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shorter logic-第74部分
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rather be styled Acosmism。 These considerations will also show what is to be said of the charge of
Pantheism。 If Pantheism means; as it often does; the doctrine which takes finite things in their
finitude and in the complex of them to be God; we must acquit the system of Spinoza of the crime
of Pantheism。 For in that system; finite things and the world as a whole are denied all truth。 On the
other hand; the philosophy which is Acosmism is for that reason certainly pantheistic。
The shortcoming thus acknowledged to attach to the content turns out at the same time to be a
shortcoming in respect of form。 Spinoza puts substance at the head of his system; and defines it to
be the unity of thought and extension; without demonstrating how he gets to this distinction; or how
he traces it back to the unity of substance。 The further treatment of the subject proceeds in what is
called the mathematical method。 Definitions and axioms are first laid down: after them comes a
series of theorems; which are proved by an analytical reduction of them to these unproved
postulates。 Although the system of Spinoza; and that even by those who altogether reject its
contents and results; is praised for the strict sequence of its method; such unqualified praise of the
form is as little justified as an unqualified rejection of the content。 The defect of the content is that
the form is not known as immanent in it; and therefore only approaches it as an outer and
subjective form。 As intuitively accepted by Spinoza without a previous mediation by dialectic;
Substance; as the universal negative power; is as it were a dark shapeless abyss which engulfs all
definite content as radically null; and produces from itself nothing that has a positive subsistence of
its own。
§ 152
At the stage where substance; as absolute power; is the self…relating power (itself
a merely inner possibility); which thus determines itself to accidentality — from
which power the externality it thereby creates is distinguished — necessity is a
correlation strictly so called; just as in the first form of necessity it is substance。
This is the correlation of Causality。 At the stage where substance; as absolute
power; is the self…relating power (itself a merely inner possibility); which thus
determines itself to be accidentality … from which power the eternality it thereby
creates is distinguished … necessity is a correlation strictly so called; just as in the
first form of necessity it is substance。 This is the correlation of Causality。
(b) The Relationship of Causality
§ 153
Substance is Cause; in so far as substance reflects into self as against its passage
into accidentality and so stands as the primary fact; but again no less suspends
this reflection…into…self (its bare possibility); lays itself down as the negative of
itself; and thus produces an Effect; an actuality; which; though so far only
assumed as a sequence; is through the process that effectuates it at the same time
necessary。
As primary fact; the cause is qualified as having absolute independence; and a
subsistence maintained in face of the effect: but in the necessity; whose identity
constitutes that primariness itself; it is wholly passed into the effect。 So far again
as we can speak of a definite content; there is no content that is not in the cause。
That identity in fact is the absolute content itself: but it is no less also the
form…characteristic。 The primariness of the cause is suspended in the effect in
which the cause makes itself a dependent being。 The cause however does not for
that reason vanish and leave the effect to be alone actual。 For this dependency is
in like manner directly suspended; and is rather the reflection of the cause in
itself; its primariness: in short; it is in the effect that the cause first becomes actual
and a cause。 The cause consequently is in its full truth causa sui。
。 。 。 。're Jacobi; omitted'
In the common acceptation of the causal relation the cause is finite; to such extent
as its content is so (as is the case with finite substance); and so far as cause and
effect are conceived as two several independent existences: which they are;
however; only when we leave the causal relation out of sight。 In the finite sphere
we never get over the difference of the form…characteristics in their relation: and
hence we turn the matter around and define the cause also as something
dependent or as an effect。 This again has another cause; and thus there grows up
a progress from effects to causes ad infinitum。 There is a descending progress
too: the effect; looked at in its identity with the cause; is itself defined as a cause;
and at the same time as another cause; which again has other effects; and so on
for ever。
§ 153n
The way understanding bristles up against the idea of substance is equalled by its readiness to use
the relation of cause and effect。 Whenever it is proposed to view any sum of facts as necessary; it
is especially the relation of causality to which the reflective understanding makes a point of tracing
of it back。 Now; although this relation does undoubtedly belong to necessity; it forms only one
aspect in the process of that category。 That process equally requires the suspension of the
mediation involved in causality and the exhibition of it as simple self…relation。 If we stick to
causality as such; we have it not in its truth。 Such a causality is merely finite; and its finitude lies in
retaining the distinction between cause and effect unassimilated。 But these two terms; if they are
distinct; are also identical。 Even in ordinary consciousness that identity may be found。 We say that
a cause is a cause; only where it has an effect; and vice versa。 Both cause and effect are thus one
and the same content: and the distinction between them is primarily only that the one lays down;
and the other is laid down。 This formal difference however again suspends itself; because the
cause is not only a cause of something else; but also a cause of itself; while the effect is not only an
effect of something else; but also an effect of itself。 The finitude of things consists accordingly in
this。 While cause and effect are in their motion identical; the two forms present themselves severed
so that; though the cause is also an effect; and the effect also a cause; the cause is not an effect in
the same connection as it is an effect。 This again gives the infinite progress; in the shape of an
endless series of causes; which shows itself at the same time as an endless series of effects。
§ 154
Action and Reaction
The effect is different from the cause。 The former as such has a being dependent
on the latter。 But such a dependence is likewise reflection…into…self and
immediacy: and the action of the cause; as it constitutes the effect; is at the same
time the pre…constitution of the effect; so long as effect is kept separate from
cause。 There is already in existence another substance on which the effect takes
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