CHAPTER XIV
INDIVIDUALITY AND GENUS
THE
view that man is intended to become a wholly self-contained, free
individuality stands in apparent conflict with the facts, that he
appears as a member of a natural whole (race, tribe, nation, family,
male or female sex), and that he acts within a whole (state, church,
etc.). He exhibits the general characteristics of the community to
which he belongs, and gives to his actions a content which is defined
by the place which he occupies within a social whole.
This being so, is
individuality possible at all? Can we regard man as a whole in
himself, in view of the fact that he grows out of a whole and fits as
a member into a whole?
The character and
function of a member of a whole are defined by the whole. A tribe is
a whole, and all its members exhibit the peculiar characteristics
which are conditioned by the nature of the tribe. The character and
activity of the individual member are determined by the character of
the tribe. Hence the physiognomy and the conduct of the individual
have something generic about them. When we ask why this or that in a
man is so or so, we are referred from the individual to the genus.
The genus explains why something in the individual appears in the
form observed by us.
But man emancipates
himself from this generic type. For the generic qualities of the
human race, when experienced by the individual in the right way,
do not restrict his freedom, and ought not by artificial arrangements
to be made to restrict it. The individual develops qualities and
activities of his own, the reason for which we can seek only in
himself. The generic type serves him only as a means to express his
own special being in it. He uses the characteristics which nature has
given him as a foundation and gives them the form which expresses his
own being. We seek in vain for the reason of such an expression of
this being in the laws of the genus. We are dealing here with an
individual who can be explained only through himself. If a man has
reached the point of emancipation from what is generic in him, and we
still attempt to explain all his qualities by reference to the
character of the genus, then we lack the organ for apprehending what
is individual.
It is impossible to
understand a human being completely if one makes the concept of the
genus the basis of one's judgment. The tendency to judge according to
the genus is most persistent where differences of sex are involved.
Man sees in woman, woman in man, almost always too much of the
generic characteristics of the other sex, and too little of what is
individual in the other. In practical life this does less harm to men
than to women. The social position of women is, in most instances, so
humiliating because it is not determined by the individual
characteristics of each woman herself, but by the general
representations which are current concerning the natural function and
needs of woman. A man's activity in life is determined by his
individual capacity and inclination, whereas a woman's activity is
supposed to be determined solely by the fact that she is “just
a woman.” Woman is to be the slave of the generic, of the
general functions of womanhood. So long as men debate whether woman,
from her “natural disposition,” is fitted for this, that,
or the other profession, the so-called Woman's Question will never
advance beyond the most elementary stage. What it lies in woman's
nature to strive for had better be left to woman herself to decide.
If it is true that women are fitted only for that profession which is
theirs at present, then they will hardly have it in them to attain
any other. But they must be allowed to decide for themselves what is
conformable to their nature. To all who fear an upheaval of our
social structure, should women be treated as individuals and not as
specimens of their sex, we must reply that a social structure in
which the status of one-half of humanity is unworthy of a human being
stands itself in great need of improvement. [Immediately
upon the publication of this book (1894), critics objected to the
above arguments that, even now, within the generic character of her
sex, a woman is able to shape her life individually, just as she
pleases, and far more freely than a man who is already
de-individualized, first by the school, and later by war and
profession. I am aware that this objection will be urged to-day, even
more strongly. None the less, I feel bound to let my sentences stand,
in the hope that there are readers who appreciate how violently such
an objection runs counter to the concept of freedom advocated in this
book, and who will judge my sentences above by another standard than
that of man's loss of individuality through school and profession.]
Anyone who judges human
beings according to their generic character stops short at the very
limit beyond which they begin to be individuals whose activity rests
on free self-determination. Whatever lies short of this limit may
naturally become matter for scientific study. Thus the
characteristics of race, tribe, nation, and sex are the
subject-matter of special sciences. Only men who simply wish to live
as specimens of the genus could possibly fit the generic picture
which the methods of these sciences produce. But all these sciences
are unable to get as far as the unique character of the single
individual. Where the sphere of freedom (in thinking and acting)
begins, there the possibility of determining the individual according
to the laws of his genus ceases. The conceptual content which man, by
an act of thinking has to connect with percepts, in order to possess
himself fully of reality (cp. pp. 64 – 65 ff.) cannot be fixed
by anyone once and for all, and handed down to humanity ready-made.
The individual must gain his concepts through his own intuition. It
is impossible to deduce from any concept of the genus how the
individual ought to think; that depends singly and solely on the
individual himself. So, again, it is just as impossible to determine,
on the basis of the universal characteristics of human nature, what
concrete aims the individual will set before himself. Anyone who
wants to understand the single individual must penetrate to the
innermost core of his being, and not stop short at those qualities
which are typical. In this sense every single human being is a
problem. And every science which deals only with abstract thoughts
and generic concepts is but a preparation for the kind of knowledge
which we gain when a human individual communicates to us his way of
viewing the world, and for that other kind of knowledge which we gain
from the content of his will. Wherever we feel that here we are
dealing with that element in a man which is free from the typical
kind of thinking and from willing according to type, there we must
cease to call in any concepts of our own making if we would
understand his nature. Knowledge consists in the combination by
thinking of a concept and a percept. With all other objects the
observer has to gain his concepts through his intuition; but if the
problem is to understand a free individuality, we need to take over
into our own spirit those concepts by which the individual determines
himself, in their pure form (without mixing with them our own
conceptual contents). Those who always mix their own concepts into
their judgment on another person can never attain to the
understanding of an individuality. Just as the free individuality
emancipates himself from the characteristics of the genus, so our
knowledge of the individual must emancipate itself from the
methods by which we understand what is generic.
A man counts as a free
spirit in a human community only to the degree in which he has
emancipated himself, in the way we have indicated, from all that is
generic. No man is all genus, none is all individuality; but every
man gradually emancipates a greater or lesser sphere of his being,
both from the generic characteristics of animal life, and from the
laws of human authorities which rule him.
In respect of that part
of his nature for which man is not able to win this freedom for
himself, he forms a member within the organism of nature and of
spirit. He lives, in this respect, by the imitation of others, or in
obedience to their command. But ethical value in the true sense
belongs only to that part of his conduct which springs from his
intuitions. And whatever moral instincts man possesses through the
inheritance of social instincts, acquire ethical value through being
taken up into his intuitions. In such individual ethical intuitions
and their acceptance by human communities all moral activity of men
has its root. To put this differently: the moral life of humanity is
the sum-total of the products of the moral imagination of free human
individuals. This is the conclusion reached by Monism.
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