The Concept

GWFHegel.Org (2005)
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Abstract

In the following article I present some general features of the Concept that may be understood without resorting to dialectical logic. Primarily, it is intended for beginning students of Hegel's philosophy, and also to provide an intuitive grasp of the Concept for those who may be struggling to understand what Hegel means by this important term that is so central to the philosophical science of the Absolute. Hegel considered that Aristotle also analyzed the Concept without dialectics, so it is shown here how Aristotle was, in fact, dealing with the Concept in his own metaphysics. Basically, it is concluded that an object is a unity of two essential determinations: (1) its being or that it is, and (2) its other determinations or what it is. This leads to understanding that the object is actually a subject-object unity or identity. The Concept is the concrete totality of these aspects and their relations, and provides a new foundation beyond empiricism for scientifically comprehending objects and objective reality in general.

Author's Profile

Bhakti Madhava Puri, Ph. D.
Bhakti Vedanta Institute of Spiritual Culture and Science

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