Definition of Hegeleanism
Hegelianism, the philosophy of Hegel, which resolves being into
thought, and thought into the unity of the logical moments of simple
apprehension, judgment, and reason, all purely spiritual acts, whereby
being in itself, or seyn, becomes other than itself, or daseyn, and
returns into itself, or für sich seyn, the universal being first by
separating from itself particularised, and then by return into itself
individualised, the whole being what Hegel characterises as Der Process
des Geistes, "The Process of the Spirit." Something like this is what
Dr. Stirling calls "The Secret of Hegel," and an open secret it is, for
he finds it pervading the whole system; "open where you will in Hegel,"
he says, "you find him always engaged in saying pretty well the same
thing"; always identity by otherness passing into selfness, or making
that for itself which is at first in itself;—a philosophy which is
anticipated by the doctrine of St. Paul, which represents God as the One
from whom are all things as Father, and through whom are all things
as Son, and to whom are all things as Spirit, the One who is thus All;
it is also involved in the doctrine of Christ when He says God is Spirit,
or the Living One who lives, and manifests Himself in life, for Himself,
from Himself, and through Himself, who, so to say, thus concretes Himself
throughout the universe.
- Wikipedia
{ He*ge"li*an*ism (?), He"gel*ism (?), }
n. The system of logic and philosophy set
forth by Hegel, a German writer (1770-1831).
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
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