The World Conceptions of the Modern Age of Thought Evolution
The rise of natural science in modern times had as its fundamental
cause the same search as the mysticism of Jakob Boehme. This becomes
apparent in a thinker who grew directly out of the spiritual movement,
which in Copernicus (1473 1543), Kepler (1571 1630),
Galileo (1564 1642), and others, led to the first great
accomplishments of natural science in modern times. This thinker is
Giordano Bruno (1548 1600). When one sees how his world
consists of infinitely small, animated, psychically self-aware,
fundamental beings, the monads, which are uncreated and
indestructible, producing in their combined activity the phenomena of
nature, one could be tempted to group him with Anaxagoras, for whom
the world consists of the homoiomeries.
Yet, there is a significant difference between these two thinkers. For
Anaxagoras, the thought of the homoiomeries unfolds while he is
engaged in the contemplation of the world; the world suggests these
thoughts to him. Giordano Bruno feels that what lies behind the
phenomena of nature must be thought of as a world picture in such a
way that the entity of the ego is possible in this world picture. The
ego must be a monad; otherwise, it could not be real.
Thus, the assumption of the monads becomes necessary. As only the
monad can be real, therefore, the truly real entities are monads with
different inner qualities.
In the depths of the soul of a personality like Giordano Bruno,
something happens that is not raised into full consciousness; the
effect of this inner process is then the formation of the world
picture. What goes on in the depths is an unconscious soul process.
The ego feels that it must form such a conception of itself that its
reality is assured, and it must conceive the world in such a way that
the ego can be real in it. Giordano Bruno has to form the conception
of the monad in order to render possible the realization of both
demands. In his thought the ego struggles for its existence in the
world conception of the modern age, and the expression of this
struggle is the view: I am a monad; such an entity is uncreated and
indestructible.
A comparison shows how different the ways are in which Aristotle and
Giordano Bruno arrive at the conception of God. Aristotle contemplates
the world; he sees the evidence of reason in natural processes; he
surrenders to the contemplation of this evidence; at the same time,
the processes of nature are for him evidence of the thought of
the first mover of these processes. Giordano Bruno fights
his way through to the conception of the monads. The processes of
nature are, as it were, extinguished in the picture in which
innumerable monads are presented as acting on each other; God becomes
the power entity that lives actively in all monads behind the
processes of the perceptible world. In Giordano Bruno's passionate
antagonism against Aristotle, the contrast between the thinker of
ancient Greece and of the philosopher of modern times becomes
manifest.
It becomes apparent in the modern philosophical development in a great
variety of ways how the ego searches for means to experience its own
reality in itself. What Francis Bacon of Verulam (1561 1626)
represents in his writings has the same general character even if this
does not at first sight become apparent in his endeavors in the field
of philosophy. Bacon of Verulam demands that the investigation of
world phenomena should begin with unbiased observation. One should
then try to separate the essential from the nonessential in a
phenomenon in order to arrive at a conception of whatever lies at the
bottom of a thing or event. He is of the opinion that up to his time
the fundamental thoughts, which were to explain the world phenomena,
had been conceived first, and only thereafter were the description of
the individual things and events arranged to fit these thoughts. He
presupposed that the thoughts had not been taken out of the things
themselves. Bacon wanted to combat this (deductive) method with his
(inductive) method. The concepts are to be formed in direct contact
with the things. One sees, so Bacon reasons, how an object is consumed
by fire; one observes how a second object behaves with relation to
fire and then observes the same process with many objects. In this
fashion one arrives eventually at a conception of how things behave
with respect to fire. The fact that the investigation in former times
had not proceeded in this way had, according to Bacon's opinion,
caused human conception to be dominated by so many idols
instead of the true ideas about the things.
Goethe gives a significant description of this method of thought of
Bacon of Verulam.
Bacon is like a man who is well-aware of the irregularity,
insufficiency and dilapidated condition of an old building, and knows
how to make this clear to the inhabitants. He advises them to abandon
it, to give up the land, the materials and all appurtenances, to look
for another plot, and to erect a new building. He is an excellent and
persuasive speaker. He shakes a few walls. They break down and some of
the inhabitants are forced to move out. He points out new building
grounds; people begin to level it off, and yet it is everywhere too
narrow. He submits new plans; they are not clear, not inviting.
Mainly, he speaks of new unknown materials and now the world seems to
be well-served. The crowd disperses in all directions and brings back
an infinite variety of single items while at home, new plans, new
activities and settlements occupy the citizens and absorb their
attention.
Goethe says this in his history of the theory of color where he speaks
about Bacon. In a later part of the book dealing with Galileo, he
says:
If through Verulam's method of dispersion, natural science seemed to
be forever broken up into fragments, it was soon brought to unity
again by Galileo. He led natural philosophy back into the human being.
When he developed the law of the pendulum and of falling bodies from
the observation of swinging church lamps, he showed even in his early
youth that, for the genius, one case stands for a thousand cases. In
science, everything depends on what is called, an aperçu, that
is, on the ability of becoming aware of what is really fundamental in
the world of phenomena. The development of such an awareness is
infinitely fruitful.
With these words Goethe indicated distinctly the point that is
characteristic of Bacon. Bacon wants to find a secure path for science
because he hopes that in this way man will find a dependable
relationship to the world. The approach of Aristotle, so Bacon feels,
can no longer be used in the modern age. He does not know that in
different ages different energies of the soul are predominantly active
in man. He is only aware of the fact that he must reject Aristotle.
This he does passionately. He does it in such a way that Goethe is
lead to say, How can one listen to him with equanimity when he
compares the works of Aristotle and of Plato with weightless tablets,
which, just because they did not consist of a good solid substance,
could so easily float down to us on the stream of time.
Bacon does not understand that he is aiming at the same objective that
has been reached by Plato and Aristotle, and that he must use
different means for the same aim because the means of antiquity can no
longer be those of the modern age. He points toward a method that
could appear fruitful for the investigation in the field of external
nature, but as Goethe shows in the case of Galileo, even in this field
something more is necessary than what Bacon demands.
The method of Bacon proves completely useless, however, when the soul
searches not only for an access to the investigation of individual
facts, but also to a world conception. What good is a groping search
for isolated phenomena and a derivation of general ideas from them, if
these general ideas do not, like strokes of lightning, flash up out of
the ground of being in the soul of man, rendering account of their
truth through themselves. In antiquity, thought appeared like a
perception to the soul. This mode of appearance has been dampened
through the brightness of the new ego-consciousness. What can lead to
thoughts capable of forming a world conception in the soul must be so
formed as if it were the soul's own invention, and the soul must
search for the possibility of justifying the validity of its own
creation. Bacon has no feeling for all this. He, therefore, points to
the materials of the building for the construction of the new world
conception, namely, the individual natural phenomena. It is, however,
no more possible that one can ever build a house by merely observing
the form of the building stones that are to be used, than that a
fruitful world conception could ever arise in a soul that is
exclusively concerned with the individual processes of nature.
Contrary to Bacon of Verulam, who pointed toward the bricks of the
building, Descartes (Cartesius) and Spinoza turned their
attention toward its plan. Descartes was born in 1596 and died in
1650. The starting point of his philosophical endeavor is significant
with him. With an unbiased questioning mind he approaches the world,
which offers him much of its riddles partly through revealed religion,
partly through the observation of the senses. He now contemplates both
sources in such a way that he does not simply accept and recognize as
truth what either of them offers to him. Instead, he sets against the
suggestions of both sources the ego, which answers out of
its own initiative with its doubt against all revelation and
against all perception. In the development of modern philosophical
life, this move is a fact of the most telling significance. Amidst the
world the thinker allows nothing to make an impression on his soul,
but sets himself against everything with a doubt that
can derive its support only from the soul itself. Now the soul
apprehends itself in its own action: I doubt, that is to say, I think.
Therefore, no matter how things stand with the entire world, in my
doubt-exerting thinking I come to the clear awareness that I am.
In this manner, Cartesius arrives at his Cogito ergo sum, I
think, therefore I am. The ego in him conquers the right to recognize
its own being through the radical doubt directed against the entire
world.
Descartes derives the further development of his world conception out
of this root. In the ego he had attempted to seize
existence. Whatever can justify its existence together with the ego
may be considered truth. The ego finds in itself, innate to it, the
idea of God. This idea presents itself to the ego as true, as distinct
as the ego itself, but it is so sublime, so powerful, that the ego
cannot have it through its own power. Therefore, it comes from
transcendent reality to which it corresponds. Descartes believes in
the reality of the external world, not because this external world
presents itself as real, but because the ego must believe in itself
and then subsequently in God, and because God must be thought as
truthful. For it would be untrue of God to suggest a real external
world to man if the latter did not exist.
It is only possible to arrive at the recognition of the reality of the
ego as Descartes does through a thinking that in the most direct
manner aims at the ego in order to find a point of support for the act
of cognition. That is to say, this possibility can be fulfilled only
through an inner activity but never through a perception from without.
Any perception that comes from without gives only the qualities of
extension. In this manner, Descartes arrives at the recognition of two
substances in the world: One to which extension, and the other to
which thinking, is to be attributed and that has its roots in the
human soul. The animals, which in Descartes's sense cannot apprehend
themselves in inner self-supporting activity, are accordingly mere
beings of extension, automata, machines. The human body, too, is
nothing but a machine. The soul is linked up with this machine. When
the body becomes useless through being worn out or destroyed in some
way, the soul abandons it to continue to live in its own element.
Descartes lives in a time in which a new impulse in the philosophical
life is already discernible. The period from the beginning of the
Christian era until about the time of Scotus Erigena develops in such
a way that the inner experience of thought is enlivened by a force
that enters the spiritual evolution as a powerful impulse. The energy
of thought as it awakened in Greece is outshone by this power.
Outwardly, the progress in the life of the human soul is expressed in
the religious movements and by the fact that the forces of the
youthful nations of Western and Central Europe become the recipients
of the effects of the older forms of thought experience. They
penetrate this experience with the younger, more elementary impulses
and thereby transform it. In this process one forward step in the
progress in human evolution becomes evident that is caused by the fact
that older and subtle traces of spiritual currents that have exhausted
their vitality, but not their spiritual possibilities, are continued
by youthful energies emerging from the natural spring of mankind. In
such processes one will be justified in recognizing the essential laws
of the evolution of mankind. They are based on rejuvenating tendencies
of the spiritual life. The acquired forces of the spirit can only then
continue to unfold if they are transplanted into young, natural
energies of mankind.
The first eight centuries of the Christian era present a continuation
of the thought experience in the human soul in such a way that the new
forces about to emerge are still dormant in hidden depths, but they
tend to exert their formative effect on the evolution of world
conception. In Descartes, these forces already show themselves at work
in a high degree. In the age between Scotus Erigena and approximately
the fifteenth century, thought, which in the preceding period did not
openly unfold, comes again to the fore in its own force. Now, however,
it emerges from a direction quite different from that of the Greek
age. With the Greek thinkers, thought is experienced as a
perception. From the eighth to the fifteenth centuries it comes
from out of the depth of the soul so that man has the feeling: Thought
generates itself within me. In the Greek thinkers, a relation between
thought and the processes of nature was still immediately established;
in the age just referred to, thought stands out as the product of
self-consciousness. The thinker has the feeling that he must prove
thought as justified. This is the feeling of the nominalists and the
realists. This is also the feeling of Thomas Aquinas, who anchors the
experience of thought in religious revelation.
The fifteenth and sixteenth centuries introduce a new impulse to the
souls. This is slowly prepared and slowly absorbed in the life of the
soul. A transformation takes place in the organization of the human
soul. In the field of philosophical life, this transformation becomes
manifest through the fact that thought cannot now be felt as a
perception, but as a product of self-consciousness. This
transformation in the organization of the human soul can be observed
in all fields of the development of humanity. It becomes apparent in
the renaissance of art and science, and of European life, as well as
in the reformatory religious movements. One will be able to discover
it if one investigates the art of Dante and Shakespeare with respect
to their foundations in the human soul development. Here these
possibilities can only be indicated, since this sketch is intended to
deal only with the development of the intellectual world conception.
The advent of the mode of thought of modern natural science appears as
another symptom of this transformation of the human soul organization.
Just compare the state of the form of thinking about nature as it
develops in Copernicus, Galileo and Kepler with what has preceded
them, This natural scientific conception corresponds to the mood of
the human soul at the beginning of the modern age in the sixteenth
century. Nature is now looked at in such a way that the sense
observation is to be the only witness of it. Bacon is one, Galileo
another personality in whom this becomes apparent. The picture of
nature is no longer drawn in a manner that allows thought to be felt
in it as a power revealed by nature. Out of this picture of nature,
every trait that could be felt as only a product of self-consciousness
gradually vanishes. Thus, the creations of self-consciousness and the
observation of nature are more and more abruptly contrasted, separated
by a gulf, From Descartes on a transformation of the soul organization
becomes discernible that tends to separate the picture of nature from
the creations of the self-consciousness. With the sixteenth century a
new tendency in the philosophical life begins to make itself felt.
While in the preceding centuries thought had played the part of an
element, which, as a product of self-consciousness, demanded its
justification through the world picture, since the sixteenth century
it proves to be clearly and distinctly resting solely on its own
ground in the self-consciousness. Previously, thought had been felt in
such a manner that the picture of nature could be considered a support
for its justification; now it becomes the task of this element of
thought to uphold the claim of its validity through its own strength.
The thinkers of the time that now follows feel that in the thought
experience itself something must be found that proves this experience
to be the justified creator of a world conception.
The significance of the transformation of the soul life can be
realized if one considers the way in which philosophers of nature,
like H. Cardanus (1501 1576) and Bernardinus Telesius
(1508 1588), still spoke of natural processes. In them a picture
of nature still continued to show its effect and was to lose its power
through the emergence of the mode of conception of natural science of
Copernicus, Galileo and others. Something still lives in the mind of
Cardanus of the processes of nature, which he conceives as similar to
those of the human soul. Such an assertion would also have been
possible to Greek thinking. Galileo is already compelled to say that
what man has as the sensation of warmth within himself, for instance,
exists no more in external nature than the sensation of tickling that
a man feels when the sole of his foot is touched by a feather.
Telesius still feels justified to say that warmth and coldness are the
driving forces of the world processes, and Galileo must already make
the statement that man knows warmth only as an inner experience. In
the picture of nature he allows as thinkable only what contains
nothing of this inner experience. Thus, the conceptions of mathematics
and mechanics become the only ones that are allowed to form the
picture of nature. In a personality like Leonardo da Vinci
(1452 1519), who was just as great as a thinker as he was an
artist, we can recognize the striving for a new law-determined picture
of nature. Such spirits feel it necessary to find an access to nature
not yet given to the Greek way of thinking and its after effects in
the Middle Ages. Man now has to rid himself of whatever experiences he
has about his own inner being if he is to find access to nature. He is
permitted to depict nature only in conceptions that contain nothing of
what he experiences as the effects of nature in himself.
Thus, the human soul dissociates itself from nature; it takes its
stand on its own ground. As long as one could think that the stream of
nature contained something that was the same as what was immediately
experienced in man, one could, without hesitation, feel justified to
have thought bear witness to the events of nature. The picture of
nature of modern times forces the human consciousness to feel itself
outside nature with its thought. This consciousness further
establishes a validity for its thought, which is gained through its
own power.
From the beginning of the Christian Era to Scotus Erigena, the
experience of thought continues to be effective in such a way that its
form is determined by the presupposition of a spiritual world, namely,
the world of religious revelation. From the eighth to the sixteenth
century, thought experience wrests itself free from the inner
self-consciousness but allows, besides its own germinating power, the
other power of consciousness, revelation, to continue in its
existence. From the sixteenth century on, it is the picture of nature
that eliminates the experience of thought itself; henceforth, the
self-consciousness attempts to produce, out of its own energies, the
resources through which it is possible to form a world conception with
the help of thought. It is with this task that Descartes finds himself
confronted. It is the task of the thinkers of the new period of world
conception.
Benedict Spinoza (1632 1677) asks himself, What
must be assumed as a starting point from which the creation of a true
world picture may proceed? This beginning is caused by the feeling that
innumerable thoughts may present themselves in my soul as true; I can
admit as the corner stone for a world conception only an element whose
properties I must first determine. Spinoza finds that one can only
begin with something that is in need of nothing else for its being. He
gives the name, substance, to this being. He finds that there can be
only one such substance, and that this substance is God. If one observes
the method by which Spinoza arrives at this beginning of his philosophy,
one finds that he has modeled it after the method of mathematics. Just
as the mathematician takes his start from general truths, which the human
ego forms itself in free creation, so Spinoza demands that philosophy
should start from such spontaneously created conceptions. The one substance
is as the ego must think it to be. Thought in this way, it does not
tolerate anything existing outside itself as a peer, for then it would
not be everything. It would need something other than itself for its
existence. Everything else is, therefore, only of the substance,
as one of its attributes, as Spinoza says. Two such attributes are
recognizable to man. He sees the first when he looks at the outer world;
the second, when he turns his attention inward. The first attribute is
extension; the second, thinking. Man contains both attributes in his
being. In his body he has extension; in his soul, thinking. When he
thinks, it is the divine substance that thinks; when he acts, it is this
substance that acts. Spinoza obtains the existence (Dasein) for
the ego in anchoring it in the general all-embracing divine substance.
Under such circumstances there can be no question of an absolute freedom
of man, for man is no more to be credited with the initiative of his
actions and thought than a stone with that of its motion; the agent in
everything is the one substance. We can speak of a relative freedom in
man only when he considers himself not as an individual entity, but
knows himself as one with the one substance.
Spinoza's world conception, if consistently developed to its
perfection, leads a person to the consciousness: I think of myself in
the right way if I no longer consider myself, but know myself in my
experience as one with the divine whole. This consciousness then, to
follow Spinoza, endows the whole human personality with the impulse to
do what is right, that is to say, god-filled action. This results as a
matter of course for the one for whom the right world conception is
realized as the full truth. For this reason Spinoza calls the book in
which he presents his world conception, Ethics. For him,
ethics, that is to say, moral behavior, is in the highest sense the
result of the true knowledge of man's dwelling in the one substance.
One feels inclined to say that the private life of Spinoza, of the man
who was first persecuted by fanatics and then, out of his own free
will give away his fortune and sought his subsistence in poverty as a
craftsman, was in the rarest fashion the outer expression of his
philosophical soul, which knew its ego in the divine whole and felt
its inner experience, indeed, all experience, illumined by this
consciousness.
Spinoza constructs a total world conception out of thoughts. These
thoughts have to satisfy the requirement that they derive their
justification for the construction of the picture out of the
self-consciousness. In it their certainty must be rooted. Thoughts
that are conceived by human consciousness in the same way as the
self-supporting mathematical ideas are capable of shaping a world
picture that is the expression of what, in truth, exists behind the
phenomena of the world.
In a direction that is entirely different from that of Spinoza,
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1646 1716) seeks the
justification of the ego-consciousness in the actual world. His point
of departure is like that of Giordano Bruno insofar as he thinks of
the soul or the ego as a monad. Leibniz finds the
self-consciousness in the soul, that is, the knowledge of the
soul of itself, a manifestation, therefore, of the ego. There cannot
be anything else in the soul that thinks and feels except the soul
itself, for how should the soul know of itself if the subject
of the act of knowing were something other than itself? Furthermore,
it can only be a simple entity, not a composite being, for the parts
in it could and would have to know of each other. Thus, the soul is a
simple entity, enclosed in itself and aware of its being, a monad.
Nothing can come into this monad that is external to it, for nothing
but itself can be active in it. All its experience, cognitive
imagination, sensation, etc., is the result of its own activity. It
could only perceive any other activity in itself through its defense
against this activity, that is to say, it would at any rate perceive
only itself in its defense. Thus, nothing external can enter
this monad. Leibniz expresses this by saying that the monad has no
windows. According to him, all real beings are monads, and only monads
truly exist. These different monads are, however, differentiated with
respect to the intensity of their inner life. There are monads of an
extremely dull inner life that are as if in a continual state of
sleep; there are monads that are, as it were, dreaming; there are,
furthermore, the human monads in wake-consciousness, etc., up to the
highest degree of intensity of the inner life of the divine principal
monad. That man does not see monads in his sense perception is caused
by the circumstance that the monads are perceived by him like the
appearance of fog, for example, that is not really fog but a swarm of
gnats. What is seen by the senses of man is like the appearance of a
fog formed by the accumulated monads.
Thus, for Leibniz the world in reality is a sum of monads, which do
not affect each other but constitute self-conscious beings, leading
their lives independently of each other, that is, egos. Nevertheless,
if the individual monad contains an after image of the general life of
the world in its inner life, it would be wrong to assume that this is
caused by an effect that the individual monads exert on each other. It
is caused by the circumstance that in a given case one monad
experiences inwardly by itself what is also independently experienced
by another monad. The inner lives of the monads agree like clocks that
indicate the same hours in spite of the fact that they do not affect
each other. Just as the clocks agree because they have been originally
matched, so the monads are attuned to each other through the
pre-established harmony that issues from the divine principal monad.
This is the world picture to which Leibniz is driven because he has to
form the picture in such a way that in it the self-conscious
life of the soul, the ego, can be maintained as a reality. It is a
world picture completely formed out of the ego itself. In
Leibniz's view, this can, indeed, not be otherwise. In Leibniz, the
struggle for a world conception leads to a point where, in order to
find the truth, it does not accept anything as truth that is revealed
in the outer world.
According to Leibniz, the life of man's senses is caused in such a way
that the monad of the soul is brought into connection with other
monads with a somnolent, sleeping and less acute self-consciousness.
The body is a sum of such monads. The one waking soul monad is
connected with it. This central monad parts from the others in death
and continues its existence by itself.
Just as the world picture of Leibniz is one that is wholly formed out
of the inner energy of the self-conscious soul, so the world picture
of his contemporary John Locke (1632 1704), rests entirely on
the feeling that such a productive construction out of the soul is not
admissible. Locke recognizes only those parts of a world conception as
justified that can be observed (experienced) and what can, on
the basis of the observation, be thought about the observed
objects. The soul for him is not a being that develops real
experiences out of itself, but an empty slate on which the outer world
writes its entries. Thus, for Locke, the human self-consciousness is a
result of the experience; it is not an ego that is the cause of an
experience. When a thing of the external world makes an impression on
the soul, it can be said that the thing contains only extension,
shape, motion in reality; through the contact with the senses, sounds,
colors, warmth, etc., are produced. What thus comes into being through
contact with the senses is only there as long as the senses are in
touch with the things. Outside the perception there are only
substances that are differently shaped and in various states of
motion. Locke feels compelled to assume that, except shape and motion,
nothing of what the senses perceive has anything to do with things
themselves. With this assumption he makes the beginnings of a current
of world conception that is unwilling to recognize the impressions of
the external world experienced inwardly by man in his act of
cognition, as belonging to the world in itself.
It is a strange spectacle that Locke presents to the contemplative
soul. Man is supposed to be capable of cognition only through the fact
that he perceives, and that he thinks about the content of the
perception, but what he perceives has only the least part to do with
the properties pertaining to the world itself. Leibniz withdraws from
what the world reveals and creates a world picture from within the
soul; Locke insists on a world picture that is created by the soul in
conjunction with the world, but no real picture of a world is
accomplished through such a creation. As Locke cannot, like Leibniz,
consider the ego itself as the fulcrum of a world conception,
he arrives at conceptions that appear to be inappropriate to support a
world conception because they do not allow the possession of the human
ego to be counted as belonging to the center of existence. A world
view like that of Locke loses the connection with every realm in which
the ego, the self-conscious soul, could be rooted because it
rejects from the outset any approaches to the world ground except
those that disappear in the darkness of the senses.
In Locke, the evolution of philosophy produces a form of world
conception in which the self-conscious soul struggles for its
existence in the world picture but loses this fight because it
believes that it gains its experiences exclusively in the intercourse
with the external world represented in the picture of nature. The
self-conscious soul must, therefore, renounce all knowledge concerning
anything that could belong to the nature of the soul apart from this
intercourse with the outside world.
Stimulated by Locke, George Berkeley (1685 1753) arrived at
results that were entirely different from his. Berkeley finds that the
impressions that the things and events of the world appear to produce
on the human soul take place in reality within this soul
itself. When I see red, I must bring this
redness into being within myself; when I feel
warm, the warmth lives within me. Thus it is
with all things that I apparently receive from without. Except for
those elements I produce within myself, I know nothing whatsoever
about the external things. Thus, it is senseless to speak about things
that consist of material substance, for I know only what appears in my
mind as something spiritual. What I call a rose, for instance, is
wholly spiritual, that is to say, a conception (an idea) experienced
by my mind. There is, therefore, according to Berkeley, nothing to be
perceived except what is spiritual, and when I notice that something
is effected in me from without, then this effect can only be caused by
spiritual entities, for obviously bodies cannot cause spiritual
effects and my perceptions are entirely spiritual. There are,
therefore, only spirits in the world that influence each other. This
is Berkeley's view. It turns the conceptions of Locke into their
contrary by construing everything as spiritual reality that had been
considered as impression of the material things. Thus, Berkeley
believes he recognizes himself with his self-consciousness immediately
in a spiritual world.
Others have been led to different results by the thoughts of Locke.
Condillac (1715 1780) is an example. He believes, like Locke, that
all knowledge of the world must and, indeed, can only depend on the
observation of the senses and on thinking. He develops this view to
the extreme conclusion that thinking has in itself no self-dependent
reality; it is nothing but a sublimated, transformed external
sensation. Thus, only sense perceptions must be accepted in a world
picture that is to correspond to the truth. His explanation in this
direction is indeed telling. Imagine a human body that is still
completely unawakened mentally, and then suppose one sense after
another to be opened. What more do we have in the sentient body than
we had before in the insensate organism? A body on which the
surrounding world has made impressions. These impressions made by the
environment have by no means produced what believes itself to be an
ego. This world conception does not arrive at the
possibility of conceiving the ego as self-conscious
soul and it does not accomplish a world picture in which
this ego could occur. It is the world conception that
tries to deliver itself of the task of dealing with the self-conscious
soul by proving its nonexistence. Charles Bonnet (1720 1793),
Claude Adrien Helvetius (1715 1771), Julien de la Mettrie
(1709 1751) and the system of nature (systeme de la nature)
of Holbach that appeared in 1770 follow similar paths. In
Holbach's work all traces of spiritual reality have been driven out of
the world picture. Only matter and its forces operate in the world,
and for this spirit-deprived picture of nature, Holbach finds the
words, 0 nature, mistress of all being, and you, her daughters,
Virtue, Reason, and Truth, may you be forever our only
divinities.
In de la Mettrie's Man, a Machine, a world conception appears
that is so overwhelmed by the picture of nature that it can admit only
nature as valid. What occurs in the self-consciousness must,
therefore, be thought of in about the same way as a mirror picture
that we compare with the mirror. The physical organism would be
compared with the mirror, the self-consciousness with the picture. The
latter has, apart from the former, no independent significance. In
Man, a Machine, we read:
If, however, all qualities of the soul depend so much on the specific
organization of the brain and the body as a whole that they obviously
are only this organization itself, then, in this case, we have
to deal with a very enlightened machine. . . . Soul, therefore, is
only a meaningless expression of which one has no idea (thought
picture), and that a clear head may only use in order to indicate by
it the part in us that thinks. Just assume the simplest principle of
motion and the animated bodies have everything they need in order to
move, feel, repeat, in short, everything necessary to find their way
in the physical and moral world. . . . If whatever thinks in my brain
is not a part of this inner organ, why should my blood become heated
when I make the plan for my works or pursue an abstract line of
thought, calmly resting on my bed? (Compare de la Mettrie, Man, a
Machine, Philosophische Bibliothek, Vol. 68.)
Voltaire (1694 1778) introduced the doctrines of Locke
into the circles in which these thinkers had their effect (Diderot,
Cabanis and others also belonged to them). Voltaire himself probably
never went so far as to draw the last consequences of these philosophers.
He allowed himself, however, to be stimulated by the thoughts of Locke
and his sparkling and dazzling writings. Much can be felt of these
influences, but he could not become a materialist in the sense of these
thinkers. He lived in too comprehensive a thought horizon to deny the
spirit. He awakened the need for philosophical questions in the widest
circles because he linked these questions to the interest of them. Much
would have to be said about him in an account that intended to trace
philosophical investigation of current events, but that is not the
purpose of this presentation. Only the higher problems of world
conception in its specific sense are to be considered. For this reason,
Voltaire, as well as Rousseau, the antagonist of the school of
enlightenment, are not to be dealt with here.
Just as Locke loses his path in the darkness of the senses, so does
David Hume (1711 1776) in the inward realm of the
self-conscious soul, the experience of which appears to him to be
ruled not by the forces of a world order, but by the power of human
habit. Why does one say that one event in nature is a cause and
another an effect? This is a question Hume asks. Man sees how the sun
shines on a stone; he then notices that the stone has become warm. He
observes that the first event often follows the second. Therefore, he
becomes accustomed to think of them as belonging together. He makes
the cause out of the sunshine, and the heating of the stone he turns
into the effect. Thought habits tie our perceptions together, but
there is nothing outside in a real world that manifests itself in such
a connection. Man sees a thought in his mind followed by a motion of
his body. He becomes accustomed to think of this thought as the cause
and of the motion as the effect. Thought habits, nothing more, are,
according to Hume, responsible for man's statements about the world
processes. The self-conscious soul can arrive at a guiding direction
for life through thought habits, but it cannot find anything in these
habits out of which it could shape a world picture that would have any
significance for the world event apart from the soul. Thus, for the
philosophical view of Hume, every conception that man forms beyond the
more external and internal observation remains only an object of
belief; it can never become knowledge. Concerning the fate of the
self-conscious human soul, there can be no reliable knowledge about
its relation to any other world but that of the senses, only belief.
The picture of Leibniz's world conception underwent a drawn-out
rationalistic elaboration through Christian Wolff (born in Breslau,
1679, professor in Halle). Wolff is of the opinion that a science
could be founded that obtains a knowledge of what is possible through
pure thinking, a knowledge of what has the potentiality for existence
because it appears free from contradiction to our thinking and can be
proven in this way. Thus, Wolff becomes the founder of a science of
the world, the soul and God. This world conception rests on the
presupposition that the self-conscious soul can produce thoughts in
itself that are valid for what lies entirely and completely outside
its own realm. This is the riddle with which Kant later feels himself
confronted; how is knowledge that is produced in the soul and
nevertheless supposed to have validity for world entities lying
outside the soul, possible?
In the philosophical development since the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries, the tendency becomes manifest to rest the self-conscious
soul on itself so that it feels justified to form valid conceptions
about the riddles of the world. In the consciousness of the second
half of the eighteenth century, Lessing (1729 1781) feels
this tendency as the deepest impulse of human longing. As we listen to
him, we hear many individuals who reveal the fundamental character of
that age in this aspiration.
Lessing strives for the transformation of the religious truths of
revelation into truths of reason. This aim is distinctly discernible
in the various turns and aspects that his thinking has to take.
Lessing feels himself with his self-conscious ego in a period of the
evolution of mankind that is destined to acquire through the power of
self-consciousness, what it had previously received from without
through revelation. What has preceded this phase of history becomes
for Lessing a process of preparation for the moment in which man's
self-consciousness becomes autonomous. Thus, for Lessing, history
becomes an Education of the Human Race. This is also the
title of his essay, written at the height of his life, in which he
refuses to restrict the human soul to a single terrestrial life, but
assumes repeated earth lives for it. The soul lives its lives
separated by time intervals in the various periods of the evolution of
mankind, absorbs from each period what such a time can yield and
incarnates itself in a later period to continue its development. Thus,
the soul carries the fruits of one age of humanity into the later ages
and is educated by history. In Lessing's conception, the
ego is, therefore, extended far beyond the
individual life; it becomes rooted in a spiritually effective world
that lies behind the world of the senses.
With this view Lessing stands on the ground of a world conception that
means to stimulate the self-conscious ego to realize through its very
nature how the active agent within itself is not completely manifested
in the sense-perceptible individual life. In a different way, yet
following the same impulse, Herder (1744 1803) attempts to
arrive at a world picture. His attention turns toward the entire
physical and spiritual universe. He searches, as it were, for the plan
of this universe. The connection and harmony of the phenomena of
nature, the first dawning and sunrise of language and poetry, the
progress of historical evolution with all this Herder allows his
soul to be deeply impressed, and often penetrates it with inspired
thought in order to reach a certain aim. According to Herder,
something is striving for existence in the entire external world that
finally appears in its manifested form in the human soul. The
self-conscious soul, by feeling itself grounded in the universe,
reveals to itself only the course its own forces took before it
reached self-consciousness. The soul may, according to Herder's view,
feel itself rooted in the cosmos, for it recognizes a process in the
whole natural and spiritual connection that had to lead to the soul
itself, just as childhood must lead to mature adulthood in man's
personal existence. It is a comprehensive picture of this world
thought of Herder that is expressed in his Ideas Toward a
Philosophy of the History of Mankind. It represents an attempt to
think the picture of nature in harmony with that of the spirit in such
a way that there is in this nature picture a place also for the
self-conscious human soul. We must not forget that Herder's world
conception reflects his struggle to come to terms simultaneously with
the conceptions of modern natural science and the needs of the
self-conscious soul. Herder was confronted with the demands of modern
world conception as was Aristotle with those of the Greek age. Their
conceptions receive their characteristic coloring from the different
way in which both thinkers had to take into account the pictures of
nature provided by their respective ages.
Herder's attitude toward Spinoza, contrary to that of other
contemporary thinkers, casts a light on his position in the evolution
of world conception. This position becomes particularly distinct if
one compares it to the attitude of Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi
(1743 1819). Jacobi finds in Spinoza's world picture the
elements that the human understanding must arrive at if it follows the
paths predestined for it by its own forces. This picture of the world
marks the limit of what man can know about the world. This knowledge,
however, cannot decide anything about the nature of the soul, about
the divine ground of the world or about the connection of the soul
with the latter for this knowledge. These realms are disclosed to man
only if he surrenders to an insight of belief that depends on a
special ability of the soul. Knowledge in itself must, therefore,
according to Jacobi, necessarily be atheistic. It can adhere strictly
to logical order, but it cannot contain within itself divine world
order. Thus, Spinozism becomes, for Jacobi, the only possible
scientific mode of conception but, at the same time, he sees in it a
proof of the fact that this mode of thinking cannot find the
connection with the spiritual world. In 1787 Herder defends Spinoza
against the accusation of atheism. He is in a position to do so, for
he is not afraid to feel, in his own way but similar to that of
Spinoza, man's experience with the divine being. Spinoza erects a pure
thought structure; Herder tries to gain a world conception not merely
through thinking but through the whole of the human soul life. For
him, no abrupt contrast exists between belief and knowledge if the
soul becomes clearly aware of the manner in which it experiences
itself. We express Herder's intention if we describe the experience of
the soul in the following way. When belief becomes aware of the
reasons that move the soul, it arrives at conceptions that are no less
certain than those obtained by mere thinking. Herder accepts
everything that the soul can find within itself in a purified form as
forces that can produce a world picture. Thus, his conception of the
divine ground of the world is richer, more saturated, than that of
Spinoza, but this conception allows the human ego to assume a
relationship to the world ground, which in Spinoza appears merely as a
result of thought.
We take our stand at a point where the various threads of the
development of modern world conceptions intertwine, as it were, when
we observe how the current of Spinoza's thought enters into it in the
eighties of the eighteenth century. In 1785 F. H. Jacobi published his
Spinoza-Booklet. In it he relates a conversation between
himself and Lessing that took place shortly before Lessing's death.
According to this conversation, Lessing had confessed his adherence to
Spinozism. For Jacobi, this also establishes Lessing's atheism. If one
recognizes the Conversation with Jacobi as decisive for
the intimate thoughts of Lessing, one must regard him as a person who
acknowledges that man can only acquire a world conception adequate to
his nature if he takes as his point of support the firm conviction
with which the soul endows the thought living through its own
strength. With such an idea Lessing appears as a person whose feeling
prophetically anticipates the impulses of the world conceptions of the
nineteenth century. That he expresses this idea only in a conversation
shortly before his death, and that it is still scarcely noticeable in
his writings, shows how hard, even for the freest minds, the struggle
with the enigmatic questions that the modern age raised for the
development of world conceptions became.
A world conception has to be expressed in thoughts. But the convincing
strength of thought, which had found its climax in Platonism and which
in Aristotelianism unfolded in an unquestioned way, had vanished from
the impulses of man's soul. Only the spiritually bold nature of
Spinoza was capable of deriving the energy from the mathematical mode
of thinking to elaborate thought into a world conception that should
point as far as the ground of the world. The thinkers of the
eighteenth century could not yet feel the life-energy of thought that
allows them to experience themselves as human beings securely placed
into a spiritually real world. Lessing stands among them as a prophet
in feeling the force of the self-conscious ego in such a way that he
attributes to the soul the transition through repeated terrestrial
lives.
The fact that thought no longer entered the field of consciousness as
it did for Plato was unconsciously felt like a nightmare in questions
of world conceptions. For Plato, it manifested itself with its
supporting energy and its saturated content as an active entity of the
world. Now, thought was felt as emerging from the substrata of
self-consciousness. One was aware of the necessity to supply it with
supporting strength through whatever powers one could summon. Time and
again this supporting energy was looked for in the truth of belief or
in the depth of the heart, forces that were considered to be stronger
than thought, which was felt to be pale and abstract. This is what
many souls continually experience with respect to thought. They feel
it as a mere soul content out of which they are incapable of deriving
the energy that could grant them the necessary security to be found in
the knowledge that man may know himself rooted with his being in the
spiritual ground of the world. Such souls are impressed with the
logical nature of thought; they recognize such thought as a force that
would be needed to construct a scientific world view, but they demand
a force that has a stronger effect on them when they look for a world
conception embracing the highest knowledge. Such souls lack the
spiritual boldness of Spinoza needed to feel thought as the source of
world creation, and thus to know themselves with thought at the
world's foundation. As a result of this soul constitution, man often
scorns thought while he constructs a world conception; he therefore
feels his self-consciousness more securely supported in the darkness
of the forces of feeling and emotion. There are people to whom a
conception appears the less valuable for its relation to the riddles
of the world, the more this conception tends to leave the darkness of
the emotional sphere and enter into the light of thought. We find such
a mood of soul in I. G. Hamann (died 1788). He was, like many a
personality of this kind, a great stimulator, but with a genius like
Hamann, ideas brought up from the dark depths of the soul have a more
intense effect on others than thoughts expressed in rational form. In
the tone of the oracles Hamann expressed himself on questions that
fill the philosophical life of his time. He had a stimulating effect
on Herder as on others. A mystic feeling, often of a poetistic
coloring, pervades his oracular sayings. The urge of the time is
manifested chaotically in them for an experience of a force of the
self-conscious soul that can serve as supporting nucleus for
everything that man means to lift into awareness about world and life.
It is characteristic of this age for its representative spirits to
feel that one must submerge into the depth of the soul to find the
point in which the soul is linked up with the eternal ground of the
world; out of the insight into this connection, out of the source of
self-consciousness, one must gain a world picture. A considerable gap
exists, however, between what man actually was able to embrace with
his spiritual energies and this inner root of the self-consciousness.
In their spiritual exertion, the representative spirits do not
penetrate to the point from which they dimly feel their task
originates. They go in circles, as it were, around the cause of their
world riddle without coming nearer to it. This is the feeling of many
thinkers who are confronted with the question of world conception
when, toward the end of the eighteenth century, Spinoza begins to have
an effect. Ideas of Locke and Leibniz, also those of Leibniz in the
attenuated form of Wolff, pervade their minds. Besides the striving
for clarity of thought, the anxious mistrust against it is at work at
the same time, with the result that conceptions derived from the depth
of the heart are time and again inserted into the world picture for
its completion. Such a picture is found reflected in Lessing's friend,
Mendelssohn, who was hurt by the publication of Jacobi's
conversation with Lessing. He was unwilling to admit that this
conversation really had had the content that Jacobi reported. In that
case, Mendelssohn argues, his friend would actually have confessed his
adherence to a world conception that means to reach the root of the
spiritual world by mere thoughts, but one could not arrive at a
conception of the life of this root in this way. The world
spirit would have to be approached differently to be felt in the soul
as a life-endowed entity. This, Mendelssohn was sure, Lessing must
have meant. Therefore, he could only have confessed to a
purified Spinozism, a Spinozism that would want to go
beyond mere thinking while striving for the divine origin of
existence. To feel the link with this origin in the manner it was made
possible by Spinozism was a step Mendelssohn was reluctant to take.
Herder did not shy away from this step because he enriched the thought
contours in the world picture of Spinoza with colorful,
content-saturated conceptions that he derived from the contemplation
of the panorama of nature and the world of the spirit. He could not
have been satisfied with Spinoza's thoughts as they were. As given by
their originator, they would have appeared to him as all painted gray
on gray. He observed what went on in nature and in history and placed
the human being into the world of his contemplation. What was revealed
to him in this way showed him a connection between the human being and
the origin of the world as well as the world itself, through the
conception of which he felt himself in agreement with Spinoza's
frame of mind. Herder was deeply and innately convinced that
the contemplation of nature and of historical evolution should lead to
a world picture through which man can feel his position in the world
as a whole as satisfactory. Spinoza was of the opinion that he could
arrive at such a world picture only in the light-flooded realm of a
thought activity that was developed after the model of mathematics. If
one compares Herder with Spinoza, remembering that Herder acknowledged
the conviction of the latter, one is forced to recognize that in the
evolution of modern world conception an impulse is at work that
remains hidden behind the visible world pictures themselves.
This impulse consists in the effort to experience in the soul
what binds the self-consciousness to the totality of the world
processes. It is the effort to gain a world picture in which the world
appears in such a way that man can recognize himself in it as
he must recognize himself when he allows the inner voice of his
self-conscious soul to speak to him. Spinoza means to satisfy the
desire for this kind of experience by having the power of thought
enfold its own certainty. Leibniz fastens his attention on the
soul and aims at a conception of the world as it must be
thought if the soul, correctly conceived of, is to appear rightly
placed in the world picture. Herder observes the world processes and
is convinced from the outset that the right world picture will emerge
in the soul if this soul approaches these processes in a healthy way
and in its full strength. Herder is absolutely convinced of the later
statement of Goethe that every element of fact is already
theory. He has also been stimulated by the thought world of
Leibniz, but he would never have been capable of searching
theoretically for an idea of the self-consciousness in the form of the
monad first, and then constructing a world picture with this idea. The
soul evolution of mankind presents itself in Herder in a way that
enables him to point with special clarity and distinctiveness to the
impulse underlying it in the modern age. What in Greece has been
treated as thought (idea) as if it were a perception is now felt
as an inner experience of the soul, and the thinker is
confronted with the question: How must I penetrate into the depths of
my soul to be able to reach the connection of the soul with the ground
of the world in such a way that my thought will at the same
time be the expression of the forces of world creation? The age of
enlightenment as it appears in the eighteenth century is still
convinced of finding its justification in thought itself. Herder
develops beyond this viewpoint. He searches, not for the point of the
soul where it reveals itself as thinking, but for the living source
where the thought emerges out of the creative principle inherent in
the soul. With this tendency Herder comes close to what one can call
the mysterious experience of the soul with thought. A world conception
must express itself in thoughts, but thought only then endows the soul
with the power for which it searches by means of a world conception in
the modern age, when it experiences this thought in its process of its
birth in the soul. When thought is born, when it has turned into a
philosophical system, it has already lost its magical power over the
soul. For this reason, the power of thought and the philosophical
world picture are so often underestimated. This is done by all those
who know only the thought that is suggested to them from without, a
thought that they are supposed to believe, to which they are supposed
to pledge allegiance. The real power of thought is known only to one
who experiences it in the process of its formation.
How this impulse lives in souls in the modern age becomes prominently
apparent in a most significant figure in the history of philosophy
Shaftesbury (1671 1713). According to him, an inner
sense lives in the soul; through this inner sense ideas enter
into man that become the content of a world conception just as the
external perceptions enter through the outer senses. Thus, Shaftesbury
does not seek the justification of thought in thought itself, but by
pointing toward a fact of the soul life that enables thought to enter
from the foundation of the world into the interior of the soul. Thus,
for Shaftesbury, man is confronted by a twofold outer world: The
external, material one, which enters the soul through the
outer senses, and the spiritual outer world, which reveals
itself to man through his inner sense.
In this age a strong tendency can be felt toward a knowledge of the
soul, for man strives to know how the essence of a world view is
anchored in the soul's nature. We see such an effort in Johann
Nicolaus Tetens (1736 1807). In his investigations of the soul
he arrived at a distinction of the soul faculties that has been
adopted into general usage at the present time: Thinking, feeling and
willing. It was customary before him to distinguish just between the
faculties of thinking and the appetitive faculty.
How the spirits of the eighteenth century attempt to watch the soul in
the process of creatively forming its world picture can be observed in
Hemsterhuis (1721 1790). In this philosopher, whom Herder
considered to be one of the greatest thinkers since Plato, the
struggle of the eighteenth century with the soul impulse of the modern
age becomes demonstrably apparent. The thoughts of Hemsterhuis can be
expressed approximately in the following way. If the human soul could,
through its own power and without external senses, contemplate the
world, the panorama of the world would lie displayed before it in a
single moment. The soul would then be infinite in the infinite. If the
soul, however, had no possibility to live in itself but
depended entirely on the outer senses, then it would be confronted
with a never ending temporal diffusion of the world. The soul would
then live, unconscious of itself, in an ocean of sensual
boundlessness. Between these two poles, which are never reached in
reality but which mark the limits of the inner life as two
possibilities, the soul lives its actual life; it permeates its own
infinity with the boundlessness of the world.
In this chapter the attempt has been made to demonstrate, through the
example of a few thinkers, how the soul impulse of the modern age
flows through the evolution of world conception in the eighteenth
century. In this current live the seeds from which the thought
development of the Age of Kant and Goethe grew.
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