Being and Substance

Review of Metaphysics 31 (4):533 - 554 (1978)
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Abstract

Stressing the immediacy of Being, Hegel placed it categorially first in his logic. But the immediacy of Being, its presence no matter which content or lack of content be presented, signals a purity which ironically deprives it of every specific reality. Hence Hegel emphasized that Being, immediate and pure, is vacuous and collapses into Nothing. Extending a philosophical argument derived from Parmenides and Plato, Hegel further inferred Becoming from the dialectic of Being and Nothing, as though with static concepts he could create the concrete flux.

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Laurence Foss and the Existence of Substances.Lawrence Dewan - 1988 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 44 (1):77-84.

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