Guiding Thoughts on the Method of Presentation
If we follow the work of the mind invested by man in his attempts to
solve the riddle of world and life, the words, Know
Thyself, which were inscribed as a motto in the temple of
Apollo, will suggest themselves to the soul in its contemplation. The
understanding for a world conception rests on the fact that the human
soul can be stirred by the contemplation of these words. The nature of
a living organism involves the necessity of feeling hunger. The nature
of the human soul at a certain stage of its development causes a
similar necessity. It is manifest in the need to gain from life a
certain spiritual return that, just as food satisfies hunger,
satisfies the soul's challenge, Know Thyself. This feeling
can lay hold on the human soul so powerfully that it can be forced to
think, Only then am I fully human in the true sense of
the word when I develop within myself a relation to the world that
expresses its fundamental character in the challenge, Know
Thyself. The soul can reach the point where it considers this
feeling as an awakening out of the dream of life that it dreamt
before this particular experience.
During the first period of his life, man develops the power of memory
through which he will, in later life, recollect his experiences back
to a certain moment of his childhood. What lies before this
moment he feels as a dream of life from which he awoke. The human soul
would not be what it should be if the power of memory did not grow out
of the dim soul life of the child. In a similar way the human soul
can, at a more developed stage, think of its experience of the
challenge expressed in the words, Know Thyself. It can
have the feeling that a soul life that does not awake out of its dream
of life through this experience does not live up to its inner
potentialities.
Philosophers have often pointed out that they are at a loss when asked
about the nature of philosophy in the true sense of the word. One
thing, however, is certain, namely, that one must see in philosophy a
special form of satisfying the need of the human soul expressed in the
challenge, Know Thyself. Of this challenge one can know
just as distinctly as one can know what hunger is, although one may be
at a loss to give an explanation of the phenomenon of hunger that
would be satisfactory to everybody.
It was probably a thought of this kind that motivated Johann Gottlieb
Fichte when he stated that the philosophy a man chooses depends on the
kind of man he is. Animated by this thought, one can examine the
attempts that have been made in the course of history to find
solutions for the riddles of philosophy. In these attempts one will
find the nature of the human being himself revealed. For although man
will try to silence his personal interests entirely when he intends to
speak as a philosopher, there will, nevertheless, immediately appear
in a philosophy what the human personality can make out of
itself by unfolding those forces that are most centrally and most
originally its own.
Seen from this viewpoint, the examination of the philosophical
achievements with regard to the world riddles can excite certain
expectations.
We can hope that such an examination can yield results concerning the
nature of human soul development, and the writer of this book believes
that in exploring the philosophical views of the occident he has found
such results. Four distinctly discernible epochs in the evolution of
the philosophical struggle of mankind presented themselves to his
view. He had to recognize the difference of these epochs as distinct
as the difference of the species of a realm of nature. This
observation led him to acknowledge in the realm of the history of
man's philosophical development the existence of objective spiritual
impulses following a definite law of evolution of their own,
independent of the individual men in whom they are observed. The
achievements of these men as philosophers thus appear as the
manifestation of these impulses that direct the courses of events
under the surface of external history. The conviction is then
suggested that such results arise from the unprejudiced
observation of the historical facts, much as a natural law rests
on the observation of facts of nature. The author of this book
believes that he has not been misled by preconceptions to present an
arbitrary construction of the historical process, but that the facts
force the acknowledgment of results of the kind indicated.
It can be shown that in the evolutionary course of the philosophical
struggle of mankind, periods are distinguishable, each of which lasts
between seven and eight centuries. In each of these epochs there is a
distinctly different impulse at work, as if it were under the surface
of external history, sending its rays into the human personalities and
thus causing the evolution of man's mode of philosophizing while
taking its own definite course of development.
The way in which the facts support the distinction of these epochs is
to be shown in the present book. Its author would like, as far as
possible, to let the facts speak for themselves. At this point, he
wants to offer a few guiding lines from which, however, the thoughts
expressed in this book did not take their departure; they are
the results of this book.
One can be of the opinion that these guiding lines correctly should
have been placed at the end of the book because their truth follows
only from the content of the complete presentation. They are, however,
to precede the subject matter as a preliminary statement because they
justify the inner structure of the book. For although they were the
result of the author's research, they were naturally in his mind
before he wrote the book and had their effect on its form. For the
reader, however, it can be important to learn not only at the end of
the book why the author presents his subject in a certain way,
but to form his judgment concerning this method of presentation
already during the reading. But only so much is to be stated here as
is necessary for the understanding of the book's arrangement.
The first epoch of the development of philosophical views begins in
Greek antiquity. It can be distinctly traced back as far as Pherekydes
of Syros and Thales of Miletos and it comes to a close in the age of
beginning Christianity. The spiritual aspiration of mankind in this
age shows an essentially different character from that of earlier
times. It is the age of awakening thought life. Prior to this age, the
human soul lived in imaginative (symbolic) thought pictures that
expressed its relation to the world and existence.
All attempts to find the philosophical thought life developed in
pre-Greek times fail upon closer inspection. Genuine philosophy cannot
be dated earlier than the Greek civilization. What may at first glance
seem to resemble the element of thought in Oriental or Egyptian world
contemplation's proves, on closer inspection, to be not real thought
but parabolic, symbolic conception. It is in Greece that the
aspiration is born to gain knowledge of the world and its laws by
means of an element that can be acknowledged as thought also in
the present age. As long as the human soul conceives world phenomena
through pictures, it feels itself intimately bound up with them. The
soul feels itself in this phase to be a member of the world organism;
it does not think of itself as an independent entity separated from
this organism. As the pure pictureless thought awakens in the human
soul, the soul begins to feel its separation from the world. Thought
becomes the soul's educator for independence.
But the ancient Greek did not experience thought as modern man does.
This is a fact that can be easily overlooked. A genuine insight into
the ancient Greek's thought life will reveal the essential difference.
The ancient Greek's experience of thought is comparable to our
experience of a perception, to our experience of red or
yellow. Just as we today attribute a color or tone percept
to a thing, so the ancient Greek perceives thought in
the world of things and as adhering to them. It is for this reason
that thought at that time still is the connecting link between soul
and world. The process of separation between soul and world is just
beginning; it has not yet been completed. To be sure, the soul feels
the thought within itself, but it must be of the opinion to have
received it from the world and it can therefore expect the solution of
the world riddles from its thought experience. It is in this type of
thought experience that the philosophical development proceeds that
begins with Pherekydes and Thales, culminates in Plato and Aristotle
and then recedes until it ends at the time of the beginning of
Christianity. From the undercurrents of the spiritual evolution,
thought life streams into the souls of man and produces in these souls
philosophies that educate them to feel themselves in their
self-dependence independent of the outer world.
A new period begins with the dawn of the Christian era. The human soul
can now no longer experience thought as a perception from the outer
world. It now feels thought as the product of its own (inner) being.
An impulse much more powerful than the stream of thought life now
radiates into the soul from the deeper currents of the spiritual
creative process. It is only now that self-consciousness awakes in
mankind in a form adequate to the true nature of this
self-consciousness. What men had experienced in this respect before
that time had really only been harbingers and anticipatory phenomena
of what one should in its deepest meaning call inwardly experienced
self-consciousness.
It is to be hoped that a future history of spiritual evolution will
call this time the Age of Awakening Self-Consciousness.
Only now does man become in the true sense of the' word aware of the
whole scope of his soul life as Ego. The full weight of
this fact is more instinctively felt than distinctly known by the
philosophical spirits of that time. All philosophical aspirations of
that epoch retain this general character up to the time of Scotus
Erigena. The philosophers of this period are completely submerged in
religious conceptions with their philosophical thinking. Through this
type of thought formation, the human soul, finding itself in an
awakened self-consciousness entirely left to its own resources,
strives to gain the consciousness of its submergence in the life of
the world organism. Thought becomes a mere means to express the
conviction regarding the relation of man's soul to the world that one
has gained from religious sources. Steeped in this view, nourished by
religious conceptions, thought life grows like the seed of a plant in
the soul of the earth, until it breaks forth into the light.
In Greek philosophy the life of thought unfolds its own inner forces.
It leads the human soul to the point where it feels its
self-dependence. Then from greater depths of spiritual life an element
breaks forth into mankind that is fundamentally different from thought
life an element that filled the soul with a new inner experience,
with an awareness of being a world in itself, resting on its inner
point of gravitation. Thus, self-consciousness is at first
experienced, but it is not as yet conceived in the form of thought.
The life of thought continues to be developed, concealed and
sheltered in the warmth of religious consciousness. In this way pass
the first seven or eight hundred years after the foundation of
Christianity.
The next period shows an entirely different character. The leading
philosophers feel the reawakening of the energy of thought life. For
centuries the human soul had been inwardly consolidated through the
experience of its self-dependence. It now begins to search for what it
might claim as its innermost self possession. It finds that this is
its thought life. Everything else is given from without; thought is
felt as something the soul has to produce out of its own depth, that
is, the soul is present in full consciousness at this process of
production. The urge arises in the soul to gain in thought a knowledge
through which it can enlighten itself about its own relation to the
world. How can something be expressed in thought life that is not
itself merely the soul's own product? This becomes the question of the
philosophers of that age. The spiritual trends of Nominalism, Realism,
Scholasticism and medieval Mysticism reveal this fundamental character
of the philosophy of that age. The human soul attempts to examine its
thought life with regard to its content of reality.
With the close of this third period the character of philosophical
endeavor changes. The self-consciousness of the soul has been
strengthened through century-long work performed in the examination of
the reality of thought life. One has learned to feel the life of
thought as something that is deeply related to the soul's own nature
and to experience in this union an inner security of existence. As a
mark of this stage of development, there shines like a brilliant star
in the firmament of the spirit, the words, I think, therefore I
am, which were spoken by Descartes (1596 1650). One feels the
soul flowing in thought life, and in the awareness of this stream one
believes one experiences the true nature of the soul itself. The
representative of that time feels himself so secure within this
existence recognized in thought life that he arrives at the conviction
that true knowledge could only be a knowledge that is experienced in
the same way as the soul experiences thought life resting on its own
foundation. This becomes the viewpoint of Spinoza (1632 1677).
Now philosophies emerge that shape the world picture as it must be
imagined when the self-conscious human soul, conceived by the
life of thought, can have its adequate position within that world. How
must the world be depicted so that within it the human soul can be
thought to correspond adequately to the necessary concept of the
self-consciousness? This becomes the question that, in an unbiased
observation, we find at the bottom of the philosophy of Giordano Bruno
(1548 1600). It is also distinctly the question for which Leibnitz
(1646 1716) seeks the answer.
With conceptions of a world picture arising from such a question the
fourth epoch in the evolution of the philosophical world view begins.
Our present age is approximately in the middle of this epoch. This
book is to show how far philosophical knowledge has advanced in the
conception of a world picture in which the self-conscious soul can
find such a secure place, so that it can understand its own meaning
and significance within the existing world. When, in the first epoch
of philosophical search, philosophy derived its powers from the
awakening thought life, the human soul was spurred by the hope of
gaining a knowledge of a world to which it belongs with its true
nature, which is not limited to the life manifested through the body
of the senses.
In the fourth epoch the emerging natural sciences add a view of nature
to the philosophical world picture that gradually senses its own
independent ground. As this nature-picture develops, it retains
nothing of a world in which the self-conscious ego (the human soul
experiencing itself as a self-conscious entity) must recognize itself.
In the first epoch the human soul begins to detach itself from the
experienced external world and to develop a knowledge concerned with
the inner life of the soul. This independent soul life finds its power
in the awakening thought element. In the fourth period a picture 'of
nature emerges that has detached itself in turn from the inner soul
life. The tendency arises to think of nature in such a way that
nothing is allowed to be mixed into its conception that has been
derived from the soul and not exclusively from nature itself. Thus,
the soul is, in this period, expelled from nature, and with its inner
experiences confined to its subjective world. The soul is not about to
be forced to admit that everything it can gain as knowledge by itself
can have a significance only for itself. It cannot find in itself
anything to point to a world in which this soul could have its roots
with its true being. For in the picture of nature it cannot find any
trace of itself.
The evolution of thought life has proceeded through four epochs. In
the first, thought is experienced as a perception coming from without.
In this phase the human soul finds its self-dependence through the
thought process. In the second period, thought had exhausted its power
in this direction. The soul now becomes stronger in the experience of
its own entity. Thought itself now lives more in the background and
blends into self knowledge. It can no longer be considered as if it
were an external perception. The soul becomes used to experiencing it
as its own product. It must arrive at the question of what this
product of inner soul activity has to do with an external world. The
third period passes in the light of this question. The philosophers
develop a cognitive life that tests thought itself with regard to its
inner power. The philosophical strength of the period manifests itself
as a life in the element of thought as such, as a power to work
through thought in its own essence. In the course of this epoch the
philosophical life increases in its ability to master the element of
thought. At the beginning of the fourth period the cognitive
self-consciousness, on the basis of its thought possession, proceeds
to form a philosophical world picture. This picture is now challenged
by a picture of nature that refuses to accept any element of this
self-consciousness. The self-conscious soul, confronted with this
nature picture, feels as its fundamental question, How do I gain
a world picture in which both the inner world with its true essence
and the external nature are securely rooted at the same time?
The impulse caused by this question dominates the philosophical
evolution from the beginning of the fourth period; the philosophers
themselves may be more or less aware of that fact. This is also the
most important impulse of the philosophical life of the present age.
In this book the facts are to be characterized that show the effect of
that impulse. The first volume of the book is to present the
philosophical development up to the middle of the nineteenth century;
the second will follow that development into the present time. It is
to show at the end how the philosophical evolution leads the soul to
aspects toward a future human life in cognition. Through this, the
soul should be able to develop a world picture out of its own
self-consciousness in which its true being can be conceived
simultaneously with the picture of nature that is the result of the
modern scientific development.
A philosophical future perspective adequate to the present was to be
unfolded in this book from the historical evolution of the
philosophical world view.
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