CHAPTER V
THE ACT OF KNOWING (COGNIZING)
THE WORLD
FROM
the foregoing considerations it follows that it is impossible to
prove, by analysis of the content of our observation, that our
percepts are representations. This is supposed to be proved by
showing that, if the process of perceiving takes place in the way in
which we conceive it in accordance with the naive-realistic
assumptions concerning the psychological and physiological
constitution of human individuals, then we have to do, not with
things themselves, but merely with our representations of things.
Now, if Naive Realism, when consistently thought out, leads to
results which directly contradict its presuppositions, then these
presuppositions must be discarded as unsuitable for the foundation of
a conception of the world. In any case, it is inadmissible to reject
the presuppositions and yet accept the consequences, as the Critical
Idealist does who bases his assertion that the world is my
representation on the line of argument indicated above. (Eduard von
Hartmann gives in his work Das Grundproblem der Erkenntnistheorie
a full account of this line of argument.)
The truth of Critical
Idealism is one thing, the persuasiveness of its proof another.
How it stands with the former will appear later in the course of this
book, but the persuasiveness of its proof is nil. If one builds a
house, and the ground floor collapses while the first floor is being
built, then the first floor collapses, too. Naive Realism and
Critical Idealism are related just as the ground floor to the first
floor in this simile.
For one who holds that
the whole perceptual world is only representational, and, moreover,
the effect of things unknown to him acting on his soul, the real
problem of knowledge is naturally concerned, not with the
representations present only in the soul, but with the things
which lie outside his consciousness, and which are independent of
him. He asks: How much can we learn about them indirectly, seeing
that we cannot observe them directly? From this point of view, he is
concerned, not with the inner connection of his conscious percepts
with one another, but with their causes which transcend his
consciousness and exist independently of him, whereas the percepts,
on his view, disappear as soon as he turns his senses away from the
things. Our consciousness, on this view, works like a mirror from
which the pictures of definite things disappear the very moment its
reflecting surface is not turned towards them. If, now, we do not see
the things themselves, but only their reflections, we must obtain
knowledge of the nature of the former indirectly by drawing
conclusions from the character of the latter. The whole of modern
science adopts this point of view, when it uses percepts only as an
ultimate means of obtaining information about the processes of matter
which lie behind them, and which alone really “are.” If
the philosopher, as Critical Idealist, admits real existence at all,
then his sole aim is to gain knowledge of this real existence
indirectly by means of his representations. His interest skips over
the subjective world of representations and pursues instead that
which produces these representations.
The Critical Idealist
can, however, go even further and say, I am confined to the world of
my representations and cannot escape from it. If I think a thing
behind my representations, this thought, once more, is nothing but my
representation. An Idealist of this type will either deny the
thing-in-itself entirely or, at any rate, assert that it has no
significance for human minds, i.e., that it is as good as
non-existent since we can know nothing of it.
To this kind of
Critical Idealist the whole world seems a dream, in the face of which
all striving for knowledge is simply meaningless. For him there can
be only two sorts of men: (1) victims of the illusion that the dreams
they have themselves woven are real things, and (2) wise men who see
through the nothingness of this dream world, and who gradually lose
all desire to trouble themselves further about it. From this point of
view, even one's own personality may become a mere dream phantom.
Just as during sleep there appears among my dream-images an image of
myself, so in waking consciousness the representation of my own
I is added to the representation of the outer world. I have then
given to me in consciousness, not my real I, but only my
representation of my I. Whoever denies that things exist, or, at
least, that we can know anything of them, must also deny the
existence, or the knowledge, of one's own personality. This is how
the Critical Idealist comes to maintain that “All reality
transforms itself into a wonderful dream, without a life which is the
object of the dream, and without a spirit which has the dream; into a
dream which hangs together in a dream of itself.” (Cf. Fichte,
Die Bestimmung des Menschen.)
Whether he who believes
that he recognizes immediate life to be a dream, postulates nothing
more behind this dream, or whether he relates his representations to
actual things, is immaterial. In both cases life itself must lose all
scientific interest for him. However, whereas for those who believe
that the whole of the accessible universe is exhausted in dreams, all
science is an absurdity, yet for those who feel compelled to argue
from representations to things, science consists in inquiring into
these “things-in-themselves.” The first of these theories
of the world may be called Absolute Illusionism, the second is called
Transcendental Realism by its most rigorously logical exponent,
Eduard von Hartmann. [Cognition
is transcendental in the sense of this world conception when it
believes itself to be conscious that nothing can be asserted directly
about the thing-in-itself, but makes (indirect inferences from the
subjective which is known to the unknown which lies beyond the
subjective (Transcendental). The thing-in-itself is, according to
this view, beyond the sphere of the immediately cognizable world; in
other words, it is transcendent. Our world can, however, be
transcendentally related to the transcendent. Hartmann's theory is
called Realism because it proceeds from the subjective, the ideal, to
the transcendent, the real.]
These two points of
view have this in common with Naive Realism, that they seek to gain a
footing in the world by means of an analysis of percepts. Within this
sphere, however, they are unable to find any stable point.
One of the most
important questions for an adherent of Transcendental Realism would
have to be, how the Ego produces the world of representations out of
itself. A world of representations which was given to us, and which
disappeared as soon as we shut our senses to the external world,
might provoke an earnest desire for knowledge, in so far as it was a
means for investigating indirectly the world of the I existing in
itself. If the things of our experience were “representations”
then our everyday life would be like a dream, and the discovery of
the true facts like waking. Even our dream-images interest us as long
as we dream and, consequently, do not detect their dream character.
But as soon as we wake, we no longer look for the inner connections
of our dream-images among themselves, but rather for the physical,
physiological, and psychological processes which underlie them. In
the same way, a philosopher who holds the world to be his
representation, cannot be interested in the reciprocal relations of
the details within it. If he admits the existence of a real Ego at
all, then his question will be, not how one of his representations is
linked with another, but what takes place in the Soul which is
independent of him, while a certain train of
representations passes through his consciousness. If I dream that I
am drinking wine which makes my throat burn, and then wake up with a
tickling sensation in the throat (cp. Weygandt, Entstehung der
Träume, 1893) I cease, the moment I wake, to be interested
in the dream-drama for its own sake. My attention is now concerned
only with the physiological and psychological processes by means of
which the irritation, which causes me to cough, comes to be
symbolically expressed in the dream-picture. Similarly, once the
philosopher is convinced that the given world consists of nothing but
representations, his interest is bound to switch from them at once to
the soul which is the reality lying behind them. The matter is more
serious, however, for the Illusionist who denies the existence of an
Ego-in-itself behind the representations, or at least holds this Ego
to be unknowable. We might very easily be led to such a view by the
observation that, in contrast to dreaming, there is indeed the waking
state in which we have the opportunity to look through our dreams,
and to refer them to the real relations of things, but that there is
no state of the Self which is related similarly to our waking
conscious life. Every adherent of this view fails entirely to see
that there is, in fact, something which is to mere perception what
our waking experience is to our dreams. This something is thinking.
The naive man cannot be
charged with the lack of insight referred to here. He accepts life as
it is, and regards things as real just as they present themselves to
him in experience. The first step, however, which we take beyond this
standpoint can be only this, that we ask how thinking is related to
perception. It makes no difference whether or no the percept, in
the shape given to me, continues to exist before and after my forming
a representation. If I want to assert anything whatever about
it, I can do so only with the help of thinking. When I assert that
the world is my representation, I have enunciated the result of an
act of thinking, and if my thinking is not applicable to the world,
then this result is false. Between a percept and every kind of
assertion about it there intervenes thinking.
The reason why, in our
consideration of things, we generally overlook thinking, has already
been given above (p. 24). It lies in the fact that our attention is
concentrated only on the object about which we think, but not at the
same time on the thinking itself. The naive consciousness, therefore,
treats thinking as something which has nothing to do with things, but
stands altogether aloof from them and contemplates them. The picture
which the thinker constructs concerning the phenomena of the world is
regarded, not as part of the things, but as existing only in men's
heads. The world is complete in itself even without this picture. It
is all ready-made and finished with all its substances and forces,
and of this ready-made world man makes himself a picture. Whoever
thinks thus need only be asked one question. What right have you to
declare the world to be complete without thinking? Does not the world
produce thinking in the heads of men with the same necessity as it
produces the blossom on a plant? Plant a seed in the earth. It puts
forth roots and stem, it unfolds into leaves and blossoms. Set the
plant before yourselves. It connects itself, in your soul, with a
definite concept. Why should this concept belong any less to the
whole plant than leaf and blossom? You say the leaves and blossoms
exist quite apart from a perceiving subject, but the concept appears
only when a human being confronts the plant. Quite so. But leaves and
blossoms also appear on the plant only if there is soil in which the
seed can be planted, and light and air in which the leaves and
blossoms can unfold. Just so the concept of a plant arises when a
thinking consciousness approaches the plant.
It is quite arbitrary
to regard the sum of what we experience of a thing through bare
perception as a totality, a whole, while that which reveals itself
through thinking consideration is regarded as a mere accretion which
has nothing to do with the thing itself. If I am given a rosebud
to-day, the picture that offers itself to my perception is complete
only for the moment. If I put the bud into water, I shall to-morrow
get a very different picture of my object. If I watch the rosebud
without interruption, I shall see to-day's state gradually change
into to-morrow's through an infinite number of intermediate stages.
The picture which presents itself to me at any one moment is only a
chance segment out of an object which is in a continual process of
becoming. If I do not put the bud into water, a whole series of
states, the possibility of which lay in the bud, will not be evolved.
Similarly I may be prevented to-morrow from observing the blossom
further, and thus have an incomplete picture of it.
It would be a quite
unobjective opinion clinging to temporal features which declared of
any haphazard appearance of a thing, this is the thing.
It is no more
legitimate to regard the sum of perceptual characteristics as the
thing. It might be quite possible for a spirit to receive the concept
at the same time as, and together with, the percept. To such a spirit
it would never occur that the concept did not .belong to the thing.
It would have to ascribe to the concept an existence indivisibly
bound up with the thing.
Let me make myself
clearer by another example. If I throw a stone horizontally through
the air, I perceive it in different places one after the other. I
connect these places so as to form a line. Mathematics teaches me to
know various kinds of lines, one of which is the parabola. I know the
parabola to be a line which is produced by a point moving according
to certain well-defined law. If I analyse the conditions under which
the stone thrown by me moves, I find the path traversed is identical
with the line I know as a parabola. That the stone moves just in a
parabola is a result of the given conditions and follows necessarily
from them. The form of the parabola belongs to the whole phenomenon
as much as any other feature of it. The spirit described above who
has no need of the detour of thinking, would find itself presented,
not only with a sequence of visual percepts at different points, but,
as part and parcel of these phenomena, also with the parabolic form
of the path which we add to the phenomenon only by thinking.
It is not due to the
objects that they appear to us at first without their corresponding
concepts, but to our mental organization. Our whole being functions
in such a way that from every real thing the relevant elements come
to us from two sources, viz., from perception and from thinking.
The nature of things
has nothing to do with the way I am organized for apprehending them.
The breach between perception and thinking exists only from the
moment that I as spectator confront the things. Which elements do,
and which do not, belong to the object, cannot depend at all on the
manner in which I obtain my knowledge of these elements.
Man is a limited being.
First of all, he is a being among other beings. His existence belongs
to space and time. Hence but a limited portion of the total universe
can ever be given to him. This limited portion, however, is linked up
with other parts on every side both in time and in space. If our
existence were so linked with things that every world occurrence were
also an occurrence in us, there would not be the distinction between
us and things. Neither would there be any individual objects for us.
All occurrences would then pass continuously one into the other. The
cosmos would be a unity and a whole complete in itself. The stream of
events would nowhere be interrupted. But owing to our limitations
there appears as a single thing what, in truth, is not a single
thing. Nowhere, e.g., is the particular quality “red”
to be found by itself in isolation. It is surrounded on all sides by
other qualities to which it belongs, and without which it could not
subsist. For us, however, it is necessary to isolate certain sections
of the world and to consider them by themselves. Our eye can seize
only single colours one after another out of a manifold colour-whole,
our understanding only single concepts out of a connected conceptual
system. This separating off is a subjective act, which is due to the
fact that we are not identical with the world-process, but are a
single being among other beings.
It is of the greatest
importance for us to determine the relation of the beings which we,
ourselves, are to the other beings. The determining of this relation
must be distinguished from merely becoming conscious of
ourselves. For this self-awareness we depend on perception just as we
do for our awareness of any other thing. The perception of
myself reveals to me a number of qualities which I combine into my
personality as a whole, just as I combine the qualities, yellow,
metallic, hard, etc., in the unity “gold.” The perception
of self does not take me beyond the sphere of what belongs to me.
Hence it must be distinguished from the determination of myself by
thinking. Just as I link up, by thinking, any single percept of the
external world into the whole world system, so I fit by thinking what
I perceive in myself into the world-process. My self-perception
restricts me within definite limits, but my thinking has nothing to
do with these limits. In this sense I am a two-sided being. I am
enclosed within the sphere which I perceive as that of my
personality, but I am also the bearer of an activity, which, from a
higher sphere, determines my finite existence. Our thinking is not
individual like our sensing and feeling; it is universal. It receives
an individual stamp in each separate human being only because it
comes to be related to his individual feelings and sensations. By
means of these particular colourings of the universal thinking,
individual men are distinguished from one another. There is only one
single concept of “triangle.” It is quite immaterial for
the content of this concept whether it is grasped in A's
consciousness or in B's. It will, however, be grasped by each of the
two in his own individual way.
This thought conflicts
with a common prejudice which is very hard to overcome. The victims
of this prejudice are unable to see that the concept of a triangle
which my head grasps is the same as the concept which my neighbour's
head grasps. The naive man believes himself to be the creator of his
concepts. Hence he believes that each person has his private
concepts. It is a fundamental demand of philosophic thinking to
overcome this prejudice. The one uniform concept of “triangle”
does not split up into a multiplicity because it is thought by many
persons. For the thinking of the many is itself a unity.
In thinking we have the
element which welds each man's special individuality into one whole
with the cosmos. In so far as we sense and feel (and also perceive),
we are single beings; in so far as we think, we are the All-One
Being which pervades everything. This is the deeper meaning of our
two-sided nature: We see a simply absolute force revealing itself in
us, which is universal. But we learn to know it, not as it issues
from the centre of the world, but rather at a point of the periphery.
Were the former the case, we should know, as soon as ever we became
conscious, the solution of the whole world problem. But since we
stand at a point on the periphery, and find that our own being is
confined within definite limits, we must explore the region which
lies beyond our own being with the help of thinking, which projects
into us out of the general world-existence.
The fact that thinking,
in us, reaches out beyond our separate existence and relates itself
to the general world-existence, gives rise to the desire for
knowledge in us. Beings without thinking do not experience this
desire. When they are faced with other things no questions arise for
them. These other things remain external to such beings. But in
thinking beings the concept rises up when they confront the external
thing. It is that part of the thing which we receive not from
without, but from within. To produce the agreement, the union of the
two elements, the inner and the outer, that is the task of knowledge.
The percept, thus, is
not something finished and self-contained, but one side only of the
total reality. The other side is the concept. The act of cognition is
the synthesis of percept and concept. Only the percept and concept
together constitute the whole thing.
The preceding
elucidation shows clearly that it is nonsensical to seek for any
other common element in the separate beings of the world than the
ideal content which thinking supplies. All efforts to look for
another unity in the world than this internally coherent ideal
content, which we gain by a thinking investigation of our percepts,
are bound to fail. Neither a humanly personal God, nor
force, nor matter, nor the blind will (Schopenhauer), can be
accepted by us as the universal unity in the world. These principles
all belong only to a limited sphere of our observation. Humanly
limited personality we perceive only in ourselves; force and matter
in external things. The will, again, can be regarded only as the
expression of the activity of our finite personality. Schopenhauer
wants to avoid making “abstract” thinking the bearer of
unity in the world, and seeks instead something which presents itself
to him immediately as real. This philosopher holds that we can never
approach the world so long as we regard it as an “external”
world. “In fact, the meaning for which we seek of that world
which is present to us only as our ‘representation,’ [See
footnote on page 55.] or the transition from the world
as mere representation of the knowing subject to whatever it may be
besides this, would never be found if the investigator himself were
nothing more than the pure knowing subject (a winged cherub without a
body). But he himself is rooted in that world: he finds himself in it
as an individual, that is to say, his knowledge, which is the
necessary supporter of the whole world as representation, is yet
always given through the medium of a body, whose affections are, as
we have shown, the starting-point for the understanding in the
perception of that world. This body is, for the pure knowing subject,
a representation like every other representation, an object among
objects. Its movements and actions are so far known to him in
precisely the same way as the changes of all other perceived objects,
and would be just as strange and incomprehensible to him if their
meaning were not explained for him in an entirely different way ...
The body is given in two entirely different ways to the subject of
knowledge, who becomes an individual only through his identity with
it. It is given as a representation in intelligent perception, as an
object among objects and subject to the laws of objects. And it is
also given in quite a different way as that which is immediately
known to everyone, and is signified by the word ‘will.’
Every true act of his will is also at once and without exception a
movement of his body. He cannot will the act without perceiving at
the same time that it appears as a movement of the body. The act of
will and the movement of the body are not two different things
objectively known, which the bond of causality unites; they do not
stand in the relation of cause and effect; they are one and the same,
but they are given in two entirely different ways —
immediately, and again in perception for the understanding.”
(The World as Will and Idea, Book 2, par. 18.) Schopenhauer
considers himself entitled by these arguments to find in the human
body the “objectivity” of the will. He believes that in
the activities of the body he feels immediately a reality — the
thing-in-itself in the concrete. Against these arguments we must urge
that the activities of our body come to our consciousness only
through self-perception, and that, as such, they are in no way
superior to other percepts. If we want to cognize their real nature,
we can do so only by a thinking investigation, i.e., by
fitting them into the ideal system of our concepts and Ideas.
Rooted most deeply in
the naive consciousness is the opinion that thinking is abstract and
empty of any concrete content. At best, we are told, it supplies but
an “ideal” counterpart of the unity of the world, but
never that unity itself. Whoever so judges has never made clear to
himself what a percept apart from concepts really is. Let us see what
this world of bare percepts is. A mere juxtaposition in space, a mere
succession in time, an aggregate of disconnected particulars —
that is how it appears. None of the things which
come and go on the stage of perception has any perceptible connection
with any other. The world is a multiplicity of objects of equal
value. None plays any greater part in the nexus of the world than any
other. In order to make obvious that this or that fact has a greater
importance than another we must go to thinking. Without thinking
fulfilling its function, the rudimentary organ of an animal which has
no significance in its life appears equal in value to the most
important limb. The particular facts reveal their meaning, in
themselves and for other parts of the world, only when thinking spins
its threads from Being to Being. This activity of thinking is one
full of content. For it is only through a perfectly definite concrete
content that I can know why the snail belongs to a lower type of
organization than the lion. The mere appearance, the percept, gives
me no content which could inform me as to the degree of perfection of
the organization.
Thinking contributes
this content to the percept from the world of concepts and Ideas. In
contrast with the content of perception which is given to us from
without, the content of thinking appears inwardly. The form in which
the latter first appears in consciousness we will call “intuition.”
Intuition is for the content of thinking what observation is for the
percept. Intuition and observation are the sources of our knowledge.
An observed object of the world remains unintelligible to us, until
we have the corresponding intuition which adds that part of the
reality which is lacking in the percept. To anyone who is incapable
of finding the intuitions corresponding to the things, the full
reality remains inaccessible. Just as the colour-blind person sees
only differences of brightness without any colour qualities, so a
person who lacks intuition observes only disconnected fragments of
percepts.
To explain a thing, to
make it intelligible, means nothing else than to place it in the
context from which it has been torn by the peculiar character of our
organization described above. A thing cut off from the world-whole
does not exist. Hence all isolation of objects has only subjective
validity for our organization. For us the universe disrupts itself
into above and below, before and after, cause and effect, object and
representation, matter and force, object and subject, etc. What
appears in observation, as separate parts, becomes combined, bit by
bit, through the coherent, unified world of our intuitions. By
thinking we fuse again into one whole all that we have separated
through perception.
The enigmatic character
of an object consists in its separateness. But this separation is our
own making and can be remedied again within the world of concepts.
Except through thinking
and perception nothing is given to us directly. The question now
arises as to the significance of percepts within our line of thought.
We have learnt that the proof which Critical Idealism offers for the
subjective nature of percepts collapses. But the exhibition of the
falsity of the proof is not, by itself, sufficient to show that the
doctrine itself is an error. Critical Idealism does not base its
proof on the absolute nature of thinking, but relies on the argument
that Naive Realism, when followed to its logical conclusion,
contradicts itself. How does the matter appear when we have
recognized the absoluteness of thinking?
Let us assume that a
certain percept, e.g., red, appears in consciousness. To
continued observation, the percept shows itself to be connected with
other percepts, e.g., a certain figure, temperature, and
touch-qualities. This combination I call an object in the world of
sense. I can now ask myself: Over and above the percepts just
mentioned, what else is there in the section of space in which
they appear? I shall then find mechanical, chemical, and
other processes in that section of space. I next go farther and
study the processes which take place in the transition between the
object and my sense-organs. I can find movements in an elastic
medium, which have not the least in common with the percepts from
which I started. I get the same result if I trace farther the
transition between sense-organs and brain. In each of these inquiries
I gather new percepts, but the connecting medium which binds all
these spatially and temporally separated percepts into one whole, is
thinking. The air vibrations which carry sound are given to me as
percepts just like the sound itself. Thinking alone links all these
percepts one to the other and exhibits them in their reciprocal
relations. We have no right to say that over and above our immediate
percepts there is anything except the ideal nexus of percepts (which
thinking has to reveal). The relation of perceptual objects to the
perceiving subject, which relation transcends the mere perceptible,
is, therefore, purely ideal, i.e., capable of being expressed
only through concepts. Only if it were possible to perceive how the
object of perception affects the perceiving subject, or,
alternatively, only if we could watch the building up of the
perceptual complex through the subject, could we speak as modern
Physiology, and the Critical Idealism which is based on it, speak.
Their view confuses an ideal relation (that of the object to the
subject) with a process of which we could speak only if it were
possible to perceive it. The proposition, “No colour without a
colour-sensing eye,” cannot be taken to mean that the eye
produces the colour, but only that an ideal relation, recognizable by
thinking, subsists between the percept “colour” and the
percept “eye.” Empirical science will have to ascertain
how the properties of the eye and those of the colours are related to
one another: by means of what structures the organ of sight mediates
the perception of colours, etc. I can trace how one percept succeeds
another and how one is related to others in space, and I can
formulate these relations in conceptual terms, but I can never
perceive how a percept originates out of the non-perceptible. All
attempts to seek any relations between percepts other than thought
relations must of necessity fail.
What then is a percept?
This question, asked in this general way, is absurd. A percept
emerges always as a perfectly determinate, concrete content. This
content is immediately given and is completely contained in the
given. The only question one can ask concerning the given content is,
what it is apart from perception, that is, what it is for thinking.
The question concerning the “what” of a percept can,
therefore, only refer to the conceptual intuition which corresponds
to this percept. From this point of view, the question of the
subjectivity of percepts, in the sense in which the Critical
Idealists debate it, cannot be raised at all. Only that which is
perceived as belonging to the subject can be termed “subjective.”
To form a link between that which is subjective and that which is
objective is impossible for any real process, in the naive sense of
the word “real,” in which it means a process which can be
perceived. That is possible only for thinking. For us, then,
“objective” means that which, for perception, presents
itself as external to the perceiving subject. As subject of
perception I remain perceptible to myself after the table which now
stands before me has disappeared from my field of observation. The
observation of the table has produced a modification in me which
likewise persists. I preserve the faculty to produce later on an
image of the table. This faculty of producing a picture remains
connected with me. Psychology terms this image a “memory-idea.”
Now this is the only thing which has any right to be called the
representation [See Translator's
Preface, p. ix.] of the table. For it corresponds to the
perceptible modification of my own state through the presence of the
table in my visual field. Moreover, it does not mean a modification
in some “Ego-in-itself” standing behind the perceiving
subject, but the modification of the perceptible subject itself. The
representation is, therefore, a subjective percept, in contrast with
the objective percept which occurs when the object is present in the
field of vision. The false identification of the subjective with
this objective percept leads to the misunderstanding of Idealism: The
world is my representation.
Our next task must be
to define the concept of “representation” more
nearly. What we have said about it so far does not give us the
concept, but only shows us where in the perceptual field
representations are to be found. The exact concept of
“representation” will also make it possible for us to
obtain a satisfactory understanding of the relation of representation
and object. This will then lead us over the border-line, where the
relation of human subject to object in the world is brought down from
the purely conceptual field of concepts into concrete individual
life. Once we know how to think of the world, it will be an easy task
to adapt ourselves to it. We can only be active with full energy when
we know the object belonging to the world to which we are to
devote our activity.
ADDITION TO THE REVISED EDITION, 1918
The
view which I have here outlined may be regarded as one to which man
is impelled as though by a natural force, as soon as he begins to
reflect about his relation to the world. He then finds himself caught
in a system of thoughts which dissolves for him as fast as he frames
it. The thought formation is such that the purely theoretical
refutation of it does not exhaust our task. We have to live through
it, in order to understand the aberration into which it leads us, and
to find the way out. It must figure in any discussion of the relation
of man to the world, not for the sake of refuting others whom one
believes to be holding mistaken views about this relation, but
because it is necessary to understand the confusion to which every
first effort at reflection about such a relation is apt to lead. One
needs to gain insight into how to refute oneself with respect to
these first reflections. This is the point of view from which the
arguments of the preceding chapter are considered.
Whoever tries to work
out for himself a view of the relation of man to the world,
becomes aware of the fact that he creates this relation, at least in
part, by forming representations about the things and events in the
world. In consequence, his attention is deflected from what exists
outside in the world and directed towards his inner world, the life
of his representations. He begins to say to himself: It is impossible
for me to stand in relation to any thing or event, unless a
representation appears in me. From this fact, once noticed, it is but
a step to the opinion: All that I experience is after all only my
representation; of a world outside I know only in so far as it is a
representation in me. With this opinion, man abandons the
standpoint of naive reality which he occupies prior to all reflection
about his relation to the world. So long as he stands there, he
believes that he is dealing with real things, but reflection about
himself drives him away from this position. Reflection prevents
him from turning his gaze towards a real world such as naive
consciousness claims to have before it. Reflection turns his gaze
only towards his representations; they interpose themselves
between his own nature and a supposedly real world, such as the naive
point of view believes it should affirm. Man can no longer look
through the intervening world of representations upon such a real
world. He must suppose that he is blind to such a reality. Thus
arises the thought of a “thing-in-itself” which is
inaccessible to knowledge.
So long as we consider
only the relationship to the world into which man appears to enter
through the life of his representations, we can hardly escape from
this kind of thought. Yet one cannot remain at the point of view of
Naive Realism except at the price of closing one's mind artificially
to the desire for knowledge. The existence of this desire for
knowledge about the relation of man to the world proves that the
naive point of view must be abandoned. If the naive point of view
yielded anything which we could acknowledge as truth, we could not
experience this desire.
But mere abandonment of
the naive point of view does not lead to any other view which we
could regard as true, so long as we retain, without noticing
it, the kind of thought which the naive point of view imposes on us.
This is the mistake made by the man who says: I experience only my
representations, and though I believe that I am dealing with real
things, I am actually conscious of nothing but my representations of
real things; I must, therefore, suppose that genuine realities,
“things-in-themselves,” exist only outside the boundary
of my consciousness; that they are inaccessible to my immediate
knowledge; but that they somehow approach me and influence me so as
to make a world of representations arise in me. Whoever thinks thus,
duplicates in thought the world before him by adding another. But,
strictly he ought to begin his whole thinking activity over again
with regard to this second world. For the unknown “thing-in-itself,”
in its relation to man's own nature, is conceived in exactly the same
way as is the known thing of the naively realistic point of view. —
There is only one way of escaping from the confusion into which one
falls by critical reflection on this naive point of view. This is to
observe that, inside everything we can experience through perception,
be it within ourselves or outside in the world, there is something
which does not share the fate of a representation interposing itself
between the real event and the contemplating human being. This
something is thinking. With regard to thinking we can maintain the
point of view of Naive Realism. If we fail to do so, it is only
because we have learnt that we must abandon it for other things, but
overlook that, what we have found to be true for other activities,
does not apply to thinking. When we realize this, we gain access to
the further insight that, in thinking and through thinking, man
necessarily comes to cognize the very thing to which he appears to
blind himself by interposing between the world and himself the realm
of his representations. — A critic highly esteemed by the
author of this book has objected that this discussion of thinking
stops at a naively realistic theory of thinking, as shown by the fact
that the real world and the world of representations are held to be
identical. However, the author believes himself to have shown in this
very discussion that the validity of “Naive Realism,” as
applied to thinking, results inevitably from an unprejudiced
study of thinking; and that Naive Realism, in so far as it is invalid
for other things, is overcome through the recognition of the true
nature of thinking.
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