Harris, W. T. (1890). The formal logic notion and judgment. In W. T. Harris, German philosophical classics for English readers and students. Hegel's Logic: A book on the genesis of the categories of the mind, a critical exposition (pp. 349-359). Chicago, IL, US: S C Griggs and Company.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/12249-030
In the third volume of this logic, Hegel gives his theory of the syllogism, making it the form of reason itself, and therefore the fundamental form of real being in the world. It is the form of true being--that is to say, of self-determined being or self-activity, which we have found to be the ultimate presupposition of all the categories of being and essence. Inasmuch as we are arrived at a form of judgment--that of the notion--which states the universal and its mediation in the individual, we need now the syllogism with its three terms to express this more explicitly. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)