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On the Concept German: Begriff. In Hegel's philosophy, the "Concept" (sometimes translated as the "Notion") is not just a mental representation, but the living, self-developing essence of reality and thought. in General p. 1—30.
Division p. 30—33.
Subjectivity This section explores the internal structure of thought before it interacts with an external "objective" world. p. 34—191.
The Concept p. 36—70.
A. The Universal Concept p. 37.
B. The Particular Concept p. 44.
C. The Individual p. 64.
The Judgment German: Urtheil. Hegel etymologically interprets this as an "original partition" (Ur-theil), where the Concept divides itself into subject and predicate to express a relationship. p. 71—131.
A. The Judgment of Existence German: Daseyn. Refers to immediate, qualitative existence. p. 82—100.
a. The positive p. 83.
b. The negative p. 89.
c. The infinite p. 98.
B. The Judgment of Reflection p. 100—111.
a. The singular p. 103.
b. The particular p. 104.
c. The universal p. 106.