If the human being were a mere creature of nature and not a creator at the
same time, he would not stand questioningly before the phenomena of the
world and would also not seek to fathom their essential being and laws. He
would satisfy his drive to eat and to propagate in accordance with the
inborn laws of his organism and otherwise allow the events of the world to
take the course they happen to take. It would not occur to him at
all to address a question to nature. Content and happy he would go through
life like the rose of which Angelus Silesius says:
The rose has no wherefore?; it blooms because it blooms.
It pays itself no mind, asks not if it is seen.
The rose can just be like this. What it is it is because nature has made it
this way. But the human being cannot just be like this. There is a drive
within him to add to the world lying before him yet another world that
springs forth from him. He does not want to live with his fellowmen in the
chance proximity into which nature has placed him; he seeks to regulate the
way he lives with others in accordance with his reason. The form in which
nature has shaped man and woman does not suffice for him; he creates the
ideal figures of Greek sculpture. To the natural course of events in daily
life he adds the course of events springing from his imagination as tragedy
and comedy. In architecture and music, creations spring from his spirit
that are hardly reminiscent at all of anything created by nature. In his
sciences he draws up conceptual pictures through which the chaos of world
phenomena passing daily before our senses appears to us as a harmoniously
governed whole, as a structured organism. In the world of his own deeds, he
creates a particular realm that of historical happenings
which is essentially different from nature's course of events.
The human being feels that everything he creates is only a continuation of
the workings of nature. He also knows that he is called upon to add
something higher to what nature can do out of itself. He is conscious of
the fact that he gives birth out of himself to another, higher nature in
addition to outer nature.
Thus the human being stands between two worlds; between the world that
presses in upon him from outside and the world that he brings forth out of
himself. His effort is to bring these two worlds into harmony. For, his
whole being aims at harmony. He would like to live like the rose that does
not ask about the whys and wherefores but rather blooms because it blooms.
Schiller demands this of the human being in the words:
Are you seeking the highest, the greatest?
The plant can teach it to you.
What it is will-lessly, you must be will-fully that's it!
The plant can just be what it is. For no new realm springs forth from it,
and therefore the fearful longing can also not arise in it: How am I to
bring the two realms into harmony with each other?
The goal for which man has striven throughout all the ages of history is to
bring what lies within him into harmony with what nature creates out of
itself. The fact that he himself is fruitful becomes the starting point for
his coming to terms with nature; this coming to terms forms the content of
his spiritual striving.
There are two ways of coming to terms with nature. The human being either
allows outer nature to become master over his inner nature, or he subjects
this outer nature to himself. In the first case, he seeks to submit his own
willing and existence to the outer course of events. In the second case, he
draws the goal and direction of his willing and existence from himself and
seeks to deal in some way or other with the events of nature that still go
their own way.
Let us speak about the first case first. It is in accordance with his
essential being for man, above and beyond the realm of nature, to create
yet another realm that in his sense is a higher one. He can do no other.
How he relates to the outer world will depend upon the feelings and
emotions he has with respect to this his own realm. Now he can have the
same feelings with respect to his own realm as he has with respect to the
facts of nature. He then allows the creations of his spirit to approach him
in the same way he allows an event of the outer world, wind and weather,
for example, to approach him. He perceives no difference in kind between
what occurs in the outer world and what occurs within his soul. He
therefore believes that they are only one realm, i.e., governed by
one kind of law. But he does feel that the creations of his spirit
are of a higher sort. He therefore places them above the creations of mere
nature. Thus he transfers his own creations into the outer world and lets
nature be governed by them. Consequently he knows only an outer world. For
he transfers his own inner world outside himself. No wonder then that for
him even his own self becomes a subordinate part of this outer world.
One way man comes to terms with the outer world consists, therefore, in his
regarding his inner being as something outer; he sets this inner being,
which he has transferred into the outer world, both over nature and over
himself as ruler and lawgiver.
This characterizes the standpoint of the religious person. A divine world
order is a creation of the human spirit. But the human being is not clear
about the fact that the content of this world order has sprung from his own
spirit. He therefore transfers it outside himself and subordinates himself
to his own creation.
The acting human being is not content simply to act. The flower blooms
because it blooms. It does not ask about whys and wherefores. The human
being relates to what he does. He connects feelings to what he does. He is
either satisfied or dissatisfied with what he does. He makes value
judgments about his actions. He regards one action as pleasing to him, and
another as displeasing. The moment he feels this, the harmony of the world
is disturbed for him. He believes that the pleasing action must bring about
different consequences than one which evokes his displeasure. Now if he is
not clear about the fact that, out of himself, he has attached the value
judgments to his actions, he will believe that these values are attached to
his actions by some outer power. He believes that an outer power
differentiates the happenings of this world into ones that are pleasing and
therefore good, and ones that are displeasing and therefore bad, evil. A
person who feels this way makes no distinction between the facts of nature
and the actions of the human being. He judges both from the same point of
view. For him the whole cosmos is one realm, and the laws governing
this realm correspond entirely to those which the human spirit brings forth
out of itself.
This way of coming to terms with the world reveals a basic characteristic
of human nature. No matter how unclear the human being might be about his
relationship to the world, he nevertheless seeks within himself the
yardstick by which to measure all things. Out of a kind of unconscious
feeling of sovereignty he decides on the absolute value of all happenings.
No matter how one studies this, one finds that there are countless people
who believe themselves governed by gods; there are none who do not
independently, over the heads of the gods, judge what pleases or displeases
these gods. The religious person cannot set himself up as the lord of the
world; but he does indeed determine, out of his own absolute power, the
likes and dislikes of the ruler of the world.
One need only look at religious natures and one will find my assertions
confirmed. What proclaimer of gods has not at the same time determined
quite exactly what pleases these gods and what is repugnant to them? Every
religion has its wise teachings about the cosmos, and each also asserts
that its wisdom stems from one or more gods.
If one wants to characterize the standpoint of the religious person one
must say: He seeks to judge the world out of himself, but he does not have
the courage also to ascribe to himself the responsibility for this
judgment; therefore he invents beings for himself in the outer world that
he can saddle with this responsibility.
Such considerations seem to me to answer the question:
What is religion? The content of religion springs from the human spirit.
But the human spirit does not want to acknowledge this origin to itself.
The human being submits himself to his own laws, but he regards these laws
as foreign. He establishes himself as ruler over himself. Every religion
establishes the human I as regent of the world. Religion's
being consists precisely in this, that it is not conscious of this fact. It
regards as revelation from outside what it actually reveals to itself.
The human being wishes to stand at the topmost place in the world. But he
does not dare to pronounce himself the pinnacle of creation. Therefore he
invents gods in his own image and lets the world be ruled by them. When he
thinks this way, he is thinking religiously.
Philosophical thinking replaces religious thinking. Wherever and whenever
this occurs, human nature reveals itself to us in a very particular way.
For the development of Western thinking, the transition from the
mythological thinking of the Greeks into philosophical thinking is
particularly interesting. I would now like to present three thinkers from
that time of transition: Anaximander, Thales, and Parmenides. They
represent three stages leading from religion to philosophy.
It is characteristic of the first stage of this path that divine beings,
from whom the content taken from the human I supposedly stems,
are no longer acknowledged. But from habit one still holds fast to the view
that this content stems from the outer world. Anaximander stands at this
stage. He no longer speaks of gods as his Greek ancestors did. For him the
highest principle, which rules the world, is not a being pictured in man's
image. It is an impersonal being, the apeiron, the indefinite. It
develops out of itself everything occurring in nature, not in the way a
person creates, but rather out of natural necessity. But Anaximander always
conceives this natural necessity to be analogous to actions that proceed
according to human principles of reason. He pictures to himself, so to
speak, a moral, natural lawfulness, a highest being, that treats the world
like a human, moral judge without actually being one. For Anaximander,
everything in the world occurs just as necessarily as a magnet attracts
iron, but does so according to moral, i.e., human laws. Only from this
point of view could he say: Whence things arise, hence must they also
pass away, in accordance with justice, for they must do penance and
recompense because of unrighteousness in a way corresponding to the order
of time.
This is the stage at which a thinker begins to judge philosophically. He
lets go of the gods. He therefore no longer ascribes to the gods what comes
from man. But he actually does nothing more than transfer onto something
impersonal the characteristics formerly attributed to divine, i.e.,
personal beings.
Thales approaches the world in an entirely free way. Even though he is a
few years older than Anaximander, he is philosophically much more mature.
His way of thinking is no longer religious at all.
Within Western thinking Thales is the first to come to terms with the world
in the second of the two ways mentioned above. Hegel has so often
emphasized that thinking is the trait which distinguishes man from the
animal. Thales is the first Western personality who dared to assign to
thinking its sovereign position. He no longer bothered about whether gods
have arranged the world in accordance with the order of thought or whether
an apeiron directs the world in accordance with thinking. He only
knew that he thought, and assumed that, because he thought, he also had a
right to explain the world to himself in accordance with his thinking. Do
not underestimate this standpoint of Thales! It represents an immense
disregard for all religious preconceptions. For it was the declaration of
the absoluteness of human thinking. Religious people say: The world is
arranged the way we think it to be because God exists. And since they
conceive of God in the image of man, it is obvious that the order of the
world corresponds to the order of the human head. All that is a matter of
complete indifference to Thales. He thinks about the world. And by virtue
of his thinking he ascribes to himself the power to judge the world. He
already has a feeling that thinking is only a human action; and accordingly
he undertakes to explain the world with the help of this purely human
thinking. With Thales the activity of knowing (das Erkennen) now
enters into a completely new stage of its development. It ceases to draw
its justification from the fact that it only copies what the gods have
already sketched out. It takes from out of itself the right to decide upon
the lawfulness of the world. What matters, to begin with, is not at all
whether Thales believed water or anything else to be the principle of the
world; what matters is that he said to himself: What the principle is, this
I will decide by my thinking. He assumed it to be obvious that thinking has
the power in such things. And therein lies his greatness.
Just consider what was accomplished. No less an event than that spiritual
power over world phenomena was given to man. Whoever trusts in his thinking
says to himself: No matter how violently the waves of life may rage, no
matter that the world seems a chaos: I am at peace, for all this mad
commotion does not disquiet me, because I comprehend it.
Heraclitus did not comprehend this divine peacefulness of the thinker who
understands himself. He was of the view that all things are in eternal
flux. That becoming is the essential beings of things. When I step into a
river, it is no longer the same one as in the moment of my deciding to
enter it. But Heraclitus overlooks just one thing. Thinking preserves what
the river bears along with itself and finds that in the next moment
something passes before my senses that is essentially the same as what was
already there before.
Like Thales, with his firm belief in the power of human thinking,
Heraclitus is a typical phenomenon in the realm of those personalities who
come to terms with the most significant questions of existence. He does not
feel within himself the power to master by thinking the eternal flux of
sense-perceptible becoming. Heraclitus looks into the world and it
dissolves for him into momentary phenomena upon which one has no hold. If
Heraclitus were right, then everything in the world would flutter away, and
in the general chaos the human personality would also have to disintegrate.
I would not be the same today as I was yesterday, and tomorrow I would be
different than today. At every moment, the human being would face something
totally new and would be powerless. For, it is doubtful that the
experiences he has acquired up to a certain day can guide him in dealing
with the totally new experiences that the next day will bring.
Parmenides therefore sets himself in absolute opposition to Heraclitus.
With all the one-sidedness possible only to a keen philosophical nature, he
rejected all testimony brought by sense perception. For, it is precisely
this ever-changing sense world that leads one astray into the view of
Heraclitus. Parmenides therefore regarded those revelations as the only
source of all truth which well forth from the innermost core of the human
personality: the revelations of thinking. In his view the real being of
things is not what flows past the senses; it is the thoughts, the ideas,
that thinking discovers within this stream and to which it holds fast!
Like so many things that arise in opposition to a particular one-sidedness,
Parmenides's way of thinking also became disastrous. It ruined European
thinking for centuries. It undermined man's confidence in his sense
perception. Whereas an unprejudiced, naive look at the sense world draws
from this world itself the thought-content that satisfies the human drive
for knowledge, the philosophical movement developing in the sense of
Parmenides believed it had to draw real truth only out of pure,
abstract thinking.
The thoughts we gain in living intercourse with the sense world have an
individual character; they have within themselves the warmth of something
experienced. We unfold our own personality by extracting ideas from the
world. We feel ourselves as conquerors of the sense world when we capture
it in the world of thoughts. Abstract, pure thinking has something
impersonal and cold about it. We always feel a compulsion when we spin
forth ideas out of pure thinking. Our feeling of self cannot be heightened
through such thinking. For we must simply submit to the necessities of
thought.
Parmenides did not take into account that thinking is an activity of the
human personality. He took it to be impersonal, as the eternal content of
existence. What is thought is what exists, he once said.
In the place of the old gods he thus set a new one. Whereas the older
religious way of picturing things had set the whole feeling,
willing, and thinking man as God at the pinnacle of the world, Parmenides
took one single human activity, one part, out of the human
personality and made a divine being out of it.
In the realm of views about the moral life of man Parmenides is
complemented by Socrates. His statement that virtue is teachable is the
ethical consequence of Parmenides's view that thinking is equitable with
being. If this is true, then human action can claim to have raised itself
to something worthily existing only when human action flows from thinking,
from that abstract, logical thinking to which man must simply yield
himself, i.e., which he has to acquire for himself as learner.
It is clear that a common thread can be traced through the development of
Greek thought. The human being seeks to transfer into the outer world what
belongs to him, what springs from his own being, and in this way to
subordinate himself to his own being. At first he takes the whole fullness
of his nature and sets likenesses of it as gods over himself; then he takes
one single human activity, thinking, and sets it over himself as a
necessity to which he must yield. That is what is so remarkable in the
development of man, that he unfolds his powers, that he fights for the
existence and unfolding of these powers in the world, but that he is far
from being able to acknowledge these powers as his own.
One of the greatest philosophers of all time has made this great, human
self-deception into a bold and wonderful system. This philosopher is Plato.
The
ideal
world, the inner representations that arise around man within
his spirit while his gaze is directed at the multiplicity of outer things,
this becomes for Plato a higher world of existence of which that
multiplicity is only a copy. The things of this world which our
senses perceive have no true being at all: they are always becoming but
never are. They have only a relative existence; they are, in their
totality, only in and through their relationship to each other; one can
therefore just as well call their whole existence a non-existence. They are
consequently also not objects of any actual knowledge. For, only about what
is, in and for itself and always in the same way, can there be such
knowledge; they, on the other hand, are only the object of what we, through
sensation, take them to be. As long as we are limited only to our
perception of them, we are like people who sit in a dark cave so firmly
bound that they cannot even turn their heads and who see nothing, except,
on the wall facing them, by the light of a fire burning behind them, the
shadow images of real things which are led across between them and the
fire, and who in fact also see of each other, yes each of himself, only the
shadows on that wall. Their wisdom, however, would be to predict the
sequence of those shadows which they have learned to know from
experience. The tree that I see and touch, whose flowers I smell, is
therefore the shadow of the idea of the tree. And this idea is what
is truly real. The idea, however, is what lights up within my spirit when I
look at the tree. What I perceive with my senses is thus made into a copy
of what my spirit shapes through the perception.
Everything that Plato believes to be present as the world of ideas in the
beyond, outside things, is man's inner world. The content of the human
spirit, torn out of man and pictured as a world unto itself, as a higher,
true world lying in the beyond: that is Platonic philosophy.
I consider Ralph Waldo Emerson to be right when he says: Among books,
Plato only is entitled to Omar's fanatical compliment to the Koran, when he
said, Burn the libraries; for their value is in this book.
These sentences contain the culture of nations; these are the cornerstone
of schools; these are the fountain-head of literatures. A discipline it is
in logic, arithmetic, taste, symmetry, poetry, language, rhetoric,
ontology, morals, or practical wisdom. There was never such range of
speculation. Out of Plato come all things that are still written and
debated among men of thought.
(see Note #2)
Let me express the last sentence
somewhat more exactly in the following form. The way Plato felt about the
relationship of the human spirit to the world, this is how the overwhelming
majority of people still feel about it today. They feel that the content of
the human spirit human feeling, willing, and thinking does
stand at the top of the ladder of phenomena; but they know what to do with
this spiritual content only when they conceive of it as existing outside of
man as a divinity or as some other kind of higher being such as a necessary
natural order, or as a moral world order or as any of the other
names that man has given to what he himself brings forth.
One can understand why the human being does this. Sense impressions press
in upon him from outside. He sees colors and hears sounds. His feelings and
thoughts arise in him as he sees the colors and hears the sounds. These
stem from his own nature. He asks himself: How can I, out of myself, add
anything to what the world gives me? It seems to him completely arbitrary
to draw something out of himself to complement the outer world.
But the moment he says to himself: What I am feeling and thinking, this I
do not bring to the world out of myself; another, higher being has laid
this into the world, and I only draw it forth from the world at this
moment he feels relieved. One only has to tell the human being: Your
opinions and thoughts do not come from yourself; a god has revealed them to
you then he is reconciled with himself. And if he has divested
himself of his belief in God, he then sets in His place the natural order
of things, eternal laws. The fact that he cannot find this God, these
eternal laws, anywhere outside in the world, that he must rather first
create them for the world if they are to be there this he does not
want to admit to himself at first. It is difficult for him to say to
himself: The world outside me is not divine; by virtue of my essential
being, however, I assume the right to project the divine into the outer
world.
What do the laws of the pendulum that arose in Galileo's spirit as he
watched the swinging church lamp matter to the lamp? But man himself cannot
exist without establishing a relationship between the outer world and the
world of his inner being. His spiritual life is a continuous projecting of
his spirit into the sense world. Through his own work, in the course of
historical life, there occurs the interpenetration of nature and spirit.
The Greek thinkers wanted nothing more than to believe that man was already
born into a relationship which actually can come about only through
himself. They did not want it to be man who first consummates the marriage
of spirit and nature; they wanted to confront this as a marriage already
consummated, to regard it as an accomplished fact.
Aristotle saw what is so contradictory in transferring the ideas
arising in man's spirit from the things of the world into some
supersensible world in the beyond. But even he did not recognize that
things first receive their ideal aspect when man confronts them and
creatively adds this aspect to them. Rather, he assumed that this ideal
element, as entelechy, is itself at work in things as their actual
principle. The natural consequence of this basic view of his was that he
traced the moral activity of man back to his original, moral, natural
potential. The physical drives ennoble themselves in the course of human
evolution and then appear as willing guided by reason. Virtue consists in
this reasonable willing.
Taken at face value, this seems to indicate that Aristotle believed that
moral activity, at least, has its source in man's own personality, that man
himself gives himself the direction and goal of his actions out of his own
being and does not allow these to be prescribed for him from outside. But
even Aristotle does not dare to stay with this picture of a human being who
determines his own destiny for himself. What appears in man as individual,
reasonable activity is, after all, only the imprint of a general world
reason existing outside of him. This world reason does realize itself
within the individual person, but has its own independent, higher existence
over and above him. .
Even Aristotle pushes outside of man what he finds present only within man.
The tendency of Greek thinking from Thales to Aristotle is to think that
what is encountered within the inner life of man is an independent being
existing for itself and to trace the things of the world back to this
being.
Man's knowledge must pay the consequences when he thinks that the mediating
of spirit with nature, which he himself is meant to accomplish, is
accomplished by outer powers. He should immerse himself in his own inner
being and seek there the point of connection between the sense world and
the ideal world. If, instead of this, he looks into the outer world to find
this point, then, because he cannot find it there, he must necessarily
arrive eventually at the doubt in any reconciliation between the two
powers. The period of Greek thought that follows Aristotle presents us with
this stage of doubt. It announces itself with the Stoics and Epicureans and
reaches its high-point with the Skeptics.
The Stoics and Epicureans feel instinctively that one cannot find the
essential being of things along the path taken by their predecessors. They
leave this path without bothering very much about finding a new one. For
the older philosophers, the main thing was the world as a whole. They
wanted to discover the laws of the world and believed that knowledge of man
must result all by itself from knowledge of the world, because for them man
was a part of the world-whole like all other things. The Stoics and
Epicureans made man the main object of their reflections. They wanted to
give his life its appropriate content. They thought about how man should
live his life. Everything else was only a means to this end. The Stoics
considered all philosophy to be worthwhile only to the extent that through
it man could know how he is to live his life. They considered the right
life for man to be one that is in harmony with nature. In order to
realize this harmony with nature in one's own actions, one must first know
what is in harmony with nature.
In the Stoics' teachings there lies an important admission about the human
personality. Namely, that the human personality can be its own purpose and
goal and that everything else, even knowledge, is there only for the sake
of this personality.
The Epicureans went even further in this direction. Their striving
consisted in shaping life in such a way that man would feel as content as
possible in it or that it would afford him the greatest possible pleasure.
One's own life stood so much in the foreground for them that they practiced
knowledge only for the purpose of freeing man from superstitious fear and
from the discomfort that befalls him when he does not understand nature.
A heightened human feeling of oneself runs through the views of the Stoics
and Epicureans compared to those of older Greek thinkers.
This view appears in a finer, more spiritual way in the Skeptics. They said
to themselves: When a person is forming ideas about things, he can form
them only out of himself. And only out of himself can he draw the
conviction that an idea corresponds to some thing. They saw nothing in the
outer world that would provide a basis for connecting thing and idea. And
they regarded as delusion and combated what anyone before them had said
about any such bases.
The basic characteristic of the Skeptical view is modesty. Its adherents
did not dare to deny that there is a connection in the outer world between
idea and thing; they merely denied that man could know of any such
connection. Therefore they did indeed make man the source of his knowing,
but they did not regard this knowing as the expression of true wisdom.
Basically, Skepticism represents human knowing's declaration of bankruptcy.
The human being succumbs to the preconception he has created for himself
that the truth is present outside him in a finished form
through the conviction he has gained that his truth is only an inner
one, and therefore cannot be the right one at all.
Thales begins to reflect upon the world with utter confidence in the power
of the human spirit. The doubt that what human pondering must regard
as the ground of the world could not actually be this ground lay
very far from his naive belief in man's cognitive ability. With the
Skeptics a complete renunciation of real truth has taken the place of this
belief.
The course of development taken by Greek thinking lies between the two
extremes of naive, blissful confidence in man's cognitive ability and
absolute lack of confidence in it. One can understand this course of
development if one considers how man's mental pictures of the causes of the
world have changed. What the oldest Greek philosophers thought these causes
to be had sense-perceptible characteristics. Through this, one had a right
to transfer these causes into the outer world. Like every other object in
the sense world, the primal water of Thales belongs to outer reality. The
matter became quite different when Parmenides stated that true existence
lies in thinking. For, this thinking, in accordance with its true
existence, is to be perceived only within man's inner being. Through
Parmenides there first arose the great question: How does
thought-existence, spiritual existence, relate to the outer existence that
our senses perceive? One was accustomed then to picturing the relationship
of the highest existence to that existence which surrounds us in daily life
in the same way that Thales had thought the relationship to be between his
sense-perceptible primal thing and the things that surround us. It is
altogether possible to picture to oneself the emergence of all things out
of the water that Thales presents as the primal source of all existence, to
picture it as analogous to certain sense-perceptible processes that occur
daily before our very eyes. And the urge to picture relations in the world
surrounding us in the sense of such an analogy still remained even when,
through Parmenides and his followers, pure thinking and its content, the
world of ideas, were made into the primal source of all existence. Men were
indeed ready to see that the spiritual world is a higher one than the sense
world, that the deepest world-content reveals itself within the inner being
of man, but they were not ready at the same time to picture the
relationship between the sense world and the ideal world as an ideal one.
They pictured it as a sense-perceptible relationship, as a factual
emergence. If they had thought of it as spiritual, then they could
peacefully have acknowledged that the content of the world of ideas is
present only in the inner being of man. For then what is higher would not
need to precede in time what is derivative. A sense-perceptible thing can
reveal a spiritual content, but this content can first be born out of the
sense-perceptible thing at the moment of revelation. This content is a
later product of evolution than the sense world. But if one pictures the
relationship to be one of emergence, then that from which the other emerges
must also precede it in time. In this way the child the spiritual
world born of the sense world was made into the mother of the sense
world. This is the psychological reason why the human being transfers
his world out into outer reality and declares with reference
to this his possession and product that it has an objective
existence in and for itself, and that he has to subordinate himself to it,
or, as the case may be, that he can take possession of it only through
revelation or in some other way by which the already finished truth can
make its entry into his inner being.
This interpretation which man gives to his striving for truth, to his
activity of knowing, corresponds with a profound inclination of his nature.
Goethe characterized this inclination in his Aphorisms in Prose in
the following words: The human being never realizes just how
anthropomorphic he is. And: Fall and propulsion. To want to
declare the movement of the heavenly bodies by these is actually a hidden
anthropomorphism; it is the way a walker goes across a field. The lifted
foot sinks down, the foot left behind strives forward and falls; and so on
continuously from departing until arriving. All explanation of
nature, indeed, consists in the fact that experiences man has of himself
are interpreted into the object. Even the simplest phenomena are explained
in this way. When we explain the propulsion of one body by another, we do
so by picturing to ourselves that the one body exerts upon the other the
same effect as we do when we propel a body. In the same way as we do this
with something trivial, the religious person does it with his picture of
God. He takes human ways of thinking and acting and interprets them into
nature; and the philosophers we have presented, from Parmenides to
Aristotle, also interpreted human thought-processes into nature. Max
Stirner has this human need in mind when he says: What haunts the
universe and carries on its mysterious, incomprehensible doings
is, in fact, the arcane ghost that we call the highest being. And fathoming
this ghost, understanding it, discovering reality in it
(proving the existence of God) this is the task men have
set themselves for thousands of years; they tormented themselves with the
horrible impossibility, with the endless work of the Danaides, of
transforming the ghost into a nonghost, the unreal into a real, the
spirit into a whole and embodied person. Behind the existing
world they sought the thing-in-itself, the essential being;
they sought the non-thing behind the thing.
The last phase of Greek philosophy, Neo-Platonism, offers a splendid proof
of how inclined the human spirit is to misconstrue its own being and
therefore its relationship to the world. This teaching, whose most
significant proponent is Plotin, broke with the tendency to transfer the
content of the human spirit into a realm outside the living reality within
which man himself stands. The Neo-Platonist seeks within his own soul the
place at which the highest object of knowledge is to be found. Through that
intensification of cognitive forces which one calls ecstasy, he seeks
within himself to behold the essential being of world phenomena. The
heightening of the inner powers of perception is meant to lift the human
spirit onto a level of life at which he feels directly the revelation of
this essential being. This teaching is a kind of mysticism. It is based on
a truth that is to be found in every kind of mysticism. Immersion into
one's own inner being yields the deepest human wisdom. But man must first
prepare himself for this immersion. He must accustom himself to behold a
reality that is free of everything the senses communicate to us. People who
have brought their powers of knowledge to this height speak of an inner
light that has dawned for them. Jakob Böhme, the Christian mystic of the
seventeenth century, regarded himself as inwardly illumined in this way. He
sees within himself the realm he must designate as the highest one
knowable to man. He says: Within the human heart (Gemüt) there
lie the indications (Signatur), quite artfully set forth, of the
being of all being.
Neo-Platonism sets the contemplation of the human inner world in the place
of speculation about an outer world in the beyond. As a result, the highly
characteristic phenomenon appears that the Neo-Platonist regards his own
inner being as something foreign. One has taken things all the way to
knowledge of the place at which the ultimate part of the world is to be
sought; but one has wrongly interpreted what is to be found in this place.
The Neo-Platonist therefore describes the inner experiences of his ecstasy
like Plato describes the being of his supersensible world.
It is characteristic that Neo-Platonism excludes from the essential being
of the inner world precisely that which constitutes its actual core. The
state of ecstasy is supposed to occur only when self-consciousness is
silent. It was therefore only natural that in Neo-Platonism the human
spirit could not behold itself, its own being, in its true light.
The courses taken by the ideas that form the content of Greek philosophy
found their conclusion in this view. They represent the longing of man to
recognize, to behold, and to worship his own essential being as something
foreign.
In the normal course of development within the spiritual evolution of the
West, the discovery of egoism would have to have followed upon
Neo-Platonism. That means, man would have to have recognized as his own
being what he had considered to be a foreign being. He would have to have
said to himself: The highest thing there is in the world given to man is
his individual I whose being comes to manifestation within the
inner life of the personality.
This natural course of Western spiritual development was held up by the
spread of Christian teachings. Christianity presents, in popular pictures
that are almost tangible, what Greek philosophy expressed in the language
of sages. When one considers how deeply rooted in human nature the urge is
to renounce one's own being, it seems understandable that this teaching has
gained such incomparable power over human hearts. A high level of spiritual
development is needed to satisfy this urge in a philosophical way. The most
naive heart suffices to satisfy this urge in the form of Christian faith.
Christianity does not present as the highest being of the world
a finely spiritual content like Plato's world of ideas, nor an
experience streaming forth from an inner light which must first be kindled;
instead, it presents processes with attributes of reality that can be
grasped by the senses. It goes so far, in fact, as to revere the highest
being in a single historical person. The philosophical spirit of Greece
could not present us with such palpable mental pictures. Such mental
pictures lay in its past, in its folk mythology. Hamann, Herder's
predecessor in the realm of theology, commented one time that Plato had
never been a philosopher for children. But that it was for childish spirits
that the holy spirit had had the ambition to become a writer.
And for centuries this childish form of human self-estrangement has had the
greatest conceivable influence upon the philosophical development of
thought. Like fog the Christian teachings have hung before the light from
which knowledge of man's own being should have gone forth. Through all
kinds of philosophical concepts, the church fathers of the first Christian
centuries seek to give a form to their popular mental pictures that would
make them acceptable also to an educated consciousness. And the later
teachers in the church, of whom Saint Augustine is the most significant,
continue these efforts in the same spirit. The content of Christian faith
had such a fascinating effect that there could be no question of doubt as
to its truth, but only of lifting up of this truth into a more spiritual,
more ideal sphere. The philosophy of the teachers within the church is a
transforming of the content of Christian faith into an edifice of ideas.
The general character of this thought-edifice could therefore be no other
than that of Christianity: the transferring of man's being out into the
world, self-renunciation. Thus it came about that Augustine again arrives
at the right place, where the essential being of the world is to be found,
and that he again finds something foreign in this place. Within man's own
being he seeks the source of all truth; he declares the inner experiences
of the soul to be the foundations of knowledge. But the teachings of
Christian faith have set an extra-human content at the place where he was
seeking. Therefore, at the right place, he found the wrong beings.
There now follows a centuries-long exertion of human thinking whose sole
purpose, by expending all the power of the human spirit, was to bring proof
that the content of this spirit is not to be sought within this
spirit but rather at that place to which Christian faith has
transferred this content. The movement in thought that grew up out of these
efforts is called Scholasticism. All the hair-splittings of the Schoolmen
can be of no interest in the context of the present essay. For that
movement in ideas does not represent in the least a development in the
direction of knowledge of the personal I.
The thickness of the fog in which Christianity enshrouded human
self-knowledge becomes most evident through the fact that the Western
spirit, out of itself, could not take even one step on the path to this
self-knowledge. The Western spirit needed a decisive push from outside. It
could not find upon the ground of the soul what it had sought so long in
the outer world. But it was presented with proof that this outer world
could not be constituted in such a way that the human spirit could find
there the essential being it sought. This push was given by the blossoming
of the natural sciences in the sixteenth century. As long as man had only
an imperfect picture of how natural processes are constituted, there was
room in the outer world for divine beings and for the working of a personal
divine will. But there was no longer a place, in the natural picture of the
world sketched out by Copernicus and Kepler, for the Christian picture. And
as Galileo laid the foundations for an explanation of natural processes
through natural laws, the belief in divine laws had to be shaken.
Now one had to seek in a new way the being that man recognizes as the
highest and that had been pushed out of the external world for him.
Francis Bacon drew the philosophical conclusions from the presuppositions
given by Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo. His service to the Western world
view is basically a negative one. He called upon man in a powerful way to
direct his gaze freely and without bias upon reality, upon life. As obvious
as this call seems, there is no denying that the development of Western
thought has sinned heavily against it for centuries. Man's own
I also belongs within the category of real things. And does it
not almost seem as though man's natural predisposition makes him unable to
look at this I without bias? Only the development of a
completely unbiased sense, directed immediately upon what is real, can lead
to self-knowledge. The path of knowledge of nature is also the path of
knowledge of the I.
Two streams now entered into the development of Western thought that
tended, by different paths, in the direction of the new goals of knowledge
necessitated by the natural sciences. One goes back to Jakob Böhme, the
other to René Descartes.
Jakob Böhme and Descartes no longer stood under the influence of
Scholasticism. Böhme saw that nowhere in cosmic space was there a place for
heaven; he therefore became a mystic. He sought heaven within the inner
being of man. Descartes recognized that the adherence of the Schoolmen to
Christian teachings was only a matter of centuries-long habituation to
these pictures. Therefore he considered it necessary first of all to doubt
these habitual pictures and to seek a way of knowledge by which man can
arrive at a kind of knowing whose certainty he does not assert out of
habit, but which can be guaranteed at every, moment through his own
spiritual powers.
Those are therefore strong initial steps which both with Böhme and
with Descartes the human I takes to know itself. Both
were nevertheless overpowered by the old preconceptions in what they
brought forth later. It has already been indicated that Jakob Böhme has a
certain spiritual kinship with the Neo-Platonists. His knowledge is an
entering into his own inner being. But what confronts him within this inner
being is not the I of man but rather only the Christian God
again. He becomes aware that within his own heart (Gemüt) there lies
what the person who needs knowledge is craving. Fulfillment of the greatest
human longings streams toward him from there. But this does not lead him to
the view that the I, by intensifying its cognitive powers, is
also able out of itself to satisfy its demands. This brings him, rather, to
the belief that, on the path of knowledge into the human heart, he had
truly found the God whom Christianity had sought upon a false path. Instead
of self-knowledge, Jakob Böhme seeks union with God; instead of life with
the treasures of his own inner being, he seeks a life in God.
It is obvious that the way man thinks about his actions, about his moral
life, will also depend upon human self-knowledge or self-misapprehension.
The realm of morality does in fact establish itself as a kind of upper
story above the purely natural processes. Christian belief, which already
regards these natural processes as flowing from the divine will, seeks this
will all the more within morality. Christian moral teachings show more
clearly than almost anything else the distortedness of this world view. No
matter how enormous the sophistry is that theology has applied to this
realm: questions remain which, from the standpoint of Christianity, show
definite features of considerable contradiction. If a primal being like the
Christian God is assumed, it is incomprehensible how the sphere of human
action can fall into two realms: into that of the good and into that of the
evil. For, all human actions would have to flow from the primal being and
consequently bear traits homogeneous with their origin. Human
actions would in fact have to be divine. Just as little can human
responsibility be explained on this basis. Man is after all directed by the
divine will. He can therefore give himself up only to this will; he can let
happen through him only what God brings about.
In the views one held about morality, precisely the same thing occurred as
in one's views about knowledge. Man followed his inclination to tear his
own self out of himself and to set it up as something foreign. And just as
in the realm of knowledge no other content could be given to the primal
being regarded as lying outside man than the content drawn
from his own inner being, so no moral aims and impulses for action could be
found in this primal being except those belonging to the human soul. What
man, in his deepest inner being, was convinced should happen, this he
regarded as something willed by the primal being of the world. In this way
a duality in the ethical realm was created. Over against the self that one
had within oneself and out of which one had to act, one set one's own
content as something morally determinative. And through this, moral demands
could arise. Man's self was not allowed to follow itself; it had to follow
something foreign. Selflessness in one's actions in the moral field
corresponds to self-estrangement in the realm of knowledge. Those actions
are good in which the I follows something foreign; those
actions are bad, on the other hand, in which it follows itself. In
self-will Christianity sees the source of all evil. That could never have
happened if one had seen that everything moral can draw its content only
out of one's own self. One can sum up all the Christian moral teachings in
one sentence:
If man admits to himself that he can follow only the commandments of his
own being and if he acts according to them, then he is evil; if this
truth is hidden from him and if he sets or allows to be set
his own commandments as foreign ones over himself in order to act according
to them, then he is good.
The moral teaching of selflessness is elaborated perhaps more completely
than anywhere else in a book from the fourteenth century, German
Theology. The author of this book is unknown to us. He carried
self-renunciation far enough to be sure that his name did not come down to
posterity. In this book it is stated: That is no true being and has
no being which does not exist within the perfect; rather it is by chance or
it is a radiance and a shining that is no being or has no being except in
the fire from which the radiance flows, or in the sun, or in the light. The
Bible speaks of faith and the truth: sin is nothing other than the fact
that the creature turns himself away from the unchangeable good and toward
the changeable good, which means that he turns from the perfect to the
divided and to the imperfect and most of all to himself. Now mark. If the
creature assumes something good such as being, living, knowing,
recognizing, capability, and everything in short that one should call good
and believes that he is this good, or that it is his or belongs to
him, or that it is of him, no matter how often nor how much results from
this, then he is going astray. What else did the devil do or what else was
his fall and estrangement than that he assumed that he was also something
and something would be his and something would also belong to him? That
assumption and his I and his me, his for
me and his mine, that was his estrangement and his fall.
That is how it still is. For, everything that one considers good or should
call good belongs to no one, but only to the eternal true good which God is
alone, and whoever assumes it of himself acts wrongly and against
God.
A change in moral views from the old Christian ones is also connected with
the turn that Jakob Böhme gave to man's relationship to God. God still
works as something higher in the human soul to effect the good, but He does
at least work within this self and not from outside upon the
self. An internalizing of moral action occurs thereby. The rest of
Christianity demanded only an outer obedience to the divine will. With
Jakob Böhme the previously separated entities the really personal
and the personal that was made into God enter into a living
relationship. Through this, the source of the moral is indeed now
transferred into man's inner being, but the moral principle of selflessness
seems to be even more strongly emphasized. If God is regarded as an outer
power, then the human self is the one actually acting. It acts either in
God's sense or against it. But if God is transferred into man's inner
being, then man himself no longer acts, but rather God in him. God
expresses himself directly in human life. Man foregoes any life of his own;
he makes himself a part of the divine life. He feels himself in God, God in
himself; he grows into the primal being; he becomes an organ of it.
In this German mysticism man has therefore paid for his participation in
the divine life with the most complete extinguishing of his personality, of
his I. Jakob Böhme and the mystics who were of his view did not
feel the loss of the personal element. On the contrary: they experienced
something particularly uplifting in the thought that they were directly
participating in the divine life, that they were members in a divine
organism. An organism cannot exist, after all, without its members. The
mystic therefore felt himself to be something necessary within the
world-whole, as a being that is indispensable to God. Angelus Silesius, the
mystic who felt things in the same spirit as Jakob Böhme, expresses this in
a beautiful statement:
I know that without me God cannot live an instant,
Came I to naught, he needs must yield the spirit.
And even more characteristically in another one:
Without me God cannot a single worm create;
Do I not co-maintain it, it must at once crack open.
The human I asserts its rights here in the most powerful way
vis-à-vis its own image which it has transferred into the outer world. To
be sure, the supposed primal being is not yet told that it is man's own
being set over against himself, but at least man's own being is considered
to be the maintainer of the divine primal ground.
Descartes had a strong feeling for the fact that man, through his
thought-development, had brought himself into a warped relationship with
the world. Therefore, to begin with, he met everything that had come forth
from this thought-development with doubt. Only when one doubts everything
that the centuries have developed as truths can one in his opinion
gain the necessary objectivity for a new point of departure. It lay
in the nature of things that this doubt would lead Descartes to the human
I. For, the more a person regards everything else as something
that he still must seek, the more he will have an intense feeling of his
own seeking personality. He can say to himself: Perhaps I am erring on the
paths of existence; then the erring one is thrown all the more clearly back
upon himself. Descartes' Cogito, ergo sum (I think, therefore I am)
indicates this. Descartes presses even further. He is aware that the way
man arrives at knowledge of himself should be a model for any other
knowledge he means to acquire. Clarity and definiteness seem to Descartes
to be the most prominent characteristics of self-knowledge. Therefore he
also demands these two characteristics of all other knowledge. Whatever man
can distinguish just as clearly and definitely as his own existence:
only that can stand as certain.
With this, the absolutely central place of the I in the
world-whole is at least recognized in the area of cognitive methodology.
Man determines the how of his knowledge of the world according to
the how of his knowledge of himself, and no longer asks for any
outer being to justify this how. Man does not want to think in the
way a god prescribes knowing activity to be, but rather in the way he
determines this for himself. From now on, with respect to the world, man
draws the power of his wisdom from himself.
In connection with the what, Descartes did not take the same step.
He set to work to gain mental pictures about the world, and in
accordance with the cognitive principle just presented searched
through his own inner being for such mental pictures. There he found the
mental picture of God. It was of course nothing more than the mental
picture of the human I. But Descartes did not recognize this.
The idea of God as the altogether most perfect being » brought his thinking
onto a completely wrong path. This one characteristic, that of the
altogether greatest perfection, outshone for him all the other
characteristics of the central being. He said to himself: Man, who is
himself imperfect, cannot out of himself create the mental picture of an
altogether most perfect being. Consequently this altogether most perfect
being exists. If Descartes had investigated the true content of his mental
picture of God, he would have found that it is exactly the same as the
mental picture of the I, and that perfection is only a
conceptual enhancement of this content. The essential content of an ivory
ball is not changed by my thinking of it as infinitely large. Just as
little does the mental picture of the I become something else
through such an enhancement.
The proof that Descartes brings for the existence of God is therefore again
nothing other than a paraphrasing of the human need to make one's own
I, in the form of a being outside man, into the ground of the
world. But here indeed the fact presents itself with full clarity that man
can find no content of its own for this primal being existing outside man,
but rather can only lend this being the content of his mental picture of
the I in a form that has not been significantly changed.
Spinoza took no step forward on the path that must lead to the conquest of
the mental picture of the I; he took a step backward. For
Spinoza has no feeling of the unique position of the human I.
For him the stream of world processes consists only in a system of natural
necessity, just as for the Christian philosophers it consisted only in a
system of divine acts of will. Here as there the human I is
only a part within this system. For the Christian, man is in the hands of
God; for Spinoza he is in those of natural world happenings. With Spinoza
the Christian God received a different character. A philosopher who has
grown up in a time when natural-scientific insights are blooming cannot
acknowledge a God who directs the world arbitrarily; he can acknowledge
only a primal being who exists because his existence, through itself, is a
necessity, and who guides the course of the world according to the
unchangeable laws that flow from his own absolutely necessary being.
Spinoza has no consciousness of the fact that man takes the image in which
he pictures this necessity from his own content. For this reason Spinoza's
moral ideal also becomes something impersonal, unindividual. In accordance
with his presuppositions he cannot indeed see his ideal to be in the
perfecting of the I, in the enhancement of man's own powers,
but rather in the permeating of the I with the divine world
content, with the highest knowledge of the objective God. To lose oneself
in this God should be the goal of human striving.
The path Descartes took to start with the I and press
forward to world knowledge is extended from now on by the
philosophers of modern times. The Christian theological method, which had no
confidence in the power of the human I as an organ of
knowledge, at least was overcome. One thing was recognized: that the
I itself must find the highest being. The path from there to
the other point to the insight that the content lying within the
I is also the highest being is, to be sure, a long one.
Less thoughtfully than Descartes did the two English philosophers Locke and
Hume approach their investigation of the paths that the human I
takes to arrive at enlightenment about itself and the world. One thing
above all was lacking in both of them: a healthy, free gaze into man's
inner being. Therefore they could also gain no mental picture of the great
difference that exists between knowledge of outer things and knowledge of
the human I. Everything they say relates only to the
acquisition of outer knowledge. Locke entirely overlooks the fact that man,
by enlightening himself about outer things, sheds a light upon them that
streams from his own inner being. He believes therefore that all knowledge
stems from experience. But what is experience? Galileo sees a swinging
church lamp. It leads him to find the laws by which a body swings. He has
experienced two things: firstly, through his senses, outer processes;
secondly, from out of himself, the mental picture of a law that enlightens
him about these processes, that makes them comprehensible. One can now of
course call both of these experience. But then one fails to recognize the
difference, in fact, that exists between the two parts of this cognitive
process. A being that could not draw upon the content of his being could
stand eternally before the swinging church lamp: the sense perception would
never complement itself with a conceptual law. Locke and all who think like
him allow themselves to be deceived by something namely by the way
the content of what is to be known approaches us. It simply rises up, in
fact, upon the horizon of our consciousness. Experience consists in what
thus arises. But the fact must be recognized that the content of the laws
of experience is developed by the I in its encounter with
experience. Two things reveal themselves in Hume. One is that, as already
mentioned, he does not recognize the nature of the I, and
therefore, exactly like Locke, derives the content of the laws from
experience. The other thing is that this content, by being separated from
the I, loses itself completely in indefiniteness, hangs freely
in the air without support or foundation. Hume recognizes that outer
experience communicates only unconnected processes, that it does not at the
same time, along with these processes, provide the laws by which they are
connected. Since Hume knows nothing about the being of the I,
he also cannot derive from it any justification for connecting the
processes. He therefore derives these laws from the vaguest source one
could possibly imagine: from habit. A person sees that a certain process
always follows upon another; the fall of a stone is followed by the
indentation of the ground on which it falls. As a result man habituates
himself to thinking of such processes as connected. All knowledge loses its
significance if one takes one's start from such presuppositions. The
connection between the processes and their laws acquires something of a
purely chance nature.
We see in George Berkeley a person for whom the creative being of the
I has come fully to consciousness. He had a clear picture of
the I's own activity in the coming about of all knowledge. When
I see an object, he said to himself, I am active. I create my perception
for myself. The object of my perception would remain forever beyond my
consciousness, it would not be there for me, if I did not continuously
enliven its dead existence by my activity. I perceive only my enlivening
activity, and not what precedes it objectively as the dead thing. No matter
where I look within the sphere of my consciousness: everywhere I see myself
as the active one, as the creative one. In Berkeley's thinking, the
I acquires a universal life. What do I know of any existence of
things, if I do not picture this existence?
For Berkeley the world consists of creative spirits who out of themselves
form a world. But at this level of knowledge there again appeared, even
with him, the old preconception. He indeed lets the I create
its world for itself, but he does not give it at the same time the power to
create itself out of itself. It must again proffer a mental picture of God. The
creative principle in the I is God, even for Berkeley.
But this philosopher does show us one thing. Whoever really immerses
himself into the essential being of the creative I does not
come back out of it again to an outer being except by forcible means. And
Berkeley does proceed forcibly. Under no compelling necessity he traces the
creativity of the I back to God. Earlier philosophers emptied
the I of its content and through this gained a content for
their God. Berkeley does not do this. Therefore he can do nothing other
than set, beside the creative spirits, yet one more particular
spirit that basically is of exactly the same kind as they and therefore
completely unnecessary, after all.
This is even more striking in the German philosopher Leibniz. He also
recognized the creative activity of the I. He had a very clear
overview of the scope of this activity; he saw that it was inwardly
consistent, that it was founded upon itself. The I therefore
became for him a world in itself, a monad. And everything that has
existence can have it only through the fact that it gives itself a
self-enclosed content. Only monads, i.e., beings creating out of and within
themselves, exist: separate worlds in themselves that do not have to rely
on anything outside themselves. Worlds exist, no world. Each person is a
world, a monad, in himself. If now these worlds are after all in accord
with one another, if they know of each other and think the contents of
their knowledge, then this can only stem from the fact that a predestined
accord (pre-established harmony) exists. The world, in fact, is arranged in
such a way that the one monad creates out of itself something which
corresponds to the activity in the others. To bring about this accord
Leibniz of course again needs the old God. He has recognized that the
I is active, creative, within his inner being, that it gives
its content to itself; the fact that the I itself also brings
this content into relationship with the other content of the world remained
hidden to him. Therefore he did not free himself from the mental picture of
God. Of the two demands that lie in the Goethean statement If
I know my relationship to myself and to the outer world, then I call it
truth Leibniz understood only the one.
This development of European thought manifests a very definite character.
Man must draw out of himself the best that he can know. He in fact
practices self-knowledge. But he always shrinks back again from the thought
of also recognizing that what he has created is in fact
self-created. He feels himself to be too weak to carry the world. Therefore
he saddles someone else with this burden. And the goals he sets for himself
would lose their weight for him if he acknowledged their origin to himself;
therefore he burdens his goals with powers that he believes he takes from
outside. Man glorifies his child but without wanting to acknowledge his own
fatherhood.
In spite of the currents opposing it, human self-knowledge made steady
progress. At the point where this self-knowledge began to threaten man's
belief in the beyond, it met Kant. Insight into the nature of human knowing
had shaken the power of those proofs which people had thought up to support
belief in the beyond. One had gradually gained a picture of real knowledge
and therefore saw through the artificiality and tortured nature of the
seeming ideas that were supposed to give enlightenment about other-worldly
powers. A devout, believing man like Kant could fear that a further
development along this path would lead to the disintegration of all faith.
This must have seemed to his deeply religious sense like a great, impending
misfortune for mankind. Out of his fear of the destruction of religious
mental pictures there arose for him the need to investigate thoroughly the
relationship of human knowing to matters of faith. How is knowing possible
and over what can it extend itself? That is the question Kant posed
himself, with the hope, right from the beginning, of being able to gain
from his answer the firmest possible support for faith.
Kant took up two things from his predecessors. Firstly, that there is a
knowledge in some areas that is indubitable. The truths of pure mathematics
and the general teachings of logic and physics seem to him to be in this
category. Secondly, he based himself upon Hume in his assertion that no
absolutely sure truths can come from experience. Experience teaches only
that we have so and so often observed certain connections; nothing can be
determined by experience as to whether these connections are also necessary
ones. If there are indubitable, necessary truths and if they cannot stem
from experience: then from what do they stem? They must be present in the
human soul before experience. Now it becomes a matter of distinguishing
between the part of knowledge that stems from experience and the part that
cannot be drawn from this source of knowledge. Experience occurs through
the fact that I receive impressions. These impressions are given through
sensations. The content of these sensations cannot be given us in
any other way than through experience. But these sensations, such as light,
color, tone, warmth, hardness, etc., would present only a chaotic tangle if
they were not brought into certain interconnections. In these
interconnections the contents of sensation first constitute the objects
of experience. An object is composed of a definitely ordered group of
the contents of sensation. In Kant's opinion, the human soul accomplishes
the ordering of these contents of sensation into groups. Within the human
soul there are certain principles present by which the manifoldness of
sensations is brought into objective unities. Such principles are space,
time, and certain connections such as cause and effect. The contents of
sensation are given me, but not their spatial interrelationships nor
temporal sequence. Man first brings these to the contents of sensation. One
content of sensation is given and another one also, but not the fact that
one is the cause of the other. The intellect first makes this connection.
Thus there lie within the human soul, ready once and for all, the ways in
which the contents of sensation can be connected. Thus, even though we can
take possession of the contents of sensation only through experience, we
can, nevertheless, before all experience, set up laws as to how
these contents of sensation are to be connected. For, these laws are the
ones given us within our own souls.
We have, therefore, necessary kinds of knowledge. But these do not relate
to a content, but only to ways of connecting contents. In Kant's opinion,
we will therefore never draw knowledge with any content out of the
human soul's own laws. The content must come through experience. But the
otherworldly objects of faith can never become the object of any
experience. Therefore they also cannot be attained through our necessary
knowledge. We have a knowledge from experience and another, necessary,
experience-free knowledge as to how the contents of experience can be
connected. But we have no knowledge that goes beyond experience. The world
of objects surrounding us is as it must be in accordance with the laws of
connection lying ready in our soul. Aside from these laws we do not know
how this world is in-itself. The world to which our knowledge
relates itself is no such in-itselfness but rather is an
appearance for us.
Obvious objections to these Kantian views force themselves upon the
unbiased person. The difference in principle between the particulars (the
contents of sensation) and the way of connecting these particulars does not
consist, with respect to knowledge, in the way we connect things as
Kant assumes it to. Even though one element presents itself to us from
outside and the other comes forth from our inner being, both elements of
knowledge nevertheless form an undivided unity. Only the abstracting
intellect can separate light, warmth, hardness, etc., from spatial order,
causal relationship, etc. In reality, they document, with respect to every
single object, their necessary belonging together. Even the designation of
the one element as content in contrast to the other element as
a merely connecting principle is all warped. In truth, the
knowledge that something is the cause of something else is a knowledge with
just as much content as the knowledge that it is yellow. If the object is
composed of two elements, one of which is given from outside and the other
from within, it follows that, for our knowing activity, elements which
actually belong together are communicated along two different paths. It
does not follow, however, that we are dealing with two things that are
different from each other and that are artificially coupled together.
Only by forcibly separating what belongs together can Kant therefore
support his view. The belonging together of the two elements is most
striking in knowledge of the human I. Here one element does not
come from outside and the other from within; both arise from within. And
here both are not only one content but also one completely
homogeneous content.
What mattered to Kant his heart's wish that guided his thoughts far
more than any unbiased observation of the real factors was to rescue
the teachings relative to the beyond. What knowledge had brought about as
support for these teachings in the course of long ages had decayed. Kant
believed he had now shown that it is anyway not for knowledge to support
such teachings, because knowledge has to rely on experience, and the things
of faith in the beyond cannot become the object of any experience. Kant
believed he had thereby created a free space where knowledge could not get
in his way and disrupt him as he built up there a faith in the beyond. And
he demands, as a support for moral life, that one believe in the things in
the beyond. Out of that realm from which no knowledge comes to us, there
sounds the despotic voice of the categorical imperative which demands of us
that we do the good. And in order to establish a moral realm we would in
fact need all that about which knowledge can tell us nothing. Kant believed
he had achieved what he wanted: I therefore had to set knowledge
aside in order to make room for faith.
The great philosopher in the development of Western thought who set out in
direct pursuit of a knowledge of human self-awareness is Johann Gottlieb
Fichte. It is characteristic of him that he approaches this knowledge
without any presuppositions, with complete lack of bias. He has the
clear, sharp awareness of the fact that nowhere in the world is a being to
be found from which the I could be derived. It can therefore be
derived only from itself. Nowhere is a power to be found from which the
existence of the I flows. Everything the I needs,
it can acquire only out of itself. Not only does it gain enlightenment
about its own being through self-observation; it first posits this being
into itself through an absolute, unconditional act. The I
posits itself, and it is by virtue of this mere positing of itself;
and conversely: The I is, and posits its existence, by virtue
of its mere existence. It is at the same time the one acting and the
product of its action; the active one and what is brought forth by the
activity; action and deed are one and the same; and therefore the I
am is the expression of an active deed. Completely undisturbed
by the fact that earlier philosophers have transferred the entity he is
describing outside man, Fichte looks at the I naively.
Therefore the I naturally becomes for him the highest being.
That whose existence (being) merely consists in the fact that it
posits itself as existing is the I as absolute subject.
In the way that it posits itself, it is, and in the way that it is, it
posits itself: and the I exists accordingly for the
I, simply and necessarily. What does not exist for itself is no
I ... One certainly hears the question raised: What was I
anyway, before I came to self-awareness? The obvious answer to that is: I
was not at all; for I was not I... To posit oneself and to be are, for the
I, completely the same. The complete, bright clarity
about one's own I, the unreserved illumination of one's
personal, human entity, becomes thereby the starting point of human
thinking. The result of this must be that man, starting here, sets out to
conquer the world. The second of the Goethean demands mentioned above,
knowledge of my relationship to the world, follows upon the first
knowledge of the relationship that the I has to itself. This
philosophy, built upon self-knowledge, will speak about both these
relationships, and not about the derivation of the world from some primal
being. One could now ask: Is man then supposed to set his own being in
place of the primal being into which he transferred the world origins? Can
man then actually make himself the starting point of the world? With
respect to this it must be emphasized that this question as to the
world origins stems from a lower sphere. In the sequence of
the processes given us by reality, we seek the causes for the events, and
then seek still other causes for the causes, and soon. We are now
stretching the concept of causation. We are seeking a final cause for the
whole world. And in this way the concept of the first, absolute primal
being, necessary in itself, fuses for us with the idea of the world cause.
But that is a mere conceptual construction. When man sets up such
conceptual constructions, they do not necessarily have any justification.
The concept of a flying dragon also has none. Fichte takes his start from
the I as the primal being, and arrives at ideas that present
the relationship of this primal being to the rest of the world in an
unbiased way, but not under the guise of cause and effect. Starting from
the I, Fichte now seeks to gain ideas for grasping the rest of
the world. Whoever does not want to deceive himself about the nature of
what one can call cognition or knowledge can proceed in no other way.
Everything that man can say about the being of things is derived from the
experiences of his inner being. The human being never realizes just
how anthropomorphic he is. (Goethe) In the » explanation of the
simplest phenomena, in the propulsion of one body by another, for example,
there lies an anthropomorphism. The conclusion that the one body propels
the other is already anthropomorphic. For, if one wants to go beyond what
the senses tell us about the occurrence, one must transfer onto it the
experience our body has when it sets a body in the outer world into motion.
We transfer our experience of propelling something onto the
occurrence in the outer world, and also speak there of propulsion when we
roll one ball and as a result see a second ball go rolling. For we can
observe only the movements of the two balls, and then in addition
think the propulsion in the sense of our own experiences. All physical
explanations are anthropomorphisms, attributing human characteristics to
nature. But of course it does not follow from this what has so often been
concluded from this: that these explanations have no objective significance
for the things. A part of the objective content lying within the things, in
fact, first appears when we shed that light upon it which we perceive in
our own inner being.
Whoever, in Fichte's sense, bases the being of the I entirely
upon itself can also find the sources of moral action only within the
I alone. The I cannot seek harmony with some other
being, but only with itself. It does not allow its destiny to be
prescribed, but rather gives any such destiny to itself. Act according to
the basic principle that you can regard your actions as the most worthwhile
possible. That is about how one would have to express the highest principle
of Fichte's moral teachings. The essential character of the
I, in which it distinguishes itself from everything that is
outside it, consists in a tendency toward self-activity for the sake of
self-activity; and it is this tendency that is thought when the
I, in and for itself, without any relationship to something
outside it, is thought. An action therefore stands on an ever higher
level of moral value, the more purely it flows from the self-activity and
self-determination of the I.
In his later life Fichte changed his self-reliant, absolute I
back into an external God again; he therefore sacrificed true
self-knowledge, toward which he had taken so many important steps, to that
self-renunciation which stems from human weakness. The last books of Fichte
are therefore of no significance for the progress of this self-knowledge.
The philosophical writings of Schiller, however, are important for this
progress. Whereas Fichte expressed the self-reliant independence of the
I as a general philosophical truth, Schiller was more concerned
with answering the question as to how the particular I of the
simple human individuality could live out this self-activity in the best
way within itself.
Kant had expressly demanded the suppression of pleasure as a pre-condition
for moral activity. Man should not carry out what brings him satisfaction;
but rather what the categorical imperative demands of him. According to his
view an action is all the more moral the more it is accomplished with the
quelling of all feeling of pleasure, out of mere heed to strict moral law.
For Schiller this diminishes human worth. Is man in his desire for pleasure
really such a low being that he must first extinguish this base nature of
his in order to be virtuous? Schiller criticizes any such degradation of
man in the satirical epigram (Xenie):
Gladly I serve all my friends, but do so alas out of liking;
Therefore it rankles me often that I'm not a virtuous man.
No, says Schiller, human instincts are capable of such ennobling that it is
a pleasure to do the good. The strict ought to transforms
itself in the ennobled man into a free wanting to. And someone
who with pleasure accomplishes what is moral stands higher on the moral
world scale than someone who must first do violence to his own being in
order to obey the categorical imperative.
Schiller elaborated this view of his in his Letters on the Aesthetic
Education of the Human Race. There hovers before him the picture of
a free individuality who can calmly give himself over to his
egoistical drives because these drives, out of themselves, want what can be
accomplished by the unfree, ignoble personality only when it suppresses its
own needs. The human being, as Schiller expressed it, can be unfree in two
respects: firstly, if he is able to follow only his blind, lower instincts.
Then he acts out of necessity. His drives compel him; he is not free.
Secondly, however, that person also acts unfreely who follows only his
reason. For, reason sets up principles of behavior according to logical
rules. A person who merely follows reason acts unfreely because he
subjugates himself to logical necessity. Only that person acts freely out
of himself for whom what is reasonable has united so deeply with his
individuality , has gone over so fully into his flesh and blood, that he
carries out with the greatest pleasure what someone standing morally less
high can accomplish only through the most extreme self-renunciation and the
strongest compulsion.
Friedrich Joseph Schelling wanted to extend the path Fichte had taken.
Schelling took his start from the unbiased knowledge of the I
that his predecessor had achieved. The I was recognized as a
being that draws its existence out of itself. The next task was to bring
nature into a relationship with this self-reliant I. It is
clear: If the I is not to transfer the actual higher being of
things into the outer world again, then it must be shown that the
I, out of itself, also creates what we call the laws of nature.
The structure of nature must therefore be the material system, outside in
space, of what the I, within its inner being, creates in a
spiritual way. Nature must be visible spirit, and spirit must be
invisible nature. Here, therefore, in the absolute identity of the spirit
in us and of nature outside of us, must the problem be solved
as to how a nature outside of us is possible. The outer world
lies open before us, in order for us to find in it again the history of our
spirit.
Schelling, therefore, sharply illuminates the process that the philosophers
have interpreted wrongly for so long. He shows that out of one being
the clarifying light must fall upon all the processes of the world; that
the I can recognize one being in all happenings; but he
no longer sets forth this being as something lying outside the
I; he sees it within the I. The I
finally feels itself to be strong enough to enliven the content of world
phenomena from out of itself. The way in which Schelling presented nature
in detail as a material development out of the I does not need
to be discussed here. The important thing in this essay is to show in what
way the I has reconquered for itself the sphere of influence
which, in the course of the development of Western thought, it had ceded to
an entity that it had itself created. For this reason Schelling's other
writings also do not need to be considered in this context. At best they
add only details to the question we are examining. Exactly like Fichte,
Schelling abandons clear self-knowledge again, and seeks then to trace the
things flowing from the self back to other beings. The later teachings of
both thinkers are reversions to views which they had completely overcome in
an earlier period of life.
The philosophy of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel is a further bold attempt
to explain the world on the basis of a content lying within the
I. Hegel sought, comprehensively and thoroughly, to investigate
and present the whole content of what Fichte, in incomparable words to be
sure, had characterized: the being of the human I. For Hegel
also regards this being as the actual primal thing, as the
in-itselfness of things. But Hegel does something peculiar. He
divests the I of everything individual, personal. In spite of
the fact that it is a genuine true I which Hegel takes as a
basis for world phenomena, this I seems impersonal,
unindividual, far from an intimate, familiar I, almost like a
god. In just such an unapproachable, strictly abstract form does Hegel, in
his logic, expound upon the content of the in-itselfness of the world. The
most personal thinking is presented here in the most impersonal way.
According to Hegel, nature is nothing other than the content of the
I that has been spread out in space and time. Nature is this
ideal content in a different state. Nature is spirit estranged from
itself. Within the individual human spirit Hegel's stance toward the
impersonal I is personal. Within self-consciousness, the being
of the I is not an in-itself, it is also
for-itself; the human spirit discovers that the highest world
content is his own content.
Because Hegel seeks to grasp the being of the I at first
impersonally, he also does not designate it as I, but rather as
idea. But Hegel's idea is nothing other than the content of the
human I freed of all personal character. This abstracting of
everything personal manifests most strongly in Hegel's views about the
spiritual life, the moral life. It is not the single, personal, individual
I of man that can decide its own destiny, but rather it is the
great, objective, impersonal world I, which is abstracted from
man's individual I; it is the general world reason, the world
idea. The individual I must submit to this abstraction drawn
from its own being. The world idea has instilled the objective spirit into
man's legal, state, and moral institutions, into the historical process.
Relative to this objective spirit, the individual is inferior,
coincidental. Hegel never tires of emphasizing again and again that the
chance, individual I must incorporate itself into the general
order, into the historical course of spiritual evolution. It is the
despotism of the spirit over the bearer of this spirit that Hegel demands.
It is a strange last remnant of the old belief in God and in the beyond
that still appears here in Hegel. All the attributes with which the human
I, turned into an outer ruler of the world, was once endowed
have been dropped, and only the attribute of logical generality remains.
The Hegelian world idea is the human I, and Hegel's teachings
recognize this expressly, for at the pinnacle of culture man arrives at the
point, according to this teaching, of feeling his full identity with this
world I. In art, religion, and philosophy man seeks to
incorporate into his particular existence what is most general; the
individual spirit permeates itself with the general world reason. Hegel
portrays the course of world history in the following way: If we look
at the destiny of world-historical individuals, they have had the good
fortune to be the managing directors of a purpose that was one stage in the
progress of the general spirit. One can call it a trick of world reason for
it to use these human tools; for it allows them to carry out their own
purposes with all the fury of their passion, and yet remains not only
unharmed itself but even brings forth itself. The particular is usually too
insignificant compared to the general: individuals are sacrificed and
abandoned. World history thus presents itself as the battle of individuals,
and in the field of this particularization, things take their completely
natural course. Just as in animal nature the preservation of life is the
purpose and instinct of the individual creature, and just as here, after
all, reason, the general, predominates and the individuals fall, thus so do
things in the spiritual world also take their course. The passions mutually
destroy each other; only reason is awake, pursues its purpose, and
prevails. But for Hegel, the highest level of development of human
culture is also not presented in this sacrificing of the particular
individuals to the good of general world reason, but rather in the complete
interpenetration of the two. In art, religion, and philosophy, the
individual works in such a way that his work is at the same time a content
of the general world reason. With Hegel, through the factor of generality
that he laid into the world I, the subordination of the
separate human I to this world I still remained.
Ludwig Feuerbach sought to put an end to this subordination by stating in
powerful terms how man transfers the being of his I into the
outer world in order then to place himself over against it, acknowledging,
obeying, revering it as though it were a God. God is the revealed
inner being, the expressed self, of man; religion is the festive disclosing
of the hidden treasures of man, the confessing of his innermost thoughts,
the public declaration of his declarations of love. But even
Feuerbach has not yet cleansed the idea of this I of the factor
of generality. For him the general human I is something higher
than the individual, single I. And even though as a thinker he
does not, like Hegel, objectify this general I into a cosmic
being existing in itself, still, in the moral context, over against the
single human being, he does set up the general concept of a generic
man, and demands that the individual should raise himself above the
limitations of his individuality.
Max Stirner, in his book The Individual and What Is His (Der Einzige und
sein Eigentum), published in 1844, demanded of the I in a
radical way that it finally recognize that all the beings it has set above
itself in the course of time were cut by it from its own body and set up in
the outer world as idols. Every god, every general world reason, is an
image of the I and has no characteristics different from the
human I. And even the concept of the general I was
extracted from the completely individual I of every single
person.
Stirner calls upon man to throw off everything general about himself and to
acknowledge to himself that he is an individual. You are
indeed more than a Jew, more than a Christian, etc., but you are also more
than a man. Those are all ideas; you, however, are in the flesh. Do you
really believe, therefore, that you can ever become man as
such? / am man! I do not first have to produce man
in myself, because he already belongs to me as all my characteristics
do. Only I am not an abstraction alone; I am the all in
all;... I am no mere thought, but I am at the same time full of thoughts, a
thought-world. Hegel condemns what is one's own, what is mine ...
Absolute thinking is that thinking which forgets that it is
my thinking, that I think, and that thinking exists only
through me. As I, however, I again swallow what is mine, am
master over it; it is only my opinion that I can change at every
moment, i.e., that I can destroy, that I can take back into myself and can
devour. The thought is only my own when I can indeed subjugate
it, but it can never subjugate me, never fanaticize me and make me the tool
of its realization. All the beings placed over the I
finally shatter upon the knowledge that they have only been brought into
the world by the I. The beginning of my thinking, namely,
is not a thought, but rather I, and therefore I am also its goal, just as
its whole course is then only the course of my self-enjoyment.
In Stirner's sense, one should not want to define the individual
I by a thought, by an idea. For, ideas are something general;
and through any such definition, the individual at least logically
would thus be subordinated at once to something general. One can
define everything else in the world by ideas, but we must experience
our own I as something individual within us. Everything that is
expressed about the individual in thoughts cannot take up his content into
itself; it can only point to it. One says: Look into yourself; there
is something for which any concept, any idea, is too poor to encompass in
all its incarnate wealth, something that brings forth the ideas out of
itself, but that itself has an inexhaustible spring within itself whose
content is infinitely more extensive than everything this something brings
forth. Stirner's response is: The individual is a word and with a
word one would after all have to be able to think something; a word
would after all have to have a thought-content. But the individual is a
word without thought; it has no thought-content. But what is its
content then if not thought? Its content is one that cannot be there a
second time and that consequently can also not be expressed, for if
it could be expressed, really and entirely expressed, then it would be
there a second time, would be there in the expression... only
when nothing of you is spoken out and you are only named, are you
recognized as you. As long as something of you is spoken out, you will be
recognized only as this something (man, spirit, Christian, etc.). The
individual I is therefore that which is everything it is only
through itself, which draws the content of its existence out of itself and
continuously expands this content from out of itself.
This individual I can acknowledge no ethical obligation that it
does not lay upon itself. Whether what I think and do is Christian,
what do I care? Whether it is human, liberal, humane, or inhuman,
unliberal, inhumane, I don't ask about that. If it only aims at what I
want, if I satisfy only myself in it, then call it whatever you like: it's
all the same to me ... Perhaps, in the very next moment I will
turn against my previous thought; I also might very well change my behavior
suddenly; but not because it does not correspond to what is Christian, not
because it goes against eternal human rights, not because it hits the idea
of mankind, humanity, humaneness in the face, but rather because I
am no longer involved, because I no longer enjoy it fully, because I doubt
my earlier thought, or I am no longer happy with my recent behavior.
The way Stirner speaks about love from this point of view is
characteristic. I also love people, not merely some of them but
everyone. But I love them with the consciousness of egoism; I love them
because love makes me happy; I love because loving is natural for me,
because I like it. I know no commandment of love ... To
this sovereign individual, all state, social, and church organizations are
fetters. For, all organizations presuppose that the individual must be like
this or like that so that it can fit into the community. But the individual
will not let it be determined for him by the community how he should be. He
wants to make himself into this or that. J. H. Mackay, in his book
Max Stirner, His Life and Work, has expressed what matters to
Stirner: The annihilation, in the first place, of those foreign
powers which seek in the most varied ways to suppress and destroy the
I; and in the second place, the presentation of the
relationships of our intercourse with each other, how they result from the
conflict and harmony of our interests. The individual cannot fulfill
himself in an organized community, but only in free intercourse or
association. He acknowledges no societal structure set over the individual
as a power. In him everything occurs through the individual. There
is nothing fixed within him. What occurs is always to be traced back to the
will of the individual. No one and nothing represents a universal will.
Stirner does not want society to care for the individual, to protect his
rights, to foster his well-being, and so on. When the organization is taken
away from people, then their intercourse regulates itself on its own.
I would rather have to rely on people's self-interest than on their
service of love, their compassion, their pity, etc.
Self-interest demands reciprocity (as you are to me, thus I am to you),
does nothing for nothing, and lets itself be won and
bought. Let human intercourse have its full freedom and it will
unrestrictedly create that reciprocity which you could set up through a
community after all, only in a restricted way. Neither a natural nor
a spiritual tie holds a society (Verein) together, and it is no
natural nor spiritual association (Bund). It is not blood nor a
belief (i.e., spirit) that brings it about. In a natural association
such as a family, a tribe, a nation; yes, even mankind individuals
have value only as specimens of a species or genus; in a spiritual
association such as a community or church the individual is
significant only as a part of the common spirit; in both cases, what
you are as an individual must be suppressed. Only in a society can you
assert yourself as an individual, because the society does not possess you,
but rather you possess it or use it.
The path by which Stirner arrived at his view of the individual can be
designated as a universal critique of all general powers that suppress the
I. The churches, the political systems (political liberalism,
social liberalism, humanistic liberalism), the philosophies they
have all set such general powers over the individual. Political
liberalism establishes the good citizen; social liberalism
establishes the worker who is like all the others in what they own in
common; humanistic liberalism establishes the human being as human
being. As he destroys all these powers, Stirner sets up in their
ruins the sovereignty of the individual. What all is not supposed to
be my cause! Above all the good cause, then God's cause, the cause of
mankind, of truth, of freedom, of humaneness, of justice; furthermore the
cause of my folk, of my prince, of my fatherland; finally, of course, the
cause of the spirit and a thousand other causes. Only my cause is
never supposed to be my cause. Let us look then at how those people
handle their cause for whose cause we are supposed to work, to
devote ourselves, and to wax enthusiastic. You know how to proclaim many
basic things about God, and for thousands of years have investigated
the depths of the Divinity and looked into His heart, so that
you are very well able to tell us how God Himself conducts the cause
of God that we are called to serve. And you also do not keep the
Lord's conduct secret. What is His cause then? Has He, as is expected of
us, made a foreign cause, the cause of truth and love, into His own?
Such lack of understanding enrages you and you teach us that God's cause
is, to be sure, the cause of truth and love, but that this cause
cannot be called foreign to Him because God is Himself, in fact, truth and
love; you are enraged by the assumption that God could be like us poor
worms in promoting a foreign cause as His own. God is supposed to
take on the cause of truth when He is not Himself the truth? He takes
care only of His cause, but because He is the all in all, everything
is also His cause; we, however, we are not the all in all, and our
cause is small and contemptible indeed; therefore we must serve a
higher cause. Now, it is clear that God concerns Himself only
with what is His, occupies Himself only with Himself, thinks only about
Himself, and has His eye on Himself; woe to anything that is not well
pleasing to Him. He serves nothing higher and satisfies only Himself. His
cause is a purely egoistical cause. How do matters stand with mankind,
whose cause we are supposed to make into our own? Is its cause perhaps that
of another, and does mankind serve a higher cause? No, mankind looks only
at itself, mankind wants to help only mankind, mankind is itself its cause.
In order to develop itself, mankind lets peoples and individuals torment
themselves in its service, and when they have accomplished what mankind
needs, then, out of gratitude, they are thrown by it onto the manure pile
of history. Is the cause of mankind not a purely egoistical cause?
Out of this kind of a critique of everything that man is supposed to make
into his cause, there results for Stirner that God and mankind have
founded their cause on nothing but themselves. I will then likewise found
my cause upon myself, I, who like God am nothing from anything else,
I, who am my all, I who am the single one.
That is Stirner's path. One can also take another path to arrive at the
nature of the I. One can observe the I in its
cognitive activity. Direct your gaze upon a process of knowledge. Through a
thinking contemplation of processes, the I seeks to become
conscious of what actually underlies these processes. What does one want to
achieve by this thinking contemplation? To answer this question we must
observe: What would we possess of these processes without this
contemplation, and what do we obtain through this contemplation? I must
limit myself here to a meager sketch of these fundamental questions about
world views, and can point only to the broader expositions in my books
Truth and Science
(Wahrheit und Wissenschaft)
and
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
(Die Philosophie der Freiheit).
Look at any process you please. I throw a stone in a horizontal direction.
It moves in a curved line and falls to earth after a time. I see the stone
at successive moments in different places, after it has first cost me a
certain amount of effort to throw it. Through my thinking contemplation I
gain the following. During its motion the stone is under the influence of
several factors. If it were only under the influence of the propulsion I
gave it in throwing it, it would go on forever, in a straight line, in
fact, without changing its velocity. But now the earth exerts an influence
upon it which one calls gravity. If, without propelling it away from me, I
had simply let go of it, it would have fallen straight to the ground, and
in doing so its velocity would have increased continuously. Out of the
reciprocal workings of these two influences there arises what actually
happens. Those are all thought-considerations that I bring to what would
offer itself to me without any thinking contemplation.
In this way we have in every cognitive process an element that would
present itself to us even without any thinking contemplation, and another
element that we can gain only through such thinking contemplation.
When we have then gained both elements, it is clear to us that they belong
together. A process runs its course in accordance with the laws that I gain
about it through my thinking. The fact that for me the two elements are
separated and are joined together by my cognition is my affair. The process
does not bother about this separation and joining. From this it follows,
however, that the activity of knowing is altogether my affair. Something
that I bring about solely for my own sake.
Yet another factor enters in here now. The things and processes would
never, out of themselves, give me what I gain about them through my
thinking contemplation. Out of themselves they give me, in fact, what I
possess without that contemplation. It has already been stated in this
essay that I take out of myself what I see in the things as their deepest
being. The thoughts I make for myself about the things, these I produce out
of my own inner being. They nevertheless belong to the things, as has been
shown. The essential being of the things does not therefore come to me from
them, but rather from me. My content is their essential being. I would
never come to ask about the essential being of the things at all if I did
not find present within me something I designate as this essential being of
the things, designate as what belongs to them, but designate as what they
do not give me out of themselves, but rather what I can take only out of
myself.
Within the cognitive process I receive the essential being of the things
from out of myself. I therefore have the essential being of the world
within myself. Consequently I also have my own essential being within
myself. With other things two factors appear to me: a process without its
essential being and the essential being through me. With myself, process
and essential being are identical. I draw forth the essential being of all
the rest of the world out of myself, and I also draw forth my own essential
being from myself.
Now my action is a part of the general world happening. It therefore has
its essential being as much within me as all other happenings. To seek the
laws of human action means, therefore, to draw them forth out of the
content of the I. Just as the believer in God traces the laws
of his actions back to the will of his God, so the person who has attained
the insight that the essential being of all things lies within the
I can also find the laws of his action only within the
I. If the I has really penetrated into the
essential nature of its action, it then feels itself to be the ruler of
this action. As long as we believe in a world-being foreign to us, the laws
of our action also stand over against us as foreign. They rule us; what we
accomplish stands under the compulsion they exercise over us. If they are
transformed from such foreign beings into our I's primally own
doing, then this compulsion ceases. That which compels has become our own
being. The lawfulness no longer rules over us, but rather rules within us
over the happenings that issue from our I. To bring about a
process by virtue of a lawfulness standing outside the doer is an act of
inner unfreedom; to do so out of the doer himself is an act of inner
freedom. To give oneself the laws of one's actions out of oneself means to
act as a free individual. The consideration of the cognitive process shows
the human being that he can find the laws of his action only within
himself.
To comprehend the I in thinking means to create the basis for
founding everything that comes from the I also upon the
I alone. The I that understands itself can make
itself dependent upon nothing other than itself. And it can be answerable
to no one but itself. After these expositions it seems almost superfluous
to say that with this I only the incarnate real I
of the individual person is meant and not any general I
abstracted from it. For any such general I can indeed be gained
from the real I only by abstraction. It is thus dependent upon
the real individual. (Benj. R. Tucker and J. H. Mackay also advocate the
same direction in thought and view of life out of which my two
above-mentioned books have arisen. See Tucker's Instead of a Book
and Mackay's The Anarchists.
In the eighteenth century and in the greater part of the nineteenth, man's
thinking made every effort to win for the I its place in the
universe. Two thinkers who are already keeping aloof from this direction
are Arthur Schopenhauer and Eduard von Hartmann, who is still vigorously
working among us. Neither any longer transfers the full being of our
I, which we find present in our consciousness, as primal being
into the outer world. Schopenhauer regarded one part of this I,
the will, as the essential being of the world, and Hartmann sees the
unconscious to be this being. Common to both of them is this
striving to subordinate the I to their assumed general
world-being. On the other hand, as the last of the strict individualists,
Friedrich Nietzsche, taking his start from Schopenhauer, did arrive at
views that definitely lead to the path of absolute appreciation of the
individual I. In his opinion, genuine culture consists in
fostering the individual in such a way that he has the strength out of
himself to develop everything lying within him. Up until now it was only an
accident if an individual was able to develop himself fully out of himself.
This more valuable type has already been there often enough: but as a
happy chance, as an exception, never as willed. Rather he was
precisely the one feared the most; formerly he was almost the
fearful thing; and out of fear, the opposite type was willed, bred,
attained: the domestic animal, the herd animal, the sick animal man,
the Christian ... Nietzsche transfigured poetically, as his ideal,
his type of man in his Zarathustra. He calls him the Superman
(Übermensch). He is man freed from all norms, who no longer wants to be
the mere image of God, a being in whom God is well pleased, a good citizen,
and so on, but rather who wants to be himself and nothing more the
pure and absolute egoist.
Footnotes:
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Throughout this essay, ideal usually means in the form
of ideas. Ed.
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Second Chapter of Representative Men, Plato; or the
Philosopher
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