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      Aufheben ([ˈʔaʊ̯fˌheːbm̩, -bən] ) or Aufhebung ([ˈaʊ̯fˌheːbʊŋ] ) is a German word with several seemingly contradictory meanings, including "to lift up", "to abolish", "cancel" or "suspend", or "to sublate". The term has also been defined as "abolish", "preserve", and "transcend". In philosophy, aufheben is used by Hegel in his exposition of dialectics, and in this sense is translated mainly as "sublate".


      Hegel


      In Hegel, the term Aufhebung has the apparently contradictory implications of both preserving and changing, and eventually advancement (the German verb aufheben means "to cancel", "to keep" and "to pick up"). The tension between these senses suits what Hegel is trying to talk about. In sublation, a term or concept is both preserved and changed through its dialectical interplay with another term or concept. Sublation is the motor by which the dialectic functions.
      Sublation can be seen at work at the most basic level of Hegel's system of logic. The two concepts Being and Nothing are each both preserved and changed through sublation in the concept Becoming. Similarly, in the Science of Logic (Doctrine of Being) determinateness, or quality, and magnitude, or quantity, are each both preserved and sublated in the concept measure.
      Hegel's philosophy of history stresses the importance of negative (the antithesis) in history—negative includes wars, etc., but not only. His conception of historical progress follows a dialectic spiral, in which the thesis is opposed by the antithesis, itself sublated by the next thesis. Hegel stated that aufheben is uniquely exempt from the historical process in that it is supposed to be true for all time and never changes or develops further as in das absolute Wissen ("absolute knowledge"). The next thesis both abolishes and preserves the original thesis and the antithesis, an apparent contradiction which leads to difficulties in interpreting this concept (and to translate aufheben). In Hegel's logic self-contradiction is legitimate and necessary.
      For Hegel, history (like logic) proceeds in every small way through sublation. For example, the Oriental, Greek and Roman Empires (in which the individual is ignored or annihilated, then recognized, and finally suppressed by the States) are preserved and destroyed in the First French Empire, which, for Hegel, placed the individual in harmony with the State. At the level of social history, sublation can be seen at work in the master-slave dialectic.
      Hegel approaches the history of philosophy in the same way, arguing that important philosophical ideas of the past are not rejected but rather preserved and changed as philosophy develops. One can always find another thing in reflective philosophy upon which some absolute ground relies. With Fichte's ultimate ground, the "I" or "ego", for example, one can immediately see the reliance upon the "non-I", which allows Fichte to distinguish what he means by the "I". Reflection is circular, as Fichte unapologetically acknowledged.
      However, reflective thought is to be avoided due to its circularity. It leads to covering the same problems and ground ever and anon for each philosophical generation. It is a philosophia perennis. Instead, Hegel calls on speculative thought: two contradictory elements are held together, uplifted and sublated without completely destroying one another. Speculative thought seeks to avoid the abstract idealism inherent in reflective thought and allows one to think in concrete or absolute idealism's terms about how things work, both in the present, real world and in history.
      Reflexivity is, per contra -- per the pro- or positive aspects of mutual reciprocity -- undoubtedly the 'brighter' or more constructive side of Hegelian dialectics and therefore not circular (in any logically pernicious sense so 'to be avoided'). It is an informative circle rather than a logically vicious one; reentry into which undoubtedly adds depth, subtlety, richness, and nuance to personal identity via our inherent sociality of dialectical interactions one with another.
      Here we have 'informed' access to consciousness's (already) reflective origins in and among the 'with' of 'unto others'; the more positive aspects of Hegel's dialectical reciprocity; that which stands in sharp contradistinction to the juxtapositionality of master/slave relations.
      Reflexivity can be informative; allowing us to re-enter the circle of consciousness in order to 'see' or become more aware, so realize and even possibly transform what makes consciousness so. Hegel's 'dialectic of consciousness' is logically no different from the 'art' of presuppositional thinking Wittgenstein attempted to bring to 'English analytic philosophy', calling attention to what is already presupposed in being a mind, having a language, sharing a culture, being in a world, etc.
      On this 'foundational supposition, Aufheben is better described as 'a simultaneous breaking-down and redirecting of the energetic life-forces'; that which carries us beyond mere sublimation unto sublation. In this regard, Aufheben has, or rather carries, transcendental overtones no other word does. Never any simple 'No'; always a teleological 'perhaps'.


      Marx



      Marx identifies sublation as the manner in which material, historical conditions develop. This is not necessarily opposite with the philosophical idealism of Hegel, for whom historical sublation reflects the agency of a specific Geist (often translated as "mind" or "spirit") which in this instance is made to encompass the activity of class conditions.


      See also



      Sublimation
      Thesis, antithesis, synthesis


      References

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    Aufheben

    Aufheben

    Aufheben #12 (2004) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #12 (2004) | libcom.org

    Declension German "Aufheben" - All cases of the noun, plural, article ...

    Declension German "Aufheben" - All cases of the noun, plural, article ...

    Aufheben #08 (Autumn 1999) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #08 (Autumn 1999) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #18 (2010) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #18 (2010) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #20 (2012) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #20 (2012) | libcom.org

    The meaning of "aufheben" | Your Daily German

    The meaning of "aufheben" | Your Daily German

    Aufheben Images – Browse 15,605 Stock Photos, Vectors, and Video ...

    Aufheben Images – Browse 15,605 Stock Photos, Vectors, and Video ...

    Aufheben #15 (2007)

    Aufheben #15 (2007)

    Aufheben #23 (2015-16) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #23 (2015-16) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #05 (Autumn 1996) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #05 (Autumn 1996) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #16 (2008) | libcom.org

    Aufheben #16 (2008) | libcom.org

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    Aufheben - Wikipedia

    Aufheben ([ˈʔaʊ̯fˌheːbm̩,-bən] ⓘ) or Aufhebung ([ˈaʊ̯fˌheːbʊŋ] ⓘ) is a German word with several seemingly contradictory meanings, including "to lift up", "to abolish", "cancel" or "suspend", or …

    AUFHEBEN in English - Cambridge Dictionary

    AUFHEBEN translate: to pick up, to keep, to overturn, to cancel, fuss, repeal. Learn more in the Cambridge German-English Dictionary.

    English translation of 'aufheben' - Collins Online Dictionary

    English Translation of “AUFHEBEN” | The official Collins German-English Dictionary online. Over 100,000 English translations of German words and phrases.

    aufheben - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

    Jul 19, 2024 · aufheben (class 6 strong, third-person singular present hebt auf, past tense hob auf or (archaic) hub auf, past participle aufgehoben, past subjunctive höbe auf or (archaic) hübe …

    aufheben - English translation – Linguee

    Many translated example sentences containing "aufheben" – English-German dictionary and search engine for English translations.

    aufheben Rechtschreibung, Bedeutung, Definition, Herkunft Duden

    Definition, Rechtschreibung, Synonyme und Grammatik von 'aufheben' ️ Auf Duden online nachschlagen ️ Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache.

    The meaning of "aufheben" | Your Daily German

    Jul 9, 2021 · "aufheben" means "to pick up". But it has a second really useful meaning. And a third meaning. This word is definitely a keeper (hint, hint).

    What does aufheben mean? - Definitions.net

    Aufheben or Aufhebung is a German word with several seemingly contradictory meanings, including "to lift up", "to abolish", or "to sublate". The term has also been defined as "abolish", …

    aufheben – Schreibung, Definition, Bedeutung, Synonyme, Beispiele - DWDS

    annullieren · aufheben · rückgängig machen · ungeschehen machen Assoziationen in den vorherigen Zustand zurückversetzen · rückgängig machen (in einem Wiki) revertieren fachspr. …

    dict.cc dictionary :: aufheben :: German-English translation

    jdn./etw. aufheben [veraltet] [(eine Person / eine Bande) festnehmen] to arrest sb./sth. [a person / a gang]law etw. Akk. aufheben [etw. beenden, z. B. eine Sitzung] to close sth. [e.g. a meeting] …