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POSITING AND PRESUPPOSING. A READING OF THE RELATION BETWEEN NATURE AND SPIRIT IN HEGEL'S SYSTEM* * This article has been published with the support of a PNPD/CAPES grant. I would like to thank Federico Orsini, Luca Illetterati, Lucio Cortella, Michela Bordignon, Sebastian Stein, as well as the participants of two workshops in Porto Alegre and Berlin, for commenting on previous versions of this paper. A special thank goes to the anonymous referee of this journal for the careful reading and the valuable suggestions. The article is based on materials from Chapters 3.7-3.9 of my book Sanguinetti (2015). It also develops some interpretive intuitions I programmatically put forward in section 4 of my paper: Sanguinetti (2013).

ABSTRACT

In this paper I will provide a reading of the relation between nature and spirit starting from an analysis of the movement of positing and presupposing, discussed by Hegel in the "Science of Logic" in his discussion of the transition between Being and Essence. 1) I will offer an analysis of the logical context within which this dialectical movement emerges. 2) I will show the role played by this dialectical movement in determining the relation between the spheres of nature and spirit in Hegelʼs "Encyclopedia". 3) I will then claim that a difficulty related to this movement arises in the "Logic", and that this difficulty reverberates in the relation between nature and spirit in Hegel's system. In particular, 4) an ambiguity arising at a logical level generates two different configurations of this movement, depending on whether the latter is meant to describe the relation of 4.1) the finite or of 4.2) the infinite spirit to nature. 5) I will finally focus on some problems deriving from my reconstruction and I will try to suggest - in very general and programmatic terms - in what sense the internal analysis of the relation between nature and spirit in Hegelʼs system can be fruitfully discussed against the dominant framework of the contemporary debate, i.e. naturalism. However, this suggestion does not necessarily imply an endorsement of Hegel's position.

Keywords:
Hegel; Nature; Spirit; Logic of Essence; Naturalism

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