About This Book
This work offers a systematic account of logic conceived as a dialectical development of thought, beginning with introductory and bibliographical material and a preliminary notion before examining attitudes toward objectivity such as empiricism, the critical philosophy, and immediate knowledge. It defines logic and lays out its three main divisions—the doctrines of Being, Essence, and the Notion—tracing how categories transform through contradiction and resolution into higher concepts. The translation is supplemented by philological notes and editorial illustrations intended to clarify dense paragraphs and to guide students through the structure and progression of the argument.
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