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Weiss, Paul-Nature and Man
Weiss, Paul-Nature and Man
DRENCHED
164112
73
CQ
Ot'P
W72
19-11-79
I'J.OOO
Acccsaion No.'Jr. *!
Author
Titl
last
AUTHOR OF
The Nature
of Systems
Reality
WITH OTHERS
American Philosophy Today and Tomorrow
Science, Philosophy and Religion
EDITOR WITH
CHARLES HARTSHORNE
Collected Papers of
Charles Sanders Peirce, six vols.
Yak
University
New
Copyright, 1947, by
Inc.
To
Victoria
PREFACE
CAN AN
still
ETHICS be grounded deep in the bedrock of nature and do justice to the fact of duty, the nature of the good, the probguilt and related topics? This work was begun in an atto provide a systematic answer to that question.
lem of
tempt
It
that a correct
an ethical being must utilize powers analogous to those exhibited everywhere and by everything, and that he ought, therefore, to be
dealt with as illustrating nonethical principles of universal application. The solution of the problems of ethics seems to depend in part
principles governing
and exhibited
self.
The more thoroughly the special topics of ethics are probed, the more do they appear to presuppose a correct grasp of these principles.
An attempt to answer the original question as to the possibility of a naturalistic ethics makes it necessary to engage in a prior
systematic exploration of other questions.
It is
with
ploration that
treatise dealing with fundaof nature, including those of ethics. There is a mental features guiding thread running throughout which is revelatory of its motivation, and is indicative of the nature of the strictly ethical treatise
to follow.
That thread
is
The
That freedom,
VI
PREFACE
universal but diversely exemplified, accounts for the fact that man and his problems are one with the rest of nature. Its acknowledg-
ment makes
it
possible to
is
a place for
at
problems of ethics are the topic of the next volume. Though grounded in and supplementing the present, that volume is an independent and complete unit, capable of being read sepaspecific
The
rately
by one concerned with ethics as a distinct discipline. The two volumes together constitute a single work, The Foundations of Ethics, and the introduction which immediately follows introduces that work as a whole. Together the two volumes and particularly the second
aim to establish a
politics.
basis for
and to introduce
a projected third
volume on
Dr. F.
S.
C. Northrop, Mrs.
Max Roesler, and Dr. Erich Frank give me the benefit of their opinions at
my
last
wife's painstaking, penetrating reading. substance of the whole has been altered again and
my
again in the effort to meet her searching criticisms. I am grateful that she at last grants me the privilege of dedicating the book to her.
P.
W.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
i
.
The Danger
tions of
2.
3.
The
Tradi-
IX
Philosophic
Truth.
PARTI
CHAPTER ONE
Prediction
4.
Necessity and
Freedom.
TWO
20
2.
The
4.
Activity
5.
Public Bonds.
THREE
The Nature of Beings i. The Inside and the Outside 4. The Inside 3. Resistance
6.
39
2.
Insistence
5.
Concern
Summary.
58
2.
FOUR
The
Motivation of Action
3.
Self-ad-
justment
5.
.
Expression
4.
6.
Compulsion
Spontaneity
Freedom of Action
7. 8.
From
Summary.
PART
II
FIVE
of Living Things
2.
81
The "ExtrinMetaphysical Biology sic" and "Intrinsic" Ought 3. The Limitation of Natural Wisdom 4. The Check
on Folly
SIX
5.
Grace
6.
Evolution.
Consciousness
i.
103
2.
The
Expression of Sensitivity
3.
Pain
and Pleasure
The
Cartesian Hypothesis
vu
VIII
4.
CONTENTS
Environmental Sensitivity 5. Animal Perception and Intelligence 8. Transition
to
Man.
of
SEVEN
Man
Darwin's Thesis
121
2.
4. The 3. The Necessity for the Body Rational Soul 5. The Human Constant
6.
The Origin
of Man.
EIGHT
Techniques and Habits i. The Unity of the Embryo 2. The Organs 3. Reflexes, Instincts and Habits Tech4. The Organic Unity of Habits 5.
niques.
145
NINE
166
2.
The
Objects of Signs
3.
Expectation
and Anticipation
currences
5.
Salutations and
Oc-
Metaphysicals
8.
Conventional Discourse
9.
The Nature
of Language
Freedom
and Language.
TEN
The Nature
i.
194
2.
Man's Three-
Freedom 3. The Origin of Mind Mind 5. Inference 6. Mind and Freedom 7. The Mind-Body Problem.
fold
4.
ELEVEN
The Will
i.
224
2.
The Nature
of
the Will
4.
TWELVE
The Self i. The Self and the Body 2. Expressions of the Self 3. The Freudian View 4. The
Concern of the Self 6. The Task of Man.
5.
241
Natural Rights
INDEX
269
INTRODUCTION
/.
IDEAS RELATE
more
fact.
world beyond. At the same time and even men and the world apart. As a rule, they
express
more what
things
mean
for
men
To know reality
intellectual
as it truly
is,
we must
and incidentally our terms from barriers into means and occasions for reaching to the
what exists.
intellectual barriers
Some
sum up
the
periences; others report something of the temper of the day, the prejudices of a class, or the spirit of a civilization. All of them
hide
reveal.
and direct grasp of the essence of things. Children, untaught as they are in the conventions to which the adult is inclined to con-
form so thoroughly and unawares, are more flexible and humble and therefore better able than the adult to see what tradition veils. But they are unable to understand and to communicate what it is
they discern. Not blinded by convention, they are nevertheless unable to make use of it. Since it is only through the use of convention that
it is
possible to
chil-
dren cannot say to themselves or to others what it is they clearly see. The more familiar they are with reality the less able are they
to
know and
to report
it.
IX
INTRODUCTION
Philosophy is insistent, creative, systematic thought, probing to the roots of things. Successful, it exposes in sophisticated prose truths open only to innocence. Since innocence is never entirely
lost,
is
with what
all
To know
must grasp what the innocent do, but within and through the established means that the
experienced use. To achieve truth
make
We
disclose. them adequate to "What," asked Blake, "it will be questioned, 'when the sun rises do you not see a round disk of fire somewhat like a guinea?' Oh,
we must remold our daily categories the facts they now obscure rather than
to
make
no! no!
see an innumerable
company of heavenly
I
host crying
God
Almighty.'
a
question not
my
corporeal
sight.
would question
window concerning a
look through it and not with it." Of course Blake, like everyone else, looked with his eyes. Otherwise he would not have known
it
he was speaking. He did not see a disk, to be sure, for he did not use the spectacles of fashionable theory which hide the sun from men and
that
moon of which
make them
as
as it
see,
known
as a
is
to innocence. Rather he
when one
It is
an independent body with a characteristic more than a disk and less than a heavenly
make allowance
we must use spectacles of some kind, but must for the distortion they produce. speak acof the sun when we use daily terms creatively, making curately them conform to what is there to know. Language, to communicate
it
To know
We
the nature of things, must stand between the tame discourse of daily life and the exultant shouts of a Blake.
Traditions of speech and thought often tell something about th nature of things as these have been understood by generations, but
XI
they also and more often nourish questionable beliefs and expectations. must overcome the limitations of these traditions if we
We
are to say
what
is
so; in
segments of those traditions in order to make effective use of the remainder. But, if we are not to produce new distortions in the
effort to
compensate for old, we must also avoid falling into the temptation to which Blake succumbed. Traditions must be treated
critically, rejected
bind.
A
most
than
discipline
comes
by conquering
the limitations
which hem
at
in unreflective thought
an obstacle in the
it
way of truth. This holds in philosophy no less does in science, art and history. Philosophy too has its shibboleths, follies and conceits which hosts of writers repeat. Every
great thinker sees through
cessful he
is
in thinking independently
thoughts
known, the more surely will he start a new tradition, provide a means for trapping men anew. The chains of today were forged
by
conventions endorsed
by
in present thought and dispast philosophy and embodied course. Those who follow him must penetrate further into the he failed to and see that the truth he discerned does
if its
No
those
is
to write
anew.
conclusions of past systems are among the premises of pressent thought. all uncritically use the results of thinkers of an-
The
We
other age; they are pivots around which we constantly think and and at most points break speak. If we break with past thought
all
XII
INTRODUCTION
is false,
as
hold on to the portion which is sound the portion which is not. And where we firmly reject break away, in order to avoid rushing into the vacuum that is left behind with errors fresh and new, we must protect ourselves with
course,
and
we must
as
we
we
2.
To
to think freely.
we embrace much that our heritage asks us to keep at a distance. This means we must break through the barriers within which our
thinkers have been content so long to remain. Our Western thought has been in the tight grip of two powerful traditions. The first stems from Aristotle, the second from
those
who
For over
ethics,
opposed him. In both there is truth streaked with error. thousand years, the science, metaphysics, esthetics,
politics,
economics,
logic
and many
lesser inquiries of
Western man were almost completely Aristotelian in intent, method and result. There were rebels throughout the period, but
their
Not
ings
power was slight and their day was brief. this in fact is one of the basic meanuntil "modern times" of the term was the revolt against Aristotle carried through
and effectively
in discipline after discipline
persistently
under the
brilliant leadership
Adam
losophers Cartesian, political scientists Lockean, logicians Leiband biologists Darwinian, rather than
They have
is
still
not,
however, en-
speech.
When we
He
and "truth"
we make
use of
Aristotle's terms
the whole
we
and remain quite faithful to his meaning. But on have broken away from him both as common sense
men
and
XIII
We have lost and gained by this change. Much was rejected that
might have been retained. Our range is wider than Aristotle's but our ideas are thinner. Our disciplines do not let us affirm,
Aristotle's did, that there
is
as
world containing colored, substantial, self-determining men and things, that minds and bodies constantly interplay, that economics and politics prea real, full-bodied
suppose the existence of ends they often ignore, that logic is a science of fact and not only of symbols, and that man is more than an animal. But gain there has been. have discovered truths
We
where
Aristotelian error
We
have
naturalized the stars, seen the folly of slavery, achieved a universal and know something of physics and chemistry of great
Though Christianity
beginning, anti-Greek or at least non-Greek in spirit, it was not long before the great theologians had the one fitted neatly
to the other.
Even the apparently non- Aristotelian ethical systems of Hobbes, Spinoza, Kant, and Bentham exhibit the unmistakeable marks of a Greek-tainted view. And, in any case, they have had
but a short life and few disciples. There is no vigorous, radically non-Aristotelian school of ethics today. Yet the non-Aristotelian temper is strong and will not down.
Having
we
are nevertheless
unwilling to accept it. As a result, the Aristotelian ethics occupies the singular position of a doctrine unrefuted but dismissed, rejected and yet opposed
about the meaning of virtue, the nature of the good, the purpose of the state, the aim of education, the duties of man and, above all,
the essence of freedom.
The
is
that
man
is
a being
who
never evolved,
who
XIV
INTRODUCTION
who
seeks and ought to seek his own good. It is a view which way of the truth that man had an animal origin,
and
stands in the
that his capacities have been modified in the course of history, that
he ought to and does devote himself to the realization of impersonal ends, even at a cost to himself. It touches only on the freedom
characteristic of
man and
fails
are possessed of rights as well. It virtues of altruism, slights the and self-sacrifice, and is indifferent to the values which humility
Aristotle's ethics
is
a static ethics
and
ethics
is
an
ethics,
would,
laid
at first glance,
seem desirable
on the foundations
by
we
cartes, etc.,
we
will lose
much
made possible by Galileo, will not only be without an adequate ethics but of the world and knowledge that is in fact availDes-
able to us every day. Though the Galileos and Descartes have taken us part of the way we should go, and at least far enough
to enable us to see that the Aristotelian
view
is
they have denied to us in principle the right to say that we are part of a rich and multicolored world of substantial active beings, each with a nature and freedom of its own. Neither the philosophy
of Aristotle nor that of his opponents does justice to both the human and the subhuman. Neither can be accepted therefore as offering a satisfactory account of the nature of the world and of
the
men who
full
live in
it.
Aristotle
was mistaken
in
many
not take
unlike his
account of the powers and flexibility of man. But opponents he did support the double truth that man is
in nature and that he possesses powers and is therefore subject to duties not possible to other beings. The modern non- Aristotelians avoided many of the errors Aristotle made in his treatment of
nature, and
XV
account of man. But they did not do both together, because they rejected one or the other of the two truths Aristotle affirmed.
Either they defined man as a complicated kind of subhuman being, getting him into nature by ignoring the traits he alone possesses, or
they insisted on
his characteristic
from the
natural.
rest of the
world.
They
powers but separated him off thus either naturalized man but
man but
denied he was
Though they and of man, they conceived of nature as being so rigid and mechanical that it could provide no place for a full-bodied man acting freely and responsibly.
account of nature
What
is
needed today
is
a philosophy
which
is
adequate to
all
aspects of existence and thus has being who is both natural and free.
room
to assert that
man
is
is
A satisfactory philosophy
one
which recognizes that nature is quite different from what both Aristotle and the moderns take it to be, and that man, as part of
powers and duties both Aristotle and the moderns had to ignore. Such a philosophy would be able to place its ethics within a cosmic frame, or what is the same thing see the freenature, has
dom
is
freedom which
core of every being. The powers that man uses when ethical, though they enable him to do what others cannot, are as
at the
natural as those
Man
is
would be super-
he does.
The freedom
freedom
tration of a
would not be responsible for the things that pertains to him is but a special illusembodied in every other natural being.
We
traction, the denial that entities possess the characters they do.
This error
occasionally evident in Aristotle, but it never was fully exploited until the modern age. The attempt to show that men are subject to the same laws that govern other beings, combined with the claim that the scope of natural science is universal
XVI
INTRODUCTION
its
and
from men
a result they have viewed men as little more than inanimate physical things. Having sacrificed man at the altar of an arbitrary theory, such a view can hardly shed light on human
and minds. As
human
were dead or subhuman can but provide an though excuse for ignoring the problems of men.
as
it
In escaping from this error, it is possible to fall into another, exploiting the opposite extreme. The error of unwarranted subtraction can be replaced by the error of unwarranted addition. This latter error is encouraged by the worthy effort to under-
stand
all entities as
interactive with
and by the laudable desire made mysteries of the union of mind and body and of the
life
It attributes
life
origin of to atoms,
however, of explaining anything, this view obscures matters by loading down the rest of nature with human characters there is no reason to believe it possesses.
stars. Instead,
present contention, that all things have a freedom similar to man's, appears to verge on the error of unwarranted addition, ap-
The
parently attributing to
nonhuman
this
is
human
that
beings alone.
But
we
has expertly deprived the rest of nature of its powers. too often speak of freedom as though it were illusory or attributable
to
We
man
alone.
We
is
freedom
subhuman realm as though it expressed an unwarranted anthropomorphism. But we should say that there is freedom in the rest of nature, even if we had to deny that man was free. If we did not, we would be unable to do justice to the nature of
in the
life
Men
have
is
freedom precisely because they are natural beings, for freedom part of whatever is a part of nature.
XVII
is
to
deny a
commit the
is
to exag-
gerate one. Both errors have a common root. They are consequences of the supposition that if all beings are free they must exhibit that freedom in the same way and with the same results.
But
common power
a
strength, in divergent
is
still
can be expressed with different degrees of mammal ways and with diverse results.
mammal though
it
flies like
swims
like a
like a stone,
feeds like a plant or thinks like a man. The rejection of the supthat free beings must exhibit their freedom in the same position,
ways, makes it possible to avoid the errors of subtraction and addition, and affirm that man is part of nature, subject to the same
categories
smallest
and most
of matter, but
terest,
different
from
all
are gaps between man and man, between men and the novel beginapes, between the snail and the stone. Sudden and and surprising endings confront us on every side. nings, abrupt
There
Nature
is
more an
affair
of
fits
and
starts,
than of smooth and easy passage, of continuity and harmony. The existence of gaps does not mean that the distance between
the different entities and acts had not once been bridged, or that what lies on one side of the gap is unconcerned with and is
quickened by a different type of power from that which lies on the other. Some bodies rise, others float and still others drop
straight
down.
is
To move up
all
is
other than to
to
and fro
as to
these different motions have a single explanation. piece of paper and a piano fall at different rates. But there is not one law for paper that rides on the air and another for that
now know
pianos that
plummet
to both with equal force, the difference in result being due plies to the structures and composition of the paper and the piano and
XVIII
INTRODUCTION
they interplay with of freedom, exhibited
air
the
way
so, there is
one
in
power
by
beings in divergent
results.
ways
This freedom, unlike motion, accounts moreover for the from origin of the living the nonliving and the human from the animal. The nonliving and
diverse circumstances
the animal are not only free to act; they are free to
ferent in nature.
become
dif-
In the present volume an attempt is made to make manifest that freedom is of the essence of all beings and that it explains
why and how new existents arise. The account begins with a consideration of the nature of causation and inanimate beings so as to make evident how deep-rooted and unavoidable the fact of
moves on to show how obstacles in the way of the exercise of freedom promote a new attempt to exercise freedom in ways which are characteristic of new and perhaps
freedom
is.
From
there
it
superior types of beings. It is freedom which makes it possible to understand and relate the human and the subhuman, and eventually to see the rights and duties of the former in their cosmic setting. It allows us to move step by step from lower beings and
limited acts to
man
3.
PHILOSOPHIC TRUTH
A philosophy
is
true. It
it
deals
is more than a report of opinions; it affirms what more than a catalogue of what happens to be the case; with what must be so. It speaks of the permanent and esis
sential in
everywhere and always. Like the truths of logic, the truths of philosophy cannot be denied without absurdity. But whereas the denial of a logical truth
things, holding
which contradicts
itself,
the
denial of a philosophical truth yields the absurdity of an assertion which contradicts the existence of full-bodied beings, some of
PHILOSOPHIC TRUTH
XEC
its
philosophy
is
more than
truths are
existential, dealing
and being.
That "x
"x
is
is
x"
is
the self-contradiction,
not x."
the world
in the
The logical truth tells us nothing about the nature of we confront every day except, of course, that nothing
violates
it; it is
world
osophic purpose. Philosophical truths are more concrete, discoursing about those aspects of being and knowledge which must be
exemplified always.
One
such truth
this
is
is
"I cannot
meet myself
To deny
to
denying one's uniqueness, and ultimately therefore the fact that one utters the denial as an individual in an individual way. Another
philosophic truth is "When I feel pain I am in pain," for the denial of this involves the absurdity that what exists only for consciousness can be characterized as having a nature other than that which
consciousness reveals
is
it
to have.
is
is
"It
wrong wantonly to kill one's friend," commit the absurdity of maintaining that
for to
it is
deny
this
to
different to reduce values unnecessarily. three truths and yet speak intelligibly;
It is
it is
possible to
deny
these
them without
letting
go some
vital aspect
There
and
to
are
many
philosophical
truths.
Some
some
analysis
make evident how inescapable they are and how disastrous their work a number rejection would be. In the course of the following
of them will be formulated; almost every one of them will serve to articulate the nature of freedom as resident in some basic aspect
of existence.
To deny them
is
to
fact of
freedom
in
make
impossible an under-
standing of causation, nature, value and obligation. Such truths, and others not yet explored, are in one sense rather
easy and in another sense very difficult to uncover. Once we have put our finger on the pulse of the universe to deny which is to
XX
deny
INTRODUCTION
one's sanity, it is a comparatively simple thing to express the nature of that which we have isolated. But we do not usually get
to the heart of things without going through a number of preliminaries, for we cherish many assertions whose denials are
thought absurd only because of traditional beliefs we have refused to criticize, and we usually have to struggle long and hard to get
beneath these to truths more substantial and sound.
that there
is
We
all
know
being is claim would have been universally deemed absurd. If we are to avoid identifying such beliefs with indubitable truths, we must
nothing really amiss in the claim that a large, flying not necessarily a bird, but there was a time when such a
make
cases
to details. It
with
red wings are birds" than to reject the with wings of some kind may be birds."
The
truths
we
express a structural fact so basic and comprehensive that every item is bound to illustrate it. The denials of such generalized truths involve the rejection of those aspects of the universe pre-
supposed in all action, existence or thought. Because every assertion and fact must provide an instance of such generalized truths,
it is
possible to start
by move inevitably to truths which cannot be denied without absurdity. Whether the original statements be true or false and the
tails,
facts
minor or
is
crucial,
they must
illustrate a truth
which covers
all
there
All thought begins with some present belief, and it is this which must be generalized to get a beginning in philosophy. Now, to me
it
seems evident at
Still, it is
this
moment
some-
I possible that I may be in error, for often mistake thing." the extent of a lapse of past time. I feel confident but not certain
that
my
assertion
is
true and
its
denial foolish.
am more
sure,
PHILOSOPHIC TRUTH
XXI
however, that the generalization: "I wrote something" cannot be denied without absurdity. My memory may play me false in its
report that a lapse of time was short rather than long, but I am not willing, except in the face of a good deal of counterevidence, to
agree that my memory is playing me false in testifying that I did write something sometime. Still, such evidence could conceivably
be produced.
It is
possible that
am
in error
when
wrote something." I may not have written anything at all. The possibility is, for me, a very remote one, but I confess that it is a possibility after all. Caution requires me therefore to retreat to the
more general formulation: "Something was written here." To deny this I would have to question the insistent testimony of my memory to the effect that the page was blank before, and the insistent
Still, it is
testimony of my senses that there is writing there now. conceivable that this, which I take to be writing, is nothseries
ing
have
somehow
memory,
senses, observations
I
and inferences
contention that "something was written here." But as more than a practical man, as a being in search
tion them,
will not yield in
my
tions, I
of an absolutely solid ground on which to base a host of speculamust drive myself to question even that of which I am very
I
confident, until
at
all.
where
it is
And
can obtain
this result
by
generalizing further to
"something occurred." Here is an indubitable truth; if it were not, ours would be a static world, a world in which nothing not even
my
assertion
occurred.
static
If this
cannot be a
world,
it
must be
then
not only necessarily true that something occurred, but necessarily true that everything in the world must have come to be,
it is
if
moment
of time.
is
The
universe comes
to be"
a philo-
XXII
INTRODUCTION
sophic truth achieved, as all of them can be, by generalizing a simple proposition of daily experience and extracting the truth which the absurdity of its denial lays bare. It is, of course, possible
which some things do not come to be, is nothing, where there is no passage of any kind. Such a scheme might describe some actual state of affairs a Nirvana, a Divine Mind, a logical system and so on. But it does not describe
to construct a
scheme
in
where time
this
world, the concern of our philosophy. Our method has not been that of denying or doubting all in things. It is a method which allows each belief to be indubitable
which no evidence serves to bring it into but which requires us to abandon it in its specificity as question, the range of our interest increases in scope. It does not require us
the particular context in
to affirm that the details abstracted
from
it
more
generalized truth they specialize and adorn. There are many philosophical truths to be obtained in this way, and it is part of our task to bring their implications into focus.
We
cannot escape the task by claiming to be modest. are, to be sure, finite, bewildered and far from omniscient. But unless we try
to live
are
We
up to the ideal of having a sound, universal knowledge, we bound to be entangled in a tissue of preconceptions and preju-
dices.
We
do not achieve modesty by refusing to ask after the That is but a device for riding on the crest of
current beliefs and preparing our ideas for passage into the limbo of historic errors. True modesty demands a courageous attempt
to express systematically, in intelligible language, truths that are
at least faintly discernible to a child.
start
make
can then proceed to all things evident that they come to be because they are free. All beings embody a freedom which is responsible for the origin of the livto be.
final
come
We
ing and the human, and which comes to expression in the ethical activities of man.
PART ONE
CHAPTER ONE
/.
WHATEVER
comes to be
Whatever
an
effect.
And
a cause.
Were
duce
there
no
causes,
exist
itself
and thus
before
nected with anything past, take place though there was nothing which enabled it to occur. The first supposition is self-contradictory; the second
in
is
intelligible
is
but absurd.
a miracle, unrelated to
world we deny
quench
to
a thirst.
Every quality, every thing, every state of affairs has its cause. Love and fear, impulse and gait, weight, structure and height, you,
the stone, the cloud
causes.
and
I, all
these and
more have
their preceding
This
is
a causal world.
have a habit of thinking and acting as if there were. His view cannot ultimately be sustained. Either the
tion in fact,
but that
we
habit is uncaused and no reason can therefore be given for its presence, or the habit has a cause and the suggestion that there is no cannot follow causation is withdrawn in being explained.
We
On
Hume without prohibiting an explanation of why we think and act as though there were causes. To account for the belief is selfcontradictorily to acknowledge a cause for
3
it.
to say that the belief just happens to be is to say that it is an irreducible matter of fact which can be rejected only verbally. If we now, as a matter of brute inexplicable fact, happen to believe in
causation, even
though
we may
beyond
at
some
later
believe in
it,
causation
is
now.
Only an uncaused belief in causation could possibly be mistaken, but such a belief could not possibly be put aside. If we believe in
causation
as
we do
we
is
free.
But
if
man
is
free, there
everything he does and yet he must possess a power of acting in ways those causes do not prescribe. In fact, as will be immediately evident, there is always a gap between cause and effect. In that
felt.
cause precedes its effect. There is a temporal distance between the two. Were there no such distance the cause would coexist
with
its effect,
and the
would
coexist with
it, and so on endlessly. Nothing would take place in such a case, for every consequence of a cause would then exist at the moment the cause appeared. The whole of history would be here before one
could blink an eye. To be sure, we sometimes speak of a ball pressing on a cushion and simultaneously "causing" a depression there. But the cause of the depression in the cushion is the ball as
it is
an
analytic component of the effect, "ball resting on a depressed cushion." As such a component it is simultaneous with the depression;
it is
fingers are the cause of a fist or pages are the cause of a book. real cause has a real effect. The effect follows it in time.
For
of
Until the effect appears, that which precedes the effect cannot have the status of a cause. One would be speaking
its effect.
carelessly if
one were to
call
match
initial
to a process of interplay and then terminated in an explosion, that the union of match and gasoline could possibly achieve the role of a cause for the explosion.
What
no
is
present cannot, as present, be a cause. As present, it has is nothing then of which it could be the
cause. Cause
and effect are correlative terms, and it is only when come about that what preceded the effect can be a
as causes
cause of
it.
on the
occurrences which succeed them. But as having actual effects, causes are already in the past, crowded out of present existence by
the arrival of these effects. Presupposing as they do the existence of effects in order to achieve the status of causes, causes could not
possibly produce effects.
When
it.
effect,
And we
an effect occurs, and not before, there is a real cause for as we shift our interest from one factor to another of the
stress different
causes.
We
we
is the cause of the match being blown to smithereens. The former and usual mode of speaking stresses a more signal subordinate effect, but the latter despite its unimportance refers to an
effect
which is equally a component of the total effect, the explowhose cause is the union of lighted match and gasoline. sion, An effect is made possible by the co-presence of antecedent
things,
its
"cause";
it
comes to be
as the
outcome of
dynamic
togetherness of lighted match and determine what can happen; their interplay determines gasoline what does happen. And what does happen is what can happen,
course of "causation."
The
made
in
The
interplay of
match
and gasoline
which each
will
by which a prospective effect, made determinate, to become a presactual, unique explosion which never was before and never be again. As the means by which the possible is made actual,
modified, a course
is
the indeterminate determinate, the abstract concrete, the process of becoming is necessarily free. Freedom, as the dynamic agency
is
always to be found
actual concrete
its
were no determination of a possible state of affairs, anycould occur, no matter what the antecedents. If there were thing no production of an actual state of affairs, nothing in fact would
there
ever happen. And if the course of causation were not a way of producing determinations allowed by the antecedents, it would be impossible to predict, as we do in science and practice, the kind
of effects which actually take place in this world of ours. prospective explosion makes no noise and hurts no one; only an actual
explosion, produced in the course of time, has power. But if the latter were not a determination of the former we could not reason-
ably
make
is
plans to prevent
its
occurrence
when we open
can of
gasoline.
This
definite beginnings
mode by which an
comes to
be, a limited,
unique route originating in a limited definite past and terminating in a limited definite present. The nature of the course in its concreteness and detail
is
vance.
for
It
it is
cannot possibly be explained by or reduced to its origin, related to its origin as a line to a point, the changing to the
fixed,
becoming to being, the present to the past. It never was before and never will be again, having its entire nature exhausted in the act of occurring. To know the course of the becoming of an
it toward an as yet undetermined the past behind. future, leaving Every effect is the outcome of specific antecedents and a limited process in time. To forget either component or to hold them apart
is
abandon oneself to paradox and perplexity. Yet this is evidently what eminent representatives of three dominant schools of
to
The rationalists, in the person of Spinoza, acknowledged only antecedent things and could, as a consequence, find no room for time. If only antecedent things are required for an effect to occur, the effect follows at once. There is no temporal distance between
romantics, in the person of Bergson, took the opposite tack. They acknowledged only a course of becoming, and as a
them.
The
If there is
only a
course, there are no boundaries, no limits given within which the course must be confined, and therefore nothing specific to know.
The
empiricists, in the person of Hume, acknowledged both the antecedents and the course but, because they did not bring them
both together, could find no need for the effect to come about. If the two are kept apart, there can be no accounting for the result
which
their
Let us imagine these three philosophers watching two men in an argument ending in an agreement. The disputants are reasonus say, are antecedents who
able
men,
let
who
common
truth.
They
make an agreement possible. Their argument is a course through which they remove their doubts and ambiguities, the outcome of which is the effect, a definite, actual agreement.
Spinoza
the only one of the three philosophers who is sure that will agree. He deduces that result from the antecedent nais
the
men
tures of the
men
as
the outcome.
As
who
men
in
agreed only because they discussed. Bergson, who allows only for the course, concerns himself instead with the argument. He knows that the agreement is not itself the argument but its outcome, and
supposes therefore that the dispute itself produces the agreement. a dispute of itself yield an agreement? Hume alone takes into account the men and the fact that they are arguing,
though he sometimes supposes that the dispute is an illusion. In neither the men nor the discussion does he find agreement. He
therefore concludes that the agreement has nothing to do with the fact that there were two men and that they were disputing. But how else but by being two men and arguing did the men come to
agree?
Most thinkers
believe
it is
confound the possible agreewhich can be anticipated, with the actual unanticipatable ment, agreement which will be reached only if there happens to be a
will agree. Like Spinoza, they
men
course of disputing. They are left with the problem of how there can be a temporal distance between cause and effect. If causes ne-
no reason why there should be any delay in the of the effect. Some thinkers, the Occasionalists, call on appearance God to force a temporal gap between the cause and effect which
cessitate, there is
their theory
val.
who
suppose that the men change into the dispute, and that this in turn becomes the agreement by holding on to and uniting with the men
not yet having disputed. These and other variations reveal how ingenious thinkers must and can become, once they deny that what
as
all
know
is
true. Unreflectively
men agreement argument conducted for a time by living men. Subtlety is misplaced when it serves only to make one distort such an obordinary
rightly treat the
as the
specific
trusive truth.
necessary to affirm with Hume that there is a temporal gap between the men before they began to dispute and those men as in
It is
The
agreement.
Rationale of Causation
The actual agreement the men reach must be recogwith Bergson, to be the outcome of a course of disputing, a nized, process unique and unanticipatable. And with Spinoza, one must
hold that an accurate knowledge of the men would make it possible to know that the men could agree. But it is vital that the
points for an
all
these three philosophers make should not be isolated, understanding of causation requires the acknowledgment of
which
of them together.
Neither antecedents nor courses are alone productive of effects. The antecedents provide one condition, the courses another, and
If,
for the
purpose of analysis, a course is held apart from antecedents, it must in the end be brought together with it again, to make possible an
understanding of
how an
effect could
come
to be.
2.
syllogism tells us that Socrates can die. It relates him abstractly to an abstract conclusion. It does not tell us how Socrates'
life
The
will end.
goes,
the
Only the actual course of living through which he way in which he eats and sleeps, teaches and thinks,
is
a mortal
who
dies in prison,
surrounded
are mortal,
by
men
but because he lived in Athens in a un-Athenian way. The conclusion of his life was not the conclusion of a syllogism. But the
concrete result, the actual fact of his dying as he did, is just as necessary as is the conclusion which a formal syllogism might provide.
His death
is
it
it is possible to add, to the fact that he his career, as terminating in his death.
Socrates, an account of
Antecedent causes and subsequent effects are not related as conclusions. The nature of the consequent premises and inevitable effect is in part determined by the nature of the course by or
which
it
comes to
be. It
is
io
what
it is.
The
antecedents
by themselves
yield only a possible result, the course by itself yields nothing but itself. To get a concrete specific result, the two must be interrelated.
The
dition which, together with the antecedents, suffices for the logical as well as for the actual derivation of the effect. Whatever occurs
is
rational, not in the sense that antecedent existents are premises for the inevitable presence of foregone conclusions, but in the sense that the effect follows inevitably from those antecedents as supthe additional condition provided by the course of plemented by
moving to the effect. The character of the effect must be learned from experience, not because it defies logic and reason, but because
by which it conies to be is a concrete empirical event, unknowable before it takes place. The course of coming to be is
the course
an unanticipatable second condition which makes possible the actual and logical, the factual and necessary occurrence of an
effect.
Once
what
a course of
it is,
becoming is completed, the effect is necessarily and when. There is no coming to be of something from
antecedent of the effect and the course as terminat-
nothing.
The
as
an effect is an event, taking time to be, the course the entire career of the effect) together determine embracing what that effect is. Before the effect occurs, it is not a determinate
ing in
it
(or, if
terminate.
effect
course by which it comes to be is not yet itself deGiven the antecedent conditions, one cannot get to the without going through the course, and thus without follow-
ing a novel route which the effect terminates. The effect is necessarily what it is. In terms of what has gone before, it is inevitable. Yet it need not have been. Taken in isola-
from the course by which it actually comes to be, it is a posiwhich did not have to occur. What necessarily is, need not sibility
tion
cast, it
it
did.
The
past allows
Prediction
for a subsequent, free course
effect that ensues.
1 1
This result has bearing in every domain even in that chaste and abstract realm where men presumably engage in acts of pure,
formal, logical reasoning. "Leibniz is a rationalist" is a contingent truth. It is conceivable that the fact might have been otherwise.
Yet
it is a necessary consequence of an inference which starts from the premises, "all members of the Cartesian School are rationalists,
is a member of that school." These premises do not the conclusion; the conclusion does not issue out of them. produce For the conclusion to be, some one must conclude, infer to it from
and Leibniz
No premises When we
pick out the conclusion that is done say that "Leibniz is a rationalist" is a
conclusion from such and such premises, we should mean therefore that we have already gone through the course of reaching that conclusion, starting from those premises. ought not to
We
suppose that the conclusion is wrapped up in the premises, awaiting only to be uncovered, or that it already exists apart from the
premises, awaiting only to be discovered.
exist
before
it is
concluded
to.
The
eral, universal.
laws of logic to which one's inferences conform are genIn reasoning one makes these general laws perti-
nent to the particular situation, exemplifies them in a limited context in the free act of moving from the premise to the conclusion.
Until one actually goes through the course of inferring that conclusion, one does not have it as a conclusion.
3.
PREDICTION
The
stract, indeterminate,
future can occasionally be predicted in the large, as aband general; it defies prediction in the little,
as concrete, determinate,
and
particular.
reveal a range of possible effects, but to get to the one actual effect that occurs, in its concreteness and full detail, one must go beyond
that "cause" to and through a free course of causation, up to the point where the effect fully is. The past limits the range of what might occur; the course of causation, a process in time, the be-
coming of the
present,
is
what
is
now unde-
termined in that range, present and determinate. Some beings act time after time with little variation, others charge their acts with considerable and variable degrees of novelty
advance.
from moment to moment. The effects of neither are given in A predictable outcome is a possible outcome, not some-
thing neat and complete awaiting merely the external passage of time in order to be able to appear on the scene, irrelevantly decorated with one date rather than another.
how
we do
cannot
know
The
is
future
be known, not because our knowledge knowledge, but because there is nothing concrete in the future that can now be known. cannot take refuge in the idea that
a limited
now
We
the future
is
intrinsically
it is
unknown
or un-
knowable to men.
reasonable argument to the effect that the nature of the future is unknown or unknowable to us cannot be
based on the grounds that we cannot master the countless details and intersecting lines of causation which lead to that future.
and multiple, intersecting lines of causation beyond the possible reach of our knowledge. But each detail and line must itself first come to be before it can be known. It
details
is
it
impossible for us to know the future in its concreteness. The actual terminus of the simplest course is unknowable in advance for the
is
to
know.
necessary to come to be in the future in order to have a concrete future to know. That concrete future is nought but a new
the present that now exists. It would be antepresent replacing cedently unknowable in its concreteness even if there were but a
Prediction
single line of causation
it is
and even
as the
if all
things
outcome of
unique course
of causation.
it is fully presthe future as possibly concrete, as only general, abstract, as that which can be made determinate, as that which lacks details. The details the future will contain are thus
ent. Until
beyond the
What
possible reach of any knowledge now. the future holds in store is beyond the power of a
God to
that
He be
omniscient, for
God
cannot do the
He
evil, make Himself impotent, ignorant or debased. His omnipotence is the power to do all that can be done, and His omniscience is the power to know all that can be known. He has not the power to do what cannot be done, the power to know what cannot be known. He cannot now know the future in its concreteness, for such a future is not, and thus is not knowable. Even if He thor-
oughly grasped the nature of things that now exist, their habits and the kind of power they exert, He could not tell in advance
just
tails
what
would
no such de-
One might conceive of effects to but these effects and every feature of them would be general, abstract. The details of actual effects cannot be known in advance,
before they actually occur.
be,
no such
details to
be known.
what
will be. It
is
foolish for a
man
to expect to achieve
curred.
time.
The
concrete
is
is
To know
Even
knowing
the world in
full being.
The
lived
14
that there
is
no
intuitive
knowledge, no
of another. Yet
is
sympathetic, intimately and immediately. Presumably an omniscient God would have an even more intimate contact with beings, and grasp what they are from within. The possibility of knowledge does not require that one destroy, discard or distort the concrete. It is true, of course, that what is normally termed
when we know that another is a person, that he when we grieve or laugh with him, we know him
knowledge
something
involves distinction, abstraction and analysis. before me I must distinguish that it is from
To know
the
two together in a judgment. Though a is a that and a what in one, undivided and undistinguished, to know the book I must distinguish them, and then bring them together in
the judgment, "this
tains distinct
is a book." The judgment, though one, conand separate elements which are not separate in the actual book. But this does not mean that to know something is to distort its nature as objective and concrete. This, perhaps an ele-
mentary dilemma may make clear. We either do or do not know that the elements used
in the judg-
are not separate in the actual book. If we know that the elements are not separate in the book, we must obviously somehow
ment
grasp the book in its concreteness; our knowledge then, instead of requiring the loss of the concrete, demands its acknowledgment.
we do not know whether or not the elements used in judgment are separate in the book, we do not know that there is something which knowledge fails to reach. But then we cannot claim to have a knowledge of anything. To have knowlif
edge
is
to refer abstracted
and
know, the very nature of the act of judgment requires rather the admission that the concrete is acknowledged in its full concreteness.
There
is
knowledge only
if
Prediction
a concrete object to which the possessed content can be referred. Knowledge involves the use of abstract content and a reference to a concrete subject matter which lies outside that abstract content. It is like vision; to be
known a thing must be kept at and acknowledged from a distance. The act of knowing is the act of relating abstract content to the
concrete being which lies outside it. Knowledge is always "knowledge of" what is outside the content of knowledge. Concrete occurrences are accordingly knowable, but that in terms of which
we know them is distinct from them. To know the determinate we must refer to it by means of what is not entirely determinate. And if we wish to know what is not entirely determinate we must have recourse to other indeterminate content, in terms of which we can articulate and thereby judge the single concrete fact. If it were impossible, then, to know the concrete, it would also be impossible to know the abstract, for the
latter
is,
relative to
our knowledge of
it,
as
"We
it,
We can contemplate
its
the possible by contemplating it, we are therefore able in principle to know everything that occurs, for an
know
Able
to
know
from
a possible
one only in
mode
is
of
The former
is
merely
more than
possesses determinations not contained in itself as possible. It is the possible transformed. The knowledge we have of the possible
therefore, never entirely appropriate to the actual. possibility determinate only relative to the means by which we know it; it acquires actual determinations when it is referred to a transformis,
is
ing concrete which lies beyond it. These conclusions can be used to illuminate the nature of predictions,
is
i.e.,
articulate
is
expected to be present. Because they refer to the future, predictions, no matter how detailed and precise they may be, necessarily
not to be confounded with judgments regardmatters of fact, unless one's purpose is to reveal oneing present self to be a disciple of Dewey. To confirm a prediction, a judgment
sible.
They ought
about possibility must be referred to a present occurrence. But the present is particular, determinate; it is the possible enriched and transformed. It can constitute a confirmation of a prediction
a
only
if
a confirmation
is
is
instead the
and concrete.
Predictions are not identical with the possibilities which they articulate. They are human modes of expressing these. Nor are
they formulations of the actual events that ensue. They articulate not those events, but their possibility. When we confirm a pretransform our knowledge of a judged our judgment to an actual concrete situapossibility by referring tion in which that possibility has been made determinate. The
diction, therefore,
we must
judgment, in being referred to the actual concrete case, is enriched, specified, provided with details it did not possess as a judgment of
a possibility. It
then no longer the judgment it was. about a possibility can be abstracted from, genjudgment eralized out of a judgment about a concrete case in which that posis
sibility has
generalize and thereby make indeterminate the particular case that occurs. But if we generalize what occurs we ought to generalize our judgment too. Our judgments must be generalized when and
as
we
are interested in recovering an original possibility, we must about it, for only then will our our
judgment
judgment
By
we would not, of course, conreferring to such a possibility firm a prediction. At most we would repeat it, but as that which had been rather than as that which was to be confirmed. An exact
is
confirmation of a prediction
we
can recover
Prediction
the predicted as an abstract element derived from the concrete, unpredictable event that actually occurs. In becoming actual, the possible is transformed. cannot
We
know, however, whether or not a transformation of a possibility will be great or small at the next moment. Nor is it very important,
for the most part, for us to know this. Even the most exact and exacting of sciences do not require a perfect exhibition of rigid laws. They require only that in the future be subpossibilities
jected to transformations somewhat similar to those they suffered in the past. successful science is one which the world happens to support for a time, by realizing its possibilities in an orderly, i.e.,
down
inviolable moral
which was
to
become morally
extinct.
For
classical
science, physical laws instead and punished violation by physical extermination or what is even more distressing,
laid
He
down
by
a
calling
even capable of
on physicists to deny that the recalcitrant thing was existing. Classical physics is Hebraic morality in
supposes that laws are iron bonds holding things
new
dress. It
what
is
is
The
They
in
stance of
are
components
what
occurs, and
they are possibilities defining the nature of what can occur. None of them is imposed from on high. As the substance of what ocin
curred, the laws of nature are perfectly exemplified; as components what occurs they are unstable, changing in character as the
things in the world change in activity; as possibilities they change in character in being exemplified.
The
domain
tissue of perfectly fulfilled laws. The present is a past is a in which changing laws are components of concrete oc-
currences.
The
future
is
domain of
possible laws.
first
The march
of
time is the free conversion of possibilities and then into the substance of things.
into the
components
Science has application to this world, not because the world is a tissue of possibilities, but because the distance between those from possibilities and the concrete happens to vary but slightly
case to case, particularly when the cases considered include whole ranges of individual items whose separate variations are slight or
balance one another. Precisely because the relation between the general predicted and the specific actual occurrence is fairly constant
it can be constantly ignored, if it is possibilities rather than concrete facts with which one is concerned. Science is possible be-
cause the things in the world act in somewhat monotonous ways, yielding a fairly constant relation between the predicted and the
actual occurrence.
4.
Every
effect
necessitated. It
must be what
it is,
because the
process started with just those antecedents and ended with just But though necessitated the effect is freely produced, the outcome of a free course which works its way out here and
that effect.
now
surety in advance. Whatever necessities there are, result from the exercise of freedom.
in
ways impossible
to
know with
thunderclap, the moving of a billiard ball, an impulsive act or an act of design are on a par because they are all the outcome of free
occurrences
by which
is
made
into
determinate actualities.
a cause. It
is
of freedom ends with a necessity for a free course to occur. Whatis, is the necessary outcome of what has gone
The course by which an effect comes about is a free occurrence whose outcome is necessary. It ends with the necessity that another free course take place. Freedom and necessity are thus inseparable.
They
19
been exercised, an effect is necessarily produced; because an effect has been produced, it must be followed by a free course moving to and terminating in a new future occurrence.
there could be necessity without freedom there would be no spread between present and future. Necessity without freedom
If
sation
allows no place for time and thus makes causation impossible. Cauis a temporal phenomenon, a concrete free course linking
past "causes" with subsequent determinate effects. If there could be freedom without necessity, the process of
ing to be
effect
comwould have neither beginning nor end. It would start independently of what had occurred, and would end before the
took place. Every process that occurs
is is
a temporal power then and there turning the indeterminate into the determinate. It neither pushes from behind nor pulls from ahead; it constitutes from
within.
world of necessity without freedom is a world in which loin which there are logical connections gicians dwell. It is a world
world
but no real movement from one to the other. A which there is freedom without necessity is a world in which romantics live. There is movement and life in it, but nothing definite and fixed before or after. Our world is more complex. To
between
existents,
in
we must be both rational and practical, conhumble and adventurous, beings who know that they have been determined to determine for themselves what they
be
at
home
in
it
will be.
CHAPTER TWO
/.
duced by
by
the theory of the determinists effects are not proThe determinists distorted their insight, however, that the impotence of causes is a consequence of the insisting
causes.
fact that
single,
whatever occurs
is
merely a passive
place where the force could be manifested. To know the nature of an effect one need know, according to their theory, only how this unitary force was exhibited in the antecedent causes and the law of its nature according to which its subsequent manifestations
necessarily take place. For the determinist, antecedents serve only to point to a possible effect; it is the cosmic force which "actualizes" the effect by giving it a predictable date and position in this world. The actual effect is,
on his theory, only the possible effect as embodying for ment an expression of the cosmic force. The actual and
effects are thus
the
mo-
possible
thought to differ only in date and position, and then only because the one does and the other does not serve as a
locus for the predetermined expression of the force. Spinoza's view can be deduced from the determinisms
when
the
law supposed to control the exhibition of the force is attributed to the antecedents. Bergson's view can be derived from it by treating the force as an ultimate changing power, and denying reality
20
The Theory
to
of Determinism
And if we look at Spinoza's the eyes of Bergson and Bergson's through the eyes theory through of Spinoza, thereby depriving both the antecedents and the course
any
specific localized course.
of
all bearing on the effect, we get the view of Hume. The theory of determinism is a matrix for a host of subsequent and less ade-
quate views. None of them holds as closely as this theory does what appears to be empirically known. A stone appears to remain where it is, stolid and unmoved,
to
so
long as
it is
not disturbed.
Not
a leaf
stir.
though more complicated than stones, leaves and animals, seem like them to be but places where an external force may be expressed.
The
and changing only under the pressure of external compulsions. The things, to which these compulsions seem to be traceable, ap-
where an
which
pear on examination also to be passive and inert mere places external force once entered and later departed. No theory, therefore, sounds so plausible and so right as one
asserts that
whatever occurs
passively exhibited
by
the result of a single force specific things. It checks with what seems to
is
be observed;
in giving
it
it is
a mathematical
simple, direct, clear-eyed. There is little difficulty form or in shaping it so that it becomes
science
nature.
which
tries
simplest form.
According to him,
the position thought that if we
velocities
a single physical
power prescribing
knew where
and velocity of whatever bodies might exist. He all the bodies in nature were and the
with
which they moved, our knowledge of the laws of motion laws perfectly fulfilled by the cosmic force would make it possible to predict precisely what the future would be.
22
Laplace thought he knew the formulae according to which one could deduce subsequent expressions of the cosmic force from a
antecedent expressions. But he did not claim that he or any man could ever know the position and velocity of every body. He supposed merely that such knowledge was possible and that it was of scientific interest. Determinism, for Laplace, de-
knowledge of
its
scribed
what was
it
was the
business of science to
The
that
it
once
Laplacian view no longer finds the favor with scientists and in the did. Others of course still hold to the view
science.
name of
texts
There
is
a cultural lag
it is
many
man today mumbles in the name of science views which scientists already reject. The words of God are whispered on Mount Sinai
and are spread abroad on broken
tablets.
Most
berg's instead. They use the term "indeterminacy" to express direct and conscious opposition to the Laplacian concept of "de-
terminacy."
They
it is
will,
is
thesis
both
the position of the ultimate entities which supconstitute the physical universe. The exact specification of posedly one of these quantities, they maintain, precludes the specification
momentum and
of the other. Laplace's theory, for them and Heisenberg, is an hypothesis about a state of affairs which it is beyond the province
of physics to ascertain, and would be useless even
if
what
it
said
were
in
true.
When
many
first stated,
philosophic streets. Quite a over the fact that physicists found no scientific truth in jubilant the hypothesis of Laplace. But their jubilation was premature.
Firstly, there
is
no surety that the Heisenberg principle will always be accepted by scientists. It is merely the theory which no<w
The Paradox
best accords with the facts
If
of Determinism
scientists
23
which
know and
consider.
willing to hang theories of free will, chance and selfdetermination or the like on the momentary and transitory theses which science finds it desirable to hold, one must be to beis
one
ready
lieve in
to reject
a
Whether
men
is
does not depend on the nature of the transitory hypotheses a science may find it desirable to maintain in the course of its de-
velopment.
Secondly, the Heisenberg principle does not deny that Laplace provided an accurate statement of the true nature of things. It is
silent
on that
made
a significant
possible for both to be right. Laplace have accurately described an objective state of affairs, and may Heisenberg may have accurately described the state of affairs
acknowledge. No disciple of Heisenberg need give up the Laplacian view; but he ought to add, for clarity's sake, that he has no scientific warrant or scientific use for it. A Laplacian today is a philosopher, speculating about an
significantly
it
can-
one says nothing of these values when he adopts the account, he says nothing about them when he rejects Laplacian
values. Since
2.
To be a determinist having some regard for the facts, one must be somewhat bolder than Laplace. Instead of maintaining that bodies are determined with respect to their positions and velocities,
24
one ought to say that they are determined to do whatever they in fact do, whether this be to move or to think, to change a state or a position, to move at a steady or at an irregular rate. One will then
achieve what is at once the most unyielding and most flexible, the most thoroughgoing and yet the most accommodating version of
determinism.
that there
One would
still
was
a cosmic force,
passive particulars,
and suffered by but would credit that force with the ability to
momentarily
felt
do more than make bodies move. As a result, one would trench on the Hegelian and Marxist theory of an over-all spirit or historical process
manifest in countless ways to know. Laplacianism is a thin view; daily Hegelianism takes in many more of the facts, since for it the single force makes things not only move, but eat, think and form a state.
itself
which made
we
denials;
the thin view of Laplace grants the possibility of motions only. Since determinism is a theory which men affirm, only the more
comprehensive scheme
is significant, for only it allows for the formulation of a theory of determinism. The thinner the possible determinism, the less provision does it make for the possibility of
its
own
the
it
more obviously
untenable. In adjusting
as
to the facts,
immediately, that it allows equal status to a denial and to an affirmation of itself. The statement that this was a deterministic world and the statement
shall see
becomes so accommodating,
we
that
it
comprehensive determinism, be on a
level,
equally true and equally false, and therefore since truth and falsehood are mutually exclusive really incapable of either truth
or falsehood.
If this
denial
were a deterministic world, both the assertion and the that it was so would be predetermined, unavoidable effects.
as
which was
ways.
men
in these
opposing
The Paradox
of Determinism
25
did were mistaken, confused, unenlightened or misinformed, but that would just to be the kind of expression which was happen
who
said the
required
by
opposite of what he did. It is consistent in fact, it is the determinist's position that it might happen that
his
he replies to
reply would be no
When
fruitful,
desirable, confirmable
and so on, he is, according to his own theory, expressing something he had to say and which others could not say unless they had been similarly compelled. The deone to say that there is nothing wrong or right in holding to the theory and nothing wrong or right in opposing it. The formulation of the theory and the acceptance or
terminist's theory allows
rejection of
it
are,
by
that theory
itself,
also
predetermined
by
the alien power. The determinist can claim nothing; he can exhibit the fact that an external force compels him to say only
something.
If this
were
it
was so
would be followed by one set of occurrences here and by another world there would also be occurrences following on the opposite statement, "this is not a deterministic world." If each statement were followed by statements of agreement or disagreement, there would be a semblance of discourse. Yet none of the statements would be judged or argued, if by judgment or argument we mean that which is deliberately affirmed in the light of what is meant. There can be no deliberately asserted truth in a
there. In such a
must
affirm that
it is
who know
are so far
26
how accommodating
someone
is
its
scheme,
it
making
a respon-
judgment of its merits. If a determinist, on the other hand, denies that he freely considers and responsibly adopts his position, he denies that he has a view which opposes others; his view is then
acknowledged to be but one verbal fact among a multitude, no better or worse, no more or less important, than any other.
is, that he has a theory, that other men ought also to accept, something the more surely must he grant that it is false, since only thus can he to have someone pass a responsible judgment on its value expect
a determinist
it is
and that
it is
and meaning, or follow the trend and evaluate the arguments on its behalf. If determinism rules the day, we cannot know that it does.
We
true,
istic
to
make
us say that
it is
without being able to judge whether it is or no. A determinworld is one in which the deterministic thesis could not be
offered as true because such a world allows no place for beings who are responsible for asserting truths.
3.
HALF-WAY DETERMINISMS
So long as there are determinists who mean what they say, so long must it be true that there is something more than blind forces
making men
marking
affirm, willy-nilly,
is
what they
deterministic view
so intriguing that
there, while
in operation elsewhere.
Thus
of
one might contend that determinism holds of all of nature, but not all of man. Such an answer, however, eventually ends by dividing
supposes that man has a body which necessarily moves under the pressure of forces exerted from without, and that
man
in
two.
It
which
acts freely,
It
supposes that
man
as a
body
is
a de-
Half-'way Determinisms
limited region within the
27
as a soul
he stands
above and outside nature, a being really free. cannot put a man's body into a determined world and keep his soul outside, without making him, as both Descartes and Kant
We
two distinct beings. To see man as one that the soul has nothing to do or that it again, suppose interplays with the body in such a way as to make man an exception in nature, affected as he is the acts of a soul which is not
were forced
to do, into
we must
by
caught within the controls that dominate other things. It is hard to decide which of these alternatives is worse. The former affirms
that man has a soul, but has no reason for saying so; the latter says that he can act, but only because he has been defined as an ex-
ceptional kind of being, possessed of a mysterious and private power totally unlike that which any another being can have.
man may
be said to have a soul which quickens and sustains his but that soul ought to be comparable to the "souls" within body, other things. If man needs a "soul" to provide his body with vitality
reasons.
and energy, other beings need "souls" as well for similar But then man will not be an exception in nature; the laws
of his behavior will be comparable to the laws that govern the behavior of other beings.
Once
grant that a
man can
it
is
granted that he can act and decide on his own responsibility and is so far not caught within a deterministic scheme, whether this be
Laplacian or Hegelian in temper. And if man is a single natural being, the indeterminism which characterizes him must also characterize other beings. The only tenable theories of determinism, in a world where men are part of nature and can decide the ques-
determinism following upon the present indeterminism, or that there was a deterministism once which somehow gave way to the
men and
present indeterminism. Both affirm that with the elimination of a change in the rest of nature, a determinism would hold
complete sway.
The
known
28
or judged at the time that it existed, but if the determinism were possible, the inability to know it would also, of course, not prevent
it
from occurring.
The
backwards
thus
is
indifferently, but
which
itself
has
no passage
in
it
and
not really time at all. Or his universe is one in which time has the status of an external reality which beats out intervals redeterminism denies real gardless of what goes on elsewhere.
becoming and therefore precludes the possibility of a time that integral to the things and processes of the world.
If there
is
only
if
could replace ours an external time could be made to change places with our could be a deterministic universe
it
own
charof,
A determinism
unknown
is
time,
which we
sense or not.
Determinism
the world as
It conflicts
only with
theory of our universe, not in itself. There might have been a universe in which impossible there was no ingredient time, or in which there were only passive
it is. It is
particulars.
annihilated to
make room
give place to it. But in neither case would the deterministic scheme be one that could be reached through any extension, backwards or
is
Half-way Determinisms
terministic in nature,
this will
29
But though there never was a time when our universe was deand though there never will be a time when
be true, there
is
is
a sense in
which
a deterministic account
of this world
always pertinent. After an effect has occurred, it is a determinate result, as are all its conditions and the course by
it
which
is
relevant to
what
is
past,
never to the world as present or as future. Since it is historians, not scientists, who are concerned with the world as having passed
away,
it is
who
should take
the theory of determinism seriously. Scientists, not historians, should be antideterministic in spirit, for it is scientists and not
historians
who are concerned with the present and future. Historians and scientists usually reverse their proper roles. Historians are inclined to look at the past as though it were still future
as
though
it
probabilities.
domain of unpredictable occurrences and Scientists, on the other hand, tend to deal with the
were
a
present and future as though it were already past as though it were a field of certainties and foregone conclusions. Only historians can
deduce actual
effects; scientists
must be content to
sur-
mise.
abandon
his
the past, any more than a scientist must abandon his habits to deal with the future. The one must conform to the determinations of
fact; the other
must conform
to the determinations
which
will
ensue in fact.
As
one portion of the past and another, he moves as a free being who is now trying to make his freedom conform to the contours of the
necessity with
which he
is
concerned.
is
nor
his
no given necessity for him to which but only a necessity which is in the freedom must conform,
less free,
though there
to know and are prepared for is the concrete not yet but can be. But what can be is now indeterminate;
The
30
desire to
know what the future holds in store leads men to try to the nature of that future in advance of that concrete course specify of becoming by which alone the future is made specific and actual,
They
they endow
possess.
with specifications
it
tend to anticipate the future; does not yet and may never
Their assertions regarding the future, accordingly, involve an overdetermination of the nature of the general possibilities which constitute that future. Their tendency to overdetermine the
content of the future
tories in
is
their vic-
All
men
Those who
follow the romantics and cherish the vague and amorphous, exhibit the same error of overdetermination that is characteristic of their
opponents, the classicists. They recognize that the classicists overdetermine their data. They think, however, that this is an inevitable result of the use of a mind, the favored tool of the classicists.
They therefore urge us not to use our minds, and to try instead to know the nature of things by some other device. Yet any other device we might employ can also serve to impose determinations
in
advance of
a concrete course of
becoming.
is itself
The mind
The
data, but they themselves tend to overdetermine the operations of the mind in order to account for the preceding error. The classicists reciprocate; they recognize that romantics overdetermine
data.
They
that the romantics give excessive weight to the emotions as a source of knowledge. Both sides make similar errors and similarly
misunderstand
versies
why
their
opponents erred.
Many
of the contro-
similar
which beset philosophy seem to be characterizable in a way. Each side recognizes that the other overdetermines its
it
of the
Activity
31
Most philosophers show great ability in ferretting out the errors of others, but their explanations of those errors are usually inadequate. Their explanations too often exhibit the very vice of overdetermination which they are so anxious to condemn. In noting this fact one need not of course commit a similar error. It is one
thing to say that overdetermination is a tempting vice. It is another thing to say that all thinkers must overdetermine their data, or that
the character and
in advance.
The
vice of overdetermination.
no need to overdetermine any particular content. The tendency to overdetermine need not eventuate in an error; it may in fact assume the form of a lucky hit. We cannot, therefore,
There
is
know in
in
men
they exaggerate some phase or power to the detriment of others. If the past is determinate as error, we can anticipate some of the
errors that will thereafter ensue.
will occur.
Nor
can
we know
But we have no guarantee they just what form they will take.
4.
ACTIVITY
There
and
fields
are independent beings in nature as well as events, energy of force. These beings act with freedom, i.e., with a
not predetermined. Because they strength, character, and direction act in this way, there are multiple effects all of which, though
rigorously deducible once they have occurred, are not intrinsically detail. It is often possible, anticipatable in their concreteness and
however, to make a shrewd guess as to what will ensue. Freedom is exercised within determinable limits and is usually exhibited in a
between cup and lip, it novel ways. But on the whole it moves
32
done know
ever,
be.
along a fairly even course, and those who know what has been in part something of what is likely to be. No one, how-
possibly know just what will actually actually be is made determinate when
treats
and
occurs.
Determinism erroneously
what
will be as
though
it
were
fully determinate before it occurs in fact. It is a possible view if one is willing to detach time from the universe and identify the
possible
is
and the
actual.
Determinism
the expression of an undivided force to be viewed as an ultimate matter of fact. It thereby misses one of the most obtrusive of
phenomena,
ited
causation each of
the occurrence of multiple independent lines of which owes its being to the interplay of a limcausation.
Each
is
a function of a
number
of a stone
of freely produced, independent activities. The breaking is a course embracing the action of a man with a hammer
a resisting stone.
The
course
is
constituted
by
these activities and exists only while and because they do. It takes
place independently of such concurrent processes as a cow's ing of a cud and a bird's flight through the air.
chew-
The
activities
may be termed the "causes" of the course of causation which they constitute, if one is willing to use "cause" in somewhat the same
did at times as an essential analytic component what exists. But this would be to speak strangely. Activities are no more the "cause" of a course than the shape and size of a circle
are the causes of a circle, or speaking and answering are the causes of a conversation. Activities are causes of a course only in the sense
that they are essential to
its
being, existing
They
are
its
constituents,
the whole
which they
at another.
constitute.
Activities, like courses, begin at
Activity
33
we
reach an atomic activity which cannot, without destroying the unity of the act and the fact of time, be divided further.* In each
unit activity there
after,
is
a part that
is
is
earlier
before and another part that is or later than another. Each unit
is
some
Each
tuted
mark
if
by preceding
But
we
treat
it
in this
way we
neglect the fact that an activity, like anything else having a temporal stretch, is determinate only after the stretch has been covered.
As
determinate, an activity
is
What
has "gone before" in any other sense makes it possible for an activity to take place.
An
activity
is
self-determined; or,
more accurately
is
determined and
thus produced freely when and as it occurs. The agent is compelled to act by what has gone before, but the action is his own, then and
there
Each
marks of habits and experiences its agent the resistance of the agent's body and the opthe world beyond. Together direct, free expressions of their
by neighbors and
with those
agents constitute a public course. Each course is thus the resultant of a free activity interplaying with activities and resistances outside
it.
Because
it is
constituted
by
activities, a
course
is
not explicable
by what has gone before. Because a course is unpredictable, the effect which follows it cannot be known until the course is finished. If
account
is
34
known
y.
FREEDOM AND
free
ITS PUBLIC
is
BONDS
Each
is
its occurrence. That possibility possibility of is constituted by the possibilities of the constituents of a previous course, and limits the shape which a present course can assume.
constrained.
fore-
Thus,
like all processes, the present inclement weather has subordinate constituents, and these together constitute the possibility which is the essence of future weather. That future weather inits being and meaning, a possible course of rainor snowing. If it does rain, the broad possibility of ing, hailing, weather as allowing for rain, hail, etc., is realized in one of many
cludes, as part of
alternative determinate ways. Actual rain is possible weather transformed in a special and unpredictable manner.
is
a passive resultant of the interplay of its constituents. They think that a history of a nation is synonymous with the biography of
individual heroes or of a multitude of independent but interacting creative figures. Their position depends on the neglect of the fact
that the different possibilities correlative to the different constitu-
ents constitute a single possibility which is correlative to a course of becoming, embracing those constituents. Were they persistent,
they would have to say that all causal chains, physical or nonphysical, human and subhuman, were nothing more than summary
statements of the activities of separate self-determining beings. But it is just as sound to deny that a nation has a nature and a possibility
of
its
that nation
and incidentally
its
water and not oxygen or hydrodeny that is wet, or that the possible career of the water limits the gen depossible careers of its constituents. Men sometimes start wars
members,
as it is to
liberately
Freedom and
have a nature of their
Its
Public Bonds
35
own
Men may
die, be frustrated, conquered or disarmed, but a war can only stop or continue, being incapable of death or conquest. Beings create bigger than they know. The whole they make possible may be
good or may be bad. In either case a future is defined which limits what the beings and the whole they constitute can do. At the other extreme are those who speak of group minds, the
Constitution, a nation, or an institution as creative forces having an internal wisdom and a private objective. They think of these as
substantial realities, ruthlessly using men and things as instruments. Since these supposed realities stand with respect to an all-embracing Absolute as they stand to individual beings, rigor would require these thinkers to treat the world as the expression of a single
cosmic power.
The
position
is
a variant
of determinism with
its
passive or unreal particulars, even when, as in the case of Hegel, the Absolute is endowed with infinite and is described as flexibility
being
is
free. It
is,
however,
just as
a conversation
say that a process, alone has internal vitality, and that concrete things and their acts are nought but instruments for this process. war There are no wars when men stop shooting at their enemies.
a reality using
men
as instruments as it is to
cosmic or
local,
is
bigger than men, but every step of it depends on how men act. Having finished shooting at the enemy, an army can turn into a
riotous
mob
in
which
countrymen.
No spirit
way; and suspicion, fear and anger multiplied a thousandfold define the riot as a new possibility which some random act may help make
real. It is
from on
individual discontent
never the institution that is alone to blame; men always have the power to alter the direction in which it goes. Neither the extreme of individualism nor of groupism is satisfactory. Nor is the situation saved by balancing one with the
cannot say that there is a separate life to groups and another to individual things without dividing the world into two parts, the one made up of individuals who are outside all states,
other.
We
institutions
an indifferent
Insti-
own way.
tutions are not things; they are courses made possible by individuals. The individuals act on their own, but the results of their actions are limited
by
the actions of those beings constitute. Each course has a future of its own, which is a function of the futures its constituents define.
The course
future
has no
power
to become.
But
as it
agency of constituent
activities, it
it,
then and there freshly constituted. There is no law to which a course blindly conforms, no end towards which it strives. Laws are general, a course is concrete; and
striving
is can speak signifisomething only things can do. of the decline and fall of nations, of the dialectic of history, cantly or of the spirit of the time. But we then must, at least tacitly, ac-
We
knowledge
that
what
will be
may be
is
quite different
possibility general, allowing for endless determinations which always add content and sometimes divergent radically change the meaning of that possibility.
Each course is a concrete occurrence which realizes a possiIn realizing the possibility, the course bility that was foreshadowed.
changes the status and meaning of the
just as correct to say that a possibility
it is
possibility. It
is,
therefore,
is
fulfilled as it is to
say that
is
reconstitution, reconstitution
a fulfillment. If
rhythm, that
it
that every nation had a characteristic contracted only to expand, rose only to decline,
were true
conquered only to be conquered, the stage which it had not yet gone through would be a constraint which it vitalized in its own
into a more or less significant aspect of itself. The decline which it faced it could forestall to any degree, prospective and for an endless time, by virtue of the way in which it actually
way
to
make
came
to be.
reassesses the
meaning which
Freedom and
Its
Public Bonds
its
37
is
course
is
also constrained
by
constituents. It
because
beings have their own capacities which they fulfill independently and freely that a course develops as it does. Because men interest
of
men
Each course
the course and
future,
is
also constrained
its
and what
by its neighbors. The futures of constitute a wider and more inclusive neighbors one course does to isolate and utilize its charwhat
the others can do.
Each
constrains and
in turn constrained
by
the others as surely as they vitalize and transform it. There are independent but no perfectly isolated systems in the world; there are
no courses which go on
where.
entirely undisturbed
a part of
inclusive courses
Each course converges on a future which is the future of the world as a whole and which is what it is because of what the courses and existing things are. Each course and thing accordingly
is,
by
a single
own way,
separating out of
a limited
and pertinent component in the act of coming to be. The determinist is one for whom there are only unvitalized
constraints,
more
real
imposed from above. He subscribes to an Absolute, and powerful than any subordinate course or thing. But
mon
to whatever
cannot exert a
comThat future is almost amorphous; it present. force. It is made determinate and realized through
is, is
is
the actions of actual present beings which diversely specify it as limited relevant possibilities and attempt to make these concrete. The single cosmic future is divided and thereby transformed
in the
form of limited
possibilities.
Those
in turn are realized and thereby enriched by possibilities being made the termini of actual specific courses of coming to be. Behind both acts of enrichment are individuals, concrete, inde-
pendent, interacting, and free. It is they to whom all activities and ultimately all courses must be referred for substance, for
origin, for explanation
between which
all
becoming occurs.
CHAPTER THREE
EACH BEING
is
is
something on the
Otherwise
it
dependent for its nature and existence an adjective of something further, and so on.
the inside. It
it
is, in addition, something from with a characteristic perspective. Otherwise being would not express itself in an individual way. Each has an indi-
Each
what concerns
is
it.
It is a
bounded
influence of other beings. Otherwise, it reality, restraining the would be completely permeated by others and could not appear
as a
Each
It
is,
in addition,
something from
it
until it
was
at
possible.
Each being
is
dealt
with
Each being is something on the inside and from the inside, something on the outside and from the outside. It is an independent,
is
individual reality, countering and taking account of others. And it all these at once. To suppose that any one, any pair or any
triad of these aspects exhausts the nature of a being
is
to divide the
indivisible.
What
is
distinct in
thought
it
is
may
39
40
The Nature
of Beings
Leibniz thought that beings had only insides. His monads, with
their tightly closed
them
windows, were isolated universes. To make constitute a single universe where each was pertinent to the
had to invoke a
others, he
related.
God
in terms of
The
Hegelians went
They took
ac-
count only of the outside of beings. According to them, the Absolute alone was real, all other beings having been denied substantiality
mere
surfaces, decorating nothing, insubstantial termini or facets of a single reality. Leibniz had only a Hegel only a One.
Many,
The
Hegel, isolated and reified what beings were from the inside and from the outside. Schopenhauer, for example, tried to deal with
beings from the vantage of their insides, with the result that he
was unable
acknowledge them as provocative objects. On his had no substantial insides of their own, no boundaries theory, they where they resisted others, and no outside limits from which an
to
approach to them could be made. Hume, on the other hand, viewed other beings only from the outside. For him, each was
knowable only so
far as
it
could make
its
presence
felt.
The
beings
in his experienced world had no substance, restrained nothing and never looked beyond their boundaries. Schopenhauer had only
Hume
nothing to object.
Whitehead recognizes that all beings are something from the outside and on the outside, on the inside and from the inside. He
is
Humean
all
in the Leibnizian
Hegelian who nevertheless insists that there is truth and Schopenhauerian views. But instead of affirm-
ing that
four aspects are conjointly exemplified, he supposes that beings first assume the state of having insides and approaching others from those insides, and that they then move on to the state
where they have only outsides and are approached from the outside. For him, the problem of how beings can be both private suband public objects is, as it were, solved in time. And when jects
Insistence
ie
41
solved this apparently being the essential task of an entity has, he thinks, no further need to be, and very entity derefore gives way at once to a new being which begins to solve iie problem over again, and so on, endlessly. But it is when and
problem
is
/hile a
being
is
something on and from the inside that it is someoutside. Its career does not consist in solving
problems of the one and the many, of subject and object; it is Because the problems are already solved that it is able to have a
areer at
If,
all.
in Leibnizian fashion,
rest of
he universe in the effort to keep it private and self -enclosed, one chieves the paradoxical result that, in order to be one private being
If,
in Hegelian fashion,
make them
anywhere
members of
ult that
>r
for anything. Each being is at once public and private, with an mtside and an inside. The windows of Leibniz' monads are open,
>ut
still
hold.
If, with Schopenhauer, one tries to hold that beings have char.cteristic perspectives but no individual natures, one achieves the
is
nothing for or on which to take a insists that beings can be dealt with
>nly
:al
their outsides,
result that there are no beings to approach. )nce subject and object, approaching others from
Each being
it
is
at
)eing approached
ilso
:o
by them from
its
outside.
subjects,
express.
2.
INSISTENCE
Though
all
42
other. It
The Nature
makes
little
of Beings
difference in
so long as all of them are understood as being inseparately together. are all accustomed, however, to approach things first from the outside. That aspect, then, as well be dealt with first. might
We
Other beings make their presence felt here where we now are. They insist on themselves and thereby give us relative positions and characters with respect to them. Their insistence is a means by
which they
An
it
did not,
other beings would be blank tablets on which the insistent being wrote its signature without blur; they would be unbiased, passive,
felt. If
by
experience, then, one intends to refer to insistence alone, it must be confessed that no one can learn from experience, since no insistence is ever met outside the context of an opposing resistance,
reflecting something of the nature of the individual intruded upon. The shape, the color, the taste, the texture of a being are some-
times spoken of as though they were pure manifestations of it, or as though they had a different nature in different contexts, exist-
ing by virtue of the power of an intruding eye, tongue or finger. Public colors and shapes vary from context to context, but they vary in this way because there are private, constant, resistant colors
and shapes which are being manifested in these different contexts. Each being resists the intrusion of others in a characteristic way;
each has
its
own
it
The
not
its
it is
a resisted insistence
The
it
As
such,
possession of resisted insistence belongs also to the inconstitutes the public outside limit of that
viewed
as the
two
sides of the
same
fact.
The
by
cation of a resistance
Insistence
43
the result of the qualification of the insistence by the alien resistant. Every being has public traits as a consequence of its resistance to
at the
boundis
of other beings, for there its characteristic insistence tered by an effective resistance.
coun-
Each being
resists
has public traits and outside limits. Each not only the intrusion of others but itself insists and is resisted by
those others. As mutually resisting one another, existents have the status of localized, detached individuals; as reciprocally insisting
on themselves they dwell in a common space. Each being spreads beyond the borders where we normally locate it; it is a static, extensive continuum of decreasing insistency.
Its
spread
is
sult
overlapped by the insistent spread of others. The respace. Space is thus a product, presupposing mutual extenis
sive insistencies.
sistencies
That space
constitute
it
is flat
in-
which
is
have a
minimum
of common
content.
Curved space
mum,
concordant, reciprocal insistencies. The space between distant inanimate beings is flat, for these beings impose themselves on
other cases, space is is the space of inanimate beings in close proximity; it is the space also in which the living always dwell. All beings exist in different types of space or better, all live in a physical space intensified and contorted in different degrees
intensity.
all
In
and ways.
another
known that the members of a mob affect one considerably. The fly on the pavement is nothing to them;
It is
well
they are closer to one another than they are to the fly, and this though they are at opposite ends of the courtyard. Their contortion of space
is
as basic a fact as
is
by two
more
by approaching closer, reciprocally insist than they did before. The astronomical world is effectively a variant of worlds long familiar to painters and psychologists.
The most
contorted space
is
that
44
fied
The Nature
of Beings
how
and contorted, not a new space or an illusion of space somehovering over and partly obscuring a real space beneath.
is
an independent ultimate entity, or that it exists only to relate or frame physical bodies. Such beliefs preclude the possibility of space being contorted in
is
There
proportion to the degree that concordant beings are more insistent, which we arbitrarily that the space in
interested in
Living beings dwell in a contorted space. So far as they are one another, they contort their space still further. Each insists on itself in the face of opposing insistencies. Each
takes account of the others, insistently approaching them from their outside limits. Each it were, insistently looks backwards, as
point
where it is.
an environment.
exist in
They
insistently take
account
Were
this
impossible to perceive. These all presuppose reciprocal abilities on the part of beings to insist on themselves and thereby contort the
space that
elements, without apparent limit, are producible by binding together spatially limited wholes to form single, more contorted spatial unities. Elements can be made to disintegrate, on the
New
other hand,
less
is
when they
are forced to
form
distinct, subordinate,
is
sudden the
result
It would be a mistake to follow Hume and try to build a theory of nature solely on the basis of what can be discovered by attending to the outside limits of beings. Hume leads one to treat en-
countered insistencies
sistance.
as
He
asks us to abstract
things; he
wants us to ignore the fact that all beings dwell in an environment which they help constitute. Hume saw that by re-
Resistance
45
stricting himself to what is known from the outside, he could go no further than to acknowledge a world of distinct atomic surfaces, present to the knower but not presented to him, owned by nothing,
indifferent to the existence of anything else. The tragedy of was that he thought that this was a sound philosophical result,
Hume
assumptions.
3.
RESISTANCE
defiance at attempts to intrude upon them. The softest, most unstable and fluid being is as opposed to intrusion as
All beings
show
the hardest, most stable and rigid, differing from the latter only in the degree to which it can retain its public shape, traits and
rock is no place in the face of an alien insistence. to an attempted intrusion than butter. But the latter
and push about with comparative ease, the former with difficulty. Both resist with equal power and effect an attempt to disturb
their privacy, but the
one is forced to undergo a change in public while the other continues to have more or less the pubproperties, lic traits it had before. Air opposes us as surely as iron. But air so
is
it
readily assumes the shape of our bodies, so readily bears and decorated with colors, sounds and odors, that we almost forget
exists, as reluctant as iron to
world.
power to resist the onslaught of all the would lose its status as an individual indeand become the creature of another. The space bependent being tween them would become a space inside the intruder, interhas the
If it
Each being
could not,
it
vening between its substantial self and the creature it possessed. The intruded being would thereby be deprived of all power to insist as well as to resist and could neither take account of the intruder nor be in a public world with it. The intruder would therefore no longer have outside limits at the intruded being. But then
the intruded
possessed;
it
would
46
The Nature
of Beings
press against
it.
When
I let it
go
it resists
me
still
to
some extent
an independent being, a part of the same contemporary spatial world with me. But the degree of resistance which it then exhibits
as
is less
than
it
is
able to increase
its
re-
sistance
when
I
pick
it
up
it
again,
it
must have
it
resistance in reserve.
The
harder
on
all
the
more surely
annihilate
reveals that
it is
per-
possible intrusion.
To
much power
something.
as
would be necesary
is
to create
is
something to nothing
as great as
Only
God,
overcome
the resistance of the most feeble thing in existence. Whatever exists has sufficient resistance in reserve to withstand the insistence of
being, severally and together. Each is adamanthat fact in an actual resistance to attempted intrutine, expressing sions and a readiness to resist still further. Others can alter its
finite
shape and change its traits, but none can annihilate it in the sense of turning its being into nothing. It may pass away, but that will
be due in part to
rected though
it
its
own
and
di-
may be by others.
of a being, the boundaries of it as a localized public are a function of the resistance it expresses and the insistence entity, it suffers. The being's outside is the resistance it can express; it is
traits
The
the
power
when
an insistence
is
encoun-
tered.
outside is achieved by negating the insistence a encounters and reducing the remaining resistance to pobeing tentiality. This can be done in one of two ways: either by infer-
Knowledge of an
ring
like
were
it
infinitely distant
from
Resistance
47
everything else, or by pointing to it as something to which reference is being made. The first method requires one to know how
its
actual resistance progressively diminishes as others, and extrapolating to the limit; the second
that
it
it
recedes from
requires
method
be viewed
as
server.
side
method we get the result that its individual outof potential energy which it actualizes as it comes quantity into finite relation with other beings; by the second method we get
By
the
first
is
its
outside
is
converge.
"it" is to treat
as
though
it
were
infinitely distant.
versely, to view a being as infinitely distant is to credit it with no other actual nature than that of being denotable. The object of a
denotation
is
is
infinitely distant
traits
from everything
is
Each being
has
some public
and thus
well as potentially resistant. An act of indication terminates in a bare "it," in an object as though it were infinitely distant. The "it" at which it terminates is
actually as
a contentless point. If knowledge of the object is to be possible, that point must be united with the traits which the object has in
The judgment, "It is a cat" thus brings together the infinitely distant outside, the being as a bare "it," with its related outside, with the traits the being possesses due to the inrelation to others.
sistence of others.
The
but
it
does
refer to
by
itself;
the "cat"
tells
us
much, but
what
it tells is
things beyond.
"It" refers to a being as
it it
as
it
on the
As Hegel
But
real,
required a denial
that there
versals.
were any things individual and concrete beyond the uniAs a consequence, "it" for him became a universal on a
itself
level
treated as nothing
more than an
48
"it" multiplied
The Nature
their outsides,
of Beings
were on
and congealed. Hegel tried to get to things as they but since those outsides were for him nobe, as
he
readily admitted, naught but terms in discourse or in the mind. Hegel knew that an "it" is a mediated result, something derivaits concreteness. But he drew the false conwas therefore not the immediate outside of the object denoted. What was denoted, instead of being acknowledged as possessed immediately by an individual being, became for Hegel
tive,
not an object in
it
clusion that
it
an entity existing and known only through mediation. He viewed as an outside which the Absolute mind, through a process of
self-expression,
at the
treated outsides as though they were the outside limits of an solute rather than as the outsides of individual beings, Hegel
Abwas
away from the beings to which they belonged and thus had to deny that they were real outsides at all. The supposition that beings are only outsides drives one to deny
compelled to tear the outsides
that they possess those outsides. The outsides will then have to be attributed to an Absolute as that which alone can possess anything. Since an Absolute
is
immediately what
it
is,
and since a
known
outside
is
is
to affirm that those outsides are self-mediated, that they are the borders of the Absolute viewed from and produced from
Absolute
The Hegelian, by acknowledging only the outsides of beings, is driven to deny that there are beings for which they could be outsides. It is one of the ironies of history that contemporary positiand pragmatic thought, while claiming to be anti-Hegelian in temper, nevertheless accepts this Hegelian conclusion. For it, too,
vistic
there are only outsides. Instead of those outsides being produced by an Hegelian Absolute substance however, they are produced,
according to contemporaries, by an Absolute language or science. It is difficult to believe that this represents an advance over Hegel.
mediation.
To
deal
The
with beings
as
Inside
49
them from
it is
their outsides.
knowledge, requiring an act of abstraction. To deal with a being as immediately on its outside, we must transcend its actual re-
sistance.
The
Hegelian,
by
identifying mediated
knowledge and
mediated existence, inevitably identifies the known outsides of beings with the self-imposed limits of an Absolute. If, in contrast
we
are to
acknowledge
it
as also
4.
THE INSIDE
Its inside is
endlessly outwards, insisting on itself with the focus of all its diversely ex-
it is
there that
it is
infinitely insistent,
ready to
nature on anything which could reach it. Could another impose ever get to its inside, that other would be swallowed without being
remainder.
The
inside of a being
is
inviolable.
This
is
the truth
which Leib-
and which led him to affirm that each being was sundered from every other. But, though a being as completely that does not mean that it makes no private is ineluctably private,
niz so clearly saw,
contact with anything beyond. It is not merely private; its privacy And though no one can force himself into is but one of its aspects.
it, it still
can be known.
The
resistance
which one
offers
it
can be
abstracted from, and the insistence remaining considered as maximized, either by inferring what the being would be like were it
infinitely close, or
for judgment to
the being that is judged. The first method requires a knowledge of how a being's insistence increases as it is approached, and an extrapolation to the limit; the second method requires us to submit
as the arbiter of passively to the being
what is
By the
50
first
The Nature
method we get
of Beings
on
its
is
in-
finitely insistent, the unitary focus of its diverse insistencies; the second, that its inside is the substantial correlate of what
by
we
articulately know of it. The two methods converge, for to treat a being as the substantial correlate of articulate knowledge is to
treat
If
it
as infinitely insistent
on being
itself.
is
articulated,"
if
we mean
by
it
in
judgment of an abstracted
subject or subjects with a predicate or relation, then the inside of a being is not an object of knowledge. It is an unknown thing-initself.
The
comes
into a judgment.
But
in a
we can know the inside of a being. We can adumbrate it. In fact, we acknowledge it every moment as the correlate of our knowledge, and report it whenever we employ a copula to unite a subject and a predicate, or whenever we use a relation to
broader sense
link denoted subjects together. The adumbrated is the real as outside articulate knowledge, a of subject and predicate freed from extraneous additions and
unity
It
as more substantial than their judged togetherness. can be reached by submitting the content of the mind to the act to know, but that whole activity is framed thing known.
acknowledged
We
against a
background of a passivity which allows the being about which we know to shape our minds according to its nature. We submit our minds to the thing while standing apart from the thing. If we merely submitted, we would lose what is submitted, just as,
if
we
we would
about
which we know.
Knowledge is always of what is other than itself; otherwise it would be neither true nor false. It is less concrete than the object known; otherwise what we knew would exhaust the being of what we know. All knowledge has a subject matter with which we are in contact, making evident that there is still more to be articulately known. We come in contact with the insides of beings directly, by submitting what we have in mind to those insides. We exhaust
The
Inside
the activity of the mind, as it were, before we exhaust the mind's allow the remaining potentialities of the mind to potentialities. be determined by what lies beyond, the result of our previous ac-
We
what
lies
outside them.
We
which our minds can be moulded by adumbrate at the same time that we
as having
articulate
an
infinite insistence
supporting their
assert
acknowledged
resistance.
As
a consequence,
we
"This
is
being when and as we assert something of it. As infinitely resistant, a being is entirely potential. When
it
be-
comes
active,
it
acquires public
traits. Its
an
traits are
not speci-
contained in it as a subject. If we supposed they were, we would, with Leibniz, confound subject matter with subject. Public traits are specifications of the subject matter not of the subject. To con-
found
a subject
with
a
is
object of knowledge,
insistence
subject matter, to make a subject into an to turn an infinite resistance into an infinite
possibility of
gether.
Though
denoting altoan
"it," it tells us
is
not
public setting. Each being is an "it," but only some, in this To refer to these as setting, can assume the shape of a public cat.
in a
"cats"
not to predicate anything of the beings as denoted or as to find a public trait, the correlate of an "it," in terms private; of which the infinitely insistent inside can be judged.
is it is
are schools of thought which deny that beings have inor that the insides can be adumbrated. There is nothing, sides, then, which they can claim their knowledge is about. In opposition
There
to
them
are those
who deny
is
more than
self-con-
tained insides.
no knowledge, then, which they can claim to have about those beings. The one cut themselves away from the world, the other cut the world away from themselves. Neither
There
can distinguish fact from fancy, supposition from truth, knowledge from being, for such distinctions require that one be faced
52
The Nature
made.
of Beings
judgment
is
of beings as surely as
we
can to their
we
it
can
can
know
as
either facet
we
know a being as an infinitely resistant "it," we an infinitely insistent inside as well. To know must extrapolate to the limit, or transcend an ex-
pressed resistance.
either of these
Those who deny that a being can be grasped in ways can acknowledge only public traits belonging
to nothing, without power or substance. But whereas when wfe that a being is an "it," we fully represent a real facet of it, we say
cannot completely express what it is on its inside. An inside is undivided and concrete; our representations of it are divided and
abstract.
characters,
Because as an "it" a being is naked, without determinate we can exhaust all that can be said of it by using a
we
it is
We
ing a being
can get to an inside most readily by submissively presentwith the result of our judgment of it. But it takes a
creative artist to obtain a fairly accurate judgment, and it takes the humility of a saint to yield the result wholly to the substance
probe deeper and deeper to the inside the more we attempt to express it and the more readily we allow our judgment to be supported and perhaps therefore altered by the object we
judged.
We
seek to know. Privacy is open to humility and never to force. It is the adumbrated background of an outside as integrated with an expressed resistance. For some it is very obscure, for others quite
what they
submissively they present to the inside clearly or obscurely abstractly the inside is always discerned. All beings get something of noted,
clear,
depending on
how
the outside of others and submit the result to the insides of those
others for support.
Nothing
is
easier,
in contact
with a
thing-in-itself.
Though
by
this to refer
only to the
The
in-
Concern
side of each
is
53
as
always
available.
an
abstraction from a real being beyond, directly discerned. What is strange is not that the inside can be discerned, despite the being's irresistible antagonism to intrusion and its insistence on
itself,
but that
men
it
exists
or
can be encountered in any sense. Once we refuse to exaggerate a distinction into a division, to force an arbitrary, unbridgeable
discursive
and the
and the
substance, judgment and that which is judged, knowledge and being, syntax and semantics, the public and the private, subject and
subject matter, the articulated and the adumbrated, there is however no longer anything in the way of an admission of the truth
of Hegel's insight.
only in theory do we attain the height of arrogance off from the vital substance of other beings.
5.
CONCERN
way
of reaching from the concrete it to lay hold of
is
a concern, a
the agency
by which
is
the
common
to
all
beings,
is
common
it is
future
a single
less
harmonious
totality of
all
neither
more nor
Any
specification of
specific
good
is
The
good
with which a being is concerned is a single, cosmic, absolute good, congealed and individualized in one of many possible ways.
From
the inside, to be
is
If that good is not to be discrepant with the goods which concern other beings, it must be made to determine what goods are to be available to those others. So far as a being fails to limit the goods
its
good
is
with or
The
highest
good
54
The Nature
is
of Beings
possible to an individual
the goods that concern other beings. Each being, through the agency of the highest relevant good
concern,
tries to
focus on
the goods that are possible to others. This requires the concern not only to carve out a good of its own but to prescribe what goods are to
is
which
in
harmony with
be available to the
rest, to
make con-
tact with them as they are from their insides and thereby limit what they can become on the inside. All beings, however, are
finite.
both
is the complete master of others. The good of each and yields to the prescriptions of the rest. The good of each being is a good whose nature is to some de-
None
defies
gree prescribed
a being
it
is
by
others.
As
a consequence, the
actually concerned fails to some degree to be as good as would be were the being alone or all-powerful, and at the same
fails
time
to
some degree
concern of others.
In the very act of concentrating on its good, a being loses part of the total good. By submitting to or rejecting the prescriptions imposed by others it qualifies what it concentrates on. And since
its
it
accordingly, good. three removes from perfection, the total good as cosmic and common. Hope for a being and hope for the world lies in the ability
is,
What
is
realized
is
which
'
it
now
embodies and expresses, and in its ability to realize it had realized a lesser good before.
this
new good
acorn depends in part on what is pospossible for the and what is possible to the soil depends in part on sible to the soil,
is
What
is
what
There is no firm and perfect oak possible to the acorn. the acorn now, or awaiting the acorn in the firmament. quickening
change
in the nature of the actual soil
makes
a different soil
and
And
Concern
55
indeterminate, awaiting full determination by the action of the acorn. radical enough change in the constitution of the soil
would so alter the future possible to the acorn that the oak it could become would be quite different from the oaks we know. Aristotelian final causes are possibilities
which change
in the course of
time.
And
make them
good which concerns others is embodied in own good is embodied in our hopes. We always know something of our own good and something of the good of others; expectation and hope are ingredient
Knowledge of
the
in
all
know them
inside,
knowledge. Because we expectantly know other things, we not merely as they are from the outside and on the
but also
as
wards
we
did not
know
that an
apple could not write or speak but could grow and be eaten, we would not know the apple as a substantial being with a definite
predilection towards the limited possibility of being ripe, nourishing and fruitful. To know anything is to know it as having a special,
The
the inside
attempt to deal with a being as though it were nothing from is an attempt to deal with it as though nothing or every-
thing were possible to it. Yet the most elementary acquaintance with an apple involves a reference to what it is concerned with an expectation would be known realizing. An apple impervious to
as
wholly
in the
present.
It
being
as
though
it
could be
it
grasped only from the inside is an attempt though it were nothing but a unique mode of
to deal with
striving. If
as
we
take
is
it
that Schopenhauerian approach, we overlook the fact that there a being which strives, that there is something against which
strives
it
strives.
56
The Nature
of Beings
from contemporaries while taking account of their presence and the character of their goods. Treated as nought but a striving, its inside becomes indistinguishable from
what
it is
from the
illusion.
inside.
The
fact that
it
Yet, paradoxically, that illusion could not apto anyone, since there is pear nothing, by hypothesis, but other
strivings.
comes an
6.
SUMMARY
and
insistent,
Whatever
is, is
both
resistant
dwells in an environment, in space and in the future, taking account of others as contemporaries and as beings which specify the future conjointly with it. No one of them can
limited good.
It
be located wholly in some limited region of space, for its outside limits are at the outsides of all the others. No one of them can be properly treated as without an appropriate outside, for each is denotable and resistant. No one of them is all on the surface; each
has a private nature
which
irresistibly
insists
on
itself.
And no one
towards the
of them
is
merely
future to concern
with
Each being
matter to what aspect we turn, we yield a similar set of four. find that it both contains and refers to the other aspects. The one
basic category governing and embodied in every being and every "x is not non-x." * If the part is the structure of noncontradiction,
No
is
e.g.,
the
good
as
an object of cone.g.,
cern,
lic
is
the pub-
nature, the x and non-x together will refer to the third facet, which is partly expressed as the fourth facet, an e.g., the inside,
insistence interplaying
*See Reality, p.
154.
Summary
Whatever
concerned.
others.
exists is a limited individual, resistant, insistent
57
and
As resistant, it
offers
As
privately insistent,
it is
only submit; as publicly insistent it is what others resist. And as having a concern it is ready to act with respect to others in the
light of its elected good.
Each being is both actually insistent and resistant in different degrees. Each forms different degrees of union with all the others.
As independent of but
a
is
component
resistant,
in a "cause."
Because each
a
is
and
each
is
component.
its
an
active,
good
as
something
CHAPTER FOUR
/.
ACTION HAS
a reason. It
begun and carried through because the the gap separating what exists from the
It
may
self -adjustment. It
may
Or
outside with the object of its concern, by an act of it may try, by an act of compulsion, to sustain or
of others to
to the prescrip-
tions
good imposes on their goods. A being which failed to make an adequate self-adjustment would fail to embody the good with which it was concerned. If it failed in the expression of its good, its outside would be discrepant
its its
with
inward nature.
gree of compulsion, other beings would be in conflict with it. The perfect act realizes, inside and out, the object of a concern as it is in
itself
and
act
No
absolutely perfect.
Each
is
spoiled. act as surely as there are at the beginning, again focus on a relevant good and act to
others and
its
aim
is
There
make
may
may
which
left
could not have been attained at a previous time. The best of acts can completely fulfill only ideals already
58
Self-adjustment
behind.
59
them
now within grasp, but beyond now beyond all reach. After the masters come the disciples who rid him of his flaws. But these we rightly ignore for the new masters who imperfectly realize a higher good
heavens of the past are
are further heavens
The
beyond. Today a schoolboy can deduce a proposition in Euclid, but in Euclid's time it took genius to state it even in an inadequate
way.
it
anyone who might scale the new beyond would produce a work as full of flaws as his. It is now easy to see the errors committed by genius in the past; it is still hard to do great things in the present. More difficult than the
better than did Aristotle, but
heights
former and
less difficult
is
the promise that past masters only partly fulfilled. It is possible for unrealizable ideals of the past to
able today, but the ideals of today are as difficult to
become
fulfill
realiz-
today
as
were yesterday's ideals yesterday. We progress by conquering what was once beyond conquest; we retrogress when we try to repeat the past with all its flaws, and we stand on a par with the
great of the past to the degree that from us as theirs were in their day.
we
2.
SELF-ADJUSTMENT
is
The
object of concern
a great or
may
or
may not be in harmony with other goods. It may be realized it may be realized publicly privately by an act of self-adjustment, an act of expression, or it may be compulsively realized in by
others.
all
They
entertain
those goods others might also embody. Theirs is the goal of the reflective, discouraged men of all ages, trying to live a life apart so as to realize a good for themselves which does not cohere with
60
the goods sought
by
others. It
that this good, when realized, is concordant with the goods others happen to realize. The men will then live in harmony with others
but only because those others or they themselves failed to realize all the goods available to them. If they are in accord with the others because those others failed to realize what they should, they are in
the position of tolerated iconoclasts. Too readily do they delude themselves that the world in which they live is as it should be. If
own
ideals, they are practical idealists, men who think high and live low. Tolerance is a great enemy of those who burn with heresy;
is
fed
by
a failure to
fit
in the
world
as it
is.
Thoughtful,
or low ideal in
to others.
political
men
harmony
attempt to adjust themselves to a high with the lower or higher ideals available
adjust themselves to a good which they believe coheres with different types possible to other beings. If the good is
They
leaders, if a low one they are followers, in an arrogant ideal before his wise men and spirit. Epicurus Plato set a servile one before his lower classes. The Epicurean wise
a high
man was
compel
others.
men who
own
by
goods, while
a process of
The
spirit
is
one which
achieved
self-adjustment to values which form a harmonious totality with whatever values are available to the rest. It is a peace which is pos-
world where government is at a minimum, in an ariswhere harmony is bought by having some men achieve tocracy
sible in a
greater values than are allowed to the others. a man to embody ideal values while It is possible, however, for
their proper goods. He, though his values what others might realize, will then nevertheless be out of harmony with them. The Epicurean wise man might achieve wisdom in a world of folly and the Platonic trades-
others
fail
to
embody
Self-adjustment
61
man might
It is
acquire temperance while the rulers went astray. sometimes desirable for men to be in conflict, providing the
is
conflict
which high values are harmonized, for they then would make a state where they might soon realize great goods concordantly. To realize great goods concordantly, to be, as W. H. Auden says, "Within the peace where all desires/ Find each in each what
each requires,"
individual
it is
good
in
necessary for each being to adjust itself to an harmony with the rich goods of others. Though
each then ignores the need to express and refuses to compel, something precious is obtained. High-minded men, men who are con-
cerned only with concordant private goods, have this as their ideal. Their aspiration is to belong to a democracy in which all beings privately and harmoniously attain their highest possible goods. Unfortunately, achievement lags behind aspiration. Others fail to elect and realize the goods available to them and as a consequence
good
only in himself.
An
tempt
is
Only beings capable of growth, however, have the ability to concentrate their energies so as to transform their inward natures in a radical enough way to make adequate room for the possibilities
they confront, and only
men seem
is in harmony with great goods open to others. Not however, succeeds in adjusting himself to the good with everyone, which he is concerned. Many love truth whose lives are lies. They
good which
live
too
much
in fact
in the world,
do not concentrate
their energies
enough become
to enable
them to bring the miracle about by which they what they are in aspiration. It is necessary at times
as to
to retreat
make
good
if
that
The
retreat
is
dangerous
of character to prevent
62
one's loneliness
from feeding an incipient madness. To become inwhat one is in aspiration it is necessary to retreat from the wardly world but with power enough to withstand the temptations that
haunt those
peace that passes understanding requires that the understanding remain intact. It is the product of a resolute retreat from the world with a compensatory concentration on a good superior
to that can be realized
It
The
external barriers.
some good world has revealed that greater goods ought to have been realized. We usually learn what it is to which we ought to adjust ourselves only after we have tried to express and impose some incomes,
as a rule,
into the
ferior good.
3.
EXPRESSION
itself
The
to that
full realization
attempt to realize its good, engages therefore in an act which both an act of self-adjustment and an act of expression.
Whenever
expresses
It is
itself,
expense of self-adjustment, to exaggerate the free act by which the meaning of the good is carried into the open. The obat the
is concerned ject with which the being to the same degree that it is made manifest externally. is
it
Though
the
being does that which its concern requires, it fails to be as it ought. The converse is also true. A being may adjust itself to its
ideal
and yet
fail
adjustment verted are inclined to adjust themselves inadequately, just as those who seek an inward peace are inclined to express themselves less
than they ought.
at the
to express this fact adequately, stressing selfexpense of expression. The exuberant and extro-
Expression
great or minor able to the rest. He
63
avail-
expresses such a good, will act well in the of his own good but not so well in the light of the goods of light others. Conflict and chaos is the inevitable outcome of the successful expression
who
man
which
is
but with
Though the upshot is embody either they or he fail to express goods to the harmony, degree they should be expressed. It is not high ideals which mark the statesman, but the ability to bring into the open goods that cohere with
those
is
ought to live together in harmony. The harmony should, however, be that which results when all most fully realize the objects of their concerns. Such harmony may of course be achieved
Men
by some beings concerning themselves only with minor goods. In an ideal caste society, different groups successfully realize different but concordant grades of good. It is not often, however, that all
those
whose
ideals are in
harmony succeed
all
in
realizing
them
to
might express the concordant ideals that are available to them, their modes and degrees of expression might still bring them into conflict. The most rigid caste system
Though
The
aims
is
conflict
which
results
from
more
desirable than a
harmony
it
Though
as a
not
ulti-
mately desirable
fulfillment of a
it is
better to have
consequence of one's
good
were
be to have a harmony
as a
consequence of
common
do
64
The
set
richest possible
harmony with one another. If succeed expressing such ideals, they would
in bringing about a public realization of a harmonious set of great values. But the most that can be expected is that a few men only
evitably
come in
goods and that they will therefore conflict with the rest.
in-
Great practical
histories are
men and
truly creative artists are highly sensicould be made available to others. But their
largely tragedies; the goods they express, though comwith the equally rich goods available to others, do not copatible here with what those others actually express or embody. Men are
unusually successful
if they express the values they have reserved for themselves; they are singularly fortunate if such expressions cohere with the values embodied elsewhere. As a rule, what they
conflicts
with what
Expression
is
an
art,
which one
is
which embody the meaning of the good with concerned. It is quite different from exposure, the
overflow of energy in unconventional channels. To express is to create and control in the light of the good; to expose is to reveal
oneself as apart from the good, and then as one who is not in sufficient control of himself. Inanimate beings seem capable of only a minimum degree of expression; their public manifestations are
primarily
are
what they
do.
Subhuman
living beings seem capable of expressing minor goods in partial harmony with the goods available to others. They can be more
Men
which harmonize with the rich goods available to others. They can and should make manifest goods that allow room for growth
on the part of others, and thereby make themselves into beings who express great goods in a world of great goods. Men ought to be
are.
Compulsion
65
The
object of a concern
is
rarely both
with equal success. Men are in a perpetual dilemma of deciding whether they are primarily to be but not to express the good, or primarily to express but not to be good. They should aim at both
equally.
good, for not only will a successful act of self-adjustment make possible better acts of expression and with respect to higher ideals, but a good man is more valuable than a good work. Socrates
Rembrandt's. Both are irreplaceable, but no matter how perfect the and no matter how excellent an expression of cherished
beauty,
it is less
must
in fact
go even further.
valuable than the result of a self-adjustment. One man who failed to adjust himself
to his good, precisely because he was still capable of self-adjustwould be more valuable than any expression of the good he ment,
possible. It is a crime to destroy even a bad man in order to preserve a masterpiece. Here is one point where the ethical and legal meaning of "crime" coincide.
made
4.
COMPULSION
it
Under
has
become
common
though
it
were
quiring no explanation. Under the influence of the deterministic creed, it has become common to treat it as though it occurred inde-
As
pendently of the needs or aims of the beings from which it issued. a consequence, we have become accustomed to think of action
as a
momentary, arbitrary use of energy serving only to sustain or But all action is adjustive and ex-
means for altering others, it is at pressive as well as compulsive. the same time a means for realizing and expressing a possible good. As compulsive, action is the agency for making the outside of
others conform to the ideals one wants
them
to
embody.
It is
the
means
66
for them. To the degree it is inadequate, a being will have put before others objectives that it itself either defies or ignores. benevolent despot tends towards the realization of great
may
cherish.
However,
others in
since
no action
is
his objective.
are discrepant with what those others in fact or can be. Both compulsively act in such a internally want, are, way as to defy what they themselves prescribed.
ways which
act ought to make a being outwardly what it can and being rarely, however, realizes inwardly ought to be inwardly. the goods it ought. Even if one acted in conformity with one's
An
own prescriptions, other beings would not necessarily be inwardly what one was outwardly making them be. To act on others so as to make their outsides conform to the goods they ought to realize inwardly, is often to make them externally
what they
Of
this the
law-maker
is
often acutely aware. He puts aside the question as to what men make of themselves internally, contenting himself with the attempt to make their outsides conform to the goods he prescribes for them. He would like them to be internally courageous, honest,
but is satisfied if he can so act on them intelligent, thoughtful, etc., that they will become these outwardly, whether or not they attain these states inwardly as well. He sees no way of distinguishing be-
tween the law-abiding and the enslaved, between those who are and those who are not inwardly what they are outwardly commeans a right to do something withpelled to be. Freedom, to him,
out fear of punishment
a permission not a power.
He
is
inclined
to ignore questions of mercy, sympathy, love, right intention and good character and to interest himself instead in the problems of
Freedom of Action
liberty, justice, the influence of the
67
environment, security, etc. As consequence he tends to adopt the attitude and to follow the practices of those who believe that others have no souls. To avoid
seeing
beings matter what they are outwardly made to be, while legally insisting that they ought outwardly to be what they ought to be inwardly. An inanimate being seems capable only of compulsive acts which
men as empty husks the lawmaker ought to view them as who always have the freedom to become inwardly good no
mold the
few beings
(their off-
spring, as a rule) in
only
man who
conformity with their appropriate goods. It is seems capable of molding the outside of all other
No one of these
types, however, engages in acts which are exclusively compulsive. All of them adjust and express themselves. The problem for all is
three functions equally well. Inanimate beings, however, seem to overstress compulsion, animals expression, and men adjustment. In different ways each fails to do
to see that their acts perform
all
all it
ought.
5.
FREEDOM OF ACTION
character from the nature of the actor, the nais
Action takes
ture of the
its
it
encounters. Conditioned in
free. It
nevertheless
converts an undetermined future good into a determinate present content in an intrinsically unpredictable way. The occasions prompting it and the ends towards which it is directed can be
specified;
its
nature and effects can often be successfully predicted. it has, action achieves only when
engage in
68
will assume
will
cedently determined.
That action
is
free
is
takes the
form of a
mode
of self-adjustment.
As
such,
it is
to a -good with which one is concerned. Almost at once, however, the action is constrained by the inherited past which imposes
limits
on the
The
jective
self-adjusting being behaves as he does because of the obhe has before him, under the limitations which his past im-
poses.
There are forms of adjustment in which he will not now engage and there are results which are now beyond his power to
achieve.
is
free, a
novel determinate
mode of producing determinations in an undetermined good. The attempt to express the good with which one is concerned
is
limited
by
the past. It
is
limited, too,
by
of the body through which it must pass. He who is dexterous will act in one way, he who is awkward in another, he who is tired in a
third.
Yet
all
jectives.
There
it
act is free. Every assigns, the nature of an expressive at expression is restrained by the and the counter-acts attempt body of those beyond. Free as and when it occurs, it is conditioned be-
the limits
fore,
it
its
goal.
Action in the mode of compulsion is also free. It too is restrained by the body and the counter-acts of those beyond. But in addition
it is
in
pendent attempts to realize the objects of their concerns, alter their own public natures in the face of attempts to compel them to
have a different form.
An
of
it
act
is
at
sion. It is
its
hemmed
its
by
barriers
fall
short
objective.
its
is
concern
must, to bring
result in closer
conformity to what
intended,
Spontaneity
redouble
its
69
its act.
Even when
(as in the
case of beings with will and intellect) acts are forged in the light of the resistance they are expected to encounter, some correction
must be introduced into the act to overcome the unpredictable concrete opposition which the act inevitably encounters. This correction of the act, this change in its nature which is introduced to compensate for the distortions the act inevitably suffers, is a prodIt serves to help realize the object of concern. greater the spontaneity, the more the attained result will be what the realization of one's good demands.
uct of spontaneity.
The
6.
SPONTANEITY
is
Before an act
is
completed, an effort
made
to alter
it
so that
it
conforms more closely to the demands of the concern. The act is thereby charged with spontaneity, a supplemental dose of freedom
serving to change the direction and upshot of the act. There is a modicum of spontaneity in every act. Even the supposedly routine and monotonous exhibit variations throughout.
part,
gree of effective spontaneity is slight. The spontaneous alteration brings about only minute changes in the act and makes no real
difference to the result.
make
its
a radical difference
upshot. Again and again, they will exhibit the intent of their concerns in ways which redress the qualifications to which their acts are being subjected. The remainder of the time they also act
freely and with some degree of spontaneity, but in such a way that the general character of previous acts and their outcomes are more
or
less
preserved.
is
Action
is
freedom manifest
freedom overcoming obstacles. Since every being meets opposition from others, there can be no result achieved by spontaneity
70
alone.
Every result is in part determined by what other beings are and do. Spontaneity enables a being to realize the object of its concern more effectively than a routine action would; it does not
enable
it
to realize
its
good
perfectly. Action at
its
best, action
charged
in midflight
with
given
new
direction,
is
always restrained by others. Few beings act with the degree of spontaneity possible to them. The incipient failure to realize the objects of their concerns does
not often provoke in them a strong attempt to alter the act which they have begun. For spontaneity to be manifest at its highest, a
greater concentration on the good than is usual is necessary. When the inanimate acts with spontaneity, it is for the moment
its
concern
in focus,
and
is
blindly but
freely responding to the discrepancy between that object and the act which has been produced. Higher types of being can fairly
steadily,
and
as
though only dimly, discern the objects of their concerns, a consequence can act with spontaneity more effectively
than lower beings can. But man can know the good. He, therefore, alone can radically alter the character of his actions by charging
them with appropriate doses of spontaneity. The most spontaneously vitalized of acts may at times not enable
a
being to realize the object of its concern to any significant degree. it cannot, no matter how spontaneously
realize the
then try to
good with which it is concerned, the being will employ its freedom to change the nature of its concern
and thereby have a new objective which it can realize more sucin which it can be frustrated and cessfully. There are multiple ways
thereby provoked to try to alter its concern and thus aim at a new and most effective is provided by the objective. The most obvious
body of almost every being successfully reto realize the object of concern, no matter how every attempt fresh, creative, subtle and spontaneous the attempt might be. The being must then change its concern and objective, for it cannot
late the
sists
body. Soon or
exist as
permanently frustrated by
its
own body
without being
From
Animate
as
two beings
7.
Each
to
is
its
an instrument for the being, an instrument which functions in part without supervision, and which may bring about results that
its total
go counter to those the concern requires. Having allocated part of concern to its body, each being is driven to bring the unallocated portion into play in the form of a spontaneity, so as to
make
which conforms
to the intent of
tries to
modify sponwhich
between what
its
body
satisfaction of its
concern demands.
is
Sometimes
expression
is
body
when that
spontaneously attempts to retreat from the obstacle which the body provides. It tries to focus on a new good so as to be able to engage in new acts which can successfully exhibit that good in and
It is this
ref ocusing
which
the coming to be of higher types of beings from possible lower ones, the human from the animal, the animal from the plant, and the animate from the inanimate.
makes
It is a different
animate being differs in radical ways from an inanimate one. type of entity. But through death it changes in inanimate where before it was animate. It is a moot type, becoming question whether the process could ever be reversed, whether the
An
come from
the nonliving.
The
question
is
evaded
if, with the panpsychist, one supposes that everything, no matter how apparently dead and inert, is nevertheless alive. That supposi-
deny
that
when
it is
72
dead, but
it still
as to just
how
the
things that appear to be dead are different from those that appear to be alive which is the original question over again in a slightly different form.
It is
When
dom
owes
its
acts,
But then no provision is made for understanding how the living and nonliving can be part of a single natural world; how it is to produce organic possible compounds, such as urea, in the
really alive.
how
life
An
world of
ours.
Nonliving beings can be changed into living ones, just as surely, though not as readily, as living beings can be changed into nonliving ones. This contention one might expect to find denied only
by
those
who
hold that the living and the nonliving are cut on enfrom one another as
is
fixed
the history of thought that Aristotle, who held that there was a definite and fixed division between the living and the nonliving,
believed that occasionally a living being could originate out of nonliving matter, while many biologists, despite their belief in the possibility
despite their ability to produce organic compounds, and despite their knowledge of the way in which the animate adjusts itself to a
that
world largely inanimate, are inclined to follow Pasteur and deny what was once nonliving could possibly become alive. What
Pasteur showed was that living beings could not be obtained in the way that Aristotle thought they might be. It is of the essence
of
modern
it
was
who was
though
Aristotle's contention
was made
own
view. Pasteur
made
Aristotle's philosophy
more
From
totle
73
made
a point
could not,
digest.
It is
was
a time
when
life
was
not.
Geology can provide evidence of the late arrival of living beings with structured bodies, but it cannot tell anything about the existence of those whose bodies cannot be or were not
fossilized. In
asserting that the living can arise from the nonliving, nothing more need be maintained therefore than that living beings could have followed nonliving ones in the course of history, and that they can be
made
been
to arise
life
somewhere.
of the origin of life is to understand how a change in circumstance will enable a nonliving being to become a living one. The answer lies in the fact that the body of an inanimate being
The problem
its concern that the only way of an effective concern is for the being to change the nature of having that concern. The living arise from the nonliving when the latter
modify
their concerns so as to
Inanimate beings with excessively recalcitrant bodies do not usually become animate; as a rule they change into other kinds of
inanimate beings. Take a thing, for example, like iron. It can accrete to itself other items, such as oxygen, and thereby achieve a new
bulk, structure and
it
way
of acting.
To
is
oxy-
no longer accretes oxygen. It ceases to interplay with it as dized, it had before. Rusted iron is a thing with a body distinct from that
of nonrusted iron. That
new body
its
the
concern to avoid permanent frustration to escape being divided against itself with an impotent concern on the one hand, and a body which it cannot control, on the other.
new
concern, a
new
objective and
74
alive.
Each places
of prescription on the objects which concern others; each engages in a minimum degree of self-adjustment and expression,
minimum
spending most of
its
it increases the degree of prescription to which the objectives which are the concern of others. It would subjects then have the kind of concern characteristic of a living being. Unlike rusted iron, the new being would, despite its rusted body, be
now
when
iron
energy in compulsive acts. Let it be supis rusted, it not only has a new object
able to interplay with oxygen; unlike rusted iron, it would interplay with oxygen without thereby getting in the way of the con-
tinued expression of its own good. Its compulsive acts would have regard for what other beings could become. Its acts would be infected with expectations and
results
would be designed to bring about which cohere with what some of the others ought to achieve. It would be a living being, exerting compulsions in terms
of prescribed goods, at the same time that it expressed the nature its own good in the light of which those prescriptions were
of
imposed.
The
its
living arises
concern, both to express itself and to act compulsively through an otherwise recalcitrant body. The state of being alive is thus the reward of a successful strategy, a consequence of the fact that a
being, in retreat from its body, was able to find an objective which could realize in and through that body. sustained by a concern, living being is one whose activities are
its
it
own good
its
It
the course
able to persist in such activities as digesting, breathing, giving off carbon dioxide and so on. The tempo and pattern of these may vary. They do entail signifi-
cant changes in the body of the being that engages in them. But the being is alive so long as it has a concern which enables it,
its
acts,
From
help realize the
life
75
by
goods
to arise, a being must so change its concern that it is thereafter able to act on the same kind of material it did before.
For
Such
a being
after
it
has changed, be given the opportunity to encounter similar material again. thus will it be able to continue to act, under the Only
influence of
its
new
its
acted on before.
Whether
concern, on the same kind of things it had or not such material is available and
life
whether or not
are
answers depend on the circumstances, and on the way in which the thing freely changes its concern when the expression of the
concern
It is
all
Not
all
of them
cerns.
Not
all
existing body.
realize the
on others so as to help for them. Life is the result of the exgoods prescribed ercise of freedom, and exists only so far as a being conquers the
will be able to act
Not
opposition which its body puts in the way of a continual exhibition of a concern for goods pertinent to itself and other beings.
When
not)
It
it
arose (granted there was a time when life was undoubtedly appeared in a host of places in multiple forms.
life first
seems likely in fact that living beings come from nonliving ones
myriads every day. The majority of newly generated living off almost at the instant of birth. They have beings, however, die
in
no opportunity
terial
to
make prolonged
is
use of their
much
they require
acts exhibiting the intent concerns. Beings die not because they have been dedie either beprived of a divine spark or mysterious breath; they can act or because their bodies cause there is nothing on which they
new
76
act too well, insistently behaving as a cancer does, without regard to what the total concern requires.
So long as an inanimate being can spontaneously infect its acts with the meaning of its concern, it has no need to change that concern. But when its body proves to be too recalcitrant to the spontaneous expression of that concern, the thing is compelled to change its nature. Spontaneity is the highest type of freedom it can
exhibit; that failing, it
must change
in nature. If
it is
it
changes
its
con-
thereafter able to produce acts under the external prompting of stimuli rather than of pressures, and to respond rather than to interact with what it en-
counters.
8.
SUMMARY
in the individual as
concerned with
good which it endeavors to realize through the use of freedom. Each action is countered by other actions and meets barriers which
short of its objective. The being, as a consequence, is to act spontaneously in order better to realize its good. prompted such an introduction of spontaneity is necessarily ineffec-
make
it fall
When
tive,
its
the being
is
freedom so
as to alter its
it
concern
as to
be able to act on
others in terms of the goods it prescribes for them, it becomes a living being. Those beings are alive which have and express a con-
cern for goods pertinent at least to offspring or kind. can help make the living arise, but it is acts of the being itself which alone can make it alive. Strictly speaking therefore, living
We
beings can never be produced in the laboratory. All that can be done is to restrain the nonliving in such a way as to compel it to use its freedom to focus on a new good which it may be able to
realize to
we
have
altered.
Summary
The power
infants
to
77
become
alive
is
lower-grade living
we add a knowledge of the nature of life and the nature of man, we should be able to explain how and why higher beings and ethical men come to be and
become
ethical
men.
If,
to this fact,
what
their function
is.
PART TWO
CHAPTER FIVE
/.
SOME OF THE
preceding remarks (particularly those referring to living beings), some that will follow, and some contained in the present chapter are far from familiar turns of thought. They have
a strange sound, particularly when compared with the conclusions of contemporary biologists and psychologists. Part of the
reason undoubtedly
stated
is
a further reason.
What
is
here
bound
to
fantastic to
many today
in part because the philosophers, who should set the tone and pace for thought, failed to do all they ought and could. Modern phi-
losophers, perhaps even more than other men, have been intimidated by the experimental successes of the biological and psychological sciences.
and
others, a quest
sued.
Before modern biology and psychology matured, philosophers did try to understand the nature of the living as well as the nature of nonliving beings. Some of them were overdogmatic and were
much trapped in errors which experiment revealed. But there was that was sound in what they said; their views have been constantly confirmed
by
those
who
men
as living
mere
Today
81
82
The Wisdom
altered in nature
of Living Things
we
and
we
tissue
by
virtue of
we
are therefore a
little
more
are single beings, and not mere collections of independent parts. And since we have now succeeded in making mice go mad, we are
somewhat more inclined to admit with the mouse has a psyche. But we are still hesitant
most
believe,
what we
al-
trusive data.
We
and are disinclined to interpret even the most oblack some of the courage of the ancients. We
avoid their
follies
by avoiding
their questions.
What
they tried to
try to do again, or arbitrarily define a large and in one sense familiar part of the universe as beyond our interest or ken.
Fields
do
we must
From
wrong moral has been drawn to the effect that philosophy anticipatory science, and that it occupies a field only until science
is
ready to work it in its own way. But it is questionable whether there have ever been any advances in science which have touched the soil philosophers can and ought to till. There is a metaphysics
of physics, mathematics, biology and psychology awaiting study today just as there was in Thales', Plato's, Descartes', and Hegel's
time. The neglect of it has deprived us of an understanding of the nature of time, space, number, body, force, gravitation, life and
mind, except as instruments or counters in the expression of hypotheses and conclusions which fit in with current interests and
are capable of being dealt with
that
have been mastered by contemporary experimenters. Philosophers who allow scientists to do their thinking for them
are unfair to themselves
and to the
knows
scientists.
can answer; a good scientist knows that there are many questions which are answerable only by philosophers. The Galileos, Newtons, Einsteins and Darwins are never positivists, men who believe that science tells all
truth. Positivists,
Metaphysical Biology
philosophers
83
who
was
world and to
that
all
truth
to be
found
in biology.
Because so
speculate,
many contemporary
with
a
scientists
overnight, to think philosophically. The result has been unfortunate. Our scientific in place of the have
philosophers
produced,
needed
crop of apparently scientific hypotheses which have only a metaphysical sense, and a crop of philosophic theories which philosophers long ago abandoned because so obviously untenable. Supposedly scientific
terms such
as
justment," "complex," "instinct," "will," and "gestalt" have been allowed to blur the truths that observation and experiment reveal,
lies behind all that living beings pubthe other hand, scientists have put forward philosophical theories which cannot stand the light of a critical reason. There are excellent scientific men who call themselves solipsists;
On
Dingle is one. There are others who, like Soddy, are afraid of such a number as the square root of minus one. Others call themselves followers of Aristotle but deny the fixity of species, followers of Berkeley but still abandon the world of common sense, or followers of Hume and yet hold that the future is predetermined.
The
It is
philosophy of a scientist
usually an overnight philosophy. the scientist with the same care and devois
He
is
it
some
and swell
up
to cosmic proportions
without regard for what is pushed away, confounding thereby the scientific and the philosophical meanings of terms, and a respectable
theory with one which ultimately denies what it wanted to say. In such an atmosphere a deliberate philosophical discussion of bodies, on a strange hue. living beings and minds must take
second and more serious reason why a speculative account of the nature of living beings sounds strange today is that we have too
84
The Wisdom
of Living Things
long taken our knowledge of lower beings to provide an adequate guide to the nature of higher ones, despite the fact that none of us
of what
has really exploited the art of penetrating to the inward substance is lower, or knows how to go from them to the higher.
There
is
and the highest of beings. But if, with so many contemporaries, we take as our basic data only what we have experimentally learnt about the subhuman, and then try to apply the principle of continuity,
we
shall
be unable to describe
man
except in terms of a
few sadly inadequate concepts, extended and magnified. If we refuse to take what we know of man as a clue to the nature of other
types of being,
external
we
and
knowledge which our experiments and observations provide and imply. A reverse procedure would have been better. We
learn
more
if
we
the principle of continuity, for then we do not lose sight of the fact that there is a richness and promise in every being which it never fully manifests at any moment.
Better
still
would be an attempt
it is
and show
how it is possible to go from one type to the others. After all, we know very little of ourselves and if ourselves are to be our guide, we will fail to see what other beings are. Some things about the inanimate are better known than are corresponding
the probable behavior. Some things are their concerns. Neither the human nor
subhuman provides
its
Each
must be examined on
own merits.
The
2.
Ought
85
Subhuman
calculated to
ries
On
precariously
rest.
mal psychologist all speculation. He contents himself with noting the kinds of behavior which animals actually
exhibit and does not suppose that some other type of behavior should have been or in the circumstances, could have been
down
the scale of
life.
mood finds justification the further one goes As one approaches the amoeba, it becomes
say that
it
it
difficut to
would be
better for
is
it
to
do
what
does.
What
justification
there for
judging a living being in terms of a standard of "right" behavior which may never be exhibited? Such an approach leads one unwarrantedly to hold that there is something other than what goes on here and now; it tempts one to suppose, in violation of much good scientific practice, that there are tendencies in a being which can-
may
never be manifest.
view
all
living beings as
spond
as they ought, since they respond as they must, given their causes and natures and the situation in which they are?
their
own
answers in part.
It is a
suppo-
going far
beyond
it it
what is
said
when
it is
maindoes
what
ought to
do
is
it
or must do.
One
inevitably,
making
use of a standard of "right" behavior in affirming that whatever occurs is right by that very fact. It is to adopt the daring metaphysical
assumption that
this is a well-oiled
happens for the best. To avoid making such a supposition it is necessary to free ourselves from all considerations of what ought to be, from the idea
of the good, the bad and the indifferent, contenting ourselves with
86
The Wisdom
of Living Things
refrain
merely describing what happens to take place. This requires us to from calling some living beings stupid and others bright, and forces us to look at the actions of a healthy as different
being
in pattern but not in value
sick or distraught.
We
would have
the
ways
to content ourselves with describing and comparing in which different animals behave in different moments
all.
and that is
An easy method for seeing how much our perspectives have altered since the Middle Ages is to note how palatable this last suggestion is to the modern mind. The medievals were so impressed with the idea of the good and the ought that they could learn
nothing from the diseased and the unfortunate except that they fell short of an ideal. They called them monsters, mistakes of nature,
worthy of no man's
are interested in
attention.
Men
cavalier.
nature's variegated forms and find as those that ruin themselves as from those that do
all
We
have profited
much from
what
is
to
be seen and to avoid disparaging some things in nature because they fail to conform to some arbitrary norm.
The
that the
good or bad.
To
say that they are mistaken in doing this is but to repeat the "mistake" once more, for to describe them as mistaken is to evaluate their decisions
because more in
ise
and to point to another which is more respected, consonance with the nature of things or the prom-
of inquiry.
can advocate the assumption of an attitude of indifference or impartiality without thereby making at least an implicit criticism of those who take another attitude; but then he at least
implicitly repeats the very "mistake" he is criticizing. Even Adam, who originally knew neither good nor evil and thus was ideally
No man
suited to be an animal psychologist, must have made some errors or at least seen the possibility of making them, and knew that they
stood in the
The
he would
Ought
87
His subsequent knowledge of good and evil, his knowledge that Eve was human, was a grasp of the fact that she too made errors which it would have been better not to have made. Adam knew there was a distance between
like to do.
what he and Eve did, and what they ought to have done. He evaluated some of his and her acts and decisions as right and wrong. Even when we try to escape making similar evaluations we reveal
Adam, for we judge others adversely for taking a different stand. Man is a living being, the fruit of a long line of evolution. If it be legitimate to draw a distinction for him between what he does and
ourselves to be true sons of
what he should
other things.
dividing
do,
fail
To
off
ought to be legitimate to do the same for to make such a distinction is to run the risk of
it
man
from the
rest of nature.
To
be a living being
is
to
be
and unwise, doing some things one ought not do. For the moment this point need not be pressed. Grant that
finite
it
ani-
would
still
between what they do and what they should do, can and should be made. From man's standpoint there are useful and useless animals, those that are dangerous and those
we
which
them towards our world and does not measure them in their own terms. But we thereupon formulate a theory, the theory of the moralist, which is alternative to that which the animal
orients
psychologist desires to hold. In terms of this moralistic theory, one can distinguish between what an animal does and what it ought to do. The distinction, to be
sure, rests
concept of the ought to but part of nature, more emphatically even than the other theory it has difficulty in bringing man into the scheme of nature and understanding him
erences. Since
limits the
as a
to
product of natural evolution. It leaves open too the question as whether the preferences which a man expresses in holding the
88
The Wisdom
of Living Things
animal psychologist, this theory uncritically assumes that there is an "ought" for man, and only for man. The animal psychologist
supposes that human detachment, the moralist that human interests alone provide proper perspectives in terms of which the behavior
of other living beings is to be judged. Both presuppose anthropomorphic theories of value, subscribing to an arbitrary good whose
realization
is
gator is just as surely in nature as his animals, and both he and his animals have tasks which they ought to fulfill.
third theory, that of the individualist, combines the objectivity of the first with the distinctions made by the second. This third theory affirms that every being,
not, looks out at the universe
tries to
its
whether
it is
aware of
it
or
it
from
its
own
do what
own
to do. It assumes that each being has appropriate good, though the actual performance of the
is
best for
it
being
has,
as
may
It affirms
from
any
right to be and to continue to be other. It need not affirm that each tries to preserve itself
its
much
a supposition defied
by
need affirm only that each would attempt to prewere it only wise enough to act in accordance with
It
what
its
This third view, however, does not take into account that living beings are not only individuals but also members of species, that
they ought and sometimes do abandon themselves for the sake of others. If we add this fact to our account and generalize it, we
achieve a fourth view to the effect that living beings are to be judged in terms of what they do and ought to do to promote both
their individual
good and
The
pend on
The
we
without referring to any goods. He insists that they be judged in terms of the natures they really have and what is relevant to those
natures.
He
first
The
Ought
89
view, that beings are to be judged in terms of the goods appropriate to them, since the good for an animal is what sustains and enriches
its
being.
re-
extent, the
animal psychologist is forced to hold the second part of the fourth view to some degree even when most insistent on denying it.
moralist cannot avoid holding to the second part of the fourth view, for he affirms that the acts of animals ought to be
The
evaluated in the light of the good they do to at least one other kind of being, man. But many animals succeed in benefiting men usually only so far as they themselves prosper. The moralist is thus
is
it is
good
obtain.
The
of
what
is
what
is
be judged in terms but this is also at times individually, good good for others and ourselves. Like the other two, his view
for
them
a limited
and reserved
way
The
three
have difficulty in making the transition from animals to men, both because they view them as characterized by radically different
drives
and because they suppose that men and animals are governed by entirely different principles. But like the fourth view each
of these three views really allows some room for a distinction between what a living being does and what it should do. It makes no
difference to the fact but only to the import of the distinction that what they underscore as the good an animal ought to do is some-
thing useful to
man
or the animal
itself,
rather than
what is needed
both by
itself
and
others.
What
about
it.
a living being
ought to do
is
an
intrinsic
or extrinsic fact
It is intrinsic if
is
a possible good. It
the being has a characteristic concern for extrinsic if the good it "ought" to realize is
what other beings prefer it to realize. In that case if a living being fails to do what it ought, it fails to conform to a possibly irrelevant condition of excellence imposed from without.
To
ought
is
to
90
The Wisdom
of Living Things
assume an anthropomorphic position. It is to impose on them an ought of our own. It is to evaluate them in terms not germane to
their being. It
is
to look at
them
formity to human requirements, desires and obligations. Justice to the nature of living beings requires us to recognize that there is a
to realize,
though
its
good. Ptolemaic astronomy for the Copernican, but in the field of values there are but few who do not adhere to the anti-Copernican senti-
own
ment
it
that values pertain to man alone. cat has value as surely as has shape; the one is no more bestowed on it by us than the other. ought not to read ourselves into animals; we ought not to
We
evaluate
them
in the light of
or the needs of our disciplines. To look at them in terms of human needs is to overhumanize them, even when we insist that they are
below the
level of
human
beings.
the beings we study only if we hold steadfast to the truth that there are goods which they ought to realize if they are to increase
in value.
The
terms which
qualification that they are to express the nature of what is not human. To the degree a being is unable to realize its characteristic good,
it is
bound
to be our
own, but
defective,
it
may
be. If
it is
able to
so far intrinsically excellent, though it may useless or dangerous. Those aniat the same time be extrinsically
mals
we
Those animals
vicious,
domesticate are usually or usually become defective. that endanger our lives or crops are extrinsically
intrinsically excellent, realizing a
good
3.
Living beings have characteristic concerns for goods pertinent to them. Those goods they ought to realize. And they all have a
The
Limitation of Natural
Wisdom
much
91
of what they
rooted deep within them, quite below consciousness, untaught by either parents or experience. They exhibit it in almost every act. Living beings show predilections for what
relevant.
what is harmful and ignore what is irWithout having been taught the benefits of corn or the danger of foxes, the new-born chick pecks at the one and runs from the other. A dog needs no brain in order to make evident that it prefers not to burn. Without a brain it withdraws its leg in the
benefits them; they reject
it
did before
its
brain
was
excised.
ations
Living beings have a native wisdom driving them outside situwhich have no pertinence to their welfare, towards those
which would benefit them, and away from those which would harm them. For the most part, each selects what will nourish it, rejects that
which endangers
it
and ignores that which is irrelevant to itself and its kind. The cow is
tempted by grass and repelled by meat; it pays no attention to the sunset. The weed isolates oxygen and minerals and ignores almost
everything
else
There are some who place the source of this wisdom in the juices and the tendons, defining it as a kind of chemical or mechanical reaction to
ism. Since the juices
what
is
whereas the
wisdom of
the organism seems to concern the welfare of the this view whole, eventually gives way to another which acknowl-
edges that, in addition to these partial bits of wisdom, there is a wisdom of the organism which relates all the parts and makes them function for the benefit of the whole. The facts demand that one
affirm that the organism
is
a single
wisdom is in the parts of the body, to the doctrine that the organism has a set of native and unlearned drives appropriate to the welfare of itself and its kind.
92
The Wisdom
of Living Things
is
wisdom
theory there is wisdom in the organism can be satisfactory if it supposes that the wisdom is complete, or that it is ingrained from the start. Unfortunately no living being is wise enough for its own
good, and fortunately it can grow in wisdom as it matures. There are times when even the most neatly organized animal will ignore what it needs and times when it will delight in what is bad for it;
there are times
when
it
what
is
irrelevant
or injurious and times when it will fly from that which it ought to have or which is without danger for it. Whatever bodily wisdom a
is
it
make the body prosper. The dog is a high-grade animal but it would be a mistake to let it eat what, when and as much as it wants.
Animals occasionally turn away from food which they desperately need, allowing themselves to waste away in the midst of plenty.
They do
not always attend to what is dangerous, paying in suffering, injury and death for their neglect. There are times, too,
when they play or engage in random movements; there are times when they deliberately move towards the only place where danger
looms, exhibiting a preference for what is indifferent or dangerous rather than for what is good for them. Curiosity kills more cats
And
when
living beings
spend even from the food and drink they ought to have. Trigger-like timidity prevents many an animal from growing old.
There is some wisdom in the body. Otherwise living beings would perish sooner than they usually do. The world is highly complex and the body is in constant need of special things which
it
if
lost.
A living thing
is
able,
from the
start, to
many
of the
act accordingly. things which make for its weal or woe, and to But the fact that an animal sometimes takes in poison as well as
water, that
often eats the debilitating with as much avidity as the it should and thus nourishing, and that it embraces but part of what
it
The Check on
Folly
93
often lives on an unbalanced diet in the midst of plenty, indicates that animal wisdom is not The hope of the animal is that perfect.
its
wisdom
will increase
with experience.
4.
they intrinsically ought to do is to attempt to prosper as individand as members of species. But quickly and too soon they act in ways which endanger their health and continuance. Their folly,
fortunately,
is
posiveness keep
(b) teachability, (c) responsiveness, (d) sensitivity, and (e) purthem from violating their own intent more than
they otherwise would. (a) Living beings have a limited opportunity to be as foolish as they might be. They are saved from much of their folly, not because they are so artfully contrived that they are inclined to do only what is best for them, but because they have too few occasions to
be. It
is
their constant
need to
struggle against oppressive forces which keeps their tendency to act in foolish ways at bay. If they did not have to struggle so much,
occasions to show how quickly and could injure themselves. Domesticated animals, thoroughly they those in circuses and zoos, do not have to struggle as much as those
many more
and
as a
healthy
is
lives. It is
consequence usually have shorter spans and good for an animal to struggle, not because
good thing, but because it prevents dominant bodily struggle tendencies and well-intrenched habits from being exercised to the
a
full,
body and
in violation of
what the
animal ought to do. Wild animals do not overeat as a rule, largely is not enough for them to eat. The difficulties of exwithin limits, keep them in trim, enabling them to act with istence,
because there
skill
a;id others.
(b)
The body
of a living being
is
selective,
attuned to some
94
The Wisdom
of Living Things
things and not to others. Depleted, needing water and food, it stretches or moves towards what it needs. With time it acquires habits enabling it to turn toward and utilize more quickly what it
requires and to avoid
many things that endanger its continuance. learn in the course of experience. There is a great Living beings difference in the caution exercised by a kitten and a cat; the old oak
has habits the acorn
young to have acquired. Unfortunately, such bodily wisdom is never entirely adequate to all the situations which a living being confronts. Almost every moment has its novelty, and for this a bodily wisdom, acquired early
is
too
or
late, is
is
not prepared.
No
matter
how
is,
always something more than training which it requires in order to act properly as an individual, as one of a species and as
there
make
part of an environment. The structure and habits of its body never a living being as wise as it need be, individually, for the
species
(c)
and environmentally.
The body has various needs. As they come into dominance favor the performance of certain acts rather than others. they Whatever encourages the completion of one of those acts is a
stimulus defining the act as a response to
Living beings are accordingly responsive, expressing their bodily needs by acts directed towards stimulating objects.
it.
Living beings act to satisfy their bodies through the agency of the objects which provoke and support the expression of their bodily needs. The satisfaction of their bodies may, however, prove
Thirst
detrimental to those bodies, and to the beings as more than bodies. may drive an animal to drink though the health of its body
require
it
may
to wait. It
its
may
lead
it
to take in fluid
which
will
work havoc on
right fluids
bodily
economy. And
even
when
it
drinks the
and to the right extent, drinking may not be what the animal ought to do. It might have been wiser to have waited a
while until the
enemy was
at a distance, or to
common
The Check on
control of a concern to help the
Folly
95
its
good
(d)
requires.
Each being has an object of concern. Others attempt to deon their own goods, and it at-
tempts to delimit theirs while focusing on its own. As a consequence each being is subject to a double conflict. On one side there
between the good others demand that the being realize and the good it is concerned with realizing; on the other side, there
is
a conflict
is
between the good it demands that others realize and the goods they are concerned with realizing. This double conflict is
a conflict
felt
by
way
of
At one and the same time it is ready to act to satisfy and to reject the prescriptions imposed by others, and to act in terms of the goods it prescribes for others and the goods with which
possible action.
those others are independently concerned. To allow action to occur, a living being must not only either reject or submit to the
also approach those others as beings concerned with either prescribed or unprescribed goods. It is
keyed to act
in
terms of
its
decisions.
living being is prepared to act as a social, domineering, dominated, or antagonistic being in relation to a few others. So far as
it is
sensitive that its prescriptions have been accepted and that it has accepted the prescriptions of others, it approaches those others as in accord with itself. So far as it is sensitive that its prescriptions
it
has rejected the prescriptions of others, So far as it is sensitive that its preit
accepts theirs,
it
takes a sub-
servient attitude.
And
so far as
it
it is
sensitive that
its
prescriptions
rejects theirs, it is in
an attitude of
more
is
a being a part cf
neighborhood than an inhabitant of a cosmos. The lower its environment with which it sensitively grade the more restricted the
deals.
96
The Wisdom
fact that there
is
of Living Things
The
sensitively apprehended environment has its compensations. Since a living being's possible actions are limited in number and range,
were
it
more
sensitive,
it
makes
with respect to other beings, it could become greatly distressed. To be sensitive but impotent is often a prelude to despair. Each being
decisively evaluates all the others, but because it is usually sensitive to the results of only those decisions which relate to beings in its
environment,
it can effectively act on what it sensitively discerns. to be sure, is so being, neatly organized that it is sensitive to the degree that it can and will act with success. There only
No
would be gain
an increase of sensitivity which reached beyond a being's present capacities to act successfully, for it could then prepare to deal with things far off but eventually near by. But on
in
its sensitivity is and ought to be limited to neighboring and particularly to those which are of most importance for beings, its continuance and prosperity, as an individual and as a member
the whole,
of a species.
The elm
and
is
When
for
as living confines itself to them, ignoring axes, stars the elm dies as a result of the blow of an axe, it
it is
in part
because
is
what
avoid the axe. If an elm could have been sensitive to the result of
axe imposes, it could have rejection of the prescriptions which an assumed an attitude of antagonism towards the axe and readied itself to
blow of an
change in
fend off the axe's blow. But an elm must blindly suffer the axe, though as a result it may undergo such a radical
its
body
that
it is
unable thereafter to
to the axe leaves
it
utilize that
body
adequately.
Its insensitivity
no
alternative but
Because living beings are sensitive to some degree, they can attend to some of the beings which have bearing on their welfare.
sensitive,
The Check on
and
in
Folly
it
97
could
it is
it
saved from
much
folly because
somewhat
radically.
sensitive to
affect
(e)
The sparrow
is
sensitive to her
hunger she does not listen and grieve, flutter about, console them. Instead she feeds them. She might responsively feed them because
the tendency to feed happens to be in ascendancy. But there are times when the sparrow is tired and keyed to act in other ways and
yet continues to attend to her young. She does not merely respond to the young and hungry sparrows, but acts to realize values that never were and which she may never know those sparrows
older and satisfied. She assumes a social attitude towards them, sub-
mitting to their prescriptions while they submit to hers, and acts to satisfy the good she sensitively discerns.
deer does not merely run away; it tries to run to safety. It rejects the prescriptions of its enemy and they reject its prescriptions. It is sensitive to the threat they embody, and acts in accord
The
with what
it
end
it
Some male
also serve to
males are
it
foolish did
not
promote the good of the species. colt and a calf, fed in the same way, develop differently. The one becomes a horse and the other a cow because they are sensi-
and
utilize
them
in different ways.
They
grown
There
is
no need, with
Aristotle, to invoke a
horse or
in
its
cow to lure them on and thereby make them grow. Each own way acts in terms of what it sensitively discerns so as to
grow towards some other state whose nature it does not know. The wisdom of a living being is most completely embodied in its purposivenesSj which is a tendency to act in the light of what it sensitively discerns, so as to realize an unknown good. If the
living being
is
below the
level of a
98
out a purpose.
It It
The Wisdom
feeds
of Living Things
its young, but how and for what end it does without any desire to grow. It is blindly purgrows posive, purposive without a purpose, and therefore does not act with the nicety which the fulfillment of its ends requires. The spar-
not know.
row
ful.
feeds
its
The male
be unfruitits
may
The
deer runs to
in
The
it
tuber-
cular
body
somewhat
the same
would
a healthy one.
not do.
y.
GRACE
In the ideal case, response the reply to a stimulus and purposiveness the blind movement to an end support one another.
responsiveness gets out of hand, the being acts aberrantly, to moment without order. When purposiveliving ness gets out of hand, the being lives a life undirected and un-
When
from moment
eats her
her act of reproduction. Her her responses. The acorn insists on reaching towards the sun though it burn for its folly. Its responsiveness to heat should have
been controlled by its purposive need to grow. The happy union of responsiveness and purposiveness
is
grace.
graceful being
is
situation in
self
which
it is,
better future of
it-
a product of art, an art mastered in the course of living. Graceful beings are those which have had a world to combat and at maturity possess a stable mode of activity
or
its
kind. Gracefulness
which they charge with a quiet purposiveness driving them wards a more perfect state.
to-
therefore prompted organized body that habit and training provide. Stultified beings have had too much with which to contend and have too little
adults too effortlessly and are not to express much of their concern in the well-
Grace
left
99
make energy something beyond. The former are hardly individuals, being almost instances of a kind instead, bodies without life. The latter are hardly kinds of
by which
to
things.
turned inside out, having allowed too much of their to be spent in mastering the vitality bodies they have. Their lives are lost in their bodies. The pampered allow too much of their most characteristic power to sleep,
They
are
more
like individuals
much
of
it
A prop-
erly matured being is neither the one nor the other. It has the structure and retains the freshness of the well-tended, and makes
the effort and attains the of the stunted. It is not only a stability vigorous illustration of its kind, but an individual freely and energetically expressing itself, in novel ways, within a present bodily
and public
setting.
those beings which have matured with difficulty and still in their texture and organization, their rhythm and adjustreveal,
Only
movement
to an
unknown
An immature being might be said to be not graceful because not enough of its power has charming. been expressed in a stabilized mold. An aged being might be said to be interesting. It is not graceful because it no longer has enough
strength to express its purposiveness effectively. Its established conpatterns of activity offer too much resistance to permit its cern to be adequately manifest. The immature are too unrestrained,
much for the future, though immersed in the present; the aged are overconditioned, living too much in the present or directed towards the future. Only a mature being can past, though
living too
can be, for it alone is properly habituated in the ways of the world and acts purposively on what it confronts. It alone reaches the stage
where
it
can became
alive to
what
it
intrinsically
demands.
ioo
The Wisdom
6.
of Living Things
EVOLUTION
a clear line
There
is
no place where
lower and the higher subhuman living beings. Yet there is a great difference between a tree and a horse. The fact that we cannot
tell
where
a cloud begins
and where
it
we
are
cannot
tell
when we
it.
we
well above
we
cannot
tell
where
to
draw
the line between the lower and the higher living beings does not mean that we cannot distinguish the more obviously higher from
horses
from
trees,
Animals are distinct from and superior to plants. But they are not necessarily superior in bodily ability, responsiveness or purposiveness. Some plants can move and some animals cannot. Some
plants are carnivorous and some animals are not. Some species of plants have a longer history than some species of animal.
be superior to animals in other reinferior to them because their spects, are nevertheless necessarily sensitivity is less acute, because they cannot perceive, and because
Plants,
though they
may
An oyster and a pansy have little sensifeed perpetually, have no consciousness, and perceive nothtivity,
ing.
An
owl and
a pig are
more acutely
sensitive
and to
wider
range of things; they can see and hear, and can feel pain and
pleasure.
Higher living beings arise from lower ones for the same reason that the living arise from the nonliving the bodies of the lower beings effectively resist the expression of their concerns. Recalcitrant bodies provide an occasion for the free alteration of concerns, enabling the higher living beings to have intents which can be ex-
pressed in and through the bodies that before were so recalcitrant. To give hands to a pig is to injure, not to benefit it; to give the
mole eyes
is
to bewilder
thumb
is
less flexible
it. The ape is not a man, not because its than a man's, but because it lacks that human
Evolution
101
concern which alone promotes the use of the thumb in human ways. Radical changes in the organism remain useless or dangerous
unless
press itself effectively in
accompanied by a change within, enabling the being to exand through the altered body.
usual theory,
The
which
bases evolution
its
on the preservation of
its
random
variations useful to
owner or
kind,
is
unable, as
Bergson and others have remarked, to account for the development of such a complex organ as the eye or the wing. These presuppose
the occurrence and preservation of
variations.
many
useless
and sometimes
dangerous not all those that are preserved are good for the being or its kind. In fact, it is precisely because mutations are useless or jeopardize
the existence of the mutating being that evolution is possible. The mutations prevent the being from expressing itself properly, and it is forced to alter internally in order to act effectively. The higher
Not
all
beings issue from the lower by a free act in which the concerns and objectives of the lower are so altered that the beings are thereafter
able to use their mutated bodies.
more
effective existence
its
and thus
makes
nature.
A useless or
dangerous mutation, on the other hand, challenges the being to change its nature. It is thus not the useful but the useless or dangerous mutations which mark the points
beings
first
at
emerge.
evolutionary change comes after some mutation has ocThere will, therefore, always be a "missing link" in the usual story of evolution, for the transition to man, just like the
curred.
transition
An
from any lower to any higher being, occurs while and because mutated bodies remain unchanged. An evolutionary change may not produce a superior being; it
may
it
is.
is
Man arose
because
his
loz
The Wisdom
of Living Things
in
and through
Evolution does not apply merely to parts of beings or to their its bodies. It embraces the living being as a whole its sensitivity, concern and its end. It is a product of freedom. Freedom is the
power behind
as
evolution, responsible for whatever mutations occur and for the fact that higher beings have nonbodily powers such
sensitivity
and purposiveness.
Freedom
is
some
responsible for evolution; it is responsible, too, for individuals are conscious. Consciousness arises
when
changing bodies.
Not
essential, the
nevertheless indicative of the fact that the being possessing superior to a plant.
CHAPTER
SIX
CONSCIOUSNESS
THE EXPRESSION OF SENSITIVITY
also act
/.
on
Instead of dwelling quietly within bodily the position and status they happen to have, they limits, accepting reach outward to that which lies beyond. Beyond is where both
sustenance and danger are to be found, and a being has the greatest hope of continuance if it can, from a distance, accurately discriminate the satisfying from the injurious, and act in the light of
discerned. This
its
The
dictated
by
the
demands of
its
sensitive concern,
by sensitivity for an objective as related to the objectives of other concerns. Its body is a sensitized body, a body infected by sensitivity.
its
There
to
is a
minimum degree
body
but a
alive;
make
the
is
sensitivity
way
its
of being sensible.
sensitive
itself
it is
whose
sensitive
it is
concern
is
only
able to be sensible
able to bring a reserve of sensitivity into play spontaneously, thereby modifying the direction and the result of the bodily activity.
it is
Sensitivity
is
103
104
Consciousness
making the body shrink and expand, close and open the avenues through which the external world is approached. A being is accordingly sensible in different degrees, and at different times, for
it
which
is it is
it
supplements that
life.
minimum
is
ex-
required for
sensitized,
So long
as a
body
is
alive
not
Thus, man's body is sensitized when he is in a stupor, though he is not then sensible. The sensitive concern of a
necessarily sensible.
a
stupefied being
is
its
body
to a
minimum
degree only, leaving that body to behave largely as structure and habit dictate. But when something is about to destroy the body,
the being infuses that body with more of the sensitive concern and thereby forces itself into wakefulness. The being is then sensible
of some particular in its environment and is ready to act so as to bring about the result which the sensitive concern requires.
Each
minimum
When
sensible. It
hold on
its
have
sensibility;
has sensi-
can act appropriately. The body is a sensitized agency for bility, an avenue through which a sensitive concern is ensensibility,
abled to realize
its
objective
more
2.
whose medium
body which it sensitizes, and through can become sensible of particular things. It is never the perfect master of its body, however. That is why it has moods, and why it can become conscious of its pains and pleasures.
a living being has
it
The
An
its
concern in
is
its
That
sensitized
body
constantly
changing, thus creating a demand that the concern alter its excontract with the contracpressions. But the concern refuses to
tion of the body, and insists
05
Should there be
a loss in the
will then be
body as now incapable of accommodating that concern; should there be a gain in the body there will be a decrease in the tension to the degree that the concern masters that gain.
pressed and the
If the
body
lets
go of something,
its
owner
suffers
an increase in
its sensitive
tension so far as
it
by means of
concern, to what has been bodily lost; if its body accretes something, the being undergoes a decrease in whatever tension it may
suffer, so far as
it
succeeds in sensitizing what has been bodily in the bodily reach of a sensitive concern, the
it
did
before,
is
recorded
fills
as a
changing mood.
A
cern.
mood
Under
out the gap between a changing body and a conthe constant irritation of an ailing tooth, without an
awareness of pain or any feeling of discomfort, a being turns morose. The irritation of its tooth ruffles its placidity. Thus the
irritant creates a tension
well-nourished, without an awareness of health or a feeling of comfort, the being becomes relaxed and expansive. Having quietly
increased the scope of the expression of its concern by mastering satisfying content, it decreases whatever tension existed between
its
concern and
In
all
its
body.
is
which
that concern
from moment
to
moment; but
it is only the living who record the change in the of a changing mood. The life of an unconscious being is one shape of increasing and decreasing irritations, of varying tensions between a concern and an altering body. But since the nonliving
being
is
it
go
changes in
living being
conscious
io6
Consciousness
its
mands of
sensitive
state of its
mood,
however, can be recorded as pain or pleasure. Changes in mood occur in beings which have only sensitized bodies; pain and pleasure
presuppose that they have a bodily expressed sensibility be conscious it is necessary first to be sensible.
as well.
To
Consciousness, and thus pain and pleasure, occur only in those beings which constantly vary their approaches to the world; they
are possible only to sensible beings which try to alter the province of their concerns to keep abreast of the states of their sensitized
bodies. Consciousness
is
tween
Consciousness
is
one of
An
animal or a
man
asleep
is
also
with-
out consciousness, though sensitive and perhaps even sensible. They become conscious when, as sensible, they insist on expressing their
concerns in
a constant way despite an altering body. Pain and pleasure are felt changes in mood, existing when and as felt. There can be no illusions about them. To have a pain or
is
pleasure
is
to have
it.
One might
wrong with
the
body
of one
who com-
no reason why the being should suddenly be plains of a pain, or see suffused with pleasure. But the fact that it is conscious of the pain
or the pleasure should be enough for
it.
us. It certainly is
enough for
To deny
no
that something is pained or pleased because ive have evidence that it is, is to carry the demand for evidence a little too
far.
A bodily
is
pain
is
something
from bodily
control.
It is
evidence that
the being
07
which
it is
about to lose in
fact.
which
it
had
made an
intimate part of
it
that
its
pressed where
that something is losing the value acquired by that being. The flesh, in being rent, is
vital
by being encompassed deprived of its status as a part of oneself; the process of losing such a part, while senon to
it, is
sibly holding
felt as
pain.
pained because parts of it suffer the loss of a value being which the concern once provided them. Pain is the expression of
is
even though it is primarily concerned with the beset other things. It is a kind of sympathy for other things about to lose the boon of being enhanced by oneself, a sign of the fact that one's regrets are rooted in an egotistic accepa natural conceit, disasters
which
tance of one's
Pain
is
being
lost
cherished.
We
is
is
being freed from its enslavement to us. The more a man has identified himself with his possessions, the more pain therefore does he
of a pantheistic God is a life of anguish, perpetual suffering in the face of his impotence to stop the pasa sage of time and the loss of values that had been in existence
feel
on
their loss.
The
life
moment
before.
is
Pleasure
consequence of
is
a successful affirmation. It
is
a sign
than
it
standpoint of that body is not alien from the standpoint of the expressed concern. Pleasure blurs the distinction between the natures
it is
is
sensi-
what
its
is
body is mastering.
ture;
predatory. It deprives others of an independent nainvolves a neglect of what they want and need. Private pleasure has its taint of the diabolic, just as publicly suffered pain has its element of indecency. It is possible only to the satanic in its
Pleasure
it
io8
Consciousness
purity; only such a being could ignore completely the fate and fortune of others. are forced to seek the company of others
We
to enjoy ourselves to the full, for only by allowing them to use us as we use them can we achieve an equilibrium, feel ourselves one
the tooth
we
attribute to ourselves.
say that pains, but the pleasure of relief we are pleased by the entrance of other
We
things" within the sphere of our influence, more for our sake than for theirs. It is in pain that we become aware that others have interests
and values of
their
own;
ends.
Pains and pleasures are rarely if ever had in isolation. Only one who is suddenly deprived of something perfectly mastered, or who
difficulty in mastering something new could have pure or pleasures. But even in these cases the other follows almost pains
has
no
being both quickly adjusts itself to some degree to losses and always encounters some opposition and resistance. Beat once, for a
cause pains and pleasures usually occur together we are not altogether appreciative or unappreciative of the value and natures
of other things. Pain is the result of an increase in tension between a need for a
bodily withdrawal and an effort to retain a hold on that which is disturbing. What a being bodily abandons, it yet sensibly holds on
to; that
is its
pain. Pleasure
is
alien world brought under sensibility of a being and an a being bodily conquers, its sensitivity the aegis of the body. What adopts; that is its pleasure. Pleasure and pain are thus the result of
tween the
body and despite a one. contracting Pleasure and pain can be deliberately produced and avoided. being can subject itself to greater pleasure and pain by increasing
its
body;
it
its
Both
The
these
Cartesian Hypothesis
109
movements
its
matically, and
are late achievements. Initially, naturally, autofreely, every living thing tries to avoid contracting
concern, and
tries to
extend
its
control as and
when
body expands.
3.
changing tension occurs. Neither is projected from the brain or mind into a part of the body. They are conscious phenomena and
exist
they are objects of consciousness. Yet, following Descartes, physiologists and philosophers rightly remark that since a man who has lost a leg will sometimes comonly so far
as
what
is felt
cannot be where
it is
said to
They then, however, treat the pain as an excitation in the brain which is attributed, for practical reasons, to other parts of the body. makes the attribution and how it is done, they
be
felt.
Who
neglect to say. They are content to affirm that one can be conscious of pains and pleasures whether or not the body is affected in any region outside the brain, and presumably whether or not
the rest of the
body is there
at
all.
body was
a complicated
machine for
impulses which
might be considerably modified in the course of their transmission and which, as felt, had no necessary pertinence to what was occurring at the point of stimulation. According to him, all that was necessary in order that pain or pleasure be felt was that the pineal
his
receive impressions from all parts of the body immediately, but only from the brain, or perhaps even from one of its smallest parts
it is disposed in the same particular way, conthe same thing in the mind, although meanwhile the other veys The nature portions of the body may be differently disposed.
. .
which, whenever
no
of the body
a
little
is
Consciousness
such that none of
its
way
off
which cannot be
also
each of the parts which are between the two, although this more remote part does not act at all. When I feel a pain in my foot,
.
. .
my knowledge of physics teaches me that this sensation is communicated by means of nerves dispersed through the foot, which,
being extended like cords from there to the brain, when they are contracted in the foot at the same time contract the inmost portions of the brain
It
which is their extremity and place of origin. that although the extremities which are in the foot may happen are not affected this action will excite the same movement in
. .
.
the brain that might have been excited by a hurt received in the foot, in consequence of which the mind will necessarily feel in the
foot the same pain as if it had received a hurt." Descartes seems undecided as is evident from the words which
I
have
italicized in the
above quotation
as to
thinkers are
veyance of an impulse from foot to brain takes time or not. Later more definite on this point. For them all transmissions
take time.
If, then, there were a being who was thousands of miles one would, according to them, have to affirm that any pain high, that the being might feel as occurring in its foot occurred only in
the brain and at an appreciable time after the foot had been disturbed. Imagine, then, a dextrous surgeon following the path of an impulse and cutting off each nerve immediately after the impulse
body
the time the impulse reached the brain, of the imaginary giant would be cut away, and
it.
By
though he then had neither foot, leg, heart nor head, he would, according to this doctrine, be conscious of a pain in the foot just as
if his
body were still there. Some men, like Spinoza and Kant,
will rightly
have nothing to
do with the Cartesian physiological explanation of the occurrence of a pain or pleasure. But if, with Spinoza and Kant, they separate
the foot and
ure,
its
they
will,
changes from the consciousness of pain and pleaswilly-nilly, still remain within the Cartesian cor-
The
ral,
Cartesian Hypothesis
1 1 1
unable to understand
itself to a
how
it is
it.
that a living
body can
painfully
adjust
It
pain in a part of
have
seems quite evident, too, that it takes time for a disturbance to its effect on an organism. Both the hypothesis of the trans-
mission of a disturbance through the nerves and the supposition that it takes time for a being to respond to an irritation, have considerable experimental support.
is
They ought
to be sufficient,
if
any-
the Cartesian point that pains and pleasthing sures are directly felt only in the brain and then are referred to
sufficient, to
make
places
where
at
most only
it is
con-
where and as it is consciously Pains and pleasure are no more in the brain than they are enjoyed. in any other part of the body; in fact, it is easier to feel disturbance which occur
at points of the body other than the brain than it is to feel those that occur in the brain. Nor are they in the mind.
They
them
it is
necessary to be conscious of
if they are to exist. Neither sensitivity nor consciousness depend on the conveyance of a disturbance from nerve to nerve, from periphery to brain.
spond to it. At each point of the transmission the being is disturbed; from the standpoint of consciousness the function of the transmission
is
being to feel it many times in a definite order. disturbance does not run its course through the body un-
affected
by anything
it
time
it
takes for
occurring at the same time. During the to be transmitted through the body, other diselse
turbances occur which are immediately felt by the individual. Were a foot tickled and then instantly cut off, the cutting would
be
felt
immediately.
It
would
swell and
112
feeling
Consciousness
which the transmission of the tickle makes possible. The would thus feel the cutting in the context of a felt tickle. being Each disturbance, transmitted or not, if consciously is immediately apprehended. Beings do not, however, respond to each disturbance in turn, as the Cartesian hypothesis would prompt one to suppose. They do not first begin to respond to a disturbance which
has been conveyed to the brain, and then inhibit that response in order to reply to the next disturbance and so on, until they come
to something overwhelming or of major importance. a foot is tickled and then cut, one does not first the tickle only to enjoy abandon that pleasure to concern oneself with the cut. The cut is
directly felt after the tickle
is
When
and before
some transmitted versions of that tickle are felt. Both the tickle and the cut may be located where they are directly sensed or elsewhere.
experience consists of at least two feelings, both referring to changes in the bodily status of an expressed concern. One of the
An
one change. The other feeling refers to a transmitted version of the other change. Thus, a felt cut is part of an experience which also embraces a transmitted pleasurable
feelings refers directly to
being experiences not a tickle now and a cut later, but a tickling in which there is an overwhelming accent on a cut. The cut and the tickle are directly sensed as painful and pleasurable,
tickle.
The
tickle alone,
however, in
this
also transmitted.
soldier
whose
if
stimulated at the
at different mostump, ments. In the attempt to cut that experience short, he tries to focus on a limited region of his body. Without affecting the fact that he is
feels a disturbance there
and elsewhere
then undergoing
painful experience, his attempt may be wrongly directed. If one cuts off the intervening places between the soldier's
a
stump and
intervening places quickly enough, he would die before he was able to respond to the disturbance in the stump. But he would
The
curred, as
Cartesian Hypothesis
it
1 1
oc-
There
pain
is
no mystery
a stimulus
it
is
gone before a
is felt;
long they can tell nothing about the feeling that the disturbing stimulus immediately provokes, and thus nothing about consciousfest;
can
tell
how
a stimulus for a response. Physiologists usually takes for a response to become mani-
ness,
why we
ef-
fectively.
originate
and where no
we
a pain, moreover,
by decayed tooth in some other part of the jaw. sometimes attribute pains to places which are not part of us. might Wounded, we may feel as though we had a twinge in a limb which
is
We
no longer
feel
there. It
is
do not
any
have
lost a limb.
know
just
where
its
pains originate
its
it
makes mistakes
how
to use
body.
Its
bodily acts are initially tentative, random; it does not what to do, and waits for success to dictate what paths
after to pursue. Its public
know
it is
just
there-
movements
are governed
by an
effort to
eliminate the source of, and thereby decrease, the tension it suffers. Its actions are somewhat random at first, because it does not know
will free it from which happen just what pain. Those of its actions to result in a decrease of tension are naturally associated with that
decrease.
are repeated. The being is then on the way to achieving the habit of acting so as to increase its pleasure and decrease its pain effectively
and promptly.
quickly finds a remedy, for others no remedy has as yet been discovered. As time goes on, the acts
it
ii4
Consciousness
selected, because effective, are utilized as
which were
means for
association
conquering new
comes
with effective bodily movement, and after such association comes the association of the selected movement with new tensions, and
the perhaps mistaken identification of the source of the tension with the terminus of that movement.
Confronted with
ways, and
it is. It is
this the
kind of tension, a being acts in habitual more surely the more mature and experienced
a
new
when a man feels a pain in the stump inevitable, then, of his leg he will act as though he had a pain in his foot, and will that he is suppose feeling the pain at the place where he is accustomed to rid himself of it. He feels the pain in the stump, not in
that
he would have
felt if
not feel the same pain the foot had been disturbed, for the disturba
He does
ance in the foot provokes a different tension from that which disturbance of the does.
stump
Descartes
is
wrong
in
is
persed through the foot and reaching to the brain. Physics teaches nothing about sensations. And there is no evidence whatsoever
that a sensation can be
communicated by means of
a nerve.
4.
ENVIRONMENTAL SENSITIVITY
as
Men
are sensitive
also
seem to be
at, but also to things outside the borders of their bodies. Sensitivity extends far beyond the regions where
it,
where
a living being
being is able to become morose because its environment ant, or to be filled with joy because the world is
unpleas-
delightful,
even
though
it
acts
and
rests in the
same
way
it
did before.
things at a
Environmental Sensitivity
distance,
it
1 1
its
body,
as well as
of things and irritations within that body or on its surface. One can sometimes feel an intruder in the room when deep in sleep; ani-
mals sometimes exhibit an uncanny awareness of the fact that there are changes going on at a distance quite beyond the reach of their
eyes and ears.
every fisherman
caught.
that
it is
better to be quiet
if fish
are to be
There
is
no sharp
between what
and what
its
is
felt at a distance.
the rest
felt inside or at the body, can be sure of just where being have difficulty of the world begins.
is
No
We
determining whether the heat we feel is in our bodies or in the world about, in knowing whether the apple is really sweet or
in
it
think it is because we enjoy the pleasure of having with our tongues. Pains and pleasures, heat and cold stand out from the very beginning because they are vivid and inti-
merely that
we
in contact
which fades
mate. Yet they are but the surface of a darker and richer content off into the distance and of which we are constantly but dimly aware. They can be so acute as to make one almost forget that there
world beyond; they can be so faint that we are aware only of that which is happening about us. But so long as we are conscious, we cannot avoid having both the clear and the dim,
is
far.
constant
Because living beings insist on expressing their concerns in a way on their environments, they feel pain and pleasure
with respect to things at a distance from their bodies. pained when its environment becomes impoverished, and
pained until
attitude
it
it is
A being
it
is
remains
the
new environment
by
pleased
it
viting things
environment,
until
dimly
felt
in the
u6
5.
Consciousness
Living beings, because their natures are changed with difficulty, allow bodily changes to continue far beyond the stage that inani-
tolerate. As a consequence, living beings are subject to a changing tension between the demands of their sensitive concerns and their changing bodies. If they can feel the
changes in tension, they are conscious beings which successfully hold on to the opposed tendencies of sensitivity and body. sensitive concern is unsatisfied so long as the body and the en-
as a
being
it is
insists
on
sensi-
bound
to suffer
it
magnitude which
feels as
pain or pleasure. It must therefore charge its actions, as productive of pain and pleasure, with spontaneity, if it is to satisfy its sensiit succeeds in bringing its sensitive concern tivity. To the degree to bear spontaneously on its body and the situation in which it is, to that degree it succeeds in freely responding and, when fortunate,
which
because the body resists the a spontaneous reintroduction of that sensisensitivity, prompts into the body. It is a means by which an ineffective sensitivity
Consciousness, though
it
arises
tivity
becomes bodily effective once again, leading the being to act, not in the way which provoked the pain or pleasure in the first
new way which turns the being away from the pain towards another possible pleasure. Pains and pleasures are most acute, and assume the forms of
place, but in a
on remaining as it is body. Anguish and ecstasy are harchange bingers of death, marks of the fact that the contrast between sensitivity and the body is at its maximum, and that the being must act
anguish and ecstasy
despite a radical
a being insists
in its
when
or change radically
if it is
When pains or
Intelligence
117
pleasures are at their height, the freedom of response and desire which consciousness entails is too late in coming, and the being is
warding and pleasures will be the prelude to activities and desires never before. Great tragedies and great joys start a being on a possible new career. It is one of the functions of religion and art to provoke anguish and ecstasy. If they are not to ruin, their effects must be controlled by ritual and the demands of their media. Free
thinkers and the practical are inclined to see only the ill effects, the and the esthetes only the good in religion and art. But religious
and
The
all
pains
which
result
from
a lack of
concordance between
sensitivity
and
a bodily
minor
is
in nature.
possible.
With
no
significant
action
To
rid oneself of
what
is
felt at a distance
through the agency of sense organs, it is necessary to close the eyes and cover up the ears. Such acts must not only be learned, but
have the disadvantage of shutting one up within oneself, preventing an adequate adjustment to the world about. A being may move, run away or towards an irritant; but this not only takes time, it
brings
it
in contact
with
still
voked by
gerous.
by risking a
loss
of consciousness of things that might prove profitable or danIf a being could impress its concern on what it senses, it could remain in contact with what irritates, and nevertheless satisfy that
concern. This
the sensed
it
does
when
it
perceives, for
is
it
by an
interest,
which
through the agency of a sense organ. Interest converts the sensed by localizing, in the sensed, possibilities that had
It
makes
possible a fresh
and new
way
body
the sense
organs
1 1
Consciousness
as a
whole
as
is
to
be
manifest.
it
also interested,
uses
its
Perception occurs
when
to distant objects and qualifies those objects sive of the intent of its concern.
thus sensitivity
functioning through the sense organs and terminating in an object evaluated as being of interest, positive or negative.
interests.
Perceiving beings insist on viewing things in terms of established This enables them to act persistently; but for that very
reason they tend to rigidify the perceptual world and to treat it as promising what it does not promise any longer. The habitual
approaches of daily
life
arc attuned to
which
new
interests.
This
is
a truth
with which
artists
They
are constantly
trying to look at things from the vantage of fresh interests appropriate to what they sensitively discern. Every artist, of course, is
habituated and his works soon take on a definite pattern reflecting his habits and experiences. He can view things in terms of fresh
interests
men
only occasionally; but he is constantly aware (as other are not) that so far as his is an habituated approach he is not
doing full justice to the phenomena he encounters. Habituated interests stand in the way of the realization of
possibilities
now
to a familiar but perhaps painful and illusory world. To avoid such habituation, the sensitively discerned possibilities must, without the mediation of the body or its organs, be brought into re-
perceived, as in the present, must be related to a sensitively discerned possibility dwelling in the
lation
with what
is
sensed.
The
future,
if it is
to be meaningful.
act of bringing a sensitively discerned possibility into relation with what is perceived turns the perceived into a possible sign
The
of what
is
sensitively discerned.
As
Transition to
is
Man
1 1
is
converted into a being with intelligence. An intelligent being an expectant one whose future is related to the future of the perceived; it is one who makes use of the perceived as a sign of a pos-
which that being had sensitively discerned. animal can perceive, acknowledge meanings, and intelligently expect what is to come. Beyond this point it does not seem
sibility
An
able to go. Its intelligence does not enable it to do more than to expect and to anticipate. It has no power of knowing, of grasping
principles in terms of
and
which the perceived can be related, explained beings from the vantage of what it
does not deal with them in terms of the
sensitively discerns;
man
is
able
6.
TRANSITION TO MAN
Animals
intelligent.
most are conscious, many perceive, some are Those that are conscious have psyches. These are unilive;
have these psyches only while they are conscious, just as the obwhich they are conscious exist as pleasurable or painful jects of only so far
as
Animals often act on that with respect to which they are not sensitive. They make their presence felt on a host of things about.
If
they run across an obstacle they can not master, they retreat from it in order to deal with some other obstacle within their
tries to
its activities
approach
the state where, despite the rock, it can realize its good. Living beings retreat from obstacles they find beyond their
power
to master.
The
retreat
is
on some other phase of the body, neighbors or the world. Should the beings be unable to do this, they have no
other recourse but to change in nature or prepare to
die.
120
Consciousness
its
Unable to master
barriers, a living
being
may
be fortunate
itself
It is
enough
new
change in nature. It may freely concern object so as to act on what it could not before.
to
with a
because
come
to be; because
changed
men came
Were man
from
an animal,
if
problem of
his
the problem origin would raise no greater difficulties than would of the origin of birds from reptiles. One can doubt whether the change from reptile to bird is a change to a higher grade or only a
change to a type more fitted to the environment that happens to prevail. But if man be recognized to have powers and virtues, values and capacities which are, apart from their serviceability, of
a higher grade than that characteristic of
sible,
is
better adapted to
environment than
origin of a being who is superior to them and who may perhaps therefore be in a position to adapt itself better to the environment
Man
is
Why
To
necessary to
mind
is his.
CHAPTER SEVEN
/.
MAN
is
A comparatively
on the cosmic
scene.
On
this
point most thinkers are today agreed. The view is not new. It was clearly stated by Empedocles over twenty-four hundred years ago. It is also to be found in the first
chapter of Genesis.
chapter of Genesis is frequently interpreted as unequivocally stating that God created the whole universe with all its inhabitants on six successive days, the last being devoted to the
creation of man.
The opening
An
interpretation,
much more
offered
compatible with
is
by Thomas Aquinas.
Following Augustine, Thomas affirms that God, instead of creating actual plants and trees, fishes and birds, created only potential
i.e., only "their origins or causes." It was not, of course, a concern for the facts of biology or geology which prompted this interpretation, but a desire to affirm that man alone, of all living
ones,
things
directly.
As
a consequence, both
like
other living things, was created only in potency, in the shape of causes which could actually produce him in the course of natural
history.
Were one
man
would be no conflict, at this point, between the Bible and modern science. The latter does not in any way deny, any more
there
121
2 2
of
Man
That is a question method and indifferent
than
was an
act of creation.
its
outside
to
its
beyond
the reach of
progress.
The
culties,
theory of creation, of course, has its own diffiraises rather than answers philosophic ques-
tions.
But
taken as a guide, it is possible to affirm that ence some time after other beings.
Aristotle
man came
into exist-
and Leibniz seem to be the most conspicuous members man is a fixed and unexistent in
is
nature.
which always was and always will be For Leibniz, every individual not only men
a per-
offered his as a metaphysical doctrine relating to the insides of things. He did not maintain that living man was eternally part of a or experienceable nature; he claimed that his soul was spatial
only
that realm of being which permanently lay behind that nature. His view can thus be readily combined with the view that man, as possessed of an observable body, is a latea fixed
component of
comer
There
ists as
are
ideal-
and so long
Berkeley, Kant, and Hegel that all of nature exists only so far as men think of it. If such an interpretation of the
writings of these men were correct, they too must be said to hold that nature could not precede the arrival of man. But the interpretation is in error. These idealists attempt to show that the natural
world depends for its being on the exercise of thought. However, the thought on which it depends is, for them, not the thought of a
limited finite being with a finite mind, but the thought of a divine, transcendent or absolute spirit with an eternal and unlimited mind.
For
and
is
these idealists, as well as for their opponents, man arrives after the natural world has been in existence for some time. It is Aristotle
his
disciples,
and apparently they alone, who deny that there world when man had not appeared.
2 3
biology, the fixity of species, the nature of time, causation and chance, that there seems to be no alternative but to reject Aristotle
and agree with the majority. There is considerable evidence that man had an animal
origin.
He
has organs, nerves, and blood, a musculature and a brain similar to those of other mammals. He is subject to similar diseases and is a host to similar He and animals feed, grow and mature parasites.
under similar circumstances, react with pain and pleasure to the same kinds of bodily disturbances, and perceive by means of similar sense
organs.
are,
There
The
texture and quantity of man's hair, the shape of his nose, lips and back, the length and opposable power of his thumbs, his exclusive ownership of a chin
his brain, the
and nonprojecting canines, the size of nature of his foot and gait, the way he speaks and the
is
apparently subject, mark him off quite clearly as a distinct type of being. These differences do not, to be sure, suffice to keep him out of the animal kingdom, or
even to
set
him
far apart
more
from the higher primates. The body of a radically from that of a porpoise than the body
does from that of an ape yet there is no doubt but that both bat and porpoise are animals somewhat akin. The differences
of a
man
between the bodies of men and apes are radical enough to separate them into distinct biological families, but the similarities are close
them together within the common class of beings who have highly developed, somewhat similar mammalian bodies.
enough
to keep
man's body
is
of an ape's. The differences are readily explained as being the result of a process of evolution, in the course of which the traits of
until they
human and
their account of
his characteristic
come
to be with
upright posture, large-sized brain and his peculteeth and jaw. But all of them seem agreed that iarly shaped feet,
24
of
Man
he and
consequence, an animal and nothing more. It does not seem worth while to dispute the contention that
man
has an animal ancestry and came to be in the course of history. The view is supported by the independent investigations of geologists,
archeologists and anthropologists. It that man has always existed in his
would be
a mistake,
be granted that man had an animal it is also that he is nothing but an animal. Just as it origin granted is possible for a child to surpass its parents, so it is possible for an
if it
its
ancestors dwelt,
and to arrive
at the stage
where
it
becomes
a radically distinct
type
of being. It would then attain and exercise powers which it did not have before and which have no animal mode of expression. In short,
it is
become
man, though a
man
is
not
2.
DARWIN'S THESIS
is
To show
that
man
trait
of man, bodily or nonbodily in nature, is a developed, complex or variant form of some animal character, differing from it in degree and not in kind. An attempt to do this has been made a number of
times in the course of history, notably by Montaigne, La Mettrie and Condillac. The most persuasive presentation of the thesis,
however,
is I
Darwin maintained
row, love and
think to be found in Darwin's Descent of Man. that man's capacity for happiness and sorhate, his sense of
beauty and of right and wrong, as well as his ability to remember, imagine and reason, were either in them in a rudiduplicated in other animals or were present form. Dogs impressed Darwin as not only having intellimentary
gence, but self -consciousness; he thought birds had a sense of beauty, monkeys an ability to make tools, and dogs, birds and
Darivin's Thesis
^5
monkeys some form of speech and moral sense. He could find nothing in man which was not duplicated, at least in embryonic form, elsewhere in the animal kingdom. As he quaintly put it, "If man had not been his own classifier, he would never have thought of
founding a separate order for his reception." Darwin erred, however, in supposing that every human characteristic is duplicated somewhere and to some degree in the ani-
religious.
No
animal ever
is.
It is
not to the
point to say, as Darwin does, that there are men who have no religion, for one kind of being is not to be distinguished from another
by
virtue of an activity in
all
which
all
the
gage and
differs
the
One
type of being
from another by
virtue of a capacity
which
all its
members
there are types of animals which are or can be religious, this he fails to do.
What Darwin should have shown is that men who cannot be religious or that there are
if
Animals decorate and occasionally show sensitivity in color and design. But an artist reproduces in his art the meaning of another
thing,
no mere manipulation of color or design begins to approach. The sense of beauty of an animal, and the art of which it is capable, differ not in degree but in kind from that open to a man.
and
this
and history speculative into the nature of realities he never directly encounters inquiries the senses. What animals know is what they learn from
Man,
through
sense experience. multiplication of such experiences could ever sum up to a knowledge of that which lies outside the reach of
No
any
sense.
And
then there
is
man's speech,
pledge himself to do something in the future, his ability to cook and his ability to engage in sexual acts for pleasure rather than for the
sake of reproduction.
There
is
no evidence
26
of
Mm
it
slight degree.
On
could however be
maintained that, though animals have the ability to engage in such acts, they do not exercise it. But we ought to say that animals
are unable to
that
suppose nothing beyond what the evidence warrants. It is arbitrary to assert that a dog is a man or angel in disguise, unfortunately limited by an inadequate body or a sluggish will. A sound method and a sure sense of values dictate that things be taken
in the shape they appear until different light.
way we
we
are forced to
view them
in a
It is possible to hold that dogs do not speak because they do not have the requisite equipment or inclination. But it would be more reasonable to assert that they do not speak because they do not
have the
ability. Similarly,
it
would be
there are no animal scientists or philosophers, either because the animals have not been educated or because they are not properly
interested. But it would be more reasonable to say that animals do not pursue these subjects because they cannot. Animals present themselves as animals and nothing more. have no reason for that the evidence is insufficient. supposing
We
men who
are
dumb,
in-
and
irrational. It
would seem
clude that they too are without a capacity for speech, religion, art, science, philosophy and history. The practitioners of these various
subjects protest. They deny that any man is completely devoid of the ability to practice them. It is a rare artist indeed who does not
believe that every man has some artistic ability; theologians affirm that atheists are not only capable of religion but are actually en-
gaged in practising it in some aberrant form; it is a commonplace with many philosophers that all men speculate to some extent. One
must yield
abilities,
I think, yield to these ought normal men, these abilities are not
not,
Found
in all mature,
in the rest.
The
If these abilities
Body
127
men, they would be present in there are idiots, and fortunately being. Unfortunately there are infants in the world. If these are human and human
every human
were
they seem to be
they must already have these various abilities, or we term the one an idiot and the
other a child precisely because they lack the abilities which mature and normal men possess. They can be termed human, not because
abilities,
power which,
in favorable circumstances,
may become
expressed
and children, we are forced by a difcome to the same conclusion that Darwin does: reidiots
and
art
do not
suffice to define
men
as
beings of a radically distinct type from animals. Darwin obtained his conclusion by minimizing the kind of ability some men possess. obtained it by affirming that these were abilities possible
We
only to men, and then remarking that there were human beings could not rightly be said to possess them. Such abilities can not therefore serve to distinguish all men from animals.
who
3.
What
is
essential
common
to
men
is
abilities to
think or cook
be human
abilities.
but a single power which is the source of these diverse Though an infant and an idiot neither understand more
a
dog or
a horse,
mankind has
rightly
refused to equate infants and idiots with dogs and horses. There is a great difference in one's attitude towards those who desire to
vivisect the
who
Everyone
has at least a
is
merely too young and the idiot too unfortunate to be able to bring their singularly human power to adequate expression. Even the
rational or
28
of
Man
Men
are
human,
not because some of them do things animals cannot, but because all of them have a power all animals lack though to be sure only
that
power
is
we
is
the source of
man's
abilities,
man cannot
Even
his
many
which
it
shares with
animals must,
in nature.
quickened by
a single
first
of these alternatives
accepted
by
is
here echoes something of the views echoed in turn by Descartes, Christian Scientists
who
and
Spirtualists,
we
are
is
only
the soul."
The body, on this view, is unessential and the soul "never voluntarily has connection with it." But, theorize as much as we like, the fact is that men sit and run, eat and drink, laugh and cry,
and
this
no mere
an essential part of a
soul or spirit could do. To deny that the body is man is to deny that a man can be ruined by
man ought
to have food
and shelter in
The
body
is
but unwanted and impoverishing part of him. The main tenor of Plato's views is in this direction, particularly in such
an
essential
dialogues as the Republic, where gymnastics, the training of the body, is defined as an indispensable part of every man's education.
The
But
a
this
Rational Soul
129
It plays havoc with the truth that thinks about the good is not good enough, and
that to be truly
good he must be
some degree.
that
body
is
bring the good about, a man needs a body; if necessary for the good to be achieved, it is so far not
To
undesirable or unwanted, but desirable and necessary. Ascetics have discovered a way by which they can avoid the evils which
the
that
way
unfortunately
is
also
one
The
give up the goods which the body helps achieve. nature of man involves a reference to the body as an indis-
power
is
to be at least partly
For
found.
a desperate
problem sometimes
a desperate
is
remedy must be
body an undesirable part of one would have to deny that any body or bodily act could him, possibly be good. The good in man, we are then bound to say,
a
To
dwells solely in his soul. But that denial cannot be maintained. If body is in someone's way, it must be a good thing to take it away.
Since a
body
is
no hindrance once
it is
dead,
we ought
to be able
to help a man by shortening his days. This we can do, not by retreating inside ourselves, but by using our body in gross bodily ways. Our body will then prove itself to be a good, if not to us,
then to our fellows. Only because we have a body, can we perform the charitable act of helping our neighbors free themselves from
the evils
which
4.
The body
that
is
his
and desirable part of man. The power cannot therefore be a soul which could be understood
is
a necessary
apart from
if it
a reference to the body. This requirement is satisfied be assumed that the soul and the body are correlatives which
require one another in order to be at all, and which together constitute a man. This is the assumption of the Aristotelians. It has al-
30
of
Man
man
being
who
and speculate.
According to
it
would be something
side space
it
and time, unable to change or move. If it had no form, would be completely indefinite and unintelligible^ a passive bit
is
of stuff indistinguishable from any other. It is because each thing both form and matter that it is at once definite in nature and in-
definite in promise,
permanent
in essence
and changing
in exist-
ence, a
of a class and an occupant of space. In nonliving things, according to Aristotle, the form is identical with the structure. In the case of living beings it is identical
member
with the psyche or anima, that which animates it. In plants and animals, the form has no other function but to direct, structuralize
and
But
in the case of
man
it
tion as well.
is
Man, says
known through
use of a bodily organ, for the character of the things means, a reason grasps the nature of things as
they are apart from one. For different eyes the world takes on
different hues; for
fact.
all
it
appears as
it is
in
Aristotelian soul vitalizes the body. Since that soul has the nonbodily power of understanding, a man as having such a soul is
The
defined
by
clear as to just
Aristotle as a rational living being. Aristotle was not how men could individually and as a class acquire
that part of the soul which had no connection with the matter of the body. He seemed to deny that man's rational soul could origi-
nate from something lower or higher than man. Man for Aristotle just happens to have a rational soul and no further questions are asked or answered.
Thomas
The
Rational Soul
3 1
ask the further question and tries valiantly to provide an plicitly answer. For him, as for Aristotle, the soul is a single indivisible
is
but one of
its
many
powers. But
Thomas
Aquinas was acutely aware, as Aristotle apparently was not, that this means we must account for the whole soul in the same way
that
we
account for
its
reasoning part.
Now,
for an Aristotelian,
that
which cannot
alter. From this it follows that the incorruptibly rational part of the soul (and therefore the entire soul) is either an eternal or a
first alternative is unsatisfactory not only no reason why and no way in which the soul provides gets together with the body, but because an eternal soul is what it is independently of and without reference to a body. It is no more
created substance.
The
because
it
pertinent to one body than to another. Because each soul has an incorruptible reason and is therefore incorruptible, and because it
pertinent to one and only one body, it must, concludes Thomas Aquinas, be created for and divinely fused with that body. Acis
a body,
cepting the Aristotelian view that a man is composed of a soul and Thomas Aquinas thus goes beyond his master and, in full accord with Hebraic and Christian tradition, affirms that each
human
soul
is
human
body by
soul
is
a divine
and individual
act.
theory, however, requires one to affirm that the united with the body either at the instant of procreation or at some time after the embryo has been in existence. Aquinas
The Thomistic
adopts the latter view. But this means he must suppose that the embryo lives for a period as a kind of animal or subhuman. He
it is
killed or
allowed to die
at the
end of
the period, only to be immediately and divinely resurrected as a true human in miniature, with new powers expressive of its radinew nature. If Aquinas had taken the first alternative, he cally
this difficulty,
but he would
all
still
have been
man
alone
as
32
of
Man
On
either alternative
cats,
able to produce beings which are truly human unless God has a hand in the proceedings. Were Aquinas men, as beings in
right,
nature,
animals.
usually a way of multiplying embarrassments in the vain attempt to escape a self-created difficulty.
God
body
in
which
to in-
the soul
inserted
is
either divinely
mold
body
live
it to acquire definiteness on being forced to within that body. On either alternative, God would be responsible for the fact that one soul, through no fault of its own, oc-
idiot,
God
and unequal treatment a conception unworthy of being associated with that of a good and just God. We make a mockery
different
of divinity
by speaking of God as creating pure souls and then or allowing them to be perverted by bodies they did compelling
Perhaps
it
nothing to deserve.
would be
Augustine and Calvin, that the souls of men have different moral weights from the start, that they are not all equally pure and innocent but defective in various degrees? In this overcome the embarrassment of supposing that a
is
way God
one would
traps
what
have to be described
as
ignorant
A God
who,
starts
them
off as perverted or
in spirit or
awkward
in performance,
doomed, is one who is either poor and thus far from the rank
of a perfect being.
33
A man
and
is
desirable.
not a body. He has a body, and that body is necessary This conclusion is so obvious and inevitable that it
nies
would be hard to find anyone who consistently and explicitly deit. Even those who underscore other interpretations of the
nature of man, constantly shift their emphases and assert this last as well. There are passages in the writings of Plato, Aristotle and
else,
be well within the main stream of traditional interpretations of these men to assert that they intended no other point than this,
which
In the Timaeus, yoE, Plato remarks that "the part of the soul desires meat and drink and other things of which it has
need by reason of the bodily nature, is bound down like a wild animal which was chained up with man and must be nourished if
man
is
to exist."
"We
body
Aristotle in the
De
can wholly dismiss as unnecessary," says Anmrn^ 41 zb 6-9, 41334, "the question whether
are one:
it is
as
the shape given to it by the stamp are one, or genthe matter of a being and that of which it is the matter. erally Unity has many senses, but the most proper and fundamental is
wax and
The
the relation of an actuality to that of which it is the actuality. soul is inseparable from its body." "The soul," says Thomas Aquinas in Question 89, Article i, of Part I of his Suimna Theo.
.
one mode of being when in the body and another when apart from it, its nature always remaining the same; but this does not mean that its union with the body is an accidental thing,
logica, "has
on the contrary, such union belongs to its very nature." These three writers agree in holding that man is neither a soul nor a body. They are not clear as to whether a man results from the union of
for
these two, or
and
original
whether or not these two are aspects of a more basic unity, which is man. And one looks to them in vain
could have an animal ancestry and an animal-like body, and yet be a single being possessed of powers
for a statement of
a
how
man
134
of
Man
and abilities no animal could possibly have. So far as subsequent thinkers have been content to follow the lead of these three philosophers they have inevitably defined themselves as unable or unwilling to provide the requisite information.
nature of
to be
man
is
in
some
body.
from birth to death. He is not, of course, He grows vertically and horizontally in the
adult his appearance often differs so as a child that it would
As an
were present a dozen or so before. So far as size, shape, skill, strength and appearyears ance are concerned, a man becomes considerably transformed over
that
more important is the physiologically body contains hardly any of the cells
the years, while so far as the constituent cells of his body are in question, he is almost entirely changed. Yet there is a deep and
it is
the same
man who
is
adult and
child. Unless a man is to be designated as a time he loses or adds a cell, changes in strength, skill being every or appearance, it is necessary to affirm that there is something in
was embryo or
who new
him which is of his essence and which remains constant throughout his days. Despite the fact that he changes, he remains self-same,
a being
with
single essence
it is
and
career.
man is one being from possible to deny that a birth to death. "If," he says in his Critique of Pure Reason^ A364n,
Kant thinks
postulate substances such that the one communicates to the other representations together with the consciousness of them, we
"we
series
first
trans-
state, together with it consciousness, to the second, the its own state with that of the second preceding substance to the third, and this in turn the states of all preceding substances, together
with
its
other.
own consciousness and with their consciousness, to one anThe last substance would then be conscious of all the states
35
of the previously changed substances, as being its own states, because they would have been transferred to it together with the consciousness of them. And yet it would not have been one and
the same person in all these states." In this way it might, to be sure, be how one possible to explain a man was self-same for a time, and might suppose perhaps even to
how he could remember. But one would not be able to explain how a man could be responsible or how he could change. On Kant's view, a man is a new substance at each moment. There are men; the men change. But to be that which changes, a man must also be that which is constant. Otherwise what was
explain
before and what was later would not characterize him. But
constant he cannot be a
if
he
is
new substance at each moment. We know it is ourselves who change. That is why we know it is ourselves who are constant. And because we know that we are constant, we know it is ourselves who change. Because we know we are constant and because we know we change, we know we
are neither
A man
is
committed
if
He
is
guilty
whether or not he
is
We
want him
to be
conscious of his guilt before we punish him so that the full meaning of the punishment will be clear. await his awakening, not his
We
recovery of identity. He does not lose his identity by forgetting who he is; he does not become a renewed man by remembering
who
he was.
He is self-same
is
all
the while, in sleep and waking, but him know the nature
of the crimes he committed. If he changes his face and fingerprints he is different in appearance from what he was. But throughout
he
is
The
changes of him, not changes to and from or in him. man has a single, constant essence. It is tempting to suppose that this essence is the life which quickens his body. The embryo
36
of
Man
which
child.
passes away as soon as the embryo asThe child does not die in order to belife
come
a youth. It
is
the same
which
vitalizes the
Only one
vitalizes
life is allotted
to a
permeates and
sensi-
tive to the adventures these parts undergo. whole and suffuses it from birth to death.
One
life
suffuses the
life of a being, however, varies in intensity, force, mode of expression and bent from the beginning to the end of his days. The vitality of an embryo is different in nature and stress from
The
that of a man.
The
life in
the
body
is
constant thing. There is more to a man, too, than the life that happens to be exhibited in his body. He is equally himself when he is
passive as
when
he
is
active,
when
him
the degree of
life in
life
exhibited in the
part of
different times.
Only
immersed
in the
form of
the body, and this seems to ebb and flow in the course of the
day. part of man's nature might be said to be expressed as the life of his body but there must be a part existing outside his bodily
frame.
The
flame.
life
that
is
immersed
in the
body is
a persistent
it,
even while
fluctuates.
Nor
together with the body which it quickens, for two changing things do not add to a constant unless their variations balance one another.
the
life
within
it
and to somewhat the same degree. The life in the body, no than the body, is something which a man has rather than is.
All changes presuppose something constant. Either, then, men are but passing shadows across the face of some more constant
thing, or there
as a
is
is
expressed
their
and
men
act
on
own
it,
life
137
Were men
merely unified bodies, everything they did would be Yet all seem to have a reason of their
the
own. Though that reason expresses, responds and reports the things body does and undergoes, it frequently concerns itself with
other things as well. While the body feeds and grows, mathematical truths or the scent of the rose. Though
operate until the brain
is
it it
thinks of
does not
developed, and though it often reflects the state of the glands and the general health of the body, it is often vigorous though the body is weak, and feeble though the
is
body
stable
strong.
The
greatest intellects
health.
could then make out a strong case for the identification of oneself with one's reason. Despite the fact that the body conthe reason seems stantly changes in shape, size and accomplishment,
to have a rather constant cast.
qualities
One
Men seem
and
intellectual bents
throughout their
No
matter
they vary the nature of their bodies they do not seem to be able to change themselves from engineers into poets, or from poets into mathematicians. The body also distorts and limits their intentions,
how
full
play.
seek.
It
The
reason
is
a late
at different times.
The
statement that a
man is a
the nature of a fact, unless experience deceives us most grievously. Nor is it the memory, as Locke suggests, which is at the end of
The memory splits into multiple unrelated fragments one develops, embraces only part of what one is, does not encompass the present moment, and has little, if any, existence at the
our search.
as
moment
is
constant in
man
is
unitary and
all-
embracing,
very beginning of
his life,
and encomwith
act,
more reasonably be
or the reason.
is
identified
memory
One
can will to
must be
these others.
The
will, too,
seems to re-
main constant for quite a while. Future deliberations run along the same course as past ones, and men hold themselves responsible
for those past promises and acts they willingly performed. Yet deall this, the will cannot be that of which we are in search. spite
The
will
is
in strength
time. It
It is
not possessed by
human
beings,
nor by any all the time. Infants and those asleep and unconscious seem to be without a will of any kind. A will exists only when one
is
it
being, appearing once again with somewhat the same, though not necessarily the identical, bent it had before.
The
man
lies
beneath
his life,
memory, mind and will. It is not the whole of him, for the life and the body, the memory, mind and will are part of him as well. Nor is it separated off from these, for he is one being and not many. A
man
still
is
changing being.
He
be a unity because
is
unchanged throughout
is
his days.
That
his self
To know
self.
oneself
is
it
is
necessary to
know something
it is
of one's
That
self
what
its
concerned with
own good
or idiot, immature or ill, a human, by pertinent to others. Baby virtue of his self, is concerned with some goods that do good
neither to
partly expressed
The Origin
of
Man
39
body and soon becomes expressed as well in the form of a will and a mind, to make man an embodied self which may eventually
will
and think.
self
is
The
out
a constant, enabling a
man
to be self-same throughis
his career.
self,
expressed in
and through
body,
in acts, struc-
6.
man
differs
from an animal
his
sensitivity, the kind of body he has, the techniques with which that body is charged, and in the kind of freedom he can utilize in order to bring his concern and body together in perception, emo-
tion and willing. All these differences are consequences of the fact that he has a self, partly unexpressed and partly expressed in his
body. But, though different in kind from an animal, a man has an animal origin and comes to be in the natural course of generation. An animal has an animal body; a human, a human one. The difference
is
seems to be about
not one in degree of complexity, for the body of an ape as complex as that of a man. Nor it is one in de-
more
gree of specialization. There are parts of an ape's body that are ours. The specialized, others that are less specialized than
tongue of an ape can do less, the foot can do more, than the tongue and foot of a man. The difference between the body of a man and
the
its
body of a higher animal is a result of the fact that each quickens body by a different type of concern, the one originating from self, the other from a psyche. That is why men can do things
The
animal's
body
is
and even tempting it to spend itself entirely as a bodily power. The concern of a man, on the other hand, though it infects every part
of his body, is never adequately expressed in that body. Only through the exercise of considerable art and with great effort can
140
a
of
Man
succeed in living in and through his body in the way an animal can. He is, like an animal, helpless as an embryo; but, unlike
animals, he
is
man
many
He
must be habitu-
ated and trained over the years before he can act with the same dexterity a quite young animal can.
It does not take a tiger long to walk and eat, to growl and leap with the natural grace that marks a tigerish body properly suffused with tigerish sensitivity. A fish takes even less time, the amoeba no
time at
all,
where
it
expresses almost
its
entire
and through its body. But it is a rare man whose body ever becomes fully vitalized. When he succeeds in making it as
sensitivity in
alive as an animal's, he succeeds only by bringing part of his concern into play gradually and over a longish period of time, and against the opposition of his body. But though a man does not ex-
and through the body as adequately as does an animal, he is superior to an animal, as is evident from the fact that he can use that concern to enable him to think and will. His
partial expression of his
his
body
is
a con-
sequence of the fact that the object of his concern is too rich for that body, requiring for its expression the use of at least a mind and
a will.
and uses even though he cannot exhibit it fully in and through body? The question is a double one, asking firstly how did man
and secondly how did each individual come to be. The answers to both parts of this question are similar. Unless men were nothing more than animals and evolution a myth, the bodies of the
first arise, first
human embryos must have resisted their concerns in ways which the bodies of previous embryos did not. The resistance of
those bodies forced those concerns to change in nature and object, thereby enabling the concerns to be more adequately expressed in
fore.
and through the bodies than they could have been expressed beThose embryos matured as previous embryos could not. They
The Origin
built bodies
of
Man
141
of
in new ways, making use new concerns directed towards new objects. The first human embryos must have dwelt within the bodies
of
must have been analogous to the history of any embryo today. Each human embryo today,
animals.
their history
But otherwise
though living
inside a
human body,
starts as a
takes
its rise
human
its
living cells
which
are not
human.
nonhuman
being, whether
in
human
or not.
is
embryo dwells
body human or animal, some time between connonhuman being gives way to a human one.
is
And whether
or not the
which
Quite a while in fact before it is born it free, with its own self, rhythm and career.
fully
human, unique,
The
cells
originates
were once
parts of living bodies. Like other parts of living bodies those cells
were, strictly speaking, not alive then. Rather they were enlivened. Bodily cells take in food, grow and develop, not of themselves but
by means
of the
power of
the
body
in
ulti-
mately through the agency of the concern which quickens that body. This is true of the reproductive cells and their parts no
less
than
it is
of other
cells
and
their parts.
little
None
of them merely
resides in a body.
They
the
are not
in the
body from
embryo
packets of life, stowed away on. As parts of the body they are
subordinate beings, sharing the body's adventures and trials, interplaying with one another, reflecting the presence of drugs, and
showing the
and shock.
its
Each
cell has
however
a structure
dictates,
and a unity of
own.
It
body
own
it is
as sustained
by
the
life
To become
livened part resisting a living thing, the cell must be separated and then freely exercise a power of its own. body,
which the individual provides. It is an enthe life of the whole in a characteristic way.
from the
i4 2
Cells,
of
Man
tivity
which can be separated off in the course of a normal acand which when separate make possible the rise of an inde-
pendent living growing being, are properly termed "reproductive cells." They differ from other cells in the ease with which they are
separated and in their ability to attain the status of actual inde-
pendent living individuals. Theoretically separate any cell from the body and start
career.
it
it
off
cells
can
initiate a state
which
mature
with
body
complex and
as
of
its
parents.
cells
Separated reproductive
before.
they did
But they are radically different. The act of separation provides them with true boundaries, enabling them for the first time
to have careers of their
components,
right.
now
And
only
as
they are distinct beings, individuals in their own separated do they deserve to be termed living
sperm and egg. Both sperm and egg, on being separated from the body, become independent living beings. Since they are cells which have none
of the powers or characteristics of a human being, they are evidently not human. They are, of course, not animal, lacking animal
traits
and powers
as well as
human
ones.
Sperm and
egg, whether
animal or human, seem more like plants than like the animal or human beings which will issue from them. The conversion of them
into true
embryos
is
been done to dispel it. Perhaps we ought to be content for the moment if we can find an explanation which conforms to all the facts
known and
coming
to be of
coheres with the account that must be provided of the any new being or power.
sperm however, necessary. Loeb produced frogs through the mechanical stimulation of their eggs, and more
a
Complex
union
is
not,
somewhat
similar
way.
It is
The Origin
of
Man
is
143
reasonable to suppose that it is likewise possible to produce a as the outcome of the stimulation of a human egg, and it
human
con-
ceivable that a similar result might be obtained by stimulating the instead. But the normal, more is one in sperm interesting case
cell
by
sensitive concerns.
The
which results from their union is quickened by a complex power which bears the marks of both. The being that eventually
something of the flavor as well as something of the physical properties of both parents, because the new sensitivity and new cell depend for their being on concerned cells provided
to be, has
comes
by
those parents.
The sperm and egg contribute part of their vitality to constitute a new cellular sensitivity; they use the remainder to constitute the characteristic resistance of the new cellular body. The new cellular
is
body thus
has a nature of
its
own,
which
characteristic of the
It is sensitive
responding
sists
to stimuli in a purposive
way. As
grows
its
body
re-
the sensitivity more and more. The embryo is thereby subjected to tensions which allow it to become conscious of pains and
pleasures.
At
the
moment
it
becomes conscious,
it
becomes
new
type of being, a being with a psyche. It is then analogous to a higher living being. It is then a being that can bring its sensitive
concern to bear on
ceive.
But
this
body, thereby enabling it to feed and perbody that it has grows at such a pace that almost at
its
its
impossible to exercise these functions. It is concern, and therefore its nature, once again.
it
144
It is
of
Mm
it,
achieves a
self. It is
then that
despite
its
body,
its
is
and use
body
be-
arises
when an embryo,
changes that concern into one which can be expressed in and through that body. The change is from a concern directed to the
its
concern characteristic of
It is a
a self, sensitive in a
new and
broader
way. change from a being which can which can act ethically, from a being which
so as to promote the welfare of itself or
its
living
body which
can
utilize a
living
body
so as to
exist.
realized
Man's first and perhaps greatest task is that of mastering his body.
In this activity he parallels the activity of other living beings, differing from them primarily in the kind of concern he utilizes, in
the difficulties he experiences in subjugating his body, in his ability to make deliberate use of that body, and in the extent and number
of bodily techniques and habits that he acquires. The discussion of human techniques and habits
is
the primary
as
analogous to those characteristic of animals. Accordingly, a good deal of what follows in the next chapters can profitably be applied
to
From now on, however, previous account of subhuman beings. our concern is with man, and the discussion that follows is important primarily for whatever light
pacities,
it
throws on
his nature
and ca-
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE EMBRYO begins as a single being feeding on the food its mother
provides.
Almost
It
once
it
own
mode
issue
must, therefore, immediately change its tactics and good. of life or be prepared to die. These alternatives all growing beings face from time to time. The lowest organisms meet the
by subdividing into a number of similar independent cells, each with a life of its own. The animal and human embryos meet
by subdividing into a number of different kinds of dependent subordinate cells. Most of these new cells must forever cling to and
remain under the embryo's sway if they are to continue and prosper; only a few of them, the "reproductive," are eventually able to exist and develop alone.
escape death the lower organisms multiply, give way to a multiplicity of independent beings. The animal and human eminto
it
To
bryos escape by changing their structures, turning their bodies complex unities of multiple dependent cells, with restricted
activity, under the single control of a psyche Because the parts of the body can act effectively somewhat independently of the body as a whole, the embryo no longer need
directly supervise every act. The quickened parts can be allowed to perform routine tasks as though they had a life of their own.
By producing
specialized cells, capable of independent activity to is able to conserve its energies and de-
H5
146
vote
itself
remain within
its
control,
their increase in
in possible an increase
activities
and the
lines of pos-
growth.
initial
The embryo
a
it
living being
which develops
in
grows.
The
grow
they organically
soon specialized parts which the embryo produces so large that they must subdivide. Like the body as a whole, unite different subordinates. They become or-
grow
subject to a single power and yet of many acts of their own. From embryo on, the living capable being is thus a unity of organs rather than of cells. It rules not like of different
his
cells,
monarch directly controlling the affairs more like an overlord who has allocated
a
but
of
power
to
men
lower caste and depends on their allegiance and delegated rule to prosper and to grow.
2.
THE ORGANS
There is no sharp boundary separating one organ from another, or from the living body, the organism, as a whole. To extract an organ from the body is to do violence to both, creating definite
boundaries and
new
on both.
all
that
is
When
a pig
is
little
but pork, and ham, and glue. Sometimes an organ can be cut away without the organism
pigs,
being thereby destroyed. If a leg is cut off, it is deprived of all but the organism need not die. And sometimes an organ vitality, can be isolated in such a way that it is the organism and not the
organ which
is
killed.
and keep it beating within a glass jar. It would be easy but wrong to conclude that all they did was to change the location of the heart from the body to the jar. Were that true, the
tract a living heart
The Organs
heart within the
147
the
body but
separate living thing, beating freely and irresponsibly no matter what the organism required and the psyche or self desired. The
its
acts in
accordance with
the requirements of the and the liver, is kept alive by leg, the lungs the organism as a whole, and can occasionally be deliberately controlled. The act of the heart is an act of remaking it in isolating
before
with powers and functions it did not have and of depriving it of others. The extracted heart beats somewhat the same way as the heart within the body does because
part, of providing it
its
structure
is
latter, it is a
gen-
newly produced and formed. The heart is a vital organ, whose acts and products are essential to the continuance and functioning of other organs. But it cannot act alone. It must be fed by other vital organs and these must be
by it in turn. The heart, the liver, the stomach and the kidneys work together. They form a kind of unity in which each provides
fed
material needed
by the
others.
They
and make possible the use of such auxiliary organs eye, ear, nose and tongue.
of
Neither separately nor together are the life or the sole avenue through which
vital
it
would depend for their vitality exclusively on and there would be no psyche or self which corrected the them,
the hands and feet
tendencies of the
sensitivity.
body by
is
a single being whose psyche or self and sustains every organ of the body, vital and auxiliary, quickens though these have their own characteristic powers enabling them living being
to
is
an instrument for
all
the
others, an agency for obtaining and transforming material by means of the vitality they ultimately receive from the psyche or
self.
Yet, throughout
its
career, each
organ remains
dependent
thing, no matter how freely and automatically it behaves. Most of the organs can be utilized in more than one way. Hands
148
can be used to grip and to push, the throat can serve to swallow and to cough; a man uses his tongue to taste and to talk, his nose
to breathe and to smell. If each
mode
of a different organ, a man would have to be much more cumbersome than he now is, or he would have to give up doing some of the things of which he is now capable. He would require at least
a score of hands
if
with which to
lift,
he needed one with which to grasp, another a third with which to push, a fourth with which
to twist, etc. Because he has only two, capable of doing many different things, he is much more compact and flexible than he
unfortunate that
flexible.
would be
him
well
his teeth as
The
converse
is
also true.
tasks to perform.
Some of
be
assumed by
organ whose
new
organs. If, for example, he could acquire an exclusive function it was to smell, and another whose
it
exclusive function
was
to taste, the
common
many ways.
It
would be
desirable
organs providing that he did not thereby become too cumbersome and could engage in the old tasks with as much
if
if
some of
his present
despatch as before.
in
We
know
that he
is
now
organically superior
some respects
become
proportionately more cumbersome, he has organs, such as hands, which they do not have, and because, without becoming proportionately
more
inefficient,
as the tongue,
which they
is
also have, in
man and
considerably increased by similar improvements, to that degree it is evident that man is neither the offspring of a good and powerful
God
The Organs
149
ment. Man, though organically superior in some ways to others, is much less than he might be.
never be to man's advantage to have each organ so specialized that it can do one and only one thing. Such specialization
It will
would demand
now
that he do but few of the things of which he or that he be so stuffed and decorated with organs capable, as to make it very difficult for him to move quickly out of harm's
is
way.
This mul-
use of organs, this capacity of organs to perform many functiple tions is an advantage. It enables a man to remain compact and yet
engage
a double advantage, however, entrains then an injury to or a danger. If an organ has many functions, in in which the injury or its loss of it will
in
many
tasks.
handicap
possessor
loss
of a
more
specialized organ
If the
tongue
is
in-
it is
speak and
taste.
The more
func-
more
is its
injury or
loss.
The second danger is more constant though not as serious in its results. The different functions of an organ are not, as a rule, comA man cannot at once drink and speak, since he has only patible. one throat and cannot make it simultaneously swallow and expel.
the competing tendencies are of equal strength they will get in one another's way, preventing the significant use of the required
If
in strength the stronger is bound to have organ. If they differ the weaker will fail to achieve adequate expression. way, and
its
The tendency
throat. If they
neither speak nor is a rare ocdrink, but would splutter instead. This, fortunately, Due to the constitution of the mind and the body, the currence.
man would
of novelty and the circumstances in which drag of fatigue, the lure the different tendencies have different strengths a man is
placed,
at different times, inclining
him to respond now in one way and then in another. Because tendencies usually differ in strength, a
man
is
much
difficulty
through a
50
given organ at almost any time. And since the strength of different tendencies varies from time to time, he is usually able to
express himself in multiple ways through the same organ. Each organ has its own work to perform. Each is composed of
different kinds of cells, having characteristic functions.
Some-
times the cells of one organ can be transferred to another. They then usually take on the functions which are characteristic of the
which they are introduced. The constitution of a cell depends on the organ of which it is a part, just as the nature of the organ depends in part on the nature of the organism in which
cells into
it
dwells.
When
is
an organ
is
transferred
subjected to a
no hope
which concern
themselves with the transfer of a gland or two. Old age infects the
entire
exacts
its toll
intro-
duce. Every
new
cell
would have
to find
body and adjust itself to a rhythm well worn work at all. But even if the entire body were
fresh and new, the life
replaced by one which animated the whole would still be old and frayed, infected by memories, emotions, moods and thoughts which would soon age and corrupt the body to bring it to the level of the one that was there before. Every cell and organ is
conditioned
by
others with
which
all,
it is
joined,
as the inevitable
is first
and
last a
possible,
of course, to do things to the cells which radically and functions of the organs and the organism the constitution of certain cells can slight change in
make
all
sanity, a giant
the difference between health and sickness, sanity and inand a dwarf. The good or ill health of the parts is
ill
man
well
The Organs
or
ill is
151
hibits
principle and source the same man still. The self he exwhen he is in good health can be discerned in the life he
in
leads
when
he
is
unwell.
When
sick his
symptoms may be
like
those of others, yet he is sick in his own way, cheerful where another is despairing, yielding where another is not, producing a different total effect with a flavor of its own.
Each
ance.
vital
organ has
and appear-
These can be considerably modified without injury to themselves or to the whole. There are healthy men whose liver, kidneys and lungs have not the color or consistency that doctors cherish, whose hearts are on their right sides, or whose stomachs
misshapen and upside down. It would be unwise to try to change these merely because they do not conform to a norm.
are
The norm
to appear
rough guide, not an absolute standard. It provides no inviolable rule. It tells us the way things have been accustomed
is
one has
tion
a right to
as
they ought to be. There is no condition on any organ except that it should funcimpose
way
efficiently
Each organ specializes and canalizes the energy it obtains directly from the organism and indirectly from the psyche or self. It works together with other organs, offering its products to them
in return for theirs.
Each
is
No one
of them can assume the role of being the indispensable agent for the conversion of material for the benefit of the rest. Each is fed
by
them
in turn.
its toll
havoc with the heart. cure or lungs, infected lungs play them all, offering them material in correction of one will benefit
on the
in a larger quantities or
over-correct,
more palatable form. One may, however, make an organ better than it should be in the con-
The
life
span of an athlete
may
be shortened
if,
having enlarged
his heart
through
exercise, he fails to
make ade-
quate provision for the use of all its products or for the continued satisfaction of its increased needs. To live long and well one must
52
provide for the expansion and contraction of all the vital organs together, and then adjust them to the needs and uses of those which
3.
REFLEXES, INSTINCTS
AND HABITS
Each organ takes time to develop and is exercised as it grows. Part of the energy it receives it uses to increase its substance, the rest it uses in order to make and transmit material others need. The
constant passage through wears down a channel in
it
its
of borrowed and transmitted energy being, a habit of activity which bea heart,
comes more and more entrenched as time goes on. There is no power in the organism designed to beat
in existence before the heart itself; there
bile
is
and
no power
is
to secrete
Nor
the energy
which
these organs use, specialized and prepared within their embryonic forms, biding its time until it can appear in organs full grown.
embryonic form;
it
power and mode of acting not possible to is fed by other mature organs and is exer-
cised along paths just recently formed. Nor, finally, can an organ be made to grow, unexercised and unused, and then suddenly be
put to work. Everything it does is the product of the interplay of many factors, and their interrelation is only gradually and slowly
learnt.
body, an enlarged heart another. If a heart could be grown fullsized but unexercised, it would somehow have to build up the
kind of habit which ordinary hearts develop as they grow. The beating of the heart is an acquired, not an innate mode of
provided by the structure of the heart and the rest of the body, the tempo and form of the heart's activities can be considerably and, occasionally, permanently changed.
activity.
limits
Within the
Because
its
activities
it
can function
steadily and without deliberate supervision. But for the same reason, its customary acts can sometimes, as medical histories and
Reflexes, Instincts
and Habits
53
quite a few Orientals demonstrate, be restrained and even subjected to unusual transformations. Hearts have been forced to skip
beats, to
change their rhythms and to follow new patterns of bethe heart normally beats is only the way beat, not the way it must or always will.
it
it
havior.
The way
has
been accustomed to
The embryo
vide the
prospers because
it is
most
all its
it
By the time it is ready to enter our world, alorgans are developed and attuned. There is then little
to
more for
body beyond exercising the different and adjusting them to one another in different ways. The hardest and most indispensable part of its eduits
do for
organs in
cation
new
situations
is
The
first
infant's
new nor
its
untried.
The
infant
was
energy deavoring to control the embryonic body, and in habituating the embryonic organs. The heart, liver, lungs, and brain, all the nerves
in vitalizing
and
in en-
and
were
in existence
stantly exercised in embryonic ways. The old campaigner on quite familiar terrain.
glory the infant trails behind it is a set of organic habits, well-learned and well-grooved. These habits are ingredient within
its
The
involuntarily as a result
from embryo. Formed unconsciously and of the repetition of acts on the part of
dation for everything the individual can bodily do. All bodily acts, no matter how new, depend on the continued functioning of the
vital
organs; they bring some accustomed muscles into play. Throughout one's life, even while striking out in new directions or
while engaged in the performance of genuinely novel tasks, one makes and must make use of routes formed and partly fixed in
embryo.
being precipitated into daylight, the infant is forced to take account of a new environment, much more complex and unpre-
By
54
it
was accustomed
It
to face.
had no occasion to
blink or to suck.
It
control of
its ears,
had no opportunity to develop habits for the nose, eyes or mouth. Yet the infant begins and
at
its
despatch. fectly well and at once in reaction to something approaching close. It would seem from this that a tendency to blink the eye lay dor-
blinks
once to use these organs with surety and eyes without antecedent practice, yet per-
appropriate occasion to
move
able tendencies to
way
of approach-
ing automobiles, but that it awaits a score of years or so in order to express these tendencies with most effect.
The
is
well performed on
its first
occasion
is
no
warrant for the supposition that there is an innate and definite tendency to do it, which comes into the open at an appropriate time. Nor is there warrant for the supposition that such acts are
in
from the
Though acts, well-performed occur without thought or desire and somemay times without much effect on other bodily activities, they nevertheless depend on the continued functioning of other organs, vary
first,
performance though the stimuli remain the same, and can are able to blink, sneeze sometimes be deliberately controlled.
in
We
as well as involuntarily,
these acts arc performed. Blinking, sneezing and way like other habitual acts. They have a similar origin, sucking are function and result. They are the outcome of a sudden and stable
which
union of
New
When
circumstances require an organism to acts in new ways. the habits it learned as an emits acts are built directly on
Reflexes, Instincts
and Habits
155
bryo, when they occur early in life, function only in response to stimulation independently of the requirements of the organism as a whole, and are performed from the first with considerable success,
psychologists describe the being as in the grip of a "reflex." its acts implicate the entire body and operate in greater inof the kind of stimulation provided, they say that it is dependence
When
acting
by
"instinct" instead.
are habits, differing from other useful to the organism or its kind, and in the frequency and ease with which they are exhibited. They are not in fact, to always more insistent than other habits. It is
habits in being
more
possible,
which
are
much more
normally acknowledged
ing experience can suddenly and rather permanently solidify the habit of listening and the habit of jumping into a new habit so insistent that
one
is
The
not more
more
we must
as a consequence of shocks sufshould not require one to refer to a by supposed wisdom located in the muscles or tendons, or to some
embryonic habits
fered
a helpless infant. It
supposed ineradicable innate and perfect way of acting. Despite the rarity of its occurrence and the fact that it
is usually or conquered, the habit of jumping with terror at suppressed sounds is one which could be made more common and could be-
come more deeply entrenched than almost any practice men have been accustomed to salute as a "reflex" or "instinct." Even such indispensable activities as respiration and digestion can be accentuated and depressed more readily than those inspired by a gripping
fear.
Such so-called instincts as fighting or acquiring, despite their actual frequency of occurrence, could not be exhibited in as many
as
men
owe
their rise to a
sudden fearful
156
shock.
Many individuals never acquire an adequate channel or occasion for the expression of an "instinct" to fight, or for the expression of an "instinct" for the accumulation of goods; those who
pursue these activities have had to wait long periods before they had a chance to engage in them. If it is desired to distinguish the so-called instinct or reflexes
one must take account of the paths through which they run, the kind of prior habits of which they make use and the kinds of occasions necessary to produce and provoke them.
habits,
from other
Later habits are built on earlier ones, themselves learnt and not
native. All
depend for
their possibility,
rhythm and
direction
all
on
come
into play under the pressure of circumstance. shock is necessary in order to root the practice of at sounds firmly within
jumping
is
necessary in order to have the knee jerk, the saliva run, or an act of self-protection begin. But to produce and stabilize such techniques as smoking or swimone's being.
Only
a slight disturbance
forever,
trary supposition that what a man does after a slight disturbance is a necessary expression of an irresistible tendency to act is just that way. What such activity reveals is rather how flexible a man is and
how
susceptible he
is
to his environment.
It tells
nothing about
his
essence, his obligations, his needs or his desires. environment will lead him to act differently; a
sometimes
in terms of an justified the sending of others to death "instinct to fight," have sanction the ownership of surplus goods
by an
"instinct to acquire,"
as the irresistible
cowardice
preservation."
The
followers of Tolstoy
know
nothing of an in-
heroes and
poor rarely exercise an instinct to acquire, and martyrs easily conquer an "instinct" to look to them-
Reflexes, Instincts
selves.
and Habits
57
us to find out
sult of
Habits are acquired as a result of action; this in turn is the rean attempt to realize an object of concern. The nature of
is
habits
body provides
part also
The
nature of habits
is
determined in
the ex-
by the intent of the individual for he encourages some tendencies and the repression of others.
Habits are constantly being altered. Men are constantly making and remaking themselves, constantly being made and remade. A good job demands a good preparation in the form of embryonic and infantile habits, and appropriate occasions for combining and
organizing them. With the surgeon's knife we can reach many of the habits built up as embryo. By changing a man's environment
his
But throughout he retains some control. A man's habits can be changed and united
deliberately.
To
the
extent he can deliberately change his habits, the man is the ruler of his destiny. His habits can also be changed and combined by
each
man
is
at
his fate
and
a creature of cir-
cumstance.
same
Involuntary patterns of behavior are acquired in somewhat the way as are fears, techniques and virtues. It is man's good for-
tune that some of these habits can, without serious disturbance to his equilibrium, be learned at once and permanently retained. It
misfortune that some of them take years to acquire and readily slip from him with disuse. It is good that he so quickly and
is
his
easily
it is
158
so late
lies in
how
to think or to be kind.
all
his
promise
of them are habits and are thus capable of being modified, coordinated and controlled.
the fact that
4.
Conditions infect the nature of that which they condition. To provide a road along which one can travel is also to tempt one to
travel
it
in
one
way
City plans for relieving congestion have sometimes failed because they not only promoted further traveling but made it assume forms
which had not been anticipated. The ways in which men eat, love,
the fields in
is
fight,
which they
the response it calls forth, the ways in which men eat, love, fight and acquire define the stimulating value of the objects with which they deal. Neither the misogynist nor the child has a
defined
by
tendency to love
in adult
ways.
The
power
to reply in such a
way
as to
make another
it
to love in
the
ways
habit of eating, for exhabit does not operate in isolation. works together with the habits of looking, reaching, conample,
veying, tasting and chewing, attaining prominence usually only after these have almost come to rest. The manner in which the
being organizes these multiple habits determines the import which its objects have for it. Food functions as a stimulus for it because
other habits, under the pressure of hunger, have been made more difficult of access, and the habit of eating forced into focus. The
frame
is
in
which something
is
done.
The things men do is a function of habits previously mastered, of their environment and the structure of their bodies, but they are
also a function of the intent
of Habits
is
159
a stimulus for
eating, not because he blindly reacts to the presence of nourishing material, but because he so organizes the dominant habit of eating
within a context of supporting, partly repressed activities, that he can effectively and directly respond to one aspect of the material before him. His organization of habits, which permits of his effective response, lies in part with him.
The
vegetarian's stomach
can handle meat, but he refuses to respond to it as food. When a man is unable to exhibit any control or power of organization, what he does caricatures what he would otherwise do. The
not stimulated by food, but excited by it. His gobbling is eating only by courtesy, an unorganized reaction which runs through and overruns, but does not utilize, the habitual
starved
is
man
grooves involved in ordinary eating. He may not even get to the stage where he digests his food; at the sight of it he may collapse,
cry or ignore
man
come
is
only a few avenues of expression are open to a they cease to be channels for the exercise of habits, and beit.
If
unleashed.
structured, organic body, with its own tendencies resist the expression of a concern,
necessary
if a
being
is
effect.
Habits degenerate into blind impulses when other habits are too thoroughly suppressed or are too sharply separated from them. An
tendency expressed indeof the demands of the self, a sign of the fact that the pendently body has its own concern which it partly fulfills in the face of the
impulse
is
a habit disturbed. It
is
a bodily
mind
as well as of the
body, in
society as well as in the individual. The habit of thinking in a a man to make his mind the avenue for the single way soon rides
exhibition of a mental passion as disastrous and as distressing as a bodily one. Simple intellects make a fetish of thinking. They be-
come
intrigued
by
some
160
narrow method, and are soon driven by what they had planned to follow. There is a tinge of insanity in those who ride the hobby
horses of limited methods, forcing everything within their confines. To preserve sanity, one habit of thought must be supplemented by others and all of them must eventually be welded with
the habits which dominate the body. The preservation of society requires each custom and organization to be bolstered by others. proletarian dictatorship would
prove
To
turning into a mischief, it must be exercised in a context of diverse independent methods. society which rallies only to the cry of courage, industry, patience or any other single limited type
of activity
is
It
play cherished to be prominently displayed. man who refuses to listen to anything while he
like a
is eating is drinks in private. Having sundered his act from those habits which might have enriched it, he is about to become
man who
a glutton, a bare impulse in the shape of a man. He can then too readily attain the state where he ignores the pressure of other habits, thereby turning himself into one debauched, a locus for
the discharge of unharnessed force. The terrible thing about a glutton or a drunkard is not that he eats and drinks with animallike pleasure,
but that he
is
about to lose
all
drink or do anything well defined at all, becoming instead a sequence of excitements and impulsive acts which can be held captive,
for but a
j.
TECHNIQUES
Techniques are unities of habits acquired slowly, and usually with difficulty. Walking, talking, painting, fishing and swimming
are techniques.
by walking.
They presuppose practice. Thus, we learn to walk Our first achievement is an inspired stumble and a
Techniques
collapse.
161
control.
We begin awkwardly, for our muscles are not yet under We do not know how to coordinate the body so that our
energies are united for the efficient performance of this single act.
dispersions, wrong emphases and misplacements. Our to bring our bodies under greater control, to use our muscles in more effective ways, to refine the process we already
There are
task
is
initiated.
Learning to walk
has, the place
is
mastered by practicing.
the
The
body one
well as of the particular acts performed. The sailor's gait is different from that of the mountaineer's; the knock-kneed step of the
Japanese child of the hills is different from the bow-legged stride of the Western child of the plains.
The ground
Walking
of
is
for walking
is
laid
long before
we move
an inch.
many
different muscles.
it
of these muscles,
step,
awkward though
To
made
of bodily movements already under control, forcing these new combinations. Some earlier tendencies must be inhibited into
and others
stressed, this
all
panded, and
activity.
of
Walking utilizes and transforms activities already learned. Just as a word completes a grimace, so a step completes a Walkjerk. makes use of movements which, at other times, ended in a ing
mere stretching of the
limbs. It
is
growth of earlier acts, for it introduces something that was not there before a coordination which changes the meaning and cut
of the factors
the
life
it brings together. Walking is a new achievement in of the individual, but it presupposes an earlier, successful performance of other habits whose pattern it partly follows, partly
62
Walking
gage in
it
only by inhibiting other acts and adjusting itself to a environment. do not cross our knees when we walk; changing we walk one way on the sand and another on the hill. The walk
We
changes
pelled to
ation in
its
pattern from
its
moment
its
to
moment
as the
being
is
com-
tempo and
emphases
and our senses become keyed to a different pitch as we change a But even when we continue to walk quietly an even path, we are forced to suppress, expand and stress along
different tendencies at every step.
as a
member
of an organic whole, which in turn is sustained by a bodily and thus a partial manifestation of the individual's concern. If the elements involved in the act of walking were not already interrelated within an organic unity of behavior, the act of walking
would await
its
its
numerous
components. Instead of being the normal accomplishment of children, the act would have its full-blown inception at different periods of
life. It would be a strange and surprising occurrence, to this individual in infancy, to that one in childhood, to coming another in youth, to a fourth in old age, and to another not at all.
Walking,
like
every technique,
is
by
a host of others.
The movement
be.
Every
act of
arm
repercussions on the movement may though and leg, of jaw and heart is a component
its
and
trivial
within a wider pattern of activity. Each is interrelated with mulacts. Otherwise it would not be the act of a single tiple other
being, changing its rhythms in terms of the others. If each act of the body were an absolutely independent occurrence, the legs would move at the oddest times and irrespective of what the individual
us
imitate the
activities of those
who seem
Techniques
a friend at the very at the dinner table.
visit
163
family
is
moment the
rest of the
gathering
a
The
truth
acts of a
man
is
which must
infect every
belief that he
important fact that habits have their own characteristic rhythms, routes and laws of development, persist in their expression despite
changes occurring elsewhere in the body, and take place irreA four-yearspective of the intent, needs and desires of the whole.
old
may
like a seven-year-old
a baby.
act of walking is interrelated with other acts, but usually with only a slight effect on its nature and course of
The
The
development. limbs have a relatively independent power and mode of behavior, a behavior which is capable of being perfected to a considerable degree without regard for the other needs of the organism. It
is
it is
at
an age for proper walking, and it is possible to teach it to walk in ways not appropriate to its childish needs. properly developed and a decent footing, the warm encouragement and inspiring body
models provided by its parents and friends are needed if it is to get to the stage where, perhaps a little earlier than is wise, it makes its first attempt to stand on its own feet and propel itself by its own
efforts.
Once
the child has mastered the beginning of the art of preto fall and then putting a foot in front of itself to prevent
it
out of
all
can proceed to perfect its mode of walking in a way keeping with its powers to engage in other acts as
its
movements
that
walking becomes more a point about which other acts turn and to which they are adjusted, than one of many coordinate activities.
164
any
to
individual.
But
it
a better
description of some
men
by walking more clearly and effectively than, for example, they do by thinking. The walking (like the thinking) is a specialized activity; it should be controlled by the interests of the being
acting as
more than
that certain
men
body. But for some purposes it is desirable should concentrate on such specialized activities
a
being unable to integrate them within a significant and harmonious pattern of behavior. perfectly adjusted man will not be so likely to help others find the way out of a
wilderness as he
who can walk effectively though his throat is stomach empty and his eyes blurred by lack of sleep. Similarly, only he who has persistently pursued the art of abstract and rigorous thought can be counted on to make those intellectual
parched, his
contributions on
which the
shifts
of civilization depend.
He who
thinks only to the degree which the state of his body warrants may attain an animal-like cunning, but it is doubtful whether he can
is
Walking
is
but one of
many
man
as
an
artist
the use of a
learned technique for making and remaking things. man's body is a work of art, re-formed under the exercise of gradually acquired techniques. Each of these techniques is carried on without con-
more surely it is mastered, though none of them is ever properly pursued except so far as its course is continuously modified through the spontaneous interference of the concerned
sciousness the
self.
is expressed in the body, there is life in that and eventually habits and techniques. So far as a man is body, concerned with the realization of a good which is broader than the
Because a concern
Techniques
165
good of
his
body, he refuses to allow those bodily habits and techHe varies their direction and
power spontaneously. Should the spontaneous modification prove of no avail, the man must, if he is to his prosper in and through
strike out in
body, abandon the attempt to act in an habitual way. He must new directions. Otherwise he will perish the more
surely he has habits and has mastered techniques. The acquisition of bodily techniques is an achievement of the
the guidance of the self. They are mastered no better men than by other beings. We come to understand man's nature by a little better if we turn from such techniques to one which he can
body under
is
the
CHAPTER NINE
SIGNS AND
LANGUAGE
/.
is
which so
distinguishes
which
many,
involves the use of signs. Subhuman beings use signs, but not as as extensively or as effectively as men; they do not know
how
signs to constitute a language. It is because man the art of using signs, and to a degree and in a way that acquires other beings cannot, that he is able to speak, to write, to discourse,
to
employ
and philoso-
inquiry into the nature of signs is an inquiry which touches on the activities of subhuman as well as human beings, but does not
An
exhaust the essence or promise of either. man remains a man even he does not use signs; there is no loss of humanity involved though
in falling into a dreamless sleep. But only if he uses signs, and in a way that others cannot, does he make clearly manifest the hu-
manity that
is his.
other beings; being distinguished from them, he is able to do things they cannot, such as the making use of signs in a language. sign is any entity, the acknowledgment of which prompts
else.
Smoke
is
a sign for
looks expectantly elsewhere. It is not a sign for one who, as a consequence of his acknowledgment of it, fails to interest
himself in something
else.
The smoke
1
is
66
The Objects
of Signs
167
Smoke
is
fire
to be seen in the
be signs of weather to come. These signs are also used for other purposes, but whether they are
or not, their use brings into focus a difficulty which established theories are inclined to skirt. When clouds are used as a sign of
rain,
what
if
is it
to
come?
What
which
makes use of
it
refers.
a sign unless someone Nothing but nothing is a sign also if there is no object to sign is a sign of something for somebody. Elimi-
nate the something or the somebody, and the sign is a sign no longer. But then, before there is rain in fact, what is it of which
They must
therefore signify something. Used to signify weather, they can be signs only of incipient weather, of weather as now future, of
weather
as
rain as
now
future,
a rain without actual strength or duration, a kind of occurrence which can be specific and determinate only in the present that is to
be.
There
is
no actual
now
to signify.
specific occurrences and concrete objects of the world do not exist in the future that now stretches ahead. Next year is not
The
already in existence, filled to the brim with all the realities and events that will in fact occur, awaiting only the indifferent passage
of time to
make
its
presence known. If
be.
it
nothing
like
becoming,
vantly decorated
by
it
sign signifies something general, indeterminate, the future as now is. The objects that coexist with the sign can be signified
68
only as objects which could be observed, could be utilized or could act in the future as possibilities which have not yet been realized.
The
is
object of every sign is thus a part of the future. That future indeterminate in nature. It is not amorphous, however. The
things and occurrences in the present limit the range of what can occur; they categorize the future, making it a tissue of delimited
possibilities to
concrete in the present that is to be. The fox is a prospective danger to the chick, the chick is a prospective morsel for the fox. Each contributes to the constitution
by means of
the other.
is
That
signified possibility
is
constituted
by
related
to the possibility constituted by the signifying being. There is now a prospective danger for the chick; an eating fox is a real possibility
for
is
it
die before
it
now
an eaten chick
a real
in fact
be
eaten.
There
is
room
on the
prospective danger can be realized as an immediate or as a remote threat; a prospective item of food can be realized as some-
thing torn, chewed and swallowed, or as something still to be reached. The chick may achieve a momentary security, the fox
may be momentarily
chagrined. Whichever it be, whether or not chick escapes, whether or not the fox eats the chick, the actual the delight or chagrin, pain or relief that is in fact realized is one which
its
concreteness and
detail,
be signified or
2.
referred to an object through the medium of an expectation, bodily or nonbodily. The expectation is a dynamic act by which the user of the sign moves from the sign to the relevant
sign
169
future. It relates the sign to an undetermined but limited frame which allows for a number of alternative occurrences. The fox ex-
pectantly turns from the perceived chick to the chick as edible, while the chick turns from the perceived fox to the fox as a source
of danger. Each acts with respect to the being it confronts in order to control the way in which the object of its sign will be realized. The one acts to turn the edible into the eaten, the other to turn the
dangerous into a harmless threat. All beings tend to anticipate, to read into the object of an exdeterminations it does not have. They tend to treat the pectation
object of a sign as though it were already determinate. The fox is overanxious, the chick is excessively timid. The former therefore
reads into the undetermined future the character of being delightful, the latter reads into the undetermined future the character of
being disastrous. The mouth of the one begins to water in anticipation of a meal, the other is filled with deadly fear before it is
touched.
A more
cautious fox
the
was food readily available to it; a more chick would have been content with the expectation courageous that something dangerous was in the offing. The fox would then
expectation that there
have been ready to act more adroitly, the chick would then have been ready to act with more decisiveness. Both could have acted
as beings alive to the fact that the
disastrous
to the chick.
The
future allows for the failure of the fox to eat the chick. But
both the fox and the chick anticipatorily read into the expectable future the result which the one is anxious and the other is afraid to
have occur.
them to act as though other were precluded. It may make them act in ways not appropriate to the present which is about to be. Errors arise when the future is anticipated and thus viewed as
anticipation prompts
alternative results
The
being more determinate than it is. It is tempting to suppose that the smile of a rogue is a sign that he will do a kindness, when it is a
will try to act as though he sign only that he
were
a friend.
By
70
man
has
made
it
it
Anticipation
for example,
is
A cloud,
may now be used as a sign of incipient weather; smoke may now be used as a sign of an observable event in the vicinity. Each is now a distinct sign with a distinct object. But
when
smoke were equivalent signs, having a broad future, a domain within which a number object of events rain and fire, noise and quiet, and so on were possibilifirst
as their
ties.
expectation accompanying the use of these signs was appropriate to both of them indifferently, not to each individually. It did not allow for the distinction of one of these signs (and its
object) from the other. Such a distinction
is
The
examination of the signs, for no sign reveals the nature of what will be signified by it. Any number of signs, no matter how different in nature, can be used to signify the same thing. Nor can the distinction be the outcome of a knowledge of a difference in the
futures
which
As
signify and continue to signify the same future. The distinction results from a refinement in the character of the expectation, or
from
happy
It
sequent refined expectation may. Sign-using beings start with many equivalent signs of an indeterminate broad future. But they also anticipate in line with their
When
past experiences, add determinations to the future they expect. they do this, they risk making errors, for there may not be
171
They may
an-
anticipatorily act as
more determinate
version of
Sign-users may, of course, be fortunate enough at times to signify some subordinate possibility as the appropriate object of one of their equivalently used signs. Thus, instead of signifying a broad
future
and
this
by means of clouds and smoke, they may signify only rain by means of those clouds which are located somewhere
is
is
anticipated.
a
They
more appropriate object than for other clouds or for smoke to signify.
An
interest in
clouds and smoke are used as different signs of different objects. Similarly, an interest in kinds of weather leads one to distinguish
different types of cloud as different signs of the different kinds of
weather.
fined,
The
process of distinguishing clouds can be further reare signs of light rain, clouds
how much
which are signs of a are signs of a rain of one refines the process of
distinguishing signs and their objects, one is always left with signs which point to a future that is never completely determinate while
it
remains future.
An
actual
heavy rain has a specific strength and which were lacking and must be lack-
ing to
it
as a
mere
possibility, as a
It is
from
different types of cloud, the cirrus possible to distinguish the stratocumulus, the cirrostratus from the altocumulus, and
to use them as distinct kinds of signs of distinct types of weather. The process of discrimination can be continued further, but there
is
it is
it.
Each
cloud
from every other, and in fact presages a future somewhat different from the future signified by any other. Yet the future to which it points is similar to that which is the object of
distinct
72
It entrains the same expectations and for all practical a sign equivalent with that other. Each object is related purposes to a different but since many possibilities are, from the possibility,
other clouds.
is
standpoint of practice and even theory, not distinguished and perhaps not even distinguishable, there will always be a number of
objects
which
desire to have a distinct sign for each possibility is a desire for excessive precision. It is a desire which cannot be satisfied ex-
The
cept
by
from every
treating every single item in the world as a sign distinct other, and then recognizing that no one of them could
be used twice in exactly the same way. For some purposes it is desirable to distinguish different types of grass and sometimes even
to distinguish
one blade from another, and use them as distinct signs having distinct objects. But for the rest of the time it suffices
the common possibility that all blades of grass signify. for specialists, all blades of grass should be synonyms. Except So long as a number of different signs serve equally well to signify some expected result, there is no need to discriminate among
to
know
them.
It is just as
wrong to
insist
signs be carried out to the limit as it is to insist that it must never be carried out beyond some preassigned point. The discriminations
interests
and time.*
by the
brilliant
:
had finished
this
book,
came
"Hopi noun that covers every thing or being that flies, with the exception of birds, which class is denoted by another noun. The former noun may be said to denote the class flying class minus bird. The Hopi actually call insect, airplane, and aviator all by the same word, and feel no difficulty about it. The situation, of course, decides any possible confusion among very disparate members of a broad
has a
linguistic class,
such as
this class.
This
class
class 'snow' to
an Eskimo.
seems to us too large and inclusive, have the same word for falling
We
snow, snow on the ground, snow packed hard flying snow whatever the situation may be.
To
word would be almost unthinkable; he would say that falling snow, slushy snow, and so on, are sensuously and operationally different, different things to contend with; he uses different words for them and for other kinds of snow. The Aztecs
go even farther than we
in the opposite direction,
with cold,
ice,
and snow
all
Salutations
and Occurrences
173
The need
parts of the incipient future waxes and wanes. Concerned only with knowing whether danger looms, a man is wise to ignore signs
pointing to other things, and to lump together as equivalent all signs which signify the danger. An increase in the number of interests
makes
new
interest
makes
desirable a distinction
among
signs
which have
previously been used as equivalent. He who opens up new vistas should coin new terms or use old ones in unusual ways; he who
clarifies
what
is
among
familiar terms.
The oracle creates new terms; the logician The one is concerned with a neglected
what
is
familiar.
The
He
is
fields
also a grammarian who inserts new and remarks that fact by multiplying
signs.
3.
act
ways while moving from signs to objects via expectaThe public act may or may not have relevance to the obis
ject
which
it is
If the act is
not rele-
vant,
an occurence;
it is
relevant, if
it
has bearing
on the obact of
ject expected,
a salutation of the
pected object.
accompany the
no bearing on the expected signifying rain is an occurrence, having rain. The act of closing windows while signifying rain is a salutarepresented by the same basic word with different terminations; ice is the noun form; cold, the adjectival form; and for snow, 'ice mist'." I am grateful to Mrs. D. D. Lee for having arranged to have Whorf's published papers sent me.
74
tion of whatever sign is being used to signify that rain, if the windows are being closed in expectation of rain as capable of wetting
floors.
may prove to be an excellent salutation. look of terror which unknowingly sweeps over the face of a frightened child is a salutation of a sign of something dangerous.
unintentional act
An
The
expecting. given salutation need not be used more than once. Although a man may put on a raincoat only once in a lifetime, the act could
nevertheless be an excellent salutation of a cloud, enabling another to designate the rain. Nor need a given salutation always accom-
sign.
At
different times
respect to future rain in different but equally pertinent ways. One can salute the clouds sometimes with a shout, sometimes with a
bow and
sometimes by a run for cover. Where a specific act constantly accompanies the use of a specific sign, however, it makes it possible for others to become aware what the being is signifying
of that sign. Were men to wear raincoats only on seeing one type of cloud, put on rubbers on seeing another, run to the cellar on seeing a third, they would be exhibiting the fact that they
by means
had,
tion
on these different occasions, three different kinds of expectawhich were directed to three different phases of the future, and that therefore they were using the three types of cloud as
three different types of sign. The constant use of any one of these particular forms of salutation makes it easier for others to learn
what
stant
is
tation that
being signified. But it is not essential to the being of a saluit be employed more than once, or that it be the con-
accompaniment of some particular sign. The act of putting on a raincoat can be a salutation accompanying the use of a cloud as a sign. It is then an act which reveals that
the individual looks forward not merely to weather, which is the object signified by the cloud, but to rainy weather. If he had
midway and
thus had
moved
to or looked towards
Words,
Calls
and Cries
175
the raincoat without attempting to put it on, his salutation would, as capable of being completed in many ways, have been a salutation of the cloud as a sign of possible weather, of weather that may or may not be rainy. An appropriate salutation is one which is
capable of being completed in many ways. Only such a salutation has a sufficient degree of indeterminacy to make it a proper ac-
companiment of an expectation; only it is appropriate to that undetermined future which alone can be the object of a sign.
situation,
The
it is.
is
A salubut
indetermi-
prove inappropriate
is
at times
one might run towards the house, begin to close the windows or look troubled. Salutations, moverover, are modes of expression open to beings other than men. As the sky
darkens, the birds fly for cover, the hens begin to squawk, the roosters crow, and the dog quiets. In their different ways they are all equally saluting the same phenomenon.
4.
Subhuman as well as human beings can use the salutations of others as signs. They can use the salutations to signify the future acts of those others or to signify the objects which those others
are signifying. This is possible because the concerns of beings, particularly of the same species, converge. Their expectations are
intertwined.
Living beings form close knit groups, not because they begin with the acknowledgment of a common body of signs or even of
ij6
common
so can use the public acts of their fellows as signs of what their fellows expect or will do. The mother may not be aware that her
face betrays her fear; the infant without
is
knowing why
the mother
afraid and without having fear itself becomes aware, by using the look of alarm as a sign of danger, that its mother is afraid of sees somesomething. The infant becomes afraid, not because it afraid of something to fear, but because it feels that its mother is its fear is acquired thing. Like many other fundamental emotions, not generated by an awareness of objects to which by contagion,
We
all
become
when
We
we
is
frightened
by
not
something.
The
is
Communicaenough, however, to make communication possible. tion requires that one individual use his own salutation as a sign of
the prospective acts of another, and that the other use that salutation as a sign of the object to which the former is referring. Com-
munication thus requires that a salutation be used as a sign by two to the acts of the other, the other referbeings, the one referring
the first. If we refer to the acts of ring to the objects signified by another and he does not in turn use our salutation as a sign, we are
with him. If attempting to but not succeeding in communicating he uses our salutation as a sign but we do not, he signifies what we do but not because we attempt to communicate something to him. The salutations used in communication may have many forms.
pawing of the ground, the baring of teeth are salutations which make excellent signs, and may be effective instruments for communication. Vocal salutations are, how-
The
extending of
quills,
the
ever, as a rule
and particularly with human beings, better for the communication than any other. An act which requires purpose of
Words,
Calls
and Cries
177
an eye to observe must await until the eye is turned in that direcone which requires an ear in order to be noted compels attion;
tention.
in-
trudes.
The norm
of
human communication
that
which
signifies
by means of vocal
Man
own
make sounds does not mean that a being is more or more intelligent than one able to act publicly only perceptive in nonvocal ways. Nor, granted the questionable supposition that
ability to
The
vocal organs are better instruments for the expression of intelligence than others, does it follow that they exist for that purpose.
Not
function.
every organ of a high-grade being performs a high-grade The ability to make sounds is like the ability to smell;
the ability to a greater degree than higher the higher can, of course, make use of the ability in ones, though ways the lower cannot. Dogs have better noses than men, and
birds have a larger repertory of sounds than such comparatively highly developed beings as whales and cows. Sign-users who are
lower beings
may have
unable to
make sounds
who
cannot
make
use of signs.
are able to use signs at all. The ability to make sounds is an incidental ability which they may achieve as the outcome of the acqui-
kind and degree of complexity. The to make sounds is more like a chance variation than a purability or useful power; the ability to use signs with intelligence posive
sition of bodies of a certain
is a significant achievement, the result of the high-grade ability to be sensitive to the concerns and objectives of others. Once the power of using signs has been acquired, it can be applied so as to
make
The mooing
the vocal organs important instruments of signification. of a cow, the bleating of a lamb, the screech of an
eagle seem to be on a level with the acts of browsing or the beating of wings. Both the former and the latter are occurrences, the one
78
then use
signs,
produced by beings who do not or they are irrelevant to what might be signified by
They
are
those beings.
outcries.
They
contrast with
calls,
which
The
chicks are
calls.
signs of the expected possible cluck of the hen and the whimper of her Each vocalizes while signifying something and
accompanying
while expecting the other to engage in some act relevant to what is signified. Since neither uses its own sounds as signs, neither
with or to
The
as a sign of the
is
chicks not only hear the cluck next move of the hen and
signifying.
it
The hen
whimper want and sometimes of what they are about to do. The chicks tend to move with the hen, the hen tends to satisfy the chicks. The
hen does
not, in this case, cluck because the chicks
as a sign of the
whimper, the
calls
chicks do not
inde-
pendently of the other. The calls of the hen could have bearing on the calls of the chicks, and conversely. One of them could call in expectation of
the call to be provided by the other, and that other in reply could call to the first in a similar way. They would then exchange calls.
another, to have a language. But they would not be communicating, for they would not be saying anything. They would be talking
at or to but not 'with
one another.
Because the "speech" of birds is an interchange of calls, birds cannot, strictly speaking, be said to have a language except in the
sense in
said to
have a language.
A bird,
an angry disputant,
calls
Words,
Calls
and Cries
But there
is
179
which
nothing sounds accompany its signifies expectation that other sounds will be forthcoming; they do not themselves serve as signs of those subsequent sounds.
it
by means of
its
sounds.
Its
To
calls into
vocal accompaniment of a sign into a sign of what is expected. The words will continue to have the same sound as the calls. But
by
distinct
from them.
In echolalia
we seem
to
Yet
say nothing; our sounds express dressing a dog we make the same sounds
we
as those
we make when
non-
we
speak to
one another.
sense syllables
well
animal.
at
made
at
all
We cry out
be expressed with the same sounds, it is to be expected that there will be theorists who understand human language to be only a tissue of cries or calls,
Because
cries,
calls,
who
and
calls
of sub-
beings overlook the fact language to be but cries or calls, unwarrantedly that sounds can be used as signs by the beings who produce them. Those who think that animals use words, unwarrantedly suppose
that
human
as
words
in an animal language.
know
nies
them. We as signs by those who produce we use our own sounds as signs; the former theory dewhat we know of ourselves. It is often hard for us to know
all
that
whether our fellows are using words; the latter theory knows more about animals than we usually know about our fellow men.
80
EXCLAMATIONS
perhaps the
first
of words
is
the ex-
by the speaker as a sign of an expected nonvocal act to be performed by the listener. "Look!" is an exclamation, signifying another's expected act of attention to the object
signifying. "Watch out!" is a word used in expectation that he will act with respect to an incipient danger. They contrast with such a call as "Oh!", a salutation not itself used as a sign.
one
is
Separated from the expectation of the acts of others, both the exclamation and the call are outcries which disturb but do not refer
to anything.
An
exclamation by
expect you
itself is a
condensed sentence.
this interesting
It states
in
brief, "I
to deal
with
I
occurrence." Re-
have
signified, the
exclamation
is
thus not only social in meaning but serves to convey to another what position I expect him to take towards what I have signified.
The
exclamation does not make evident the objects or acts that I, the speaker, am expecting. It ought to be expanded. The nature of the object to which the listener is being directed or the character of the act we await from the listener is made clear
through the use of subordinate terms, articulating the intent of the exclamation. When this is done we have a language. Language is
exclamation expanded. The effect of an exclamation on the listener
primarily to prompt him to attend to that to which the speaker attended. The effect on the listener must be and is intended to be different from
is
what
sponded or
The
The speaker has already rethe listener is expected to respond. responding; former responds apart from the exclamation; the latter is exit
is
on the speaker
is
himself.
now
pected to respond because of it. The speaker expects the listener to attend to what he has noted, but does not usually expect him to
act as he himself does.
When we
exclaim, "ouch!",
we
we
are in pain;
81
we may. When we exclaim, "Look we signify another's possible exercise of caution. One or the
may be quite out of danger.
is
other of us
An
exclamation
a sign
with respect to
listener
is
it
in a different
we have attended, but will act way. The speaker responds and the
expected to respond; the one responds before or while he exclaims, the other is expected to respond after the exclamation
has been heard. So far as they respond in similar ways,
it is
usually
by attending and then at different times; so far as they respond at the same time, it is usually through actions and then in different
ways. It is the error of such theories as Mead's to suppose that discourse requires the use of similar sounds and similar activities on the
part of both speaker and listener, leading to the paradoxical result that as Mead himself affirms the lion's roar must intimidate the
lion a
little,
since
it
its
own
6.
The
viewed
They
enable the
which
they
help clarify the nature of the sign and expectation which the exclamation accompanies.
are exclaiming. Its parts are exclamations which together serve to clarify the more comprehensive exclamation conveyed by the sentence as a whole. "Look
The unit of language is the sentence. abouts and nature of that about which
It
makes
explicit the
where-
we
out!"
is
clarified
"I expect
you
when expanded to "There is a sniper," i.e., to, to look there, to note the threat there exhibited and
is
to act accordingly."
The
sentence as a whole
mately exclamatory
in intent.
8z
whether or not
they originally functioned as isolated exclamations. Taken out of the sentence each word can be elaborated by means of connected
subordinate exclamations. There are thus no irreducible words.
as
sentence, to be elaborated through the use of other words. The meaning of each of these last words in turn is to be explicated, as
use
make one word perform multiple functions, or supplement by bodily gestures, actions or grammatical constructions;
those that have more, specialize and refine the basic divisions. An adjective, for example, is a noun in a subordinate position, and
together with a regular noun forms a single term, one of the three basic divisions of language na?nes, predicates and ?netaphysicals.
Names
are exclamations
which serve
to
as
expected to
respond or
divided
pronouns
are of
a
subis to signify through other signs. Names can be virtue of their specificity of reference into denotatives, by and proper names. Predicates, on the other hand, record
two kinds, common nouns and more explicit version of the former.
Names and
would
tell
predicates require one another. The former alone where to attend but not what it is to which one should
would
it
tell
what
it is
to
which we should
attend,
but not
language completely dead or self-enclosed, there would be no need to go beyond the use of these. Artificial languages can be created in which
there are, in addition to predicates, only
tell
us that
was
Were
83
A
is
to
complete expression contains a term which remarks what it as a whole is to be referred. Such a term
be called a metaphysical.
may
Works
like
"is,"
"and/' "or,"
most metaphors, and the metaphysical categoreals, "being," "substance," "causality," etc., are metaphysicals. The latter and some
a
of the former refer to the concrete being of which the referent of name and the referent of a predicate are aspects.
Metaphysicals appear in discourse usually in the form of names, predicates, connectives between them, or as components of larger
signs. It
is
primarily
when
it
out metaphysicals, explicit or implicit, there would be subjects in a language but no sign of a subject matter; there would be predicates,
together articulate,
referred.
and to which
say "this
is
When we
red,"
we do
the object as a "this" which is red, since it obviously isn't, but that an object, referred to by "is," is the source and locus of the referents of both the "this"
The
possible to understand
how
it is
describe
it
as
A metaphysical relates to
an
one of
many
possible ways.
The
it
with the
way
The
follows out the implications of its great virtue of idealism is that its coit
to
do
full
fictions. Its great limitation is that for it all assertions are treated
only to
fictions.
84
Yet when
much about man from reading the Pickwick Papers. we speak of "Mr. Pickwick," we are not referring to any existent man. The Pickwick Papers, like other works of good fiction, specifies in a possible and plausible way some feature
We learn
characteristic of everybody. "Mr. Pickwick" refers to the potencies to be found in any man, and what is said of Pickwick is a
way
of imaginatively realizing those potencies. To say that "Mr. Pickwick is gentle yet not a fool," is to use "Mr. Pickwick is" as
a metaphysical for a vague set of potencies pertinent to man, and and "not a fool" as arbitrary, connected determinations of "gentle" those potencies. The whole statement would be somewhat more accurate, though more prosaic, if it read: gentleness ness are not necessarily linked in man.
and
foolish-
terminate
Artists provide plausible, consistent determinations for indelearn from them what things promise and realities.
We
what follows
flexible
if
the promise
way. Art is more more profound than science and has a richer
is
realized in a certain
it
too
it
tells
something
as
it is,
by concentrating
what
is
possible.
its
metaphysical component, or
is
the
empirical. metaphysics is the concrete reality which provides discourse with subject matter, content and truth. The philosopher attempts to understand what that reality is capable of, though as apart from
The
object of meta-
physical inquiry
portion of
expressing
it
it
as revealed
by
details.
The
interconnecting details. others but probes interrelates his terms in novel ways to express better
in a precise
way by
which
rigid
are vaguely
more
which he
ex-
proper place. pects every himself with everything as the object of the term "is."
detail to find a
He
con-
Conventional Discourse
85
trasts with the artist whose object is confined within the area marked out by some name, and contrasts with the scientist who is interested in conceivable objects which would account for the predicates being what they are. The three types supplement one
all
tempts to encompass the truth of the others in somewhat the same way as the body encompasses the acts of the heart and the lungs.
The
object of a
name
is
a being as a
mere
"it"
and thus as
at a
being as infected by the contributions which the knower makes to that being; the object of a metaphysical is the substance of a
in a number of possible ways. The three together, as forming a unitary portion of discourse, are symbolized by a sentence, a single sign of the object as something to which an-
being as articulatable
may be directed. The sentence may refer to a present obthe thing before one, but ject, only on the implicit or explicit supposition that it is something to which another might attend.
other
We
need no signs to acknowledge what is present, but signs in order to represent what that present thing
others.
we do
may
need
be for
7.
CONVENTIONAL DISCOURSE
are forged
Few words
Most of them
in
much
are part of one's inheritance. As a group they are as beyond the control of either individuals or society at any
as are the
rise
one time
nology.
They
perceptibly as these others usually do. The meanings of most words are slowly modified in the course
of history. Occasionally, however, some powerful individual or group, some crisis in thought or fact, compels men to change the
signification of the
words they have been accustomed to use. Plato turned the term "sophist" from one of praise into one of contempt.
86
made them
Aristotle took the ordinary Greek words for timber and shape into the philosophic "matter and form" with new
and
and
wider meanings.
The
calendar
now
in use
is
who
men
to put
it
using.
The
philosopher,
Duns
of the great scholastic into "dunce," so that a name for wisdom Scotus,
name
became a sign of stupidity. It is perhaps they who were responsible for turning the solemn "hoc est corpus," "here is the body of God," into the silly "hocus pocus." revolution in the practice and
spread of education and learning converted the important scholastic "trivium" of basic studies into "trivial," and helped change
the meaning of "vulgar" from "popular" to "boorish". In feudal
days a "villain" was a free villager and a "blackguard" was a menial servant in a great household. The abandonment of the
Aristotelian
cosmology helped debase the word "quintessence," so that instead of referring to the fifth and heavenly element of the medieval universe it now refers to a "concentrated extract." Some
they undergo transformation in shape or spelling. "Brief"
lish for "brevis,"
is
words, on the other hand, retain somewhat the same meaning while
is
Eng-
room"
is
English for "cspace," a "drawing "space" a "withdrawing room," "to maim" is to commit "may-
hem," and "algebra" is English for "aljabr." Despite such changes in the meaning and character of words, most of those we use today are inherited and have almost the same
meaning and nature for us that they had for our immediate ancestors. The first and longest linguistic lesson the child has to learn is
to recognize the established signs
in the
ways they
which men must adopt if they are to find a rewithin that group. Every trade and enterprise has spectable place its own set of signs, whose gradual mastery and eventual automatic use the apprentice spends his time attaining. Part of the task
group are
signs
is
to
make
Conventional Discourse
187
signs of the state of the incipient weather. The medical doctor is not accredited as a reliable practitioner until he has learned to
to
know what
other doctors say they signify. He may later diverge from his fellows, but to enter the practice he must first agree with them on
how
a
is
reward for using arbitrary signs according to established conventions. "Doctor," medical or otherwise, is a title which may in
fact
little
more than
a technical vocabulary.
definite referents to
always
by
their means,
may
write as though there were entities which functioned as signs apart from any user. Because they have been forced to learn that a
red glow
fair
is
a sign of fire,
danger or the sun, and clouds a sign of men tend to suppose that the glow and
the clouds signify their respective objects apart from any sign-user. Sometimes they even go so far as to hold that the very words they
use have a natural affinity for definite objects, and that the words by themselves designate those objects. "Ding dong" seems for them
to be,
by
its
they view
as a
very nature, the sign of a ringing iron bell; "babble" term which itself intends to mark the sound of a
running brook.
No
other
think points so
sound to the objects they are causally related to their objects. But there are signify; others words which are similar in sound to objects they do not signify,
and there are words which do not refer to the things to which they are causally related. "Sun" has the same sound as "son," but
the one does not designate the other. "Impotence" obviously designates that which could not have caused it. There are words, too,
them
causally related.
88
it
does not necessarily repeat the mumblings of the demented which it equally signifies. cloud is causally related to
brook,
rain and serves as a sign of it, but clouds have also been used as of events to come in human affairs. portents
is
nate those objects, though this is In any case, there are tablished.
employ by no means evident or well esmany words like "impotence," which could not be caused by the objects they signify, and words like "nonverbal," which could not possibly be similar to their
signified objects.
men
originally to
those
words
to desig-
to
Every entity, and thus every sign, vocal or nonvocal, is related some future possibility which may be termed a natural object
it it
for
to signify.
But
it
uses
8.
The primary use of words is to designate expected things, acts or words whose possibility is provided by something other than those words. Words are essentially conventional signs, signs used
to designate something to
Words
signs
traffic
which they do not "naturally" point. words and of things or acts. All other
religious symbols, railway
employed
signals,
communication
and
sions, etc.
can be treated
and a different medium from those employed in discourse or writing. Conversely, all verbal and written discourse can be
treated as a variant of
use of different kinds of signs and relates them in different ways. Words come late in the history of the race and of the individual,
signs,
such as
traffic
signals,
come
words
later
still.
therefore whether
we
say that
are vocal
The Nature
salutations used as signs, or
of Language
89
whether
we
discourse.
a language.
A language pre-
supposes a grammar, a structural representation of the type of word, act or thing expected to follow the use of a given word.
We
speak grammatically and use a language when we make an habitual, conventionally established use of words as signs of words or of
other things which have an established structural function in relation to those words. When, for example, in English, we begin by
employing a subject term, we prepare ourselves to make use of a copula and predicate. A language of words is not, however, a complete language; it is but a more flexible and complicated tissue of connected vocal signs to be employed for the sake of signifying acts and things.
always has the form of a dialogue, though that fact may be obscured. He to whom one speaks may be silent and his reply may be silently provided by the speaker.
language
is
shared.
It
The
speaker may even merely imagine a listener and may answer for him as well as speak to him. Or he can act the part of both listener and speaker, presenting a dialogue as though it were a monologue.
use his signs only to signify that the listener will also use them as signs. If the sign the speaker offers is then used
The
speaker
may
by
comes
polite
the listener to signify other items in a language, language bea medium of discourse. There is a language of chants, of
and diplomatic discourse where grammatically structured back and forth and may not refer to anything A man says u How do you do?" and thus seems to ask a beyond.
units are passed
question of another. The other does not answer the question and, to make matters worse, puts the same question to the speaker. On
the surface nothing could be more impolite, though actually the reverse is the case. Neither has in fact asked a question; neither
talk
on the
To
answer the
190
apparent question with an account of one's health is to be unmannerly. The speaker uses these words as an accompaniment of
a
as
one acknowledged to be in
He
offers the
words
him
to the
by which
as also
an
acknowledged part of the social situation. Neither points to anything beyond the two of them; they may dislike one another or
may
have nothing further to do with one another. But for the mosocial contact and used a language together.
in the verbal counterpart of the act of smokof peace, of breaking bread, of bowing and so on. Theirs ing a pipe is an interchange of words, a discourse not a communication.
Each
uses his
own words
as a
sign of the
momentary equal
social
have been offered as a sign that the speaker is peaceably inclined. full-grown language is more than a shared act of grammati-
by speaker and
say, not
listener. It refers
He
understands what
we
lan-
guage
as a sign of
what
interests us,
but
which he can
refer to
what we
signify.
We
by others as signs of the things to which we are referring apart from those signs. If our offer is accepted, communication is
achieved.
The sentence is the grammatical unit. It is a single sign which the speaker offers to the listener to use as a sign. Language is thus not merely a set of grammatically related terms, but those grammatically related terms unified and used in expectation that the
listener will also
make
by means of
realities
a language
communicate use of the unity as a sign. when we use shared sentences to signify
a sentence
We
ends at a
full
subject
may
may be as long as the entire poem; its be what in prose would be a sentence. The grammar
91
quite different from, though illustrating the very same principles as ordinary prose. Its grammarian is still to be born.
9.
Signs
may
already available or
be used unconsciously or by intent. They may be may be produced on the required occasion.
They may
have the form of things or public acts. They may be used singly or in interrelation, as isolated terms or as parts of a shared language. It is as parts of shared language that they most evidently are elements employed in a technique of expression and
communication.
A technique
is
with freedom.
It is
the
of activity which is the perspective of the speaker, the technique of language is a barrier to be vitalized, retreated from and transcended. It is vitalized
in
body, making probable some limited course filled out in unpredictable ways. Viewed from
reflects,
and transcended
by insight and action. Poets are masters of the art of vitalizing language, mystics of retreating from it, and speculators and philistines of
transcending it occasionally. all other beings, man points beyond and deals with things outside the signs he uses. But only he can be aware of what signs
Like
are.
He
make an
at the
to
its
object,
language
in another
way. In
its
most
form, as
communicable speech, language is the one's body and one's fellows. It is a barrier,
to be face to face with reality. Since only
is
is
man
able to
go beyond
Dialecticians and sophists confound language and reality. They barrier through which one must peer in forget that language is a
92
order to get to
tered
know
They
it
are mas-
by language; they
take
what
is
said as
though
were the
duplicate of or the very thing of which something was said. By concentrating on language they deprive themselves of the opportunity to have something to say.
Only man can be a philosopher and this to the degree that he formulates the meaning of reality inside language and observes that the reality still stands outside. He makes use of an inherited
grammar
as
who
alternate in supplying
the requisite terms. His philosophy is a dialogue in solitude, by which he unites himself with others and orients himself to a world
expressed. It
degree of achievement and clarity of purpose but not in kind from the intent of all his other honest attempts at communication.
losophy has to be thoroughly rehearsed in private before it pressed in public, for it has strength only as far as it uses and
used by language.
ex-
not
man has something to communicate only if he has first made contact with something. And he can communicate with someone only if he has first communed with himself. The language he uses
in his
if
in an individual
and fresh
way
from the binding forms of conventional practice and thought, and help his fellows do the same. Man lives primarily in a world of words and other signs, subhe
to escape
mitting
and ruling more by, threats and commands, assertions and denials, hints and promises than by any force which may be available. The fetters of economics and technology are
more
to,
when compared with the fetters which language imon him. Yet language enables him to be free. Language poses forces him outside himself; it directs him and his fellows to a world
like
straw
A language
is
a technique
which
93
from other techniques in its degree of complication, its public and its relevance to intents and expectations. It serves to utility
make
public
in mind, but
it
can be and
is
is
often used,
effect,
when
the
mind
not
at
work. Con-
it is possible to have a mind before one has a language. child seems to think long before it is able to speak. It evidently and
beyond the reach of its vocabulary. what one does not mean and to mean what one does not say; it is possible to speak significantly and yet not
It is
possible to say
have a thought behind the words. Speech involves the use of signs, but one does not need a mind in order to be able to use a sign. In
fact, just as
men
speak and even communicate with one another without thinking. Man's ability to use signs, verbal or nonverbal, provides no clue to
the existence or nature of his mind.
does,
is
and
we must
CHAPTER TEN
by
our bodies, our fellows and the world about. These pasts, form a fourfold barrier, standing perpetually in our way. They
limit
what we could
We
we
possibly and actually be, have and do. are creatures of experiences already lived through.
What
did days ago plays a part in our acts today. The past keeps us moving within narrow grooves, turning us into biased beings who concentrate on one prospect rather than another, sometimes even
to our detriment.
It
forces
some tendencies
to the fore
and keeps
may require The shape of our tomorrow we molded all yesterday. Our bodies have requirements, drives and modes of acting which
can be controlled
their
a different stress.
own
at times, but never entirely defied. Possessing structures and habits, those bodies have rhythms and
make demands to which we must submit whether we will or no. Those who have often exhibited fear by running, find it hard to avoid a frightened run even when they would prefer to be at rest. Before a timid man has a chance to say what he would like to do, his legs are on the move, precipitately carrying him from the scene.
same circumstances, might also have been frightened. But some would have had their bodies so well keyed that it would be hard to discern a move. If we demand of the brave
Anyone
else,
in the
that they
startled
194
95
demand only those can be brave whose bodies have been properly trained. Whatever praise they deserve is earned then and there by their bodies alone, though credit is also due them,
as
distinct
from
their
bodies,
Whether
ever
for past practice and control. body leaves its mark on what-
we do.
by our
societies.
We
act as social
The
lives
of other
interplay with and intersect our own. From birth on, our neighbors drive us subtly but surely along paths we never chose. They pro-
voke certain
acts
of our efforts
and the repression of others; they stand in the way and of the effects which those efforts would other-
wise produce; they force us to occupy ourselves with problems we would have preferred to ignore, and then they compete with us
and force us to forego resolving the issues they raised. Our attempts and our achievements bear unmistakable signs of the pressure exerted
No
matter
how
aloof
we
try to be,
we
always yield
somewhat
demands and force imposed by nonhuman beings. At every moment, we are compelled to take account of them as having natures and careers not in harmony with our own, and we
to the
constantly shift our emphases in the endeavor to subject them to some control. They help fix the boundaries of our future; they
alter the shape our acts assume in fact. The world that lies ahead is structured primarily by what lies alongside. There is no real escape from our fourfold bond, struggle as we
may. If a man could free himself from his lows or the world, he would be without
past, his
body,
his fel-
roots, a language or a
home:
world and yet not part of it. He would be alone and ignorant, untaught and untrained. Something can be said, in fact, for those who recommend that
in the
we
passively submit to
all
our bonds.
in,
the
conditions which
hem him
the
stable he often
i<)6
is,
The Nature
of
Mind
the
life.
more definite is his future, the more routine and easy is his Those who persist in battering their heads against a wall are
who
they lose the peace that comes tions that prevail. They also soon batter according to a pattern, how much they are under the influence of habit, thereby revealing
the
demands of the body, the pressure of their fellows and the character of the wall. Professional rebels are conservatives in dis-
thought and existence in a somewhat and tedious way. They are trapped as surely as others are; steady their judgments and acts are no less dated and are no less predictguise, breaking the fixtures of
able than are those of the quietest conservative. The heresies of today are the prelude to the dogmas of tomorrow. Rebellion at bondis but a preparation for being bound again, sometimes even more firmly than before. Yet each man does and must avoid being a creature of any one of these four bonds. Otherwise he would be dead in spirit and in body. He would do nothing, but would have everything done to and for him. Those who pride themselves on being stable steadily
age
recede into the background. The defenders of the status quo are now in the process of becoming part of the status ante. "I am a man
of my times," is the birthcry of an antiquarian. To be alive is to master the fourfold ring of conditions in a manner all one's own. And this every man does to some degree. None is wholly passive.
differ from one anAll subject their bonds to some control. other primarily in the extent to which we master our bonds while
We
we submit to them.
We are
free ourselves
never completely bound by the past. Nor do we ever from it entirely. To be sure, we can reform. Yet we
cannot reform ourselves completely at one fell swoop. reform would take a lifetime to perform. By the time
A complete
it
was com-
of the reform through which we had gone pleted, the earlier stages would be solidified into constraints as effective as those from which
we
197
Though he change
what he has
learned, defy the lessons of his experience, develop virtues where he before encouraged vice, he will continue to act
as
somewhat
all
is
common
signature signed to
his
acts before
past, a
Nor
its
in control of his
habits, enliven
We
We
its
and surgery. All but the most drastic changes are quickly and absorbed within the body as a whole, which continues caught with almost the same strength, insistence and direction it had before.
may be
defeated, the
body
no matter
how
can rightly claim that he is body, but only that he has mastered it at various
No man
The way
to escape
from the
thrall of the
body
is
to control
again and again. And since men must eat and sleep, drink and breathe, each must constantly submit to his body in some respects in order to be able to resist it at all. To control the body we must
yield to it, if not in one way then in some other. that is made must be recovered the next day.
And
every gain
who
is
resist
way of expressing a submission at the same time. Men do not change their societies; the most they can do is introduce
but another
changes within them. They cannot cut themselves off completely from their fellow men, but must act in terms of what their fellows
produce and intend. Revolutionaries and criminals work inside the frame of an established social whole, differing from others and
in the
way
evil others
198
suppose a social
The Nature
of
Mind
field which determines what is respectable or conservative or revolutionary, reasonable or foolish, criminal, promoting security or disorder.
Finally,
men do
not quietly submit to or really try to escape her, yielding to her in one way
while mastering her in another. Men have always struggled with nature, but only in our age has the struggle been buttressed with strategy and accompanied with an acute awareness that we will
yield in the end, though not without having
scientists
made some
gain.
Our
and engineers force nature along unaccustomed routes by following her at the same time. They made the airplane possible, not by ignoring but by yielding to the fact of gravitation. They
conquered nature by infecting her with their own demands, which she then proceeded to carry out without their aid or encouragement.
All four barriers are forever in our way.
to subject
them
to
some
control.
As
a result of
take on the contours of our intentions and we, though still trapped, often do what we want. are in fact free beings, for we can and
We
do
initiate acts,
assert ourselves
sometimes with
considerable success
2.
No
If it
barrier can
it
could
come so close that it can prevent our being free. would destroy us as independent beings and would as
only because
we
We
are free
independent beings
who
on our own
in a
threefold way.
Each of us independently initiates acts in the endeavor to realize some privately isolated objective. And when those acts encounter the opposition they inevitably must, we freely call
upon unused
we were on
for us,
199
we freely occupy ourselves with new objectives in terms of which we may be able to act and struggle with more effect. Our freedom is a triply employed power by which we endeavor to realize objectives, initially regardless of,
of,
and
finally
tan-
we happen
barriers firstly into fields of operation, then into more or less effective means for the realization of our ends, and finally into occasions for acting in new ways.
Freedom
is
power by which
the indeterminate
is
made de-
terminate, the general specific, the abstract concrete, the possible actual. It is most perfectly expressed when we initiate actions de-
signed to convert a result intended into a result attained. Each of us has a characteristic way of focussing on the future, of interpret-
ing
it
from
his
own
possible
good
to be
made
objective is more determinate than it was, but it is not yet entirely determinate. Action is required to make it fully determinate, to
give
it
definiteness
and substance.
In origin our acts are means for re-forming ourselves and perhaps other beings so as to make concrete and present what is now abstract and future. Produced from within, they are free sources of the determinations
into realities
do,
by which we attempt to convert possibilities .When they encounter the opposition they inevitably we must, if we are to realize our objectives, express ourselves
spontaneously, thereby exerting additional effort. Though none of us can break through any of our barriers, all of us can and do
vitalize
sition
which they
them, shape them anew, spontaneously reply to the oppooffer to the realization of our objectives.
We
thereby master the past, the body, fellow beings and the world to
much
for us.
They
effectively
make an
were
effort to isolate
is
and
realize
new
Only
if
there
as there
realiza-
200
tion
The Nature
we
are necessarily pledged,
all
of
Mind
and regardless of
realize
it.
would we, despite every defeat to the contrary, always strive to appearance
men have ultimate objectives, only they are unable into superior types of being when they encounter inchange superable obstacles to the expression of their human concerns.
Because only
to
When
they encounter resistance which effectively prevents the expression of a concern for their ultimate objectives, they try to
change the nature of their acts. Like other beings they are, despite an inability to change in nature, always free to meet defeat with a new adventure, feeble and unsuccessful though this may prove
to be.
Each of us initiates acts. Each of us struggles with all four Each of us spontaneously shifts his emphasis in the face of defeat. Most of us concentrate our energies, however, on only one of these three enterprises, and are inclined to struggle more with some barriers than with others. But a man is somewhat less than
barriers.
should be, unless he employs his freedom fully in all three and takes adequate account of all the obstacles he confronts. ways A man must master bodily techniques to be free while bound.
a
man
as free as
his is
know how
and what
achieved
is
what
it is
can do. Only then will one learn how one can know the world in which one is, and what man's ultimate objective and
it
duty
may
be.
5.
It is
before
there
were human
and
their followers,
who
mind
a separate, eternal
substance or part of one, constitute only an apparent dissenting minority. Their claim relates to a frozen mind, a mind which is a
The
Origin of
Mind
201
reservoir of perfect, eternal truths not to a fallible, fumbling mind, pertinent to the contingent, changing facts of daily experi-
ence.
These
writers,
no
less
and cannot
than the others, are agreed that mind exist before there is a human
body. The opposition between the minority and the majority does not relate to the question as to whether or not the mind is an
integral part of a living being. It relates solely to the question as to whether or not there is another mind, superior to the former
and capable of existing and functioning apart from anything in nature. All thinkers seem agreed that there were no human minds
before there were
human
bodies. It
would be
to suppose otherwise.
It is
human
by
misconceive
how minds
To minimize
this prospect it is helpful to remind oneself that man and his powers are a product of a natural evolution resulting from the exercise of
freedom
in an
environment.
Men
dom.
It is
acquire their minds as the outcome of an exercise of freenot inevitable, however, that freedom should be exer-
cised so that
mind should be
its
outcome.
It is
proposition forces a clean break with Hegel and his school, including those who, like the Marxists, turn the Hegelian idealism into a materialism. The
there be minds.
The
acceptance of
this last
Hegelians subscribe to the theory that mind and everything else in nature is the necessary product of a relentless historic movement
which nothing can stay or redirect. But that movement is a movement for the things in nature and not of them. It is a cosmic juggernaut which alone determines what does and can occur. For in nature are Hegelians, of the right and of the left, the things
strings.
No
one of these
or comes to be; rather, all are precipitated things really develops out of an infinite maw which acts according to a logic of its own,
unaffected
the efforts or inclinations of finite beings. The Heaccount for the existence of individual human gelian view does not
by
2O2
The Nature
of
Mind
minds. These have their source inside and not outside nature; they arise as a result of the activities of specific beings, exercising powers
of their own.
The
in the last century has appeared to some to be the only alternative to Hegelian idealism or materialism. But there is little difference
in principle
latter,
power and activity to individual beings. In addition, the latter supposes that whatever occurs is an inescapable consequence of
some previous cause
tried to
a
supposition
which
is
Hume
clearly revealed
to be without warrant
and which
in fact, as
we
have already
Hume thought his analysis implied that there was no causation in fact. He overlooked an alternative: there is causation, but it is
mind
not the production of a future effect by a past cause. Man and his arrive late on the cosmic scene, but not as a result of com-
pulsions exercised
a blind
from on high or from the past, nor as a result of chance movement of things. Man and mind are the outintelligible
come of
natural beings.
Were
there
no
causation, as
Hume
maintained, there
would be
nought but a sequence of independent and irrelevant occurrences, each one a miracle, impotent and inexplicable. No rational explanation of anything would be possible and it would be necessary to cancel out the evidence of daily experience and the possibility of
intelligent practice.
Hume's
in a different
opposed, defeats itself, though more firmly one holds to it, the more
it
which
may
must allow
that, after a
*pp.4ff,2 4 ff.
The Origin
one another in
of
Mind
The more one
203
can come a time
disal-
when they
and
rationally.
past, the
more one
connected in
Hume
mean
thought
his
principles required
him
to
deny
that there
it
would
in his day,
could
still
be true, on Hume's
own
in
But
Hume drew
it is
his analysis.
not an
act
by which
present effect.
The
past
is
It
duce anything. It is by agreeing with Hume on this truth that we can, in consonance with the evidence of daily experience, affirm:
the past and the future are causally connected, but the past does not necessitate the future.
The
difficulty
which
Hume
is
not avoided
theory of in its place. causation is the exteleology Teleology supposes that hibition of an irresistible power exerted by the future on the present. But, like the
mechanism
it
opposes,
it
are already determinate before they actually occur. Teleology is mechanism in reverse. Rightly maintaining with Hume that noth-
ing as past can be active in the future, the teleologist falsely supposes that the productive cause of things is something not yet in existence,
limit,
or
largely that of a purgative. It eliminates mechanism but puts nothing better in its place. The future on which it rests its hopes is just as impotent as the past
control.
is
The
which mechanism
pose either
glorified.
what
occurs,
it is
some
distant
204
existcnts
irresistibly
The Nature
work
in the present.
of
Mind
somehow
past conditions the future
continues to
as a limited
The
but not yet determinate realm within which a range of occurrences can take concrete course in time is necesplace.
and thereby realize that future. The can be known in advance as a possibility, not as an actuality.
when
Minds
are an
outcome of the
sciousness and language, they first appeared after the world had been in existence for some time. The minds belong to and originate
in individual
men. Since a mind is not a palpable thing passed on from generation to generation, each man today must acquire his own mind, and this in somewhat the same way that the first men
did.
It
They
The
primitive adult
as
neither
nor infant.
When
he matured
acquire
mind
in
somewhat
the
way we
were
less
of course, possible that in earlier times the minds of men developed than are minds today. There is no justifica-
tion for
dogmatism on the
point,
however.
would justify us in saying that the minds of men at other times were inferior to ours. The most we have a right to claim is that characterized by their minds were perhaps different from ours
different habits
So
it
far as
and exercised at a different tempo. the problem of the origin of our minds
is
concerned,
makes no difference whether they are similar to, better than, or different from the minds of our ancestors; the problem of the
origin of our minds
is still
the problem of
initial
each one
of us acquires
his
mind.
The
The
dimensions of them
in
is
Origin of
Mind
205
to
what
it
sensitively discerns.
always will
if
if
an animal,
Either
it
and sometimes
will if an adult,
abandon
its
it
intelligence.
expected by others, or
it
what
though
it
its
it
but as though it were the obignores both the perceived and the
own
discerned.
On
hearing an insistent cry, excitable beings move from to what their neighbors expect, look to what
is sensitively discerned as though it were the object of their fellows' concern, or put aside both the perceived and the sensitively discerned to point blindly to a future whose nature they do not
know. By
treating their perceived neighbors as a sign of what those neighbors fear, they tend to act with fear when they are with those neighbors again, despite the fact that there may be
nothing then to
it
fear.
By
treating
what they
sensitively
discern as
were the object of the concern of others, they act with though fear towards what are irrelevant possibilities. By ignoring both
sensitively discern, they give up the guidance that an individual sensitive concern could yield, and instead participate, like unconscious beings, in the dynamic act of
unknown
unobserved present. In these three ways they infectiously share the emotions of others. They thereby abandon their intelligence, giving up as it were the concern as sensitive for the concern as
purposive.
By abandoning
loses. It
its
intelligence,
its
and thereby
frees itself
its
from the
But
characteristic of
sensitivity.
206
then the teachings of
It
The Nature
its
of
Mind
own
has the
wisdom of
the lily
knows
encountered
when
it
A being ought
its fel-
and
one with
both,
it is
in a position to
have
Minds
They
presuppose intelligence.
They
some
senses.
It
are possible only to infants who have grasped the meaning of of the items they encounter through the agency of their
That
it is
does not
know what it
perceives.
It
to
what
it
expects or that the expected is pertinent connects them without knowing what it
acquire a mind, be part of a social
does or why.
also, if it is to
group. Minds are possible only in societies. To be able to acquire a mind the infant must be able to participate in the vital life of its
kind. Since
what
which others
to
its
are not the goods with it intelligently grasps are actually concerned, but those goods as relevant
good, it must, to be truly social, direct itself towards a mind is posgood other than that which it intelligently grasps. sible only for an infant whose individual intelligence is rendered
own
useless
by
the activities in
which
it
vitally participates
it is
with others.
No
in a
mind
unless
is
at
position
where
its
intelligence
useless.
do not
suffice to
There
are
are
They do
though
what they
intelligently grasp
what they
at
once
live
He
The Origin
of
Mind
207
alone can acquire a mind because he alone can, in the face of a mind is vitally shared experience, insist on
remaining
intelligent.
his
member of a group.
is
Mind
intelligence reinstated,
made
given body and driving force, enabling a hurpan being to be at once an independent individual and a part of a social whole. It is
intelligence
demands of
the agency by which the individual overgroup comes the resistance which the infectiously shared concerns of
existence. It
others offer to
what
it
intelligently
is
and sensitively
discerns.
The
discerned sensitively
the perceived. Irrelevant to our concerns as purposively intertwined with other concerns, it is made relevant by means of the
it
makes what we
is
dis-
cerned
is
given
metaphor.
the
treated as having a
what we
sensitively discern is a good whose realization depends on how we act; it is an object of mere intelligence. For others, it is at best an
unknown good
us, as a
Our minds
enable us to grasp
as a
possibility relevant
an object not only of our concern but of the concerns of others, though in a different sense and with a different
good which
is
value.
intelligently
refer to
it
as
individuals, or
others.
we would
of
ignore
it
with
give it a double value, see it not only an intelligent meaning for us but also as having an emohaving tionally grasped meaning as the terminus of the concerns of others.
as
By means
mind we
zo8
The Nature
4.
of
Mind
LEVELS OF MIND
treating content as having one significance in another context. It is
Mind
in
first
is
the
power of
is treated as pertinent to the discerned, as at once something we expected and somesensitively thing another expects. By being related to the sensitively discerned
as
having this double meaning, the perceived acquires a double import, signifying a future as at once pertinent to us and to other
beings.
When
its
mother,
it
views her as a perceived being concerned with an objective it sensitively discerns or is accustomed to expect. The infant is contagiously agitated perhaps while expecting the milk it is accustomed to await when perceiving its mother. It thereupon infers, perhaps
agitated with respect to that milk. Instead of passively awaiting the milk or being agitated with respect to something unknown, it treats the expected milk as though it were the
is
object which agitates its mother. It has no knowledge, of course, of the nature of milk; yet it has a mind as a consequence of the fact that it turns to the milk as a sensitively discerned possibility which
is
not only signified by means of the percept of its mother but pertinent to the agitation it shares with its mother.
is
higher level of mind will be attained by an infant which can grasp the nature of the mentally acknowledged possibility. Using the mentally acknowledged possibility as a focus, the infant will
then be able to forge connections between it and new perceptions. The new perceptions will thereby achieve the double role of
being relevant to the infant and to a perceived, concerned being. The original possibility will then not only enable the infant to connect
new
beings, in
perceptions with what it expects but to treat perceived whose concerns it does not vitally participate, as beings
it
expects.
New perceptions,
know
the pos-
Levels of
sibilities
Mind
2 09
on which
it
By referring new perceptions and to the milk which it beings intelligently and agitatedly expected, the infant thus comes to know them, only in terms of milk.
ceptions and to other beings.
though
somehow and in some way related to milk, but knows nothing more. Its undeveloped mind knows merely that the possibility of milk is pertinent in some way to what is now perceived and what now exists. To
infant
it
The
knows whatever
confronts to be
develop its mind it must grasp the different senses in which the milk is pertinent to all types of experience and being. limited possibility, such as milk, can serve as an appropriate
But then
it
any number of diverse perceptions and concerns. must be subjected to radical interpretations. To view
everything from the perspective of milk requires a grasp, beyond the power of an infant, of the different ways in which milk is
pertinent to different perceptions and beings. An infant is able to develop its mind because
it is
involved in the
It
which
it
intelligently expects. If
its
intelligence
were
re-
could do nothing more than use possibility that one possibility as a focal point for everything it encounters and thus subject it to radical interpretations so that it becomes
stricted to but
one
it
somehow
pertinent to everything. multiplicity of focal points make it unnecessary to give strange meanings to a single possibility in order to make that posto different beings. But so far as a being has sibility pertinent
it
connect
its
to another.
scientific
mind
is
between different perceptual items, and infers from that connected whole to a principle by which different focal possibilities
can be related one to the other.
The
makes
employ
in
zio
order to
The Nature
of
Mind
move from one perception or focal point to another, are the material of mathematics. Mathematics is in search of a principle
which can transform the different limited principles of science into one another. Both science and mathematics ignore the bearing percepts have on real objects, and how those real objects are concerned with possibilities. To know these one must have the mind
of an
artist. It is
mind
to generate meta-
phors, to bring together diverse perceptions into unities which are revelatory of all the beings to which those perceptions belong. It is the further function of cosmology to generalize this effort, to ex-
tend the
metaphor to all beings and make evident how it is to be interpreted from case to case. A grasp of the nature of all
artistic
beings from the vantage of a comprehensive metaphor makes it possible to relate all objects to a single objective. That objective, acknowledged to be nothing more than an objective, is one of the
main things
a philosophy seeks to know. Philosophy is Godless cosmology. This is true even when its discourse is pious and its
ostensible topic
The
It It
metaphor encompassing
all
that
is.
scientific
presupposes the existence of the artistic, the cosmological, the and the mathematical. But it does not wait for them to
The knowledge
granted that their methods allow for of how their tasks differ provides
philosophy to make possible a characterization of the kind of results they will reach. Starting with any item,
the philosophic mind frees it from the details which obscure the fact that every actuality is finite and is concerned with a possible future good. From then on, there is nothing more for a mind to do
than to get richer and richer ideas of the nature of the good and of the actual, and of the concern which relates the two.
Just as
his intelligence to
have a mind, so no
philosophy.
The
object of philosophy
is
Inference
all
1 1
beings and activities exhibit, not a truth opposed to them. The unity which it provides is a unity which not only allows but requires a multiplicity of diverse mental activities.
Various
levels of
mind come
to be for the
itself arises.
diversity of experience stands in the way of the use of established connections. It thereby drives the individual to
The
divide his enterprises and ultimately himself, or to find a higher in terms of which he can ground bring the separated items together. The mind is stretched to the utmost limit if it can reach the
stage
where
it is
able to interrelate
all
that
is
to an ultimate allis
no need and no
to go.
y.
INFERENCE
every item of perception and sensi-
idea,
has different meanings in different situations. Each is a principle of inference by means of which we can move from the
case where it is pertinent in one sense to a possible different application in another. The work of mind is inference. When we affirm
that
what we perceive
is
it
mation
relevant to an object beyond, our affirthe inference that because the perceived has one meaning
is
in relation to us,
has another meaning as apart from us and as Such an inference enables us, while shar-
the ing the vital concern of others, to view those others through similar inference, exercised with agency of what is perceived.
reference to a possibility, discerned or conceived, makes it possible for us to grasp the meaning of others as vitally concerned with the
objects with
which we
though
differ-
terial
use of the ently concerned. On all its levels, the of intelligence (or of what can be derived from that
mind makes
mama-
terial), as a principle of inference, and thus as having one value for us and other values for other beings. Inferences are of two kinds: contingent and necessary. An in-
2
is
The Nature
of
Mind
ference
contingent if the premise does not suffice to warrant the conclusion, and thus if the conclusion must obtain at least part of
its
will rain"
content from the principle of inference. The conclusion "It is obtained from the premise "The sky has begun to
darken" by means of some such contingent principle as "If the sky darkens, there will be rain" or "If rain is promised, rain will
come."
The conclusion does not follow from the premise alone; content implicitly or the principle makes the concluexplicitly in
what
it is.
sion
differs from a contingent one in that the alone suffices to warrant the conclusion. In a necessary inpremise ference there is only a logical relation between premise and con-
A necessary inference
is
clusion; there
clusion.
Such an inference
no principle which provides content for the conis derivable from a contingent inference
treating the contingent principle as a premise. C. S. Peirce* seems to have been the first to discover this truth. "Let the prem-
by
ises
by
of any argument," he said, "be denoted by P, the conclusion C, and the principle by L. Then if the whole of the principle be
become
and
.'.
C.
But
this
denoted
new argument must also have its principle which may be by L'. Now, as L and P (supposing them to be true), conis
Thus
L'
must be contained
in the prin-
whether expressed
ment
principle.
Such
may
be
termed a logical principle" Every principle of inference, Peirce's observation makes clear, contains a logical principle by which one
to the conclusion.
can rigorously proceed from a premise and the original principle Any result in nature or mind, therefore, is a
necessary consequent of some antecedent and of some course which starts from that antecedent and terminates in that result.
*
Collected Papers,
2.
465-6.
Inference
Of
ence
vital
the
original,
is
two modes of inference, the contingent is the more the more common and the more basic. Necessary infer-
They
are
which
occasionally approached and imitated in the postulate systems logicians offer as portraits of the nature of mathematical
is,
with mathe-
move
from contingent
The work
speak of
all
of
mind
is
inference. It
is
mind
as
engaged
in inference
is
therefore
any bound
we
are
as logically
premises. This, however, is little more than the result of the pressure of specialists. Ordinary men constantly "connecessitated
by
clude" and say they do, where logicians would see only inadequately grounded results, unworthy of the name "conclusion." To
not necessary that the premise should necesexhibited in the process of drawing the conprinciple clusion contributes to the determination of the conclusion in the
it is
draw
a conclusion
sitate
it.
The
same
way
Secondly,
affirmed;
we are accustomed to think of conclusions as results yet we do not affirm but rather entertain the results of
It is
many
contingent inferences.
arbitrary,
which one
in fact that
and at which one rests. It is a rare conclusion deliberately reasons is reasoned to deliberately; most intellectual results,
even those widely acclaimed as the termini of inference, are obtained without preparation and are rarely affirmed, serving merely
as
momentary perches
at
ferential leaps.
14
Thirdly,
The Nature
men
It is
of
Mind
how
they reason.
as
aware of
Nor
principles
in order to reason,
principle
of
inference in order to
matically without
make
use of
it.
Just as
men
speak gram-
to be one, so they
move
to
principles
remark.
customary to speak of premises and conclusions as propositions which may be true or false, and to refuse the designation to mere terms. Yet what is an isolated term but a conFourthly,
it is
densed proposition? Or, where a term is a component of a proposition, what is it but that proposition partially filled out, a premise pointing to a possible conclusion? An isolated term has a different
application to different objects and
is
form: "This
is
As
component of
X"
as
propoan object
As
a conclusion as that to
ticularly
if
par-
they are logicians are sometimes tempted to speak as though they possessed two minds. One would suppose from their accounts that they were in possession of a divine pure reason,
which
moved
and human mind which haltingly and illegitimately hopped from one detached idea to another. But there is only one
If a
man
could, like a medieval angel, have his whole being conwould be unable to learn anything from
He would
life,
no
A
dom
man
is
not a mind; he has a mind. That mind embodies but It is capable of exhibiting but part of the freea barrier analogous to that of his
part, erects. It is
it is
characteristic of him.
is
His mind
body, though
good
to the restraints
would
mind
particular things happen to impose, or he have retreated so far from them that he would have lost
himself in a mystical enjoyment of his or their private beings. The is the self external to itself, the individual as organized and
body and
own
activity.
Since the
mind
is
is
count of
it.
He
must
from an habitual
The
inferences in
which he
engages must be fresh and novel at every moment, reflecting the effort of the self to make the mind conform to the self's intent.
No man
when
ise
thinks
all
Kant
assure
us to the contrary.
We
which no
mode
who
with a unitary promman of expression can exhaust. not be a man who thought for a pur-
who exuded
at times
odors.
Men
can, do,
and
their minds.
They
can, do,
and
at times
The Nature
of
Mind
perfect chain of reasoning, in perfect accord with the world, as not important. They can, do and sometimes ought to dwell in quiet
solitude, peacefully
from the mind and not from the world, theirs is a retreat not to the unintelligible but to what is beyond the intelligible. It is an
enjoyment of the self as being more than mind, rather than being alienated from the world.
as
a barrier in the
form of mind
in
order to concern himself directly with the things he has in mind. His actions, then, instead of being only the direct expression of
himself as filtered and structured
by
his
body, reflect
has
also
what
intel-
he has in mind.
telligible to
They
which
are in-
made
breaks through the barrier of the mind, too, in flashes ligible. of sympathy by which he reaches to the being of objects as substantial, independent, not entirely understood.
He
We
we
are
is
more
which
we
we
transcend them and touch the beings which lie outside. Intellectuals run the risk of losing touch with reality, but once they become concerned with reaching it by passing through the barrier of
the mind, they are able to reach it as that which they not only know but also understand. The sympathy of an animal is without
reason, the reason of an intellectual
full
is
actually moves are for it because of its past, and are conclusions which are possible habit of thinking made probable because of its acquired habits.
man sympathizes through reason. The conclusions towards which the mind
in certain
ways
from
a given set of premises rather than another. The mind, however, is not a slave of its past. It reconstitutes itself as it goes along.
it
In an actual inference
past defined and
its
which
its
own
body having its own habits. That body is a barrier. It provokes the mind to entertain images and concepts relevant to the body. As Spinoza remarked, the idea that Peter has of Paul tells more about Peter's body than it does about Paul. To
faced
by
avoid this
a
it is
essential to retreat
mind uninfluenced by
that body.
Only then
will
it
be possible to
truly intellectual being thinks in are not in exact conformity with the course and interests of his
body.
determined in part by other beings near and far. In moving to a conclusion the mind isolates and quickens a future partly determined by them. But to be a mind at its best, a philosophic reason, it must retreat also from such barriers
mind's direction
is
The
also
and move to objectives and ideals which portray a world that might and ought to be, but may never be in fact. It then moves
is,
it
and
may
commonplace
it
many
By commonplace, mind one effectively escapes the limitations of the past, the body, the environment and even the whole of the existent world. Yet
the
means of the
mind
has
its
own
own.
It
can serve to
hold one within monotonous and outworn patterns; it can lead one to submit to the demands of other beings more than one otherwise would.
mind
to
make one
free
must
first
free itself
from
conarbitrary constraints, and must then freely constrain itself in formity with an ultimate bond. It must break through the barriers
rier
of past, body, neighbors and world, and then construct a final barof its own in the form of an idea of which everything else is
illustration.
an
Then and
it
be a mind as free as a
mind can
be, a
mind which
The Nature
7.
of
Mind
The
in
operations of the
a
which
man might
mind
natural fruits.
ever,
who
There are professed materialists and naturalists, think that the mind has no role to play in nature.
howHux-
ley, for
example, was a good Darwinian, and Santayana has spoken of himself as the only materialist now Yet both of them living.
view
mind
as little
more than
affirm that
mind
arrive.
natural goal.
They
They They deny that it has a on the way up, not naturalists
which took
when they
Theirs
is
matter to be a product of mind and refused to allow that this product had any effect on the mind which mysteriously generated it.
According to the neo-Platonists, matter is impotent, a shadow thrown across the wastes of emptiness. The Huxleys and Santayanas reverse the roles which mind and matter play in this account.
The defects
characteristic of the
the other, though in opposite corners. Thus, just as for the neoPlatonists there are no laws or habits which matter embodies and no
power which
are
it
no
habits or laws to
it
can exert, so for the halfhearted naturalists there which the mind submits and no difference
is
which
mystery for the one, logic a mystery for the other. For both there is no way of affirming the evident truth that the state of the body often makes a difference to
a
what one
does.
has a role to play in nature. But it would be driving this too far to affirm that the mind is nothing more than an instrupoint ment for the pursuit or use of things in nature. Dewey's statement
Mind
that
"knowledge
It
is
mode
gram.
2
if it
would
express a falsehood
meant
that
all
significant.
N-dimensional geome-
tries are
not plans for changing the course of the world. It would show little submission to the facts to deny that most of the truths
learned at second hand have an inconsequential role to play in the lives of those who hear them. The mind is but one of the factors
in an organic pattern of activities in
which
it is
sometimes domi-
The
truths
aware sometimes, as in the case of the fanatic, disand confound. Sometimes, as in the case of the indolent, organize they serve only to adorn a passing mood. It is a professor's deit is
of which
lusion that
mind
is
power,
all
good.
Nor
is it
mind concerns
phenomena of daily life. It now, and sometimes even beyond the particular details of nature. If mind did not, it would be impossible to think some such truth
as:
change," which is what most naturalists intend. That proposition does not restrict itself to what is happening here and now; it
all of nature. It necessarily goes beyond any evidence we have or can obtain. No experience is wide or long enough directly to include all the facts it embraces. So long as such assertions are
applies to
significant
nial
and they must be significant if the affirmation or deof naturalism makes sense the mind cannot be defined as
nought but an instrument for the solution of practical problems. There are times when occurrences in the mind merely reflect
the occurrences in the
body or conversely;
when mind and body condition one another. A depressing thought may occasionally paralyze the body, a diseased gland may corrupt
the mind.
But
it is
weary
legs to keep
rest.
thought of
220
The Nature
there are times
of
Mind
in different di-
Though
allel
when
the
rections.
Sometimes
we
we
we
we
are thirsty
our legs while we contemplate the muscles of our arms. The vitality and direction of the mind or body can be varied independently. When the body is at rest, the mind can begin to move and when the mind becomes quiet, the body may be most active. The mind and body are thus related to one another somewhat
as are
They
being, capable of
of operating in
to be before,
working together, of benefiting one another and independence of one another. But the one comes
is
and
of the other.
Though we primarily and initially express ourselves body, we can come to express ourselves through the
is
One
can get along for a time with a theory that the mind
changing pattern of ideas which somehow keeps abreast of events happening elsewhere, that it is an offshoot of bodily processes, or
that
it is
But even
is why there is still a "mind-body" problem. were perfectly coherent and did succeed in acthey counting for every property and act of mind and the way it functioned with respect to the body, they would be adequate to
do not
satisfy
if
that
only a facet of the human being. From them one could learn nothing about the nature and function of the self, the constancy which
characterizes
it,
or
its
power
to vitalize
"mind-body" problem is permanent and insoluble mind be viewed in isolation from a wider self. The mind
the
then
not only treated as distinct from the body but as something which could not be owned or be linked to the body. It is easy to create
insoluble problems of this kind. Thus,
if
we
^2
a child involved,
how
can create a "finger-mouth" problem, a finger, which is other than and separate
we
mouth, could ever get into and out of it. The problem is not merely soluble but solved as soon as we bring in the child. The
a
from
and takes
it
and out of the mouth because the child puts it in is no problem of how a mind can
be distinct from and yet cooperate with, influence, be influenced by and act independently of a body at different times once it
be recognized that one being owns them both and connects the content of the one to the other in these different ways.
their
they can never be completely sundered from one another. They by emotions which reflect the tension pro-
voked by differences in their content, rhythm and direction. The emotion fills out the gap between them, thereby infecting them both and modifying their activities.
An
emotion
is
mind whose
It arises
acts
when
body and mind diverge, becoming most evident when an individual, without intellectual preparation, sud-
denly changes the direction of his bodily acts. As the James-Lange theory of the emotions suggests, if one goes through the acts of a
anger one will have an emotion of anger, providing it is important to add one does not then think of what one is doing.
in
man
An
also be provoked, however, as the James-Lange seems not to allow, by sending our thoughts careening in theory one direction while we habitually and bodily continue in another.
It is
emotion can
possible to
alien
some
irritable anger by entertaining while engaged in the pursuit of familiar tasks thought
provoke a flush of
in routine
ways.
is is
No man
mind which
ever free of the emotions for long, for none has a in perfect accord with his body for more than a
together.
few moments
222
The
attire
of
Mind
they are violent, forced to fill in an unusual and large gap due to a sudden change in the course of the activities of either body or
mind. And, since the emotions infect both the mind and the body which they relate, sooner or later they lose their warmth and in-
They then become steady emotional states which define the temper of one whose mind and body continue to have a somewhat constant bearing on one another at a fairly constant distance. The mind and body are also discordant with respect to the obtensity.
jects
of others.
with which they deal. While perceiving one thing, men think The world with which their bodies are concerned di-
verges from that towards which their minds are inclined. To overcome the discrepancy, the individual charges his thoughts with a spontaneous mental desire to make them applicable to the objects
body confronts, or spontaneously charges his bodily acts with an alien interest or bodily desire in an attempt to force them to deal with the things he has in mind. Our thoughts are spontaneously
his
when they are deliberately forged and our bodies are spontaneously impelled to turn where our thoughts point even when we are most anxious to
turned towards the world even
to help us escape,
be immersed in what
matism
is
present and immediate. The truth in pragnot that mind does or should concern itself with the
is
when
it
does not,
it is
possible
that
it
will be
made
of the
vision,
practical
spontaneously. But
it is
spon-
body to submit to the guidance theoretical. Which will occur is beyond any man's prebeing the result of an adventure in freedom which experiwith the one solution and then the other.
emotions and desires await the occurrence of a discrepancy
ments
first
The
momentary ways of harmonizing the two. It is possible, however, to harmonize them more permanently through the use of the 'will. This concerns itself with objectives pertinent to both mind and
body, directing them, despite divergencies in momentary content,
to
work in harmony.
223
its
many
grades,
many
degrees of adequacy. In
most elementary form it fastens on the object of the body or mind and forces the other to conform; in its highest form it is a creative
will
which
fastens
body
in the light of
it
ence of a more permanent relation between the mind and the body, expressive of the fact that both are possessions of a single
undivided
self.
We
begin to
move
when we
possible.
and the
which makes
that will
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE WILL
/.
ACTION
is required to make what is in mind fully determinate. If the action produces the result envisaged, what is in mind attains the status of an empirical truth, and the individual adjusts himself
to the
what
is
in
mind.
We
mind
often,
fails
all
What we
have in
are prepared to bring about as bodies. While thinking of one result we are frequently keyed to act so as to bring about an entirely different result. To make a truth of what is in mind, we must control the body and other beings. If
to
conform to what we
we
cannot do
in the
this, we think idly, or we provide ideas which stand of the correct apprehension of what does in fact occur. way man's body is usually prepared to act in consonance with the
economy
force to the fore, regardless of what he has in mind. His ways of modifying the state of his body
and of modifying the things about terms of the needs of the body. Hungry, he reaches towards
food; shivering, he turns from the cold. At one time the state of his body may be more responsible for promoting a tendency than the
provocations offered by the world; at another time the latter may have a greater influence. Even though food is not available, hun-
ger pangs
may
The
224
225
for food, to
pangs keep other tendencies repressed, prompting a man to look move towards the place where food is usually found,
to chew what he can put his teeth into. On the other hand, a man well-nourished can be provoked to eat by tempting odors, flavors, and colors, by threat and custom. These can force the tendency to
though the internal economy of the body may require that the tendency be restrained for a while.
eat to the fore,
the
mind are a function of the nature of mind confronts. At different times one or
the
the
A chemist thinks
about iron, water and oxygen in somewhat similar ways; the sight of a triangle starts the ruminations of a mathematician in a way it
does not the poet's.
the
body have
their
own
habits.
They respond
are vitalized
Both
self. That self spontaneously them into accord by altering both, thereby enabling them to brings converge on a common objective. This double infection of mind and body by the self, with its consequent reference of them to
some
single objective, is felt by the self as an emotion. Emotions direct the individual, despite diverse mental and bodily tendencies,
An
body which
are in con-
sonance, but only because both are denied independence and the
results
they can independently produce are made impossible. The of an angry man are in accord. He is a unified
being, his emotion infecting and altering the tendencies of his mind and body. He may continue to act on the being to which he was
bodily directed or he
in mind.
may
it
But
emotion
ferent turn from normally does and his thought will have a different content. The object of his anger, though physically in the path of his body or intellectually before his mind, will at the
the one
sustain
what he tended
to think or
what he
226
The Will
tended to do. As an object of both mind and body, the object of his anger will usually have no other reality than that of being angrily referred to by means of his emotionally coincident mind
and body.
No man
problem of
tioning
can persistently accept an emotional solution to the making his mind and body cohere. The emotions are
body or both are funcimproperly and may have been made to converge on someor
mind
thing not actual apart from that emotion. They direct a being to think and act so as to bring about results he did not envisage and may not want. Only the emotion of love, and then only when dipartly free of these defects. Love synthesizes the object of a mental inference and a bodily tendency so as to make what is observed serve as a guide to the nature of a
is
being beyond. The lover recognizes the emotional object to be constituted from within by a self analogous to his. He knows another as lovable. But the object of his love, like the object of any
real
other emotion, he
may
misconstrue.
The
other
is
lovable, but he
may not have those virtues which the lover lovingly bestows on him. Not even love is an altogether satisfactory agent for making
the
free themselves from the grip of the emotions by achabits of thinking in consonance with their bodies; others quiring free themselves by acquiring bodily habits of acting in consonance
Some men
They
the
are sane
by
are sane, excessively sane in fact. habit, purchasing their sanity by subordinating
men
to the mind, thereby depriving and independent mind or of a vital and independent body. The main difference between the two types is that the noses of the one are usually red and of the other blue.
mind
to the
themselves either of
The mind and the body have their own goods; to make one of them permanently the model for the other is to do injustice to that other. Also, there are novelties in experience for which our habits are not prepared. Those who are sane by habit, therefore, cannot
227
and unite
mind and body through desire instead. A desire is the means by which we
offer an object of
mind or
body
to the
It
of an emotion, since
the body. which the
It
infects
and
by
subordinated to the body, or conversely. It is unlike either an emotion or a subordinating act in that it allows
either
mind
mind or body
ate that
whichever one was once subordinate can become superior. Desire does not exert a force on the body or the mind. It merely
one to the other.
referred to
it
what
have in mind
is
component which are appropriate to the planting of the food towards which I tend is treated
in the percept,
some perceived
a tree. If
desire to eat,
as a possible conclusion,
and can then serve to provoke thoughts appropriate to eating. Desire is an act, not of the mind or the body for it makes use
of these
but of the
offers
it
self. It
body and
to the other. It
of bodily hunger is granted an opportunity to alter the trend of the mind; it is through desire that an object of curiosity is granted
own
objective.
In order to have a
at
in har-
one and the same time premony, sent the mental objective to the body and the bodily objective to the mind. He is, as a consequence, driven in two directions; he is
a desiring
beset
by
conflicting desires.
Hungry, he
still is
curious, curious he
still is
hungry.
Desire provides no adequate solution to the discrepancy between mind and body precisely because it provides two solutions.
It also fails to direct
the
mind or
the body.
It
228
The Will
refer objectives to them. It provides possible provocations for the mind or the body; it is not always capable of provoking one of
them
to
conform to the
other.
It is
always a question as to
whether what
is
desired can be
desire
sustained
food
we
may not be able to think of any thing relevant; though we are curious about the nature of the stars we may not be able to act in
any way
that will
make
those stars
more
available.
An
adequate
resolution of the opposition between mind and body requires that what the mind conceives the body can perform, and what the the requisite will body wants the mind can conceive.
provides
means.
2.
the
Desire presents to the body or mind an object towards which mind or body is directed. It presents a bodily object to the mind or a mental object to the body, whether or not they are
capable of attaining
it.
body or
directed, but
they are capable of attaining it and in such a mental movement towards it. provoke
a bodily or
will objects
way
We
them.
a will.
is
We
desire
by provoking the mind or body to deal with objects by viewing them as possible objects of
Having
desired,
be eaten,
we
only
we may fail to will; having willed, desire we think of food as that which is to desire it. We will to eat it when we make the
What is in mind
is
willed
when
it is
Conversely, that to
sented to the
mind
willed
229
Will thus refers an object to the mind or body as capable of rewill, however, without knowing how to make sponding to it. the will effective. do not know what the required bodily or
We We
how
mental act
fail
is,
or
it
it is
And we may
be weak. But
to bring
may
so long as a bodily tendency is aroused by something we think of in order to arouse it, we are exercising a will, and making it possible for the body to act in conformity with what is in mind. So
the sake of making us think, we are exercising a will, and making for the mind to act in with the body. possible
conformity
What is in
is
mind
is
by
will referred to
what
not yet in the forefront of the body, and conversely. to eat when we are not keyed to eat; we will to think
We will
when we
dominant tendencies of the body but pertinent to some not yet expressed and perhaps not even understood bodily tendency; we exercise our wills too by treating the food
for
which we hunger
as that of
which we ought
to think in the
We normally will, not to change the direction of our minds, but We then "say" to the body that there
on an object
it
something it ought to do. This "saying" is in part a mental act and in part transcends the powers of the mind. It is mental so far as
it
fastens
as that
which ought
to be pursued. It
is
not
mental so far as
body
so as to incite the
3.
CRITICISM
AND OBJECTIONS
The
will
it
is
nor does
think.
an expression of the self. It does no physical work It does not transform itself into physical force
and thereby
nor does
it
change
itself
into
30
The Will
mental energy and convert a bodily tendency into a thought. The body does physical work; the mind thinks. The will neither moves
nor thinks.
jects of the
so as to
It has no other task or power but that of offering obmind to the body and objects of the body to the mind make the objects of one into provocations for the other.
tempting to object that there is no such account of it repeats the very question it power was designed to answer. The first objection has two forms one of which was stated by Spinoza and the other by Hobbes. Accordviews
like these
it is
To
ing to the Spinozistic view there is no separate power of will. Its supposed activities are nought but activities of the mind. According to the Hobbesean view there is also no separate power of will, but for the opposite reason; the will's activities are supposed to be
nought but
of the body. for Spinoza, run along independent routes, each constituting a distinct domain, independent of but concordant with the other. By maintaining that the mind and body are
activities
will.
perfectly concordant, Spinoza obviously rules out any need for a concordant mind and body make a will unnecessary since
the only task of the will is to bring mind and body into accord. By treating the mind and body as correlative but independent powers possessed
by no
man were
mind and
it
would be but
a tautology
and recognizing that Staying, however, within Spinoza's system of an independent power of will is not
as a reaffirmation
intended
mind,
in
it is
evident that he
is
deny
that there
is
what
affirm
true.
voluntarily accept what is false or reject So far as an idea is true, Spinoza thinks, we must
it is false,
it;
so far as
we must deny it. "Volition and idea What is before the mind determines, for attitude we take with respect to it.
23
Putting aside the question as to whether or not it is correct to speak of affirmation and denial as acts of will rather than as acts
of preference or choice (which they seem to be),
sufficient to
it is
perhaps
identical
with nor produced by ideas in mind. They are the result of a union of ideas and tendencies to affirm or deny. Spinoza, by concentrating on the content of the mind, confounds one of the conditions for affirmation or denial (mental content which is true or false)
with the effect that such content makes possible (mental content affirmed or denied to be true or false).
What is important in Spinoza's theory is not his a priori exclusion of will and his treatment of affirmation and denial as identical
with or
as effects
of objects confronted, but something quite difis that there is no faculty of will,
but only specific acts of willing. That thesis I think is correct. It affirms in another way that there are no instincts or reflexes, no
separate potentialities or capacities, but only a single concern which is subdivided and distinguished in the course of being
realized.
A man
ties, his
is
and
ready to spring out towards some fixed objective. His potentialitendencies, are distinguished by becoming actualized. As merely potential, as capacities or faculties, they merge into one man's potentiality another and have no fixed and separate ends.
to eat
tiality
is
conjoined with and merges imperceptibly into his potento grasp and chew. Just so, a man's power to will is con-
power
to be tense
or to be passionate.
It is
only when he
is
tween
tinct
lost
his
mind and
his
body
The
will
is
a dis-
power only while exercised. When not exercised, it becomes within the self, without distinguishable traits, location or
meaning.
According to Hobbes the will is the last bodily tendency which comes to the fore as a consequence of a preceding combat between
32
The Will
his theory it is that bodily tenda host of bodily tendencies. it is a physical ency which has won a victory over competitors;
On
will,
is
obviously deal-
how a tendency, ing with something else. His theory explains for provoked by the will, comes to the fore. Instead of accounting
a will, his theory presupposes
its
existence.
front the
that
is
body with
is,
body
entertained objectives, and thereby provoke to act in one way instead of another. The tendency that
as
expressed
it is
and does not relate them to Spinoza deals with ideas latent mental tendencies, Hobbes deals with bodily tendencies and takes no account of the objects which provoke them. Without a
Where
will there
which Spinoza speaks, but no ideas were elicited; or there thing by which judgments of those would be the bodily tendencies of which Hobbes speaks, but no in is no giving up the gain thought which made them appear. There error for the Hobbesean, or conversely. One must be a
would be the
ideas of
Spinozistic
their respecSpinozist and a Hobbesean together, supplementing and applying the result to both the tive half-truths by one another
this
way one
an object to the body or to understanding of the will as referring mind in order to make the two concordant. the view is somewhat like that of William James. His The
present
account, however,
is
is
essentially
It
framed
in terms
on
a sensationalistic theory of
knowledge,
mythology
that
all
of instincts and reflexes, and a tentatively acceptance of a theory determinism. Once these suppositions are put aside, the adopted
and his will prove to be quite similar. present theory seem to attribute James' view, and the present as well,
energy,
all
all
the
the effort
by which we appear
to be impelled to act
233
when we
a
body or
work
the mind. Ours is apparently the will can do. But this seems
To will is to
only
is,
one makes an
effort
however, no difficulty in holding that we make an effort when we will but do not thereby expend physical or mental energy.
we do not infuse physical energy into the appropriate muscles. We do not know what those muscles are or how they function. When we will to lift our arms we use
will to
lift
When we
our arms
the prospective result of lifted arms as a provocation for the body to act in a way it is not now acting. Until we have actively willed
the lifting of the arms, the tendency to
it is
lift
the arms
is
not to the
not yet a distinct and definite mode of acting. It comes fore; to the fore only as a result of an internal physical redistribution of
arms. There
the energy of the body, under the provocation of the idea of lifted is an effort made when one wills to act, but this is
mean
work and
is
effort, this is
not a body.
We
when
body
has strength
way. and act are actually elicited, the will is weak. There is bodily work done when one
has observable effects.
If a
work which But the work is work of the body, not work
of the will.
However, if by effort we mean to refer to an individual's insistence on some objective not now favored by a bodily or mental tendency, there can be no doubt that every act of will requires
effort.
Effort
mind or body
necessary to present a prospective result to the in the face of established provocations. The willed
is
but the
crowd out the other objectives which are now by the mind or body. The drunkard wills to drink before him forces his thirst into focus. He
234
needs
all
The Will
the energy of his being to keep the glories of abstention before him. This last is but one of many possible mental objectives
He
must
is
insist
on
in the face of a
tendency
success-
thought of drink, he
must go on and institute a defense to protect his new thought of abstention from being displaced by others (e.g., by the thought of being congenial) which the circumstances might favor. Only
then will he be in a position to favor a nondrinking bodily tend-
his thirst.
The
by
the upsurge of some repressed tendency. the sively in one direction and suddenly stop themselves under
influence of objectives they had just put aside. They must exert an effort to keep the willed objective steadily before them in the face of inclinations to favor something else, for to have willed one
thing is not to have demolished all inclination to act otherwise. willed objective competes against objectives furthered by the
circumstances and against objectives which could have been willed. Nothing less than a continued recognition of the superior value
of a willed objective suffices to keep it in the foreground against the competitive pressure of rejected objectives.
be contended, however, that an objective, so far as it is understood, is in the mind, and that an act of relating such an
It
may
objective to the body must be an act of moving to the body from the mind. The present theory would then be one with those
which suppose that something mental exerts a physical influence on the body. It would then be no more satisfactory or intelligible
than the classical and established views that preceded it. The objection would be valid if all we knew were inside
if
us,
and
hammer
what we knew were willed into the body in somewhat the way But we know objects outside impresses itself on stone.
the mind.
And
on the body,
235
body with new provocations. Thus, when a man food before him, he regards the food as a terminus of a possible bodily act of reaching for it. The food elicits the act of reaching for the food in somewhat the same bodily way as
only provides that
wills to eat the
There
is
no more mystery
walk towards
When
make
thereby disturbing his present bodily activities as a matter of When he wills, he thinks of the perceived thing as that which ought to disturb his present activities. In both cases, an
course.
bodily
activities.
can willingly act in terms of perceived objects. He can act also in terms of objects which do not now exist. He willingly can will to build a house as well as to walk towards one. Once
again the analogy with perception holds.
It is
A man
possible to have a
perceptual content which purports to be of a house when there is no house in fact. That perceptual content will, in an erroneous
perceptual judgment, be attributed to something other than a house. man will, as a consequence, thoughtlessly walk towards
the object erroneously supposed to be a house. Somewhat sima man can evaluate a site as ilarly, having the prospective value of
a house,
site as a site
for
were
a unity.
In willing
what
is
nonexistent, a
man
He
then acts to
is
possibility
related to
make them a unity. In both cases, an unrealized some actuality, and there serves, without
236
It is
The Will
not an idea in mind that makes us walk, thoughtlessly or deliberately, but an idea as referred to some substantial reality.
In referring the idea to the we alter our status with respect reality, to that idea and to the referred. thereby reality to which it is
We
our equilibrium, though not necessarily in a the successful attainment of the objective.
affect
There
|
is
no
will to will
will.
were,
would, for the same reason, be a will to will to will, a will to will not to will, a will not to will to will, and so on. To engage
tliere
one would
first
and then progress infinitely downwards, all in the of a moment. But if there is no will to will and no space will not to will, a man cannot willingly employ or withdraw his
infinite regress
will.
over an
Without the will there could be prospects envisaged and actions performed. But without the will the actions would not be elicited by the prospects envisaged, and the prospects would not be insisted on in order that the acts be elicited. The will brings a possible
some
objective into relation with the body or mind. It thereby voids actual objective and thus alters the way in which the body
The
It is
will
is
hemmed
in
by
limits
deavor to overcome an opposition between its mind and body. It is free and must be free, since its entire function is to give mental
meaning and bodily objectives a mental meanand thereby provide those objectives with determinations they ing, otherwise would not have.
objectives a physical
Like every other free activity, the will vitalizes constraints, provided by the past, the body, neighbors and the world. It is constrained
It is
by
constrained as well
It is
the past, which brings different objectives to mind. by a body which tends towards objectives
constrained also
It is
not willed.
boring things.
by the future as stressed by neighconstrained too by the world, for the world
237
determines just what objects there are with which the mind and body can and ought to deal, and therefore what it is that the will
insist
upon.
4.
Nature is more a temptress than a mother. She constantly provokes bodily tendencies and mental inclinations, and keeps them
to the front,
satisfaction.
trigued by of prospective pleasures, and confused by pleasures in the guise of possible dangers. The human mind seems to have a natural
attraction for the false.
are frightened by snakes that are harmless, infruits that are poisonous, beset by dangers in the guise
We
relief
and more
We
temptations of nature by inserting willed objects between those which she stresses and those that are favored by our dominant
when he
mental or bodily tendencies. Man first stands erect in nature recognizes that he must free himself from the tensions
which arise because the mind and body have too readily followed her recommendations recommendations which drive the body in one way and the mind in another He must dangle before himself the
new ways
in order to
escape from
promotes.
Initially,
men
resolution of a conflict
it is
not long
before they employ their wills to get themselves to the stage where they can act 'well habitually, sometimes in the face of present
we
quite early in the history of the individual, the will is employed to means discipline the body by making it the locus of techniques
There
is little
238
The Will
first
component movements and steps. Then one must firmly relate them by going over them in sequence again and again. But there are compensations. While
concentrate on
its
One must
different
the technique is being willingly mastered, the body and the mind are in accord, for a willing mastery of a technique requires that
one keep in mind what one is doing and keep one's body from disturbing the intent of the mind. And so far as nothing arises which
provokes the mind or body to work in opposition to the acquired
technique, the technique promises a fairly enduring resolution of the conflict of mind and body.
techniques enable a mind and body to work together for a considerable time, they tend to force the one or the other into
Though
a groove.
The more
technique
is
overcome those oppositions between the mind and the body which arc inevitable when the differently structured mind and body confront a novel situation.
good are they able to use their minds and bodies independently and yet in harmony. It is only the good that encourages collateral but independent mental and
until
Not
men
bodily
activities.
are not pure spirits and thus uninterested in immediate obNor are they so engrossed in the immediate and beneficial jectives.
Men
They
attend
more or
less unconsciously to the achievement of techniques, to limited objectives and to an ultimate good. But they ought to go further. They ought to mil the good, techniques and limited
men
are willing
men,
at
once
and
practical.
beings who ought to will the good apart with other objectives must be left for the sequel. from and together Now it suffices to observe that techniques, limited objectives and
The study
of
men
as
the
in fact
to be sharply separated.
239
one of them
three,
though
at
may
stress
and
at
another
moment another.
way which is not in consonance with the willing of others. They will to obtain something now, but in such a way that the
ultimate
good is obscured. Or, they are fairly clear about the good and misconceive what they are to will now to obtain it. The prac-
tical
man
less
lives
wills in
But the one keeps the good ways which oppose his real
concern.
The
such a
tions
way
as to
other keeps the good in the foreground but often in prevent him from making use of present condi-
and techniques. Men are at once theoretical and practical, but they are rarely both to the degree they can and should be.
Man
is
has a body. It is the concern of that self which is exhibited in the acts of all three. His self needs the help of reason in order to be able to know the demands of the good, and it needs the help of the
body
to realize that
will.
good
in the
world that
now
exists.
The
self also
needs a
The
self,
a conflict
to an end.
its
concern
its
in diverse
When it employs
will to focus
on
the good, it provides a means by which the body and mind can function as independent but collateral agencies for the realization
employs body, mind and will to realize the ultimate good, which is a permanent and appropriate object only
of that good.
self
The
of a
self's
concern.
a reference to the
Cut away
as requiring har-
monization, see the will as directed towards a single, permanent a good relevant to all there is and almost at once the objective
self
we deal
2 4o
The Will
ethics,
we should try to grasp what that self is. Not to know it, is not to know what it is to which some of our basic ethical judgwith
ments
refer.
Only
a self
is
inescapably obligated and radically free. All judgments of responsiand blame, of duty and human right, at least tacitly, take bility
account of the
nature.
self;
its
CHAPTER TWELVE
THE SELF
/.
A man
gether.
is
Nor
is
he
all
three to-
He
is
necessarily expressed in
and
through the
as a will.
body and
may
If
it
were,
it
would have
to be located in
possible to push it out of place and get it inside other bodies. But the self has no bulk and is the self of that
would be
being and no other. Also, were the self a body, it would be limited to the performance of physical actions and there would be nothing
to wish or to think the theory that it was a body which makes it possible to wish or to think.
but
it is
the self
There
is
spiritualists to
weigh the
by subtracting
imme-
from the weight it had just before. Any discrepancy they might find would indicate the loss of something material; yet that of which they are obviously in search is a self
diately after death
which has nonbodily powers and a supernatural destiny, a spiritual and not a material thing. The same mistake is committed by those more honored scientists who try with all their being and equipment to peer into the brain for traces of mind, will and emotion.
Ideas, ideals, decisions, approvals, disapprovals,
commands,
like
self-identity
241
242
The Self
subtler
is
is
the self
He who
holds that view can deny the self is corporeal, and yet can affirm that it characterizes or qualifies the body. By denying that the self
is
is
body
with nonbodily functions; by affirming that the self qualifies the body as a whole, he makes a needed place for a theory of the self a unity. as that which enables the living body to be
This view,
still
popular today,
is
About
twenty-four hundred years ago, Pythagoras and Empedocles defined the "soul" as a harmony or proportion between the bodily
parts of a living being.
esthetic
and mathematical ways of referring to the character of the of the body, theirs was but a special form of the theory that unity the self was a state of the body as a whole. Their particular theories
were
brilliantly refuted
by
by
Aris-
totle in the
de Amina. Implicit
tries to
view which
in those refutations
reply to
way
as to
edge before
birth,
on the
as a
way
defenders.
and Aristotle's more significant points have often, consequence, been overlooked.
Plato's
mean
In saying that the self or "soul" is a state of the body, one might that it was the state of the body at just that time, that it was
the unity of just those parts or elements which, for that moment, make up the body. But then the self would not only depend for its
on those elements, but would change or cease to be when they were increased or decreased in number, or even merely rearranged. The self would also be unable to control the body, and
existence
in addition
would be unable
243
and
self-criticism
would be
impossible.
To
self is
more
than a bodily state at a moment. The least that could be maintained is that it is a state of a unified body, a state which continues unin content and arrangement. The not with an aspect of or a relation in identified, the body, but with a form for the body, i.e., with something which was to be distinguished from every particular transient state which
would then be
the
body actually had at any one time. To allow for self-discipline one would then have to go further and affirm that the self had powers which the body itself did not have, and by which it could
act
on the body.
would have
ing.
one Finally, to make room for self-criticism, to attribute to the self the nonbodily power of know-
As
gone beyond the theory that the self was a form of the body, to the view that it had a being and status of its own.
2.
Though
form of
the self
it
comes
From
the
first it
and through the body. That body has a structure and needs of its own. A man eats, not because his self needs food
but because
his
it
body
eat.
does.
Yet
it is
the self
body
so that
self
can
The
is
may
also
be
expressed in and through a mind. That mind is not necessarily coordinate with or in harmony with the body. It goes its own way, sometimes in defiance of what the body requires or provides.
The
self
is
though the self is expressed in and through the body, it also stands outside the body with powers and interests of its own.
244
The Self
individual
is
An
are
a single being.
Even when
his
most discrepant, he possesses them as one and together. He relates them by emotion, by desire and by will. But these ways
of relating are subsequent to the existence of a discrepancy be-
tween the mind and the body. The self is more than the emotions, desire or will. These are expressions of it, serving to relate those
other bodily and mental expressions of the self which happen to be
discrepant.
The
self are
relating a discrepant
self
would
a
be without objectives of
own.
It
motive for
which
discrepant
nizian
would be without
interest
an Aristotelian
in miniature,
God
or a Leib-
monad, which
its
God
It
would forever
coming
it itself
revolve about
into
it
own
orbit.
would stand
outside time,
made
every other being the self, through the agency possible. of a concern, reaches from the present to the future and strives to
like
But
make
it
The
self is
it
the mind,
body or
will,
because
has
manifests in and through, and thereby controls and possesses each of them.
5.
No
one in recent rimes has stressed more strongly than Freud is a self, and that it tries to manifest itself in
order to satisfy its concern. Unfortunately, he too often confounded the concern of the self with one of the ways in which that concern is manifested.
Freud
is
complex
I
figure,
many
thesis
dimensions.
shall extract
from
which many of
his followers
245
has been
by Freud's
position.
It is their
for
the things men do. At the same time they think that the self seeks 'and obtains full expression through the performance of
all
a sexual act.
as
But
it is
it
both ways.
The
self,
providing the urge behind everything that is done, cannot be identified with the self as interested in a limited and special activity or goal.
Were the concern, or "libido," as the Freudians call it, the source of a host of different acts and nothing more, it would not
be correct to describe
also
it
as
having an objective of
to treat
its
own. But
it
one of those
is
Yet
it is
of the self
a sexual
impulse.
The
goal which
to describe
in other acts.
it
To
is
one of many possible and independent modes in which a single concern can be exhibited. The self is too inclusive in its concern to be restricted to a sexual impulse; a sexual
in terms of
impulse is too limited in its form and goal to be identified with the source of the different things men do.
He
Freud himself often slipped from one interpretation to the other. tried, at one and the same time, to be a physician and a meta-
physician. His preference for sexual terminology indicates the inclination of the physician to investigate the nature of a limited though powerful strain of activity; his stress upon the existence of
metaphysical interest in that which of activity. By trying to be both, lies Freud was able to delve deeper than most physicians and to keep
a single
his
concern indicates
mode
closer to the facts than most metaphysicians are wont to do, but he thereby also failed to note where observations ended and speculations began.
as a
It
was
246
due
The Self
to his careful investigations as a doctor that we today have so aware of the fact that men are seriously frustrated and
become
due to his inadequacy as a metaphysician, and almost an entire generation to believe that the heart of a being was to be sought in a sexual impulse. His facts revealed that a sexual impulse could be repressed, difficult and
their erotic zones. But,
he led
his followers
dangerous though such repression was; his metaphysics affirmed that the impulse was irresistible and was bound to appear in a new
prevented from appearing in an old. only limited modes of expression that are repressed, only the self that can have variable modes of expression. The expression
if
form
It is
which
is
pression
distinct, usually
with
its
own goal. An act of repression does not turn one mode of expression into another, but forces the self to find another avenue of
expression.
is
try climbing through the window. Climbing through the window not a variation or corruption of the act of going through the
door;
it is
house in
an alternative expression of the desire to get into the some way or other.
There
is
is danger in repressing any act, not merely one which directed to sexual ends. In order to exhibit one tendency, it is
necessary to repress another, and if we repress it in the wrong way, no matter what its nature or goal, the repression may have serious repercussions. The taking of what does not belong to one
is,
urgent and hard to restrain. Certainly its has had sad and permanent effects on many individuals, repression leaving them with dreams of conquest, and with feelings of frustraat least in early life,
tion
it is
wrong to repress the tendency to steal, but that it must be repressed with care. It is not so much what is repressed as the manner
in
which
mind.
repressed that breaks a man's spirit and twists his denial of a mode of expression must be conjoined with
it is
247
self
By being improperly restrained, a harmless mode of expression can be made to give way to one that is dangerous and desperate.
This
little
is
is
unimportant.
An
apple has
Yet by being prohibited from eating an apple, bluntly and without suggestion as to what else he might do with it, Adam was doomed to lose paradise in fact and in spirit. If he obeyed the
value.
command
But
it
not to eat, his interest in the apple would still remain. would be dammed up within him, acting as an excitant cor-
rupting his other interests and perverting his judgment. Adam should have been told to spray the forbidden apple regularly, to make pictures and reproductions of it, and to salute it whenever
he came in sight of
it.
directed to the apple, did not have to be expressed as an act of eating. Being denied that mode of expression, he ought to have
satisfying.
God
should have
known
Every object
some pertinence
to the self.
The
self
way
ought to take account of every thing that exists, in some or other. arbitrary taboo, denying all right and opportu-
An
some one
dealing with
surreptitious and perverted ways. to act in a certain way does not destroy a mode prohibition of expression; it merely prevents it from being exercised fully and But it does not follow from this that if a prohibition is in the
it
in
open.
not new or distorted ways of eating it. They are pictures of it are different and independent limited modes of expressing the concern
concern which, though making use of, is directed what they involve. quite beyond apples and Every prohibition ought to be accompanied by a suggestion of
of the self
a
new
248
The Self
of serving as a means for focusing on the object, and almost inevitably involves the individual in the conflicting attempt to carry through and repress the same activity. prohibition can perform
its
The
teacher
a
taught them
as she
her pupils not to put ink in their hair soon discovered when she left the
the keyhole. In the interval between the of the command and the leaving of the room, she provoked issuing a tension which made them The fidget was a psychoneufidget.
not of an
irresistible
novel ways.
way
on
nation of
its
They impose a punitive peace, cheating an entire opportunity to live and prosper, and then are dumbresult
is
new and
of running a state.
sexual impulse, of course, is much more insistent and wideor to crush a state. As a spread than an impulse to ink one's hair
result
it is
much more
difficult
and dangerous to
restrain.
The
doing. They satisfy a sexual drive in the course of a wider effort to create a permanent bond with another human being, and they
it
Don
nova
failed to
were not
lovers,
sion to love.
They
249
they never understood that the sexual act is to be carried through only within a context of regard and concern for the good of another.
adults force their sexual interests to the periphery of their without appreciable injury; others put it completely yet safely aside. Sexuality is not the predestined or only satisfactory mode of expression open to a man. Men find satisfaction in the
lives
Some
service.
pursuit of art, science, business, war, contemplation and public According to some Freudians, these are but perverted or
inadequate ways of exhibiting sexual impulses. The view goes counter to the fact that there are celibates in these fields whose
lives
and happier than the lives of those who devote themselves to a round of bodily pleasures. The most that could be urged is that the sexual impulse is so strongly intrenched
are richer, healthier
that
it
happy
celibates
occasionally expressed
has sexuality as but
man
one of
It is
alternative
possibly be, being directly exhibited in acts of sexual restraint and sexual indulgence, in ethical and nonethical behavior, as mind and
will, in
it
was
his
discovery of
led
what appeared
which
Freud
the explanation goes the other a sexual impulse with the essential concern way. By confounding of man, Freud was bound to suppose that sexuality was at the root
of
all his
activity.
activities
of a child as anticipatory or variant sexual acts. This is a highly questionable conclusion. The child's acts have
They
are
prompted
250
on
different occasions
The Self
ways and with different
and by different stimuli; they end in differresults. Freud brought into the open the fact that the child indulges in many practices which have a
ent
sexual coloring, and that there is more than one kind of sexual expression, utilizing different channels. But the fact that any one
of these channels
child
is
is
utilized
by
mean
that the
which
adults
perform
reads a book, another uses it instead to stop a draught. one is interested in literature. Similarly, the fact that a child Only and an adult may both occupy themselves with sexual matters does
not mean that they arc dominated by a common sexual interest. The child acts in one way, the adult in another. So radically diverse are the effects and intents of the two, that one
is
compelled
to say that the one has a nonsexual and the other a sexual interest
in sexual matters.
Even
if
all
expressions of the very impulse which is eventually realized in the sexual acts of an adult, one would still be far from a justification of the thesis that every act of the child can be accounted for in terms
of a sexual impulse, or even of an interest in bodily pleasures. theory has begun to stretch far beyond the limits of credulity when
it
begins to affirm that sneezing, riding a bicycle, asking questions, skipping a rope and combing one's hair all play variations on the
erotic theme.
that childish play or curiosity It is particularly hard to believe are nothing more than variant or perverted expressions of sexare normal, healthy and significant uality. Play and curiosity
child can bounce a ball occurrences, with their own objectives. by the hour and ask questions without end. He thereby exercises
muscles which have nothing to do with the sexual act and may eventually find a satisfaction which has a spiritual as well as a
bodily quality.
may
at times
be sexually motivated.
They
25
be nonsexually motivated.
They may
at times offer
obstacles to the expression or satisfaction of a sexual impulse. man can play so strenuously that he weakens his power to engage
in sexual
activity,
and curiosity can so grip him that he becomes to act rather than impelled to pursue. There is nothing impotent in curiosity or play which requires them to be understood as the natural predecessors, or instruments of
consequences, perversions
this
Embarrassments of
disciples,
Adler and
much
less
by Freud. But
in compensation,
ward other
sexuality, to
limited impulses and tried, just view them as of the essence of that central
is
and
selfis
identical
concern which
at the
There
more
to be said in favor of a
theory nor a modification of it, but instead interprets sexual activity as a variation of a fundamental impulse to play. In childhood
the urge to play
is
almost
irresistible,
all its
ing overmuch, interpret outgrowths or perversions of an attempt to utilize everything in a game of some kind. Moreacts as
over, the child plays with inanimate as well as animate things, and plays a good portion of the day, whereas the sexual interest is primarily directed towards the living and then only some of the time.
The
more
much more
much
as
having even the adult's An even better alternative would be to interpret all acts as the outcome of an impulse to engage in social activities. Children are
constantly acting the parts of policemen and firemen. They perpetually interrupt adult conversation and make countless miniature
and sometimes major experiments in social adjustment. It is not difficult to view them as having an insatiable urge to participate
anticipatorily in the adult activities of social welfare, social discourse and social adjustment. Since the adult sexual act is over-
252
The Self
laden with social meaning and implications, it would be a natural corollary from this theory that children should exhibit an early
interest in sexual matters.
Here
is
and
sex,
curiosity and conversation. It has no more difficulty in accounting for sleep, suicide, and asocial acts than does a theory which stresses
a sexual or a playful impulse.
It also
viduals
accounting for the sexual act, which some of the time, in terms of an impulse which can be exhibited by everyone and for longer periods. There is some justification for
viewing a
social
human
beings, for it is evident early and universally. There is no justification for treating a sexual or playful impulse as of the essence
of
human
But the
then rather
and spasmodically.
theory
is,
social
them
it
concern which
lies
behind
modes of
expression.
As
consequence
an
adult's,
and to suppose that some one limited group of objects could the concern of a human being.
satisfy
4.
The
self has a
ently affirm.
But
the history of philosophy, psychology and religion confirm, it very difficult to see and to say what it is with which the self
is
concerned.
Progress in this direction can be made, however, if one can overcome the habit of dealing with men as though they
were natural beings incapable of obligations, or as though they were ethical beings incapable of a natural existence.
The
It is (i)
constant,
The Concern
of the Self
253
(2) active, (3) concerned, (4) unique, (5) beneficial to the body, (6) responsible, and (7) sensitive to values. These different des-
ignations trench on one another and converge on the same truth. One or more of them have, however, often been slurred or denied.
all,
its
concern.
remains self-same over the years, despite changes in his body, temper, memory, virtue and thought. His identity could be accounted for on the supposition that he was nought but a self,
man
self
ultimate, con-
crete self-sufficient being. But then it would be irrelevant or not a man had a body or what nature that body had.
whether
No matter
how the body changed or whether or not it existed, the man would be affected in no way. But a man is a man only so far as he has a body. What he does to and with that body is vital to him. He is
more than
a self; the self does not exhaust his nature.
His
self
is
unitary source of diverse, bodily expressed insistencies and of a single concern for an all-embracing good; it is the private responsible inside of which his body is the public outside. Infinitely insistent
absolutely constant in nature, distinct from but not separated from the body, enabling a man to be self -same over the years.
infinitely responsible,
it is
and
Guilt
is
body or mind.
Because that
nitely.
man can continue to be guilty indefiguilty where before they were that the self, though it could be
constant once guilty, can change from the state of innocence to the state of guilt and is not, therefore, a real constant. Were guilt a
defect in the self like a fault in a rock, this
clusion.
is
But
it
later guilty.
self.
would be a just conis the very same being who was once innocent and While innocent and while guilty a man has the
guilt,
self-same
self,
But then
its
cannot
is
alter
being.
self.
Guilt
It is attributable
254
in the
The Self
same
It
far apart. way as distance is attributable to things the nature of a relation which the self has to the good; it expresses man does not refer to some transitory trait possessed by the self.
but by not by changing changes from innocence to guilt, so acting that the good with which his self is concerned is not realized to the degree that it can be. He is guilty to the degree
his self
that he prevents the infection of what is by what ought to be. It was his task to bring the ought to be to bear on the world. If he
so acted as to preclude this, he
is
a being
held apart what belongs together. He the bad situation he made possible is not altered.
2.
it.
who
The
self
is
active.
It acts
to realize a
Its
evaluated as more or less desirable in the changes. These are to be the degree to which the good is realized by their means. light of
which was not active would either be indifferent to all reflect that exists, or would be intruded on by others and made to innermost the nature of their efforts. But the self is the responsible,
self
core of man.
it is
It is
And
because
that
which nothing
else
can direct or
determine.
moment
unless
it is
possible
Since nothing can exist at the very for it to exist then, there must
moment. That
moment
realizing
after
self can and does realize at the next must continue to confront the self at the possibility the next, at the moment after that and so on, for
otherwise the
self
would,
the possibility it self requires that the self, the self-same possibility of
change in confronts. The constancy of an active confront and realize at every moment,
at
some point
in
its
career,
itself.
Subhuman
attempt
at realization
is
by opposing
The Concern
of others.
of the Self
are confronted with
255
When
subhuman beings
nought
but the possibility of themselves, they can realize it only in part. Their reappearance at a later moment in the same guise they had
earlier
is
broader
the result of a partial success in realizing a different, possibility. Their persistence is the result of a failure to
be different.
The
despite changes in the constituand the nature of the future, is faced with a posself, in contrast,
which it can and does realize fully. Otherwise its would be an accident, the result of a steady failure to constancy realize some greater and the self would be a being capapossibility,
of
itself
if it as
not change.
man, however,
because his
self
is
to be different but
all his
is
That
constant in
no matter what
self
else
may occur and what else it may do, own possibility again and again.
every moment. But
this
is
The
renews
itself at
not what
primarily seeks to do. It is concerned with more than the realization of the possibility of reappearing again. If it were not, reit
sponsibility
would be
impossible, regret
would be meaningless,
hope, happiness and duty illusions. Like every other being, the self is concerned with more than the
mere
possibility of itself.
it
cannot entirely
real-
which
the object of
its
it always succeeds in fully realizing the possibility of itself while attempting to realize the possibility which concerns it. When other beings reappear it is because they fail, in some one way, to
them,
own
with which they are concerned. But the no matter how and to what possibility fully,
with which
it is
extent
it
concerned.
It
does
not reappear because it fails to realize the object of its concern; it reappears because its object of concern is always realized as the self, whether or not it is also realized in other ways.
The
self is
it is
concerned with
256
a
TheSelf
it steadily realizes in the guise of the self. That good a possibility realizable as the self. As more general, as broader than the self, that good is a possibility realizable also in other ways.
good which
is
It is in fact a possibility pertinent to everything whatsoever, for the self differs from the psyche primarily in that it is concerned with a universal, not a restricted good, with a good which is
relevant to
self realizes
all
and not only to some beings. At every moment, the in itself and perhaps elsewhere an absolute, ultimate,
self, is
universally relevant, possible good. The good which is the concern of the
pertinent to
all
other beings.
from the objective which concerns the body. If it could, the self would be a separate substance. As such it would not only have a separate objective, but would therefore have a separate inside and outside and would stand apart from and be
externally related to the body. But the self is the inside of which the body is the outside. That body, as a physical thing, has its own inside and its own objective. But as quickened and sustained by
the
self, it is
the outside of
is
which the
self
is
the inside.
The body
ized in
concerned with an objective which must be realto some degree when and as the self acts to
good, for the acts of the self are in part modes to realize an instance of that absoself.
The
good
at
self
of continuance.
4.
and nature from yours and remains so no matter how similar we are in feature, act and intent. The uniqueness of our selves is not due
to our bodies, for the nature of an inside cannot be determined
by
an outside.
have to be
Nor can
as
the uniqueness be due to the nature of the the selves are concerned. If it were, there would
as there
many goods
were
selves,
The Concern
of the Self
257
ethically incomparable. Men are justifiably judged in terms only so far as there is a single good which concerns
common
them
all.
Nor
can the uniqueness of selves be found in the character of their concerns, for if each self were directed to the good in a different
way, they could not be innocent or guilty in a similar sense and for similar reasons. Nor, can the uniqueness of selves be finally, due to the presence in them of characters which are possessed
by no
others. Unduplicated traits are conceivably duplicatable, thereby making possible the identification of different selves. But
selves are
I
am
we
in theory or in fact.
would have the same concern and objective as would be just self, with nothing to differentiate it any from any other. But selves do not exist by themselves. They are
One
by
It
itself
other.
completely other than one another because they are inseparable from bodies. From the very start each self is directed to a universal
good, as that which is relevant to all beings but primarily relevant to the objective of its body. It is because selves approach a single,
universally pertinent good as primarily pertinent to the objectives, i.e. to the limited possible goods, of their bodies, that those selves
as absolute, abstract
and un-
limited, pertinent to all beings. It itself is that good realized in a limited way, and thus as concrete, determinate and relativized. As
a concrete
all
self is a
unity of which
When
objectives are independent, partial illustrations. the absolute good is realized as a self, it continues to exist
apart from that self. As so existing, it is a universal good pertinent to all that exists. The self always tries and always succeeds to some
extent in realizing that absolute good in its body, for the absolute good is, through the self's concern, inseparable from the objective of the body. The self does not, however, always try or always
succeed in realizing the absolute good in other beings, for the ob-
258
The Self
even though they
illus-
good
good which unifies, harmonizes. Since elements are unified by that which is less concrete than and by that which is at least as concrete as they are, there must be two distinct types
is
That
which have a
stract
good
it
is
and power independent of it. One such abgreater than another the broader its range, the more
status
elements
The
highest of
such abstract goods is the absolute good, the most comprehensive of forms, the future as a single possibility of which all other possibilities
are subordinate, compatible illustrations. concrete good, is an existent One such concrete good unity.
is greater than another if it embodies a greater abstract good than that other. The greatest of concrete goods, therefore, is the self, since, as we saw above, the self is the absolute good, though in a
The
absolute
good
is
not
It
itself a
great good.
It is
The
tinct
good is the total future as a form of harmony disfrom but related to what is to be harmonized. It is related
absolute
to the limited possibilities which are the concern of specific things, as color is to red and blue, where color is understood to have a
being and meaning apart from these specific modes. As a pure, fixed standard separately existing form, it is eternally the same, a
in terms of
which
all
existents
self, it is
and
As
all
real-
a concrete existent
which
other
beings partially, indirectly and independently realize, a value in terms of which all existents can be measured.
The
self,
since
it is
a self
of a body,
is
absolute
good
as it exists
by itself,
with the
good
as a radically inde-
The Concern
of the Self
259
terminate, all-embracing future. It is concerned rather with that good as pertinent to the body and thus as made partially determi-
time the
by the body's objective. At the same quickening the body, relates the object of the by body's concern to the absolute good, and thus enhances, by means of that good, the value of that body's objective. The body, under
nate and enhanced in value
self,
it
otherwise would.
6.
The
tions
absolute good and the good of the body impose prescripon one another, thereby enhancing one another's value. The
is
good, however, has universal applicability. It form of whatever objectives there may be. The
is
the harmonizing
self,
concerned
as it
with realizing the good, not only refers it to the objective of the body, but refers it to the objectives which concern other beings.
the degree that those objectives are receptive of the absolute good to that degree are they enhanced in value, and the absolute
To
good
is
made
determinate.
objective of the body is receptive to the good. The living the body quickened by the self, has as a consequence an body, objective richer than what it would otherwise have. Other beings,
The
however, are independent of the self. Though the absolute good is pertinent to their objectives and though it can enhance and har-
monize them, those objectives are not often receptive to the good. Most beings, accordingly, concern themselves with objectives
without regard for the fact that those objectives can and ought to be enhanced and harmonized with others within the frame of
an all-embracing unity.
on by the
could be.
self,
hopeful than
it
Because the
good
a
to
all
objectives, that
good becomes pertinent to them all, as exemplified by every one of them. The
does; a long and arduous intellectual
voyage
necessary before
260
The Self
one comes to the point of seeing that there is a harmony which is pertinent to, is referred to, and ought to be integrated with the particular futures of all there is. But whether it knows it or not,
for every self the world
is
things are approached from the vantage of a universal good, in terms of which those limited goods ought to be enhanced and
made concordant.
The
self
provides
all
in terms of
harmony. It offers them the all embracing which they can convert the prescrip-
qualifications, thereby enabling them to recover some of the value they lost by mutual limitation. Thus, were a being concerned with the possibility of ruling all others, its possibility would
and internal
limit
possibilities
them
open to those others so as to make it would defy and be defied by and their conjoint realization would
The
form of the
in
good
value.
in terms of
If
good converts the possibility of being a ruler of subjects into a ruler who is also a subject, and the possibila ity of being a subject for a ruler into subject who is also a ruler.
accepted, that
The
It tries
self is
and ought to impose that good on those objectives and thereby enhance those limited goods in harmony. If those objectives
do not accept the offered good, the beings which concern themselves with those objectives will fail to deal with the greatest
goods possible to them. The self, however, is concerned with the absolute good; it tries and ought to make that good as determinate
as
possible.
It
on behalf of others
so that
what is realized in them is their objectives as enhanced by the absolute good. Other beings ought to be receptive to the absolute good; but whether they are or not, the self must act with and
The Concern
on those other beings so
beings. Its task
is
of the Self
26
good
in those
it
to enhance
them
in the
same
way
that
en-
hances
tives
own
New values,
such
come
into the
world with
the arrival of man. For this a price is paid in the form of a responto realize the greatest sibility degree of good everywhere. The self
has the
lute
embodiment
to the abso-
must try to know just good. responsibility what that good demands, and for this purpose must make use of a mind. To bring what is in mind to pass it must make use of a will.
fulfill its
it
To
The
self is thus
all
driven to use
is,
its
mind and
will to fulfill
its
duty
towards
that
including
its
own body.
its
The
its
self
always
fulfills its
it
obligation towards
It is
body, though
unavoidably biased towards and realizes the objective of its body, as enhanced by the body
should.
absolute good, to some extent and in some way. Still, it may at times promote the enhanced objective of another at the expense of
its
own body. The self may fulfill its responsibility towards its own
to a
body only
minimum
by
virtue of the
way
it
its
self is superior to a
is
some of the
its
possibilities
its
kind; a
man
sensitive to
some
possibilities
good.
He
is
sensi-
reject and some accept the prescriptions which the good provides, and thus is aware that there are things he ought to do on behalf of others. His is an ethical sensitivity, a
tive that
some objectives
having ac-
262
uses his mind, he sees
The Self
more
clearly that he
is
possibilities as pertinent
The
values
idiot
though and
abstract good.
infant,
idiot
no
less
makes
They
are not
sufficiently sensitive
to the value
as a
which the
also
self ever attains provides for other objectives. the stage of being sensitive to all objectives. But the more sensitive
it is,
which the
No
the more mature it is. And the more able is a man to act and know in terms of the values his self makes possible. The self changes the future for the body and perhaps for others.
it does not always act to realize those changed prospects, since does not always sense the difference its presence makes. Growth
But
it
in
sensitivity
depends on the
self's
ability to
good
as distinct
by
objectives of others.
The
of
its
it is
self is at
once
selfish
and
selfless,
self-same, approaching
lute
pertinent to
them
all.
possibility restricting
and restricted by the objectives of others in different from that in which they restrict one another.
partially realizes the
good
in the
form of a
is
self, i.e.,
a partial
it
always partially
realizes
as
an
body
itself
by which the objective of its body and thereare increased in value. Sometimes it enhances
the objectives and sometimes even the being of others. does it begin to do all it ought.
Only then
Natural Rights
5.
263
NATURAL RIGHTS
a being has a right to attain
itself
is
that
which
its
result
proportionately to
present value, in
rest.
To make more
man
to cheat itself.
The
a
right each
is
inseparable
from
responsibility to
enhance others.
only by
refulfilling his
sponsibility that he is able to get what he has a right to get. The degree to which he can interest himself in the good of others meas-
himself.
The inanimate do not take sensitive account of others. The maximum to which they can be enhanced, while remaining inanimate,
is
defined
by
now
allows them accidentally to benefit others. Those living beings which can take sensitive account of the requirements of some
this
subhuman. The maximum to which they can be perfected is defined by the value they now have and the degree to which this allows them to live with the
others, but only blindly, are the
of
It is mem alone who can deliberately enhance own worth by deliberately setting himself to increase the values all. The maximum worth to which he can be enhanced is de-
fined
by
the degree to
Man
differs
sibilities.
future as
from other beings in having more rights and responHis actions, unlike theirs, are always quickened by the an absolute, universally pertinent good. Whereas inani-
mate beings
realize a part of that good in themselves regardless of the benefits they bestow on others, and whereas animals act to realize a part of that good as pertinent to a few, men are obligated
to realize
it
as a single
good pertinent to themselves and all the rest. of the future as pertinent to all is for man the
it.
264
In contrast with
rights
The Self
subhuman
beings,
all
and
responsibilities.
minimum,
worth, living up, as they do, to their responsibilities in different degrees. To be a better man than another is to be a more conscientious one, to have tried to do
as
more
The more
acknowledges others to have and the more one them, the more ethical worth one has.
The
more
more
ethical
worth he
has;
responsibilities he
uncon-
endeavor to
cerned with what other beings need in order to be perfected; their fulfill their concerns is limited to acts pertinent to a
few neighboring
beings.
It is
endeavor to help all others to be as perfect as possible in consonance with the perfection of the rest, thereby extending their
rights to the limit.
All beings change in nature to the degree that they are excesconstrained, unless perchance they perish. It is not until sively
man
is
a being
who
must take
is.
ing towards the whole future as a good pertinent to all, and who it as deserving to be realized within the body of all that
He
alone
is
obligated to perfect
all
there
is
in the world.
6.
No
!
matter
how
insignificant, servile,
able.
he has a unique value, unduplicatable, unrepeatable and irreplaceHe may look like, behave like and think like others, his
may
be contemptible.
He
productions trivial. His character may be less good that he ought to be;
his
yet he has a value that cannot be reproduced or replaced and which is greater than that possessed by any other type of being.
The Task
The
birth of a
of
Mem
265
being ought always to be an occasion for rejoicing, for nothing so deserves celebration as the coming to be of a new value. One may, to be sure, pay a high price for it. It
human
may
later,
equal values. There are times when joy must be restrained; there are other times when it can be nothing more than a tinge to a
lasting.
It is tragic that
they should be born in times of famine and pestilence. These are poignant occurrences because they produce new, fresh and precious values in such a
way
as to subtract
from the
totality of the
good
Looked
at in their
setting, as
having
tend to make them worse, their presence may sometimes be so regrettable that it might be thought wise and charitable to destroy
them; taken by themselves, as human beings infinitely rich in value and in potency, they are to be appreciated as new, infinitely precious goods
again.
occurs in or outside the body or mind can have no effect on the nature of a man, but only on the things he can think and do.
What
Nor
it
it in his own way, on the new result an impression of the self to which the leaving cleansing is due. These limitations provide no justification, how-
The
vidual remains essentially the same in sickness and in health does not extinguish the fact that in the one case he suffers and in the other he rejoices, and that he can evaluate and react to these states
in multiple
ble
new
change in external circumstances makes possiways. different activities, the pursuit of which make a great and
difference to the value he has and will obtain as a being in a public world. When he reforms, he gets a different hold on his objective,
it
266
meaning that he has for
The Self
others.
The constancy
not preclude an endless variety in the kind and value of the things he can do.
No man
tions
is
He
molds them
in
a characteristic
way. Changes in his cells or organs, or the condiwhich hem him in from without, make possible new acts and
enterprises otherwise
beyond
him to develop
talents, and prompting him occasionally to undergo a radical reform. Yet everything he does bears the self-same signature, written though it is on different things, at different times
and
in different
his
own
individual
health,
fortune and opportunity, each man, it able to achieve what every other can.
start,
for as
embryos
environments, are fed by different they already and inevitably lay the ground for patterns of expression and foods, activity which cannot readily be dislodged or radically changed.
live in different
Not
all
can be professional
leaders, for as
embryos they have already set individual limits to what they can attain as mature technicians of mind and body. No
change in health, opportunity or determination will suffice to turn one into a violinist of distinction if his gifts do not lie in that direc-
tion.
is
and always
remains,
for
yet bound irrevocably at the beginning of his life, the individual works in new contexts from the standpoint and
old. Though there is nothing which is not in principle open to everyone equally, from the first much that a man might do is excluded beyond recall, and as he grows, more
and more
Each
outside his possible reach. man can, to some degree, control the activities of most
is
of his organs, individually and together, for the good of his body. He can also interrelate them for an end beyond. His problem is
The Task
to
of
Man
267
the state of living in and through his body to the state of living by means of it in order to benefit others as well as himself. It is his task to remake the world, to realize to a maximum
the
move from
concerned. Only so far as he succeeds, duty. Only then does he exhibit himself as one not bound by things as they are. Only then does he do what he ought improve the world by making it the embodiment of the
is
does he
absolute good. Man is a natural being with a fixed core, directed towards a good which is pertinent to all that exists. And he has a responsibility from which he can never escape. It is the primary function
of his body, mind and will to help him live up to this responsibility. Trapped though he is by the bonds of past, body, society and the world, he is free to act and thus is accountable for his
every failure to realize the good fully in not possibly master those bonds, he would
fact.
Even
if
he could
still be responsible. He has infinite value because he has an infinite responsibility, and conversely. To deny him the one is to deny him the other,
<
the right to be good. This requires him to realize the good. Whether or not, and to what degree it can be realized is therefore a vital problem. It is in fact a central
is
problem of
ethics.
A man, because he
is
responsible,
owes
it
to him-
self to plumb the foundations of ethics and make evident to himself what he ought to do. Only then can he make himself the man he
ought to
be.
INDEX
Ability, 125, 126, 127, 128, 177
Action
Continued
Absolute,
15,
Abstraction, xxii, 13, 14, 49 Absurdity, xviii, xx, xxii Account-taking, 39^., 55, 195, 215, 247,
263
random, 35, 92, 98, 113 regular, 18, 69, 70, 118, 154
source
of,
254
in,
Action, v,
103,
586%
62,
69,
70,
71,
76,
116,
stretch of, 33
176,
178
voluntary, 114, 200, 235 Actuality, xii, 6, 17, 18, 20, 30, 228, 231
and
possibility,
15,
17,
18,
32,
199,
203, 235
156,
200,
221,
determinateness of,
32, 171
Adam,
119,
xv ii
Adjective, 182
Omnipotence
96,
117,
101,
1
Adjustment,
103, 140,
66,
70,
224, 251
self-, 58, 59ff., 62, 65, 67, 68, 72,
113,
114,
116,
20,
74
Adlery A. t 2$i
Adult, 134, 205, 248, 249
101,
ethical, 144
free,
26, 31, 33,
53,
183,
184
230,
function of, 199, 224, 235, 261 good, 86, 87, 129, 237
habit of, 152, 158 habitual, 154, 196
211,
213,
219,
Agent,
33
human,
.
.
kinds of, 58
man
of, 63
mental, 213, 220, 22 if., 229 of children, 2490*. of inanimate, 67, 69 of organs, 147, 152, 154
142
and
intelligence, 205
269
27
Index
Augustine , St., 121, 132 Awareness, 108, 115, 127,
12 iff.,
127,
Animals Continued and language, 178, 179 and men, xiii, xv, 120,
128,
i 66,
176, 214
133,
134,
139,
140,
144,
148,
264
and
217
Becoming,
10,
11,
good
for, 87!?., 97
167, 201
Beginnings,
xvii, xxii, 6,
18,
32
wild, 93
Behavior
of, 91
f.
wisdom
Animate, Anguish,
Antecedents,
Anthropology, 124
Anthropomorphism,
Antagonism,
Anticipation,
i69ff., 251
xvi, 88,
90
119,
158,
95,
8,
96
10,
Beings, xix,
30, 31,
226
51, 185
Apes, loo, 123, 124, 139 Apprenticeship, 186 Approval, 241 Aquinas, St. Thomas, 121, Archaeology, 124
beyond
i3of., 133
Argument,
Aristotle,
122,
7, 8,
25
55,
xii,
32,
59,
72,
83,
97,
186,
graceful, 98f.
123,
129,
130,
131,
133,
242, 244
Art,
1 1
8,
125,
127,
128,
164,
and other
mastery
150
natural, v, 4, 12 iff.
8, 184,
210
nature
pampered,
98,
99
Astronomy,
Atheists, 126
43,
90
Atoms,
22, 33,
45
99 unconscious, 105
explanation of,
3,
Belief
indubitable, xxii, 4
Index
Bentham,
/., xiii
271
wisdom
Biology,
xiii,
72,
metaphysics
Boundaries,
174, '95
7,
39, 56,
115,
142,
146,
Blake, W., x, xi
Blinking, 154, 157
Body,
82,
96,
97,
99,
102,
103,
104,
io6f., 109,
and mind,
xiii,
80
Calvin,
].,
132
and
self,
139,
223,
225,
239,
241!?.,
and and
Cancer, 76, 92 Capacity, 125, 231 Career, 34, 41, 56, 142 Casanova, G., 248
Categoreals, 183, Categories
basic, 56,
230
animal, 100
bias of, 68, 217
boundary
changes
of, 115
daily, x,
universal, xvii
1346*.,
197, 253
child's, 158
19,
concern
of,
71,
159,
222,
and freedom
belief in, 4
4, 6, 19,
203
10,
12,
demands
economy
course of,
5, 6,
7,
9,
13,
18,
213
good of, 129, 165, 226, 266 human, 26, 27, 122, 123, 128,
133. '37> i39. i5 8
132,
terminus
Cause,
of, 12,
unit of, 33
mastery
of,
116,
and
Aristotelian, 32
components
efficient, 19
of, 57
needs
objective of inanimates, 73, 130 parts of 141, 145, 242 preparation of, 224 rejuvenation of, 150
resistance of,
102, 105,
33, 70,
203
impotence
of, 5, 9, 20
bodily, 141
71, 730*.,
143, 144,
100,
159,
116,
140,
150, 266
human,
141 f.
272
Cells
Index
Continued
Concern
change
105,
Continued
in,
animal, 139
70, 736*.,
100,
101,
102,
106,
120, 140,
263!".
143, 144
Certainty, xxi, 29
convergent, 258,
Chance, Change,
115,
22, 23,
demands
HI,
150, 107,
expression of,
112,
116,
120,
130,
131,
135,
139,
140,
143,
144,
159,
264
and constancy,
*54
evolutionary, 101
136,
138,
253,
human,
138,
139,
reason for, 119 Chants, language of, 189 Character, 61, 66, 264 Chemistry, xiii, 72 Childhood, 134, 135, 136, 251 Children, ix, 127
sexuality in, 2496*.
of body, 71, 159, 222, 256, 257, 259 of living beings, 74, 90, of mind, 219 of self, 164, 225, 238, 239, 244*?., 25if., 260 of subhuman, 264 of will, 222
purposive, 205
28
satisfaction of, 71, 75, 116, 117, 157,
244, 252
sensitive, 1036*., 108, 109, 116, 267
3
1
Conclusion,
170, 171,
172,
9,
n,
Clouds,
as
15,
17,
18,
29,
3,
3<5
38, 39,
47
Coexistence, 4
Coherence theory,
Cold,
common,
148
Collections, 82
Coming to be. See Becoming Command, 192, 241, 248 Commandments, the, 17, 22
Communication,
1
ix, xxi,
88,
oof.
4,
iff.,
Components,
32,
346%
Compounds,
Compulsion,
organic, 72
21, 25, 33, 58, 60, 61, 651!.,
117,
119.
See also
124
1346?., 151, 157, 25316?.,
Concern, 536%
See Components
Index
Constraint, 19, 34, 36, 37, 46, 68, 196, 197, 217, 236, 264 Contagion, 176, 208
273
61,
4, 24, 25, 26.
Democracy,
Democritus, 200
Denial, xix, xx,
See also
Affirmation
Continuum,
82, 109,
no,
Contradiction, xviii, 56 Control, 64, 73, 109, 144, 153, 154, 156,
157, 195,
in,
159, 196,
160,
197,
164,
165,
169,
194,
203,
224,
242,
244,
266
Description, 86, 182 Desires, xvi, 23, 29, 61, 92, 117, 154, 156, 222, 227, 228, 244, 248 Despair, 96, 265
Convention, ix, i85ff., 192 Conversation, 32, 35, 252 Copula, 50, 189
6,
n,
67,
12,
13,
15,
16,
32,
33,
169,
199,
203,
Cosmology, 210
Courage,
Course,
66, 82, 160
5, 7, 8, 28, 33, 34,
161
10, 212
224 of effect, 10, 24, 29, 203 of good, 67, 258, 259 of possibility, 15, 16, 199, of self, 257, 258 Determination, 24, 36, 37, 39, 55, 68, 70, 138, 183, 184, 199, 236, 254
self-, 22, 23,
33
20, 27, 28, 29, 32, 37, 65,
7,
9,
10,
12,
13,
Determinism,
213
141,
145,
152,
163,
Cowardice, 156
Creation,
28,
131,
132
117,
118,
119,
205,
Custom,
Danger,
60
Disciples, 59, 60
Discourse, x,
25,
166,
181,
183,
188,
Darwin, C,
xii,
82, i24ff.
189, 190,251
Date, 20, 167, Death, 71, 72, 75, 92, 96, 112, 116, 117,
119,
129,
131,
134,
136,
145,
146,
Deduction,
Defects, 90, 132 Defiance, social, 196, 197 Definiteness, 19, 130, 173 Deliberate, 25, 127, 157. See also Action,
254
temporal,
4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 19
voluntary
274
Index
Ends
Continued
object of;
Good; Objective
Energy,
Doctor
medical, 187, 245 of philosophy, 187 Dogma, 196
Environment,
39,
44,
56,
94,
95,
96,
Dominance,
Don
Juan, 248
Doubt, self-imposed,
Dualism, xvi
Epicurus, 60
Duns
Equilibrium, 108, 117, 157, 236 Error, xii, xxi, 59, 86, 87, 175, 235,
*39>
Drunkard, Duree, 6
Duty,
60, 233
See
explanation of, 30, 31, 169, 170 in response, 113, of addition and subtraction, xv, xvi,
xvii
Earlier
and
later, 33
Economics,
Education,
Effect,
xii, xiii,
192
Eternal, 131, 200 Ethics, v, xiv, xviii, xxii, 4, 14, 65, 77,
144,
156,
240,
249,
252,
257,
264,
267,
3ff., 21,
33
Aristotelian, xiii
analytic component of, 4, 5 and cause, 3ff., 18, 19, 2off., 202ff. avoidability of, 10
coming
18.
See also
deduction
Course
Evidence,
106,
126,
knowledge
120,
123,
11,
18,
24,
freedom and,
102, 201
subordinate, 5
Effort, 199, 20 1
of will, 232^
Egg*
142.
M3
Exclamations,
iSoff.
Embryo,
Emotions,
144, i45ff.,
1526%
mediated, 49
possibility of,
254^
31,
Expectation,
181,
190,
4,
55,
74,
119,
166,
1
Empedocles,
121, 242
80,
193,
205,
206,
208,
209
206,
Experience,
114,
Endings, xvii, 6, 19, 32, 235 Ends, xiii, 23, 36, 97, 98, 99, 199, 231, 246. See also Concern
115,
125,
197,
201,
203,
Experiment,
82, 83, 84
Index
Explanation,
xviii, xxii, 6,
2 75
38,
58, 65,
Fluidity, 45
Folly, 92,
93(1".
Food,
62ff., 67, 68,
235. *43
Form,
xii,
i3off.,
186,
243,
258,
259,
261, 263
Fossils, 73
139,
140,
143,
144,
159,
Frank, E. vi
y
of freedom, 199 of inanimates, 64, 74 of men, 64, 164, 249 of self, 138, 139, 215, 216, 220, 24ifF., of sensitivity, iO3f., 139, 140 of tendencies, 149, 150, 154, 156, 157, 159, 163, 262 patterns of, 266 repression of, 246
resistance to, 71 sexual, 246ff.
Freedom,
2of.,
v, xiii,
xviii,
46%
12,
i8f.,
and
activity, 26, 31, 33, 62, 67!?., 69, 101, 198, 199, 200, 236
causation,
4, 6, 19,
203
consciousness, 102
evolution, 102, 201
mind,
necessity, i8fT.
141,
of, xviii, xxii
animal, xviii
embryonic,
of, 47, 49, 52
Extensiveness, 43, 49
explanatory nature
method
human,
192,
139,
217,
267
Eye, origin
Fact,
xiii, 4,
of, 101
65
Falsehood,
and
truth, 24, 25
test of,
Freud,
Fanatic, 219
Future,
15, 17, 19, 35, 36, 56, 98, 99, 118, 125, 202, 203, 236, 259, 262
and determinism,
115,
29, 30, 83
109,
113,
1676% 202f.
immediate,
location of,
in
1
change
19
psyche
as,
common,
208, 258
38,
53,
56,
170,
171,
Fidget, 248
Field, 198, 109 Fighting, instinct for, 155, 156, 158
knowledge
2 76
Index
Continued
Future
Good Continued
of of of of
n,
15
undetermined,
7, 8,
u,
others, 206, 207, 2546% 261 f. prescribed, 95, 138, 259, 26off. private, 61, 67, 88
qualified, 54, 260 realization of, 57, 58f., 62, 65^, 69,
tion
Galileo, G.,
xii, xiv,
82
7<>.
75
7b
145,
Gaps,
See also Distance Generals, 6, u, 13, 15, 18, 29, 36, 167, 199. See also Universals
xvii.
16, 88,
138,
130,
164,
199,
207,
254ff.,
26 if., 267
social, 61, 97, 144
Generalization, xx,
210
thought
ultimate,
of, 129
Geology, xiii, 73, 82, 83, 121, 122, 124 Geometry, ^-dimensional, 219
Gestalt, 83
256,
258.
See also
Good, absolute
universal, 239, 256
Gland,
137, 219
pineal, 109,
Grace,
Grammar,
Glutton,
60
Grammarian,
God,
Greek thought, xiii Gregory XIII, Pope, 186 Ground, ultimate, 211. See
Objective, ultimate
also
Good;
name
Good,
of, 187
Group mind,
Growth,
35
106, 123, 134, 141, 143, 145, 146, 151, 153, 248, 262
absolute, 53, 238, 256, 258, abstract, 258, 260 and self, 254f., 258f., 261
267
and
will, 223, 238, 263 arbitrary, 88 as object of concern, 53, 54, 58, 59, 61, 64, 67, 68, 206, 210, 253, 258^. See also Concern
Habit,
140,
160,
144,
152,
189,
153,
191,
155, 193,
163,
204,
and and
29
259, 261
as real, 199
cause for,
53, 54, 94, 144, 256^, 263,
59f., 261
common,
embryonic, 154, 156, 157 formation of, 113, 153, 156, 157
mental, i58f., 192, 204, 216, 217, 218, 225, 226 of artists, 118 of matter, 218
161 organization of, 157^., stabilization of, 156
264 concordant,
concrete, 258 cosmic, 53, 54, 253, 256, 257, 259 demands of, 239
elected, 57
for animals,
876*.,
97
Hands,
Happiness,
24,
249
164,
195,
knowledge
minor,
Harmony,
66
Index
Health, 86, 92, 94, 98, 137, 150, 151, 249, 256 Heart, 146, 147, 151, 152, 153, 162
Inclination,
2 37
277
149,
150,
157,
222,
234,
Indefiniteness, 130.
Hebrews,
17,
131
27, 35, 40, 41, 47, 48, 82, 122, 201
ness
Independence,
Indeterminate,
u,
15,
18,
19, 55,
40,
201,
22, 23
minateness
and and
Indifference, 85, 86, 254 Individualism, 34, 35, 88, 89 Individuals, 356*., 57, 76, 81, 88, 93,
94, 96, 99, 130, 142, 201, 204, 206,
207, 215
8,
Humility,
ix, xiii,
as substantial, 38
concern
origin of
localized, 43
human,
1406*.
privacy of, 45
resistance of, 45ff ., 57
obscuring,
ix,
224
Infants,
138,
157, 204,
205, 262
Idealism, 48, 122, 183, 201, 202 Idealists, absolute. See Hegel
practical, 60
and
ethics, 77
of, 153*"., 265
body
251,
Identity, 2 53
self-,
2 54
241,
243,
helplessness of,
140,
155,
161
262
Ignorance, 195
Illusion, 8, 56, 106, 118
iff.,
226
Immaturity, 99 Immediate, 48
Impartiality, 86, 88
Innocence,
2 57
x, xxii,
Impotence, 96,
2 5i
Impulse, 109, no, 159, 160, 245n\, 252 Inanimate, 43, 71, 81, 116, 130, 263 acts of, 67, 69 body of, 73f., 130 expression of, 64, 74
14,
490%
from the
on
Insight, 191
278
Index
Knowledge
Continued
32, 33,
Insistence, 426*., 496*., 56, 57, 233, 253 Instinct, 83, 1556% 231, 232
Institution, 35,
36,
160
of concrete, 13, 14, 15, 506*. of effect, 10, 12, 13, 20, 31,
34, 67, 203
Instrument, 35, 71, 82, 147, 218, 219 Intellect, 69, 137, 159
Intellectuals, 159, 216, 217
119,
124,
177,
205^,
17,
100,
137,
157,
158,
of of of of
good,
outside, 46
Intrusion, 42f., 45, 46, 52, 53, 254 Intuition, 53 Inwardness, 14. See also Inside
Iron, alteration of, 73f. Irrationality, 126
Irregularity, 18, 24
Irritation,
Is,
of persons, 14, 179, 184 of reality, i3f., 40, 47, 5of., 125, 234 of possibles, 15, 17, 203, 208 of self, 138, 240
rational, 130
scientific, 22, 23,
self-, 84,
through body,
114, 115, 117, 154
30
105,
in,
universal, xxii
183, 184
It, 47,
Laboratory and
life,
/.,
76
La
James, W., 221, 232 Jaw, human, 123 Joy, 114, 117,265
Mettrie, de,
124
195, 204
166, 178,
Judgment,
14,
15,
27,
28,
and philosophy,
animal, 178, 179
artificial, 182
192
Jumping, habit
Jung,
as absolute, 48
C,
251
Justice, 132
182,
189,
190,
Kant, /., xiii, 27, no, 122, 134, 135, 215 Kindness, habit of, 157
Knee-jerk, 156
Knowledge,
ix,
x, xix,
13,
14,
15,
17,
22,
23,
24, 27
Law,
abstractness of, 50
mediated, 48, 49 nature of, 119, 218 of action, 67 of antecedents, 9 of becoming, 6 of change, 135
Index
Lee, D. D.,
Leibniz, von, G.,
xii,
279
Continued
xiii, xviii, xxii,
Man
40, 41, 49, 51,
as ethical, v,
156, 252
14, 144,
as free, v,
xiii,
143,
145,
150,
148,
149
120,
i38f.,
84, 101,
|53, 2*5 daily, 118, 219 in body, 136, 146, 150, 153, 164, 243. See also Body, living
192
of, 265, 266
xiii,
meaning
13*.
rhythm,
74, 150
nature of,
i33
119,
i34
U7.
165,
184,
span, 151, 152 Limits, outside, 7, 39, 40, 42, 43, 44,
45, 46, 48, 49, 56, 57, 115, 142, 146,
!74ii95.
56,
1396%
144,
148, 202
Subhuman
logfT.
promise
Loeb,
/.,
142
10, 59,
right of, xviii, 240, 263, 264, 267 task of, xvi, 77, 144, 156, 200, 254,
218
264, 267 unity of, 26, 27, 133, 138, 163 value of, 65, 120, 129, 260, 264^, 267 Manifestation, 62
Manners,
186, 190
Many,
Marx,
Love,
Machines,
Man,
abilities of, xv,
126, 157
action of, 23, 27, 67, 128, 136, 163, 200, 263 and animal, xiii, xv, 120, 12 iff., 127,
128,
1
133,
134,
139,
140,
144,
148,
66, 264
114,
123,
126,
140,
Mead, G. H.,iSi
Meaning,
1
118, 119,
125, 180,
182,
185,
266
i8o
Meaning
Continued
multiple, 207, 208, 211 of man, 265, 266
Index
Mind
Continued
group, 35
habits of, 204, 216, 217, 218, 225, 226
impulsive, 159
65, 85,
87,
154,
202,
infallible, 201
Mediation, 48 Medievals, 86
instrumental theory of, 218, 219 knowing, 50, 51, 201, 216, 239
levels of, 205, 208, 2 1
124,
135,
1
Memory,
253
xxi,
137,
138,
150,
need
of
Men,
8, 21
and wars, 35
as walkers, 164
artist, 210 origin of, 2oof., 203 ff., 218 philosophic, 210
bad, 65
submitted, 50, 51
work
267
Miracle,
3,
72, 202
high-minded,
of action, 63
origin of, i4of.
political,
Modern
times,
xxii
xii,
xv
60
Modesty,
Momentum,
Monsters, 86
22
primitive, 204
reflective, 59,
60
Metaphor,
245
Moods,
Method,
xii,
219 89 Morality, laws of, 17 Moral-sense, 124 Motion, laws of, xvii, 21
io5f., 150,
Moralism,
87,
Mind,
139,
Movement,
19, 21, 24, 92, 99, 100, 113, 114, 130, 162, 218
and body,
xvi,
2oofT.,
215, 217,
Muscles, use of, 161, 233, 250 Musculature, human, 123 Mutation, 101, 102
and freedom, 201, 2036*., 215, 217, 222 and intelligence, 2o6f., 210, 211 and language, 193 and man, 215 and self, 215, 216, 220, 223, 239,
24 iff.
Mythology, 204
Names,
182, 185
and
will, 223
20,
24,
29,
202, 203,
development
divine, xxii
Neighbors,
I94
33,
37," 96,
119,
176,
191,
*95
'97.
*99
2*7,
236,
264
Index
Neo-Platonism, 218 Nerves, no, 114, 123, 153
281
82,
83,
Organism,
91,
101,
in,
145,
Newton,
/.,
82
Organs
action of, 147, 152, 266
auxiliary, 147, 152
Norm,
151
embryonic,
152,
153
Noun,
182
10, 12, 18, 68, 69, 94, 99, 149,
Novelty,
Number,
82
change
common,
immediate, 238
insistence on, 233
vocal, 177
mental, 234, 236 of body, 71, 159, 222, 256, 257, 259, 261, 262 of self, 2446*., 254ff., 265
ultimate, 199, 200, 210, 217, 238, 239 willed, 233, 234, 236, 237, 239 See also Concern, object of; Ends;
Man,
Mind, Organs
Ought
idea of, 85, 86
intrinsic
and
extrinsic, 89*?.
Good
Objects, 35, 36, 40, 41, 73, 115, 117, 118, 158, 229f., 232 of concern. See Concern, object of of emotions, 226
of knowledge, 51, 234^ of signs, 167, 168, 170, 175, 180, 183
willed, 233, 234, 236, 237
from
426%
47, 55
Obligation,
252, 264.
xix,
125,
156,
238,
240,
Observation,
Obstacles,
200, 251.
xviii,
67,
69,
71,
119,
120,
31,
39
Occasionalists, 58
Oxydation,
73,
74
Occurrence,
vocal, 178
Offspring, 67, 76
118,
119,
123,
143,
168,
Omnipotence, 13, 46, 54, 107 Omniscience, xxii, 13, 14 One and many, 40, 41, 108
Operation, field of, 199 Opportunity, 93f., 197, 238 Opposition, 26, 33, 54, 68, 69,
199, 236, 254
180, 215
feeling of, 109, in, 113, 115, 116 location of, io9ff., 113, 114
public, 107 pure, 1 08
108, 198,
n,
104
282
Parts
Index
and whole,
91,
102,
145,
150,
163, 242
Play, 249, 250, 251, 252 Pleasure, 100, 104, lojff., inf.,
130,
ii5f.,
acute, 116
causes
pure,
29, 133
08
by,
n,
33,
68,
196,
199,
216,
217,
236,
267
Point and
6,
8,
10,
12,
ijff.,
29,
34,
38,
53,
54,
61,
168,
184,
and
100,
ii7f.,
actuality,
15,
17,
18,
32,
199,
123,
143,
203, 235
as objects 2o8f.
205,
206,
208,
222,
235,
of signs, 168,
i7off.,
188,
261
common,
171, 172, 256 constituents of, 34 determinate, 15, 53, 55, 168 double, 207 distinction between, 172
Philosophers, 22, 23, 31, 173, 192 Philosophy, x, xviii, 109, 125, 132, 192, 210, 211, 252
of
self, 254ff.
realization
1
and art, 184, 185 and language, 192 and science, 82, 83, and signs, 166, 192 and theology, 210
animal, 126
38,
118,
totality of, 53
184,
185
46, 47,
51,
121,
184,
contemporary, 8 if., 84
controversies
in,
Power,
x, 6,
13,
19,
30
77,99, 120,
i27f.,
method
of,
xx
Pragmatism,
114
48, 222
20, 25
17, 22,
Predetermination,
Predicates, 50, 51,
253 Predictions, 6,
182,
183,
185,
189,
204
142
Index
Prescriptions,
54, 159, 259, 261
5,
283
xiii,
58,
65f.,
7^.,
29, 30,
951".,
40,
50,
57,
167,
Present,
2 44
6,
12,
16,
17,
55,
167,
168,
185, 203,
of good, 57,
58f.,
62, 65f.,
70,
75,
119,
129, 138,
145,
156
Primitives, 204
Principles, 209f., 262
of possibilities,
1
38,
118,
Privacy,
27, 4of.,
45,
49,
51,
52,
56,
Reason,
10, 83,
131, 213,
214
Procreation, 131
Production,
203
5,
6,
9,
18, 20,
131,
Referents of signs,
183*1".
Projection, 109
Promise,
x,
54,
55,
59,
84,
118,
129,
Reflection, 59, 191 Reflex, 91, 155, 157, 231, 232 Reform, 196, 265, 266
Re-formation, 199
158,
of man,
xvii,
166, 266
Rejection, 95
Pronouns, 182
Propositions, 214 Prose, 190
Rejuvenation, 150 Relation, 40, 46, 47, 50, 202, 203, 209, 212
Religion, 125^., 204, 252 and signs, 166
Promise
Rembrandt, 65
Repression, 2 4 6ff.
Resistance,
159,
194,
228,
232,
233,
235,
237,
195,
225,
234,
M5
Psyche,
82,
119,
130,
143,
144,
145,
Reproduction,
39,
125, 131
40, 42f.,
70,
44,
45^.,
197,
54,
and
self,
138,
139,
55,
56,
69,
99,
108,
200,
Psychoanalysis, 249
207, 259
infinite, 47, 51, 52
Psychology,
of body,
105,
33,
70, 71,
143,
73flf.,
100,
102,
116,
140,
144,
159,
194,
potential, 46, 47 Response, 68, 70, 76, 94, 97, 98, inf.,
116,
Words
102,
143,
117,
143,
149,
154,
158,
159,
25f.,
135,
138,
Pythagoras, 242
Quality, 3, 42, 45, 115 Questions, 189, 250
philosophic, 122
Rational, 10, 19, 127, 137
Rationalists, 7
Responsiveness, 93, 94, 97, 99, 100 Retreat, 61, 62, 71, 74, 119, 129, 191,
z
,
5 f.
human,
267
284
Rights
Index
Continued
Self
natural, 264
257ff.
Roesler, M., vi
Romantics,
Ruler, 261
Rust, 73, 74
7,
19, 30,
40
220, 240
89
renewal
separability of, 128, 131, 256 task of, 244, 255f., 260
uniqueness
125,
198, 249
and art, 184, 185 and Bible, 121 and determinism, 22, 23, 29 and mathematics, 210 and philosophy, 82, 83, 184, 185 and signs, 166
as absolute, 48 limits of, 122
Self-perfection, 263
Self-preservation, 155, 156 Semantics, 53 Sensation, xii, 112, 114, 117, 232
Sense
common,
83
of beauty, 124, 125 of pain and pleasure, 1 1 2 of right and wrong, 124, 125
scope terms
of,
xv
Scientists, 29
in,
144,
116,
136,
143,
147,
mind
207,
208,
211,
261
philosophy
Selection, 91, 93 f
Self, v, 26, 141, 145, 150, 151, 161, 239
growth
in,
262
activity of, 243, 253, 254, 260 and body, 139, 223, 225, 239, 2416*.,
253i 256, 257
of inanimate, 263 of plants, 100 reach of, 95, 96, 100, 103, 105, 108,
114, 139, 140
and desire, 146, 227, 244, 245 and good, 254^, 258f., 261 and mind, 215, 216, 220, 223,
24lff.
239,
to value, 253, 261, 262 Sentence, iSiff., 190 Separation of cells, 141 f. Servants, 63, 66
Service, 63, 90, 249
Sexuality, 125, 245ff. Shape, 42,45, 134
and psyche, 138, 139, 144, 256, 261 and will, 229, 236, 239, 24iff., 244
as
as substance, 253
Shock,
concern
Signals, 188
25 2f., 260
constancy
*5 2 *
2 53
139,
151,
220,
243,
254^-
Significance, 208, 219 Signification, i67ff., 178, 179, 182, 185, 188, 190
Signs, i66ff., 191
demands
of, 159
Index
Signs conventional, i86ff.
definition of, 166, 167 distinction between, lyoff.
285
69ff., 76, 103, 165, 198, 199, 200, 222
Continued
Spontaneity,
116,
164,
172,
173
170, 175, 180,
function Standard
objects of,
i8 3
167,
168,
perceived
209, 211
formation
of, 24
purpose
States,
of, 165
of, xiii
technique
191, 193
Skill, 93, 134
Skills, 128
Slavery,
xiii
Statesmen, 63, 248 Status quo, 196 Stimuli, 39, 76, 94, 98, 109, 112, 143, *53i 154. J 57 *5 8 '59.
250
Striving, 55, 200, 232
113,
2 47
Sleep, 106, 115, 135, 136, 166, 215, 252 Smith, A., xii
Smoke, as sign, 166, 170, 171 Sociality, 95, 97, 175, 180, 206, 207, 249, 25 if.
Society, 63, 159, 267 Socrates, 9, 65 Soddy, F., 83 Solidarity, 176
Solipsists, 83
190,
195,
Structure, 130, 138, 155, 157, 158, 159, 182, 243, 258
Struggle, 93, i98f. Stupor, 104 Subdivision, 145, 146
160,
185,
i95f.,
206,
Subhuman,
144, 264
freedom
122,
i3of.,
in,
xvi
243.
See
45, 177 as sign, 177, 178, 179, 181 Space, 436*., 56, 82, 130, 186, 241
Sound,
Subject matter,
184
Species, 92, 97
fixed, 72, 83, 122, 123
95 ff., 217
386*.,
Substance,
175
135,
44, 50,
52,
53,
131,
members
183,
185,
200,
216,
235,
253,
Speculation, xxi, 83, 85, 125, 126, 127, 191, 204, 245
Speech,
x, xii,
Sucking
191, 193
of birds, 178
Sperm,
142, 143
xiii,
Spinoza, B.,
7,
8,
9,
20,
21,
no,
absolute, 122
cosmic,
24, 35
See also
Self,
Soul
Suppression, 155, 159, 162 Surgery, 157, 197 Susceptibility, 156 Swearing, 179 Syllogism 9 Symbols, xiii, 125, 188 Sympathy, 14, 66, 107, 216
286
Symptoms, Synonyms,
151, 187
Index
Thought
idle,
Continued
172
Taboos,
86, 247
simple-minded, 159
speculative, 83 willed, 229
139,
i9if.,
Teachability, 93
Techniques,
i6ofT.,
1
82,
144,
156,
2i7f.,
157,
Time,
66,
200,
239,
266
Technology,
Teeth, 124 Teleology,
185, 192
6, 7, 8, 9,
19
external, 28, 32
19, 54, 55, 97,
Temperance,
61
passage of, 12, 28, 167 process in, 7, 1 1 Timidity, 92, 194 Tolerance, 60
224,
228,
93,
161,
229,
97,
232,
116,
233,
147,
237
149,
154,
bodily,
i56f.,
178,
224^.,
231, 237
embryonic, 154
expression of, 159, 162, 246 repression of, 246 to affirm or deny, 231
Tragedy,
human,
123, 124
Transformations,
61,
new,
x, 173
114
184,
82, 83,
and falsehood,
83, 222, 239
Thing
in itself, 50, 52
coherence theory
concrete, xix
of, 183
Thought,
abstract, 164
love of, 6 1
xii,
activity of,
necessary, xviii
creative, x, xii
conventional,
ix,
192, 196
depressing, 219
disciplined, x, 83, 164
disconnected, 209
Understanding,
204, 216,
190, 216
Greek,
xiii
habit of,
i58f.,
192,
217,
218, 225f.
index
Uniqueness,
264, 265
xix, 6,
13,
Wakefulness, 104
Walking,
Unit
indivisible.
War,
See Atoms
34, 35,
249
of language, 181
Unity
cellular, 141
good
as, 258,
259
V*
action of, 114, 200, 223, 228, 2306*.,
235
44
and desire, 228 and good, 223, 238, 263 and self, 229, 236, 239, 24 iff., 244 concern of, 222
effort of, 233
need
267
for,
230,
236,
237,
239,
261,
See also
World
Vagueness,
power of, 229, 23off., Wing, origin of, 101 Wisdom, 35, 60
23, 60, 64, 65, 90,
241
97, 107,
108,
Wish,
241
161, 179,
1
acquired, 264
Words,
of, 88fT.
88, 189
anthropomorphic theories
increase in, 90, 260, 263
and language,
189,
190
exclamatory nature
function of, 188
of,
181, 182
189
Work. See
World,
31,
xiii,
Action, Effort
xviii,
xxi,
19,
21,
24,
25,
32,
37, 92,
119,
192,
194,
199,
Verbs, 183
Virtue,
Vision,
xiii,
external,
xiii, xix,
176
215, 216
of
artist
and
scientist, 43
Vivisection, 127
of idealist, 61
retreat
Vocabulary,
187, 193, 245 Volition, 230, 235, 236. See also Will
from
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