Slavoj Žižek and Jean Hyppolite: Opposite Readings of Hegel

Slavoj Žižek and Jean Hyppolite: Opposite Readings of Hegel

From The Philosophy Channel by Robbert Veen

March 18, 2026 · 10 min

About this episode

This episode explores Hegel's concept of pure being and its implications for thought and logic.

This episode explores the very beginning of Hegel’s Science of Logic: the concept of pure being. Hegel asks us not to think about concepts, not to analyze how concepts are used, but to think the concept itself. Pure being becomes our immediate object—empty, indeterminate, without qualities, without relation. It is the most minimal thought we can have, and precisely because it is so empty, it reveals something essential about thinking itself.Pure being has no determinacy, yet this lack of determinacy turns out to be its only determinacy. The moment we say “it is indeterminate,” we already distinguish it from what is determinate. That inner tension forces the concept to move beyond itself. Pure being cannot remain what it is; it collapses into determinate being, into Dasein, being‑somehow.Hegel expresses this beginning with a single phrase: “Being, pure being—without further determination.” It is not a full proposition but an evocation of a thought. Only in this minimal form can something so immediate and indeterminate be expressed.Pure being is also pure thought. It is the concept in its emptiest form, the act of thinking stripped of all content. Nothing can be perceived or…

People in this episode

Host: Robbert Veen

Topics covered

  • Hegel
  • philosophy
  • pure being
  • logic
  • thought
  • indeterminacy

Keywords

  • Hegel
  • pure being
  • indeterminacy
  • philosophy
  • logic
  • thought

Mentioned in this episode

Books & works: Hegel’s Science of Logic, pure being

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