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In agreement with the Vedanta, Hegel
considers the Absolute to be the truth of all things. All things have their
being in the Absolute. There is only one Consciousness everywhere, the
self-accomplished Absolute, which, however, when it is equated with Ultimate
Reality, cannot fit in with Hegel's view that the Absolute has to undergo
dialectical process in order to complete itself in the Self-consciousness of
Spirit. The opinion that a reader of Hegel is likely to form in his mind is
that his Absolute is not yet ready and that it has to be manufactured in the
future by the evolutionary process of the dialectic of Reason. But Hegel does
not permit one to form this opinion consistently, for he asserts that the
Absolute is implicit in all the stages of the process and that it is the sole
eternal Reality. This, again, would make one feel that his Absolute is an
immutable being, not subject to change. Can we then say that the dialectical
process is the passage of the relative individual reason functioning in an
organic relation to the phenomenal universe towards a gradual unfoldment within
itself of the transcendent Absolute which is eternally present in the deepest
recesses of its consciousness? May evolution be discoverable only in the Cosmic
Reason and not in its essence which is the Absolute? Then cosmic evolution
would be possible and necessary, and yet it would not affect the Absolute. But
Hegel does not give us the freedom to understand him in this way; he insists
that Reality is a becoming, that it is a logical process of dynamic developing
evolution. We thus notice two contradictory views which are held by Hegel: on
one side he says that there is change and development, evolution or becoming in
the Reality. This is clearly an unwarranted transference of relative phenomena
experienced by the individual reason to the trans-empirical Absolute. On the
other side, he asks us not to forget that his Reason is not any individual
state, not the differentiated ideas of the human being, but that it is a universal
rational necessity implied in all thoughts, which is transcendental,
metaphysical and which has to be realised in Self-consciousness. Here Hegel
confuses between the functions of the individual reason moving in adaptation to
the evolutionary phenomena of Nature and the Absolute Consciousness which is
the true goal of his philosophy.
There are, however, certain features in
Hegel's philosophy which are suggestive of great meaning and for which he
deserves the credit that is due to a great philosopher. One of such features is
his logical development of the Absolute Idea and carrying it through Nature, to
consummate it in the Absolute Spirit, though he did not work out this theory
perfectly. His dialectic continues till the Absolute Idea realises itself in
the Absolute Spirit. It is possible for us to do proper justice to Hegel by
confining his dynamic change, development or evolution to the Absolute Idea and
Nature, to the universal subject and the universal object, until they
reach their perfection in the Absolute Spirit, without attributing evolutionary
development to this Spirit itself, provided we bring about a radical
change and rectification in Hegel's notion of the Spirit. For Hegel's
Absolute Spirit, though it is said to be the self-fulfilment of the Absolute
Idea through Nature, is made to seek its perfect expression in art, religion
and philosophy. One would have expected Hegel to take the Idea through Nature
and raise it to the Transcendent Self-consciousness in the Spirit, in the
manner in which the Ishvara of the Advaita is raised to the Consciousness of
Brahman. But Hegel appears to bring down the Absolute to the relative realm of
the individuals when he makes it realise itself in art, religion and
philosophy, so that there is the dialectic even in the pure Spirit. This would
obviously be a travestied completion of his great philosophy. The Absolute
Idea, again, should be carefully freed from individual psychological functions
or the logical categories of human thought, and made the cosmic Reason of the
Ishvara of the Vedanta. If we bring about this change in our concept, and
forget Hegel's own description of the Absolute Spirit and understand this
Spirit in the sense of the Brahman of the Vedanta, we would be able to discover
the Ishvara of the Vedanta in his Absolute Idea and the body of Ishvara in his
Nature. The Absolute Spirit would then be Brahman. Hegel's contention
that God is no God without the universe, that God cannot cease to be
manifesting himself as the universe, and that he cannot be without recognising
himself in the universe which is his universal object and yet non-different
from him can be meaningful only when this God is understood in the sense of
Ishvara, who too, is no Ishvara without the universe, who cannot ever cease from
appearing as the universe, and who cannot be without recognising himself in the
universe which is his universal object and which is non-different from him.
Change and evolution are to be seen in Ishvara and in his cosmic body, which
two are organically related to each other and which are the prototype of all
the continuously evolving individuals here. As the embodiment of all
individuals Ishvara has plurality in him, though these plural elements are
inseparable parts of the organism of his body. So have change and evolution to
be characteristics of Hegel's Absolute Reason as the Idea, which has
Nature as its universal body, the two being organically related to each other,
and which, as the embodiment of all the relative moments in the dialectical
process, is constituted of a plurality of such moments, which are bound to it
organically by internal relations. Both for Ishvara and the Absolute
Idea of Hegel the universal body is not outside as a material existence but is
one with knowledge or Reason. All that Hegel has said in regard to the Absolute
Idea would then apply to Ishvara and His Nature as the body of the Idea would
correspond to the Jagat which is the body of Ishvara. Nature and history
become the stages of the evolution of the Idea into Self-consciousness in the
Spirit. But we have to keep the Absolute Spirit apart, unaffected by change, as
we do Brahman. This, however, is only a suggestion, and it should not be
forgotten that Hegel does not deal with his system in this way.
Another interesting feature in the
philosophy of Hegel is his development of the theory of internal relations.
The parts of the Absolute are all internally related to it, and this relation
they bear even among themselves. God is a logical system of relations. The
whole and the part are related to each other organically. A part is what it is
because of its unique relation to the whole, and without this relation the part
is nothing; it can have neither meaning nor being. Every part is sustained by
every other part in a manner that Whitehead is to describe in his theory of
organism. Every part is dependent on every other part, and determines it. The
whole always exceeds the mathematical sum of its parts; the infinite is not
merely an aggregate of finites. The parts are not externally related in a way
that one does not determine the other, but are internally related so that any
change in any part will affect the whole. The whole ceases to be what it is now
when there is modification of condition in any part. Every change is a universal
change; there is no such thing as change in a particular part alone. Every
situation anywhere mirrors a universal situation. The nature and purpose of the
whole is the sole factor that determines what a part is at any given moment.
The whole is prior to the parts and is the reality of the parts. The Absolute
is such a whole and the individuals in the universe are such parts of it,
bearing such relations to it. A complete knowledge of any part involves a
knowledge of the whole, for the true essence of the part is in the whole. So it
is impossible to have a real knowledge of anything in the universe without a
knowledge of the Absolute. The theory of internal relations applies to Ishvara,
but not to Brahman. And Hegel ought to confine all relations to the Absolute
that is conceived in relation to the phenomenal universe, and not to the
Absolute as such in its pure essence. The Vedanta holds that attainment
of perfect knowledge is impossible as long as one is bound to the empirical
universe, and says that 'by knowing That, all things become known',
in an instantaneous, indivisible, eternal Now and in infinite Here.
Hegel's Absolute becomes a relative
conceptual process and not an immutable consciousness, because the latter is
realised only in non-mediate intuition which, for Hegel, is not the genuine way
of knowing. He holds that Reality cannot be known in any mystic intuition, but
is known only in thought,—Reason. He thinks that Reality cannot be pure being and that any
attempt for such an intuition of it would not give us anything more than this
abstract being. We find in philosophers like Shankara and Swami Sivananda an
insistence that the findings of the intellect have to be judged by the
revelations of intuition, but Hegel would have it that the claims of any
intuition should be made concrete and real by logical thought. Hegel dissects
experience into abstract intuition and concrete reasoning and thinks that
intuition is something cut off from the rational process. The result is that he
produces a system of philosophy in which Reality becomes a changing process,
thus denying its own existence as Reality.
Intuition is a faculty of knowing which is
not infra- intellectual but super-intellectual. It is the integral realisation
of the true essence of things. The knower enters the very spirit or being of
the knowable object and knows it in his own being and consciousness in an
instantaneous wholeness which the intellect cannot understand. Intellect is
transfigured and raised in intuition, not negated or abandoned. Hegel's
extreme views on the value of rationality are due to an incapacity in him to
comprehend the nature of a super-rational means of knowing. Hegel's own
theory that the whole is prior to the parts and that it determines the parts
gets defeated by his inductive system of the dialectical process which
constructs a general Absolute from the particular phases observed in life
through the phenomenal reason. Intuition gives us the whole at once, as prior
to the appearance of the particulars, while intellect, which is the tool of
Hegel, splits up Reality into parts and infers the former from the latter.
Induction can give us only probabilities and not self-evident truths. How,
then, did Hegel become confident of the existence of a trans-empirical Absolute
which is unattainable by induction and which logically precedes the various
knowable particulars in the world? It is impossible to get an Idea of the
Absolute by dovetailing particulars through conceptual reasoning. The fact is
that Hegel has already in his mind an Idea of the Absolute even prior to his
commencing the exposition of the dialectical process which is only a later
instrument employed to justify the Idea which was in him intuitively. Nothing
but a mystical moment experienced could have been responsible for the rise of
an Idea of the Absolute in Hegel's mind. But this Idea was afterwards
clouded by an exaggerated importance given to conceptual thought, and so what
Hegel discovered is not the eternal Reality of intuition but a phenomenal
appearance of it which makes it inseparable from what we observe in Nature
through our imperfect means of the conceptual categories. True philosophy is a
rational declaration of intuitional experience, and not a conceptual grouping
of externally observed phenomena. Intuition is the immediate knowing by the
total being of the Self, while intellect is only an understanding of a few
empirical parts. Hegel would have become one of the greatest expounders of the
Vedanta, if only he could recognise the significance of intuition, whereby we
know the Absolute as it is, and not as it merely appears to us.
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