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shorter logic-第32部分
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opposition; here presented from a merely subjective point of view; lies between
Thought and Being; whereas in the first way of junction; being is common to the
two sides of the antithesis; and the contrast lies only between its individualisation
and universality。 Understanding meets this second way with what is implicitly the
same objection as it made to the first。 It denied that the empirical involves the
universal; so it denies that the universal involves the specialisation; which
specialisation in this instance is being。 In other words it says: Being cannot be
deduced from the notion by any analysis。
The uniformly favourable reception and acceptance which attended Kant's
criticism of the Ontological proof was undoubtedly due to the illustration which he
made use of。 To explain the difference between thought and being; he took the
instance of a hundred sovereigns; which; for anything it matters to the notion; are
the same hundred whether they are real or only possible; though the difference of
the two cases is very perceptible in their effect on a man's purse。 Nothing can be
more obvious than that anything we only think or conceive is not on that account
actual; that mental representation; and even notional comprehension; always falls
short of being。 Still it may not unfairly be styled a barbarism in language; when
the name of notion is given to things like a hundred sovereigns。 And; putting that
mistake aside; those who perpetually urge against the philosophic Idea the
difference between Being and Thought might have admitted that philosophers
were not wholly ignorant of the fact。 Can there be any proposition more trite than
this ? But after all; it is well to remember; when we speak of God; that we have
an object of another kind than any hundred sovereigns; and unlike any one
particular notion; representation; or however else it may be styled。 It is in fact this
and this alone which marks everything finite: its being in time and space is
discrepant from its notion。 God; on the contrary; expressly has to be what can
only be 'thought as existing'; his notion involves being。 It is this unity of the notion
and being that constitutes the notion of God。
If this were all; we should have only a formal expression of the divine nature
which would not really go beyond a statement of the nature of the notion itself。
And that the notion; in its most abstract terms; involves being is plain。 For the
notion; whatever other determination it may receive; is at least reference back on
itself; which results by abolishing the intermediation; and thus is immediate。 And
what is that reference to self; but being? Certainly it would be strange if the
notion; the very inmost of mind; if even the 'Ego'; or above all the concrete
totality we call God; were not rich enough to include so poor a category as being;
the very poorest and most abstract of all。 For; if we look at the thought it holds;
nothing can be more insignificant than being。 And yet there may be something still
more insignificant than being that which at first sight is perhaps supposed to be;
an external and sensible existence; like that of the paper lying before me。
However; in this matter; nobody proposes to speak of the sensible existence of a
limited and perishable thing。 Besides; the petty stricture of the Kritik that 'thought
and being are different' can at most molest the path of the human mind from the
thought of God to the certainty that he is: it cannot take it away。 It is this process
of transition; depending on the absolute inseparability of the thought of God from
his being; for which its proper authority has been revindicated in the theory of
faith or immediate knowledge — whereof hereafter。
§ 52
In this way thought; at its highest pitch; has to go outside for any
determinateness; and although it is continually termed Reason; is out…and…out
abstract thinking。 And the result of all is that Reason supplies nothing beyond the
formal unity required to simplify and systematise experiences; it is a canon; not
an organon; of truth; and can furnish only a criticism of knowledge; not a
doctrine of the infinite。 In its final analysis this criticism is summed up in the
assertion that in strictness thought is only the indeterminate unity and the action
of this indeterminate unity。
§52n
Kant undoubtedly held reason to be the faculty of the unconditioned but if reason be reduced to
abstract identity only; it by implication renounces its unconditionality and is in reality no better than
empty understanding。 For reason is unconditioned only in so far as its character and quality are not
due to an extraneous and foreign content; only in so far as it is self…characterising; and thus; in
point of content; is its own master。 Kant; however; expressly explains that the action of reason
consists solely in applying the categories to systematise the matter given by perception; i。e。 to
place it in an outside order; under the guidance of the principle of non…contradiction。
§ 53
(b) The Practical Reason is understood by Kant to mean a thinking Will; i。e。 a
Will that determines itself on universal principles。 Its office is to give objective;
imperative laws of freedom laws; that is; which state what ought to happen。 The
warrant for thus assuming thought to be an activity which makes itself felt
objectively; that is; to be really a Reason; is the alleged possibility of proving
practical freedom by experience; that is; of showing it in the phenomenon of
selfconsciousness。 This experience in consciousness is at once met by all that the
Necessitarian produces from contrary experience; particularly by the sceptical
induction (employed among others by Hume) from the endless diversity of what
men regard as right and duty i。e。 from the diversity apparent in those professedly
objective laws of freedom。
§ 54
What; then; is to serve as the law which the Practical Reason embraces and
obeys; and as the criterion in its act of selfdetermination? There is no rule at hand
but the same abstract identity of understanding as before: there must be no
contradiction in the act of self… determination。 Hence the Practical Reason never
shakes off the formalism which is represented as the climax of the Theoretical
Reason。
But this Practical Reason does not confine the universal principle of the Good to
its own inward regulation: it first becomes practical; in the true sense of the
word; when it insists on the Good being manifested in the world with an outward
objectivity; and requires that the thought shall be objective throughout; and not
merely subjective。 We shall speak of this postulate of the Practical Reason
afterwards。
§54n
The free self…determination which Kant denied to the speculative; he has expressly vindicated for
the practical reason。 To many minds this particular aspect of the Kantian philosophy made it
welcome; and that for good reasons。 To estimate rightly what we owe to Kant in the matter; we
ought t
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