Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
	Conspectus of Hegel’s Book
	  Lectures On the History
	  of Philosophy:
	  Volume XIII. Volume I of The History of Philosophy.
	    History of Greek Philosophy
	
	    
	Written: 1915
    Source: Lenin’s Collected Works, 4th Edition, Moscow, 1976,
	  Volume 38, pp. 247-268
	Publisher: Progress Publishers
	First Published: 1930 in Lenin Miscellany XII
	Translated: Clemence Dutt
	Edited: Stewart Smith
	Transcription & Markup: Kevin Goins
	Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive (2008).You may freely copy, distribute, display and 
	  perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. 
	  Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source.
  
  
	Note that this document has undergone special formating to ensure that 
	Lenin’s sidenotes fit on the page, marking as best as possible 
	where they were located in the original manuscript. 
  
  
	
		
   
    VOLUME XIII.
	  VOLUME I OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY.
	  HISTORY OF GREEK PHILOSOPHY
	
    
  
	
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	  “Anaximander (610-547 B. C.) supposes 
	  man to develop from a fish.” (213)
	 
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	PYTHAGORAS AND PYTHAGOREANS[2]
	  
  
  	
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 	  ...“Hence the determinations are dry, 
	  destitute of process, undialectical, and sta- 
	  tionary....” (244)
	 
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	  negative de- 
	  termination 
	  of dialectics
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		  This refers to the general ideas of the 
		  Pythagoreans;—“number” and its sig- 
		  nificance, etc. Ergo: it is said in regard 
		  to the primitive ideas of the Pythago- 
		  reans, their primitive philosophy; their 
		  “determinations” of substance, things, 
		  the world, are “dry, destitute of process 
	  	  (movement), undialectical.”
		 
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	  Tracing predominantly the dialectical in 
	  the history of philosophy, Hegel cites the
	 
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	  views of the Pythagoreans: ...“one, added 
	  to even, makes odd (2+1 = 3);—added 
	  to odd, it makes even (3+1 = 4);—it” 
	  (Eins[3])
	  “has the property of making ge- 
	  rade (= even), and consequently it must 
	  itself be even. Thus unity contains in it- 
	  self different determinations.” (246)
	 
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	  Musical harmony and the philosophy of 
	  Pythagoras:
	 
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	  (“harmony of 
	  the world”)
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	  “The subjective, and, in the case of hear- 
	  ing, simple feeling, which, however, exists 
	  inherently in relation, Pythagoras has at- 
	  tributed to the understanding, and he at- 
	  tained his object by means of fixed deter- 
	  minations.” (282)
	 
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	  relation of 
	  the subjec- 
	  tive to the 
	  objective
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	  Pp. 265--266: the movement of the heav-
	 
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	  enly bodies—their harmony—the har- 
	  mony of the singing heavenly spheres 
	  inaudible to us (in the Pythago- 
	  reans): Aristotle, De coelo, II, 13 
	  (and 9)[4]:
	 
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	  ...“Fire was placed by the Pythagoreans 
	  in the middle, but the Earth was made 
	  a star that moved around this central body 
	  in a circle....” But for them this fire was 
	  not the sun.... “They thus rely, not on 
	  sensuous appearance, but on grounds.... 
	  These ten spheres”	  
	 
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	  | 
		 
		              
		              
		      ten spheres or orbits 
		  or movements of the ten planets: Mer- 
		  cury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Sun, 
		  Moon, Earth, the Milky Way and the 
		  Gegenerde[5]
	  	  (—antipode?) invented “for 
		  an even number,” for 10[6]
		 
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	          “like all that 
	  is in motion, make a sound; but each 
	  makes a different tone, according to the 
	  difference in its size and velocity. This 
	  is determined by the different distances, 
	  which bear a harmonious relationship to 
	  one another, in accordance with musical 
	  intervals; by this means a harmonious 
	  sound (music) arises in the moving spheres 
	  (world)....”
	 
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	  Concerning the soul, the Pythagoreans 
	  thought “die Seele set: die Sonnenstäub- 
	  chen”[7] (p. 268) (= dust particle, atom) 
	  (Aristotle, De anima, I, 2).”[8]
	 
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		  An allusion 
		  to the struc- 
		      ture of 
		      matter!
		 
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	  the role of 
	  dust (in the 
	  sunbeam) in 
	  ancient 
	  philosophy
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	  In the soul—seven circles (elements) 
	  as in the heavens. Aristotle, De ani- 
	  ma, I, 3—p. 269.
	 
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	  Pythagore- 
	  ans: 
	  “guesses,” 
	  fantasies 
	  on the resem- 
	  blance of the 
	  macrocosm 
	  and the 
	  microcosm
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	  And here immediately are recounted the 
	  fables that Pythagoras (who had taken 
	  from the Egyptians the doctrine of the im- 
	  mortality of the soul and the transmi- 
	  gration of souls) related about himself, that 
	  his soul had dwelt 207 years in other people, 
	  etc., etc. (271)
	 
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		  NB: the linking of the germs of scien- 
		  tific thought with fantasy à la religion, 
		  mythology. And nowadays! Likewise, 
		  the same linking but the proportions 
		  of science and mythology are different.
		 
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	  More on the theory of numbers of Pytha- 
	  goras. 
	      “Numbers, where are they? Dispersed 
	  through space, dwelling in independence 
	  in the heaven of ideas? They are not 
	  things immediately in themselves, for a 
	  thing, a substance, is something quite 
	  other than a number—a body bears no 
	  resemblance to it.” 254 
	      Quotation |from Aristotle?—Met- 
	  aphysik, I, 9, is it not? From Sextus 
	  Empiricus? Unclear|.  
	 
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	  NB
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	  Pp. 279-280—the Pythagoreans accept the
	 
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	  ether (...“A ray penetrates from the 
	  sun through the dense and cold ether,” 
	  etc.)
	 
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		  Thus the conjecture about the ether 
		  has existed for thousands of years, re- 
		  maining until now a conjecture. But 
		  at the present time there are already 
		  a thousand times more subsurface chan- 
		  nels leading to a solution of the prob- 
		  lem, to a scientific determination of 
		  the ether.
		 
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    THE ELEATIC SCHOOL[9]
  
	
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	  In speaking of the Eleatic school, Hegel 
	  says about dialectics:
	 
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	  ...“We here” (in der eleatischen Schule[10]) 
	  “find the beginning of dialectics, i.e., 
	  simply the pure movement of thought 
	  in Notions; likewise we see the opposition 
	  of thought to outward appearance or sen- 
	  suous Being, or of that which is implicit 
	  to the being-for-another of this implicit- 
	  ness, and in the objective existence we see 
	  the contradiction which it has in itself, 
	  or dialectics proper....” (280) See the next 
	  page.[11]
	 
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	  what is 
	  dialectics? 
	    
	  (α) 
  	    
  	    
  	    
	  (β)
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	  Here are essentially two determinations 
	  (two characteristics, two typical features; 
	  Bestimmungen, keine Definitionen[12]) of 
	  dialectics[13]:
	 
	
	  α) “the pure movement of thought 
	     in Notions”; 
	  β) “in the (very) essence of objects 
	     (to elucidate) (to reveal) the con- 
	     tradiction which it (this essence) 
	     has in itself (dialectics 
	     proper).”
	 
	
	  In other words, this “fragment” of He- 
	  gel’s should be reproduced as follows: 
	      Dialectics in general is “the pure move- 
	  ment of thought in Notions“ (i.e., putting 
	  it without the mysticism of idealism: 
	  human concepts are not fixed but are 
	  eternally in movement, they pass into 
	  one another, they flow into one another, 
	  otherwise they do not reflect living life. 
	  The analysis of concepts, the study of 
	  them, the “art of operating with them” 
	  (Engels)[14] always
	  demands study of the 
	  movement of concepts, of their inter- 
	  connection, of their mutual transitions).
	 
	
	  In particular, dialectics is the study 
	  of the opposition of the Thing-in-itself 
	  (an sich), of the essence, substratum, sub- 
	  stance—from the appearance, from “Be- 
	  ing-for-Others.” (Here, too, we see a tran- 
	  sition, a flow from the one to the other: the 
	  essence appears. The appearance is essen- 
	  tial.) Human thought goes endlessly deeper 
	  from appearance to essence, from essence of 
	  the first order, as it were, to essence of 
	  the second order, and so on without 
	  end.
	 
	
	  Dialectics in the proper sense is the 
	  study of contradiction in the very essence 
	  of objects: not only are appearances tran- 
	  sitory, mobile, fluid, demarcated only 
	  by conventional boundaries, but the es- 
	  sence of things is so as well.
	 
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	  Hegel on 
	  dialectics 
	  (see the 
	  previous 
	  page
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	  Sextus Empiricus presents the point of 
	  view of the Sceptics as follows:
	 
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	  ...“Let us imagine that in a house in 
	  which there are many valuables, there 
	  were those who sought for gold by night; 
	  each would then think that he had found 
	  the gold, but would not know for certain 
	  whether he had actually found it. Thus 
	  philosophers come into this world as into 
	  a great house to seek the truth, but were 
	  they to reach it, they could not tell 
	  whether they had really attained it....” 
	  (288-289)
	 
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	  the compari- 
	  son is 
	  a tempting 
	  one...
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	  Xenophanes (the Eleatic) said:
	 
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	  “Did beasts and lions only have hands, 
	      Works of art thereby to bring forth, as 
	  do men, 
	      They would, in creating divine forms, 
	  give to them 
	      What in image and size belongs to them-
	 
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	  Gods in the 
	  image of 
	  man
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	  selves....” (289-290)
	 
	
	
	  “What especially characterises Zeno is 
	  dialectics, which ... begins with him....” 
	  (302)
	 
	
	  “We find in Zeno likewise true objective 
	  dialectics.” (309)
	 
	
	  (310: on the refutation of philosophic 
	  systems: “Falsity must not be demonstrat- 
	  ed as untrue because the opposite is true, 
	  but in itself....”)
	 
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	  “Dialectics is in general α) external dia- 
	  lectics, in which this movement is differ- 
	  ent from the comprehension of this move-
	 
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	  dialectics
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ment; β) not a movement of our intelli- 
	  gence only, but what proceeds from the 
	  nature of the thing itself, i. e., from the 
	  pure Notion of the content. The former 
	  is a manner of regarding objects in such 
	  a way that reasons are revealed and aspects 
	  of them shown, by means of which all 
	  that was supposed to be firmly fixed, is 
	  made to totter. There may be reasons which 
	  are altogether external too, and we shall 
	  speak further of this dialectics when deal- 
	  ing with the Sophists. The other dialectics,
	 
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	  however, is the immanent contemplation 
	  of the object: it is taken for itself, without 
	  previous hypothesis, idea or obligation, 
	  not under any external conditions, laws, 
	  grounds. We have to put ourselves right 
	  into the thing, to consider the object in 
	  itself and to take it in the determina- 
	  tions which it has. In regarding it thus, 
	  it” (er) (sic!) “shows from itself that it con- 
	  tains opposed determinations, and thus 
	  transcends itself; this dialectics we more 
	  especially find in the ancients. Subjec-
	 
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	  objective 
	  dialectics
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	| 
	 
	  tive dialectics, which reasons from exter- 
	  nal grounds, does justice when it is granted 
	  that: ‘in the correct there is what is not 
	  correct, and in the false the true as well.’ 
	  True dialectics leaves nothing whatever 
	  to its object, as if the latter were defi- 
	  cient on one side only; but it disintegrates 
	  in the entirety of its nature....” (p. 311)
	 
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	  With the “principle of development” in 
	  the twentieth century (indeed, at the end 
	  of the nineteenth century also) “all are 
	  agreed.” Yes, but this superficial, not 
	  thought out, accidental, philistine “agree- 
	  ment” is an agreement of such a kind as 
	  stifles and vulgarises the truth.—If every- 
	  thing develops, then everything passes from 
	  one into another, for development as is 
	  well known is not a simple, universal and 
	  eternal growth, enlargement (respective dim- 
	  inution), etc.—If that is so, then, in the 
	  first place, evolution has to be under- 
	  stood more exactly, as the arising and 
	  passing away of everything, as mutual 
	  transitions.—And, in the second place, 
	  if everything develops, does not that 
	  apply also to the most general concepts 
	  and categories of thought? If not, it means 
	  that thinking is not connected with being. 
	  If it does, it means that there is a dialec- 
	  tics of concepts and a dialectics of cogni- 
	  tion which has objective significance. +
	 
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	  Regarding 
	  the question 
	  of dialec- 
	  tics and 
	  its objective 
	  significance...
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	  NB 
	
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	   I. 
	    
	    
	    
	    
	   II.
	 | 
	
	  The principle   
	  of develop- 
	  ment... 
	    
	    
	  The principle 
	  of unity...
	 | 
	
	  + In addition, the uni- 
      versal principle of de- 
      velopment must be com- 
      bined, linked, made to 
      correspond with the uni- 
	  versal principle of the 
	  unity of the 
	  world, nature, motion, 
      matter, etc.
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	  “Zeno’s treatment of motion was above 
	  all objectively dialectical....” (p. 313)
	 
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	  ...“Movement itself is the dialectic of 
	  all that is....” It did not occur to Zeno 
	  to deny movement as “sensuous certainty,” 
	  it was merely a question “nach ihrer (move- 
	  ment’s) Wahrheit” (of the truth of move- 
	  ment). (313) And on the next page, where 
	  he relates the anecdote how Diogenes the 
	  Cynic, of Sinope, refuted movement by 
	  walking, Hegel writes:
	 
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	  NB. This can 
	  and must be 
	  turned 
	  round: the 
	  question is 
	  not whether 
	  there is 
	  movement, 
	  but how
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	 | 
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	  to express 
	  it in the logic 
	  of concepts
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	  ...“But the anecdote continues that, when 
	  a pupil was satisfied with this refutation, 
	  Diogenes beat him, on the ground that, 
	  since the teacher had disputed with reasons, 
	  the only valid refutation is one derived 
	  from reasons. Men have not merely to sat- 
	  isfy themselves by sensuous certainty, but 
	  also to understand....” (314)
	 
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	  Not bad! 
	  Where is this 
	  continuation 
	  of the anec- 
	  dote taken 
	  from? It is 
	  not to be 
	  found in Dio- 
	  genes Laerti- 
	  us, VI, § 39,[15] 
	  or in Sextus 
	  Empiri- 
	  cus, III, 8[16] 
	  (Hegel p. 
	  314). Did He- 
	  gel invent it?
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	  Zeno has four ways of refuting motion: 
	  1. That which is moving to an end must
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
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	  first cover half of the path. And of 
	  this half, again first its half, and so 
	  on ad infinitum.
	 
	
	
	  Aristotle replied: space and time 
	  are infinitely divisible (δννάμει[17]) 
	  (p. 316), but not infinitely divided 
	  (ένεργεία[18]), Bayle (Dictionnaire,[19] 
	  Vol. IV, article Zeno) calls this reply 
	  of Aristotle’s pitoyable[20] and says:
	 
	
	    ...“if one drew an infinite number 
		of lines on a particle of matter, one 
		would not thereby introduce a division 
		that would reduce to an actual infin- 
		ity that which according to him was 
	    only a potential infinity....”
	 
	
	
	  And Hegel writes (317): “Dies si ist 
	  gut!”[21]
	 
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	  | 
		 
		  i.e., if one carried out the infinite 
		  division to the end!!
		 
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	  ...“The essence of space and time is mo- 
	  tion, for it is universal; to understand 
	  it means to express its essence in the form
	 
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	  correct!
	 | 
	
	
	| 
	 
	  of the Notion. As unity of negativity and 
	  continuity, motion is expressed as the No- 
	  tion, as thought; but neither continuity 
	  nor discontinuity is to be posited as the 
	  essence....” (pp. 318--319)
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  “To understand means to express in the 
		  form of notions.” Motion is the essence 
		  of space and time. Two fundamental con- 
		  cepts express this essence: (infinite) con- 
		  tinuity (Kontinuitä) and “punctuality” 
		  (= denial of continuity, discontinu- 
		  ity). Motion is the unity of continuity 
		  (of time and space) and discontinuity (of 
		  time and space). Motion is a contra- 
		  diction, a unity of contradictions.
		 
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	  | 
		 
		  Überweg-Heinze, 10th edition, p. 63 
		  (§ 20), is wrong when he says that Hegel 
		  “defends Aristotle against Bayle.” Hegel 
		  refutes both the sceptic (Bayle) and the 
		  anti-dialectician (Aristotle). 
		      Cf. Gomperz, Les penseurs de la 
		  Grèce, p ...[22], the forced recognition, under 
		  the lash, of the unity of contradictions, 
		  without recognising dialectics (owing to 
		  cowardice of thought)....
		 
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	  2. Achilles will not overtake the tortoise.
	 
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	  “First the half” and so on endlessly. 
	  Aristotle answers: he will overtake 
	  it if he be permitted “to overstep the 
	  limits.” (320) 
      And Hegel: “This answer is cor- 
	  rect and contains all that can be 
	  said” (p. 321)—for actually the half 
	  here (at a certain stage) becomes the 
	  “limit”....
	 
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	| 	
	 
	  ...“If we speak of motion in general, we 
	  say that the body is in one place and then 
	  it goes to another; because it moves it is 
	  no longer in the first, but yet not in the
	 
	 | 
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	 | 
	 | 
    
	  cf. Chernov’s 
	  objections 
	  against 
	  Engels[23]
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  second; were it in either it would be at 
	  rest. If we say that it is between both, 
	  this is to say nothing at all, for were it 
	  between both, it would be in a place, and
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  this presents the same difficulty. But move- 
	  ment means to be in this place and not 
	  to be in it; this is the continuity of space 
	  and time—and it is this which first makes 
	  motion possible.” (Pp. 321--322)
	 
	 | 
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	  NB 
	  correct!
	 | 
	
	
	
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  Movement is the presence of a body in 
		  a definite place at a given moment and 
		  in another place at another, subsequent 
		  moment—such is the objection which Cher- 
		  nov repeats (see his Philosophical Studies) 
		  in the wake of all the “metaphysical” 
		  opponents of Hegel. 
		      This objection is incorrect: (1) it de- 
		  scribes the result of motion, but not mo- 
		  tion itself; (2) it does not show, it does 
		  not contain in itself the possibility of mo- 
		  tion; (3) it depicts motion as a sum, as 
		  a concatenation of states of rest, that is 
		  to say, the (dialectical) contradiction is 
		  not removed by it, but only concealed, 
		  shifted, screened, covered over.
		 
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	  “What makes the difficulty is always 
	  thought alone, since it keeps apart the mo- 
	  ments of an object which in their separa- 
	  tion are really united.” (322)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  correct!
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  We cannot imagine, express, measure, 
	  depict movement, without interrupting con- 
	  tinuity, without simplifying, coarsening, 
	  dismembering, strangling that which is liv-
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
     
	  ing. The representation of movement by 
	  means of thought always makes coarse, 
	  kills,—and not only by means of thought, 
	  but also by sense-perception, and not only 
	  of movement, but every concept. 
	      And in that lies the essence of dialectics. 
	      And precisely this essence is ex- 
	  pressed by the formula: the unity, identity 
	  of opposites.
	 
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	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  3. “The flying arrow rests.”
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  And Aristotle's answer: the error 
	  arises from the assumption that “time 
	  consists of the individual Nows” (έχ 
	  τών νϋν) p. 324.
	 
	
	  4. Half is equal to the double: motion
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  measured in comparison with an un- 
	  moving body and in comparison with 
	  a body moving in the opposite 
	  direction.
	 
	
	
	  At the end of the § on Zeno, Hegel com- 
	  pares him to Kant (whose antinomies, he 
	  says, “do no more than Zeno did here”).
	 
	
	  The general conclusion of the dialectic 
	  of the Eleatics: “the truth is the one, all 
	  else is untrue”—“just as the Kantian phi- 
	  losophy resulted in “We know appearances 
	  only.” On the whole the principle is the 
	  same.” (p. 326)
	 
	
	  But there is also a difference.
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “In Kant it is the spiritual that de- 
	  stroys the world; according to Zeno, the 
	  world of appearance in itself and for itself 
	  has no truth. According to Kant, it is our 
	  thought, our spiritual activity that is bad;— 
	  it shows excessive humility of mind to be- 
	  lieve that knowledge has no value....” 
	  (327)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  Kant and his 
	  (subjectiv- 
	  ism, scep- 
	  ticism, etc.)
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	
	| 
	 
	  The continuation of the Eleatics in Leu- 
	  cippus and among the Sophists...
	 
	 | 
	
  
   
  
  THE PHILOSOPHY OF HERACLITUS
  
	
    | 
	 
	  After Zeno (? he lived after Heracli- 
	  tus?)[24] Hegel 
	  passes on to Heraclitus and 
	  says: 
	      “It” (Zeno’s dialectics) “may, to that 
	  extent, also be called subjective dialec- 
	  tics, insofar as it rests in the contemplative 
	  subject, and the one, without this dialec- 
	  tics, without this movement, is one ab- 
	  stract identity....” (328)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  but it was previously said, see the 
	  passage quoted from p. 309, and 
	  others, that Zeno’s dialectics is ob- 
	  jective dialectics. Here is some kind 
	  of superfine “distinguo.” Cf. the 
	  following:
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 			
	 | 
	
	
	| 
	 	
 	  “Dialectics: (α) external dialectics, 
	  a reasoning which goes hither and 
	  thither, without reaching the soul of the
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  thing itself; (β) the immanent dialectics 
	  of the object, but (NB) following within 
	  the contemplation of the subject; (γ) the 
	  objectivity of Heraclitus, i.e., dialectics 
	  itself taken as principle.” (328)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 			
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	
	
	
	  
	  
		α) 
		β) 
		  
		  
		γ)
	   | 
	  
	    subjective dialectics. 
	    in the object there is dialectics, 
	    but I do not know, perhaps it is 
	    Schein,[25] merely appearance, etc. 
	    fully objective dialectics, as the 
	    principle of all that is
	   | 
	   
	 
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  (In Heraclitus): “Here we see land; there is
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  no proposition of Heraclitus which 
	  I would not have adopted in my Log- 
	  ic....” (328)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  “Heraclitus says: Everything is be- 
	  coming; this becoming is the principle. 
	  This is contained in the expression: Being 
	  no more is than not-Being....” (p. 333)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “The recognition of the fact that Being 
	  and not-Being are only abstractions de- 
	  void of truth, that the first truth is to be 
	  found only in Becoming, forms a great ad- 
	  vance. The understanding comprehends both 
	  as having truth and validity in isolation; 
	  reason on the other hand recognises the one 
	  in the other, and sees that in the one its 
	  other” (NB “its other”) “is contained— 
	  that is why the All, the Absolute is to be 
	  determined as Becoming.” (334)
	 
	
	
	  “Aristotle says (De mundo,[26] Chapter 5)
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  that Heraclitus ‘joined together the 
	  complete whole and the incomplete’ 
	  (part)” ... “what coincides and what 
	  conflicts, what is harmonious and what 
	  discordant; and from out of them all 
	  (the opposite) comes one, and from 
	  one, all.” (335)
	 
	
	  Plato, in his Symposium,[27] puts forward 
	  the views of Heraclitus (inter alia in their 
	  application to music: harmony consists 
	  of opposites), and the statement: “The art 
	  of the musician unites the different.”
	 
	
	  Hegel writes: this is no objection against 
	  Heraclitus (336), for difference is the es- 
	  sence of harmony:
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  “This harmony is precisely absolute Be- 
	  coming, change,—not becoming other, now 
	  this and then an other. The essential 
	  thing is that each different thing, each 
	  particular, is different from another, not 
	  abstractly so from any other, but from its 
	  other. Each particular only is, insofar 
	  as its other is implicitly contained in its 
	  Notion....”
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  Quite right 
	  and impor- 
	  tant: the 
	  “other” as 
	  its other, 
	  development 
	  into its 
	  opposite
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “So also in the case of tones; they must 
	  be different, but so that they can also 
	  be united....” (336) P. 337: incidentally 
	  Sextus Empiricus (and Aristotle) are reckon- 
	  ed among the ... “best witnesses”....
	 
	
	  Heraclitus said: “die Zeit ist das erste 
	  körperliche Wesen”[28] (Sextus Empiricus)— 
	  p. (338)
	 
	
	  körperliche[29]—an “unfortunate” expres- 
	  sion (perhaps, Hegel says (NB), it was 
	  chosen by a sceptic (NB),—but time, he 
	  says, is “das erste sinnliche Wesen”[30]....
	 
	
	
	  ...“Time is pure Becoming, as per- 
	  ceived....” (338)
	 
	
	  In regard to the fact that Heraclitus 
	  considered fire as a process, Hegel says: 
	  “Fire is physical time, it is this absolute 
	  unrest” (340)—and further, in regard to 
	  the natural philosophy of Heraclitus:
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“It” (Natur) “is process in itself....” 
	  (344) “Nature is the never-resting, and 
	  the All is the transition out of the 
	  one into the other, from division into 
	  unity, and from unity into division....” 
	  (341) 
	      “To understand Nature means to rep- 
	  resent it as process....” (339)
	 
	
	  Here is what is said to be the narrow-
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ness of natural scientists:
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“we listen to their account“ (Natur- 
	  forscher[31]), “they only observe and say 
	  what they see; but this is not true, for un- 
	  consciously they transform what is im- 
	  mediately seen by means of the Notion.
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	  
	  And the strife is not due to the opposi-
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  tion between observation and the absolute 
	  Notion, but between the limited rigid 
	  notion and the Absolute Notion. They 
	  show that changes are non-existent....” 
	  (344-345)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“Water in its decomposition re- 
	  veals hydrogen and oxygen: these have 
	  not arisen for they were already there 
	  as such, as the parts of which the water 
	  consists” (thus Hegel mimics the na- 
	  tural scientists)....
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “As we find in all expression of per- 
	  ception and experience; as soon as men 
	  speak, there is a Notion present, it 
	  cannot be withheld, for in conscious- 
	  ness there is always a touch of univer- 
	  sality and truth.”
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	
	
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  Quite right and important—it is pre- 
		  cisely this that Engels repeated in more 
		  popular form, when he wrote that natu- 
		  ral scientists ought to know that the re- 
		  sults of natural science are concepts, and 
		  that the art of operating with concepts 
		  is not inborn, but is the result of 2,000 
		  years of the development of natural science 
		  and philosophy.[32] 
		      The concept of transformation is taken 
		  narrowly by natural scientists and they 
		  lack understanding of dialectics.
		 
	   | 
	   
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“He” (Heraclitus) “is the one who first 
	  expressed the nature of the infinite, and 
	  who first understood nature as infinite in 
	  itself, i.e., its essence as process....” (346)
	 
	
	
	  On the “concept of necessity”—cf. p. 
	  347. Heraclitus could not see truth in 
	  “sensuous certainty” (348), but in “necessity” 
	  (είμαρμένη[33])—((λόγοζ[34])).
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  NB || “Absolute mediation” (348)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  (“absolute 
	  connec- 
	  tion”)	  
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
  	 
	  “The rational, the true, that which I 
	  know, is indeed a withdrawal from the 
	  objective as from what is sensuous, individ- 
	  ual, definite and existent; but what rea- 
	  son knows within itself is just as much 
	  necessity or the universal of being; it is 
	  the essence of thought as it is the essence 
	  of the world.” (352)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB: Necessi- 
	  ty = “the universal of 
	  Being” (the 
	  universal in 
	  Being) 
	  (connection, 
	  “absolute 
	  mediation”)
	 | 
	
  
  
   
  
  LEUCIPPUS
  
  
	
    | 
	 
	  368: “The development of philosophy in
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
    
	  The develop-
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  history must correspond to the de- 
	  velopment of logical philosophy; but 
	  there will still be passages in the lat- 
	  ter which are absent in historical de- 
	  velopment.”
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  ment of phi- 
	  losophy in 
	  history “must 
	  correspond” 
	  (??) to the 
	  development 
	  of logical 
	  philosophy
	 | 
	
	
	
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  Here there is a very profound and cor- 
		  rect, essentially materialist thought (ac- 
		  tual history is the basis, the foundation, 
		  the Being, which is followed by conscious- 
		  ness).
		 
	   | 
	   
	 
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  Leucippus says that atoms are invisible 
	  “because of the smallness of their body” 
	  (369)—Hegel, however, replies that this 
	  is “Ausrede”[35] (ibid.), that 
	  “Eins”[36] cannot 
	  be seen, that “das Princip des Eins” “ganz 
	  ideell”[37]
	  (370), and that Leucippus is no 
	  “empiricist”, but an idealist.
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	
	  ((stretching of a point 
	  by the idealist Hegel, 
	  course, stretching a point.)) 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  ([Straining to make Leucippus conform 
		  to his Logic, Hegel expatiates on the impor- 
		  tance, the “greatness” of the principle (368) 
		  Fürsichsein,[38] descrying it in Leucippus. 
		  It savours in part of stretching a point.][39]
	     
	    
	      But there is also a grain of truth in it; 
		  the nuance (the “moment”) of separateness; 
		  the interruption of gradualness; the mo- 
		  ment of the smoothing out of contradic- 
		  tions; the interruption of continuity—the 
		  atom, the one. (Cf. 371 i.f.):—“The one 
		  and continuity are opposites....”
	     
	    
	      Hegel’s logic cannot be applied in its 
		  given form, it cannot be taken as given. 
		  One must separate out from it 
		  the logical (epistemological) nuances, after 
		  purifying them from Ideenmystik[40]: that 
		  is still a big job.)
		 
	   | 
	   
	 
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “The Atomists are, therefore, generally 
	  speaking, opposed to the idea of the crea- 
	  tion and maintenance of the world by 
	  means of a foreign principle. It is in the 
	  theory of atoms that natural science first 
	  feels released from the need for demonstrat- 
	  ing a foundation for the world. For if nature 
	  is represented as created and held together 
	  by another, then it is conceived of as not 
	  existent in itself, and thus as having its 
	  Notion outside itself, i.e., its basis is 
	  foreign to it, it has no basis as such, it is 
	  only conceivable from the will of another— 
	  as it is, it is contingent, devoid of ne- 
	  cessity and Notion in itself. In the idea 
	  of the atomists, however, we have the con- 
	  ception of the inherency of nature, that is 
	  to say, thought finds itself in it....” (372-373)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
    
	  materialism 
	  (Hegel is 
	  afraid of the 
	  word: keep 
	  away from 
	  me) versus 
	  atomism
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  In the presentation—according to Dio- 
	  genes Laertius, IX, § 31-33—of the atomism 
	  of Leucippus, the “vortex” (Wirbel— 
	  δίνην)[41] 
	  of atoms, Hegel finds nothing of interest 
	  (“no interest,” ...“empty representation,” 
	  “dim, confused ideas”—p. 377 i.f.).
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  Hegel’s blindness, the one-sidedness of 
	  the Idealist!!
	 
	 | 
	
  
  	
   
  
  DEMOCRITUS
  
	
    | 
     
	  Democritus is behandelt[42] by Hegel in 
	  a very stiefmütterlich[43] fashion, in all 
	  pp. 378-380! The spirit of materialism is 
	  intolerable to the idealist!! The words of 
	  Democritus are quoted (p. 379):
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  “Warmth exists according to opin- 
	  ion (νόμφ) and so do cold and colour, 
	  sweet and bitter; only the indivisible 
	  and the void are in accordance with 
	  truth (έτεή)” (Sextus Empiricus, Ad- 
	  versus Mathematicos, VII, § 135).[44]
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  And the conclusion is drawn:
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“We see this much, that Demo- 
	  critus expressed the difference between 
	  the moments of Being-in-itself and 
	  Being-for-other more distinctly....” 
      (380)
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  By this “the way is at once opened up” 
	  to “the bad idealism,” that ... “meine Emp- 
	  findung, mein....”[45]
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  “bad ideal- 
	  ism” (my 
	  feeling) cf. 
	  Mach[46]
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“A sensuously notionless manifold of 
	  feeling is established, in which there is 
	  no reason, and with which this idealism 
	  has no further concern.”
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 			
	 | 
    
	  Hegel 
	  versus 
	  E. Mach...
	 | 
	
  
	
   
	
  THE PHILOSOPHY OF ANAXAGORAS
  
  
	
    | 
	 
      Anaxagoras. Noΰς[47] “the cause of the world 
	  and of all order,” and Hegel elucidates this:
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  ...“Objective thought ... reason in the 
	  world, also in nature—or as we speak of 
	  genera in nature, they are the universal. 
	  A dog is an animal, this is its genus, its 
	  substantial; the dog itself is this. This 
	  law, this understanding, this reason is 
	  itself immanent in nature, it is the essence 
	  of nature; the latter is not formed from 
	  without as men make a chair.” (381-382)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  NB 
	  the concept 
	  of genus is 
	  “the essence 
	  of nature,” is 
	  law...
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “Noΰς is the same as soul (Aristotle 
	  on Anaxagoras)—p. 394
	 
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  and ...[48] the elucidation of this 
		  1eap from the general in nature 
		  to the soul; from objective to subjec- 
		  tive, from materialism to idealism. 
		  C’est ici que ces extrêmes se touchent 
		  (et se transforment!)[49]
		 
	   | 
	   
	 
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  On the homoeomeriae[50] of Anaxagoras 
	  (particles of the same kind as the whole 
	  body) Hegel writes: 
	      “Transformation is to be taken in a
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	| 
	 
	  double sense, according to existence and 
	  according to the Notion....” (403-404) 
	  Thus, for instance, it is said that water 
	  can be removed—the stones remain; blue 
	  colour can be removed, red, etc., will 
	  remain.
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  transforma- 
	  tion (its 
	  significance)
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “This is only according to existence; 
	  according to the Notion, they only inter- 
	  penetrate, it is inner necessity.” Just as 
	  one cannot remove the heart by itself from 
	  the living body without the lungs perish- 
	  ing, etc.
	 
	
	
	  “Nature likewise exists only in unity, 
	  just as the brain exists only in unity with 
	  the other organs” (404)
	 
	
	
	  whereby some conceive transformation 
	  in the sense of the presence of small 
	  qualitatively determined particles and 
	  their growth (respective diminution) 
	  [combination and separation]. The 
	  other conception (Heraclitus)—the 
	  transformation of the one into an other. 
	  (403)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	
	
	  
	  | 
		 
		  Existence and Notion—are to be dis- 
		  tinguished in Hegel approximately as 
		  follows: fact (Being) taken separately, 
		  torn from its connection, and connection 
		  (the Notion), mutual relation, concat- 
		  enation, law, necessity.
		 
	   | 
	   
	 
	 | 
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  415: ...“The Notion is that which things 
	  are in and for themselves....”
	 
	
	
	  Hegel speaks of grass being the end for 
	  animals, and the latter for men, etc., etc., 
	  and concludes: 
	      “It is a circle which is complete in itself, 
	  but whose completion is likewise a passing 
	  into another circle; a vortex whose mid- 
	  point, that into which it returns, is found 
	  directly in the periphery of a higher circle 
	  which swallows it up....” (414)
	 
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 	
	 
	  So far the ancients are said to have fur- 
	  nished little: “Universal is a meagre deter- 
	  mination; everyone knows of the univer- 
	  sal, but not of it as essence.” (416)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 			
	 | 
	
	  NB: 
	  the “univer- 
	  sal” as “es- 
	  sence”
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “But here we have the beginning of 
	  a more distinct development of the relation- 
	  ship of consciousness to Being, the de- 
	  velopment of the nature of knowledge as 
	  a knowledge of the true.” (417) “The mind 
	  has gone forth to express essence as thought.“ 
	  (418)
	 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	 | 
	
	  “development 
	  of the nature 
	  of knowl- 
	  edge”
	 | 
	
	
	
	|   | 
    
	
	| 
	 
	  “We see this development of the univer- 
	  sal, in which essence goes right over to the 
	  side of consciousness, in the so much de- 
	  cried worldly wisdom of the Sophists.”(418)
	 
	
	
	  ((End of the first volume)) [The second 
	  volume begins with the Sophists.]
	 
	 | 
	
  
     
  	
	
	
	  
	 
	
	  
	Notes
	[1] The Ionic school, or Miletian school (from the town
	  of Miletus, trading and cultural centre of the ancient world on the coast of
	  Asia Minor), was the earliest school of naturalistic materialism (6th century
	  B.C.) in the history of Greek philosophy. (See F. Engels, Dialectics of 
	  Nature, Moscow, 1954, p. 250.)
	
	
	[2] Pythagorean philosophy (6th-4th. century 
	  B.C.)—an idealist philosophy that considered the essence of all things
	  to lie in numbers. Named after Pythagoras, the founder of a philosophical,
	  religious and political league in Crotona (Southern Italy) that fought for
	  the supremacy of the aristocracy.
	
	  
	[3] one—Ed.
	
	  
	[4] Aristotle’s
	  work De coelo (On the Heavens)
	  belongs to his natural-philosophic writings and consists of four books that
	  are subdivided into chapters. In modern editions, these books are designated
	  by Roman nvmerals and the chapters by Arabic ones.
	
	
	[5] Antichthon—Ed.
	
	
	[6] The number ten was viewed by the Pythagoreans as
	  sacred, as the most perfect number, embracing the entire nature of numbers.
	
	
	[7] “the soul is solar dust”—Ed.
	
	[8] Aristotle’s work De anima (On the Soul)
	  belongs to his natural-philosophic writings and consists of three books. 
	
	
	[9] The Eleatic school (end of 6th-5th century
	  B.C.) was named after the town of Elea in Southern Italy. In contradistinction
	  to the natural dialectic teachings of the Miletian school, and of Heraclitus,
	  regarding the changeable nature of things, the Eleatic school believed in 
	  their indivisible, immovable, unchangeable, homogeneous, continuous, eternal
	  essence. At the same time, some of the propositions of representatives of 
	  the Eleatic school, and particularly the proofs advanced by Zeno concerning
	  the contradictoriness of motion (the so-called paradoxes of Zeno), despite
	  their metaphysical conclusions, played a positive role in the development of
	  ancient dialectics, having raised the problem of expressing in logical concept
	  the contradictory character of the processes of motion.
	
	
	[10] In the Eleatic school—Ed.
	
	[11] The next page of the manuscript contains the text
	  given below.—Ed.
	
	
	[12] determinations, not definitions—Ed.
	
	
	[13] Determination is the comprehensive conception
	  of the object which characterises its essential aspects and connections with
	  the surrounding world and the laws of its development. Definition,
	  in this case, is the abstract formal-logical determination that takes into
	  account only the external features of the object.
	
	
	[14] See F. Engels, Anti-Dühring, Moscow, 1959,
	  p. 21. Also see p. 264 of this volume.
	
	
	[15] The reference is to the work of Diogenes Laertius, 
	  Lives and Opinions of Famous Philosophers, consisting of ten books.
	  It was published in ancient Greek by G. Gübner, Vols. 1-2, Leipzig, 1830-33.
	
	
	[16] The reference is to the work of Sextus Empiricus,
	  Basic Tenets of Pyrrhonism, in three books.
	
	
	[17] in potentiality—Ed.
	
	[18] in actuality—Ed.
	
	  
	[19] The reference is to Pierre Bayle, Dictionnaire
	  historique et critique (Historical and Critical Dictionary), 4 Vols., 
	  Amsterdam and Leyden,	1740.
	
	
	[20] pitiful—Ed.
	
    [21] “This if is good!”—Ed.
	
	
	[22] Lenin has in mind the French translation of the
	  first volume of Theodor Gomperz’s work Griechische Denker (Greek Thinkers).
	
	[23] The reference is to § 1 of the book by V. Chernov, 
	  Philosophical	and Sociological Studies, Moscow, 1907.
	
	
	[24] Heraclitus (c. 530-470 B.C.) lived prior to Zeno
	  of Elea (c. 490-480 B.C.). Hegel discusses Heraclitus after the Eleatics because
	  his philosophy, especially his dialectics, was superior to that of the Eleatics,
	  in particular, the dialectics of Zeno. Whereas Eleatic philosophy embodied,
	  in Hegel’s view, the category of being, Heraclitus’ philosophy
	  was an historical expression of the higher, more concrete and genuine category
	  of becoming. This is an example of how Hegel “adapted” the history
	  of philosophy to fit the categories of his logic. At the same time Hegel’s
	  treatment of Heraclitus and the Eleatics reflected the actual law-governed
	  nature of the history of philosophy as a science. Such deviations from the
	  chronological order are quite legitimate in examining the history of individual
	  aspects or categories of philosophy, since in this case their development
	  emerges in a form free from historical accident. Lenin wrote the following
	  in his fragment On the Question of Dialectics about the “circles”
	  in philosophy: “Ancient: from Democritus to Plato and the dialectics
	  of Heraclitus” and remarks: “Is a chronology of persons essential?
	  No!” (See present volume, p. 360.)
  	
	
	[25] semblance, show—Ed.
	
	
	[26] The work De mundo (On the Universe),
	  included in Aristotle’s collected works, was written after Aristotle’s
	  death by an unknown author at the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd 
	  century A.D.
	
	
	[27] Symposium (Feast)—a dialogue by Plato. 
	
	
	[28] “Time is the first corporeal 
	  essence.”—Ed.
	
	
	
	[29] corporeal—Ed.
	
	[30] “the first sensuous essence”—Ed.
	
	
	
	[31] of natural scientists—Ed.
	
	[32] See F. Engels, Anti-Dühring, Moscow,
	  1959, pp. 21-22.
	
	
	[33] fate—Ed.
	
	
	
	[34] logos—Ed.
	
	
	[35] “subterfuge”—Ed.
	
	
	[36] “One”—Ed.
	
	
	[37] “the principle of the One” is “altogether
	  ideal”—Ed.
	
	
	[38] Being-for-itself—Ed.
	
	
	[39] In Lenin’s manuscript these five lines have
	  been crossed out.—Ed.
	
	
	[40] mysticism of ideas—Ed.
	        [Back to note #14]
	
	[41] Diogenes Laertius (p. 
	  235)—“vertiginem”—Latin translation.—Ed.
	
	[42] treated—Ed.
	
	[43] step-motherly—Ed.
	
	[44] The reference is to the work of Sextus Empiricus,
	  Against Mathematicians, consisting of 11 books, six of which are
	  devoted to a critique of grammar, rhetoric, geometry, arithmetic, astronomy
	  and music, and five (Against Dogmatists) to a critique of logic,
	  physics and ethics.
 	
	
	[45] “my feeling, mine”
	
  
	
	[46] A critique of the subjective idealist teachings
	  of Mach on sensations
	  was presented by Lenin in his book Materialism and
	  Empirio-Criticism, Chapter 1, §§ 1 and 2 (V. I. Lenin, Materialism
	  and Empirio-Criticism, Moscow, 1960, pp. 32-61).
 	
	
	[47] reason—Ed.
	
	
	[48] A word has remained undeciphered here.—Ed.
	
	
	[49] “It is here that these extremes come into
	  contact (and are transformed!).—Ed.
	
	
	[50] Homoeomeriae — according to Aristotle, a
	  term used by Anaxagoras to denote tiny material elements consisting in their
	  turn of an infinite number of smaller particles and containing all existing
	  properties (“all in everything”). The elements themselves are
	  inert and set in motion by νοΰς (mind, reason), believed
	  by Anaxagoras to be a kind of fine and light matter. He explained any emergence
	  and destruction by the junction and separation of elements. In the extant
	  fragments of Anaxagoras’ works these elements are called “seeds”
	  or “things”; the term homoeomeriae was introduced by Aristotle.