§ 87 It is not of the nature of the all…pervading Spirit to die this merely natural death。
§ 88 The highest point in the development of a people is this: to have reduced its laws; its ideas of
justice and morality to a science。
§ 89 We have then before us a real and an ideal existence of the Spirit of the Nation。
§ 90 We are sure to see a people putting talk about virtue partly side by side with actual virtue。
§ 91 At the same time the isolation of individuals from each other and from the Whole makes its
appearance。
§ 92 Zeus and his race are themselves swallowed up by the very power that produced them —
the principle of thought。
§ 93 Time is the negative element in the sensuous world。 Thought is the same negativity。
§ 94 Thought is that Universal … that Species which is immortal。
§ 95 Spirit; in rendering itself objective and making this an object of thought; destroys the
determinate form of its being; but gains a prehension of its universal element。
§ 96 The individual traverses as a unity various grades of development; and remains the same
individual; in like manner also does a people。
§ 97 The life of a people ripens a certain fruit。 But this fruit does not fall back into the bosom of
the people that produced it; but bees a poison…draught to it。
§ 98 The principles of the successive phases of Spirit that animate Nations; are only steps of the
one universal Spirit。
§ 99 Philosophy; as occupying itself with the True; has only to do with the eternally present。。
Introduction
The subject of this course of Lectures is the Philosophical History of the World。 And by this must
be understood; not a collection of general observations respecting it; suggested by the study of its
records; and proposed to be illustrated by its facts; but Universal History itself。
I cannot mention any work that will serve as a pendium of the course; but I may remark that in
my The Philosophy of Right §§。 341…360; I have already given a definition of such a Universal
History as it is proposed to develop; and a syllabus of the chief elements or periods into which it
naturally divides itself。
To gain a clear idea at the outset; of the nature of our task; it seems necessary to begin with an
examination of the other methods of treating History。 The various methods may be ranged under
three heads:
I。 Original History
II。 Reflective History
III。 Philosophical History