Besides the current of world conception that, through the idea of
evolution, wants to bring the conception of the phenomena of nature
and that of the spirit into complete unity, there is another that
expresses their opposition in the strongest possible form. This
current also springs from natural science. Its followers ask,
What is our basis as we construct a world conception by means of
thinking? We hear, see and touch the physical world through our
senses. We then think about the facts that our senses supply
concerning that world. We form our thoughts accordingly concerning the
world at the testimony of the senses. But are the statements of our
senses really to be trusted?
Let us consult actual observations. The eye conveys to us the
phenomena of light. We say an object sends us red light when the eye
has the sensation of red. But the eye conveys sensations of light to
us also in other cases. When it is pushed or pressed, or when an
electric current flows through our head, the eye also has sensations
of light. It is, therefore, possible that in cases in which we have
the sensation of a light-sending body, something could go on in that
object that has no semblance to our sensation of light. The eye,
nevertheless, would transmit light to us.
The physiologist, Johannes Mueller (1801 58), drew the conclusion
from these facts that what man has as his actual sensation does not
depend on the external processes but on his organization. Our nerves
transmit sensations to us. As we do not have the sensation of the
knife that cuts us but a state of our nerves that appears to us as
pain, so we also do not have a sensation of the external world when
something appears to us as light. What we then really have is a state
of our optic nerve. Whatever may happen outside, the optic nerve
translates this external event into the sensation of light. The
sensation is not a process that transmits a quality or a state of an
external object to our consciousness but one that transmits a quality,
a state of our nerves caused by an external event, to our
consciousness. This Johannes Mueller called the law of specific
sense energies. If that is correct, then our observations
contain nothing of the external world but only the sum of our own
inner conditions. What we perceive has nothing to do with the external
world; it is a product of our own organization. We really perceive
only what is in us.
Natural scientists of great renown regarded this thought as an
irrefutable basis of their world conception. Hermann Helmholtz (1821
94) considered it as the Kantian thought that all our knowledge had
reference only to processes within ourselves, not to things in
themselves translated into the language of natural science (compare
Vol. I of this book). Helmholtz was of the opinion that the world of
our sensations supplies us merely with the signs of the physical
processes in the world outside.
I have been convinced that it is necessary to formulate the relation
between the sensation and its object by declaring the sensation to be
merely the sign of the effect of the object. The nature of the sign
demands only that the same sign be always given to the same object.
Beyond this requirement there is no more similarity necessary between
the sensation and its object than between the spoken word and the
object that we denote with it. We cannot even call our sense
impression pictures, for a picture depicts the same by the same. In a
statue we represent one bodily form through another bodily form; in a
drawing we express the perspective view of an object by the same
perspective in the picture; in a painting we depict color through
color.
Our sensations, therefore, must differ more from the events they
represent than pictures differ from the objects they depict. In our
sensual world picture we have nothing objective but a completely
subjective element, which we ourselves produce under the stimulation
of the effects of an external world that never penetrates into us.
This mode of conception is supported from another side by the
physicist's view of the phenomena of sensation. A sound that we hear
draws our attention to a body in the external world, the parts of
which are in a certain state of motion. A stretched string vibrates
and we hear a tone. The string transmits the vibrations to the air.
They spread and reach our ear; a tone sensation is transmitted to us.
The physicist investigates the laws according to which the physical
particles outside move while we hear these tones. He finds that the
subjective tone sensation is based on the objective motion of the
physical particles. Similar relations are observed by the physicist
with respect to the sensations of light. Light is also based on
motion, only this motion is not transmitted by the vibrating particles
of the air, but by the vibrations of the ether, the thinnest matter
that fills the whole space of the universe. By every light-emitting
body, the ether is put into the state of undulatory vibrations that
spread and meet the retina of our eye and excite the optic nerve,
which then produces the sensation of light within us. What in our
world picture appears as light and color is motion outside in space.
Schleiden expresses this view in the following words:
The light outside ourselves in nature is motion of the ether. A motion
can be slow and fast; it can have this or that direction, but there is
obviously no sense in speaking of light or dark, of green or red
motion. In short, outside ourselves, outside the beings who have the
sensation, there is no such thing as bright and dark, nor are there
any colors.
The physicist expels colors and light from the external world because
he finds only motion in it. The physiologist feels that he is forced
to withdraw them into the soul because he is of the opinion that the
nerve indicates only its own state of irritation no matter what might
have excited it. The view that is given with these presuppositions is
sharply delineated by Hippolyte Taine (1828 93) in his book,
Reason. The external perception is, according to his opinion,
nothing but hallucination. A person who, under the influence of
hallucination, perceives a death skull three steps in front of him,
has exactly the same perception as someone who receives the light rays
sent out by a real skull. It is the same inner phantom that exists
within us no matter whether we are confronted with a real skull or
whether we have a hallucination. The only difference between the one
perception and the other is that in one case the hand stretched out
toward the object will grasp empty air, whereas in the other case it
will meet some solid resistance. The sense of touch then supports the
sense of sight. But does this support really represent an irrefutable
testimony? What is correct for one sense is also valid for the other.
The sensations of touch can also turn out to be hallucinations.
The anatomist Henle expresses the same view in his Anthropological
Lectures (1876) in the following way:
Everything through which we believe to be informed about an external
world consists merely of forms of our consciousness for which the
external world supplies merely the exciting cause, the stimulus, in
the language of the physiologists. The external world has no colors,
tones and tastes. What it really contains we learn only indirectly or
not at all. How the external world affects a sense, we merely conclude
from its behavior toward the other senses. We can, for instance, in
the case of a tone, see the vibrations of the tuning fork with our
eyes and feel it with our fingers. The nature of certain stimuli,
which reveal themselves only to the one sense, as, for instance, the
stimuli of the sense of smell, is still inaccessible to us. The number
of the properties of matter depends on the number and on the keenness
of the senses. Whoever lacks a sense loses a group of properties
without a chance of regaining them. A person who would have an extra
sense would have an organ to grasp qualities of which we have no other
inkling than the blind man has of color.
If one glances over the physiological literature from the second half
of the nineteenth century, one sees that this view of the subjective
nature of the world picture of our perceptions has gained increasing
acceptance. Time and again one comes across variations of the thought
that is expressed by J. Rosenthal in his General Physiology of
Muscles and Nerves (1877). The sensations that we receive
through external impressions are not dependent on the nature of these
impressions but on the nature of our nerve cells. We have no sensation
of what exerts its effect on our body but only of the processes in our
brain.
To what extent our subjective world picture can be said to give us an
indication of the objective external world, is expressed by Helmholtz
in his Physiological Optics:
To ask the question if cinnabar is really red as we see it or if this
is only a sense deception is meaningless. A red-blind person will see
cinnabar as black or in a dark yellow-gray shade; this is also a
correct reaction for the special nature of his eye. He must only know
that his eye happens to be different from that of other people. In
itself one sensation is neither more nor less correct or incorrect
than the other, even if the people who see the red have the great
majority on their side. The red color of cinnabar exists only insofar
as the majority of men have eyes that are of a similar nature. One can
say with exactly the same right that it is a quality of cinnabar to be
black for red-blind people. It is a different question, however, if we
maintain that the wave length of light that is reflected by cinnabar
has a certain length. This statement, which we can make without
reference to the special nature of our eye, is only concerned with the
relations of the substance and the various systems of ether waves.
It is apparent that for such a conception all phenomena of the world
are divided into two completely separated parts, into a world of
motions that is independent of the special nature of our faculty of
perception, and a world of subjective states that are there only
within the perceiving subjects. This view has been expressed sharply
and pointedly by the physiologist, Du Bois-Reymond (1818 96), in his
lecture, On the Limits of Natural Science, which he gave at the
forty-fifth assembly of German naturalists and physicians on August
14, 1872 in Leipzig. Natural science is the reduction of processes we
perceive in the world to motions of the smallest physical particles of
a dissolution of natural processes into mechanics of
atoms, for it is a psychological fact of experience that,
wherever such a dissolution is successful our need for
explanation is for the time being satisfied. Moreover, it is a known
fact that our nervous system and our brain are of a material nature.
The processes that take place within them can also be only processes
of motion. When sound or light waves are transmitted to my sense
organs and from there to my brain, they can here also be nothing but
motions. I can only say that in my brain a certain process of motion
goes on, and I have simultaneously the sensation red. For
if it is meaningless to say of cinnabar that it is red, it is not less
meaningless to say of a motion of the brain particles that it is
bright or dark, green or red. Mute and dark in itself, that is
to say, without qualities, such is the world according to the
view that has been obtained through the natural scientific conception,
which
. . . knows instead of sound and light only vibrations of a
property-free fundamental matter that now can be weighed and then
again is imponderable. . . . The Mosaic word, And there was
light, is physiologically incorrect. Light came into being only
when the first red eye spot of the infusoria differentiated for the
first time between light and darkness. Without the substance of the
optic and auditory sense this world, glowing in colors and resounding
around us, would be dark and silent. (Limits of Natural
Science.)
Through the processes in the substance of our optic and auditory
senses a resounding and colorful world is, according to this view,
magically called into existence. The dark and silent world is
physical; the sounding and colorful one is psychic. Whereby does the
latter arise out of the former; how does motion change into sensation?
This is where we meet, according to Du Bois-Reymond, one of the
limits of natural science. In our brain and in the
external world there are only motions; in our soul, sensations appear.
We shall never be able to understand how the one can arise out of the
other.
At first sight it appears is if, through the knowledge of material
processes in the brain, certain processes and latent abilities can
become understandable. I am thinking of our memory, the stream of the
association of our thought pictures, the effect of exercise, specific
talents and so forth. But a little concentration at this point tells
us that this view is an error. We would only learn something
concerning the inner conditions of our mental life that are
approximately of the same nature as our sense impressions, but we
should learn nothing that would explain how the mental life comes into
existence through these conditions. What possible connections can
there be between certain motions of certain atoms in my brain, on the
one hand, and, on the other, such undeniable and undefinable facts
expressed by the words: I feel pain; I am delighted; I taste something
sweet, smell the scent of roses, hear the sound of an organ, see red,
and also the certainty that immediately follows from all this,
Therefore I am. It is altogether incomprehensible that it should not
be a matter of perfect indifference to a number of atoms of carbon,
hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, etc., what their position is and how they
move, how this has been and how it will be.
There is no bridge for our knowledge that leads from motion to
sensation. This is the credo of Du Bois-Reymond. From motion in the
material world we cannot come into the psychical world of sensations.
We know that sensation arises from matter in motion, but we do not
know how this is possible. Also, in the world of motion we cannot go
beyond motion. For our subjective perceptions we can point at certain
forms of motions because we can infer the course of these motions from
the process of our perceptions, but we have no conception of what it
is that is moving outside in space. We say that matter moves. We
follow its motions as we watch the reactions of our sensations, but as
we do not observe the object in motion but only a subjective sign of
it, we can never know what matter is. Du Bois-Reymond is of the
opinion that we might be able to solve the riddle of sensation if the
riddle of matter were disclosed. If we knew what matter is, we should
probably also know how it produces sensations, but both riddles are
inaccessible to our knowledge. Du Bois-Reymond meant to check those
who wanted to go beyond this limit with the words, Just let them
try the only alternative that is left, namely, supra-naturalism, but
be sure that science ends where supra-naturalism begins.
The results of modern natural science are two sharply marked
opposites. One of them is the current of monism. It gives the
impression of penetrating directly from natural science to the most
significant problems of world conception. The other declares itself
incapable of proceeding any further with the means of natural science
than to the insight that to a certain subjective state there is a
certain corresponding process of motion. The representatives of the
two currents vehemently oppose each other. Du Bois-Reymond rejected
Haeckel's History of Creation as fiction (compare Du
Bois-Reymond's speech, Darwin versus Galiani). The ancestral
trees that Haeckel constructs on the basis of comparative anatomy,
ontogeny and paleontology appear to Du Bois-Reymond to be of
approximately the same value as are the ancestral trees of the
Homeric heroes in the eyes of historical criticism. Haeckel, on
the other hand, considers the view of Du Bois-Reymond to be an
unscientific dilettantism that must naturally give support to the
reactionary world conceptions. The jubilation of the spiritualists
over Du Bois-Reymond's Limitation Speech was so much the
more resonant and justified, as Du Bois-Reymond had, up to that time,
been considered an important representative of the principle of
scientific materialism.
What captivates many people in the idea of dividing the world
dualistically into external processes of motion and inner, subjective
processes of sensation and perception is the possibility of an
application of mathematics to the external processes. If one assumes
material particles (atoms) with energies to exist, one can calculate
in which way such atoms have to move under the influence of these
energies. What is so attractive in astronomy with its methods of
strict calculations is carried into the smallest elements. The
astronomer determines the motion of the celestial bodies by
calculating the laws of the mechanics of the heavens. In the discovery
of the planet Neptune we experienced a triumph of the mechanism of the
heavens. One can also reduce the motions that take place in the
external world when we hear a tone and see a color to laws that govern
the motions of the celestial bodies. Possibly one will be able in the
future to calculate the motion that goes on in our brain while we form
the judgment, two times two is four. The moment when everything that
can be expressed in mathematical formulas has been calculated will be
the one in which the world has been explained mathematically. Laplace
has given a captivating description of the ideal of such an
explanation of the world in his Essai Philosophique sur les
Probabilités (1814):
A mind that would know for a given moment all forces that activate
nature as well as the mutual position of the entities of which nature
consists would, if its power of comprehension were otherwise
sufficient, comprehend in the same formula the motions of the largest
celestial body and of the lightest atom. Nothing would be uncertain
for such a mind, and the future as well as the past would be within
the scope of its perfect and immediate knowledge. Man's power of
reasoning offers, with the perfection that it has given to astronomy,
a feeble imitation of such a mind.
Du Bois-Reymond says in connection with these words:
As the astronomer predicts the day on which a comet reemerges from the
depth of world space after years in the firmament of heaven, so would
this mind read in its calculation the day when the Greek cross will
shine from the mosque of the Hagia Sophia and when England will burn
its last coal.
There can be no doubt that even the most perfect mathematical
knowledge of a process of motion would not enlighten me with regard to
the question of why this motion appears to me as a red color. When one
ball hits another, we can explain the direction of the second ball but
we cannot in this way determine how a certain motion produces the red
color. All we can say is that when a certain motion is given, a
certain color is also given. While we can explain, apparently,
as opposed to merely describe, what can be determined through
calculation, we cannot go beyond a mere description in anything that
defies calculation.
A significant confession was made by Gustav Robert Kirchhoff
(1824 87) when, in 1874, he defined the task of mechanics:
It is to describe the motions occurring in nature in the most
complete and simple way. Mechanics applies mathematics.
Kirchhoff confesses that with the help of mathematics no more can be
obtained than a complete and simple description of the processes in
nature.
To those personalities who demand of an explanation something
essentially more than just a description according to certain points
of view, the confession of Kirchhoff could serve as a confirmation of
their belief that there are limits to our knowledge of
nature. Referring to Kirchhoff, Du Bois-Reymond praises the wise
reserve of the master, who characterizes the task of mechanics as that
of describing the motions of the bodies, and places this in contrast
to Ernst Haeckel, who speaks of atom souls.
An important attempt to base his world conception on the idea that all
our perceptions are merely the result of our own organization has been
made by Friedrich Albert Lange (1828 73) with his History
of Materialism (1864). He had the boldness and consistency of
thought that does not allow itself to be blocked by any obstacle but
follows its fundamental conception to its last conclusion. Lange's
strength lay in a forceful character that was expressed in many
directions. His was a personality able to take up many things, and he
had sufficient ability to carry them out.
One important enterprise was his renewal of Kant's conception that,
with the support of modern natural science, we perceive things not as
they require it, but as our organization demands it.
Lange did not really produce any new conceptions, but he did throw
light into given thought worlds that is rare in its brightness. Our
organization, our brain, in connection with our senses, produces the
world of sensation. I see blue, or I feel
hardness, because I am organized in this particular way. I
combine the sensations into objects. By combining the sensations of
white and soft, etc., I produce, for instance,
the conception of wax. When I follow my sensation with my thoughts, I
do not move in the external world. My intellect produces connections
within the world of my sensations according to the laws of my reason.
When I saw that the qualities I perceive in a body presuppose a matter
with laws of motion, I also do not go outside of myself. I find that I
am forced through my organization to add the thoughts of processes of
motion to my sensations.
The same mechanism that produces our sensations also produces our
conception of matter. Matter, equally, is only a product of my
organization, just as color and tone. Even when we speak of things in
themselves, we must be clearly aware of the fact that we cannot go
beyond our own realm. We are so organized that we cannot possibly go
beyond ourselves. Even what lies beyond our realm can be represented
to ourselves only through our conception. We become aware of a
limit to our world. We argue that there must be something beyond the
limit that causes sensations in us. But we can only go as far as to
that limit, even the limit we set ourselves because we can go no
further. A fish can swim in water in the pond, not in the earth,
but it can hit its head against the bottom and the walls. In the
same way we live within the realm of our conceptions and sensations,
but not in the external things. We hit against a limit, however, where
we cannot go any further, where we must say no more than that beyond
this is the unknown. All conceptions we produce concerning this
unknown are unjustified because we cannot do anything but relate the
conceptions we have obtained within ourselves to the unknown. If we
wanted to do this, we should be no wiser than a fish that would say,
Here I cannot go any further. Therefore, I want to go into some
other kind of water in which I will try to swim in some other
way. But the fact is that the fish can swim only in water and
nowhere else.
This is supplemented by another thought that belongs with the first
line of reasoning. Lange, as the spirit of an inexorable desire for
consistency, linked them together. In what situation am I when I
contemplate myself? Am I not as much bound to the laws of my own
organization as I am when I consider something else? My eye observes
an object. Without an eye there is no color. I believe that there is
an object in front of me, but on closer inspection I find that it is
my eye, that is to say, I, myself, that produces the object. Now I
turn my observation to my eye itself. Can I do this in any other way
except by means of my organs? Is not the conception that I obtain of
myself also just my idea? The world of the senses is the product of
our organization. Our visible organs are like all other parts of the
phenomenal world, only pictures of an unknown object. Our real
organization remains, therefore, as unknown to us as the objects of
the external world. What we have before us is merely the product of
both. Affected by an unknown world through an unknown ego, we produce
a world of conceptions that is all we have at our disposal.
Lange asks himself the question: Where does a consistent materialism
lead? Let all our mental conclusions and sense perceptions be produced
by the activity of our brain, which is bound to material conditions,
and our sense organs, which are also material. We are then confronted
with the necessity of investigating our organism in order to see how
it functions, but we can do this only by means of our organs. No color
without an eye, but also no eye without an eye.
The consistently materialistic view is immediately reversed into a
consistently idealistic one. There is no break to be assumed in our
nature. We must not attribute some functions of our being to a
physical nature and others to a spiritual one, but we are justified to
assume physical conditions for everything, including the mechanism of
our thinking, and we should not rest until we have found them. But we
are as much justified if we consider as mere pictures of the really
existing world, not only the external world as it appears to us, but
also the organs with which we apprehend this world. The eye with which
we believe we see is itself only a product of our imagination. When we
find that our visual pictures are produced by the structure and
function of the eye, we must never forget that the eye with all its
contrivances the optic nerve as well as the brain and the structures
we may still discover in it as causes of our thinking are only ideas
that, to be sure, form a world that is consistent and interconnected
in itself, but merely a world that points beyond itself. . The senses
supply us, as Helmholtz says, with the effects of the things, not with
faithful pictures, and certainly not with the things themselves. Among
these effects are also the senses themselves as well as the brain and
the molecular movements assumed in it. (History of Materialism,
1887.)
Lange, therefore, assumes a world beyond our world that may consist of
the things in themselves or that may not even have anything to do with
this thing in itself, since even this concept, which we
form at the limit of our own realm, belongs merely to the world of our
ideas.
Lange's world conception, then, leads to the opinion that we have only
a world of ideas. This world, however, forces us to acknowledge
something beyond its own sphere. It also is completely incapable of
disclosing anything about this something. This is the world conception
of absolute ignorance, of agnosticism.
It is Lange's conviction that all scientific endeavor that does not
limit itself to the evidence of the senses and the logical intellect
that combines these elements of evidence must remain fruitless. That
the senses and the intellect together, however, do not supply us with
anything but a result of our own organization, he accepts as evidently
following from his analysis of the origin of knowledge. The world is
for him fundamentally a product of the fiction of our senses and of
our intellects. Because of this opinion, he never asks the question of
truth with regard to the ideas. A truth that could enlighten us about
the essence of the world is not recognized by Lange. He believes he
has obtained an open road for the ideas and ideals that are formed by
the human mind and that he has accomplished this through the very fact
that he no longer feels the need of attributing any truth to the
knowledge of the senses and the intellect. Without hesitation he
considered everything that went beyond sensual observation and
rational combination to be mere fiction. No matter what the idealistic
philosophers had thought concerning the nature of facts, for him it
belonged to the realm of poetic fiction.
Through this turn that Lange gave to materialism there arose
necessarily the question: Why should not the higher imaginative
creations be valid if even the senses are creative? What is the
difference between these two kinds of creation? A philosopher who
thinks like this must have a reason for admitting certain conceptions
that is quite different from the reason that influences a thinker who
acknowledges a conception because he thinks it is true. For Lange,
this reason is given by the fact that a conception has value for life.
For him, the question is not whether or not a conception is true, but
whether it is valuable for man. One thing, however, must be clearly
recognized: That I see a rose as red, that I connect the effect with
the cause, is something I have in common with all creatures endowed
with the power of perception and thinking. My senses and my reason
cannot produce any additional values, but if I go beyond the
imaginative product of senses and reason, then I am no longer bound to
the organization of the whole human species. Schiller, Hegel and every
Tom, Dick and Harry sees a flower in the same way. What Schiller
weaves in poetic imagination around the flower, what Hegel thinks
about it, is not imagined by Tom, Dick and Harry in the same way. But
just as Tom, Dick and Harry are mistaken when they think that the
flower is an entity existing externally, so Schiller and Hegel would
be in error if they took their ideas for anything more than poetic
fiction that satisfied their spiritual needs. What is poetically
created through the senses and the intellect belongs to the whole
human race, and no one in this respect can be different from anybody
else. What goes beyond the creation of the senses and of reason is the
concern of the individual. Nevertheless, this imaginative creation of
the individual is also granted a value by Lange for the whole human
race, provided that the individual creator who produces it is
normal, richly gifted and typical in his mode of thinking, and is,
through his force of spirit, qualified to be a leader.
In this way, Lange believes that he can secure for the ideal world its
value by declaring that also the so-called real world is a product of
poetic creation. Wherever he may look, Lange sees only fiction,
beginning with the lowest stage of sense perception where the
individual still appears subject to the general characteristics of the
human species, and culminating with the creative power in
poetry.
The function of the senses and of the combining intellect, which
produce what is reality for us, can be called a lower function if one
compares them with the soaring flight of the spirit in the creative
arts. But, in general and in their totality, these functions cannot be
classified as a principally different activity of the mind. As little
as our reality is a reality according to our heart's desire, it is
nevertheless the firm foundation of our whole spiritual existence. The
individual grows out of the soil of the species, and the general and
necessary process of knowledge forms the only secure foundation for
the individual's rise to an esthetic conception of the world.
(History of Materialism.)
What Lange considers to be the error of the idealistic world
conception is not that it goes beyond the world of the senses and the
intellect with its ideas, but that it believes it possesses in these
ideas more than the individual thinker's poetic fantasy. One should
build up for oneself an ideal world, but one should be aware that this
ideal world is no more than poetic imagination. If this idealism
maintains it is more than that, materialism will rise time and again
with the claim: I have the truth; idealism is poetry. Be that so, says
Lange: Idealism is poetry, but materialism is also poetry. In idealism
the individual is the creator, in materialism, the species. If they
both are aware of their natures, everything is in its right place: the
science of the senses and the intellect that provide proofs for the
whole species, as well as the poetry of ideas with all its conceptions
that are produced by the individual and still retain their value for
the race.
One thing is certain: Man is in need of an ideal world created by
himself as a supplement of reality, and the highest and noblest
functions of his spirit are actively combined in such creations. But
is this free activity of the spirit to be allowed repeatedly to assume
the deceptive form of a proof-establishing science? If so, materialism
will emerge again and again to destroy the bolder speculations and try
to satisfy reason's demand for unity with a minimum of elevation above
the real and actually provable. (History of Materialism.)
In Lange's thinking, complete idealism is combined with a complete
surrender of truth itself. The world for him is poetry, but a poetry
that he does not value any less than he would if he could acknowledge
it as reality.
Thus, two currents of a distinctly natural scientific character can be
distinguished as abruptly opposing each other in the development of
modern world conception: The monistic current in which Haeckel's mode
of conception moved, and the dualistic one, the most forceful and
consistent defender of which was Friedrich Albert Lange. Monism
considers the world that man can observe to be a true reality and has
no doubt that a thinking process that depends on observation can also
obtain knowledge of essential significance concerning this reality.
Monism does not imagine that it is possible to exhaust the fundamental
nature of the world with a few boldly thought out formulas. It
proceeds as it follows the facts, and forms new ideas in regard to the
connections of these facts. It is convinced, however, that these ideas
do supply a knowledge of a true reality. The dualistic conception of
Lange divides the world into a known and an unknown part. It treats
the first part in the same fashion as monism, following the lead of
observation and reflective thought, but it believes that nothing at
all can be known concerning the true essential core of the world
through this observation and through this thought. Monism believes in
the truth of the real and sees the human world of ideas best supported
if it is based on the world of observations. In the ideas and ideals
that the monist derives from natural existence, he sees something that
is fully satisfactory to his feeling and to his moral need. He finds
in nature the highest existence, which he does not only want to
penetrate with his thinking for the purpose of knowledge, but to which
he surrenders with all his knowledge and with all his love.
In Lange's dualism nature is considered to be unfit to satisfy the
spirit's highest needs. Lange must assume a special world of higher
poetry for this spirit that leads beyond the results of observation
and its corresponding thought. For monism, true knowledge represents a
supreme spiritual value, which, because of its truth, grants man also
the purest moral and religious pathos. To dualism, knowledge cannot
present such a satisfaction. Dualism must measure the value of life by
other things, not by the truth it might yield. The ideas are not
valuable because they participate in the truth. They are of value
because they serve life in its highest forms. Life is not valued by
means of the ideas, but the ideas are appreciated because of their
fruitfulness for life. It is not for true knowledge that man strives
but for valuable thoughts.
In recognizing the mode of thinking of natural science Friedrich
Albert Lange agrees with monism insofar as he denies the uses of all
other sources for the knowledge of reality, but he also denies this
mode of thinking any possibility to penetrate into the essential of
things. In order to make sure that he himself moves on solid ground he
curtails the wings of human imagination. What Lange is doing in such
an incisive fashion corresponds to an inclination of thought that is
deeply ingrained in the development of modern world conception. This
is shown with perfect clarity also in another sphere of thinking of
the nineteenth century. This thinking developed, through various
stages, viewpoints from which Herbert Spencer (1820 1903)
started as he laid the foundations for a dualism in England. Spencer's
dualism appeared at approximately the same time as Lange's in Germany,
which strove for natural scientific knowledge of the world on the one
hand and, on the other, confessed to agnosticism so far as the essence
of things is concerned. When Darwin published his work, The Origin
of Species, he could praise the natural scientific mode of thought
of Spencer:
Mr. Herbert Spencer, in an Essay (1852), has contrasted the theories
of the Creation and the Development of organic beings with remarkable
skill and force. He argues from the analogy of domestic production,
from the changes which the embryos of many species undergo, from the
difficulty of distinguishing species and varieties, and from the
principle of general gradation that species have been modified; and he
attributes the modification to the change of circumstances. The author
(1855) has also treated Psychology on the principle of the necessary
requirement of each mental power and capacity by gradation. (The
Origin of Species, Historical Sketch.)
Also, other thinkers who followed the method of natural science felt
attracted to Spencer because he tried to explain all reality from the
inorganic to the psychological in the manner expressed in Darwin's
words above. But Spencer also sides with the agnostics, so that Lange
is justified when he says, Herbert Spencer, whose philosophy is
closely related to ours, believes in a materialism of the phenomenal
world, the relative justification of which, within the realm of
natural science, finds its limit in a thought of an unknowable
absolute.
It is quite likely that Spencer arrived at his viewpoint from
assumptions similar to those of Lange. He had been preceded in England
by thinkers who were guided by a twofold interest. They wanted to
determine what it is that man really possesses with his knowledge, but
they also were resolved not to shatter by doubt or reason the
essential substance of the world. They were all more or less dominated
by the sentiment that Kant described when he said, I had to
suspend knowledge in order to make room for belief. (Compare the
first volume of this book.)
The beginning of the development of the world conception of the
nineteenth century in England is marked by the figure of Thomas
Reid (1710 96). The fundamental conviction of this man can be
expressed in Goethe's words as he describes his own activity as a
scientist as non-speculative: In the last analysis it seems to
me that my method consists merely m the practical and self-rectifying
operations of common sense that dares to practice its function in a
higher sphere. (Compare Goethe's Werke, Vol. 38, p. 595 in
Kürschner's Deutsche National Literatur.) This common sense
does not doubt in any way that it is confronted with real essential
things and processes as it contemplates the world. Reid believes that
a world conception is viable only if it upholds this basic view of a
healthy common sense. Even if one admitted the possibility that our
observation could be deceptive and that the true nature of things
could be different from the picture that is supplied to us by our
senses and our intellect, it would not be necessary to pay any
attention to such a possibility. We find our way through life only if
we believe in our observation; nothing beyond that is our concern.
In taking this point of view Reid is convinced that he can arrive at
really satisfactory truths. He makes no attempt to obtain a conception
of things through complicated thought operations but wants to reach
his aim by going back to the basic principles that the soul
instinctively assumes. Instinctively, unconsciously, the soul
possesses what is correct, before the attempt is made to illumine the
mind's own nature with the torch of consciousness. It knows
instinctively what to think in regard to the qualities and processes
of the physical world, and it is endowed instinctively with the
direction of moral behavior, of a judgment concerning good and evil.
Through his reference to the truths innate in common
sense, Reid directs the attention of thought toward an
observation of the soul. This tendency toward a psychological
observation becomes a lasting and characteristic trait in the
development of the English world conception.
Outstanding personalities within this development are William
Hamilton (1788 1856), Henry Mansel (1820 71),
William Whewell (1794 1866), John Herschel (1792
1871), James Mill (1773 1836), John Stuart Mill (1806
73), Alexander Bain (1818 1903) and Herbert Spencer
(1820 1903). They all place psychology in the center of their
world conception.
William Hamilton also recognizes as truth what the soul from
the beginning feels inclined to accept as true. With respect to
fundamental truths proofs and comprehension ceases. All one can do
is observe their emergence at the horizon of our consciousness. In
this sense they are incomprehensible. But one of the fundamental
manifestations of our consciousness is also that everything in this
world depends on something that is unknown to us. We find in this
world in which we live only dependent things, but not absolutely
independent ones. Such independent things must exist, however. When
a dependent thing is found, an independent thing is assumed. With
our thinking we do not enter the independent entity. Human knowledge
is meant for the dependent and it becomes involved in contradictions
if its thoughts, which are well-suited to the dependent, are applied
to the independent. Knowledge, therefore, must withdraw as we approach
the entrance toward the independent. Religious belief is here in its
place. It is only through his admission that he cannot know anything
of the essential core of the world that man can be a moral being. He
can accept a God who causes a moral order in the world. As soon as it
has been understood that all logic has exclusively to do with the
dependent, not the independent, no logic can destroy this belief in
an infinite God.
Henry Mansel was a pupil and follower of Hamilton, but he
expressed Hamilton's view in still more extreme forms. It is not
going too far to say that Mansel was an advocate of belief who no
longer judged impartially between religion and knowledge, but who
defended religious dogma with partiality. He was of the opinion that
the revealed truths of religion involve our knowledge necessarily in
contradictions. This is not supposed to be the fault of the revealed
truths but has its cause in the limitation of the human mind, which
can never penetrate into regions from which the statements of
revelation arise.
William Whewell believed that he could best obtain a conception
concerning the significance, origin and value of human knowledge by
investigating the method through which leading men of science arrived
at their insights. In his History of the Inductive Sciences
(1840), he set out to analyze the psychology of scientific investigation.
Thus, by studying outstanding scientific discoveries, he hoped to find
out how much of these accomplishments was due to the external world
and how much to man himself. Whewell finds that the human mind always
supplements its scientific observations. Kepler, for example, had the
idea of an ellipse before he found that the planets move in ellipses.
Thus, the sciences do not come about through a mere reception from
without but through the active participation of the human mind that
impresses its laws on the given elements. These sciences do not extend
as far as the last entities of things. They are concerned with the
particulars of the world. Just as everything, for instance, is assumed
to have a cause, such a cause must also be presupposed for the whole
world. Since knowledge fails us with respect to that cause, the dogma
of religion must step in as a supplement. Herschel, like Whewell, also
tried to gain an insight into the genesis of knowledge in the human
mind through the observation of many examples. His Preliminary
Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy appeared in 1831.
John Stuart Mill belongs with those thinkers who are deeply
imbued with the conviction that one cannot be cautious enough in
determining what is certain and uncertain in human knowledge. The
fact that he was introduced to the most diversified branches of
knowledge in his boyhood, most likely gave his mind its characteristic
turn. As a child of three he received instructions in the Greek
language, and soon afterwards was taught arithmetic. He was exposed
to the other fields of instruction at a correspondingly early age.
Of even greater importance was the method of instruction used by his
father, James Mill, who was himself an important thinker. Through
him vigorous logic became the second nature of John Stuart. From his
autobiography we learn: Anything which could be found out by
thinking I was never told until I had exhausted my efforts to find
it out for myself. The things that occupy the thinking of such
a person must become his destiny in the proper sense of the word.
I have never been a child, I have never played cricket. It is,
after all, better to let nature take its own course, says John
Stuart Mill as one whose destiny had so uniquely been to live almost
exclusively in thinking. Because of his development, he had to
experience to the fullest the problems concerning the significance
of knowledge. How can knowledge, which for him was life, lead also
to the source of the phenomena of the world? The direction in which
Mill's thought developed in order to obtain clarity concerning these
problems was probably determined early by his father. James Mill had
proceeded by starting from psychological experience. He had observed
the process by which idea is linked to idea in man's mind. Through
connecting one concrete idea to another we obtain our knowledge of
the world. We must then ask ourselves: What is the relation between
the order in which the ideas are linked and the order of the things
in the world? Through such a mode of conception our thinking begins
to distrust its own power because man can associate ideas in a manner
that is entirely different from the connection of the things in the
external world. This mistrust is the basis of John Stuart Mill's
logic, which appeared in 1843 as his chief work under the title,
System of Logic.
In matters of world conception a more pronounced contrast is scarcely
thinkable than that between Mill's Logic and Hegel's Science
of Logic, which appeared twenty-seven years earlier. In Hegel we
find the highest confidence in thinking, the full assurance that we
cannot be deceived by what we experience within ourselves. Hegel
experiences himself as a part, a member of the world, and what he
experiences within himself must also belong to the world. Since he has
the most direct knowledge of himself, he believes in the content of
this knowledge and judges the rest of the world accordingly. He argues
as follows: When I perceive an external thing, it is possible that the
thing shows only its surface to me and that its essence remains
concealed. This is not possible in my own case. I understand my own
being. I can then compare the things outside with my own being. If
they reveal some element of my own essence on their surface, I am
justified in attributing to them something of my own nature. It is for
this reason that Hegel expects confidently to find outside in nature
the very spirit and the thought connections that he finds within
himself.
Mill, however, experiences himself not as a part of the world but as a
spectator. The things outside are an unknown element to him and the
thoughts that man forms concerning them are met by Mill with distrust.
One observes men and learns from his observations that all men die.
One forms the judgment that all men are mortal. The Duke of Wellington
is a man; therefore, the Duke of Wellington is mortal. This is the
conclusion the observer comes to. What gives him the right to do so?
This is the question John Stuart Mill asks. If a single human being
would prove to be immortal, the whole judgment would be upset. Are we
justified in supposing that, because all men up to this time have
died, they will continue to do so in the future? All knowledge is
uncertain because we draw conclusions from observations we have made
and transfer them to things we cannot know anything about, since we
have not observed them directly. What would somebody who thinks like
Hegel have to say about such a conception? It is not difficult to
imagine the answer. We know from definite concepts that in every
circle all diameters are equal. If we find a circle in the real world,
we maintain that its diameters, too, are equal. If we observe it a
quarter of an hour later and find that its diameters are unequal, we
do not decide that under certain circumstances the diameter of a
circle can also be unequal. But we say that what was formerly a circle
has for some reason been elongated into an ellipse.
If we think like Hegel, this is the attitude we take toward the
judgment, all men are mortal. It is not through observation but
through an inner thought experience that we form the concept of man.
For the concept of man, mortality is as essential as the equality of
the diameters is for the concept of the circle. If we find a being in
the real world that has all the other characteristics of man, we
conclude that this being must also have that of mortality, in the same
way that all other properties of the circle allow us to conclude that
it has also that of the equality of diameters. If Hegel came across a
being that did not die, he could only say, That is not a
man. He could not say, A man can also be immortal.
Hegel makes the assumption that the concepts in us are not arbitrarily
formed but have their root in the essence of the world, as we
ourselves belong to this essence. Once the concept of man has formed
within us, it is clear that it has its origin in the essence of
things, and we are fully justified in applying it to this essence. Why
has this concept of mortal man formed within us? Surely only because
it has its ground in the nature of things. A person who believes that
man stands entirely outside of the order of things and forms his
judgments as an outsider can argue that we have until now seen men
die, and therefore we form the spectator concept: mortal men. The
thinker who is aware that he himself belongs to the order of things
and that it is they that are manifested within his thoughts, forms the
judgment that up to this time all men have died; to die, then, is
something that belongs to their nature, and if somebody does not die,
he is not a man but something else. Hegel's logic has become a logic
of things: For Hegel, the manifestation of logic is an effect of the
essence of the world; it is not something that the human mind has
added from an outside source to this essence. Mill's logic is the
logic of a bystander, of a mere spectator who starts out by cutting
the thread through which it is connected with the world.
Mill points out that the thoughts, which in a certain age appear as
absolutely certain inner experiences, are nevertheless reversed in a
later time. In the Middle Ages it was, for instance, believed that
there could not possibly be antipodes and that the stars would have to
drop from the sky if they did not cling to fixed spheres. Man will,
therefore, only be capable of the right attitude toward his knowledge
if he, in spite of his awareness that the logic of the world is
expressed in this knowledge, forms in every individual case his
judgment through a careful methodical examination of his conceptual
connections guided by observation, a judgment that is always in need
of correction.
It is the method of observation that John Stuart Mill attempts to
determine with cool detachment and calculation. Let us take an
example. Suppose a phenomenon had always occurred under certain
conditions. In a given case a number of these conditions appear again,
but a few of them are now missing. The phenomenon in question does not
occur. We are forced to conclude that the conditions that were not
provided and the phenomenon that failed to occur stood in a causal
relationship. If two substances have always combined to form a
chemical compound and this result fails to be obtained in a given
case, it is necessary to inquire what condition is lacking that had
always been present before. Through a method of this kind we arrive at
conceptions concerning connections of facts that can be rightly
considered as being grounded in the nature of things. Mill wants to
follow the methods of observation in his analysis. Logic, which Kant
maintained had not progressed a single step since Aristotle, is a
means of orientation within our thinking itself. It shows how to
proceed from one correct thought to the next. Mill's logic is a means
of orientation within the world of facts. It intends to show how one
obtains valid judgments about things from observation. He does not
even admit mathematics as an exception. Mathematics must also derive
its basic insights from observation. For example, in all observed
cases we have seen that two intersecting straight lines diverge and do
not intersect again. Therefore we conclude that they will never
intersect again, but we do not have a perfect proof for this
statement. For John Stuart Mill, the world is thus an alien element.
Man observes its phenomena and arranges them according to what they
announce to his conceptual life. He perceives regularities in the
phenomena and through logical, methodical investigations of these
regularities he arrives at the laws of nature. But there is nothing
that leads him to the principle of the things themselves. One can well
imagine that the world could also be entirely different. Mill is
convinced that everybody who is used to abstraction and analysis and
who seriously uses his abilities will, after a sufficient exercise of
his imagination, have no difficulty with the idea that there could be
another stellar system in which nothing could be found of the laws
that have application to our own.
Mill is merely consistent in his bystander viewpoint of the world when
he extends it to man's own ego. Mental pictures come and go, are
combined and separated within his inner life; this is what man
observes. He does not observe a being that remains identical with
itself as ego in the midst of this constant flow of ideas.
He has observed that mental pictures emerge within him and he assumes
that this will continue to be the case. From this possibility, namely,
that a world of perceptions can be grouped around a center, arises the
conception of an ego. Thus, man is a spectator also with
respect to his own ego. He has his conceptions tell him
what he can know about himself. Mill reflects on the facts of memory
and expectation. If everything that I know of myself is to consist of
conceptual presentations, then I cannot say: I remember a
conception that I have had at an earlier time, or I expect the
occurrence of a certain experience, but I must say: A present
conception remembers itself or expects its future occurrence. If
we speak, so Mill argues, of the mind as of a sequence of perceptions,
we must also speak of a sequence of perceptions that is aware of
itself as becoming and passing. As a result, we find ourselves in the
dilemma of having to say that either the ego or the mind
is something to be distinguished from the perceptions, or else we must
maintain the paradox that a mere sequence of perceptions is capable of
an awareness of its past and future. Mill does not overcome this
dilemma. It contains for him an insoluble enigma. The fact is that he
has torn the bond between himself, the observer, and the world, and he
is not capable of restoring the connection. The world for him remains
an unknown beyond himself that produces impressions on man. All man
knows of this transcendent unknown is that it can produce perceptions
in him. Instead of having the possibility of knowing real things
outside himself, he can only say in the end that there are
opportunities for having perceptions. Whoever speaks of things in
themselves uses empty words. We move on the firm ground of facts only
as long as we speak of the continuous possibility of the occurrence of
sensations, perceptions and conceptions.
John Stuart Mill has an intense aversion to all thoughts that are
gained in any way except through the comparison of facts, the
observation of the similar, the analogous, and the homogeneous
elements in all phenomena. He is of the opinion that the human conduct
of life can only be harmed if we surrender to the belief that we could
arrive at any truth in any way except through observation. This
disinclination of Mill demonstrates his hesitation to relate himself
in his striving for knowledge to the things of reality in any other
way than by an attitude of passivity. The things are to dictate to man
what he has to think about them. If man goes beyond this state of
receptivity in order to say something out of his own self about
the things, then he lacks every assurance that this product of his
own activity has anything to do with the things. What is
finally decisive in this philosophy is the fact that the thinker who
maintains it is unable to count his own spontaneous thinking as
belonging to the world. The very fact that he himself is active in
this thinking makes him suspicious and misleads him. He would best of
all like to eliminate his own self completely, to be absolutely sure
that no erroneous element is mixed into the objective statements of
the phenomena. He does not sufficiently appreciate the fact that his
thinking is a part of nature as much as the growth of a leaf of grass.
It is evident that one must also examine one's own spontaneous
thinking if one wants to find out something concerning it.
How is man, to use a statement of Goethe, to become acquainted with
his relation to himself and to the external world if he wants to
eliminate himself completely in the cognitive process? Great as Mill's
merits are for finding methods through which man can learn those
things that do not depend on him, a view concerning man's relation to
himself and of his relation to the external world cannot be obtained
by his methods. All these methods are valid only for the special
sciences, not, however, for a comprehensive world conception. No
observation can teach what spontaneous thinking is; only thinking can
experience this in itself. As this thinking can only obtain
information concerning its own nature through its own power, it is
also the only source that can shed light on the relation between
itself and the external world. Mill's method of investigation excludes
the possibility of obtaining a world conception because a world
conception can be gained only through thinking that is
concentrated in itself and thereby succeeds in obtaining an insight
into its own relation to the external world. The fact that John Stuart
Mill had an aversion to this kind of self-supporting thinking can be
well understood from his character. Gladstone said in a letter
(compare Gompertz: John Stuart Mill, Vienna, 1889) that in
conversation he used to call Mill the Saint of
Rationalism. A person who practices thinking in this way imposes
rigorous demands on thinking and looks for the greatest possible
precautionary measures so that it cannot deceive him. He becomes
thereby mistrustful with respect to thinking itself. He believes that
he will soon stand on insecure ground if he loses hold of external
points of support. Uncertainty with regard to all problems that go
beyond strictly observational knowledge is a basic trait in Mill's
personality. In reading his books we see everywhere that Mill treats
such problems as open questions concerning which he does not risk a
sure judgment.
The belief that the true nature of things is unknowable is also
maintained by Herbert Spencer. He proceeds by asking: How do I
obtain what I call truths concerning the world? I make certain
observations concerning things and form judgments about them. I
observe that hydrogen and oxygen under certain conditions combine to
form water. I form a judgment concerning this observation. This is a
truth that extends only over a small circle of things. I then observe
under what circumstances other substances combine. I compare the
individual observations and thereby arrive at more comprehensive, more
general truths concerning the process in which substances in general
form chemical compounds. All knowledge consists in this; we proceed
from particular truths to more comprehensive ones. We finally arrive
at the highest truth, which cannot be subordinated to any other and
which we therefore must accept without further explanation. In this
process of knowledge we have, however, no means of penetrating to the
absolute essence of the world, for thinking can, according to this
opinion, do no more than compare the various things with one another
and formulate general truths with respect to the homogeneous element
in them. But the ultimate nature of the world cannot, because of its
uniqueness, be compared to any other thing. This is why thinking fails
with regard to the ultimate nature. It cannot reach it.
In such modes of conception we always sense, as an undertone, the
thinking that developed from the basis of the physiology of the senses
(compare above
to the first part of this Chapter).
In many philosophers this thought has
inserted itself so deeply into their intellectual life that they
consider it the most certain thought possible. They argue as follows:
One can know things only by becoming aware of them. They then change
this thought, more or less unconsciously, into: One can know only of
those things that enter our consciousness, but it remains unknown how
the things were before they entered our consciousness. It is for this
reason that sense perceptions are considered as if they were in our
consciousness, for one is of the opinion that they must first enter
our consciousness and must become part of it in the form of
conceptions if we are to be aware of them.
Also, Spencer clings to the view that the possibility of the process
of knowledge depends on us as human beings. We therefore must assume
an unknowable element beyond that which can be transmitted to us by
our senses and our thinking. We have a clear consciousness of
everything that is present in our mind. But an indefinite
consciousness is associated with this clear awareness that claims that
everything we can observe and think has as its basis something we can
no longer observe and think. We know that we are dealing with mere
appearances and not with full realities existing independently by
themselves. But this is just because we know definitely that our world
is only appearance, that we also know that an unimaginable real world
is its basis. Through such turns of thought Spencer believes it
possible to arrange a complete reconciliation between religion and
knowledge. There is something that religion can grasp in belief, in a
belief that cannot be shaken by an impotent knowledge.
The field, however, that Spencer considers to be accessible to
knowledge must, for him, entirely take on the form of natural
scientific conceptions. When Spencer himself ventures to explain, he
does so in the sense of natural science.
Spencer uses the method of natural science in thinking of the process
of knowledge. Every organ of a living being has come into existence
through the fact that this being has adapted itself to the conditions
under which it lives. It belongs to the human conditions of life that
man finds his way through the world with the aid of thinking. His
organ of knowledge develops through the adaptation of his conceptual
life to the conditions of his external life. By making statements
concerning things and processes, man adjusts himself to the
surrounding world. All truths have come into being through this
process of adaptation, and what is acquired in this way can be
transmitted through inheritance to the descendants. Those who think
that man, through his nature, possesses once and for all a certain
disposition toward general truths are wrong. What appears to be such a
disposition did not exist at an earlier stage in the ancestors of man,
but has been acquired by adaptation and transmitted to the
descendants. When some philosophers speak of truths that man does not
have to derive from his own individual experience but that are given
a priori in his organization, they are right in a certain
respect. While it is obvious that such truths are acquired, it must be
stressed that they are not acquired by man as an individual but as a
species. The individual has inherited the finished product of an
ability that has been acquired at an earlier age.
Goethe once said that he had taken part in many conversations on
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and that he had noticed how on
those occasions the old basic problem had been renewed, How much
does our inner self contribute to our spiritual existence, how much
the external world? And Goethe goes on to say, I had never
separated the two; when I was philosophizing in my own way on things,
I did so with an unconscious naïveté and was really convinced that I
saw with my eyes my opinion before me.
Spencer looks at this old basic problem from the point of
view of natural science. He believed he could show that the developed
human being also contributed to his spiritual existence through his
own self. This self, is also made up of the inherited traits that had
been acquired by our ancestors in their struggle with the external
world. If we today believe we see with our eyes our opinions before
us, we must remember that they were not always our opinions but that
they were once observations that were really made by our eyes in the
external world. Spencer's way of thinking, then, is, like that of John
Stuart Mill, one that proceeds from psychology. But Mill does not go
further than the psychology of the individual. Spencer goes from the
individual back to his ancestors. The psychology of the individual is
in the same position as the ontogenesis of zoology. Certain phenomena
of the history of the individual are explainable only if they are
referred back to phenomena of the history of the species. In the same
way, the facts of the individual's consciousness cannot be understood
if taken alone. We must go back to the species. We must, indeed, go
back beyond the human species to acquisitions of knowledge that were
accomplished by the animal ancestors of man. Spencer uses his great
acumen to support this evolutionary history of the process of
cognition. He shows in which way the mental activities have gradually
developed from low stages at the beginning, through ever more accurate
adaptations of the human mind to the external world and through
inheritance of these adaptation. Every insight that the individual
human being obtains through pure thought and without experience about
things has been obtained by humanity or its ancestors through
observation or experience. Leibniz thought he could explain the
correspondence of man's inner life with the external world by assuming
a harmony between them that was pre-established by the creator.
Spencer explains this correspondence in the manner of natural science.
The harmony is not pre-established, but gradually developed. We here
find the continuation of natural scientific thinking to the highest
aspects of human existence. Linnaeus had declared that every living
organic form existed because the creator had made it as it is. Darwin
maintained that it is as it is because it had gradually developed
through adaptation and inheritance. Leibniz declared that thinking is
an agreement with the external world because the creator had
established this agreement. Spencer maintained that this agreement is
there because it has gradually developed through adaptations and
inheritance of the thought world.
Spencer was motivated in his thought by the need for a naturalistic
explanation of spiritual phenomena. He found the general direction for
such an explanation in Lyell's geology (compare
in Part 2 Chapter I).
In this geology, to be sure, the idea is still rejected that organic forms
have gradually developed one from another. It nevertheless receives a
powerful support through the fact that the inorganic (geological)
formations of the earth's surface are explained through such a gradual
development and through violent catastrophes. Spencer, who had a
natural scientific education and who had for a time also been active
as a civil engineer, recognized at once the full extent of the idea of
evolution, and he applied it in spite of Lyell's opposition to it. He
even applied this idea to spiritual processes. As early as 1850, in
his book, Social Statistics, he described social evolution in
analogy with organic evolution. He also acquainted himself with the
studies of Harvey and Wolff in embryonic development (compare
Part I, Chapter IX of this book),
and he plunged into the works of Karl
Ernst von Baer (compare above
in Part II Chapter II),
which showed him that
evolution proceeded from the development of a homogeneous uniform
state to one of variety, diversity and abundance. In the early stages
of embryological development the organisms are very similar; later
they become different from one another (compare above
in Part II Chapter II).
Through Darwin this evolutionary thought was completely confirmed.
From a few original organic forms the whole wealth of the highly
diversified world of formations has developed.
From the idea of evolution, Spencer wanted to proceed to the most
general truths, which, in his opinion, constituted the aim of all
human striving for knowledge. He believed that one could discover
manifestations of this evolutionary thought in the simplest phenomena.
When, from dispersed particles of water, a cloud is formed in the sky,
when a sand pile is formed from scattered grains of sand, Spencer saw
the beginnings of an evolutionary process. Dispersed matter is
contracted and concentrated to a whole. It is just this process that
is presented to us in the Kant-Laplace hypothesis of world evolution.
Dispersed parts of a chaotic world nebula have contracted. The
organism originates in just this way. Dispersed elements are
concentrated in tissues. The psychologist can observe that man
contracts dispersed observations into general truths. Within this
concentrated whole, articulation and differentiation take place. The
original homogeneous mass is differentiated into the individual
heavenly bodies of the solar system; the organism differentiates
itself into the various organs.
Concentration alternates with dissolution. When a process of evolution
has reached a certain climax, an equilibrium takes place. Man, for
instance, develops until he has evolved a maximum of harmonization of
his inner abilities with external nature. Such a state of equilibrium,
however, cannot last; external forces will effect it destructively.
The evolutionary process must be followed by a process of dissolution;
what had been concentrated is dispersed again; the cosmic again
becomes chaotic. The process of evolution can begin anew. Thus,
Spencer sees the process of the world as a rhythmic play of motion. It
is certainly not an uninteresting observation for the comparative
history of the evolution of world conception that Spencer, from the
observation of the genesis of world phenomena, reaches here a
conclusion that is similar to one Goethe expressed in connection with
his ideas concerning the genesis of life. Goethe describes the growth
of a plant in the following way:
May the plant sprout, blossom or bear fruit, it is always by the same
organs that the prescription of nature is fulfilled in various
functions and under frequently changing forms. The same organ, which
at the stem expands as a leaf and takes on a most differentiated
shape, now contracts again in the calyx, spreads out in the petal,
epitomizes in the organs of reproduction and finally once more swells
as fruit.
If one thinks of this conception as being transferred to the whole
process of the world, one arrives as Spencer's contraction and
dispersion of matter.
Spencer and Mill exerted a great influence on the development of world
conception in the second half of the nineteenth century. The rigorous
emphasis on observation and the one-sided elaboration of the methods
of observational knowledge of Mill, along with the application of the
conceptions of natural science to the entire scope of human knowledge
by Spencer could not fail to meet with the approval of an age that saw
in the idealistic world conception of Fichte, Schelling and Hegel
nothing but degeneration of human thinking. It was an age that showed
appreciation only for the successes of the research work of natural
science. The lack of unity among the idealistic thinkers and what
seemed to many a perfect fruitfulness of a thinking that was
completely concentrated and absorbed in itself, had to produce a
deep-seated suspicion against idealism. One may say that a widespread
view of the last four decades of the nineteenth century is clearly
expressed in words spoken by Rudolf Virchow in his address, The
Foundation of the University of Berlin and the Transition from the Age
of Philosophy into that of Natural Science (1893): Since the
belief in magic formulas has been forced back into the most backward
circles of the people, the formulas of the natural philosopher have
met with little approval. And one of the most significant
philosophers of the second half of the century, Eduard von Hartmann,
sums up the character of his world conception in the motto he placed
at the head of his book, Philosophy of the Unconscious: Speculative
Results Obtained by the Inductive Method of Natural Science. He is
of the opinion that it is necessary to recognize the greatness
of the progress brought about by Mill, through which all attempts of a
deductive method of philosophy have been defeated and made obsolete
for all times. (Compare Eduard von Hartmann, Geschichte der
Metaphysik, 2 part, page 479.)
The recognition of certain limits of human knowledge that was shown by
many naturalists was also received favorably by many religiously
attuned souls. They argued as follows: The natural scientists observe
the inorganic and organic facts of nature and they attempt to find
general laws by combining the individual phenomena. Through these laws
processes can be explained, and it is even possible to predetermine
thereby the regular course of future phenomena. A comprehensive world
conception should proceed in the same way; it should confine itself to
the facts, establish general truths within moderate limits and not
maintain any claim to penetrate into the realm of the
unknowable. Spencer, with his complete separation of the
knowable and the unknowable, met the demand of
such religious needs to a high degree. The idealistic mode of thought
was, on the other hand, considered by such religiously inclined
spirits to be a fantastic aberration. As a matter of principle, the
idealistic mode of conception cannot recognize an
unknowable, because it has to uphold the conviction that
through the concentrated penetration into the inner life of man a
knowledge can be attained that covers not merely the outer surface of
the world but also its real core.
The thought life of some influential naturalists, such as Thomas Henry
Huxley, moved entirely in the direction of such religiously inclined
spirits. Huxley believed in a complete agnosticism with regard to the
essence of the world. He declared that a monism, which is in general
agreement with Darwin's results, is applicable only to external
nature. Huxley was one of the first to defend the Darwinian
conceptions, but he is at the same time one of the most outspoken
representatives of those thinkers who believed in the limitation of
that mode of conception. A similar view is also held by the physicist
Johaan Tyndall (1820 93) who considered the world process to
be an energy that is completely inaccessible to the human intellect.
According to him, it is precisely the assumption that everything in
the world comes into existence through a natural evolution that makes
it impossible to accept the thought that matter, which is, after all,
the carrier of the whole evolution, should be no more than what our
intellect can comprehend of it.
A characteristic phenomenon of his time is the personality of the
English statesman, James Balfour (1840 1930). In 1879, in his
book, A Defense of Philosophical Doubt, Being an Essay on the
Foundations of Belief, he expressed a credo that is doubtless
similar to that held by many other thinkers. With respect to
everything that man is capable of explaining he stands completely on
the ground of the thought of natural science. For him, there is no
other knowledge but natural science, but he maintains at the same time
that his knowledge of natural science is only rightly understood if it
is clear that the needs of man's soul and reason can never be
satisfied by it. It is only necessary to understand that, in the last
analysis even in natural science, everything depends on faith in the
ultimate truths for which no further proof is possible. But no harm is
done in that this trend of thoughts leads us only to belief, because
this belief is a secure guide for our action in daily life. We believe
in the laws of nature and we master them through this belief. We
thereby force nature to serve us for our purpose. Religious belief is
to produce an agreement between the actions of man and his higher
needs that go beyond his everyday life.
The world conceptions that have been discussed under the title,
The World as Illusion, show that they have as their basis
a longing for a satisfactory relationship of the self-conscious ego to
the general world picture. It is especially significant that they do
not consciously consider this search as their philosophical aim, and
therefore do not expressly turn their inquiry toward that purpose.
Instinctively as it were, they permit their thinking to be influenced
by the direction that is determined by this unconscious search. The
form that this search takes is determined by the conceptions of modern
natural science. We approach the fundamental character of these
conceptions if we fix our attention on the concept of
consciousness. This concept was introduced to the life of
modern philosophy by Descartes. Before him, it was customary to depend
more on the concept of the soul as such. Little attention
was paid to the fact that only a part of the soul's life is spent in
connection with conscious phenomena. During sleep the soul does not
live consciously. Compared to the conscious life, the nature of the
soul must therefore consist of deeper forces, which in the waking
state are merely lifted into consciousness. The more one asked the
question of the justification and the value of knowledge in the light
of clear and distinct ideas, however, the more it was also felt that
the soul finds the most certain elements of knowledge when it does not
go beyond its own limits and when it does not delve deeper into itself
than consciousness extends. The opinion prevailed that everything else
may be uncertain, but what my consciousness is, at least, as such is
certain. Even the house I pass may not exist without me; that the
image of this house is now in my consciousness: this I
may maintain. But as soon as we fix our attention on this
consciousness, the concept of the ego inevitably grows together with
that of the consciousness. Whatever kind of entity the ego
may be outside the consciousness, the realm of the ego can
be conceived as extending as far as the consciousness. There is no
possibility of denying that the sensual world picture, which the soul
experiences consciously, has come into existence through the
impression that is made on man by the world. But as soon as one clings
to this statement, it becomes difficult to rid oneself of it, for
there is a tendency thereby to imply the judgment that the processes
of the world are the causes, and that the content of our consciousness
is the effect. Because one thinks that only the effect is contained in
the consciousness, it is believed that the cause must be in a world
outside man as an imperceptible thing in itself.
The presentation that is given above shows how the results of modern
physiological research lead to an affirmation of such an opinion. It
is just this opinion through which the ego finds itself
enclosed with its subjective experiences within its own boundaries.
This subtly produced intellectual illusion, once formed, cannot be
destroyed as long as the ego does not find any clues within itself of
which it knows that they refer to a being outside the subjective
consciousness, although they are actually depicted within that
consciousness. The ego must, outside the sensual consciousness, feel a
contact with entities that guarantee their being by and through
themselves. It must find something within that leads it
outside itself. been said here concerning thoughts that
are brought to life can have this effect. As long as the ego has
experienced thought only within itself, it feels itself confined with
it within its own boundary. As thought is brought to life it
emancipates the ego from a mere subjective existence. A process takes
place that is, to be sure, experienced subjectively by the ego, but by
its own nature is an objective process. This breaks the
ego loose from everything that it can feel only as
subjective.
So we see that also the conceptions for which the world is illusion
move toward a point that is reached when Hegel's world picture is so
transformed that its thought comes to life. These conceptions take on
the form that is necessary for a world picture that is unconsciously
driven by an impulse in that direction. But in them, thinking still
lacks the power to work its way through to that aim. Even in their
imperfection, however, these conceptions receive their general
character from this aim, and the ideas that appear are the external
symptoms of active forces that remain concealed.
|