Hegel keeps using words like 'form' and 'substance' and 'Notion' but I don't know what he means by this.
It seems like the way germanics express philosophical ideas is to just enshrine them in these philosophically immense compound buzzphrases rather than do the whole aristotelean thing I'm used to.
Can somebody explain the meaning of these in terms of scholasticism or something?
>>9150310
pretty sure you just explained the meaning of those terms in your previous sentence.
t. anon who read your post
http://dbanach.com/archive/mickelsen/[email protected]
>>9150310
Learn them in German.
>>9150310
Go watch Gregory Sadler's course on Hegel. He goes through every section in the Phenomenology
>Have you read Hegel?
rip carli
>>9150310
Notion is the implied nature of a Thing. Substance is what's inside of a concept.
Hm, OP, it's almost like this philosophy is obscurantist by nature, and that people are predisposed to trying to pull some profound truth from these texts because other people have told them that they're profound
>>9150310
>'form' and 'substance' and 'Notion'
All Greek concepts. If you had just started with the Greeks, you wouldn't be having this problem.