XIV
THE VALUE OF LIFE (Optimism And Pessimism)
COUNTERPART
of the question concerning the purpose and function of life (cp. p.
111) is the question concerning its value. We meet here with two
mutually opposed views, and between them with all conceivable
attempts at compromise. One view says that this world is the best
conceivable which could exist at all, and that to live and act in it
is a good of inestimable value. Everything that exists displays
harmonious and purposive co-operation and is worthy of admiration.
Even what is apparently bad and evil may, from a higher point of
view, be seen to be a good, for it represents an agreeable contrast
with the good. We are the more able to appreciate the good when it is
clearly contrasted with evil. Moreover, evil is not genuinely real;
it is only that we perceive as evil a lesser degree of good. Evil is
the absence of good, it has no positive import of its own.
The other
view maintains that life is full of misery and agony. Everywhere pain
outweighs pleasure, sorrow outweighs joy. Existence is a burden, and
non-existence would, from every point of view, be preferable to
existence.
The chief
representatives of the former view, i.e., Optimism, are
Shaftesbury and Leibnitz; the chief representatives of the second,
i.e., Pessimism, are Schopenhauer and Edouard von
Hartmann.
Leibnitz
says the world is the best of all possible worlds. A better one is
impossible. For God is good and wise. A good God wills to create the
best possible world, a wise God knows which is the best possible. He
is able to distinguish the best from all other and worse
possibilities. Only an evil or an unwise God would be able to create
a world worse than the best possible.
Whoever
starts from this point of view will find it easy to lay down the
direction which human action must follow, in order to make its
contribution to the greatest good of the universe. All that man need
do will be to find out the counsels of God and to act in accordance
with them. If he knows what God's purposes are concerning the world
and the human race he will be able, for his part, to do what is
right. And he will be happy in the feeling that he is adding his
share to all the other good in the world. From this optimistic
standpoint, then, life is worth living. It is such as to stimulate us
to cooperate with, and enter into, it.
Quite
different is the picture Schopenhauer paints. He thinks of ultimate
reality not as an all-wise and all-beneficent being, but as blind
striving or will. Eternal striving, ceaseless craving for
satisfaction which yet is ever beyond reach, these are the
fundamental characteristics of all will. For as soon as we have
attained what we want a fresh need springs up, and so on.
Satisfaction, when it occurs, endures always only for an
infinitesimal time. The whole rest of our lives is unsatisfied
craving, i.e., discontent and suffering. When at last blind
craving is dulled, every definite content is gone from our lives.
Existence is filled with nothing but an endless ennui. Hence the best
we can do is to throttle all desires and needs within us and
exterminate the will. Schopenhauer's Pessimism leads to complete
inactivity; its moral aim is universal idleness.
By a very
different argument Von Hartmann attempts to establish Pessimism and
to make use of it for Ethics. He attempts, in keeping with the
fashion of our age, to base his world-view on experience. By
observation of life he hopes to discover whether there is more pain
or more pleasure in the world. He passes in review before the
tribunal of reason whatever men consider to be happiness and a good,
in order to show that all apparent satisfaction turns out, on closer
inspection, to be nothing but illusion. It is illusion when we
believe that in health, youth, freedom, sufficient income, love
(sexual satisfaction), pity, friendship and family life, honour,
reputation, glory, power, religious edification, pursuit of science
and of art, hope of a life after death, participation in the
advancement of civilization, that in all these we have sources of
happiness and satisfaction. Soberly considered, every enjoyment
brings much more evil and misery than pleasure into the world. The
disagreeableness of “the morning after” is always greater
than the agreeableness of intoxication. Pain far outweighs pleasure
in the world. No man, even though relatively the happiest, would, if
asked, wish to live through this miserable life a second time. Now
since Hartmann does not deny the presence of an ideal factor (wisdom)
in the world, but, on the contrary, grants to it equal rights with
blind striving (will), he can attribute the creation of the world to
his Absolute Being only on condition that He makes the pain in the
world subserve a world-purpose that is wise. But the pain of created
beings is nothing but God's pain itself, for the life of Nature as a
whole is identical with the life of God. An All-wise Being can aim
only at release from pain, and since all existence is pain, at
release from existence. Hence the purpose of the creation of the
world is to transform existence into the non-existence which is so
much better. The world-process is nothing but a continuous battle
against God's pain, a battle which ends with the annihilation of all
existence. The moral life for men, therefore, will consist in taking
part in the annihilation of existence. The reason why God has created
the world is that through the world he may free himself from his
infinite pain. The world must be regarded, “as it were, as an
itching eruption on the Absolute,” by means of which the
unconscious healing power of the Absolute rids itself of an inward
disease; or it may be regarded “as a painful drawing-plaster
which the All-one applies to itself in order first to divert the
inner pain outwards, and then to get rid of it altogether.”
Human beings are members of the world. In their sufferings God
suffers. He has created them in order to split up in them his
infinite pain. The pain which each one of us suffers is but a drop in
the infinite ocean of God's pain (Hartmann,
Phanomenologie des Sittlichen Bewusstseins,
pp. 866 ff.).
It is
man's duty to permeate his whole being with the recognition that the
pursuit of individual satisfaction (Egoism) is a folly, and that he
ought to be guided solely by the task of assisting in the redemption
of God by unselfish service of the world-process. Thus, in contrast
with the Pessimism of Schopenhauer, that of Von Hartmann leads us to
devoted activity in a sublime cause.
But what
of the claim that this view is based on experience?
To strive
after satisfaction means that our activity reaches out beyond the
actual content of our lives. A creature is hungry, i.e., it
desires satiety, when its organic functions demand for their
continuation the supply of fresh life-materials in the form of
nourishment. The pursuit of honour consists in that a man does not
regard what he personally does or leaves undone as valuable unless it
is endorsed by the approval of others from without. The striving for
knowledge arises when a man is not content with the world which he
sees, hears, etc., so long as he has not understood it. The
fulfilment of the striving causes pleasure in the individual who
strives, failure causes pain. It is important here to observe that
pleasure and pain are attached only to the fulfilment or
non-fulfilment of my striving. The striving itself is by no means to
be regarded as a pain. Hence, if we find that, in the very moment in
which a striving is fulfilled, at once a new striving arises, this is
no ground for saying that pleasure has given birth to pain, because
enjoyment in every case gives rise to a desire for its repetition, or
for a fresh pleasure. I can speak of pain only when desire runs up
against the impossibility of fulfilment. Even when an enjoyment that
I have had causes in me the desire for the experience of a greater,
more subtle, and more exotic pleasure, I have no right to speak of
this desire as a pain caused by the previous pleasure until the means
fail me to gain the greater and more subtle pleasure. I have no right
to regard pleasure as the cause of pain unless pain follows on
pleasure as its consequence by natural law, e.g., when a woman's
sexual pleasure is followed by the suffering of child-birth and the
cares of nursing. If striving caused pain, then the removal of
striving ought to be accompanied by pleasure. But the very reverse is
true. To have no striving in one's life causes boredom, and boredom
is always accompanied by displeasure. Now, since it may be a long
time before a striving meets with fulfilment, and since, in the
interval, it is content with the hope of fulfilment, we must
acknowledge that there is no connection in principle between pain and
striving, but that pain depends solely on the non-fulfilment of the
striving. Schopenhauer, then, is wrong in any case in regarding
desire or striving (will) as being in principle the source of
pain.
In truth
the very reverse of this is correct. Striving (desire) is in itself
pleasurable. Who does not know the pleasure which is caused by the
hope of a remote but intensely desired enjoyment? This pleasure is
the companion of all labour, the results of which will be enjoyed by
us only in the future. It is a pleasure which is wholly independent
of the attainment of the end. For when the aim has been attained, the
pleasure of satisfaction is added as a fresh thrill to the pleasure
of striving. If anyone were to argue that the pain caused by the
non-attainment of an aim is increased by the pain of disappointed
hope, and that thus, in the end, the pain of non-fulfilment will
still always outweigh the utmost possible pleasure of fulfilment, we
shall have to reply that the reverse may be the case, and that the
recollection of past pleasure at a time of unsatisfied desire will as
often mitigate the displeasure of non-satisfaction. Whoever at the
moment when his hopes suffer shipwreck exclaims, “I have done
my part,” proves thereby my assertion. The blessed feeling of
having willed the best within one's powers is ignored by all who make
every unsatisfied desire an occasion for asserting that, not only has
the pleasure of fulfilment been lost, but that the enjoyment of the
striving itself has been destroyed.
The
satisfaction of a desire causes pleasure and its non-satisfaction
causes pain. But we have no right to infer from this fact that
pleasure is nothing but the satisfaction of a desire, and pain
nothing but its non-satisfaction. Both pleasure and pain may be
experienced without being the consequence of desire. All illness is
pain not preceded by any desire. If anyone were to maintain that
illness is unsatisfied desire for health he would commit the error of
regarding the inevitable and unconscious wish not to fall ill as a
positive desire. When some one receives a legacy from a rich relative
of whose existence he had not the faintest idea, he experiences a
pleasure without having felt any preceding desire.
Hence, if
we set out to inquire whether the balance is on the side of pleasure
or of pain, we must allow in our calculation for the pleasure of
striving, the pleasure of the satisfaction of striving, and the
pleasure which comes to us without any striving whatever. On the
debit side we shall have to enter the displeasure of boredom, the
displeasure of unfulfilled striving, and, lastly, the displeasure
which comes to us without any striving on our part. Under this last
heading we shall have to put also the displeasure caused by work that
has been forced upon us, not chosen by ourselves.
This
leads us to the question, What is the right method for striking the
balance between the credit and the debit columns? Edouard von
Hartmann asserts that reason holds the scales. It is true that he says
(Philosophie des Unbewussten,
7th edition, vol. ii. p. 290):
“Pain and pleasure exist only in
so far as they are actually being felt.” It follows that there
can be no standard for pleasure other than the subjective standard of
feeling. I must feel whether the sum of my disagreeable feelings,
contrasted with my agreeable feelings, results in me in a balance of
pleasure or of pain. But, notwithstanding this, van Hartmann
maintains that “though the value of the life of every being can
be set down only according to its own subjective measure, yet it
follows by no means that every being is able to compute the correct
algebraic sum of all the feelings of its life — or, in other
words, that its total estimate of its own life, with regard to its
subjective feelings, should be correct.” But this means that
rational estimation of feelings is reinstated as the standard of
value.
It is
because Von Hartmann holds this view that he thinks it necessary, in
order to arrive at a correct valuation of life, to clear out of the
way those factors which falsify our judgment about the balance of
pleasure and of pain. He tries to do this in two ways: first, by
showing that our desire (instinct, will) operates as a disturbing
factor in the sober estimation of feeling-values; e.g., whereas we
ought to judge that sexual enjoyment is a source of evil, we are
beguiled by the fact that the sexual instinct is very strong in us,
into pretending to experience a pleasure which does not occur in the
alleged intensity at all. We are bent on indulging ourselves, hence
we do not acknowledge to ourselves that the indulgence makes us
suffer. Secondly, Von Hartmann subjects feelings to a criticism
designed to show, that the objects to which our feelings attach
themselves reveal themselves as illusions when examined by reason,
and that our feelings are destroyed from the moment that our
constantly growing insight sees through the illusions.
Von
Hartmann, then, conceives the matter as follows. Suppose an ambitious
man wants to determine clearly whether, up to the moment of his
inquiry, there has been a surplus of pleasure or of pain in his life.
He has to eliminate two sources of error that may affect his
judgment. Being ambitious, this fundamental feature of his character
will make him see all the pleasures of the public recognition of his
achievements larger than they are, and all the insults suffered
through rebuffs smaller than they are. At the time when he suffered
the rebuffs he felt the insults just because he is ambitious, but in
recollection they appear to him in a milder light, whereas the
pleasures of recognition to which he is so much more susceptible
leave a far deeper impression. Undeniably, it is a real benefit to an
ambitious man that it should be so, for the deception diminishes his
pain in the moment of self-analysis. But, none the less, it falsifies
his judgments. The sufferings which he now reviews as through a veil
were actually experienced by him in all their intensity. Hence he
enters them at a wrong valuation on the debit side of his account. In
order to arrive at a correct estimate an ambitious man would have to
lay aside his ambition for the time of his inquiry. He would have to
review his past life without any distorting glasses before his mind's
eye, else he will resemble a merchant who, in making up his books,
enters among the items on the credit side his own zeal in
business.
But Von
Hartmann goes even further. He says the ambitious man must make clear
to himself that the public recognition which he craves is not worth
having. By himself, or with the guidance of others, he must attain
the insight that rational beings cannot attach any value to
recognition by others, seeing that “in all matters which are
not vital questions of development, or which have not been definitely
settled by science,” it is always as certain as anything can be
“that the majority is wrong and the minority right.”
“Whoever makes ambition the lode-star of his life puts the
happiness of his life at the mercy of so fallible a judgment”
(Philosophie des Unbewussten,
vol. ii, p. 332).
If the ambitious man acknowledges all this to himself,
he is bound to regard all the achievements of his ambition as
illusions, including even the feelings which attach themselves to the
satisfaction of his ambitious desires. This is the reason why Von
Hartmann says that we must also strike out of the balance-sheet of
our life-values whatever is seen to be illusory in our feelings of
pleasure. What remains after that represents the sum-total of
pleasure in life, and this sum is so small compared with the
sum-total of pain that life is no enjoyment and non-existence
preferable to existence.
But
whilst it is immediately evident that the interference of the
instinct of ambition produces self-deception in striking the balance
of pleasures and thus leads to a false result, we must none the less
challenge what Von Hartmann says concerning the illusory character of
the objects to which pleasure is attached. For the elimination, from
the credit-side of life, of all pleasurable feelings which accompany
actual or supposed illusions would positively falsify the balance of
pleasure and of pain. An ambitious man has genuinely enjoyed the
acclamations of the multitude, irrespective of whether subsequently
he himself, or some other person, recognizes that this acclamation is
an illusion. The pleasure, once enjoyed, is not one whit diminished
by such recognition. Consequently the elimination of all these
“illusory” feelings from life's balance, so far from
making our judgment about our feelings more correct, actually cancels
out of life feelings which were genuinely there,
And why
are these feelings to be eliminated? Because they are connected with
objects which turn out to have been illusions. But this means that
the value of life is made dependent, not on the quantity of pleasure,
but on the quality of pleasure, and this quality is made dependent on
the value of the objects which cause the pleasure. But if I am to
determine the value of life only by the quantity of pleasure or pain
which it brings, I have no right to presuppose something else by
which first to determine the positive or negative value of pleasure.
If I say I want to compare quantity of pleasure and quantity of pain,
in order to see which is greater, I am bound to bring into my account
all pleasures and pains in their actual intensities, regardless of
whether they are based on illusions or not. If I credit a pleasure
which rests on an illusion with a lesser value for life than one
which can justify itself before the tribunal of reason, I make the
value of life dependent on factors other than mere quantity of
pleasure.
Whoever,
like Edouard von Hartmann, puts down pleasure as less valuable when
it is attached to a worthless object, is like a merchant who enters
the considerable profits of a toy-factory at only one-quarter of
their real value on the ground that the factory produces nothing but
playthings for children.
If the
point is simply to weigh quantity of pleasure against quantity of
pain, we ought to leave the illusory character of the objects of some
pleasures entirely out of account.
The
method, then, which Van Hartmann recommends, viz., rational criticism
of the quantities of pleasure and pain produced by life, has taught
us so far how we are to get the data for our calculation,
i.e., what we are to put down on the one side of our account
and what on the other. But how are we to make the actual calculation?
Is reason able also to strike the balance?
A
merchant makes a miscalculation when the gain calculated by him does
not balance with the profits which he has demonstrably enjoyed from
his business or is still expecting to enjoy. Similarly, the
philosopher will undoubtedly have made a mistake in his estimate, if
he cannot demonstrate in actual feeling the surplus of pleasure or,
as the case may be, of pain which his manipulation of the account may
have yielded.
For the
present I shall not criticize the calculations of those Pessimists
who support their estimate of the value of the world by an appeal to
reason. But if we are to decide whether to carry on the business of
life or not, we shall demand first to be shown where the alleged
balance of pain is to be found.
Here we
touch the point where reason is not in a position by itself to
determine the surplus of pleasure or of pain, but where it must
exhibit this surplus in life as something actually felt. For man
reaches reality not through concepts by themselves, but through the
interpenetration of concepts and percepts (and feelings are percepts)
which thinking brings about (cp. p. 56). A merchant will give up his
business only when the loss of goods, as calculated by his
accountant, is actually confirmed by the facts. If the facts do not
bear out the calculation, he asks his accountant to check the account
once more. That is exactly what a man will do in the business of
life. If a philosopher wants to prove to him that the pain is far
greater than the pleasure, but that he does not feel it so, then he
will reply: “You have made a mistake in your theorizings;
repeat your analysis once more.” But if there comes a time in a
business when the losses are really so great that the firm's credit
no longer suffices to satisfy the creditors, bankruptcy results, even
though the merchant may avoid keeping himself informed by careful
accounts about the state of his affairs. Similarly, supposing the
quantity of pain in a man's life became at any time so great that no
hope (credit) of future pleasure could help him to get over the pain,
the bankruptcy of life's business would inevitably follow.
Now the
number of those who commit suicide is relatively small compared with
the number of those who live bravely on. Only very few men give up
the business of life because of the pain involved. What follows?
Either that it is untrue to say that the quantity of pain is greater
than the quantity of pleasure, or that we do not make the
continuation of life dependent on the quantity of felt pleasure or
pain.
In a very
curious way, Edouard von Hartmann's Pessimism, having concluded that
life is valueless because it contains a surplus of pain, yet affirms
the necessity of going on with life. This necessity lies in the fact
that the world-purpose mentioned above (p. 127) can be achieved only
by the ceaseless, devoted labour of human beings. But so long as men
still pursue their egoistical appetites they are unfit for this
devoted labour. It is not until experience and reason have convinced
them that the pleasures which Egoism pursues are incapable of
attainment that they give themselves up to their proper task. In this
way the pessimistic conviction is offered as the fountain of
unselfishness. An education based on Pessimism is to exterminate
Egoism by convincing it of the hopelessness of achieving its
aims.
According
to this view, then, the striving for pleasure is fundamentally
inherent in human nature. It is only through the insight into the
impossibility of satisfaction that this striving abdicates in favour
of the higher tasks of humanity.
It is,
however, impossible to say of this ethical theory, which expects from
the establishment of Pessimism a devotion to unselfish ends in life,
that it really overcomes Egoism in the proper sense of the word. The
moral ideas are said not to be strong enough to dominate the will
until man has learnt that the selfish striving after pleasure cannot
lead to any satisfaction. Man, whose selfishness desires the grapes
of pleasure, finds them sour because he cannot attain them, and so he
turns his back on them and devotes himself to an unselfish life.
Moral ideals, then, according to the opinion of Pessimists, are too
weak to overcome Egoism, but they establish their kingdom on the
territory which previous recognition of the hopelessness of Egoism
has cleared for them.
If men by
nature strive after pleasure but are unable to attain it, it follows
that annihilation of existence and salvation through non-existence
are the only rational ends. And if we accept the view that the real
bearer of the pain of the world is God, it follows that the task of
men consists in helping to bring about the salvation of God. To
commit suicide does not advance, but hinders, the realization of this
aim. God must rationally be conceived as having created men for the
sole purpose of bringing about his salvation through their action,
else would creation be purposeless. Every one of us has to perform
his own definite task in the general work of salvation. If he
withdraws from the task by suicide, another has to do the work which
was intended for him. Somebody else must bear in his stead the agony
of existence. And since in every being it is, at bottom, God who is
the ultimate bearer of all pain, it follows that to commit suicide
does not in the least diminish the quantity of God's pain, but rather
imposes upon God the additional difficulty of providing a
substitute.
This
whole theory presupposes that pleasure is the standard of value for
life. Now life manifests itself through a number of instincts
(needs). If the value of life depended on its producing more pleasure
than pain, an instinct would have to be called valueless which
brought to its owner a balance of pain. Let us, if you please,
inspect instinct and pleasure, in order to see whether the former can
be measured by the latter. And lest we give rise to the suspicion
that life does not begin for us below the sphere of the
“aristocrats of the intellects” we shall begin our
examination with a “purely animal” need, viz.,
hunger.
Hunger
arises when our organs are unable to continue functioning without a
fresh supply of food. What a hungry man desires, in the first
instance, is to have his hunger stilled. As soon as the supply of
nourishment has reached the point where hunger ceases, everything has
been attained that the food-instinct craves. The pleasure which is
connected with satiety consists, to begin with, in the removal of the
pain which is caused by hunger. But to the mere food-instinct there
is added a further need. For man does not merely desire to restore,
by the consumption of food, the disturbance in the functioning of his
organs, or to get rid of the pain of hunger, but he seeks to effect
this to the accompaniment of pleasurable sensations of taste. When he
feels hungry, and is within half an hour of a meal to which he looks
forward with pleasure, he avoids spoiling his enjoyment of the better
food by taking inferior food which might satisfy his hunger sooner.
He needs hunger in order to get the full enjoyment out of his meal.
Thus hunger becomes for him at the same time a cause of pleasure.
Supposing all the hunger in the world could be satisfied, we should
get the total quantity of pleasure which we owe to the existence of
the desire for nourishment. But we should still have to add the
additional pleasure which gourmets gain by cultivating the
sensibility of their taste-nerves beyond the common measure.
The
greatest conceivable value of this quantity of pleasure would be
reached, if no need remained unsatisfied which was in any way
connected with this kind of pleasure, and if with the smooth of
pleasure we had not at the same time to take a certain amount of the
rough of pain.
Modern
Science holds the view that Nature produces more life than it can
maintain, i.e., that Nature also produces more hunger than it
is able to satisfy. The surplus of life thus produced is condemned to
a painful death in the struggle for existence. Granted that the needs
of life are, at every moment of the world-process, greater than the
available means of satisfaction, and that the enjoyment of life is
correspondingly diminished, yet such enjoyment as actually occurs is
not one whit reduced thereby. Wherever a desire is satisfied, there
the corresponding quantity of pleasure exists, even though in the
creature itself which desires, or in its fellow-creatures, there are
a large number of unsatisfied instincts. What is diminished is not
the quantity but the “value” of the enjoyment of life. If
only a part of the needs of a living creature find satisfaction, it
experiences still a corresponding pleasure. This pleasure is inferior
in value in proportion as it is inadequate to the total demand of
life within a given group of desires. We might represent this value
as a fraction, the numerator of which is the actually experienced
pleasure, whilst the denominator is the sum-total of needs. This
fraction has the value 1 when the numerator and the denominator are
equal, i.e., when all needs are also satisfied. The fraction
becomes greater than 1 when a creature experiences more pleasure than
its desires demand. It becomes smaller than 1 when the quantity of
pleasure falls short of the sum total of desires. But the fraction
can never have the value 0 so long as the numerator has any value at
all, however small. If a man were to make up the account before his
death and to distribute in imagination over the whole of life the
quantity belonging to a particular instinct (e.g., hunger), as well
as the demands of this instinct, then the total pleasure which he has
experienced might have only a very small value, but this value would
never become altogether nil. If the quantity of pleasure remains
constant, then with every increase in the needs of the creature the
value of the pleasure diminishes. The same is true for the totality
of life in nature. The greater the number of creatures in proportion
to those which are able fully to satisfy their instincts, the smaller
is the average pleasure-value of life. The cheques on life's pleasure
which are drawn in our favour in the form of our instincts, become
increasingly less valuable in proportion as we cannot expect to cash
them at their full face value. Suppose I get enough to eat on three
days and am then compelled to go hungry for another three days, the
actual pleasure on the three days of eating is not thereby
diminished. But I have now to think of it as distributed over six
days, and this reduces its “value” for my food-instinct
by half. The same applies to the quantity of pleasure as measured by
the degree of my need. Suppose I have hunger enough for two
sandwiches and can only get one, the pleasure which this one gives me
has only half the value it would have had if the eating of it had
stilled my hunger. This is the way in which we determine the value of
a pleasure in life. We determine it by the needs of life. Our desires
supply the measure; pleasure is what is measured. The pleasure of
stilling hunger has value only because hunger exists, and it has
determinate value through the proportion which it bears to the
intensity of the hunger.
Unfulfilled demands of our life throw their shadow even upon
fulfilled desires, and thus detract from the value of pleasurable
hours. But we may speak also of the present value of a feeling of
pleasure. This value is the smaller, the more insignificant the
pleasure is in proportion to the duration and intensity of our
desire.
A
quantity of pleasure has its full value for us when its duration and
degree exactly coincide with our desire. A quantity of pleasure which
is smaller than our desire diminishes the value of the pleasure. A
quantity which is greater produces a surplus which has not been
demanded and which is felt as pleasure only so long as, whilst
enjoying the pleasure, we can correspondingly increase the intensity
of our desire. If we are not able to keep pace in the increase of our
desire with the increase in pleasure, then pleasure turns into
displeasure. The object which would otherwise satisfy us, when it
assails us unbidden makes us suffer. This proves that pleasure has
value for us only so long as we have desires by which to measure it.
An excess of pleasurable feeling turns into pain. This may be
observed especially in those men whose desire for a given kind of
pleasure is very small. In people whose desire for food is dulled,
eating easily produces nausea. This again shows that desire is the
measure of value for pleasure.
Now
Pessimism might reply that an unsatisfied desire for food produces
not only the pain of a lost enjoyment, but also positive ills, agony,
and misery in the world. It appeals for confirmation to the untold
misery of all who are harassed by anxieties about food, and to the
vast amount of pain which for these unfortunates results indirectly
from their lack of food. And if it wants to extend its assertion also
to non-human nature, it can point to the agonies of animals which, in
certain seasons, die from lack of food. Concerning all these evils
the Pessimist maintains that they far outweigh the quantity of
pleasure which the food-instinct brings into the world.
There is
no doubt that it is possible to compare pleasure and pain one with
another, and determine the surplus of the one or the other as we
determine commercial gain or loss. But if Pessimists think that a
surplus on the side of pain is a ground for inferring that life is
valueless, they fall into the mistake of making a calculation which
in actual life is never made.
Our
desire, in any given case, is directed to a particular object. The
value of the pleasure of satisfaction, as we have seen, will be the
greater in proportion as the quantity of the pleasure is greater
relatively to the intensity of our desire.
[We disregard here the case where excessive increase
of pleasure turns pleasure into pain.]
It depends, further, on this intensity
how large a quantity of pain we are willing to bear in order to gain
the pleasure. We compare the quantity of pain, not with the quantity
of pleasure, but with the intensity of our desire. He who finds great
pleasure in eating will, by reason of his pleasure in better times,
be more easily able to bear a period of hunger than one who does not
derive pleasure from the satisfaction of the instinct for food. A
woman who wants a child compares the pleasures resulting from the
possession of a child, not with the quantities of pain due to
pregnancy, birth, nursing, etc., but with her desire for the
possession of the child.
We never
aim at a certain quantity of pleasure in the abstract, but at
concrete satisfaction of a perfectly determinate kind. When we are
aiming at a definite object or a definite sensation, it will not
satisfy us to be offered some other object or some other sensation,
even though they give the same amount of pleasure. If we desire
satisfaction of hunger, we cannot substitute for the pleasure which
this satisfaction would bring a pleasure equally great but produced
by a walk. Only if our desire were, quite generally, for a certain
quantity of pleasure, would it have to die away at once if this
pleasure were unattainable except at the price of an even greater
quantity of pain. But because we desire a determinate kind of
satisfaction, we experience the pleasure of realization even when,
along with it, we have to bear an even greater pain. The instincts of
living beings tend in a determinate direction and aim at concrete
objects, and it is just for this reason that it is impossible, in our
calculations, to set down as an equivalent factor the quantities of
pain which we have to bear in the pursuit of our object. Provided the
desire is sufficiently intense to be still to some degree in
existence even after having overcome the pain — however great
that pain, taken in the abstract, may be — the pleasure of
satisfaction may still be enjoyed to its full extent. The desire,
therefore, does not measure the pain directly against the pleasure
which we attain, but indirectly by measuring the pain
(proportionately) against its own intensity. The question is not
whether the pleasure to be gained is greater than the pain, but
whether the desire for the object at which we aim is greater than the
inhibitory effect of the pain which we have to face. If the
inhibition is greater than the desire, the latter yields to the
inevitable, slackens, and ceases to strive. But inasmuch as we strive
after a determinate land of satisfaction, the pleasure we gain
thereby acquires an importance which makes it possible, once
satisfaction has been attained, to allow in our calculation for the
inevitable pain only in so far as it has diminished the intensity of
our desire. If I am passionately fond of beautiful views, I never
calculate the amount of pleasure which the view from the mountain-top
gives me as compared directly with the pain of the toilsome ascent
and descent; but I reflect whether, after having overcome all
difficulties, my desire for the view will still be sufficiently
intense. Thus pleasure and pain can be made commensurate only
mediately through the intensity of the desire. Hence the question is
not at all whether there is a surplus of pleasure or of pain, but
whether the desire for pleasure is sufficiently intense to overcome
the pain.
A proof
for the accuracy of this view is to be found in the fact, that we put
a higher value on pleasure when it has to be purchased at the price
of great pain than when it simply falls into our lap like a gift from
heaven. When sufferings and agonies have toned down our desire and
yet after all our aim is attained, then the pleasure is all the
greater in proportion to the intensity of the desire that has
survived. Now it is just this proportion which, as I have shown (p.
137), represents the value of the pleasure. A further proof is to be
found in the fact that all living creatures (including men) develop
their instincts as long as they are able to bear the inhibiting pains
and agonies. The struggle for existence is but a consequence of this
fact. All living creatures strive to expand, and only those abandon
the struggle whose desires are throttled by the overwhelming
magnitude of the difficulties with which they meet. Every living
creature seeks food until sheer lack of food destroys its life. Man,
too, does not turn his hand against himself until rightly or wrongly,
he believes that he cannot attain those aims in life which alone seem
to him worth striving for. So long as he still believes in the
possibility of attaining what he thinks worth striving for he will
battle against all pains and miseries. Philosophy would have to
convince man that striving is rational only when pleasure outweighs
pain, for it is his nature to strive for the attainment of the
objects which he desires, so long as he can bear the inevitable
incidental pain, however great that may be. Such a philosophy,
however, would be mistaken, because it would make the human will
dependent on a factor (the surplus of pleasure over pain) which, at
first, is wholly foreign to man's point of new. The original measure
of his will is his desire, and desire asserts itself as long as it
can. If I am compelled, in purchasing a certain quantity of apples,
to take twice as many rotten ones as sound ones — because the
seller wishes to clear out his stock — I shall not hesitate a
moment to take the bad apples as well, if I put so high a value on
the smaller quantity of good apples that I am prepared, in addition
to the purchase price, to bear also the expense for the
transportation of the rotten goods. This example illustrates the
relation between the quantities of pleasure and of pain which are
caused by a given instinct. I determine the value of the good apples,
not by subtracting the sum of the good from that of the bad ones, but
by the fact that, in spite of the presence of the bad ones, I still
attach a value to the good ones.
Just as I
leave out of account the bad apples in the enjoyment of the good
ones, so I surrender myself to the satisfaction of a desire after
having shaken off the inevitable pains.
Supposing
even Pessimism were in the right with its assertion that the world
contains more pain than pleasure, it would nevertheless have no
influence upon the will, for living beings would still strive after
such pleasure as remains. The empirical proof that pain overbalances
pleasure is indeed effective for showing up the futility of that
school of philosophy which looks for the value of life in a surplus
of pleasure (Eudæmonism), but not for exhibiting the will, as
such, as irrational. For the will is not set upon a surplus of
pleasure, but on whatever quantity of pleasure remains after
subtracting the pain. This remaining pleasure still appears always as
an object worth pursuing.
An
attempt has been made to refute Pessimism by asserting that it is
impossible to determine by calculation the surplus of pleasure or of
pain in the world. The possibility of every calculation depends on
our being able to compare the things to be calculated in respect of
their quantity. Every pain and every pleasure has a definite quantity
(intensity and duration). Further, we can compare pleasurable
feelings of different kinds one with another, at least approximately,
with regard to their intensity. We know whether we derive more
pleasure from a good cigar or from a good joke. No objection can be
raised against the comparability of different pleasures and pains in
respect of their intensity. The thinker who sets himself the task of
determining the surplus of pleasure or pain in the world, starts from
presuppositions which are undeniably legitimate. It is possible to
maintain that the Pessimistic results are false, but it is not
possible to doubt that quantities of pleasure and pain can be
scientifically estimated, and that the surplus of the one or the
other can thereby be determined. It is incorrect, however, to assert
that from this calculation any conclusions can be drawn for the human
will. The cases in which we really make the value of our activity
dependent on whether pleasure or pain shows a surplus, are those in
which the objects towards which our activity is directed are
indifferent to us. If it is a question whether, after the day's work,
I am to amuse myself by a game or by light conversation, and if I am
totally indifferent what I do so long as it amuses me, then I simply
ask myself, What gives me the greatest surplus of pleasure? And I
abandon the activity altogether if the scales incline towards the
side of displeasure. If we are buying a toy for a child we consider,
in selecting, what will give him the greatest pleasure, but in all
other cases we are not determined exclusively by considerations of
the balance of pleasure.
Hence, if
Pessimistic thinkers believe that they are preparing the ground for
an unselfish devotion to the work of civilization, by demonstrating
that there is a greater quantity of pain than of pleasure in life,
they forget altogether that the human will is so constituted that it
cannot be influenced by this knowledge. The whole striving of men is
directed towards the greatest possible satisfaction that is
attainable after overcoming all difficulties. The hope of this
satisfaction is the basis of all human activity. The work of every
single individual and the whole achievement of civilization have
their roots in this hope. The Pessimistic theory of Ethics thinks it
necessary to represent the pursuit of pleasure as impossible, in
order that man may devote himself to his proper moral tasks. But
these moral tasks are nothing but the concrete natural and spiritual
instincts; and he strives to satisfy these notwithstanding all
incidental pain. The pursuit of pleasure, then, which the Pessimist
sets himself to eradicate is nowhere to be found. But the tasks which
man has to fulfil are fulfilled by him because from his very nature
he wills to fulfil them. The Pessimistic system of Ethics maintains
that a man cannot devote himself to what he recognizes as his task in
life until he has first given up the desire for pleasure. But no
system of Ethics can ever invent other tasks than the realization of
those satisfactions which human desires demand, and the fulfilment of
man's moral ideas. No Ethical theory can deprive him of the pleasure
which he experiences in the realization of what he desires. When the
Pessimist says, “Do not strive after pleasure, for pleasure is
unattainable; strive instead after what you recognize to be your
task,” we must reply that it is human nature to strive to do
one's tasks, and that philosophy has gone astray in inventing the
principle that man strives for nothing but pleasure. He aims at the
satisfaction of what his nature demands, and the attainment of this
satisfaction is to him a pleasure. Pessimistic Ethics, in demanding
that we should strive, not after pleasure, but after the realization
of what we recognize as our task, lays its finger on the very thing
which man wills in virtue of his own nature. There is no need for man
to be turned inside out by philosophy, there is no need for him to
discard his nature, in order to be moral. Morality means striving for
an end so long as the pain connected with this striving does not
inhibit the desire for the end altogether; and this is the essence of
all genuine will. Ethics is not founded on the eradication of all
desire for pleasure, in order that, in its place, bloodless moral
ideas may set up their rule where no strong desire for pleasure
stands in their way, but it is based on the strong will which attains
its end even when the path to it is full of thorns.
Moral
ideals have their root in the moral imagination of man. Their
realization depends on the desire for them being sufficiently intense
to overcome pains and agonies. They are man's own intuitions. In them
his spirit braces itself to action. They are what he wills, because
their realization is his highest pleasure. He needs no Ethical theory
first to forbid him to strive for pleasure and then to prescribe to
him what he shall strive for. He will, of himself, strive for moral
ideals provided his moral imagination is sufficiently active to
inspire him with the intuitions, which give strength to his will to
overcome all resistance.
If a man
strives towards sublimely great ideals, it is because they are the
content of his will, and because their realization will bring him an
enjoyment compared with which the pleasure which inferior spirits
draw from the satisfaction of their commonplace needs is a mere
nothing. Idealists delight in translating their ideals into
reality.
Anyone
who wants to eradicate the pleasure which the fulfilment of human
desires brings, will have first to degrade man to the position of a
slave who does not act because he wills, but because he must. For the
attainment of the object of will gives pleasure. What we call the
good is not what a man must do, but what he wills to do when he
unfolds the fullness of his nature. Anyone who does not acknowledge
this must deprive man of all the objects of his will, and then
prescribe to him from without what he is to make the content of his
will.
Man
values the satisfaction of a desire because the desire springs from
his own nature. What he attains is valuable because it is the object
of his will. If we deny any value to the ends which men do will, then
we shall have to look for the ends that are valuable among objects
which men do not will.
A system
of Ethics, then, which is built up on Pessimism has its root in the
contempt of man's moral imagination. Only he who does not consider
the individual human mind capable of determining for itself the
content of its striving can look for the sum and substance of will in
the craving for pleasure. A man without imagination does not create
moral ideas; they must be imparted to him. Physical nature sees to it
that he seeks the satisfaction of his lower desires; but for the
development of the whole man the desires which have their origin in
the spirit are fully as necessary. Only those who believe that man
has no such spiritual desires at all can maintain that they must be
imparted to him from without. On that view it will also be correct to
say that it is man's duty to do what he does not will to do. Every
Ethical system which demands of man that he should suppress his will
in order to fulfil tasks which he does not will, works, not with the
whole man, but with a stunted being who lacks the faculty of
spiritual desires. For a man who has been harmoniously developed, the
so-called ideas of the Good lie, not without, but within the range of
his will. Moral action consists, not in the extirpation of one's
individual will, but in the fullest development of human nature. To
regard moral ideals as attainable only on condition that man destroys
his individual will, is to ignore the fact that these ideals are as
much rooted in man's will as the satisfaction of the so-called animal
instincts.
It cannot
be denied that the views here outlined may easily be misunderstood.
Immature youths without any moral imagination like to look upon the
instincts of their half developed natures as the full substance of
humanity, and reject all moral ideas which they have not themselves
originated, in order that they may “live themselves out”
without restriction. But it goes without saying that a theory which
holds for a fully developed man does not hold for half-developed
boys. Anyone who still requires to be brought by education to the
point where his moral nature breaks through the shell of his lower
passions, cannot expect to be measured by the same standard as a
mature man. But it was not my intention to set down what a
half-fledged youth requires to be taught, but the essential nature of
a mature man.
Every
mature man is the maker of his own value. He does not aim at
pleasure, which comes to him as a gift of grace on the part of nature
or of the Creator; nor does he live for the sake of what he
recognizes as duty, after he has put away from him the desire for
pleasure. He acts as he wills, that is, in accordance with his moral
intuitions; and he finds in the attainment of what he wills the true
enjoyment of life. He determines the value of his life by measuring
his attainments against his aims. An Ethical system which puts
“ought” in the place of “will,” duty in the
place of inclination, is consistent in determining the value of man
by the ratio between the demands of duty and his actual achievements.
It applies to man a measure that is external to his own nature. The
view which I have here developed points man back to himself. It
recognizes as the true value of life nothing except what each
individual regards as such by the measure of his own will. A value of
life which the individual does not recognize is as little
acknowledged by my views as a purpose of life which does not spring
from the value thus recognized. My view looks upon the individual as
his own master and the assessor of his own value.
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