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Introductory Remarks Introductory Remarks
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2: The Judgment Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2: The Judgment
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection A: The judgment of existence Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection A: The judgment of existence
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection B: The judgment of reflection Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection B: The judgment of reflection
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection C: The judgment of necessity Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection C: The judgment of necessity
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection D: The judgment of the concept Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 2, Subsection D: The judgment of the concept
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3: The Syllogism Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3: The Syllogism
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General discussion General discussion
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3, Subsection A: The syllogism of existence Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3, Subsection A: The syllogism of existence
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3, Subsection B: The syllogism of reflection Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3, Subsection B: The syllogism of reflection
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Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3, Subsection C: The syllogism of necessity Book 3, Section 1, Chapter 3, Subsection C: The syllogism of necessity
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines the distinction among four kinds of judgment according to Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: those of existence, reflection, necessity, and the concept. Hegel devotes one major subsection to each of these judgments in the Science of Logic, with the chapter on judgment deviating significantly from the norm. This chapter begins by revisiting the central point about contradiction, particularly Hegel’s distinction between identity and predication in the formalist or nondialectical senses of those terms. It then moves to a discussion of the Hegelian perspective on the relation between subject and predicate as a judgment that links individuality and universality and concludes by considering Hegel’s argument that “conclusion” and “syllogism” are equivalent.
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