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Group V - 553–568 (summer, 1796)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jane Kneller
Affiliation:
Colorado State University
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Summary

REMARKS ON THE WISSENSCHAFTSLEHRE

553.1. Difference between fact and fact-act, page 4.

p. 5, a is a – seems to me to be nothing but a repetition of the bringing forth of the a to being. It can express a strengthening. No connotations are involved, and it qualifies therefore as a logical copula. Often such an identity judgment expresses a sharpened distinction – a sharp attention to the peculiar character of that which is in danger of being confused with something else. The sphere a is determined through the sphere a. a is the name of an unknown sphere. The first a is a characteristic posited, the second a is an essential posited – the former is presupposed, the latter is posited. The concept a is set in opposition to the a that is available.

Their common sphere, their scene, is the I – the subject. The first a is already available in the I – the other also – They are only connected.

/These reflections on this simple proposition must deliver to us the foundations of all philosophy/

a is a emerges from predication of the simple; simply on account of quantity, quality, relation, modality or their composites.

554. All explanation must begin with a fact. But from which fact must all explanation proceed? It must be a fact that lies at the basis of all other facts and needs no further explanation, but rather itself first makes possible all explanation.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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