THE
REALITY OF SPIRITUAL ACTIVITY
(FREEDOM)
CHAPTER
VIII
THE FACTORS OF LIFE
LET
us recapitulate the results gained in the previous chapters. The
world faces man as a multiplicity, as an aggregate of detailed parts.
He himself is one of these entities, a being among beings. Of this
configuration of the world we say simply that it is given, and
inasmuch as we do not evolve it by conscious activity, but simply
find it, we say that it consists of percepts. Within this world of
percepts we perceive ourselves. This percept of Self would remain
merely one among many other percepts, did not something arise from
the midst of this percept of Self which proves capable of connecting
all percepts one with another and, therefore, the sum of all other;
percepts with the percept of Self. This something which emerges is no
longer a mere percept; neither is it, like percepts, simply given. It
is produced by our activity. It appears, in the first instance, bound
up with what each of us perceives as his Self. In its inner
significance, however, it transcends the Self. It adds to the
separate percepts ideally determined elements, which, however, are
related to one another, and which are grounded in a whole. What
self-perception yields is ideally determined by this something in the
same way as all other percepts, and placed as subject, or “I,”
over against the objects. This something is thinking, and the ideally
determined elements are the concepts and Ideas. Thinking, therefore,
first manifests itself in the percept of Self. But it is not merely
subjective, for the Self characterizes itself as subject only with
the help of thinking. This relation of the Self to itself by means of
thinking is a determination of our personality in life. Through it we
lead a purely ideal existence. Through it we feel ourselves to
be thinking beings. This determination of our lives would remain a
purely conceptual (logical) one, if it were not supplemented by other
determinations of our Selves. Our lives would then exhaust themselves
in establishing purely ideal connections between percepts themselves,
and between them and ourselves. If we call this establishment of an
ideal relation an “act of cognition,” and the resulting
condition of ourself “knowledge,” then, assuming the
above supposition to be true, we should have to consider ourselves as
beings who merely cognize or know.
The supposition is,
however, untrue. We relate percepts to ourselves not merely ideally,
through concepts, but also, as we have already seen, through feeling.
We are, therefore, not beings with a merely conceptual content. The
Naive Realist holds that the personality actually lives more
genuinely in the life of feeling than in the purely ideal element of
knowledge. From his point of view he is quite right in interpreting
the matter in this way. Feeling signifies on the subjective side
exactly the same as percepts signify on the objective side. From the
principle of Naive Realism, that everything is real which can be
perceived, it follows that feeling is the guarantee of the reality of
one's own personality. Monism, however, as here understood, must
bestow on feeling the same supplementation which it considers
necessary for percepts, if these are to stand before us as complete
reality. For this Monism, feeling is an incomplete reality, which, in
the form in, which it first appears to us, does not contain as yet
its second factor, the concept or Idea. This is why, in actual life,
feelings, like percepts, appear prior to knowledge. At first, we have
merely a feeling of existence; and it is only in the course of our
gradual development, that we attain to the point at which the concept
of Self emerges from within the faint feeling of our own existence.
However, what for us does not appear until later, is from the first
indissolubly bound up with our feeling. This is how the naive man
comes to believe that in feeling he grasps existence immediately, in
knowledge only mediately. The development of the life of feeling,
therefore, appears to him more important than anything else. He will
not believe the nexus of the world to have been grasped until he has
received it into his feeling. He attempts to make feeling the
instrument of knowledge rather than knowing. Now a feeling is
entirely individual, something equivalent to a percept. Hence a
Philosopher of Feeling makes a world-principle out of something which
has significance only within his own personality. He attempts to
permeate the whole world with his own Self. What the Monist, in the
sense we have described, strives to grasp by means of concepts the
Philosopher of Feeling tries to attain through feeling, and he looks
on this community of his with the objects as more immediate than
knowledge.
The tendency just
described, the Philosophy of Feeling, is often called Mysticism. The
error in such a mystical conception based upon feeling is that it
seeks to experience immediately what must be known, that it tries to
elevate feeling, which is individual, into a universal principle.
Feeling is a purely
individual activity. It is the relation of the external world to the
subject, in so far as this relation finds expression in a purely
subjective experience.
There is yet another
expression of human personality. The Self, through thinking, takes
part in the universal world-life. Through thinking it relates purely
ideally (conceptually) the percepts to itself, and itself to the
percepts. In feeling, it has immediate experience of the relation of
objects to itself as subject. In will, the opposite is the case. In
volition, we are concerned once more with a percept, viz., that of
the individual relation of the Self to what is objective. Whatever in
the act of will is not an ideal factor, is just as much mere object
of perception as is any object in the external world.
Nevertheless, the Naive
Realist believes here again that he has before him something far more
real than can be attained by thinking. He sees in the will an element
in which he is immediately aware of an occurrence, a causation, in
contrast with thinking which afterwards grasps the event in
conceptual form. What the I achieves by its will is, on this view, a
process which is experienced immediately. The adherent of this
philosophy believes that in the will he has really got hold of one
“bit” of reality (cf. Chapter III, p. 30 Ed.). Whereas he
can follow other occurrences only from the outside by means of
perception, he is confident that in his will he experiences a real
process quite immediately. The mode of existence presented to him by
the will within the Self becomes for him the principle of reality in
the universe. His own will appears to him as a special case of the
general world-process; hence the latter is conceived as a universal
will. The will becomes the world-principle of reality just as, in
Mysticism, feeling becomes the principle of knowledge. This kind of
theory is called Voluntarism (Thelism). It makes something which can
be experienced only individually the fundamental factor of the world.
Voluntarism can as
little be called scientific as can Mysticism. For both assert that
the conceptual interpretation of the world is inadequate. Both
demand, with a certain amount of justice, in addition to a principle
of being which is ideal, also a principle which is real. But as
perception is our only means of apprehending these so-called real
principles, the assertion of Mysticism and Voluntarism coincides with
the view that we have two sources of knowledge, viz., thinking and
perception, the latter presenting itself as an individual experience
in feeling and will. Since the immediate experiences which flow from
the one source cannot be directly absorbed into the experiences of
thinking which flow from the other, both experiences —
perception and thinking — remain side by side, without any
higher form of mediation between them. Besides the conceptual (ideal)
principle to which we attain by means of knowledge, there is said to
be a real principle which must be experienced. In other words,
Mysticism and Voluntarism are both forms of Naive Realism, because
they subscribe to the doctrine that the immediately perceived
(experienced) is real. Compared with Naive Realism in its primitive
form, they are guilty of the yet further inconsistency of accepting
one definite form of perception (feeling, will) as the exclusive
means of knowing reality. Yet they can do this only so long as they
cling to the general principle that everything that is perceived is
real. They ought, therefore, to attach an equal value to external
perception for purposes of knowledge.
Voluntarism turns into
Metaphysical Realism when it asserts the existence of will also in
those spheres of reality in which will can no longer, as in the
individual subject, be immediately experienced. It assumes
hypothetically that a principle holds good outside the subject, for
the existence of which, nevertheless, subjective experience is the
sole criterion of reality. As a form of Metaphysical Realism,
Voluntarism is open to the criticism developed in the preceding
chapter, a criticism which makes it necessary to overcome the
contradictory element in every form of Metaphysical Realism, and to
acknowledge that the will is a universal world-process only in so far
as it is ideally related to the rest of the world.
ADDITION TO THE REVISED EDITION, 1918
The
difficulty of seizing the essential nature of thinking by observation
lies in this, that it has eluded the introspecting soul all too
easily by the time that the soul tries to bring it into the focus of
attention. Nothing but the lifeless abstract, the corpse of living
thought, then remains for inspection. When we consider only this
abstract, we find it hard, by contrast, to resist entering into the
mysticism of feeling, or, again, into the metaphysics of will, both
of which are “full of life.” We are tempted to regard it
as odd that anyone should want to seize the essence of reality in
“mere thoughts.” But if we once succeed in really finding
the true life in thinking, we learn to understand that the
self-abandonment to feelings, or the intuiting of the will, cannot
even be compared with the inward wealth of this life of thinking,
which we experience as within itself, ever self-supporting, yet at
the same time ever in movement. Still less is it possible to rank
will and feeling above thinking. It is owing precisely to this
wealth, to this inward abundance of experience, that the
counter-image of thinking which presents itself to our ordinary
attitude of soul, should appear lifeless and abstract. No other
activity of the human soul is so easily misapprehended as thinking.
Will and feeling still fill the soul with warmth even when we live
through them again in memory. Thinking all too readily leaves us cold
in recollection; it is as if the life of the soul had dried out. But
this is really nothing but the strongly marked shadow thrown by its
luminous warm nature penetrating deeply into the phenomena of the
world. This penetration is effected by a power contained in the
activity of thinking itself which is the power of love —
spiritual love. There is no room here for the objection that thus to
perceive love in the activity of thinking is to project into thinking
a feeling, viz., love. This objection is, in truth, a confirmation of
the view here advocated. If we turn towards the essential nature of
thinking, we find in it both feeling and will, and both these in the
depth of their reality. If we turn away from thinking towards “mere”
feeling and will, these lose for us their genuine reality. If we are
willing to make of thinking an intuitive experience, we can do
justice, also, to experiences of the type of feeling and will. But
the mysticism of feeling and the metaphysics of will are not able to
do justice to the penetration of reality by intuitive thinking. They
conclude all too readily that they themselves are rooted in reality,
but that the intuitive thinker, untouched by feeling, blind to
reality, forms out of “abstract thoughts” a shadowy,
chilly picture of the world.
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