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181370

(1988) Modern modalities, Dordrecht, Springer.

Hegel on modalities and monadology

Martin Kusch, Juha Manninen

pp. 109-177

"Reasonable and practical men refuse to be imposed upon by the possible, for the simple ground that it is possible only. They stick to the actual (not meaning by that word merely whatever immediately is here and now)."1 This remark by Hegel in his Encyclopaedia is very revealing regarding the motives of his own modal theory. Actuality and reason are interconnected, but the full concept of actuality is not to be mistaken for the immediately existing, e.g. the Prussian state. An especially interesting statement by Hegel on this point was recently found in formerly unpublished lecture-notes taken in a lecture on the philosophy of right, held just one year before the publication of Hegel's Grundlinien der Philosophie des Rechts in 18212. In these lecture-notes Hegel is reported as having said: "That which is reasonable becomes actual, and the actual becomes reasonable."3

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-2915-9_4

Full citation:

Kusch, M. , Manninen, J. (1988)., Hegel on modalities and monadology, in S. Knuuttila (ed.), Modern modalities, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 109-177.

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