Comment on the status of Nothing in the move from Becoming to Determinate Being #81
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For reference, here is the article in question EDIT: now public |
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Thinking about this further.
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This comment is in response to the interpretation put forward by @Firgrep in the article on "Becoming", under the sub-heading of "Not Nothing", and concerns the status of the determination of nothing in this moment of the logical development.
The idea that the unity falls under header of "being" because this unity 'is' raises some questions. First of all, doesn't "nothing" also 'is' insofar as it is a determination of thought that is being investigated? It must have being (and, in fact, I think that's Hegel's point about the concept of Nothing), and so it must have being, in other words, it must 'is'. It is in this sense, that I think Hegel is using "being" as a shorthand for both "being" and "nothing". In fact, he's using it as a shorthand for determinate being. Just as when he distinguishes it as a "determination on its own" and a "determination of the whole".
If the above is wrong, however, what does that tell us about the the determination of "nothing"? Why is it such a central determination in our understanding of "becoming" and the moments of coming-to-be and ceasing-to-be, but is irrelevant in the moment that follows from them? I'm not sure that quite makes sense.
All of the above, however, is nullified by what Hegel says in the next paragraph:
"Becoming, as this transition into the unity of being and nothing, a unity which is in the form of being or has the form of the onesided immediate unity of these moments, is determinate being." (106, Miller).
Hegel assuages all of the concerns I have raised above by saying that the form that it has is a onesided one - i.e it ignores nothing. That is, at least, consistent. But, at this stage, I suppose my concern would be with the status of "nothing". What does Hegel mean by the form of being? Does he mean is-ness? Well, surely "nothing" has isness, otherwise, how do we think it? What exactly is meant by the form of being? Which by the way, sounds like a very determinate understanding of such an indeterminate determination.
Also, now that I am re-reading this section, I would query the following sentence: " it is being that comes-to-be and ceases-to-be". That is not quite right, it is nothing that comes to be and being that ceases to be.
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