X
THE IDEA OF FREEDOM
HE concept
“tree” is conditioned for our knowledge by the percept
“tree.” There is only one determinate concept which I can
select from the general system of concepts and apply to a given
percept. The connection of concept and percept is mediately and
objectively determined by thought in conformity with the percept. The
connection between a percept and its concept is recognized after the
act of perception, but the relevance of the one to the other is
determined by the character of each.
In
willing the situation is different. The percept is here the content
of my existence as an individual, whereas the concept is the
universal element in me. What is brought into ideal relation to the
external world by means of the concept, is an immediate experience of
my own, a percept of my Self. More precisely, it is a percept of my
Self as active, as producing effects on the external world. In
apprehending my own acts of will, I connect a concept with a
corresponding percept, viz., with the particular volition. In other
words, by an act of thought I link up my individual faculty (my will)
with the universal world-process. The content of a concept
corresponding to an external percept appearing within the field of my
experience, is given through intuition. Intuition is the source for
the content of my whole conceptual system. The percept shows me only
which concept I have to apply, in any given instance, out of the
aggregate of my intuitions. The content of a concept is, indeed,
conditioned by the percept, but it is not produced by it. On the
contrary, it is intuitively given and connected with the percept by
an act of thought. The same is true of the conceptual content of an
act of will which is just as little capable of being deduced from
this act. It is got by intuition.
If now
the conceptual intuition (ideal content) of my act of will occurs
before the corresponding percept, then the content of what I do is
determined by my ideas. The reason why I select from the number of
possible intuitions just this special one, cannot be sought in an
object of perception, but is to be found rather in the purely ideal
interdependence of the members of my system of concepts. In other
words, the determining factors for my will are to be found, not in
the perceptual, but only in the conceptual world. My will is
determined by my idea.
The
conceptual system which corresponds to the external world is
conditioned by this external world. We must determine from the
percept itself what concept corresponds to it; and how, in turn, this
concept will fit in with the rest of my system of ideas, depends on
its intuitive content. The percept thus conditions directly its
concept and, thereby, indirectly also its place in the conceptual
system of my world. But the ideal content of an act of will, which is
drawn from the conceptual system and which precedes the act of will,
is determined only by the conceptual system itself.
An act of
will which depends on nothing but this ideal content must itself be
regarded as ideal, that is, as determined by an idea. This does not
imply, of course, that all acts of will are determined only by ideas.
All factors which determine the human individual have an influence on
his will.
In a
particular act of will we must distinguish two factors: the motive,
and the spring of action. The motive is the conceptual factor, the
spring of action is the perceptual factor in will. The conceptual
factor, or motive, is the momentary determining cause of an act of
will, the spring of action is the permanent determining factor in the
individual. The motive of an act of will can be only a pure concept,
or else a concept with a definite relation to perception,
i.e., an idea. Universal and individual concepts (ideas)
become motives of will by influencing the human individual and
determining him to action in a particular direction. One and the same
concept, however, or one and the same idea, influences different
individuals differently. They determine different men to different
actions. An act of will is, therefore, not merely the outcome of a
concept or an idea, but also of the individual make-up of human
beings. This individual make-up we will call, following Edward van
Hartmann, the “characterological disposition.” The manner
in which concept and idea act on the characterological disposition of
a man gives to his life a definite moral or ethical stamp.
The
characterological disposition consists of the more or less permanent
content of the individual's life, that is, of his habitual ideas and
feelings. Whether an idea which enters my mind at this moment
stimulates me to an act of will or not, depends on its relation to my
other ideal contents, and also to my peculiar modes of feeling. My
ideal content, in turn, is conditioned by the sum total of those
concepts which have, in the course of my individual life, come in
contact with percepts, that is, have become ideas. This, again,
depends on my greater or lesser capacity for intuition, and on the
range of my perception, that is, on the subjective and objective
factors of my experiences, on the structure of my mind and on my
environment. My affective life more especially determines my
characterological disposition. Whether I shall make a certain idea or
concept the motive for action will depend on whether it gives me
pleasure or pain.
These are
the factors which we have to consider in an act of will. The
immediately present idea or concept, which becomes the motive,
determines the end or the purpose of my will; my characterological
disposition determines me to direct my activity towards this end. The
idea of taking a walk in the next half-hour determines the end of my
action. But this idea is raised to the level of a motive only if it
meets with a suitable characterological disposition, that is, if
during my past life I have formed the ideas of the wholesomeness of
walking and the value of health; and further, if the idea of walking
is accompanied by a feeling of pleasure.
We must,
therefore, distinguish (1) the possible subjective dispositions which
are likely to turn given ideas and concepts into motives, and (2) the
possible ideas and concepts which are capable of so influencing my
characterological disposition that an act of will results. The former
are for morality the springs of action, the latter its ends.
The
springs of action in the moral life can be discovered by analyzing
the elements of which individual life is composed.
The first
level of individual life is that of perception, more particularly
sense-perception. This is the stage of our individual lives in which
a percept translates itself into will immediately, without the
intervention of either a feeling or a concept. The spring of action
here involved may be called simply instinct. Our lower, purely
animal, needs (hunger, sexual intercourse, etc.) find their
satisfaction in this way. The main characteristic of instinctive life
is the immediacy with which the percept starts off the act of will.
This kind of determination of the will, which belongs originally only
to the life of the lower senses, may however become extended also to
the percepts of the higher senses. We may react to the percept of a
certain event in the external world without reflecting on what we do,
and without any special feeling connecting itself with the percept.
We have examples of this especially in our ordinary conventional
intercourse with men. The spring of this kind of action is called
tact or moral good taste. The more often such immediate reactions to
a percept occur, the more the agent will prove himself able to act
purely under the guidance of tact; that is, tact becomes his
characterological disposition.
The
second level of human life is feeling. Definite feelings accompany
the percepts of the external world. These feelings may become springs
of action. When I see a hungry man, my pity for him may become the
spring of my action. Such feelings, for example, are modesty, pride,
sense of honour, humility, remorse, pity, revenge, gratitude, piety,
loyalty, love, and duty.
[A complete catalogue of the principles of morality
(from the point of view of Metaphysical Realism) may be found in
Edouard von Hartmann's
Phanomenologie des sittlichen Bewusstseins.
]
The third and last level of life is to have thoughts
and ideas. An idea or a concept may become the motive of an action
through mere reflection. Ideas become motives because, in the course
of my life, I regularly connect certain aims of my will with percepts
which recur again and again in a more or less modified form. Hence it
is, that with men who are not wholly without experience, the
occurrence of certain percepts is always accompanied also by the
consciousness of ideas of actions, which they have themselves carried
out in similar cases or which they have seen others carry out. These
ideas float before their minds as determining models in all
subsequent decisions; they become parts of their characterological
disposition. We may give the name of practical experience to the
spring of action just described. Practical experience merges
gradually into purely tactful behaviour. That happens, when definite
typical pictures of actions have become so closely connected in our
minds with ideas of certain situations in life, that, in any given
instance, we omit all deliberation based on experience, and pass
immediately from the percept to the action.
The highest level of individual life is that of
conceptual thought without reference to any definite perceptual
content. We determine the content of a concept through pure intuition
on the basis of an ideal system. Such a concept contains, at first,
no reference to any definite percepts. When an act of will comes
about under the influence of a concept which refers to a
percept, i.e., under the influence of an idea, then it
is the percept which determines our action indirectly by way of the
concept. But when we act under the influence of pure intuitions, the
spring of our action is pure thought. As it is the custom in
philosophy to call pure thought “reason,” we may perhaps
be justified in giving the name of practical reason to the spring of
action characteristic of this level of life. The clearest account of
this spring of action has been given by Kreyenbuhl
(Philosophische Monatshefte,
vol. xviii, No. 3).
In my opinion his article on this subject is one of the most
important contributions to present-day philosophy, more especially to
Ethics. Kreyenbuhl calls the spring of action, of which we are
treating, the practical a priori, i.e., a spring of
action issuing immediately from my intuition.
It is
clear that such a spring of action can no longer be counted in the
strictest sense as part of the characterological disposition. For
what is here effective in me as a spring of action is no longer
something purely individual, but the ideal, and hence universal,
content of my intuition. As soon as I regard the content as the valid
basis and starting-point of an action, I pass over into willing,
irrespective of whether the concept was already in my mind
beforehand, or whether it only occurs to me immediately before the
action, that is, irrespective of whether it was present in the form
of a disposition in me or not.
A real
act of will results only when a present impulse to action, in the
form of a concept or idea, acts on the characterological disposition.
Such an impulse thereupon becomes the motive of the will.
The
motives of moral conduct are ideas and concepts. There are Moralists
who see in feeling also a motive of morality; they assert, e.g., that
the end of moral conduct is to secure the greatest possible quantity
of pleasure for the agent. Pleasure itself, however, can never be a
motive; at best only the idea of pleasure can act as motive. The idea
of a future pleasure, but not the feeling itself, can act on my
characterological disposition. For the feeling does not yet exist in
the moment of action; on the contrary, it has first to be produced by
the action.
The idea
of one's own or another's well-being is, however, rightly regarded as
a motive of the will. The principle of producing the greatest
quantity of pleasure for oneself through one's action, that is, to
attain individual happiness, is called Egoism. The attainment of this
individual happiness is sought either by thinking ruthlessly only of
one's own good, and striving to attain it even at the cost of the
happiness of other individuals (Pure Egoism), or by promoting the
good of others, either because one anticipates indirectly a
favourable influence on one's own happiness through the happiness of
others, or because one fears to endanger one's own interest by
injuring others (Morality of Prudence). The special content of the
egoistical principle of morality will depend on the ideas which we
form of what constitutes our own, or others' good. A man will
determine the content of his egoistical striving in accordance with
what he regards as one of life's good things (luxury, hope of
happiness, deliverance from different evils, etc.).
Further,
the purely conceptual content of an action is to be regarded as yet
another kind of motive. This content has no reference, like the idea
of one's own pleasure, solely to the particular action, but to the
deduction of an action from a system of moral principles. These moral
principles, in the form of abstract concepts, may guide the
individual's moral life without his worrying himself about the origin
of his concepts. In that case, we feel merely the moral necessity of
submitting to a moral concept, which, in the form of law, controls
our actions. The justification of this necessity we leave to those
who demand from us moral subjection, that is, to those whose moral
authority over us we acknowledge (the head of the family, the state,
social custom, the authority of the church, divine revelation). We
meet with a special kind of these moral principles when the law is
not proclaimed to us by an external authority, but comes from our own
selves (moral autonomy). In this case we believe that we hear the
voice, to which we have to submit ourselves, in our own souls. The
name for this voice is conscience.
It is a
great moral advance when a man no longer takes as the motive of his
action the commands of an external or internal authority, but tries
to understand the reason why a given maxim of action ought to be
effective as a motive in him. This is the advance from morality based
on authority to action from moral insight. At this level of morality,
a man will try to discover the demands of the moral life, and will
let his action be determined by this knowledge. Such demands are (1)
the greatest possible happiness of humanity as a whole purely for its
own sake, (2) the progress of civilization, or the moral development
of mankind towards ever greater perfection, (3) the realization of
individual moral ends conceived by an act of pure intuition.
The
greatest possible happiness of humanity as a whole will naturally be
differently conceived by different people. The above mentioned maxim
does not imply any definite idea of this happiness, but rather means
that every one who acknowledges this principle strives to do all
that, in his opinion, most promotes the good of the whole of
humanity.
The
progress of civilization is seen to be a special application of the
moral principle just mentioned, at any rate for those to whom the
goods which civilization produces bring feelings of pleasure.
However, they will have to pay the price of progress in the
destruction and annihilation of many things which also contribute to
the happiness of humanity. It is, however, also possible that some
men look upon the progress of civilization as a moral necessity,
quite apart from the feelings of pleasure which it brings. If so, the
progress of civilization will be a new moral principle for them,
different from the previous one.
Both the
principle of the public good, and that of the progress of
civilization, alike depend on the way in which we apply the content
of our moral ideas to particular experiences (percepts). The highest
principle of morality which we can conceive, however, is that which
contains to start with, no such reference to particular experiences,
but which springs from the source of pure intuition and does not seek
until later any connection with percepts, i.e., with life. The
determination of what ought to be willed issues here from a point of
view very different from that of the previous two principles. Whoever
accepts the principle of the public good will in all his actions ask
first what his ideals contribute to this public good. The upholder of
the progress of civilization as the principle of morality will act
similarly. There is, however, a still higher mode of conduct which,
in a given case, does not start from any single limited moral ideal,
but which sees a certain value in all moral principles, always asking
whether this or that is more important in a particular case. It may
happen that a man considers in certain circumstances the promotion of
the public good, in others that of the progress of civilization, and
in yet others the furthering of his own private good, to be the right
course, and makes that the motive of his action. But when all other
grounds of determination take second place, then we rely, in the
first place, on conceptual intuition itself. All other motives now
drop out of sight, and the ideal content of an action alone becomes
its motive.
Among the
levels of characterological disposition, we have singled out as the
highest that which manifests itself as pure thought, or practical
reason. Among the motives, we have just singled out conceptual
intuition as the highest. On nearer consideration, we now perceive
that at this level of morality the spring of action and the motive
coincide, i.e., that neither a predetermined characterological
disposition, nor an external moral principle accepted on authority,
influence our conduct. The action, therefore, is neither a merely
stereotyped one which follows the rules of a moral code, nor is it
automatically performed in response to an external impulse. Rather it
is determined solely through its ideal content.
For such
an action to be possible, we must first be capable of moral
intuitions. Whoever lacks the capacity to think out for himself the
moral principles that apply in each particular case, will never rise
to the level of genuine individual willing.
Kant's
principle of morality: Act so that the principle of your action may
be valid for all men — is the exact opposite of ours. His
principle would mean death to all individual action. The norm for me
can never be what all men would do, but rather what it is right for
me to do in each special case.
A
superficial criticism might urge against these arguments: How can an
action be individually adapted to the special case and the special
situation, and yet at the same time be ideally determined by pure
intuition? This objection rests on a confusion of the moral motive
with the perceptual content of an action. The latter, indeed, may be
a motive, and is actually a motive when we act for the progress of
culture, or from pure egoism, etc., but in action based on pure moral
intuition it never is a motive. Of course, my Self takes notice of
these perceptual contents, but it does not allow itself to be
determined by them. The content is used only to construct a
theoretical concept, but the corresponding moral concept is not
derived from the object. The theoretical concept of a given situation
which faces me, is a moral concept also, only if I adopt the
standpoint of a particular moral principle. If I base all my conduct
on the principle of the progress of civilization, then my way through
life is tied down to a fixed route. From every occurrence which comes
to my notice and attracts my interest, there springs a moral duty,
viz., to do my tiny share towards using this occurrence in the
service of the progress of civilization. In addition to the concept
which reveals to me the connections of events or objects according to
the laws of nature, there is also a moral label attached to them
which contains for me, as a moral agent, ethical directions as to how
I have to conduct myself. At a higher level these moral labels
disappear, and my action is determined in each particular instance by
my idea; and more particularly by the idea which is suggested to me
by the concrete instance.
Men vary
greatly in their capacity for intuition. In some, ideas bubble up
like a spring, others acquire them with much labour. The situations
in which men live, and which are the scenes of their actions, are no
less widely different. The conduct of a man will depend, therefore,
on the manner in which his faculty of intuition reacts to a given
situation. The aggregate of the ideas which are effective in us, the
concrete content of our intuitions, constitute that which is
individual in each of us, notwithstanding the universal character of
our ideas. In so far as this intuitive content has reference to
action, it constitutes the moral substance of the individual. To let
this substance express itself in his life is the moral principle of
the man who regards all other moral principles as subordinate. We may
call this point of view Ethical Individualism.
The
determining factor of an action, in any concrete instance, is the
discovery of the corresponding purely individual intuition. At this
level of morality, there can be no question of general moral concepts
(norms, laws). General norms always presuppose concrete facts from
which they can be deduced. But facts have first to be created by
human action.
When we
look for the regulating principles (the conceptual principles guiding
the actions of individuals, peoples, epochs), we obtain a system of
Ethics which is not a science of moral norms, but rather a science of
morality as a natural fact. Only the laws discovered in this way are
related to human action as the laws of nature are related to
particular phenomena. These laws, however, are very far from being
identical with the principles on which we base our actions. When I,
or another, subsequently review my action we may discover what moral
principles came into play in it. But so long as I am acting, I am
influenced not by these moral principles but by my love for the
object, which I want to realize through my action. I ask no man and
no moral code, whether I shall perform this action or not. On the
contrary, I carry it out as soon as I have formed the idea of it.
This alone makes it my action. If a man acts because he accepts
certain moral norms, his action is the outcome of the principles
which compose his moral code. He merely carries out orders. He is a
superior kind of automaton. Inject some stimulus to action into his
mind, and at once the clock-work of his moral principles will begin
to work and run its prescribed course, so as to issue in an action
which is Christian, or humane, or unselfish, or calculated to promote
the progress of culture. It is only when I follow solely my love for
the object, that it is I, myself, who act. At this level of morality,
I acknowledge no lord over me, neither an external authority, nor the
so-called voice of my conscience. I acknowledge no external principle
of my action, because I have found in myself the ground for my
action, viz., my love of the action. I do not ask whether my action
is good or bad; I perform it, because I am in love with it. Neither
do I ask myself how another man would act in my position. On the
contrary, I act as I, this unique individuality, will to act. No
general usage, no common custom, no general maxim current among men,
no moral norm guides me, but my love for the action. I feel no
compulsion, neither the compulsion of nature which dominates me
through my instincts, nor the compulsion of the moral commandments.
My will is simply to realize what in me lies.
Those who
hold to general moral norms will reply to these arguments that, if
every one has the right to live himself out and to do what he
pleases, there can be no distinction between a good and a bad action,
every fraudulent impulse in me has the same right to issue in action
as the intention to serve the general good. It is not the mere fact
of my having conceived the idea of an action which ought to determine
me as a moral agent, but the further examination of whether it is a
good or an evil action. Only if it is good ought I to carry it
out.
In reply
I would say that I am not talking of children or of men who follow
their animal or social instincts. I am talking of men who are capable
of raising themselves to the level of the ideal content of the world.
It is only in an age in which immature men regard the blind instincts
as part of a man's individuality, that the act of a criminal can be
described as living out one's individuality in the same sense in
which the embodiment in action of a pure intuition can be so
described.
The
animal instinct which drives a man to a criminal act does not belong
to what is individual in him, but rather to that which is most
general in him, to that which is equally present in all individuals.
The individual element in me is not my organism with its instincts
and feelings, but rather the unified world of ideas which reveals
itself through this organism. My instincts, cravings, passions,
justify no further assertion about me than that I belong to the
general species man. The fact that something ideal expresses itself
in its own unique way through these instincts, passions, and
feelings, constitutes my individuality. My instincts and cravings
make me the sort of man of whom there are twelve to the dozen. The
unique character of the idea, by means of which I distinguish myself
within the dozen as “I,” makes of me an individual. Only
a being other than myself could distinguish me from others by the
difference in my animal nature. By thought, i.e., by the
active grasping of the ideal element working itself out through my
organism, I distinguish myself from others. Hence it is impossible to
say of the action of a criminal that it issues from the idea within
him. Indeed, the characteristic feature of criminal actions is
precisely that they spring from the non-ideal elements in man.
An act
the grounds for which lie in the ideal part of my individual nature
is free. Every other act, whether done under the compulsion of nature
or under the obligation imposed by a moral norm, is unfree.
That man
alone is free who in every moment of his life is able to obey only
himself. A moral act is my act only when it can be called free in
this sense.
Action on
the basis of freedom does not exclude, but include, the moral laws.
It only shows that it stands on a higher level than actions which are
dictated by these laws. Why should my act serve the general good less
well when I do it from pure love of it, than when I perform it
because it is a duty to serve the general good? The concept of duty
excludes freedom, because it will not acknowledge the right of
individuality, but demands the subjection of individuality to a
general norm. Freedom of action is conceivable only from the
standpoint of Ethical Individualism.
But how
about the possibility of social life for men, if each aims only at
asserting his own individuality? This question expresses yet another
objection on the part of Moralism. The Moralist believes that a
social community is possible only if all men are held together by a
common moral order. This shows that the Moralist does not understand
the community of the world of ideas. He does not realize that the
world of ideas which inspires me is no other than that which inspires
my fellow-men. I differ from my neighbour, not at all because we are
living in two entirely different mental worlds, but because from our
common world of ideas we receive different intuitions. He desires to
live out his intuitions, I mine. If we both draw our intuitions
really from the world of ideas, and do not obey mere external
impulses (physical or moral), then we can not but meet one another in
striving for the same aims, in having the same intentions. A moral
misunderstanding, a clash of aims, is impossible between men who are
free. Only the morally unfree who blindly follow their natural
instincts or the commands of duty, turn their backs on their
neighbours, if these do not obey the same instincts and the same laws
as themselves. Live and let live is the fundamental principle of the
free man. He knows no “ought.” How he shall will in any
given case will be determined for him by his faculty of ideas.
If
sociability were not deeply rooted in human nature, no external laws
would be able to inoculate us with it. It is only because human
individuals are akin in spirit that they can live out their lives
side by side. The free man lives out his life in the full confidence
that all other free men belong to one spiritual world with himself,
and that their intentions will coincide with his. The free man does
not demand agreement from his fellow-men, but he expects it none the
less, believing that it is inherent in human nature.
There are
many who will say that the concept of the free man which I have here
developed, is a chimera nowhere to be found realized, and that we
have got to deal with actual human beings, from whom we can expect
morality only if they obey some moral law, i.e., if they
regard their moral task as a duty and do not simply follow their
inclinations and loves. I do not deny this. Only a blind man could do
that. But, if so, away with all this hypocrisy of morality! Let us
say simply that human nature must be compelled to act as long as it
is not free. Whether the compulsion of man's unfree nature is
effected by physical force or through moral laws, whether man is
unfree because he indulges his unmeasured sexual desire, or because
he is bound tight in the bonds of conventional morality, is quite
immaterial. Only let us not assert that such a man can rightly call
his actions his own, seeing that he is driven to them by an external
force. But in the midst of all this network of compulsion, there
arise free spirits who in all the welter of customs, legal codes,
religious observances, etc., learn to be true to themselves. They are
free in so far as they obey only themselves; unfree in so far as they
submit to control. Which of us can say that he is really free in all
his actions? Yet in each of us there dwells something deeper in which
the free man finds expression.
Our life
is made up of free and unfree actions. We cannot, however, form a
final and adequate concept of human nature without coming upon the
free spirit as its purest expression. After all, we are men in the
fullest sense only in so far as we are free.
This is
an ideal, many will say. Doubtless; but it is an ideal which is a
real element in us working up to the surface of our nature. It is no
ideal born of mere imagination or dream, but one which has life, and
which manifests itself clearly even in the least developed form of
its existence. If men were nothing but natural objects, the search
for ideals, that is, for ideas which as yet are not actual but the
realization of which we demand, would be an impossibility. In dealing
with external objects the idea is determined by the percept. We have
done our share when we have recognized the connection between idea
and percept. But with a human being the case is different. The
content of his existence is not determined without him. His concept
(free spirit) is not a priori united objectively with the perceptual
content “man,” so that knowledge need only register the
fact subsequently. Man must by his own act unite his concept with the
percept “man.” Concept and percept coincide with one
another in this instance, only in so far as the individual himself
makes them coincide. This he can do only if he has found the concept
of the free spirit, that is, if he has found the concept of his own
Self. In the objective world a boundary-line is drawn by our
organization between percept and concept. Knowledge breaks down this
barrier. In our subjective nature this barrier is no less present.
The individual overcomes it in the course of his development, by
embodying his concept of himself in his outward existence. Hence
man's moral life and his intellectual life lead him both alike to his
twofold nature, perception (immediate experience) and thought. The
intellectual life overcomes his twofold nature by means of knowledge,
the moral life succeeds through the actual realization of the free
spirit. Every being has its inborn concept (the laws of its being and
action), but in external objects this concept is indissolubly bound
up with the percept, and separated from it only in the organization
of human minds. In human beings concept and percept are, at first,
actually separated, to be just as actually reunited by them. Some one
might object that to our percept of a man there corresponds at every
moment of his life a definite concept, just as with external objects.
I can construct for myself the concept of an average man, and I may
also have given to me a percept to fit this pattern. Suppose now I
add to this the concept of a free spirit, then I have two concepts
for the same object.
Such an
objection is one-sided. As object of perception I am subject to
perpetual change. As a child I was one thing, another as a youth, yet
another as a man. Moreover, at every moment I am different, as
percept, from what I was the moment before. These changes may take
place in such a way that either it is always only the same (average)
man who exhibits himself in them, or that they represent the
expression of a free spirit. Such are the changes which my actions,
as objects of perception, undergo.
In the
perceptual object “man” there is given the possibility of
transformation, just as in the plant-seed there lies the possibility
of growth into a fully developed plant. The plant transforms itself
in growth, because of the objective law of nature which is inherent
in it. The human being remains in his undeveloped state, unless he
takes hold of the material for transformation within him and develops
himself through his own energy. Nature makes of man merely a natural
being; Society makes of him a being who acts in obedience to law;
only he himself can make a free man of himself. At a definite stage
in his development Nature releases man from her fetters; Society
carries his development a step further; he alone can give himself the
final polish.
The
theory of free morality, then, does not assert that the free spirit
is the only form in which man can exist. It looks upon the freedom of
the spirit only as the last stage in man's evolution. This is not to
deny that conduct in obedience to norms has its legitimate place as a
stage in development. The point is that we cannot acknowledge it to
be the absolute standpoint in morality. For the free spirit
transcends norms, in the sense that he is insensible to them as
commands, but regulates his conduct in accordance with his impulses
(intuitions).
When Kant
apostrophizes duty: “Duty! Thou sublime and mighty name, that
dost embrace nothing charming or insinuating, but requirest
submission,” thou that “holdest forth a law ... before
which all inclinations are dumb, even though they secretly
counter-work it,”
[Translation by Abbott,
Kant's Theory of Ethics,
p. 180;
Critique of Pure Practical Reason,
chap. iii.]
then the free spirit replies: “Freedom! thou kindly and humane
name, which dost embrace within thyself all that is morally most charming,
all that insinuates itself most into my humanity, and which makest me the
servant of nobody, which holdest forth no law, but waitest what my
inclination itself will proclaim as law, because it resists every law
that is forced upon it.”
This is
the contrast of morality according to law and according to
freedom.
The
Philistine who looks upon the state as embodied morality is sure to
look upon the free spirit as a danger to the state. But that is only
because his view is narrowly focused on a limited period of time. If
he were able to look beyond, he would soon find that it is but on
rare occasions that the free spirit needs to go beyond the laws of
his state, and that it never needs to confront them with any real
contradiction. For the laws of the state, one and all, have had their
origin in the intuitions of free spirits, just like all other
objective laws of morality. There is no traditional law enforced by
the authority of a family, which was not, once upon a time,
intuitively conceived and laid down by an ancestor. Similarly the
conventional laws of morality are first of all established by
particular men, and the laws of the state are always born in the
brain of a statesman. These free spirits have set up laws over the
rest of mankind, and only he is unfree who forgets this origin and
makes them either divine commands, or objective moral duties, or the
authoritative voice of his own conscience.
He, on the
other hand, who does not forget the origin of laws, but looks for it
in man, will respect them as belonging to the same world of ideas
which is the source also of his own moral intuitions. If he thinks
his intuitions better than the existing laws, he will try to put them
into the place of the latter. If he thinks the laws justified, he
will act in accordance with them as if they were his own
intuitions.
Man does
not exist in order to found a moral order of the world. Anyone who
maintains that he does, stands in his theory of man still at that
same point, at which natural science stood when it believed that a
bull has horns in order that it may butt. Scientists, happily, have
cast the concept of objective purposes in nature into the limbo of
dead theories. For Ethics, it is more difficult to achieve the same
emancipation. But just as horns do not exist for the sake of butting,
but butting because of horns, so man does not exist for the sake of
morality, but morality exists through man. The free man acts because
he has a moral idea, he does not act in order to be moral. Human
individuals are the presupposition of a moral world order.
The human
individual is the fountain of all morality and the centre of all
life. State and society exist only because they have necessarily
grown out of the life of individuals. That state and society, in
turn, should react upon the lives of individuals, is no more
difficult to comprehend, than that the butting which is the result of
the existence of horns, reacts in turn upon the further development
of the horns, which would become atrophied by prolonged disuse.
Similarly the individual must degenerate, if he leads an isolated
existence beyond the pale of human society. That is just the reason
why the social order arises, viz., that it may react favourably upon
the individual.
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