... realities are; that had already been done, andwas in fact an obvious commonplace in philosophy. The most generaland distinct finite realities are Nature and Mind. He takes these as pal-pably ... religion, and foundin it all that was characteristic of reason,—unity, and harmony of oppo-sites. Love, in fact, was the “analogue” of reason.7 “Life,” again, wastreated as the supreme category ... makesit unnecessary for him to have what afterwards appears as the discus-sion of essence. The qualifications ascribed to Being are, as we noted,taken directly from Kant. Hegel seems to have...