From: gerald_a_levy (gerald_a_levy@msn.com)
Date: Mon Dec 30 2002 - 21:14:52 EST
A follow-up on [8249] for the benefit of those listmembers who don't have Hegel's _Science of Logic_. > Also see the following sections in Chapter 2 ("Real Measure") in Section > 3 ("Measure") Book One ("The Doctrine of Being"): > * In Section A. ("The Relation of Self-Subsistent Measures"), Sub- > Section (a) ("The Combination of Two Measures"), especially first > paragraph (pp. 349-350 in Miller translation ([Humanities Press]). "Something is IMMANENTLY DETERMINED AS A MEASURE RELATION OF QUANTA which also possess qualities and the something is the connection of these qualities. One of them is the *being-within-self* or *inwardness* of the something by virtue of which it is a real being-for-self, a material thing (such as, taken intensively, weight, or its extensive aspect, the multiplicity of *material* parts); the other quality is the *externality* of this inwardness (the abstract, ideal element of space). These qualities are quantitatively determined and their correlation constitutes the qualitative nature of the material something -- e.g. the ratio of weight to volume: specific gravity. The volume, the ideal aspect, is not taken as unit, but the intensive aspect, which manifests quantitatively and in comparison with the former as an extensive magnitude, as a plurality of independent ones, is to be taken as amount. The purely qualitative relation of the two specific magnitudes, that is, as a ratio of powers, has vanished, because with the self-subsistence of the material thing immediacy has returned and in this the specific magnitude is an ordinary quantum whose relation to the other side is likewise determined as the ordinary exponent of a direct ratio" (capitalization emphasis added, quotes in asterisks are emphasized as italics in original, JL). > * Sub-Section (b) ("Measure as a Series of Measure Relations"), > also in Section A, especially first paragraph (1), (Ibid, pp. 351- > 352). "(1) If two things forming a compound body owed their respective specific natures only to a simple qualitative determination, they would only destroy each other when combined. But a thing which is an IMMANENT MEASURE RELATION is self-subsistent; it is therefore also capable of combining with another such thing. But in being reduced to an element of this unity, it preserves itself through the persistence of its indifferent, quantitative character and at the same time functions as a specifying moment or a new measure relation. Its quality is masked in the quantitative element and is thus also indifferent towards the other measure, continuing itself in it and in the newly formed measure. The exponent of the new measure is itself only some quantum or other, an external determinateness, and its indifference finds expression in the fact that the specifically determined thing effects, in association with other such measures, precisely similar neutralizations of the reciprocal measure relations; it is in only one measure relation formed by itself and another specifically determined thing that its specific peculiarity is not expressed" (capitalization added for emphasis, JL). ------------------------------- I would suggest, however, that to be able to fully comprehend the above, it must be comprehended in context -- especially in the context of the rest of Section Two ["Magnitude (Quantity)"] of "The Doctrine of Being". But, *please* don't ask me to offer a summary of Section Two. I'm afraid that would be too difficult a task for me at present. In any event, we now know that the concept of an immanent measure relation, in partial answer to Chris's [8230], can be traced at least as far back as Hegel. In solidarity, Jerry
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