CHAPTER IV
THE WORLD AS PERCEPT
CONCEPTS
and Ideas [On the use of the term “Idea” see
Preface to the Revised Translation p. ix.] arise through
thinking. What a concept is cannot be expressed in words. Words can
do no more than draw our attention to the fact that we have concepts.
When someone sees a tree, his thinking reacts to the stimulus of this
observation. Thus an ideal element is added to the perceived object,
and the perceiver regards the object and its ideal complement as
belonging together. When the object disappears from the field of his
observation, the ideal counterpart alone remains. This latter is the
concept of the object. The wider the range of our experience, the
larger becomes the sum of our concepts. Moreover, concepts are not by
any means found in isolation one from the other. They combine to form
a whole ruled by law. The concept “organism,” e.g.,
combines with those of “development according to law,”
“growth,” and others. Other concepts based on particular
objects fuse completely with one another. All concepts formed from
particular lions fuse in the collective concept “lion.”
In this way, all the separate concepts combine to form a closed,
conceptual system within which each has its special place. “Ideas”
do not differ qualitatively from concepts. They are but fuller, more
saturated, more comprehensive concepts. I must attach special
importance to the necessity of bearing in mind, here, that I make
thinking my starting-point, and not concepts and Ideas which are
first gained by means of thinking. These latter presuppose thinking.
My remarks regarding the self-dependent, self-sufficient character of
thinking cannot, therefore, be simply transferred to concepts.
(I make special mention of this, because it is here that I differ
from Hegel, who regards the concept as something primary and
original.)
Concepts cannot be
gained from observation. This is apparent from the fact that, as man
grows up, he slowly and gradually forms the concepts corresponding to
the objects which surround him. Concepts are added to observation.
A philosopher, widely
read at the present day — Herbert Spencer — describes the
mental process which we perform upon observation as follows: “If,
when walking through the fields some day in September, you hear a
rustle a few yards in advance, and on observing the ditch-side where
it occurs, see the herbage agitated, you will probably turn towards
the spot to learn by what this sound and motion are produced. As you
approach there flutters into the ditch a partridge; on seeing this
your curiosity is satisfied — you have what you call an
explanation of the appearances. The explanation, mark, amounts to
this — that whereas throughout life you have had countless
experiences of disturbance among small stationary bodies,
accompanying the movement of other bodies among them, and have
generalized the relation between such disturbances and such
movements, you consider this particular disturbance explained on
finding it to present an instance of the like relation” (First
Principles, Part I, par. 23). A closer analysis leads to a very
different description from that here given. When I hear a noise, my
first demand is for the concept which fits this observation. It is
this concept only which points beyond the noise. Whoever does not
reflect further, hears just the noise and is satisfied with that. But
my reflecting makes it clear to me that the noise is to be regarded
as an effect. Thus it is only when I combine the concept of effect
with the percept of a noise that I am led to go beyond the particular
observation and seek for its cause. The concept of “effect”
calls up that of “cause,” and my next step is to look for
the agent, which I find, say, in a partridge. But these concepts,
cause and effect, can never be gained through mere observation,
however many instances we bring under review. Observation evokes
thinking, and it is this which shows me how to link separate
experiences together.
If one demands of a
“strictly objective science” that it should take its data
from observation alone, one must demand also that it abandon all
thinking. For thinking, by its very nature, transcends the objects of
observation.
It is time now to pass
from thought to the thinking being. For it is through the thinker
that thinking is combined with observation. The human consciousness
is the stage on which concept and observation meet and are linked to
one another. In saying this, we already characterize this (human)
consciousness. It mediates between thinking and observation. In so
far as we observe an object, it seems to be given; in so far as we
think, we appear to ourselves as being active. We regard the thing as
object and ourselves as the thinking subject. When thinking is
directed upon the observation we have consciousness of objects; when
it is directed upon ourselves we have consciousness of ourselves
or self-consciousness. Human consciousness must, of necessity, be at
the same time self-consciousness, because it is a consciousness which
thinks. For, when thinking contemplates its own activity it makes an
object for study of its own essential nature, it makes an object of
itself as subject.
It must not be
overlooked that it is only by means of thinking that I am able to
determine myself as subject and contrast myself with objects,
Therefore, thinking must never be regarded as a merely subjective
activity. Thinking transcends the distinction of subject and object.
It produces these two concepts just as it produces all others. When,
therefore, I, as thinking subject, refer a concept to an object, we
must not regard this reference as something purely subjective. It is
not the subject, but thinking which makes the reference. The subject
does not think because it is a subject, rather it conceives itself to
be a subject because it can think. The activity performed by man as a
thinking being is thus not merely subjective. Rather it is neither
subjective nor objective; it transcends both these concepts. I ought
never to say that my individual subject thinks but rather that I
myself, as “subject,” exist by the grace of thinking.
Thinking is thus an element which leads me beyond myself and relates
me to objects. At the same time it separates me from them, inasmuch
as it sets me, as subject, over against them.
It is just this which
constitutes the double nature of man. He thinks and thereby embraces
himself and the rest of the world. But by this same act of thought he
determines himself also as an individual, standing over against the
things, as subject.
We must next ask
ourselves how the other element, which we have so far simply called
the object of observation and which comes, in consciousness, into
contact with thinking, enters into consciousness at all?
In order to answer this
question, we must eliminate from the field of observation everything
which has been imported by thinking. For, at any moment, the content
of our consciousness is always shot through with concepts in the most
varied ways.
Let us imagine that a
being with fully developed human intelligence originated out of
nothing and confronted the world. All that it there perceived before
its thinking began to act would be the pure content of observation.
The world so far would appear to this being as a mere chaotic
aggregate of objects of sensation — colours, sounds, sensations
of pressure, of warmth, of taste, of smell, and, further, feelings of
pleasure and pain. This aggregation constitutes the world of pure
unthinking observation. Over it stands thinking, ready to begin its
activity as soon as it can find a point of attack. Experience shows
that the opportunity is not long in coming. Thinking is able to draw
threads from one element of observation to another. It links definite
concepts with these elements and thus establishes a relation between
them. We have seen above how a noise which we hear is connected with
another observation by our identifying the first as the effect of the
second.
If now we recollect
that the activity of thinking is on no account to be considered as
merely subjective, then we shall not be tempted to believe that the
relations thus established by thinking have merely subjective
validity.
Our next task is to
discover by means of thinking reflection what relation the
above-mentioned immediately given content of observation has to the
conscious subject.
The ambiguity of
current speech makes it advisable for me to come to an agreement with
my readers concerning the meaning of a word which I shall have to
employ in what follows. I shall apply the word “percepts”
to the immediate objects of sensation enumerated above, in so far as
the conscious subject apprehends them through observation. It is,
then, not the process of observation, but the object of observation
which I call the “percept.”
I do not choose the
term “sensation,” because this has a definite meaning in
Physiology which is narrower than that of my concept of “percept.”
I can speak of a feeling as a percept, but not as a sensation in the
physiological sense of the term. I have knowledge of my feeling
through its becoming a percept for me. The manner in which, through
observation, we gain knowledge of our thinking is such that thinking,
too, may be called a percept, when it first appears before our
consciousness.
The unreflective man
regards his percepts, such as they appear to his immediate
apprehension, as things having an existence wholly independent of
him. When he sees a tree he believes in the first instance that it
stands in the form which he sees, with the colours of all its parts,
etc., there on the spot towards which his gaze is directed. When the
same man sees the sun in the morning appear as a disc on the horizon,
and follows the course of this disc, he believes that the phenomenon
exists and occurs (by itself) exactly as he observes it. To this
belief he clings until he meets with further percepts which
contradict his former ones. The child who has as yet had no
experience of distance grasps at the moon, and does not correct its
first impression as to the real distance until a second percept
contradicts the first. Every extension of the circle of my percepts
compels me to correct my picture of the world. We see this in
everyday life, as well as in the spiritual development of mankind.
The picture which the ancients made for themselves of the relation of
the earth to the sun and other heavenly bodies had to be replaced by
another when Copernicus found that it was not in accordance with some
percepts which in those early days were unknown. A man who had been
born blind said, when operated on by Dr. Franz, that the idea of the
size of objects which he had formed before his operation by his sense
of touch was a very different one. He had to correct his tactual
percepts by his visual percepts.
How is it that we are
compelled to make these continual corrections in our observations?
A simple reflection
supplies the answer to this question. When I stand at one end of an
avenue, the trees at the other end, away from me, seem smaller and
nearer together than those where I stand. My percept-picture changes
when I change the place from which I am looking. The form in which it
presents itself to me is, therefore, dependent on a condition which
inheres, not in the object, but in me, the percipient. It is all the
same to the avenue where I stand. But the picture of it which I
receive depends essentially on my standpoint. In the same way, it
makes no difference to the sun and the planetary system that human
beings happen to look at them from the earth; but the percept-picture
of the heavens which human beings have is determined by the fact that
they inhabit the earth. This dependence of our percept-picture on our
places of observation is most easy to understand. The matter becomes
more difficult when we realize further that our perceptual world is
dependent on our bodily and spiritual organization. The physicist
teaches us that within the space in which we hear a sound there are
vibrations of the air, and that also there are vibrations in the
particles of the body in which we seek the cause of the sound. These
vibrations are perceived as sounds only if we have normally
constructed ears. Without them the whole world would be for us for
ever silent. Again, physiology teaches us that there are men who
perceive nothing of the wonderful display of colours which surrounds
us. In their percept-picture there are only degrees of light and
dark. Others are blind only to one colour, e.g., red. Their world
picture lacks this colour tone, and hence it is actually a different
one from that of the average man. I should like to call the
dependence of my percept-picture on my point of observation
“mathematical,” and its dependence on my organization
“qualitative.” The former determines the proportions of
size and mutual distances of my percepts, the latter their quality.
The fact that I see a red surface as red — this qualitative
determination — depends on the organization of my eye.
My percept-pictures,
then, are in the first instance subjective. The recognition of the
subjective character of our percepts may easily lead us to doubt
whether there is any objective basis for them at all. When we know
that a percept, e.g., that of a red colour or of a certain tone, is
not possible without a specific structure of our organism, we may
easily be led to believe that it has no being at all apart from our
subjective organization, that it has no kind of existence apart from
the act of perceiving of which it is the object. The classical
representative of this theory is George Berkeley, who held that from
the moment we realize the importance of the subject for perception,
we are no longer able to believe in the existence of a world apart
from a conscious Spirit. “Some truths there are so near and
obvious to the mind that man need only open his eyes to see them.
Such I take this important one to be, viz., that all the choir of
heaven and the furniture of the earth — in a word, all those
bodies which compose the mighty frame of the world — have not
any subsistence without a mind; that their being consists in their
being perceived or known; that, consequently, so long as they are not
actually perceived by me, or do not exist in my mind or that of any
other created spirit, they must either have no existence at all or
else subsist in the mind of some Eternal Spirit.” (Berkeley,
Principles of Human Knowledge, Part I, Section 6.)
On this view, when we
take away the fact of its being perceived, nothing remains of the
percept. There is no colour when none is seen, no sound when none is
heard. Extension, form, and motion exist as little as colour and
sound apart from the act of perception. We never perceive bare
extension or shape. These are always joined with colour or some other
quality, which are undoubtedly dependent on our subjectivity. If
these latter disappear when we cease to perceive, the former, being
connected with them, must disappear likewise.
If it is urged that,
even though figure, colour, sound, etc., have no existence except
within the act of perception, yet there must be things which exist
apart from consciousness and to which the conscious
percept-pictures are similar, then the view we have mentioned would
answer, that a colour can be similar only to a colour, a figure to a
figure. Our percepts can be similar only to our percepts and to
nothing else.. Even what we call a thing is nothing but a collection
of percepts which are connected in a definite way. If I strip a table
of its shape, extension colour, etc. — in short, of all that is
merely my percepts — then nothing remains over. If we follow
this view to its logical conclusion, we are led to the assertion that
the objects of my perceptions exist only through me, and indeed only
in as far as, and as long as, I perceive them. They disappear with my
perceiving and have no meaning apart from it. Apart from my percepts,
however, I know of no objects and cannot know of any.
No objection can be
made to this assertion as long as we take into account merely the
general fact that the percept depends partly on the organization of
the subject. The matter would be far otherwise if we were in a
position to say what part exactly is played by our perceiving in the
bringing forth of a percept. We should know then what happens to a
percept whilst it is being perceived, and we should also be able to
determine what character it must already possess before it comes to
be perceived.
This leads us to turn
our attention from the object of a percept to the perceiving subject.
I am aware not only of other things but also of myself. The content
of my percept of myself consists, in the first instance, in being
something stable in contrast with the ever coming and going flux of
percept-pictures. The perception of the I can always come forth in my
consciousness alongside of all other percepts. When I am absorbed in
the perception of a given object I am, for the time being, aware only
of this object. To this, then, the percept of my Self can come. I am
then conscious, not only of the object, but also of my Self as
opposed to and observing the object. I do not merely see a tree, I
know also that it is I who see it. I know, moreover, that some
process takes place in me when I observe the tree. When the tree
disappears from my field of vision, an after-effect of this process
remains in my consciousness, viz., an image of the tree. This image
has become associated with my Self during my observation. My Self has
become enriched; to its content a new element has been added. This
element I call my representation [See Translator's Preface,
p. ix.]
of the tree. I should never have occasion to talk of representations
did I not experience them in the percept of my own Self. Percepts
would come and go; I should let them slip by. Only because I perceive
my Self, and observe that with each percept the content of the Self,
too, is changed, I am compelled to connect the observation of the
object with the changes in my own condition, and to speak of my
representation.
I perceive the
representation in my Self in the same sense as I perceive colour,
sound, etc., in other objects. I am now also able to distinguish
these other objects, which stand over against me, by the name of the
outer world, whereas the contents of my percept of my Self form my
inner world. The failure to recognize the true relation between
representation and object has led to the greatest misunderstandings
in modern philosophy. The fact that I perceive a change in my Self,
that my Self undergoes a modification, has been thrust into the
foreground, whilst the object which causes these modifications
is altogether lost sight of. It has been said that we perceive, not
objects, but only our representations. I know, so it is said, nothing
of the table in itself, which is the object of my observation, but
only of the changes which occur within me when I perceive a table.
This view should not be confused with the Berkeleyan theory mentioned
above. Berkeley maintains the subjective nature of my perceptual
contents, but he does not say that I can know only my own
representations. He limits my knowledge to my representations
because, in his opinion, there are no objects outside the act of
representing. What I take as a table no longer exists, according to
Berkeley, when I cease to look at it. This is why Berkeley holds that
our percepts are created directly by the omnipotence of God. I see a
table because God causes this percept in me. For Berkeley therefore,
nothing is real except God and human spirits. What we call the
“world” exists only in spirits. What the naive man calls
the outer world, or corporeal nature, is for Berkeley non-existent.
This theory is confronted by the now predominant Kantian view which
limits our knowledge of the world to our representations, not because
of any conviction that nothing beyond these representations exists,
but because it holds that we are so organized that we can experience
only the changes of our own selves, not the things which cause these
changes. This view concludes from the fact that I know only my
representations, not that there is no reality independent of them,
but only that the subject cannot have direct knowledge of such
reality. The subject can merely “through the medium of its
subjective thoughts imagine it, invent it, think it, cognize it, or
perhaps even fail to cognize it.” (O. Liebmann, Zur Analysis
der Wirklichkeit, p. 28.) This (Kantian) conception believes it gives
expression to something absolutely certain, indeed immediately
evident, without any proof. “The most fundamental principle
which the philosopher must bring to clear consciousness, consists in
the recognition that our knowledge, in the first instance, is limited
to our representations. Our representations are all that we
immediately experience, and just because we have immediate experience
of them the most radical doubt cannot rob us of our knowledge of
them. On the other hand, the knowledge which transcends my
representations — taking representations here in the widest
possible sense, so as to include all psychical processes — is
not proof against doubt. Hence, at the very beginning of all
philosophizing we must explicitly set down all knowledge which
transcends representations as open to doubt.” These are the
opening sentences of Volkelt's book on Kant's Theory of Knowledge.
What is here put forward as an immediate and self-evident truth is,
in reality, the conclusion of a line of argument which runs as
follows. Naive common sense believes that things, just as we perceive
them, exist also outside our consciousness. Physics, Physiology, and
Psychology, however, seem to teach us that for our percepts our
organization is necessary, and that, therefore, we cannot know
anything about external objects except what our organization
transmits to us. Our percepts are thus modifications of our
organization, not things-in-themselves. This train of thought has, in
fact, been characterized by Ed. von Hartmann as the one which leads
necessarily to the conviction that we can have direct knowledge only
of our own representations (cf. his Das Grundproblem der
Erkenntnistheorie, pp. 16 – 40). Because outside our organisms
we find vibrations of physical bodies and of air, which are perceived
by us as sounds, it is concluded that what we call sound is nothing
more than a subjective reaction of our organisms to these motions in
the external world. Similarly, colour and heat are inferred to be
merely modifications of our organisms. And, further, these two. kinds
of percepts are held to be produced in us through processes in the
external world which are utterly different from what we experience as
heat or as colour. When these processes stimulate the nerves in the
skin of my body, I have the subjective percept of heat; when they
stimulate the optical nerve I perceive light and colour. Light,
colour, and heat, then, are the reactions of my sensory nerves to
external stimuli. Similarly, the sense of touch reveals to me, not
the objects of the outer world, but only states of my own body. In
the sense of modern Physics one could somehow think that bodies are
composed of infinitely small particles called molecules, and that
these molecules are not in direct contact with one another, but have
definite intervals between them. Between them, therefore, is empty
space. Across this space they act on one another by attraction and
repulsion. If I put my hand on a body, the molecules of my hand by no
means touch those of the body directly, but there remains a certain
distance between body and hand, and what I experience as the body's
resistance is nothing but the effect of the force of repulsion which
its molecules exert on my hand. I am absolutely external to the body
and perceive only its effects on my organism.
The theory of the
so-called Specific Nervous Energy, which has been advanced by J.
Müller (1801 –1858), supplements these considerations. It
asserts that each sense has the peculiarity that it reacts to all
external stimuli in only one definite way. If the optic nerve is
stimulated, light sensations result, irrespective of whether the
stimulation is due to what we call light, or to mechanical pressure,
or an electrical current. On the other hand, the same external
stimulus applied to different senses gives rise to different
percepts. The conclusion from these facts seems to be, that our
sense-organs can only transmit what occurs in themselves, but nothing
of the external world. They determine our percepts, each according to
its own nature.
Physiology shows,
further, that there can be no direct knowledge even of the effects
which objects produce on our sense-organs. Through following up the
processes which occur in our own bodies, the physiologist finds that,
even in the sense-organs, the effects of the external vibrations are
modified in the most diverse ways. We can see this most clearly in
the case of eye and ear. Both are very complicated organs which
modify the external stimulus considerably, before they conduct it to
the corresponding nerve. From the peripheral end of the nerve the
modified stimulus is then conducted to the brain. Here the central
organs must in turn be stimulated. The conclusion is, therefore,
drawn that the external process undergoes a series of transformations
before it reaches consciousness. What goes on in the brain is
connected by so many intermediate links with the external process,
that any similarity to the latter is out of the question. What the
brain ultimately transmits to the soul is neither external processes,
nor processes in the sense-organs, but only such as occur in the
brain. But even these are not perceived immediately by the soul. What
we finally have in consciousness are not brain processes at all,
but sensations. My sensation of red has absolutely no similarity to
the process which occurs in the brain when I sense red. The
sensation, again, occurs as an effect in the soul, and the brain
process is only its cause. This is why Hartmann (Das Grundproblem der
Erkenntnistheorie, p. 37) says, “What the subject perceives
is therefore only modifications of his own physical states and
nothing else.” However, when I have sensations, they are very
far as yet from being grouped in what I perceive as “things.”
Only single sensations can be transmitted to me by the brain. The
sensations of hardness and softness are transmitted to me by the
organ of touch, those of colour and light by the organ of sight. Yet
all these are to be found united in one and the same object. The
unification must, therefore, be brought about by the soul itself;
that is, the soul combines the separate sensations, mediated through
the brain, into bodies. My brain conveys to me singly, and by widely
different paths, the visual, tactual, and auditory sensations which
the soul then combines into the representation of a trumpet. Thus,
this last link of a process (i.e., the representation of a trumpet),
is for my consciousness the primary datum. In this result nothing can
any longer be found of what exists outside me and originally
impressed my sense-organs. The external object is lost entirely on
the way to the brain and through the brain to the soul.
It would be hard to
find in the history of human spiritual life another edifice of
thought which has been built up with greater ingenuity, and which
yet, on closer analysis, collapses into nothing. Let us look a little
closer at the way it has been constructed. The theory starts with
what is given in naive consciousness, i.e., with things as perceived.
It proceeds to show that none of the qualities which we find in these
things would exist for us, had we no sense-organs. No eye — no
colour. Therefore, the colour is not, as yet, present in that which
affects the eye. It arises first through the interaction of the eye
and the object. The latter is, therefore, colourless. But neither is
the colour in the eye, for in the eye there is only a chemical, or
physical, process which is first conducted by the optic nerve to the
brain, and there initiates another process. Even this is not yet the
colour. That is only produced in the soul by means of the brain
process. Even then it does not yet enter my consciousness, but is
first referred by the soul to a body in the external world. There,
upon this body, I finally believe myself to perceive it. We have
traveled in a complete circle. We are conscious of a coloured object.
That is the starting-point. Here the thought-operation begins. If I
had no eye, the object would be, for me, colourless. I cannot,
therefore, attribute the colour to the object. I start on the search
for it. I look for it in the eye — in vain; in the nerve —
in vain; in the brain — in vain once more; in the soul —
here I find it indeed, but not attached to the object. I recover the
coloured body only on returning to my starting-point. The circle is
completed. I believe that I am cognizing as a product of my soul that
which the naive man regards as existing outside him, in space.
As long as one stops
here everything seems to fit beautifully. But we must go over the
circle once more from the beginning. Hitherto I have used, as my
starting-point, the object, i.e., the external percept of which up to
now, from my naive standpoint, I had a totally wrong conception. I
thought that the percept, just as I perceive it, had objective
existence. But now I observe that it disappears with my act of
representation, that it is only a modification of my soul condition.
Have I, then, any right at all to start from it in my arguments? Can
I say of it that it acts on my soul? I must henceforth treat the
table of which formerly I believed that it acted on me and produced a
representation of itself in me, as itself a representation. But from
this it follows logically that my sense-organs, and the processes in
them are also merely subjective. I have no right to talk of a real
eye but only of my representation of the eye. Exactly the same is
true of the nerve paths, and the brain process, and even of the
process in the soul itself, through which things are supposed to be
constructed out of the chaos of manifold sensations. If assuming the
truth of the first circle of argumentation, I run through the steps
of my act of cognition once more, the latter reveals itself as a
tissue of representations which, as such, cannot act on one another.
I cannot say that my representation of the object acts on my
representation of the eye, and that from this interaction, results my
representation of colour. Nor is it necessary that I should say
this. For as soon as I see clearly that my sense-organs and their
activity, my nerve- and soul-processes, can also be known to me only
through perception, the train of thought which I have outlined
reveals itself in its full absurdity. It is quite true that I can
have no percept without the corresponding sense-organ. But just
as little can I be aware of a sense-organ without perception. From
the percept of a table I can pass to the eye which sees it, or the
nerves in the skin which touch it, but what takes place in these I
can, in turn, learn only from perception. And then I soon notice that
there is no trace of similarity between the process which takes place
in the eye and the colour which I perceive. I cannot get rid of my
colour percept by pointing to the process which takes place in the
eye during this perception. No more can I rediscover the colour in
the nerve- or brain-processes. I only add new percepts, localized
within the organism, to the first percept which the naive man
localizes outside his organism. I only pass from one percept to
another.
Moreover, there is a
break in the whole argument. I can follow the processes in my
organism up to those in my brain, even though my assumptions become
more and more hypothetical as I approach the central processes of the
brain. The method of external observation ceases with the process in
my brain, more particularly with the process which I should observe,
if I could treat the brain with the instruments and methods of
Physics and Chemistry. The method of internal observation begins with
the sensation, and continues up to the combination of things out of
the material of sensation. At the point of transition from
brain-process to sensation, there is a break in the sequence of
observation.
The view which I have
here described, and which calls itself Critical Idealism, in contrast
to the standpoint of naive consciousness which it calls Naive
Realism, makes the mistake of characterizing the one percept as
representation, whilst taking the other in the very same sense
as the Naive Realism which it apparently refutes. It establishes the
representational (ideal) character of percepts by accepting naively,
as objectively valid facts, the percepts connected with one's own
organism; and, in addition, it fails to see that it confuses two
spheres of observation, between which it can find no connecting link.
Critical Idealism can
refute Naive Realism only by itself assuming, in naive-realistic
fashion, that one's own organism has objective existence. As soon as
the Idealist realizes that the percepts connected with his own
organism are exactly of the same nature as those which Naive Realism
assumes to have objective existence, he can no longer use the former
as a safe foundation for his theory. He would, to be consistent, have
to regard his own organism also as a mere complex of representations.
But this removes the possibility of regarding the content of the
perceptual world as a product of the spiritual organization. One
would have to assume that the representation “colour” was
only a modification of the representation “eye.”
So-called Critical Idealism can be established only by borrowing the
assumptions of Naive Realism. The apparent refutation of the latter
is achieved only by uncritically accepting in another sphere its own
assumptions as valid.
This much, then, is
certain: Analysis within the world of percepts cannot establish
Critical Idealism, and, consequently, cannot strip percepts of
their objective character.
Still less is it
legitimate to represent the principle that “the perceived world
is my representation” as self-evident and needing no proof.
Schopenhauer begins his chief work, The World as Will and Idea, with
the words: “The world is my idea [Editor's footnote:
The term “idea,” as used in the current translations of
Schopenhauer, would be “representation” according to our
translation.] — this is a truth which holds good for everything
that lives and cognizes, though man alone can bring it into
reflective and abstract consciousness. If he really does this, he has
attained to philosophical self-consciousness. It then becomes clear
and certain to him that what he knows is not a sun and an earth, but
only an eye that sees a sun, a hand that feels an earth; that the
world which surrounds him is there only as idea, i.e., only in
relation to something else, the consciousness which is himself. If
any truth can be asserted a priori, it is this; for it is the
expression of the most general form of all possible and thinkable
experience, a form which is more general than time, or space, or
causality, for they all presuppose it ...” (The World as
Will and Idea, Book I, par. I.) This whole theory is wrecked by
the fact, already mentioned above, that the eye and the hand are just
as much percepts as the sun and the earth. Using Schopenhauer's
vocabulary in his own sense, I might maintain against him that my eye
which sees the sun, and my hand which feels the earth, are my ideas
(representations) just like the sun and the earth themselves. That,
put in this way, the whole theory cancels itself, is clear without
further argument. For only my real eye and my real hand could have
the representations “sun” and “earth” as
their own modifications; the representations “eye” and
“hand” cannot have them. Yet it is only in terms of
representations that Critical Idealism is allowed to speak.
Critical Idealism is
totally unable to gain an Insight into the relation of percept to
representation. It cannot make the distinction, mentioned on p. 45,
between what happens to the percept in the process of perception and
what must be inherent in it prior to perception. We must, therefore,
attempt this problem in another way.
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