Publication | Closed Access
Orientalist Constructions of India
386
Citations
34
References
1986
Year
South Asian CultureColonialismEast Asian StudiesOrientalismHuman ConditionSocial SciencesPhilosophy Of ActionExistentialismOrientalist ConstructionsReligious SystemsCasteExternal ConditionsCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesConsciousnessContemplative SciencePhilosophy (French Literary Studies)Philosophy (Philosophy Of Mind)Accidental CombinationAbsolute ThoughtIndian StudiesPhilosophy Of ReasonHumanitiesSpiritualityDream StudiesPhilosophical InquiryMindbody ProblemCultural AnthropologyPhilosophy Of MindPhilosophical Psychology
Now it is the interest of Spirit that external conditions should become internal ones; that the natural and the spiritual world should be recognized in the subjective aspect belonging to intelligence; by which process the unity of subjectivity and (positive) Being generally—or the Idealism of Existence—is established. This Idealism, then, is found in India, but only as an Idealism of imagination, without distinct conceptions;—one which does indeed free existence from Beginning and Matter (liberates it from temporal limitations and gross materiality), but changes everything into the merely Imaginative; for although the latter appears interwoven with definite conceptions and Thought presents itself as an occasional concomitant, this happens only through accidental combination. Since, however, it is the abstract and absolute Thought itself that enters into these dreams as their material, we may say that Absolute Being is presented here as in the ecstatic state of a dreaming condition (Hegel, Philosophy of History, p. 139).
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