the extent that it could not be
reconstructed within Spinoza’s system, the way would remain open for the Spinozist to declare it
a matter of indifference. So the problem remains that a systematic argument focused all the way
down on issues involving apperception would apparently lack an argument for investing such
importance in the topic in the first place.
8
9
Most important, to my mind, is the path breaking Pippin (1989).
On this association, see Pippin 1987.
7
Progress requires instead consideration of the arguments of the Transcendental Analytic
of Kant’s first Critique, where apperception figures so importantly. These arguments do not
assume its importance; they argue for the importance of apperception from consideration of
broader issues. What are the broader issues? One way of formulating them comes from Kant’s
famous letter to Herz, focused on the question: “What is the ground of the relation of that in us
which we call ‘representation’ to the object?” (C 131/10:130). To go farther into the Analytic
itself would mean breaking down the issues in more detail: Perhaps the issues concern the
possibility of correct representation. Or perhaps there is some complex interplay with issues
concerning conditions of the possibility of any representation at all. Either way, we can already
see how focus on these issues from the Transcendental Analytic might be thought to change
things with respect to the engagement with Spinoza. The idea would be that the Spinozist himself
is purporting to think of or represent or judge about an object—about substance. So one could
argue that the Spinozist owes an account of how such representation or judgment is possible, or
an answer to the question of how the concepts he is using designate something in some
determinate fashion, and something one might then judge correctly or incorrectly? And the way
would be open to argue that the Spinozist must fail to provide what she owes. For example, if the
Kantian can show that accounting for how concept-use represents determinate objects requires a
Transcendental Unity of Apperception, in some sense, and that this requires in turn some
spontaneity of the subject—and if Spinoza’s monism somehow conflicts with our having that
sort of spontaneity—then we might argue thereby that there is an inescapable problem already
inside Spinozism, preventing the Spinozist from declaring these issues to be external and a
matter of indifference.
8
This approach to Hegel would also give us a nice approach to what it means to transition
to a Subjective Logic. The idea would be that an Objective Logic would concern attempts at
philosophical theories of objects considered independently of spontaneous and apperceptive
contribution by a judging subject. The failure of these attempts would be supposed demonstrate
the need, now in a subjective logic, to construct a theory foregrounding the account of the
representation of objects, and specifically in terms of the active contribution of a subject.
And this approach can explain in similar terms Hegel’s criticism of Kant as well. Part of
it would run along these lines: Consider Kant’s epistemic restriction, leaving us inescapably
ignorant of things in themselves. One might argue that, if knowledge of objects requires an active
contribution from the subject, and if this would leave things in themselves unknowable, then
those very supposed things would not even by representable or thinkable for us. 10 Thus the
unknowability claims would be eliminated from within.11 And Hegel might then seek to argue,
against Kant, that properly executed deductions do not just generate conclusions about a priori
conditions relative to a restricted form of cognition of ours, but rather a priori conditions that are
absolute.12
This approach to Hegel may be relatively familiar, but I want to argue that we better
understand its considerable power if we make more explicit what I call—following early work
by Rorty—a metaphilosophical claim: a claim about what is fundamental or inescapable in
philosophy.13 In particular, the claim here would assert the fundamentality or inescapability in
10
I think something like this is what Pippin means in seeing in Hegel a “confrontation with a ‘realist skepticism’” (1989,
94; also 31, 98-9, 107, 167). Or Redding: “Kant’s combination of conceivability but unknowability seems to take away
with the one hand a quasi-divine epistemic take on the world … only to return something like a semantic version of it with
the other” (2007, 222).
11
Borrowing the terminology of eliminating from within from my (2006).
12
See e.g. Pippin: “our way of taking up, discriminating, categorizing the world” can “somehow pass from ‘ours’ to
‘absolute’ status” (1993, 287).
13
Rorty 1967.
9
philosophy generally of the issues favored in the sketch above: those concerning the possibility
of representation. Note that this is what provides the promising approach to both respects, with
which I began, in which Hegel seeks to support a system:
First, the metaphilosophical claim would explain a unifying organization, but without
narrowness: A system could address many diverse issues throughout philosophy, but all in a
manner organized by approaching them through the lens of our one supposedly most
fundamental kind of issue. So our system inspired by the Transcendental Analytic need not just
address one kind of issue. If it argues that some form of spontaneous apperception is needed to
make sense of representation, then we might also explore its implications concerning ethical
issues, for example.14 And the prospects for this approach hinge, to my mind, on the same being
true of metaphysical issues: This approach need not banish them, or give a so-called “nonmetaphysical” reading of Hegel. Metaphysical issues, if they can be formulated and approached
in light of fundamental questions about representation, could be resolved in that same unified
and organized fashion. If we prefer to say that the fundamental issues concern “intentionality”,
then we could call this a “metaphysics of intentionality”. 15
Second, this would allow a claim to comprehensiveness: We could in this way try to
argue that other, rival philosophical projects in general, insofar as they all must make claims
about something or purport to represent something, would be impacted by this systematic
approach. We could say that rival systems would generally be addressed by means of the kind of
argument just-noted with respect to Spinoza, which I would call a “track-shifting” argument:
Philosophical systems working along a track that fails to foreground issues about the possibility
14
Kant himself seems to explore a similar idea in the Groundwork at Ak. 4:452.
This is how I would approach bringing out the appeal of understanding the history of philosophy, under this title, in
Brandom (2002).
15
10
of representation inevitably incur a philosophical debt; a truly systematic and comprehensive
philosophy would have to pay that debt, and so would have to shift tracks, to a project committed
now to view everything rather through the lens of issues about representation of objects.
Meanwhile Kant would be addressed in a different way. We would read Kant’s own system as
based around the argument of the Transcendental Analytic, where transcendental apperception
figures so prominently; and then we would give what I would call a “track-extending” response:
We would claim our new system follows the track of Kantian deductions, from the Analytic,
even farther than Kant managed.16
So here we can make explicit how an argument might support systematicity: It might do
so by defending a metaphilosophical commitment that will then organize a system of subsidiary
arguments addressing philosophical comprehensively. This way in which arguments reflect back
on the nature of philosophy itself turns out to be what was missing in our initial thoughts about a
kind of flat list of arguments in premise-conclusion form, addressing substance dualism,
perception, etc.
All this gives us a wonderfully systematic, consistent approach to four important
questions considered above:
Transcendental Analytic Model of Hegel’s Systematic Argument
1. What are the fundamental issues at stake in Hegel’s arguments? Issues about the
conceptual conditions of the possibility of representation or cognition of objects.
2. What is the central argument strategy? Focus on the case for a necessary spontaneity of
the subject in any possible representation of objects.
3. What distinguishes Subjective as opposed to Objective Logic? Subjective Logic has
overcome attempts at theories of objects supposedly independent of contribution of or
mediation by spontaneous subject.
16
This is how I would understand McDowell’s proposal to, following Pippin (2009,69), read Hegel as a “radicalization of
Kant”.
11
4. What is the root reason why pre-Kantian metaphysics supposed to fail? On grounds of
broadly epistemological problems about the possibility of representation and/or
knowledge of its supposed objects, like Spinoza’s one substance, God, or nature.
This seems to me a powerful model of everything a systematic interpretation of the Logic
should be. But I should say that it is not my approach; my aim is to abstract the model, and
discard the specifics focused on Kant’s Transcendental Analytic. To explain why I don’t rather
just stop here and declare success, I will mention my worries about this Transcendental Analytic
approach to the Logic.
I have discussed in detail one worry previously: I see Hegel as considering carefully this
kind of philosophical program, oriented around worries about the possibility of cognition of
objects. Part of his gloss of such programs is this: “prior to setting about to acquire cognition of
God, the essence of things, etc., the faculty of cognition itself would have to be examined”. But
what I call Hegel’s “swimming argument” makes the case that the argument for such programs is
“… as incoherent as the Scholastic's wise resolution to learn to swim, before he ventured into the
water…” (EL §10An). Since Hegel’s argument is quite general, I have argued that it is some
reason, at least, to read him as pursuing a different kind of program. 17
A second worry is more connected to my topic in this paper, involving the discussion of
Spinoza noted above. Part of this is a philosophical worry: it seems to me that the Spinozist can
answer that the track-shifting argument above begs the question. Say we argue for the priority of
issues about the possibility of cognition of objects by focusing, through and through, on worries
about the possibility of cognition of objects. If so, then we are really just assuming the priority of
such issues from the start. Someone like a Spinozist could then, with equal right, adopt an
17
See my 2012 and 2015. Note that this is not to say that Hegel excludes issues about the possibility of cognition of
objects. He may even sometimes, as in the Phenomenology, start with such issues; I would argue that he is here making
the case in detail, as summarized in the swimming argument (PhG §73), how emphasizing these issues necessarily gives
way to the fundamentality of metaphysical issues.
12
opposed metaphilosophy, making the case in his terms that his issues are more important,
fundamental, and so on. She might take the success of her arguments (as she sees it) as all the
reason we need to accept the possibility of cognition of objects, including those with which she
is concerned.
Rorty’s wonderful early work on metaphilosophy generalizes this kind of worry. Any
revolutionary will want to found philosophy on a new method, with its own metaphilosophy. But
the old guard will have its old metaphilosophy. And “[s]ince philosophical method is in itself a
philosophical topic … every philosophical revolutionary is open to the charge of circularity”
(1967, 2).
But aside from this philosophical concern and Rorty’s general worry, to which I return
below, consider the interpretive issues regarding Hegel’s discussion, above, of the refutation of
Spinoza. Hegel seems not to argue that Spinoza’s system-building prioritizes the wrong issues,
and requires a track-shift—for instance, towards building around issues about the possibility of
cognition of objects. On the contrary, Hegel says that what is needed, with respect to Spinozism,
is “acknowledging its standpoint as essential and necessary and then raising it to a higher
standpoint on the strength of its own resources” (WL 12:15/512). I don’t see how this promise to
advance by means of Spinoza’s own resources could fit the idea that Hegel’s Subjective Logic is
really switching tracks, away from Spinoza’s issues, to build on something more like a deduction
of conceptual conditions of cognition, from Kant’s Transcendental Analytic.
The third worry, again central to my topic today, is this: I think that understanding
Hegel’s response to Kant in this way, as an attempt to engage internally and overcome Kant’s
arguments for epistemic restriction, would miss something important in Kant. For I do not think
that Kant rests his restriction, or his denial of the knowability of things in themselves, on
13
considerations from the Transcendental Analytic. So we cannot in this way show that
considerations from a Kantian argument for the restriction actually, when taken further, support
eliminating the restriction. The restriction thesis is part of the package of Transcendental
Idealism. Kant does not think that either idealism, or any limitation of our knowledge, follows
just from the need for our spontaneity to play a role in any knowledge of objects; he does not
give a so-called “short argument” for idealism, but rests his arguments for restriction, and
transcendental idealism more generally, on details concerning the pure forms of our sensible
intuition: space and time.18 So if one wants to turn Kant’s own argument for the restriction
against Kant—as it is pretty widely agreed that Hegel does—then this seems to me to require
according rather the central role to either the Aesthetic or (as I will argue) the Dialectic of Kant’s
first Critique.
3. Kant’s Dialectic as Infiltration of the Opponent’s Territory
I seek, then, to borrow the above model of a systematic interpretation, but to fill it in with
a very different approach to Hegel. Recall again, from my central Hegel text, the problem Hegel
raises about there being, with respect to a pre-critical metaphysician like Spinoza, “no point in
attacking him outside his territory”. This raises an interesting question: does Kant have a critique
of pre-critical metaphysics that might address this kind of worry? I think that he recognizes the
need, and supplies one. More specifically, my view is that Kant’s Transcendental Dialectic is a
solution to just this kind of problem. Consider the way in which the B-Preface distinguishes two
main lines of argument in the Critique. The first, epistemological line address issues about the
conditions of the possibility of experience, defending synthetic a priori knowledge; the second,
18
Following Ameriks 1990.
14
centered on the Dialectic, addresses the topics of pre-critical metaphysics. From the first line,
Kant says, “there emerges a very strange result and one that appears very disadvantageous to the
whole purpose with which the second part of metaphysics concerns itself”: “we can never get
beyond the boundaries of possible experience” (Bxix). This gets at just how a pre-critical
metaphysician, concerned with objects beyond experience, should respond to the first line of
argument: given the metaphilosophical commitment built into the kind of project she pursues, it
would be strange to recognize the authority of the topic of Kant’s epistemological reflection over
her project, bringing as it does such disadvantages concerning the issues and concern that (on her
view) are central. But this is the occasion for Kant’s second overarching line of argument, which
presumably will not have this limitation relative to pre-critical metaphysics: it will, in my
Hegelian terms here, “infiltrate the opponent’s stronghold and meet him on his own ground”. So
Kant immediately proceeds to say that “herein lies just the experiment providing a checkup on
the truth” of his result, or on the position “leaving the thing in itself as something actual for itself
but uncognized by us” (Bxx)
I take this to mean that the issue-focus of Kant’s Dialectic criticism cannot be
distinguished in broadly epistemological terms. The basic focus cannot be on the possibility of
representation, and not on a priority or a priori objective validity, and so on. Nor can the focus
be any claim that accounting for representation requires attention not just to judgment but to a
broader context of rational inferences, or a space of reasons or the like. That thought may be in
Hegel, and it may be in Kant’s Dialectic. But, even if so, it cannot be what drives Kant’s
criticism of pre-critical metaphysics, and (I will argue) it cannot be the way that this material
from Kant influences Hegel’s systematic argument.
15
On my view, then, we must keep the critical argument in mind when thinking of what
Kant means in highlighting the focus of the Dialectic on conditions and “the unconditioned”
(Bxx), which are supposed to be of direct interest to our faculty of reason. In the argument
critical of prior metaphysics, I think the key sense of condition is: something worldly that is such
as can be appealed to in explaining. The corresponding meaning of Kant’s term “unconditioned”,
I think, would be something worldly such that appeal to it might explain completely some
particular kind of regress of conditions.19 These issues are designed by Kant to capture the
interests of the pre-critical rationalists, who are his central targets. Take Leibniz’s theory of
monads. Monads would be supposed to explain how there could be composites. The topic here is
not at base epistemological. It is not about what we can infer from what. Indeed, the
epistemology, the inference, goes in the other direction: we infer the existence of monads from
the existence of composites. But the metaphysical supporting or grounding or conditioning
would flow from the monads, explaining how there can be composites. The existence of
composites does not similarly explain how there can be monads.
So the issue-focus here is on what I will call the metaphysics of conditions and the
unconditioned; or, I would also say, the metaphysics of explanation. Kant holds that the faculty
of reason itself requires that philosophy directly raise and pursue those issues—that we occupy
this territory, to use Hegel’s metaphor. But the way Kant argues in the Dialectic is to
demonstrate that our pursuing these issues, or occupation of this territory, necessarily leads to the
contradictions of the Antinomy (e.g. Bxx). The contradictions, then, must be demonstrated
without appeal to Kant’s epistemology, and without appeal to transcendental idealism, because
the Antinomy is supposed give independent support for all that. In Kant’s terms, “the antinomy
19
Here I follow Grier 2001, e.g. 2 and 144; Proops 2010, 455; and my 2015, ch. 4.
16
of pure reason leads inevitably back to that limiting of our cognition” (Ak 20:290-1). That is, we
are supposed to conclude that our knowledge is limited, and that our pursuit of theoretical
philosophy can never really answer the nonetheless necessary and inescapable questions raised
by reason itself. Kant wants to conclude that progress in philosophy requires transforming
metaphysics, and everything else—it requires re-orienting everything around reflection on
broadly epistemological issues concerning conditions of the possibility of representation of
objects by a subject.20
Now recall the problem about refutation of a system on its own territory, or Rorty’s
worry that targets of refutation can always escape by contesting on a metaphilosophical level.
Kant’s Dialectic seems to me a powerful solution to this kind of problem: We can assume the
opponents’ metaphilosophy, or the priority of her favored issues, but for the purposes of showing
that the opponents’ project, systematically pursued, goes astray from within—and in some way
requiring a solution available only if we shift tracks, to a different and favored kind of
philosophical program.
Hegel, on my view, hijacks for his own purposes Dialectic model, so that the prominence
he gives its terminology—“dialectic”, “reason”, and so on—is no surprise. Hegel would thus be
agreeing with Kant’s Dialectic in seeing the fundamental issues as those concerning the
metaphysics of conditioning and the unconditioned, in Kantian terms. And Hegel would agree
that a philosophy pursuing this focus necessarily generates contradictions. But Hegel would be
taking the contradictions to teach a very different lesson. They would not show any need for
philosophy to shift tracks, making another set of issues fundamental rather than the metaphysics
20
“[T]he concern of this critique of pure speculative reason consists in that attempt to transform the accepted procedure
of metaphysics” (Bxxii).
17
of conditions and the unconditioned. Rather, they would show how to reform and fix such a
metaphysics, or respond to these issues in a way that is for the first time truly systematic because
it is uniformly built around these contradictions. So Hegel aims to show that it never was
necessary to change tracks, in the manner Kant thinks requires—that we can and should better
extend the track yet farther along its course in the Dialectic. The Logic puts the point like this:
It must be regarded as an infinitely important step that dialectic is once more being
recognized as necessary to reason, although the result that must be drawn from it is
the opposite than Kant drew. (WL 6:558/741–42)
Further, Hegel says that Antinomy contradictions are not limited, as in Kant’s account, but occur
everywhere21—which is what makes for a Hegelian or a dialectical Logic.
I conclude that the considerations about refutations of systems, in my focus text at the
transition to the Subjective Logic, suggests further support for my thesis, that the primary issues
to be built around in Hegel’s systematic argument come from Kant’s Dialectic rather than
Analytic. I now turn to testing this result against the challenges involved in making sense of what
Hegel says at the transition about Spinoza and Kant’s systems.
4. Rising Higher with Spinoza’s Own Resources
The first step, then, is to explain how reading Hegel as extending the considerations of
the Dialectic makes sense of his claim to surpass Spinoza’s system building from Spinoza’s own
resources. Here I want to highlight two roots or elements which support Spinoza’s argument for
monism, and are highlighted in Hegel’s lectures’ explanation of it. The first element is a
principle requiring that everything be explicable, which Spinoza interpreters (although not
Hegel) now tend to call the principle of sufficient reason (PSR). 22 Spinoza says for example “For
21
22
EL §48R
I follow this usage for concision, but Hegel does not use this terminology with respect to Spinoza.
18
each thing there must be assigned a cause, or reason” (E1P11D2).23 I see Hegel as thinking of
this in terms of explanation, insofar as Hegel views it all through the lens of Jacobi’s
interpretation. Jacobi suggests that the Spinozist “wants to explain all things absolutely … and
will not otherwise let anything stand” (J 30/194). Jacobi—and we will see that Hegel follows—
thinks of this as the principle that nothing comes from nothing: “the spirit of Spinozism …
certainly nothing other than the ancient a nihilo nihil fit” (Jacobi 14/187). Hegel follows,
The second element would be the Cartesian ontology of substance, attribute, and mode.
Note, about these two elements, that the issues they foreground are those in the
metaphysics of explanation or conditions, made central in the Dialectic. In the case of the PSR,
this is the demand that everything depend on some condition that explains it. In the case of the
ontology, think for example of the way in which “mode” is defined as something conditioned by
something that explains it, or as “that which is in another through which it is also conceived”
(E1D5).24 So, on my approach, Hegel would take Spinoza to be broadly correct concerning
which philosophical issues are most fundamental.
Further, I think that Hegel takes Spinoza’s way of pursuing these issues to be natural,
even if Hegel thinks this will generate contradictions and need to be overcome.
The key for Hegel is specifically Spinoza’s pursuit of those issues in his proof of
monism. The proof is worth attention in its own right, but here I will just note the role of the two
elements I have highlighted, focusing on steps highlighted in Hegel’s lectures.
23
Earlier, Spinoza says that “there must be, for each existing thing, a certain cause on account of which it exists”
(E1P8S2).
24
In his rendition of E1P14D, Hegel equates erklärt (explained) and begriffen (conveived) (VGP 20:174/266).
19
An important step, emphasized in Hegel’s lectures, is Spinoza’s argument for “P5:
…there cannot be two or more substances of the same … attribute”. 25 Note here that the first
element (PSR) requires that, if there are distinct substances, then there would have to be a cause
explaining this. The second element (the ontology) dictates what kinds of causes would be
available. Modes are one possibility, but modes are supposed to be too dependent to explain this;
so Spinoza concludes that only attributes can serve as a cause here, and that distinct substances
would require distinct attributes.
Another key step is the ban on cross-attribute causal relations (E1P2-3). What Hegel
emphasizes, in this connection, is P10: “Each attribute of a substance must be conceived through
itself”.26
Together these steps can support a big conclusion, by this route: If there is any substance,
then by the PSR it requires a cause of its existence. Ruling out cross-attribute causality, and
attribute sharing, rules out the cause being another substance. So any substance would have to be
the cause of itself, or a necessary being in this sense (E1P7). And Spinoza argues this requires
any substance to be infinite in its kind (E1P8).
But Hegel sees that this falls short of monism; it would, so far, still allow multiple
substances, each a necessary being and infinite within its kind or attribute. And Hegel sees that
Spinoza needs to rule this out by arguing that, should there be any substance other than God—
defined as a substance with all attributes—this would be unexplainable. Hegel highlights this
idea, translating Spinoza’s argument in E1P14: “if there were a substance other than God, it must
be explained by means of an attribute of God”.27 Since that would require two substances of the
25
E1P5. VGP 20:173/265.
E1P10. Hegel 20:173/265.
27
E1P14D, Hegel 20:174/266. Hegel equates erklärt and begriffen here.
26
20
same attribute, the existence a substance other than God would be unexplainable, and the only
scenario satisfying the principle requiring that everything be explained is supposed to be the
existence of God alone, and so substance monism.
We can give in these terms a Hegel-inspired interpretation of Spinoza’s way of arguing
for a philosophical system, along these lines:
Spinozist Systematic Argument
1.
2.
Fundamental Issues: Issues about the metaphysics of explanation / of conditions and
conditioning.
Argument Strategy: Draw consequences from (a) demand that everything has an
explanation, and (b) the ontology of substance.
Some may expect Hegel’s own systematic argument to fit the Spinoza model, but I think that we
should evaluate this question by looking to Hegel’s response to Spinoza in the Logic.
Of particular interest are the discussions of Spinoza in, “Actuality,” the final section of
the second book or division of the Logic, prior to the transition to the culminating Subjective
Logic. For here Hegel levels a powerful criticism: Spinoza’s monism involves a denial of all
determinacy and finitude. For example, "Spinozism is a deficient philosophy” because, with
respect to the one substance, “there is no determinateness which would not be … dissolved into
it” (WL 6:195/472; cf. E §151Zu). 28 I do not think that Hegel is saying that Spinoza nowhere
contradicts that conclusion. The point is that Spinoza’s argument strategy should force him to it.
We can see this, for example, where Hegel says that those who employ the principle that nothing
comes from nothing (PSR), whether they know it or not, are forced to Eleatic monism, denying
the reality of change, determinacy, or anything but the abstract “one”:
28
Spinoza’s is not the only monism against which Hegel makes comparable charges; I take it that the charge is similar in
the famous complaint about a view that would “palm off its Absolute as the night in which, as the saying goes, all cows
are black-this is cognition naively reduced to vacuity” (PhG §16)
21
Ex nihilo, nihil fit… nothing comes from nothing… Those who zealously hold firm
to the proposition … are unaware that in so doing they are subscribing to the
abstract pantheism of the Eleatics and essentially also to that of Spinoza.29
I think that Hegel has multiple lines of attack here, each worthy of more discussion: I
focus here on the simplest and most ambitious, arguing that Spinoza’s own argument should
commit him to the denial of the existence of determinate attributes, and so of all the modes
dependent on them, leaving nothing but indeterminate substance.
I would defend Hegel’s case by showing how it can rest on a re-working of Spinoza’s
argument in P5, about the possibility of distinct substances. The argument rests on the need, if
there is distinction, for a cause to explain it. It should be in this spirit to require that, if there are
distinct attributes, then there would have to be a cause to explain this as well. And yet Spinoza’s
version of the Cartesian ontology would offer nothing that can do this work. Modes cannot serve;
for Spinoza argues, in considering modes as explaining the distinctness of substances, that their
dependence renders them incapable of explaining the distinctness of that which they depend
upon (E1P5D). The alternative allowed by Spinoza’s own demonstration of P5 is attributes
themselves as causes. What would it be for the distinctness of attributes to explain the
distinctness of attributes? This would have to be the case: to be attribute X is to not be attribute
Y, and so on for all attributes. But this is what Spinoza rules out, as in Hegel’s citation of P10:
“Each attribute of a substance must be conceived through itself”. In an earlier letter, Spinoza had
tried defining attributes by ruling this out: “By attribute I understand whatever is conceived
through itself and in itself, so that its concept does not involve the concept of another thing”. 30
29
WL 5:85/61. Note again the connection with Jacobi, from above.
Spinoza Reader, p. 67. Perhaps some will think there is a remaining possibility: perhaps a definition of substance,
somehow prior to its attributes, could explain the existence and distinctness of the attributes. I don’t think Spinoza’s own
use of the ontology in proofs by elimination allows this. More importantly, I don’t think he can allow it: For example, he
cannot allow competitors to monism to define God as creating a universe of separate, finite substances.
30
22
In sum, Spinoza’s own way of arguing leaves no room for a cause to explain the
distinctness of distinct attributes. Hegel’s Logic charges that Spinoza just cheats here:
“Differentiation occurs with Spinoza quite empirically – attributes (thought and extension) and
then modes, affects, and all the remaining” (21:381/333). Spinoza cannot allow empirical
evidence to settle the matter of distinctness, since his anti-monist opponents would happily
adduce what they take to be equally strong empirical evidence for distinct substances. So
Spinoza cannot allow any case of the distinctness of distinct attributes, and consequently his own
principles require him to deny the existence of distinct attributes at all, leaving only the Eleatic
one, with no determinate differences.
One sense in which this Hegelian criticism uses Spinoza’s “own resources” (as Hegel
requires) should be clear: the point is that the very elements supporting Spinoza’s argument for
monism in fact force the elimination of determinacy.
Granted, a certain kind of Eleatic monist might try to retrench here, in just the manner I
have worried about all along: she might embrace the conclusion that there is nothing
determinate, and reject Hegel’s worries by declaring determinacy itself to be external and
indifferent to her Eleatic system. But consider this possible retrenchment from the point of view
of Hegel, understood as following Kant’s Dialectic. Part of what makes Hegel think that
Spinoza’s steps are natural ones for philosophy is that Hegel takes philosophy to be an
expression of reason’s interest in the metaphysics of explicability and complete explicability.
Philosophy, for example, exists to “procure for reason’s urges the satisfaction it deserves” (EL
8:38/p. 26). But Spinoza pursues this same interest in a very specific manner, and one that leads
to a destination that can seem perverse given the starting point: it turns out that if we pursue
explicability in this way, via the Cartesian ontology and the demand that everything real would
23
have to be explicable, then we end up having to conclude that there can be nothing determinate
about which explanatory questions could arise. So from this point of view, the source of appeal
of Spinoza’s starting point—the interest in the metaphysics of explicability—would be itself
contradicted by the conclusion to which Spinoza’s way of pursuing that interest forces him.
Hegel seeks to draw a conclusion from this. But it is not the conclusion that philosophy
need shift tracks, to make some other issues fundamental, such as broadly epistemological issues
about representation and its objects. Rather, we must extend the same tracks further, or to better
pursue the same issues within the metaphysics of explanation. It is better not to pursue those
same issues not by following Spinoza’s specific argument-strategy, drawing consequences from
intuitive principles and ontology. It is better to rather attend to the way in which such a natural
pursuit generates contradictions, and to draw whatever metaphysical conclusions follow from
those contradictions, even if these are initially less intuitive than Spinoza’s principles and
ontology.
Part of Hegel’s point is negative: the rejection of the ontology in which substance is
basic. More generally, the treatment of Spinoza at the end of the Objective Logic is supposed to
bring to a conclusion Hegel’s case for the abandonment of all forms of what Hegel calls “the
metaphysics of the understanding”. We could also call this a thing metaphysics, in the sense that
it makes basic what Hegel calls substance as substratum, supposed to correspond with the
subject-place in judgment.31 Natural as that ontology is, Hegel argues that it leads to
unacceptable dead ends. The last of these is supposed to come after investment in supposedly
independent things as causes, including Spinoza’s conception of substance as cause of itself
(§153An), and of everything else. Hegel argues that it would have to be in the nature of the cause
31
See my (2015, chapter 6).
24
to bring about the effect. What it is to be the cause, then, would end up depending on the effect.
The result is “reciprocity” as a “vacuousness” (§156): everything would be equally cause and
effect of everything else, in infinite regress, and metaphysics would be left with nothing which is
such that appeal to it truly explains anything else.
We can see in these terms why Hegel would take Spinoza as an essential and necessary
step, while still pressing a far-reaching disagreement. Spinozism is “the foundation of all true
further development, but it is not possible to stand pat with it” (§151Zu). The well-known
expression of the point in the lectures on Spinoza is that “[w]hen one begins to philosophize one
must be first a Spinozist. The soul must bathe itself in the aether of this single substance, in
which everything one believed true has perished”. 32 This cannot be an embrace, on Hegel’s part,
of a one indeterminate substance—given the criticism of Spinoza. The point is rather that
philosophy must focus on Spinoza’s issues, and must think through his powerful argument for
monism, in order to free itself from the intuitive thing-metaphysics of the understanding—
“everything one believed true”—and in order move on to better resolve those fundamental issues
in very different ways.
But attention to contradiction is supposed to support not just the abstract negation of
subtracting intuitive content; rather, specific contradictions are supposed to support determinate
negation and so specific positive lessons. The specific defect in Spinozism teaches the need to try
to replace Spinoza’s conception of explanatory completeness in terms of the idea of a necessary
being as self-causing ground of reality with something else—with some one something that
32
VGP 20:165/3:257. My translation.
25
nonetheless generates from itself difference, or a with a metaphysics of self-determination, or
freedom, or “self-negating negation” (11:376/472). Metaphysics was left with nothing such that
appeal to it could explain anything; it must turn to something self-determining enough to be
responsible for something, such that appeal to it can explain.
This last point provides us with a very different account of the systematic relevance of
the transition from an Objective to a Subjective Logic. What distinguishes the Objective Logic is
a focus on the intuitive thing-metaphysics of the understanding, on substance as substratum, and
so on. The Logic aims to get beyond this. So
…objective logic comprises within itself the metaphysics which sought to
comprehend with the pure forms of thought such particular substrata, originally
drawn from the imagination, as the soul, the world, and God… Logic, however,
considers these forms free of those substrata… (WL 21:49/42)
And the transition away from the intuitive thing metaphysics still dominant in the Doctrine of
Essence—leaving us with the “conceptless” (§156Zu) relation of cause and effect and
reciprocity—must give way to the Doctrine of the Concept or the Subjective Logic. Or, “This
truth of necessity is thus freedom, and the truth of substance is the concept” (§158). I take this to
mean that the Subjective Logic retains the same issue-focus, on the metaphysics of explanation;
but it now pursues this focus freed from the old intuitive constraint, free to develop towards a
metaphysics of complete explanation in terms not of a necessary being but a kind of free selfdetermination—ultimately, what Hegel will call “the idea”.
It is now possible to fill our model from above in a new way:
Transcendental Dialectic Model of Systematic Argument
5. Fundamental issues: metaphysics of explanation
6. Argument strategy: expose contradictions, determinate negation produces better theories
of the fundamental issues
7. What distinguishes Subjective from Objective Logic? Subjective Logic pursues the
metaphysics of conditions and the unconditioned, but no longer constrained by intuitive
26
commitments like that to the substrata of the metaphysics of the understanding,
generating an account of the unconditioned as a kind of free self-determination.
8. What is the root reason why pre-Kantian metaphysics supposed to fail? Because it
generates, within metaphysics, Antinomy contradictions that it cannot resolve.
Now I have focused here on the transition to the Subjective Logic, and it is important to
mention that there are crucial further steps to come, closer to the end of the Subjective Logic.
The view I have defended elsewhere (2015) argues that the end makes clear the focus on the
metaphysics of explanation, and turns out even more anti-Spinozist than is yet clear at the
transition discussed here. I think the key argument will be this: out of contradictions in
mechanism and chemism, Hegel draws the conclusion that an adequate metaphysics of
explanation must take teleology as more complete, less conditioned. But the greater explanatory
completeness of teleological life turns out to require realization in something non-teleological,
something it can use for its purposes. Without the non-teleological realizer, life could not act
without getting sucked into the mere conditionedness of mechanism. So this will mean denying
also Spinoza’s principle. In order for there to be something completely explicable—the idea,
including in the first case life—there must also be things not completely explicable – nonteleological things. So it cannot be the case that everything is explicable. The less explicable
must be neither completely a form of nor in the idea—they are rather insubstantial, not entirely
actual or Wirklich, and external. So I think that Hegel’s criticism of Spinoza also leads away
from metaphysical monism in important respects.
But here I will not pursue those later parts of the Logic. What is crucial here is that it is
thinking in terms of the Dialectic that lets us see how Hegel use a resource from Spinoza himself,
but to lift philosophy higher, into a different system.
27
V. Kant in the Doctrine of the Concept
The initial problem included how to make sense of discussions of both Spinoza and Kant
at the transition point to the Subjective Logic. And the remaining challenge here is significant.
Recall Hegel’s complaint that Spinoza fails to generate attributes out of his one substance. In that
case, I concluded that Hegel is promising to pursue similar issues, and yet in a different way that
does better with respect to those issues. But now come back to Hegel’s comparable complaint,
noted above, about Kant: he fails to generate his categories out of the “I” of apperception.
Parallel reasoning would seem to suggest the natural reading that Hegel is promising to use the
conclusion of the Logic to argue in a way that pursues fundamentally the issues from Kant’s
Analytic, about the possibility of cognition of objects, and yet to execute in a way that does
better in this same respect. But then we have all of the problems encountered along the way: If
we now say there are two equally fundamental tracks of argument in the Logic pursuing distinct
kinds of philosophical issue, then this would be to say that there is no organizing unity, and no
systematic argument in this respect. If those tracks are non-fundamental, and organized or given
unity by something else, then none of the ways of reading Hegel so far considered has made any
progress toward explaining this something else, or how Hegel hopes to argue for a system. And
if the Spinoza-inspired track is supposed to non-fundamental and superseded by an Analyticinspired track, then we have lost our account of the comprehensiveness of Hegel’s systematic
argument, in losing track of a convincing refutation of Spinoza, given the problem of contesting
metaphilosophy—and more specifically of a sense in which Hegel commits to raise Spinozism
higher by means of its own resources.
I would argue that the natural, parallel reasoning causing trouble in the last paragraph is
mistaken: that the Logic is not, in the end, fundamentally pursuing the issues of Kant’s Analytic,
28
concerning the possibility of representation, and that they are not what unifies its argument into
defense of one system. And that means providing a different way to understand Hegel’s
complaint about Kant’s execution – one that fits better, I think, with Hegel’s response to Spinoza
and the aim of systematic argument. We need not see the complaint against Kant as a promise to
do better in the very same respect. The point could instead be this: Consideration of the potential
for a systematic philosophy based on the issues from the Transcendental Analytic shows this to
not work out, given the problem about derivation of the categories from transcendental
apperception. What this shows is not that this kind of system can be better executed. It shows
rather that a system of philosophy is better built by making fundamental instead the distinct
issues within the metaphysics of reason. The point is then that consideration of a Transcednental
Analytic-based system eventually shows this to go astray, and in need of digging down below
itself, as it were and out of itself into another kind of project or system. For such a project cannot
rest content with something like formal conditions of the possibility of the representation of
objects. Ultimately, it would require also a metaphysical account of how some one, unified,
subject might generate diversity out of itself.33 This would be not a track-extending but a trackshifting argument: even if we do try to pursue a positive program modeled on deductions from
Kant’s Analytic consideration of the possibility of representation, and pursue it systematically,
ultimately this forces us to shift, so that we instead recognize as more fundamental the kind of
metaphysical issues that Hegel and Spinoza orient their systems around.
Consider in this light a passage in the introduction to the Subjective Logic that takes an
interesting turn. The well-known passage begins like this:
33
This is what I would take to be the upshot of the powerful worries about Kant on spontaneity in Pippin’s (1987).
29
…we find in a fundamental principle of Kantian philosophy the justification for
turning to the nature of the “I” in order to learn what the concept is.
So far this might seem to be Hegel proposing to argue or justifying conclusions in exactly the
manner of Kant’s Analytic. But Hegel immediately continues with a familiar complaint about
Kant:
If we cling to the mere representation of the “I” as we commonly entertain it, then
the “I” is only the simple thing also known as the soul, a thing in which the concept
inheres as a possession or a property. (12:19/516)
So the complaint is that Kant’s way of arguing, by pursuing conditions of the possibility of
representation or cognition, prevents philosophy from doing what it needs to do, namely, of
revising the store of metaphysical ideas, or revising the metaphysics of the “I”. Kant’s ideas
remain, Hegel often charges, shaped by the metaphysics of the understanding, and substrata in
which properties inhere. Kant’s denying knowledge does nothing to help reconceive the
metaphysical ideas.34 So I take Hegel’s conclusion to be that proper pursuit of Kant’s own
principle, should have pushed him to shift tracks, and alter his positive project so that it came to
cede the priority of different issues: not issues about deducing pure categories of the
understanding, but about the metaphysics of the unconditioned.
Now perhaps some would make a new proposal here, saying that this kind result is just a
way of better executing Kant’s Analytic project. The issue-focus in such a program would
remain on the possibility of the representation of objects. The conclusions would include the
claim that among the conditions of this is a metaphysically self-determining or spontaneous
34
There are many passages elsewhere—like the treatment of the critical philosophy at the beginning of the
Encyclopedia—making plain that this is a complaint Hegel has against Kant specifically: Kant retains the “thoughts” of
objects like the soul as things in this substratum sense, downgrading these to just thoughts beyond the bounds of
sensibility. (EL §47R)
30
subject. So the program would be organized by issues concerning representation, and the
metaphysical conclusions would rest on those underlying or more basic considerations.
But I think that, from Hegel’s perspective, this would be more ambivalent than
systematic. To see why, think of the full shape of the resulting philosophical program. And think
in terms of what I called Hegel’s swimming argument above. So the first step of such a program
would be to reject direct engagements with the metaphysics of explanation, conditions or
grounds. The reason we would be supposed to not immediately think about essence or God, and
the way these are supposed to have kinds of explanatory priority, would be because (so the story
would go) there is something unsafe or worrisome there. The worry might be skepticism about
knowledge, or the worry that we might not be able to know God or essence. But the worry could
also be more like a kind of semantic skepticism, or a worry that we might not be able to
represent at all these objects from pre-critical metaphysics. In either case the worry would be
supposed to force philosophy to change tracks and systematically pursue as basic issues about
the possibility of such representation—deriving conceptual conditions of the possibility of this,
and so on. But now the new proposal we are considering would add that it turns out that pursuit
of that Analytic-based program cannot be complete, and the needed reassurance for the worry
cannot be provided, until and unless we step right back into the metaphysics of explanation or
reason. If so, then this seems as is a spinning of the methodological wheels, rather than settling
on a systematic argument. And then there really wasn’t any reason to abandon direct pursuit of
such metaphysical issues in the first place, and no reason to privilege questions about
representation of objects, so that the whole Analytic-inspired track drops out as unnecessary. The
apparent reason rested on what is now conceded to be an illusion, namely: that we could pursue
something else, something meta-theoretical, in some pure form, and get reassurance about the
31
possibility and limits of representation of objects first. I do not think that Hegel’s Logic is
ambivalent or confused here; the consistent position is that such hope is just an illusion, like the
hope to learn to swim before getting in the water. If so, then the systematic way of making
positive progress is to face the inescapable issues about the metaphysics of explanation or the
unconditioned, in their full breadth and generality, wherever they arise—whether these concern
the subject, or essence or God—and develop these by consideration of internal contradictions
into Hegel’s metaphysics of self-determination. Since it is now conceded that systematic
philosophy must eventually jump in those metaphysical waters, it should now also be conceded
that a unified, systematic approach would be all-in.
Some who are attracted to Analytic-like programs in philosophy will worry that jumping
in the water sounds like a reversion to the pre-critical. But this will only seem so if one merely
assumes that the divide between the pre-critical and the critical is drawn in terms of neglect and
attention to issues about the conditions of the possibility of the representations of objects. I have
provided here what seems to me both a better and a more Hegelian way of classifying
possibilities here: Hegel does not understand the modern spirit of critical philosophy, which he
intends to develop, as defined by reflection on issues concerning conditions of representation. He
defines in terms of attention to Antinomy style contradictions, necessarily arising from
consideration of issues within the metaphysics of reason. So despite what can seem to be (from
Hegel’s perspective) “retrograde step” of Kant’s restriction of our knowledge, still:
[T]here is something deeper lying at the foundation of this turn which knowledge
takes, and appears as a loss and a retrograde step, something on which the elevation
of reason to the loftier spirit of modern philosophy in fact rests. The basis of that
conception now universally accepted is to be sought, namely, in the insight into the
necessary conflict… (WL 20:30/25–26)
Another way to put the point is to say that Hegel advocates jumping in the water, but not
swimming the same old stroke. That is, he prioritizes the old issues, but addresses them
32
differently than pre-critical metaphysicians. Instead of a pre-critical drawing of consequences
from intuitive principles, as in Spinoza’s use of Cartesian ontology, Hegel advocates attending to
contradictions in those old views, and learning from them that the old, pre-critical ways of
thinking of substance and the like must be revised. The procedure here is Kantian, but not at all
in the Analytic sense of building around consideration of the conditions of the possibility of
representation—it is Kantian in the Dialectic sense of reasoning from contradictions within the
metaphysics of conditions.
One more reason to think that this is what is going on in the Doctrine of the Concept is to
think of the “Mechanism” chapter, for example. I do not think Hegel asks whether the absolute
mechanism considered there fails to provide the resources necessary to account for the
possibility of representation of objects by a subject. That argument could have been very short.
But this is not what Hegel argues. He is here still and finally fundamentally pursuing the old
issues, like Spinoza’s. Hegel takes absolute mechanism seriously as a treatment of such issues,
concerning the metaphysics of explanation. And he seeks to refute it in its own terms – to meet
it, on its own ground. What he is doing is working through these issues, trying to show that any
take on them generates contradictions ultimately resolved only with a metaphysics of selfdetermination. Of course, this eventually leads into a penultimate “Cognition” chapter, but I
would argue that this pursues metaphysical issues about greater self-determination than covered
in the “Life” chapter; the is the experiment considered turns out to rely on a metaphysics of “the
good” and “the true” (§233), and in ways requiring revision in the final chapter on “The
Absolute Idea”.
Now some might lodge a final objection. Gabriel has advanced it in a useful form, raising
the worry that my Dialectic-focused “reading ignores the fact that Hegel does not avoid
33
epistemology”35. Here I have tried to argue that consideration of the problem of arguing for a
system highlights not questions about which issues are included and which avoided, but rather
questions about which kind of issues is prior, or taken as fundamental. My proposal is that Hegel
bases his project on the metaphysics of the Dialectic, without needing to ignore epistemology.
There are two senses it is included:
The first sense, is that Hegel pursues broadly epistemological issues in a track-shifting
argument that has been my focus in this section. At some points, like the beginning of the
subjective logic, Hegel considers the possibility of a systematic philosophy focused on such
broadly epistemological issues. But he does so in order to show that such a system is eventually
forced out of itself and into a project organized by the issues in the metaphysics of explanation.
To see a second sense, consider the very simple idea of organizing a system around
something like evil demon skepticism from the Meditations. We might first reject competing
views on grounds that they cannot resolve this skepticism without begging the question by
appealing to something placed in doubt by thoughts about an evil demon. We would have to
conclude with a better answer to skepticism, meeting these high standards.
But of course many other kinds of philosophical programs will reject the standard of the
evil demon. They won’t take this issue as fundamental, but will have some other
metaphilosophy. For example, say we instead hold that the problem of representing objects at all,
let alone correctly, is more fundamental. We could argue that evil demon skepticism about
knowledge founders insofar as it assumes but cannot explain the possibility of representing the
objects of which it questions the possibility knowledge. This rival kind of system is not thereby
precluded from addressing issues about knowledge. But the standards it faces would be very
35
Gabriel 2016, fn 26 p. 204.
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different: it wouldn’t have to justify the possibility of knowledge without presuming anything the
demon places in doubt. The high standards here would come with the alternative issues taken as
fundamental: after rejecting evil demon skepticism for failing to explain representation without
begging the question by assuming representational notions in explaining this, this new system
will have to do better on that score—better in accounting for the possibility of the representation
of objects. This is part of why it is so important to make explicit what metaphilosophy drives the
systematic argument, because this sets the standard for what does and does not beg the question.
Similarly, I think that Hegel can argue that both kinds of broadly epistemological
programs just mentioned miss the fundamentality of yet other issues still, about the metaphysics
of conditioning and the unconditioned. To say this is not to say that Hegel must ignore
knowledge and representation. It is just to say that he is not building or organizing his system in
those terms. So he can address knowledge, for example, without having to accept the terms of
evil demon skepticism and somehow resolve it. Similarly, consider the Kantian question about
representation:
What is the ground of the relation of that in us which we call "representation" to the
object? (C 131/10:130).
Hegel can treat this as important, not because of any specialness of the topic of representation.
Rather, just insofar as it is another question about grounds or conditions, and a natural topic in a
metaphysics of explanation. And this would make a big difference in the standards he would
have to meet. There is after all in the Subjective Logic initial orientation around reflection on of
forms of judgment (§166ff.). It is right to say that Hegel gives epistemological issues from the
Transcendental Analytic, such as those concerning “objective validity” 36, a Kantian answer in
36
WL 12:18/518. Thanks to Dean Moyar for pressing on this point, on which see his 2018.
35
terms of the transcendental unity of apperception—so long as it is added that Hegel takes this
answers to not be able to stand on their own, but to raise metaphysical issues, or to reveal a
priority of metaphysical issues, the resolving of which is what unifies the broader systematic
argument.37
Finally, I can bring this to a conclusion in these very terms. The problem at issue has
been how to explain aim for a systematic argument. The discussions of Spinoza and Kant at the
transition to the Subjective Logic can make this harder still. But thinking of Kant’s Dialectic as
Hegel’s model offers what I think is the best way forward: This will mean that Hegel sees
Spinoza’s defense of monism as focused on the right issues, concerning what I call the
metaphysics of explanation. But, also, Hegel can argue that Spinoza’s case goes awry from
within, and the track that considers these issues needs to be extended into a Subjective Logic
focused on the metaphysics of self-determination. With respect to Kant, this will mean that the
main systematic relevance of Hegel’s drawing concepts from Kant’s Analytic is what I call a
“track-shifting” argument: showing that pursuit of the Analytic program as a system would
eventually have to shift tracks to something more forced on the metaphysical issues highlighted
in Kant’s own Dialectic. Finally, settling in this way the metaphilosophy or fundamental issues
organizing Hegel’s systematic argument promises to make clearer the stakes he imposes on
himself: The basic challenge is not to accept the terms of evil demon skepticism and reply to it.
The basic challenge is not to account for the possibility of representation without employing
representational notions. In my view, the basic challenge would be addressing the broadest issues
about grounds or conditions and the metaphysics of explanation, in a manner that—while it must
37
I would argue that this is the case in the Phenomenology of Spirit.
36
raise dialectical contradictions—can eventually give a more satisfying resolution of those
contradictions in a metaphysics of self-determination.
Primary Texts / Abbreviations
HEGEL: References to the German text of the self-standing Logic are to the critical edition,
Gesammelte Werke, (Meiner, 1968-). Other references to the German are to the writings
contained in the Werke in zwanzig Bände are by volume: page in that edition. Edited by E.
Moldenhauer und K. Michel, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1970-1. I cite the Encyclopedia by § number,
with ‘An’ indicating Anmerkung and ‘Zu’ indicating the Zusatz. I use the following
abbreviations, translations (altering where necessary), and other editions:
EL: Encyclopaedia Logic, trans. TF Geraets, HS Harris, and WA Suchting, Hackett Publishing
Co, 1991.
PhG: Phenomenology of Spirit. Translated by A.V. Miller. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1977.
VGP: Lectures on the History of Philosophy. Translated by E. S. Haldane and Frances H.
Simson. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 3 vols, 1995.
WL: Hegel’s Science of Logic. Translated by A.V. Miller. London: George Allen & Unwin,
1969.
KANT: Aside from references to the Critique of Pure Reason, all references to Kant’s writings
are given by volume and page number of the Akademie edition of Kant’s Gesammelte Schriften
(de Gruyter, Berlin 1902-). I use these abbreviations and translations:
A/B: Critique of Pure Reason, translations from Paul Guyer and Allen Wood. Cambridge, 1998.
SPINOZA:
E:
Spinoza, Ethics. In A Spinoza Reader. Translated and edited by Curley, E. Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1994. References to the Ethics by part (I-V), proposition (P),
definition (D), scholium (S) and corollary (C).
Other Works Cited
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Ameriks, K. 1990. „Kant, Fichte, and Short Arguments to Idealism," Archiv für Geschichte der
Philosophie, vol. 72, pp. 63-85.
Gabriel, M. 2016. “What Kind of Idealist (if Any) is Hegel?”. Hegel Bulletin.
Grier, M. 2001. Kant’s Doctrine of Transcendental Illusion. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Knappik, Franz Ulrich. 2016. And yet he is a monist. Comments on James Kreines, 'Reason in the
world'. Hegel Bulletin.
Kreines, James 2006. “Hegel's Metaphysics: Changing the Debate,” Philosophy Compass
1.5:466–80.
Kreines, J. 2012. “Learning from Hegel What Philosophy Is All About: For the Metaphysics of
Reason; Against the Priority of Meaning.” Verifiche: Rivista di Scienze Umane 41 (1–3):
129–73.
Kreines, J. 2015. Reason in the World: Hegel’s Metaphysics and its Philosophical Appeal. OUP.
Moyar, D. „Die Lehre vom Begriff. Zweiter Abschnitt. Die Objektivität.” In Kommentar zu Hegels
Wissenschaft der Logik. Quante, M and Mooren, N. (eds). Hegel-Studien, Beiheft 67. 2018.
Pp 555-646.
Pippin. R. 1987. "Kant on the spontaneity of mind', Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17, pp. 44976.
Pippin, R. 1989. Hegel’s Idealism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Pippin, R. 1993. Hegel's Original Insight. International Philosophical Quarterly XXXIII (3): 285–
295.
Proops, I. 2010. “Kant’s First Paralogism.” Philosophical Review 119(4): 449–95.
Redding, P. 2007. Analytic Philosophy and the Return of Hegelian Thought. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Redding, P. (2016). If Reason is 'in the World', Where Exactly is it Located? European Journal of
Philosophy, 24(3), 712-724.
Rorty, R. 1967, “Metaphilosophical Difficulties of Linguistic Philosophy,” in R. Rorty (ed.), The
Linguistic Turn, 1-41.
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