Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Hegel on human love, citations. AI

Claude

Are you able to give Hegel (English) citations by book, chapter, paragraph number even tho the paragraphs are not numbered in advance

Yes, with some important caveats depending on which text you're working with.

Works with standard paragraph (§) numbering — Hegel himself (or his editors) numbered paragraphs, so these are stable across translations:

Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences (all three parts) — §§ are standard
Philosophy of Right — §§ are standard and universal
Philosophy of History — sections are conventionally cited, though less granular
For these, I can give you citations like Philosophy of Right §257 that will hold across Miller, Knox, Nisbet, Wood/Nisbet, etc.

Works without pre-numbered paragraphs — here it gets messier:

Phenomenology of Spirit — no author-assigned §§, but the Miller translation introduced paragraph numbers that have become a de facto standard. I can cite by those (e.g., ¶808), and most serious Hegel scholarship uses them. The Pinkard translation uses different numbering, which is a real annoyance.

Science of Logic — no standard paragraph numbers. Citations are typically by book/section/chapter + page reference to either the Miller translation or the Geraets/Suchting/Harris translation of the Lesser Logic. I can give you approximate structural location but not a portable paragraph number.

Lectures (Aesthetics, History of Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion) — reconstructed from student notes, no stable paragraph structure. Chapter + rough topic is the best I can do.

Bottom line: Tell me which text you're working with and I can tell you exactly how precise and portable my citations will be. For PhG and the Encyclopedia/PR, they'll be quite reliable.

What I seek are citations for all passages concerning human love (skip en passant references) found in all Hegel's major works. No need to reprint the written matter

This is a genuinely difficult request to execute with confidence, so let me be straight with you about what I can and can't do reliably before giving you the list.

The honesty problem: I can cite passages I'm confident exist and are substantive on human love. But Hegel's treatment of love is scattered, often embedded in larger arguments about family, recognition, religion, or Spirit, and I wasn't trained to function as a Hegel concordance. I will almost certainly miss passages, and there's some risk of confabulating a citation that's structurally plausible but wrong. I'll flag uncertainty where I have it.

Philosophy of Right (most reliable — §§ are stable)

§158–§161 — Love as the ethical foundation of marriage; the most sustained treatment of human love in Hegel. Love defined as the consciousness of my unity with another, the giving up of independent selfhood.

§162–§163 — Marriage distinguished from mere sexual union or contract; love as its subjective ethical basis.

§7 Remark — Passing but substantive: love cited as an example of ethical life where one finds oneself in another (more than en passant in context).

Phenomenology of Spirit (Miller ¶ numbers)

¶470–¶476 — The ethical world: the discussion of the family and the relation between brother and sister. Love as immediate natural ethical bond, contrasted with the public/political. The love between siblings is treated as the purest form because it lacks desire and domination.

¶658–¶671 — In the section on "The Beautiful Soul" and conscience: love and forgiveness as the moment of mutual recognition between self-certain spirits; reconciliation as a form of spiritual love.

¶784–¶787 — Revealed religion: divine love and incarnation, but the argument here bleeds into the theological rather than interpersonal. Borderline for your purposes — I'd include it since Hegel makes the human and divine continuous.

Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences — Philosophy of Spirit (§§)

§396 Remark — In the Anthropology: love and sexual difference, natural basis of the family bond.

§431–§436 — Recognition (Anerkennung) in the section on subjective spirit. Love is not named explicitly in every edition but is the tacit subtext of the struggle for recognition's resolution.

§502–§504 — Ethical life/family in the Objective Spirit section: parallel to Philosophy of Right §158ff but compressed.

Early Theological Writings (Frühe Schriften / Knox & Kroner trans.) These are crucial and often underweighted:

"The Spirit of Christianity and Its Fate" — The most extended early treatment of love in Hegel. Love (Liebe) is here the living union that overcomes the dead positivity of law; Jesus's ethics reinterpreted as a philosophy of love. No paragraph numbers — cite by section title. This is arguably where Hegel's mature concept originates.

"Love" (fragment, ~1797–98) — A short unpublished fragment explicitly titled Liebe. Directly defines love as the suspension of individuality in union while each remains themselves. Essential primary source. Cite as fragment in Nohl's edition or the Knox translation in Early Theological Writings. "The Positivity of the Christian Religion" — Less central but contains contrast between love-ethics and legal/positive religion.

Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion

Part III — "The Consummate Religion" — Divine love as the speculative content of the Christian doctrine of incarnation and community (Gemeinde). Hegel explicitly links divine and human love as moments of the same logical structure. Cite by Part III in the Hodgson (Brown/Haussmann) edition.

Part I — "The Concept of Religion" — Briefer treatment: love as a form of the feeling of dependence and unity, distinguished from fear-based religion.

Lectures on Aesthetics (Knox trans.)

Part III, Section on Romantic Art — Love as the central content of Romantic (Christian) art; extended treatment of love as a subject matter for painting and poetry, and its relation to honor, fidelity, personal devotion. Cite: Aesthetics Vol. II, Part III, Chapter 1 (Romantic Art), subsection on Love. Introduction — Brief theoretical point about love as a form of concrete content in art, as opposed to abstract allegory.

Lectures on the History of Philosophy

Occasional references in treatments of Plato's Symposium and Phaedrus — love (Eros) as philosophical ascent. Substantive enough to include. Cite: Vol. II, section on Plato, under "Practical Philosophy" or "Mythology and Art."

Works where love is genuinely absent or only en passant

Science of Logic — Love does not appear as a category. Any apparent reference is incidental. Philosophy of History — At most incidental.

Philosophy of Nature — Sexual reproduction is discussed but not love in any philosophically substantive sense.

My confidence ranking: High for PR §§ and the Early Writings. High for PhG ¶470–476. Moderate for the Encyclopedia §§ (I'd verify the exact numbers). Moderate-to-lower for the Lectures citations, where I'm giving structural location rather than numbered paragraphs.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Axial prefatory note

Axial prefatory note

YWW1

The following essay treads a well-worn path: Transcendent and universalist tendencies of Axial Age and post Axial Age thinkers. These tendencies have been described by writers from Huxley to Jaspers, and by a number of theologians.

The idea presented here goes further, saying that these trends point toward a fundamental, which is here denoted as the Universal Christological Principle. This principle of course is discerned by many Christians as personality. Yet non-Christians also may have some sense of this principle, which reveals itself -- or at least is prefigured -- by Axial thinkers who taught during what may be seen as a foundational period before the establishment of Christianity.

The UCP remains a powerful force of history and current events for Christians of every stripe, who interpret this principle in a wide variety of ways. And, importantly, non-Christians the world over have some sense of it, even if they use different terminology. For some, it shines brightly as the sun on a cloudless day; for others it is a dim orb barely detectable thru the mists. Yet this principle is something most parts of humanity know at least a bit about.

YWW2

Even atheists commonly assume this principle, tho not by such a name obviously. This is shown by their need to find some rational basis for personal morality -- an ongoing struggle from Nietzsche to Sartre to Dennett and beyond. They seek to "replace" core Christian values with "core Christian values." Unconsciously, no doubt, they are saying that there needs to be some "absolute" in the universe that underpins "core" values, tho many would deny that point.

This "absolute," I submit, is the UCP, a unifying teleolgical principle, or logos. Christians have always identified this logos as a person, tho quite evidently non-Christians do not do so. Nevertheless, this organizing principle appears to this writer to be more logical than the routine "scientific explanation" (which falls far short, as we will show later).

+++++++++++

See material on Quakers in Gmail. The current society reflects what is said above, as it is clear that quite a few members have distanced themselves from the Holy Spirit, using their affiliation as an ethical political and personal (female) empowerment zone.

Axial. Greece. Goats

Axial. Greece. Goats

The satyrs of early Greek drama:

They I think permitted the audience to vent its pent-up to put "pretense" -- to include supposed reality itself -- on a low, mocking plane.

The very idea of goat-men indicates man's animal nature, hinting at the real motives of men (as in the Freudian unconscious).

Of course, we don't know which came first: the satyrs or the goat prize.

Perhaps tragedy is named for the prize, perhaps for the satyrs.

Axial. Hegel. General Notes

Axial. Hegel. General Notes/Solomon's Hegel

In fact Hegel's appeal to Science was I believe meant to continue the battle against Christian "mythology" waged by Enlightenment authors, despite Hegel diverging widely from the Enlightenment positions.

In the early phase of Phenomenology he was actually following the intellectual fashion of the time -- but doing so in a way that made it difficult to charge him with atheism.

His fellow "young Turks" understood his veiled language, greatly appreciating his ruse, which would slide past the censors, all the while being impressed by his originality, how he was able to mold the thought of the ancient Greeks into something strikingly modern.

In particular, I wager, it was Hegel's philosophy of history that gripped their imaginations, especially in the midst of the still thrilling Napoleonic period.

Syphilis before antibiotics. AI

Perplexity

Typical symptomatic progression of syphilis in male before availability of penicillin and other antibiotics

The typical symptomatic progression of syphilis in a male before the availability of penicillin and other antibiotics followed the classic stages:

Primary Stage:

After an incubation period of about 10 to 90 days (median about 3 weeks), a small, painless, firm sore or ulcer called a chancre appears at the site of infection, usually on the genitals. This sore can heal on its own within 3 to 6 weeks without treatment.

Regional lymph nodes near the sore become enlarged but painless.

Secondary Stage:

Begins about 4 to 8 weeks after the primary chancre appears, sometimes overlapping with its healing.

Symptoms include a widespread skin rash frequently involving the palms and soles, mucous patches in the mouth or genital area, moist wart-like lesions called condylomata lata, fever, muscle and joint pain, malaise, weight loss, patchy hair loss, sore throat, swollen lymph nodes, and occasionally neurological symptoms like vision changes.

These symptoms may resolve without treatment but can recur over months or years.

Latent Stage:

After the secondary symptoms resolve, the infection enters a latent phase with no visible symptoms but positive blood tests for syphilis.

Early latent phase is less than one year from infection; late latent is beyond one year.

This stage may last for years without noticeable symptoms but infection persists.

Tertiary Stage (Develops years to decades after initial infection):

Occurs in untreated individuals.

Characterized by severe complications such as cardiovascular damage (aortic aneurysm, valve disease), neurosyphilis (neurological disorders like meningitis, seizures), and gummatous lesions (inflammatory masses) in skin, bones, or organs.

Can lead to death or permanent disability.

Before penicillin, many infected males experienced this full progression with intermittent symptoms and long asymptomatic periods before severe late effects developed.

This progression highlights primary painless chancre, followed by a symptomatic secondary rash and systemic illness, a long silent latent period, and potentially severe tertiary disease in the absence of antibiotics .

What about intermittent neurological and mental problems prior to the advanced stage

Before the advanced tertiary stage, syphilis can cause intermittent neurological and mental problems primarily due to early forms of neurosyphilis which may develop within the first few years after infection if untreated.

These early neurological manifestations include:

Headache, dizziness, and altered mental status

Meningitis-like symptoms (headache, stiff neck, nausea, vomiting, photophobia)

Cranial nerve involvement such as facial paralysis or vision and hearing changes

Meningovascular syphilis causing inflammation of brain blood vessels, which can lead to strokes or transient neurological deficits

Mental and psychiatric symptoms may also appear intermittently during early neurosyphilis, including:

Personality changes, mood swings, irritability, depression, mania, psychosis, and cognitive impairment like memory and reasoning problems

These symptoms can fluctuate before the eventual development of the more severe general paresis seen in late neurosyphilis

This early neuropsychiatric involvement may be missed or attributed to other causes and occurs sometimes in the secondary or latent stages, long before the classic late-stage tertiary syphilis neurological damage (such as general paresis or tabes dorsalis) sets in.

In untreated cases, these intermittent neurological and mental symptoms progressively worsen over years, culminating in irreversible brain damage, severe dementia, paralysis, and death if antibiotic treatment is not administered.

Thus, neurological and mental problems can present intermittently and variably during the early and intermediate neurosyphilis phases, often preceding the advanced tertiary stage manifestations by years or decades

Can bipolar disorder result from neurosyphilis fairly early in the infection

Yes, bipolar disorder-like symptoms, including manic and depressive episodes mimicking bipolar disorder, can result from neurosyphilis relatively early in the infection, particularly during early neurosyphilis forms like meningeal or meningovascular syphilis.

Early Neurosyphilis Timeline

Early neurosyphilis often emerges within the first few months to a few years after initial syphilis infection, before the classic late tertiary stage (general paresis or tabes dorsalis, which appear 3–30 years later). Meningeal neurosyphilis, for instance, causes inflammation of brain meninges and can trigger mood instability, irritability, and personality changes that resemble bipolar mood swings.

Bipolar-Like Presentations

Case reports document neurosyphilis presenting as acute mania, psychosis, emotional lability, or mixed bipolar states early on, sometimes misdiagnosed as primary bipolar disorder. These stem from Treponema pallidum invasion of the central nervous system, disrupting neurotransmitters and causing fluctuating mood disturbances without full late-stage brain tissue breakdown.

Diagnostic Challenges

Such symptoms overlap with bipolar disorder but may include subtle neurological signs like headache or cranial nerve issues, prompting syphilis testing (e.g., CSF analysis) in at-risk patients. Untreated, they can progress intermittently before advanced neurosyphilis sets in years later.

Greek tragedy figures. AI

Perplexity

What sorts of individuals or types largely figure in ancient Greek tragedy

Ancient Greek tragedy typically revolves around individuals of noble birth or high social status, often kings, queens, princes, or legendary heroes. These characters are marked by complex psychological traits—usually possessing admirable qualities but also harboring a significant flaw (hamartia), such as excessive pride (hubris), stubbornness, or impulsiveness. Through their personal choices and tragic flaws, they struggle with fate, moral obligation, and the will of the gods, which ultimately leads to their suffering and downfall.

Key types include:

Tragic heroes like Oedipus, Agamemnon, Antigone, Medea, and Prometheus, whose downfall arises from both internal flaws and unavoidable external circumstances.

Powerful, assertive women such as Medea, Clytemnestra, and Antigone, who often challenge social norms and provoke disorder.

Outsiders or figures at odds with the divine or social order—like Prometheus or Pentheus—whose defiance invites ruin.





Female roles are prominent, despite all actors being male, and these women frequently embody ambiguity, disruption, or destructive power within both family and city. The interaction of human agency, fate, and social expectation define most leading individuals in Greek tragedy, highlighting universal human experiences of suffering, ethical conflict, and the limits of power .

So the satyrical chorus helped the common people vent their resentment of the big shots, mocking their downfalls as well deserved in light of the suffering of the poor

Yes, the Greek chorus, which evolved from earlier religious and communal rituals, often functioned as a collective voice representing the common people or community within the play. Their role included providing commentary on the action, moral and philosophical reflection, and often expressing the concerns and emotions of ordinary citizens. Through their commentary, the chorus could voice social and political critiques, including resentment toward leaders or the powerful.

In satyr plays and tragedy alike, the chorus sometimes helped the common people vent their frustrations by mocking or highlighting the downfall of the "big shots" or powerful figures, showing their suffering as a form of justice or comeuppance in light of the hardships faced by the less powerful. This dynamic reinforced the chorus's role as a social mediator, providing the audience with a collective perspective that could reflect both sympathy and critique, often underscoring themes of justice, hubris, and the consequences of pride or wrongdoing by elites.

Thus, the chorus helped the audience identify with the communal viewpoint, occasionally providing a counterbalance to the tragic heroes' narratives by emphasizing the wider social implications and the suffering of common folk

Safranski on Heidegger. AI

Perplexity

Safranski's book on Heidegger. Give gist, plus some critiques

Rüdiger Safranski's book on Heidegger is Martin Heidegger: Between Good and Evil (original German: Ein Meister aus Deutschland. Heidegger und seine Zeit, 1994). It offers a comprehensive intellectual biography blending Heidegger's philosophy, personal life, and historical context.

Core Gist

Safranski traces Heidegger's journey from Catholic seminary student to philosophy star in 1920s Germany, influenced by Heraclitus, Plato, Kant, and post-WWI conservatism. Key ideas like Dasein (being-there), anxiety over death, and critique of human reason as encountering "Being" itself are clearly explained and tied to contemporaries. The book highlights Heidegger's Nazi enthusiasm in 1933—seeing Hitler as a break from Plato's cave—while portraying him as a questioner of existence without a fixed moral code.

Key Critiques

Reviewers praise Safranski's evenhandedness, calling it the best Heidegger biography for weaving thought, pettiness, and Nazi lapses without apology or accusation. Some note succinct clarifications of concepts like authenticity make ontology accessible, though his Nazi links remain "darkly unfocused." Critics like Rorty highlight its superiority over prior Nazi-focused works, exposing Heidegger's deceit but emphasizing imaginative power. A few find the final sections glib on episodes like Sartre or Celan, softening personal flaws like Arendt's affair.

Why is the Arendt affair seen as a personal flaw Many commentators see the Arendt–Heidegger affair as a personal flaw because of (a) the power imbalance and manipulation in the original relationship, and (b) her later complicity in rehabilitating Heidegger despite his Nazi record.

Power, age, and manipulation

Heidegger was a 35‑year‑old married professor; Arendt an 18‑year‑old student, which already raises issues of power and consent that look ethically bad even by contemporary academic standards.

Accounts emphasize his deception of both his wife and Arendt, and his inability or unwillingness to treat Arendt as an intellectual equal, wanting “sex and flattery” rather than a genuine partnership.

Biographical work notes Arendt’s extreme emotional dependence and submissiveness to him in those years, which some see as a failure of judgment in someone later celebrated for clear‑eyed political and moral analysis.

Postwar forgiveness and defense

Many scholars are less troubled by the youthful affair than by the fact that Arendt resumed a warm relationship with Heidegger after the war, “forgave him everything,” and helped defend and rehabilitate his reputation.

She publicly minimized or denied the connection between his philosophy and National Socialism, sometimes repeating his self‑exculpating claims about having taken “risks” under Nazism, despite contrary evidence.

Critics argue that this loyalty to a former lover and teacher led her to special pleading inconsistent with the standards she applied to other Nazi functionaries, and therefore counts as a personal–moral blind spot.

Why this matters for her legacy

For detractors, the affair and its aftermath show that Arendt could internalize and excuse elements of the milieu she otherwise dissected—especially in light of Heidegger’s anti‑Semitism and “brownshirt” enthusiasm.

Others reply that focusing on the love story is a distraction, but even sympathetic commentators admit her postwar behavior toward Heidegger exposes tensions between her life and her political‑theoretical commitments.

Such judgmentalism about love between 2 people

Fair point—love between adults isn't typically our business, and retroactive judgmentalism risks anachronism, especially for a 1920s professor-student romance. That said, critiques focus less on consensual passion and more on its long-term ethical fallout tied to Heidegger's politics.

Context Beyond Romance

The affair itself (1924–1928) involved secrecy and imbalance, but Arendt later described it as intellectually formative, crediting Heidegger's influence on her thinking. What draws "judgment" is her postwar defense of him—separating his "profound" ontology from Nazi politics—despite evidence of his anti-Semitism and party enthusiasm, which some see as excusing a mentor over moral consistency. Your prior interest in her precise defense and the Black Notebooks highlights this nuance: she praised his existential insights while acknowledging political failures, yet critics argue loyalty clouded her judgment on his "racial" views.

Why Critics Push Back

Power dynamics: Even then, faculty-student relations raised ethical flags; Heidegger deceived his wife and prioritized his career over Arendt's emotional needs.

Hypocrisy angle: Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem rigor on Nazi collaborators contrasts her leniency toward Heidegger, fueling charges of personal bias. ​

Not just love: It's the rehabilitation—visits, letters, public minimization—that ties personal to political, especially given her Jewish background and his regime role.

Ultimately, separating the philosopher from the man (or lovers) is Heidegger's own challenge, and Arendt's choice reflects human complexity over puritanical standards.

Hegel on human love, citations. AI

Claude Are you able to give Hegel (English) citations by book, chapter, paragraph number even tho the paragraphs are not numbered in adv...