... <ckrajewski@s...> wrote: "Did Hegel in the original work refers to the constant as progress in the history of Man (in other words the LAW in cognition) or...
You portrayed a facinating contraversy that has its own threshold in human political history. The trend to bio-technology seemed at the beginning of this...
In Hegel's philosophy of Nature for the popular consumption it is necessary that a controversial scientific issue of outstanding convention be. An interesting...
From Chris Krajewski, Often the Laws of Nature substitute in our Natural Attitude for forms of concrete discoursion. These basic mechanical justifications for...
Dear members of the Hegel.net lists, I hope that the new year will give us some great advances in our Hegel.net community. As a first step (and as a solid...
True Hegel does not take the fulfilled assumption on polarizing HEAT out into the LIGHT of the consequentially determined spatial separation of the essentially...
Who's wrong? Hegel or modern Physics. If I didn't answer that question at 29. because it would seem to be that mistakes are the essence for the NON-ENS, just...
In response of From: "Chris Krajewski" <ckrajewski@s...> Date: Fri Feb 25, 2005 6:49 pm and From: "Chris Krajewski" <ckrajewski@s...> Date: Fri Feb 25,...
Thank you for the eventual response you've given me. It came on a day I needed it. Curiosity is the issue I would take up in modern physics. It is the timing...
In terms of understanding Nature per-say it is possible that the HOME not the Nation enacts the Concept for knowing the world in Otherness. This may be the...
I don't suppose anyone around here actually knows anything about Hegel's _Philosophy of Nature_? Supposedly the three volume Petry translation is far superior...
For what it's worth, I reckon Miller's translation is perfectly serviceable and it includes the "zusatz" notes too. Miller is an experienced Hegel translator...
... serviceable ... Hegel ... I kind of ... Nature ... I'm sure, Stephen, that the Miller translation is perfectly fine. The Miller and Petry translations both...
I've just been looking through a website called "Schwabian into English" (http://www.schwaebisch-englisch.de/ ) - Hegel was from Schwabia, of course - and as a...
In a message dated 11/3/06 6:37:46 AM Pacific Standard Time, jgbardis@... ... Hello Group, John above message was posted in the general Hegel group, but my...
What I hope to do is to show that Hegel was very close to Lamarck in many ways. To do this it would be necessary first to know Lamarck's views--which have very...
For anyone seriously interested in Hegel's philosophy of nature, there are two books I highly recommend: _The Structure of Evolutionary Theory_ (2002) by...
Lamarck's views hinted at eternalism. Hegel was, of course, a student of Aristotle, and he does deal, though in a rather obscure way, with the matter. What...
What Rudwick calls the standard model of geology at the end of the 18th century, because it was so widely held that it can't really be associated with any...
Lamarck's geology, which was accepted by Hegel, was a simplified version of Hutton's. Like Hutton's it was a steady-state model with eternalist implications....
There are two points about Lamarck's theory of evolution that aren't generally known. First, it is basically ahistorical. Second, it involves two forces of...
Gould describes Lamarck's geology so: "Currents tend to flow from east to west, and continents therefore erode on their eastern borders and accrete by...
Gould writes: "As a pedagogic device, Lamarck usually started with humans, as the 'highest' creature, and then discussed the rest of nature as a degradation...
Hegel believed in spontaneous generation. He writes, for instance: "Land and especially sea, as thus the real possibility of life, perpetually erupt at every...
Gould writes: "Lamarck argued that a second set of forces, distinct from the causal flow of environment to organism, produced nature's other primary pattern of...
Gould writes: "Lamarck argued that his unconventional chemistry, emphasizing the role of fire and the motions of subtle fluids, engendered these two central ...
In the following Hegel expresses himself in a remarkably ignorant way concerning fossils. In the next post, and the last post in this series, I'll quote Hegel...
So did Schopenhauer (believe in spontaneous generation, that is) - but it was more to do with Bichat than Genesis, if I remember rightly. Stephen Cowley ... ...
Stephen Cowley
stephen.cowley@...
Nov 13, 2007 7:42 pm
52
Lamarck did not, in opposition to Cuvier, believe in extinction. Nor did he believe in world-wide catastrophes. In the following from a zusatz dated to 1830...
... but it was more to do with Bichat than Genesis, if I remember rightly. ... You surprised me, Stephen. I didn't think anyone was paying attention. I was...