Hegel, Heraclitus and Marx's Dialectic
β Scribed by Howard Williams
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 273
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The objectives of this book are threefold. The first, historical, objective is to demonstrate where the idea of dialectic enters into the work of Heraditus, Hegel and Marx and to show what function it performs for them. The second, philosophical, objec-tive is to provide an assessment of the worth of the use they make of dialectic and to criticize this use where necessary. The third, methodological, objective is to present and defend what I think is valuable in the dialectic and to recommend some fields in which it might profitably be employed. These objectives are, of course, closely interrelated but all three represent equally valid angles from which to approach the problem of dialectic. Those of histor-ical bent will want to know what precisely dialectic meant for its main practitioners; those of a philosophical bent will want to know what sense we can make of the logic of dialectic; and those of a methodological bent will want to know what we can make of the dialectic in our scientific, historical and social enquiries. I hope not to have set myself too ambitious a task in trying to interest all three types of reader.
One of the main themes of this book is to demonstrate how Marx draws extensively on Heraclitus and Hegel in presenting his dialectic. The debt he owes to Hegel in particular is enormous. But this should not blind us to the fact that there is also a marked difference between Hegel's and Marx's interpretation of dialectic. This difference is that for Hegel dialectic is both a method of argument and an ontology whereas for Marx dialectic properly describes only his method of argument. This difference is of great consequence to their work. One of the main purposes of Hegel's philosophical system is to demonstrate that reality is dialectical. It might be argued that Marx's main purpose in writing Capital is similar, namely, to demonstrate that the essence of human society is dialectical. However, it is my contention that Marx does not, in Hegel's fashion, see reality as dialectical but rather takes the view that reality can only be understood dialectically. This may seem only to be a minor distinction to make. But it has the implication that Marx does not devote his lifetime's work to demonstrating the identity of rational thought with reality but, rather, to demonstrating the lack of identity between the two. For Marx, unlike Hegel, neither is the real necessarily rational nor is the rational necessarily real. Marx, on the contrary, comes to the con-clusion that the real has to be made rational and the rational real.
βFrom the Preface
Howard Williams is Professor in Political Theory at the Department of International Politics, Aberystwyth University.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
1. Heraclitus's Philosophy and the Origins of Dialectic
The doctrine of flux
The unity of opposites
Knowledge and the world
Heraclitus, Hegel and Marx
Notes
2. Kant's Dialectic and Hegel's Logic
Introduction: Kant and the limits of reason
The scope and origins of Hegel's Logic
Idealist dialectic in the Logicβsome criticisms
The terminology of dialectical logic
A logic of objects (or the unity of form and content)
The limitations of the judgement
Notes
3. Dialectical Logic I
Logic and ontology
'The laws of thought'
Identity
Contradiction
The law of the excluded middle
Notes
4. Dialectical Logic II
The transition from the objective logic to the subjective logic
Hegel on the syllogism
Notes
5. The Meaning of Aufhebung and Vorstellung in Hegel's Philosophy
Notes
6. Dialectic in Man's Capital
Facts
Two concepts of appearance
The distinction between the mode of presentation and the mode of research
The rational form of dialectic
Concrete abstraction
Notes
7. Man's Dialectical Mode of Presentation: the Circulation of Commodities
The value form
The fetishism of commodities
Notes
8. Contradiction and Dialectical Transition in Marx
Contradiction
Say's Law and the unity of opposites
The dialectical transition
The dialectic of property
The transformation of quantity into quality
The negation of the negation
Notes
9. Conclusion
Adorno's negative dialectic
The philosophical status of Marx's Capital
'The true is the whole'
Essence and appearance
The unity of opposites
Real contradictions
Notes
Selected Bibliography and Further Reading
Index
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