
Science of Logic - Wikipedia
Science of Logic (German: Wissenschaft der Logik), first published between 1812 and 1816, is the work in which Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel outlined his vision of logic.
Table of Contents for Hegel's Science of Logic
Hegel's dialectics through a reading of his Science of Logic, linked to commentary by Engels and Lenin, Dialectics, Marxism, Logic, Hegel, Marx, Engels, philosophy
Contrary to Aristotle's view just mentioned, the science of logic is included in these means; the study of logic is a preliminary labour to be carried out in school and it is not until later that the …
As of 1807 at least, and throughout the long subsequent process of publication ofThe Science of Logic, the place of this science as the first of a three-part System of Philosophy that …
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: The Science of Logic
This translation of The Science of Logic (also known as 'Greater Logic') includes the revised Book I (1832), Book II (1813) and Book III (1816). Recent research has given us a detailed picture of …
The Science of Logic - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
Jun 5, 2011 · In this new English translation of Hegel’s Science of Logic, George di Giovanni has produced a readable and scholarly edition of Hegel’s text that should replace A. V. Miller’s …
Project MUSE - <i>The Science of Logic</i> by Georg Wilhelm …
The Science of Logic, often dubbed Hegel’s Greater Logic (as distinct from the so-called Lesser Logic of his tripartite Encyclopedia), is a two-volume work that was published in instalments …
Full course on Hegel's Science of Logic — Philosophy Portal
The foundations of our logic are inherited from Aristotle, and have not changed for 2,000 years. Hegel’s Science of Logic is an attempt to reinvent our understanding of logic to the standards …
This course will focus on a central component of the philosophy of Georg Hegel (1770-1831) – namely, what he calls the ‘science of logic’ – and will thereby serve to introduce Hegel’s …
It can indeed be said that logic is the science of thinking, of its determinations and laws. However, thinking as such constitutes only the universal determinateness or the element in which the …