CHAPTER II
THE DESIRE FOR KNOWLEDGE
Zwei Seelen wohnen, ach! in
meiner Brust,
Die eine will sich von der andern
trennen;
Die eine hält, in derber
Liebeslust,
Sich an die Welt mit klammernden
Organen
Die andre hebt gewaltsam sich vom
Dust
Zu den Gefilden hoher Ahnen.
FAUST
I, 1112 – 1117.
Two souls alas! reside within my
breast,
And each withdraws from, and
repels, its brother.
One with tenacious organs holds
in love
And clinging lust the world in
its embraces;
The other strongly sweeps, this
dust above,
Into the high ancestral spaces.
FAUST,
Part I, Scene 2.
(Bayard Taylor's translation.)
IN
these words Goethe expresses a trait which is deeply ingrained in
human nature. Man is not a self-contained unity. He demands ever more
than the world, of itself, offers him. Nature has endowed us with
needs: among them are some the satisfaction of which she leaves to
our own activity. However abundant the gifts which we have received,
still more abundant are our desires. We seem born to be dissatisfied.
And our desire for knowledge is but a special instance of this
dissatisfaction. Suppose we look twice at a tree. The first time we
see its branches at rest, the second time in motion. We are not
satisfied with this observation. Why, we ask, does the tree appear to
us now at rest, then in motion? Every glance at nature evokes in us a
multitude of questions.
Every phenomenon we meet
presents a new problem to be solved. Every experience is to us a riddle.
We observe that from the egg there emerges a creature like the mother
animal, and we ask for the reason of the likeness. We observe a living
being grow and develop to a determinate degree of perfection, and we
seek the conditions of this experience. Nowhere are we satisfied with
what nature spreads out before our senses. Everywhere we seek what we
call the explanation of the facts.
The something more
which we seek in things, over and above what is immediately given to
us in them, splits our whole being into two parts. We become
conscious of our opposition to the world. We oppose ourselves to the
world as independent beings. The universe has for us two opposite
poles: I and World.
We erect this barrier
between ourselves and the world as soon as consciousness is first
kindled in us. But we never cease to feel that, in spite of all, we
belong to the world, that there is a connecting link between it and
us, and that we are beings within, and not without, the universe.
This feeling makes us
strive to bridge over this opposition, and ultimately the whole
spiritual striving of mankind is nothing but the bridging of this
opposition. The history of our spiritual life is a continuous seeking
after the unity between ourselves and the world. Religion, Art, and
Science follow, one and all, this goal. The religious believer seeks
in the revelation which God grants him, the solution of the world
problem, which his I, dissatisfied with the world of mere phenomena,
sets him as a task. The artist seeks to embody in his material the
Ideas which are in his I, that he may thus reconcile that which lives
within him and the outer world. He, too, feels dissatisfied with the
world of mere appearances, and seeks to mould into it that something
more which his I contains and which transcends appearances. The
thinker searches for the laws of phenomena. He strives to master by
thinking what he experiences by observing. Only when we have made the
world-content into our thought-content do we again find the unity
from which we had separated ourselves. We shall see later that this
goal can be reached only if the problem of scientific research is
comprehended much more deeply than is often done. The whole
situation, as I have here stated it, meets us, on the stage of
history, in the conflict between the one-world theory, or Monism, and
the two-world theory, or Dualism. Dualism pays attention only to the
separation between the I and the World, which the consciousness of
man has brought about. All its efforts consist in a vain struggle to
reconcile these opposites, which it calls now Spirit and Matter, now
Subject and Object, now Thinking and Appearance. The Dualist feels
that there must be a bridge between the two worlds, but is not able
to find it. In so far as man is aware of himself as “I,”
he cannot but put down this “I” in thinking on the side
of Spirit; and in opposing to this “I” the world, he is
bound to reckon on the world's side the realm of percepts given to
the senses, i.e., the Material World. In doing so, man assigns a
position to himself within this very antithesis of Spirit and Matter.
He is the more compelled to do so because his own body belongs to the
Material World. Thus the “I,” or Ego, belongs as a part
to the realm of Spirit; the material objects and processes which are
perceived by the senses belong to the “World.” All the
riddles which belong to Spirit and Matter, man must inevitably
rediscover in the fundamental riddle of his own nature. Monism pays
attention only to the unity and tries either to deny or to slur over
the opposites, present though they are. Neither of these two points
of view can satisfy us, for they do not do justice to the facts. The
Dualist sees in Spirit (I) and Matter (World) two essentially
different entities, and cannot, therefore, understand how they
can interact with one another. How should Spirit be aware of what
goes on in Matter, seeing that the essential nature of Matter is
quite alien to Spirit? Or how in these circumstances should Spirit
act upon Matter, so as to translate its intentions into actions? The
most acute and the most absurd hypotheses have been propounded
to answer these questions. However, up to the present the Monists are
not in a much better position. They have tried three different ways
of meeting the difficulty. Either they deny Spirit and become
Materialists; or they deny Matter in order to seek their salvation in
Spiritualism; [Editor's footnote: The author refers to philosophical
“Spiritualism,” as opposed to philosophical
“Materialism.” Cf. p. 15, last lines.] or they assert
that, even in the simplest entities in the world, Spirit and Matter
are indissolubly bound together, so that there is no need to marvel
at the appearance in man of these two modes of existence, seeing that
they are never found apart.
Materialism can never
offer a satisfactory explanation of the world. For every attempt at
an explanation must begin with the formation of thoughts about the
phenomena of the world.
Materialism, thus, begins with the thought of
Matter or material processes. But, in doing so, it is ipso facto
confronted by two different sets of facts, viz., the material world
and the thoughts about it. The Materialist seeks to make these latter
intelligible by regarding them as purely material processes. He
believes that thinking takes place in the brain, much in the same way
as digestion takes place in the animal organs. Just as he ascribes
mechanical and organic processes to Matter, so he credits it with the
capacity to think in certain circumstances. He overlooks that,
in doing so, he is merely shifting the problem from one place to
another. Instead of to himself he ascribes the power of thinking to
Matter. And thus he is back again at his starting-point. How does
Matter come to think about its own nature? Why is it not simply
satisfied with itself and content to accept its own existence? The
Materialist has turned his attention away from the definite subject,
his own I, and occupies himself with an indefinite shadowy something.
And here the old problem meets him again. The materialistic
conception cannot solve the problem: it can only shift it to another
place.
What of the
Spiritualistic theory? The Spiritualist denies to Matter all
independent existence and regards it merely as a product of Spirit.
But when he tries to apply this theory to the solution of the riddle
of his own human nature, he finds himself in an awkward position.
Over against the “I,” or Ego, which can be ranged on the
side of Spirit, there stands directly the world of the senses. No
spiritual approach to it seems open. It has to be perceived and
experienced by the “I” with the help of material
processes. Such material processes the “I” does not
discover in itself, so long as it regards its own nature as
exclusively spiritual. Within all that it achieves by its own
spiritual effort, the sensible world is never to be found. It seems
as if the “I” had to concede that the world would be a
closed book to it, unless it could establish a non-spiritual relation
to the world. Similarly, when it comes to acting, we have to
translate our purposes into realities with the help of material
things and forces. We are, therefore, dependent on the outer world.
The most extreme Spiritualist, or, if you prefer it, Idealist, is
Johann Gottlieb Fichte. He attempts to deduce the whole edifice of
the world from the “I.” What he has actually
accomplished is a magnificent thought-picture of the world,
without any empirical content. As little as it is possible for the
Materialist to argue the Spirit away, just as little is it possible
for the Idealist to argue away the outer world of Matter.
When man directs his
consideration upon the “I,” he perceives, in the first
instance, the work of this “I” in the conceptual
elaboration of the world of Ideas. Hence a philosophy the direction
of which is spiritualistic may feel tempted, in view of man's own
essential nature, to acknowledge nothing of spirit except this world
of Ideas. In this way Spiritualism becomes one-sided Idealism.
Instead of going on to penetrate through the world of Ideas to the
spiritual world, Idealism identifies the spiritual world with the
world of Ideas itself. As a result, it is compelled to remain fixed
with its world-view in the circle of the activity of the Ego, as if
it were bewitched.
A curious variant of
Idealism is to be found in the theory which F. A. Lange has put
forward in his widely read History of Materialism. He holds that the
Materialists are quite right in declaring all phenomena, including
our thoughts, to be the product of purely material processes, but, in
turn, Matter and its processes are for him themselves the product of
our thinking. “The senses give us only the effects of things,
not true copies, much less the things themselves. But among these
mere effects we must include the senses themselves together with the
brain and the molecular vibrations which we assume to go on there.”
That is, our thinking is produced by the material processes, and
these by the thinking of our I. Lange's philosophy is thus nothing
more than the philosophical analogon of the story of honest Baron
Münchhausen, who holds himself up in the air by his own pigtail.
The third form of
Monism is that which finds even in the simplest being (the atom) the
union of both Matter and Spirit. But nothing is gained by this
either, except that the question, the origin of which is really in
our consciousness, is shifted to another place. How comes it that the
simple being manifests itself in a two-fold manner, if it is an
indivisible unity?
Against all these
theories we must urge the fact that we meet with the basic and
primary opposition first in our own consciousness. It is we,
ourselves, who break away from the bosom of Nature and contrast
ourselves as “I” with the “World.” Goethe has
given classic expression to this in his essay Nature although his
manner may at first sight be considered quite unscientific: “Living
in the midst of her (Nature) we are strangers to her. Ceaselessly
she speaks to us, yet betrays none of her secrets.” But Goethe
knows the reverse side too: “Mankind is all in her, and she in
all mankind.”
However true it may be
that we have estranged ourselves from Nature, it is none the less
true that we feel we are in her and belong to her. It can be only her
own working which pulsates also in us.
We must find the way
back to her again. A simple reflection may point this way out to us.
We have, it is true, torn ourselves away from Nature, but we must
none the less have taken with us something of her in our own nature.
This quality of Nature in us we must seek out, and then we shall
restore our connection with her. Dualism neglects to do this. It
considers the human interior as a spiritual entity utterly alien to
Nature and attempts somehow to hitch it on to Nature. No wonder that
it cannot find the coupling link. We can find Nature outside of us
only if we have first learnt to know her within us. What is allied to
her within us must be our guide to her. This marks out our path of
inquiry. We shall attempt no speculations concerning the interaction
of Nature and Spirit. We shall rather probe into the depths of our
own being, to find there those elements which we saved in our flight
from Nature.
The examination of our
own being must bring the solution of the problem. We must reach a
point where we can say, “Here we are no longer merely ‘I,’
here is something which is more than ‘I.’“
I am well aware that
many who have read thus far will not consider my discussion in
keeping with “the present position of science.” To such
criticism I can reply only that I have so far not been concerned with
any scientific results, but simply with the description of what every
one of us experiences in his own consciousness. That a few phrases
have been added about attempts to reconcile man's consciousness and
the World serves solely to elucidate the actual facts. I have,
therefore, made no attempt to give to the expressions “I,”
“Spirit,” “World,” “Nature,” the
precise meaning which they usually bear in Psychology and Philosophy.
The ordinary consciousness ignores the sharp distinctions of the
sciences, and so far my purpose has been solely to record the facts
of everyday experience. I am concerned, not with the way in which
science, so far, has interpreted consciousness, but with the way in
which we experience it in every moment of our lives.
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