BY THE SAME AUTHOR RIDDLES OF THE SPHINX A STUDY IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF EVOLUTION SECOND EDITION LONDON : SWAN SONNENSCHEIN AND CO. PERSONAL IDEALISM PHILOSOPHICAL ESSAYS BY EIGHT MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD EDITED BY HENRY STURB CONTAINING AXIOMS AS POSTULATES BY F. C. S. SCHILLER, M.A. LONDON : MACMILLAN AND CO., LTD. 1902 HUMANISM PHILOSOPHICAL ESSAYS • w BY FTC. S. SCHILLER, M.A. FELLOW AND TUTOR OF CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE, OXFORD Hontion MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED NEW YORK : THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1903 All rights reserved TO MY DEAR FRIEND THE HUMANEST OF PHILOSOPHERS WILLIAM JAMES WITHOUT WHOSE EXAMPLE AND UNFAILING ENCOURAGEMENT THIS BOOK WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN WRITTEN PREFACE THE appearance of this volume demands more than the usual amount of apology. For the philosophic public, which makes up for the scantiness of its numbers by the severity of its criticism, might justly have expected me to follow up the apparently novel and disputable position I had taken up in my contribution to Personal Idealism with a systematic treatise on the logic of ' Pragmatism.' And no doubt if it had rested with me to transform wishes into thoughts and thoughts into deeds without restrictions of time and space, I should willingly have expanded my sketch in Axioms as Postulates into a full account of the beneficent simplification of the whole theory of knowledge which must needs result from the adoption of the principles I had ventured to enunciate. But the work of a college tutor lends itself more easily to the conception than to the composition of a systematic treatise, and so for the present the philosophic public will have to wait. The general public, on the other hand, it seemed more feasible to please by an altogether smaller and more practicable undertaking, viz., by republishing from various technical journals, where conceivably the philosophic public had already read them, the essays which compose the bulk of this volume. I have, however, taken the opportunity to add several new essays, partly because they happened to be available, partly because they seemed to be needed viii HUMANISM to complete the doctrine of the rest. And the old material also has been thoroughly revised and considerably aug mented. So that I am not without hopes that the collection, though discontinuous in form, will be found to be coherent in substance, and to present successive aspects of a fairly systematic body of doctrine. To me at least it has seemed that, when thus taken collectively, these essays not only reinforced my previous contentions, but even supplied the ground for a further advance of the greatest importance. It is clear to all who have kept in touch with the pulse of thought that we are on the brink of great events in those intellectual altitudes which a time-honoured satire has described as the intelligible world. The ancient shibboleths encounter open yawns and unconcealed deri sion. The rattling of dry bones no longer fascinates respect nor plunges a self-suggested horde of fakirs in hypnotic stupor. The agnostic maunderings of impotent despair are flung aside with a contemptuous smile by the young, the strong, the virile. And there is growing up a reasonable faith that even the highest peaks of speculation may prove accessible to properly-equipped explorers, while what seemed so unapproachable was nothing but a cloud- land of confused imaginings. Among the more marked symptoms that the times are growing more propitious to new philosophic enterprise, I would instance the conspicuous success of Mr. Balfour's Foundations of Belief ; the magnifi cent series of William James's popular works, The Will to Believe, Human Immortality, and The Varieties of Religious Experience ; James Ward's important Gifford Lectures on Naturalism and Agnosticism ; the emergence from Oxford, where the idealist enthusiasm of thirty years ago long seemed to have fossilised into sterile logic-chopping or to have dissolved into Bradleian scepticism, of so audacious a manifesto as Personal Idealism; and most recently, but not PREFACE IX least full of future promise, the work of the energetic Chicago School headed by Professor Dewey.1 It seemed therefore not impolitic, and even imperative, to keep up the agitation for a more hopeful and humaner view of metaphysics, and at the same time to herald the coming of what will doubtless be an epochmaking work, viz., William James's promised Metaphysics. II The origin of great truths, as of great men, is usually obscure, and by the time that the world has become cognizant of them and interested in their pedigree, they have usually grown old. It is not surprising therefore that the central thought of our present Pragmatism, to wit the purposiveness of our thought and the teleological character of its methods, should have been clearly stated by Professor James so long ago as i879.2 Similarly I was surprised to find that I had all along been a pragma- tist myself without knowing it, and that little but the name was lacking to my own advocacy of an essentially cognate position in i892.3 But Pragmatism is no longer unobserved ; it has by this time reached the ' Strike, but hear me ! ' stage, and as the misconceptions due to sheer unfamiliarity are refuted or abandoned it will rapidly enter on the era of profitable employment. It was this latter probability which formed one of my chief motives for publishing 1 They have published a number of articles in the Decennial Publications of the University ; their Studies in Logical Theory are announced, but have not yet reached me. Though proceeding from a different camp, the works of Dr. J. E. MacTaggart and Prof. G. H. Howison should also be alluded to as adding to the salutary ferment. For while ostensibly (and indeed ostentatiously) employing the methods of the old a priori dogmatism they have managed to reverse its chief conclusions, in a charming but somewhat perplexing way. I have on pur pose confined this enumeration to the English-speaking world ; but in France and even in Germany somewhat similar movements are becoming visible. 2 In his ' Sentiment of Rationality ' in Mind, O.S. No. 15. '•^ In Reality and ' Idealism.' Cp. pp. 119-121. x HUMANISM these essays. The practical advantages of the prag- matist method are so signal, the field to be covered is so immense, and the reforms to be effected are so sweeping, that I would fain hasten the acceptance of so salutary a philosophy, even at the risk of prematurely flinging these informal essays, as forlorn hopes, against the strongholds of inveterate prejudice. It is in the hope therefore that I may encourage others to co-operate and to cultivate a soil which promises such rich returns of novel truth, that I will indicate a number of important problems which seem to me urgently to demand treatment by pragmatic methods. I will put first the reform of Logic. Logic hitherto has attempted to be a pseudo-science of a non-existent and im possible process called pure thougJit. Or at least we have been ordered in its name to expunge, from our thinking every trace of feeling, interest, desire, and emotion, as the most pernicious sources of error. It has not been thought worthy of consideration that these influences are the sources equally of all truth and all-pervasive in our thinking. The result has been that logic has been rendered nothing but a systematic mis representation of our actual thinking. It has been made abstract and wantonly difficult, an inexhaustible source of mental bewilderment, but impotent to train the mind, by being assiduously kept apart from the psychology of concrete thinking. And yet a reverent study of the actual procedures of the mind might have been a most precious aid to the self-knowledge of the intellect. To justify in full detail these grave strictures (from which a few only of modern logicians, notably Professors Sigwart and Wundt, and Mr. Alfred Sidgwick,1 can be more or less exempted) would be a long and arduous 1 Whose writings, by reason perhaps of the ease of their style, have not received from the experts the attention they deserve. PREFACE XI undertaking. Fortunately, however, a single illustration will sufficiently indicate the sort of difference Pragmatism would introduce into the traditional maltreatment. Let us consider a couple of actual, and probably familiar, modes of reasoning, (i) The world is so bad that tJiere. must be a better ; (2) the world is so bad that there cannot be a better. It will probably be admitted that both of these are common forms of argumentation, and that neither is devoid of logical force, even though in neither case does it reach ' demonstration.' And yet the two reasonings flatly contradict each other. Now my suggestion is that this contradiction is not verbal, but deep-rooted in the conflicting versions of the nature of thought which they severally exemplify. The second argument alone it would seem could claim to be strictly ' logical.' For it alone conforms to the canons of the logical tradition which conceives reasoning as the product of a ' pure ' thought untainted by volition. And as in our theoretical reflections we can all disregard the psychological conditions of actual thinking to the extent of selecting examples in which we are interested merely as examples, we can appreciate its abstract cogency. In arguing from a known to an unknown part of the universe, it is ' logical ' to be guided by the indications given by the former. If the known is a ' fair sample ' of the whole, how can the conclusion be otherwise than sound ? At all events how can the given nature of the known form a logical ground for inferring in the unknown a complete reversal of its characteristics ? And yet this is precisely what the first argument called for. Must not this be called the illogical caprice of an irrational desire ? By no means. It is the intervention of an emotional postulate which takes the first step in the acquisition of new knowledge. But for its beneficent activity we should have acquiesced in our xii HUMANISM ignorance. But once an unknown transfiguration of the actual is desired, it can be sought, and so, in many cases, found. The passionless concatenations of a ' pure ' thought never could have reached, and still less have justified, our conclusion : to attain it our thought needs to be impelled and guided by the promptings of volition and desire. Now that such ways of reasoning are not infrequent and not unsuccessful, will, I fancy, hardly be denied. Indeed if matters were looked into it might easily turn out that reasonings of the second type never really occur in actual knowing, and that when they seem to do so, we have only failed to detect the hidden interest which incites the reason to pretend to be ' dispassionate.' In the example chosen, e.g., it may have been a pessimist's despair that clothed itself in the habiliments of logic, or it may have been merely stupidity and apathy, a want of imagination and enterprise in questioning nature. But, it may be said, the question of the justification de jure of what is done de facto still remains. The votary of an abstract logic may indignantly exclaim — ' Shall I lower my ideal of pure thought because there is little or no pure thinking ? Shall I abandon Truth, immutable, eternal, sacred Truth, as unattainable, and sanction as her substitute a spurious concretion of practical ex perience, on the degrading plea that it is what we need to live by, and all we need to live by ? Shall I, in other words, abase myself? No! Perish the thought! Perish the phenomenal embodiment of Pure Reason out of Time and Place (which I popularly term "myself") rather than that the least abatement should be made from the rigorous requirements of my theory of Thought ! ' Strong emotional prejudices are always hard to reason with, especially when, as here, their nature is so far misconceived that they are regarded as the revelations PREFACE xiii of Pure Reason. Still, in some cases, the desire for knowledge may prove stronger than the attachment to habitual modes of thought, and so it may not be wholly fruitless to point out (i) that our objections are in no wise disposed of by vague charges of a ' confusion of psychology and logic ' ; (2) that the canons of right Thought must, even from the most narrowly logical of standpoints, be brought into some relation to the pro cedures of actual thinking ; (3) that in point of fact the former are derived from the latter ; (4) that if so, our first mode of reasoning must receive logical recognition, because (5) it is not only usual, but useful in the 'dis covery of ' Truth ' ; (6) that a process which yields valuable results must in some sense be valid, and (7) that, conversely, an ideal of validity which is not realis able is not valid. In short, how can a logic which professes to be the theory of thought set aside as irrelevant a normal feature of our thinking ? And if it cannot, is it not evident that, when reformed by Prag matism, it must assume a very different complexion, more natural and clearer, than while its movements were im peded by the conventions of a strait-laced Intellectualism ? Secondly, Pragmatism would find an almost in exhaustible field of exploration in the sciences, by examining the multifarious ways in which their ' truths ' have come to be established, and showing how the practical value of scientific conceptions has accelerated and determined their acceptance. And it is not over- sanguine to suppose that a clearer consciousness of the actual procedure of the sciences would also lead to the critical rejection of conceptions which are not needed, and are not useful, and would facilitate the formation of new conceptions which are needed.1 1 Most opportunely for my argument the kind of transformation of our scientific ideas which Pragmatism will involve has received the most copious and admirable illustration in Professor Ostwald's great Naturphilosophie. Professor b xiv HUMANISM In the field of Ethics Pragmatism naturally demands to know what is the actual use of the ethical ' principles ' which are handed on from one text-book to another. But it speedily discovers that no answer is forthcoming. Next to nothing is known about the actual efficacy of ethical principles : Ethics is a dead tradition which has very little relation to the actual facts of moral sentiment. And the reason obviously is that there has not been a sufficient desire to know to lead to the proper researches into the actual psychological nature and distribution of the moral sentiments. Hence there is implicit in Pragmatism a demand for an inquiry to ascertain the actual facts, and pending this inquiry, for a truce to the sterile polemic about ethical principles. In the end this seems not unlikely to result in a real revival of Ethics. If finally we turn to a region which the vested interests of time-honoured organisations, the turbid complications of emotion, and a formalism that too often merges in hypocrisy, must always render hard of access to a sincere philosophy, and consider the attitude of Pragmatism towards the religious side of life, we shall find once more that it has a most important bearing. For in principle Pragmatism overcomes the old antithesis of Faith and Reason. It shows on the one hand that ' Faith ' must underlie all ' Reason ' and pervade it, nay, that at bottom rationality itself is the supremest postulate of Faith. Without Faith, therefore, there can be no Reason, and initially the demands of ' Faith ' must be as legitimate and essentially as reasonable as those of the ' Reason ' they pervade. On the other hand, it enables us to draw the line between a genuine and a spurious ' Faith.' The spurious ' faith,' which too often is all theologians take courage to aspire to, is merely the Ostwald is not a professional philosopher at all, but a chemist, and has very likely never heard of Pragmatism ; but he sets forth the pragmatist procedure of the sciences in a perfectly masterly way. PREFACE xv smoothing over of an unfaced scepticism, or at best a pallid fungus that, lurking in the dark corners of the mind, must shun the light of truth and warmth of action. In contrast with it a genuine faith is an ingredient in the growth of knowledge. It is ever realising itself in the knowledge that it needs and seeks — to help it on to further conquests. It aims at its natural completion in what we significantly call the making true or verification, and in default of this must be suspected as mere make- believe. And so the identity of method in Science and Religion is far more fundamental than their difference. Both rest on experience and aim at its interpretation : both proceed by postulation ; and both require their anticipa tions to be verified. The difference lies only in the mode and extent of their verifications : the former must doubtless differ according to the nature of the subject ; the latter has gone much further in the case of Science, perhaps merely because there has been so much less persistence in attempts at the systematic verification of religious postulates. Ill It is clear, therefore, that Pragmatism is able to propound an extensive programme of problems to be worked out by its methods. But even Pragmatism is not the final term of philosophic innovation : there is yet a greater and more sovereign principle now entering the lists of which it can only claim to have been the fore runner and vicegerent. This principle also has long been working in the minds of men, dumb, unnamed and unavowed. But the time seems ripe now formally to name it, and to let it loose in order that it may receive its baptism of fire. I propose, accordingly, to convert to the use of philosophic terminology a word which has long been xvi HUMANISM famed in history and literature, and to denominate HUMANISM the attitude of thought which I know to be habitual in William James and in myself, which seems to be sporadic and inchoate in many others, and which is destined, I believe, to win the widest popularity. There would indeed be no flavour of extravagance and paradox about this last suggestion, were it not that the professional study of Philosophy has so largely fallen into the hands of recluses who have lost all interest in the practical concerns of humanity, and have rendered philosophy like unto themselves, abstruse, arid, abstract and abhorrent. But in itself there is no reason why this should be the character of philosophy. The final theory of life ought to be every man's concern, and if we can dispel the notion that the tiresome technicalities of philosophy lead to nothing of the least practical interest, it yet may be. There is ground, then, for the hope that the study of a humaner philosophy may prove at least as profitable and enjoyable as that of the ' humaner ' letters. In all but name Humanism has long been in existence. Years ago I described one of its most precious texts, William James's Will to Believe^ as a " declaration of the independence of the concrete whole of man with all his passions and emotions unexpurgated, directed against the cramping rules and regulations by which the Brahmins of the academic caste are tempted to impede the free expansion of human life," and as " a most salutary doctrine to preach to a biped oppressed by many '-ologies,' like modern man, and calculated to allay his growing doubts whether he has a responsible personality and a soul and conscience of his own, and is not a mere phantasmagoria of abstractions, a transient complex of shadowy formulas that Science calls ' the laws of nature.' " Its great lesson was, I held, that "there are not really 1 In reviewing it for Mind in October 1897 (N.S. No. 24, p. 548). PREFACE xvii any eternal and non-human truths to prohibit us from adopting the beliefs we need to live by, nor any infallible a priori tests of truth to screen us from the consequences of our choice." Similarly Professor James, in reviewing Personal Idealism^ pointed out that " a re-anthropo- morphised universe is the general outcome of its philo sophy." Only for re-anthropomorphised we should hence forth read re-humanised. ' Anthropomorphism ' is a term of disparagement whose dyslogistic usage it may prove difficult to alter.2 Moreover, it is clumsy, and can hardly be extended so as to cover what I mean by Humanism. There is no need to disclaim the truth of which it is the adumbration, and a non-anthropomorphic thought is sheer absurdity ; but still what we need is something wider and more vivid. Similarly I would not disclaim affinities with the great saying of Protagoras, that Man is the Measure of all things. Fairly interpreted, this is the truest and most important thing that any thinker ever has propounded. It is only in travesties such as it suited Plato's dialectic purpose to circulate that it can be said to tend to scepticism ; in reality it urges Science to discover how Man may measure, and by what devices make concordant his measures with those of his fellow-men. Humanism therefore need not cast about for any sounder or more convenient starting-point. For in every philosophy we must take some things for granted. Humanism, like Common Sense, of which it may fairly claim to be the philosophic working out, takes Man for granted as he stands, and the world of man's experience as it has come to seem to him. This is the only natural starting-point, from which we can proceed in every direction, and to which we must return, enriched 1 Mind for January 1903 (N.S. No. 45, p. 94). 2 I tried to do this in Riddles of the Sphinx, ch. v. §§ 6-9. But I now think the term needs radical re-wording. xviii HUMANISM and with enhanced powers over our experience, from all the journeyings of Science. Of course this frank, though not therefore ' uncritical,' acceptance of our immediate experience and experienced self will seem a great deal to be granted by those addicted to abstruser methods. They have dreamt for ages of a priori philosophies ' without presuppositions or assumptions,' whereby Being might be conjured out of Nothing and the sage might penetrate the secret of creative power. But no obscurity of verbiage has in the end succeeded in concealing the utter failure of such preposterous attempts. The a priori philosophies have all been found out. And what is worse, have they not all been detected in doing what they pretended to disclaim ? Do they not all take surreptitiously for granted the human nature they pride themselves on disavowing ? Are they not trying to solve human problems with human faculties ? It is true that in form they claim to transcend our nature, or to raise it to the superhuman. But while they profess to exalt human nature, they are really mutilating it — all for the kingdom of Abstraction's sake ! For what are their professed starting-points, — Pure Being, the Idea, the Absolute, the Universal I, but pitiable abstractions from experience, mutilated shreds of human nature, whose real value for the understanding of life is easily outweighed by the living experience of an honest man ? All these theories then de facto start from the im mediate facts of our experience. Only they are ashamed of it, and assume without inquiry that it is worthless as a principle of explanation, and that no thinker worthy of the name can tolerate the thought of expressly setting out from anything so vulgar. Thus, so far from assum ing less than the humanist, these speculations really must assume a great deal more. They must assume, in addition to ordinary human nature, their own met- PREFACE xix empirical starting-points and the correctness (always more than dubious) of the deductions whereby they have de facto reached them. ' Do you propose then to accept as sacrosanct the gross unanalysed conceptions of crude Common Sense, and to exempt them from all criticism ? ' No, I only propose to start with them, and to try and see whether we could not get as far with them as with any other, nay, as far as we may want to get. I have faith that the process of experience that has brought us to our present stand-point has not been wholly error and delusion, and may on the whole be trusted. And I am quite sure that, right or wrong, we have no other, and that it is e.g. grotesque extravagance to imagine that we can put our selves at the standpoint of the Absolute. I would protest, therefore, against every form of ' a priori meta physical criticism ' that condemns the results of our experience up to date as an illusory ' appearance ' without trial. For I hold that the only valid criticism they can receive must come in, and through, their actual use. It is just where and in so far as common-sense assumptions fail to work that we are theoretically justified, and practically compelled, to modify them. But in each such case sufficient reasons must be shown ; it is not enough merely to show that other assumptions can be made, and couched in technical language, and that our data are abstractly capable of different arrangements. There are, I am aware, infinite possibilities of conceptual re arrangement, but their discovery and construction is but a sort of intellectual game, and has no real importance. In point of method, therefore, Humanism is fully able to vindicate itself, and so we can now define it as the philosophic attitude which, without wasting thought upon attempts to construct experience a priori, is content to take human experience as the clue to the world of human xx HUMANISM experience, content to take Man on his own merits, just as he is to start with, without insisting that he must first be disembowelled of his interests and have his individu ality evaporated and translated into technical jargon, before he can be deemed deserving of scientific notice. To remember that Man is the measure of all things, i.e. of his whole experience-world, and that if our standard measure be proved false all our measurements are vitiated ; to remember that Man is the maker of the sciences which subserve his human purposes ; to remember that an ultimate philosophy which analyses us away is thereby merely exhibiting its failure to achieve its purpose, that, and more that might be stated to the same effect, is the real root of Humanism, whence all its auxiliary doctrines spring. It is a natural consequence, for instance, that, if the facts require it, " real possibilities, real indeterminations, real beginnings, real ends, real evil, real crises, catastrophes and escapes, a real God and a real moral life, just as common sense conceives these things, may remain in humanism as conceptions which philosophy gives up the attempt either to ' overcome ' or to reinterpret." l And whether or not Humanism will have to recognise the ultimate reality of all the gloomier possibilities of James's enumeration, it may safely be predicted that its ' radical empiricism ' will grant to the possibilities of 'pluralism ' a more careful and unbiassed inquiry than monistic pre conceptions have as yet deigned to bestow upon them. For seeing that man is a social being it is natural that Humanism should be sympathetic to the view that the universe is ultimately 'a joint- stock affair.' And again, it will receive with appropriate suspicion all attempts to explain away the human personality which is the formal and efficient and final cause of all explanation, and 1 James, Will to Believe (p. ix. ). I have substituted humanism for empiricism. PREFACE xxi will rather welcome it in its unmutilated, undistorted immediacy as (though in an uncongenial tongue) the ' a priori condition of all knowledge.' And so it will approve of that 'personal idealism ' which strives to redeem the spiritual values an idealistic absolutism has so treacher ously sold into the bondage of naturalism. With ' Common Sense ' it will ever keep in touch by dint of refusing to value or validate the products of merely speculative analyses, void of purpose and of use, which betoken merely a power to play with verbal phrases. Thus Humanism will derive, combine and include all the doctrines which may be treated as anticipations of its attitude. For Pragmatism itself is in the same case with Personal Idealism, Radical Empiricism and Pluralism. It is in reality only the application of Humanism to the theory of knowledge. If the entire man, if human nature as a whole, be the clue to the theory of all experience, then human purposiveness must irrigate the arid soil of logic. The facts of our thinking, freed from intellectualistic perver sions, will clearly show that we are not dealing with abstract concatenations of purely intellectual processes, but with the rational aims of thinkers. Great therefore, as will be the value we must claim for Pragmatism as a method, we must yet concede that man is greater than any method he has made, and that our Humanism must interpret it. IV It is a well-known fact that things are not only known by their affinities but also by their opposites. And the fitness of the term Humanism for our philosophic purpose could hardly better be displayed than by the ready transfer of its old associations to a novel context. A humanist philosopher is sure to be keenly interested xxii HUMANISM in the rich variety of human thought and sentiment, and unwilling to ignore the actual facts for the sake of bolstering up the narrow abstractions of some a priori theory of what 'all men must' think and feel under penalty of scientific reprobation. The humanist, accordingly, will tend to grow humane, and tolerant of the divergences of attitude which must inevitably spring from the divergent idiosyncrasies of men. Humanism, therefore, will still remain opposed to Barbarism. But Barbarism may show itself in philosophy in a double guise, as barbarism of temper and as barbarism of style. Both are human defects which to this day remain too common among philosophers. The former displays itself in the inveterate tendency to sectarianism and intolerance, in spite of the discredit which the history of philosophy heaps upon it. For what could be more ludicrous than to keep up the pretence that all must own the sway of some absolute and unquestionable creed ? Does not every page of every philosophic history teem with illustrations that a philosophic system is an unique and personal achievement of which not even the servilest discipleship can transfuse the full flavour into another's soul ? Why should we therefore blind ourselves to the invincible individuality of philosophy, and deny each other the precious right to behold reality each at the peculiar angle whence he sees it ? Why, when others cannot and will not see as we do, should we lose our temper and the faith that the heavenly harmony can only be achieved by a multi tudinous symphony in which each of the myriad centres of experience sounds its own concordant note ? As for barbarism of style, that too is ever rampant, even though it no longer reaches the colossal heights attained by Kant and Hegel. If Humanism can restore against such forces the lucid writing of the older English style, it will make Philosophy once more a subject gentle- PREFACE xxiii men can read with pleasure. And it can at least contend that most of the technicalities which disfigure philosophic writings are totally unneeded, and that the stringing together of abstractions is both barbarous and dangerous. Pedagogically it is barbarous, because it nauseates the student, and because abstract ideas need to be illumined by concrete illustrations to fix them in the mind : logic ally it is dangerous, because abstractions mostly take the form of worn-out metaphors which are like sunken rocks in navigation, so that there is no more fatal cause of error and deception than the trust in abstract dicta which by themselves mean nothing, and whose real meaning lies in the applications, which are not supplied. In history, however, the great antithesis has been be tween Humanism and Scholasticism. This also we may easily adopt, without detracting from its force. For Scholasticism is one of the great facts in human nature, and a fundamental weakness of the learned world. Now, as ever, it is a spirit of sterilising pedantry that avoids beauty, dreads clearness and detests life and grace, a spirit that grovels in muddy technicality, buries itself in the futile burrowings of valueless researches, and conceals it self from human insight by the dust-clouds of desiccated rubbish which it raises. Unfortunately the scholastic temper is one which their mode of life induces in pro fessors as easily as indigestion, and frequently it renders them the worst enemies of their subjects. This is de plorable but might be counteracted, were it not thought essential to a reputation for scientific profundity at least to seem scholastic. Humanism therefore has before it an arduous fight with the Dragon of Scholasticism, which, as it were, deters men from approaching the golden apples that cluster on the tree of knowledge in the garden of the Hesperides. And lastly, may we not emphasise that the old associ- xxiv HUMANISM ations of the word would still connect with Humanism a Renascence of Philosophy ? And shall we not accept this reminiscence as an omen for the future ? For it is clear, assuredly, that Philosophy has still to be born again to enter on her kingdom, and that her votaries must still be born again to purge their systems of the taint of an inveterate barbarism. But some of these suggestions verge, perhaps, upon the fanciful : it suffices to have shown that Humanism makes a good name for the views I seek to label thus, and that in such extension of its meaning its old associations lose no force but rather gain a subtler flavour. To claim that in its philosophic use Humanism may retain its old associations is not, however, to deny that it must enter also into new relations. It would be vain, for instance, to attempt concealment of the fact that to Naturalism and Absolutism its antagonism is intrinsic. Naturalism is valid enough and useful as a method of tracing the connexions that permeate reality from the lowest to the highest level : but when taken as the last word of philosophy it subjects the human to the arbitra ment of its inferior. Absolutism, on the other hand, cherishes ambitions to attain the superhuman ; but, rather than admit its failure, it deliberately prefers to delude itself with shadows, and to reduce concrete reality to the illusory adumbration of a phantom Whole. The difference thus is this, that whereas Naturalism is worthy of respect for the honest work it does, and has a real use as a partial method in subordination to the whole, Absolutism has no use, and its explanatory value is nothing but illusion. As compared with these, Humanism will pursue the middle path ; it will neither reject ideals because they are not realised, nor yet despise the actual because it can conceive ideals. It will not think the worst of Nature, but neither will it trust an Absolute beyond its ken. PREFACE xxv I am well aware that the ideas of which the preceding pages may have suggested the barest outline are capable of endless working out and illustration. And though I believe myself to have made no assertion that could not be fully vindicated if assailed, I realise most keenly that a complete statement of the Humanist position far tran scends, not only my own powers, but those of any single man. But I hoped that those who were disposed to sym pathy and open-mindedness would pardon the defects and overlook the gaps in this informal survey of a glorious prospect, while to those who are too imperviously encased in habit or in sloth, or too deeply severed from me by an alien idiosyncrasy, I knew that I could never hope to bring conviction, however much, nor to avoid offence, however little, I might try to say. And so I thought the good ship Humanism might sail on its adventurous quest for the Islands of the Blest with the lighter freight of these essays as safely and hopefully as with the heaviest cargo. F. C. S. SCHILLER. OXFORD, August 1903. CONTENTS ESSAY PAGE I. THE ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS . . i II. 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE . . . .18 III. TRUTH . . . 44 IV. LOTZE'S MONISM .... 62 V. NON- EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY AND THE KANTIAN A PRIORI . ... 85 VI. THE METAPHYSICS OF THE TIME-PROCESS. . 95 VII. REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' . . . .no VIII. DARWINISM AND DESIGN . . . .128 IX. THE PLACE OF PESSIMISM IN PHILOSOPHY . 157 X. CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES . . .166 XI. ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES . . .183 XII. ACTIVITY AND SUBSTANCE . . . 204 XIII. THE DESIRE FOR IMMORTALITY . . . 228 XIV. THE ETHICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF IMMORTALITY . 250 XV. PHILOSOPHY AND THE SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATION OF A FUTURE LIFE . . 266 THE ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS1 ARGUMENT The Place of Conduct in Philosophy : (a) The absolutist reduction of Conduct to ' appearance ' ; (b] the pragmatist reaction which makes conduct primary and thought secondary. Is Pragmatism irrationalism ? No, but it explains it by exposing the inadequacy of intellectualism. Ways of reaching Pragmatism (i) by justification of 'faith' against 'reason,' (2) historical, (3) evolutionary. The definition of Pragmatism. Its relation to psychological teleology. The supremacy of ' Good ' over ' True ' and ' Real.' Kant's Copernican Revolution, and the complication of the question of reality with that of our knowledge. A further similar step necessitated by the purposvieness of actual knowing. The function of the will in cognition. ' Reality ' as the response to a will to know, and therefore dependent in part on our action. Consequently (i) 'reality' cannot be indifferent to us; (2) our relations to it quasi-personal; (3) metaphysics quasi-ethical ; (4) Pragmatism as a tonic : the venture of faith and freedom ; (5) the moral stimulus of Pragmatism. WHAT has Philosophy to say of Conduct ? Shall it place it high or low, exalt it on a pedestal for the adoration of the world or drag it in the mire to be 1 This essay, originally an Ethical Society address, appeared in the July 1903 number of the International Journal of Ethics, It is now reprinted with a few additions, the chief of which is the long note on pp. 11-12. Its title has of course been objected to as putting the cart before the horse. To which it is easy to reply that nowadays it is no longer impracticable to use a motor car for the removal of a dead horse. And the paradox implied in the title is, of course, intentional. It is a conscious inversion of the tedious and unprofitable disquisitions on ' the metaphysical basis of this, that, and the other, which an erroneous conception of philosophical method engenders. They are wrong in method, because we have not de facto a science of first principles of unquestionable truth from which we can start to derive the principles of the special sciences. The converse of this is the fact, viz. that our ' first ' principles are postulated by the needs, and slowly secreted by the labours, of the special sciences, or of such preliminary exercises of our intelligence as build up the common-sense view of life. And so what my title means is, not an attempt to rest the ' final synthesis ' upon a single science, but rather that among the contributions of the special sciences to the final evaluation of experience that of the highest, viz. ethics, has, and must have, decisive weight. B 2 HUMANISM i trampled on by all superior persons ? Shall it equate it with the whole or value it as nought ? Philosophers have, of course, considered the matter, though not perhaps with as great success, or as carefully as they ought. And so the relations of the theory to the practice of life, of cognition to action, of the theoretical to the practical reason, form a difficult and complicated chapter in the history of thought.1 From that history one fact, however, stands out clearly, viz. that the claims on both sides are so large and so insistent that it is hardly possible to compromise between them. The philosopher is not on the whole a lover of compromise, despite the solicitations of his lower nature. He will not, like the ordinary man of sense, subscribe to a plausible platitude like, e.g. Matthew Arnold's famous dictum that Conduct is three- fourths of Life. Matthew Arnold was not a philosopher, and the very precision of his formula arouses scientific suspicions. But anyhow the philosopher's imperious logic does not deal in quarters : it is prone to argue aut Ccesar aut nullus ; if Conduct be not the whole life, it is naught. Which therefore shall it be ? Shall Conduct be the substance of the All, or the vision of a dream ? Now, it would seem at first that latterly the second alternative seems to have grown philosophically almost inevitable. For, under the auspices of the Hegelizing ' idealists,' Philosophy has uplifted herself once more to a metaphysical contemplation of the Absolute, of the unique Whole in which all things are included and transcended. Now whether this conception has any value for metaphysics is a moot point, on which I have elsewhere expressed a decided opinion ; ~ but there can hardly be a pretence of denying that it is the death of morals. For the ideal of the Absolute Whole cannot be rendered compatible with the antithetical valuations which form the vital atmosphere of human agents. They are partial appreciations, which vanish from the stand point of the Whole. Without the distinctions of Good 1 Cp. the essay on ' Use/ess ' Knowledge for its treatment by Plato and Aristotle. 2 Riddles of the Sphinx, ch. x. i ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS 3 and Evil, Right and Wrong, Pleasure and Pain, Self and others, Then and Now, Progress and Decay, human life would be dissolved into the phantom flow of an unmean ing mirage. But in the Absolute all moral distinctions must, like all others, be swallowed up and disappear. The All is raised above all ethical valuation and moral criticism : it is ' beyond Good and Evil ' ; it is timelessly perfect, and therefore incapable of improvement. It transcends all our antitheses, because it includes them. And so to the metaphysician it seems an easy task to compose the perfection of the whole out of the imper fections of its parts : he has merely to declare that the point of view of human action, that of ethics, is not and cannot be final. It is an illusion which has grown transparent to the sage. And so, in proportion as his insight into absolute reality grows clearer, his interest in ethics wanes. It must be confessed, moreover, that metaphysicians no longer shrink from this avowal. The typical leader of this philosophic fashion, Mr. F. H. Bradley, never attempts to conceal his contempt for ethical considera tions, nor omits a sneer at the pretensions of practice to be heard in the High Court of Metaphysics. " Make the moral point of view absolute," he cries,1 " and then realise your position. You have become not merely irrational, but you have also broken with every considerable religion." And this is how he dismisses the appeal to practice,2 "But if so, what, I may be asked, is the result in practice? That I reply at once is not my business ; " it is merely a " hurtful 3 prejudice " if " irrelevant appeals to practical results are allowed to make themselves heard." Altogether I can conceive nothing more pulverising to ethical aspiration than chapter xxv. of Mr. Bradley's Appearance and Reality? 1 Appearance and Reality, pp. 500-501. 2 Ibid. p. 450. 3 But does not this '•'•hurtful" reaffirm the ethical valuation which Mr. Bradley is trying to exclude ? 4 If in any one's mind any lingering doubts have survived as to the purport of this philosophic teaching, he has only to turn to the ingenious but somewhat 4 HUMANISM i And the worst of it all is that this whole treatment of ethics follows logically and legitimately from the general method of philosophising which conducts to the meta physical assumption of the Absolute. Fortunately, however, there appears to be a natural tendency when the consequences of a point of view have been stated without reserve, and become plain to the meanest intelligence, to turn round and try something fresh. By becoming openly immoralist, metaphysic has created a demand for its moral reformation. And so, quite recently, there has become noticeable a movement in a diametrically opposite direction, which repudiates the assumptions and reverses the conclusions of the meta physical criticism of ethics which we have been considering. Instead of regarding contemplation of the Absolute as the highest form of human activity, it sets it aside as trivial and unmeaning, and puts purposeful action above purposeless speculation. Instead of supposing that Action is one thing and Thought something alien and other, and that there is not, therefore, any reason to anticipate that the pure contemplations of the latter will in any way relate to or sanction the principles which guide the former, it treats Thought as a mode of conduct, as an integral part of active life. Instead of regarding practical results as irrelevant, it makes Practical Value an essential determinant of theoretic truth. And so far from admitting the claim to independence of an irresponsible intelligence, it regards knowledge as derivative from conduct and as involving distinctively moral qualities and responsibilities in a perfectly definite and traceable way. In short, instead of being reduced to the nothingness of an illusion, Con duct is reinstated as the all-controlling influence in every department of life. Now, I cannot but believe that all effective ethical effort ultimately needs a definite basis of assumptions concerning the nature of life as a whole, and it is because flippant and prolix exposition of the same doctrine in Mr. A. E. Taylor's Problem of Conduct. To Mr. Taylor the real problem of Conduct would appear to be why any one should continue to hanker after so manifest an absurdity as a rule of conduct, i ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS 5 I am convinced that this new method of philosophising will supply such a basis in an almost perfect way, that I venture to avow myself its earnest advocate. If I am asked for its name, • I can only say that it has been called Pragmatism by the chief author of its importance, Professor William James, whose recent book, The Varieties of Religious Experience, so many others besides the readers of philosophic literature have been enjoying. But the name in this case does even less than usual to explain the meaning, and as the nature of Pragmatism has been greatly misunderstood, and even writers of intelligence and repute have conspicuously failed to grasp it, I must try to put it in a clearer light. And perhaps I shall best begin by mentioning a few of the ways in which Pragmatism may be reached, before explaining how it should, in my opinion, be defined. For a considerable prejudice against it has arisen in some minds by reason of the method by which Professor James has approached it. Professor James first unequivocally advanced the pragmatist doctrine in connection with what he calls the ' Will to believe.' 1 Now this Will to believe was put forward as an intellectual right (in certain cases) to decide between alternative views, each of which seemed to make a legitimate appeal to our nature, by other than purely intellectual considerations, viz. their emotional interest and practical value. Although Professor James laid down a number of conditions limiting the applicability of his Will-to-believe, the chief of which was the willingness to take the risks involved and to abide by the results of subsequent experience, it was not perhaps altogether astonishing that his doctrine should be decried as rank irrationalism. Irrationalism seemed a familiar and convenient label for the new doctrine. For irrationalism is a permanent 1 He had, however, laid the foundation of his doctrine as long ago as 1879 'n an article in Mind. And, though the name is new, in some form or other the recognition of the thing runs through the whole history of thought. Indeed, it would be strange if it had been otherwise, seeing that, as we contend, the actual procedure of the human mind has always been (unconsciously) pragmatist. 6 HUMANISM x or continually recrudescent phenomenon of the moral consciousness, the persistent vogue of which it has always been hard to explain. It is ably and brilliantly exemplified at the present day by Mr. Balfouri's Foundations of Belief, and, in an extreme and less defensible form, by Mr. Benjamin Kidd. And if, instead of denouncing it, we try to understand it, we shall not find that it is entirely absurd. At bottom indeed it indicates little more than a defect in the current rationalism, and a protest against the rationalistic blindness towards the non- intellectual factors in the foundation of beliefs. And Common Sense has always shown a certain sympathy with all such protests against the pretensions of what is called the pure intellect to dictate to man's whole complex nature. It has always felt that there are ' reasons of the heart of which the head knows nothing,' postulates of a faith that surpasses mere understanding, and that these possess a higher rationality which a narrow intellectualism has failed to comprehend. Now if one had to choose between Irrationalism and Intellectualism, there would be no doubt that the former would have to be preferred. It is a less violent departure from our actual behaviour, a less grotesque caricature of our actual procedure. Like Common Sense, therefore, Pragmatism sympathises with Irrationalism in its blind revolt against the trammels of a pedantic Intellectualism. But Pragmatism does more ; it not only sympathises, it explains. It vindicates the rationality of Irrationalism, without becoming itself irrational ; it restrains the ex travagance of Intellectualism, without losing faith in the intellect. And it achieves this by instituting a fundamental analysis of the common root both of the reason and of the emotional revulsion against its pride. By showing the 'pure' reason to be a pure figment, and a psychological impossibility, and the real structure of the actual reason to be essentially pragmatical, and permeated through and through with acts of faith, desires to know and wills to believe, to disbelieve and to make believe, it renders possible, nay unavoidable, a reconciliation between a 7 reason which is humanised and a faith which is rationalised in the very process which shows their antithesis to be an error. That, however, Pragmatism should have begun by intervening in the ancient controversy between Reason and Faith was something of an accident. In itself it might equally well have been arrived at by way of a moral revolt from the unfruitful logic-chopping and aimless quibbling which is often held to be the sum total of philosophy. Or again, it might be reached, most instructively, by a critical consideration of many historic views, notably those of Kant and Lotze,1 and of the unsolved problems which they leave on our hands. Or, once more, by observing the actual procedure of the various sciences and their motives for establishing and maintaining the ' truth ' of their various propositions, we may come to realise that what works in practice is what in actual knowing we accept as ' true.' But to me personally the straightest road to Pragmatism is one which the extremest prejudice can scarce suspect of truckling to the encroachments of theology. Instead of saying like Professor James, ' so all-important is it to secure the right action that (in cases of real intellectual alternatives) it is lawful for us to adopt the belief most congenial with our spiritual needs and to try whether our faith will not make it come true,' I should rather say 'the traditional notion of beliefs determined by pure reason alone is wholly incredible. For how can there be such a thing as " pure " reason ? How, that is, can we so separate our intellectual function from the whole complex of our activities, that it can operate in real independence of practical considerations ? I cannot but conceive the reason as being, like the rest of our equipment, a weapon in the struggle for existence and a means of achieving adaptation. It must follow that the practical use, which has developed it, must have stamped itself upon its inmost 1 Or, as Professor James suggested, and as Prof. A. W. Moore has actually done in the case of Locke (see his Functional -versus the Representational Theory of Knowledge], by a critical examination of the English philosophers. 8 HUMANISM i structure, even if it has not moulded it out of pre-rational instincts. In short, a reason which has not practical value for the purposes of life is a monstrosity, a morbid aberra tion or failure of adaptation, which natural selection must sooner or later wipe away.' It is in some such way that I should prefer to pave the way for an appreciation of what we mean by Pragmatism. Hence I may now venture to define it as the thorough recognition that the purposive character of mental life generally must influence and pervade also our most re motely cognitive activities.1 In other words, it is a conscious application to the theory of life of the psychological facts of cognition as they appear to a teleological Voluntarism. In the light of such a teleological psychology the problems of logic and metaphysics must appear in a new light, and decisive weight must be given to the conceptions of Purpose and End. Or again, it is a systematic protest against the practice of ignoring in our theories of Thought and Reality the purposiveness of all our actual thinking, and the relation of all our actual realities to the ends of our practical life. It is an assertion of the sway of human valuations over every region of our experience, and a denial that such valuation can validly be eliminated from the contemplation of any reality we know. And inasmuch as such teleological valuation is also the special sphere of ethical inquiry, Pragmatism may be ] This is wider, and I think more fundamental, than any of the definitions in Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy (ii. pp. 321-322), for the reason that the logical development of pragmatist method in my essay on Axioms as Postulates came out (in Personal Idealism} too recently to be available for the purposes of the Dictionary. I think, however, that intrinsically also neither Peirce's, nor James's, nor Baldwin's accounts are quite adequate. In Peirce's sense, that a conception is to be tested by its practical effects, the principle is so obvious as to be com paratively unimportant, and, perhaps, as he says, is somewhat a matter of youthful buoyancy. James's definition, that the whole meaning of a conception expresses itself in practical consequences, does not emphasise the essential priority of action to thought, and does not explicitly correlate it with his own ' will to believe. ' Baldwin tries to confine it to the genetic sphere and to deny that it yields a philosophy of reality. But his own subsequent account (s.v. Truth] of the psychology of the truth-valuation seems inconsistent with this and far more satisfactory. He fails, moreover, to explain how he can get at reality without knowing it, and how our estimations of what ' truth ' is can disregard and become nd ependent of our modes of establishing it. i ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS 9 r said to assign metaphysical validity to the typical method of ethics. At a blow it awards to the ethical conception of Good supreme authority over the logical conception of True and the metaphysical conception of Real. The Good becomes a determinant both of the True and of the Real. For from the pursuit of the latter we may never eliminate the reference to the former. Our apprehension of the Real, our comprehension of the True, is always effected by beings who are aiming at the attainment of some Good, and it seems a palpable absurdity to deny that this fact makes a stupendous difference. I should confidently claim, therefore, that by Prag matism a further step has been taken in the analysis of our experience which amounts to an important advance in that self-knowledge on which our knowledge of the world depends. Indeed, this advance seems to me to be of a magnitude comparable with, and no less momentous than, that which gave to the epistemological question priority over the ontological. It is generally recognised as the capital achievement of modern philosophy to have perceived that a solution of the ontological question — What is Reality? — is not possible until it has been decided how Reality can come within our ken. Before there can be a real for us at all, the Real must be knowable, and the notion of an un knowable reality is useless, because it abolishes itself. The true formulation therefore of the ultimate question of metaphysics must become — What can I know as real? And thus the effect of what Kant called the Copernican revolution in philosophy is that ontology, the theory of Reality, comes to be conditioned by epistemology, the theory of our knowledge. But this truth is incomplete until we realise all that is involved in the knowledge being ours and recognise the real nature of our knowing. Our knowing is not the mechanical operation of a passionless ' pure ' intellect, which Grinds out Good and grinds out 111, And has no purpose, heart, or will. io HUMANISM i Pure intellection is not a fact in nature ; it is a logical fiction which will not really answer even for the purposes of technical logic. In reality our knowing is driven and guided at every step by our subjective interests and preferences, our desires, our needs and our ends. These form the motive powers also of our intellectual life. Now what is the bearing of this fact on the traditional dogma of an absolute truth and ultimate reality existing for themselves apart from human agency ? It would utterly debar us from the cognition of ' Reality as it is in itself and apart from our interests ' if such a thing there were. For our interests impose the conditions under which alone Reality can be revealed. Only such aspects of Reality can be revealed as are not merely knowable but as are objects of an actual desire, and consequent attempt, to know. All other realities or aspects of Reality, which there is no attempt to know, necessarily remain unknown, and for us unreal, because there is no one to look for them. Reality, therefore, and the knowledge thereof, essentially presuppose a definitely directed effort to know. And, like other efforts, this effort is purposive ; it is necessarily inspired by the conception of some good at which it aims. Neither the question of Fact, therefore, nor the question of Knoivledge can be raised without raising also the question of Value. Our ' Facts ' when analysed turn out to be ' Values,' and the conception of ' Value ' therefore becomes more ultimate than that of ' Fact.' Our valuations thus pervade our whole experience, and affect whatever ' fact,' whatever ' knowledge ' we consent to recognise. If, then, there is no knowing without valuing, if knowledge is a form of Value, or, in other words, a factor in a Good, Lotze's anticipation x has been fully realised, and the foundations of metaphysics have actually been found to lie in ethics. In this way the ultimate question for philosophy becomes — What is Reality for one aiming at knowing what ? ' Real ' means, real for what purpose ? to what 1 Metaphysics (Eng. Tr. ), ii. p. 319. i ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS n end? in what use ? And the answer always comes in terms of the will to know which puts the question. This at once yields a simple and beautiful explanation of the different accounts of Reality which are given in the various sciences and philosophies. The purpose of the questions being different, so is their purport, and so must be the answers. For the direction of our effort, itself determined by our desires and will to know, enters as a necessary and ineradicable factor into whatever revelation of Reality we can attain. The response to our questions is always affected by their character, and that is in our power. For the initiative throughout is ours. It is for us to consult the oracle of Nature or to refrain ; it is for us to formulate our demands and to put our questions. If we question amiss, Nature will not respond, and we must try again. But we can never be entitled to assume either that our action makes no difference or that nature contains no answer to a question we have never thought to put.1 1 That the Real has a determinate nature which the knowing reveals but does not affect, so that our knowing makes no difference to it, is one of those sheer assumptions which are incapable, not only of proof, but even of rational defence. It is a survival of a crude realism which can be defended only, in a pragmatist manner, on the score of its practical convenience, as an avowed fiction. On this ground and as a mode of speech we can, of course, have no quarrel with it. But as an ultimate analysis of the fact of knowing it is an utterly gratuitous interpretation. The plain fact is that we come into contact with reality only in the act of ' knowing ' or experiencing it. As unknowable, therefore, the Real is nil, as unknown, it is only potentially real. The situation therefore in no wise sanctions the assumption that what the Real is in the act of knowing, it is also outside that relation. One might as well argue that because an orator is eloquent in the presence of an audience, he is no less voluble in addressing himself. The simple fact is that we know the Real as it is when we know it ; we know nothing whatever about what it is apart from that process. It is meaningless therefore to inquire into its nature as it is in itself. And I can see no reason why the view that reality exhibits a rigid nature unaffected by our treatment should be deemed theoretically more justifiable than its converse, that it is utterly plastic to our every demand — a travesty of Pragmatism which has attained some popularity with its critics. The actual situation is of course a case of interaction, a process of cognition in which the ' subject ' and the 'object' determine each the other, and both 'we' and 'reality' are involved, and, we might add, evolved. There is no warrant therefore for the assumption that either of the poles between which the current passes could be suppressed without detriment. What we ought to say is that when the mind ' knows ' reality both are affected, just as we say that when a stone falls to the ground both it and the earth are attracted. We are driven, then, to the conviction that the ' determinate nature of reality ' does not subsist 'outside' or 'beyond' the process of knowing it. It is merely a lesson of experience that we have enshrined in the belief that it does so subsist. 12 HUMANISM i It is no exaggeration therefore to contend, with Plato, that in a way the Good, meaning thereby the conception of a final systematisation of our purposes, is the supreme controlling power in our whole experience, and that in abstraction from it neither the True nor the Real can exist. For whatever forms of the latter we may have discovered, some purposive activity, some conception of a good to be attained, was involved as a condition of the discovery. If there had been no activity on our part, or if that activity had been directed to ends other than it was, there could not have been discovery, or that discovery. We must discard, therefore, the notion that in the constitution of the world we count for nothing, that it matters not what we do, because Reality is what it is, whatever we may do. It is true on the contrary that our action is essential and indispensable, that to some extent the world (our world) is of our making, and that without us nothing is made that is made. To what extent and in what directions the world is plastic and to be moulded Things behave in similar ways in their reaction to modes of treatment, the differences between which seem to us important. From this we have chosen to infer that things have a rigid and unalterable nature. It might however have been better to infer that therefore the differences must seem unimportant to the things. The truth is that the nature of things is not determinate but determinable, like that of our fellow-men. Previous to trial it is indeterminate, not merely for our ignorance, but really and from every point of view, within limits which it is our business to discover. It grows determinate by our experiments, like human character. We all know that in our social relations we frequently put questions which are potent in determining their own answers, and without the putting would leave their subjects undetermined. ' Will you love me, hate me, trust me, help me ? ' are conspicuous examples, and we should consider it absurd to argue that because a man had begun social intercourse with another by knocking him down, the hatred he had thus provoked must have been a pre-existent reality which the blow had merely elicited. All that the result entitles us to assume is a capacity for social feeling variously responsive to various modes of stimulation. Why, then, should we not transfer this conception of a determinable indeter- mination to nature at large, why should we antedate the results of our manipula tion and regard as unalterable facts the reactions which our ignorance and blundering provoke? To the objection that even in our social dealings not all the responses are indeterminate, the reply is that it is easy to regard them as having been determined by earlier experiments. In this way, then, the notion of a ' fact-in-itself ' might become as much of a philosophic anachronism as that of a ' thing-in-itself, ' and we should conceive the process of knowledge as extending from absolute chaos at the one end (before a determinate response had been established) to absolute satisfaction at the other, which would have no motive to question the absolutely factual nature of its objects. But in the intermediate condition of our present experience all recognition of ' fact ' would be provisional and relative to our purposes and inquiries. i ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS 13 by our action we do not know as yet. We can find out only by trying : but we know enough for Pragmatism to transfigure the aspect of existence for us. It frees us in the first place from what constitutes perhaps the worst and most paralysing horror of the naturalistic view of life, the nightmare of an indifferent universe. For it proves that at any rate Nature cannot be indifferent to us and to our doings. It may be hostile, and something to be fought with all our might ; it may be unsuspectedly friendly, and something to be co-operated with with our whole heart ; it must respond in varying ways to our various efforts. Now, inasmuch as we are most familiar with such varying responsiveness in our personal relations with others, it is I think natural, though not perhaps necessary, that the pragmatist will tend to put a personal interpre tation upon his transactions with Nature and any agency he may conceive to underlie it. Still even ordinary language is aware that things behave differently according as you ' treat ' them, that e.g., treated with fire sugar burns, while treated with water it dissolves. Thus in the last resort the anthropomorphic ' humanism ' of our whole treatment of experience is unavoidable and obvious ; and however much he wills to disbelieve it the philosopher must finally confess that to escape anthropomorphism he would have to escape from self. And further, seeing that ethics is the science of our relations with other persons, i.e. with our environment qua personal, this ultimateness of the personal construction we put upon our experience must increase the importance of the ethical attitude towards it. In other words, our meta physics must in any case be quasi-ethical. It may fairly be anticipated, secondly, that Pragmatism will prove a great tonic to re-invigorate a grievously depressed humanity. It sweeps away entirely the stock excuse for fatalism and despair. It proves that human action is always a perceptible, and never a negligible, factor in the ordering of nature, and shows cause for the belief that the disparity between our powers and the I4 HUMANISM t forces of nature, great as it is, does not amount to incommensurability. And it denies that any of the great questions of human concern have been irrevocably answered against us. For most of them have not even been asked in the pragmatist manner, and in no case has there been that systematic and clear-sighted endeavour which extorts an answer from reluctant nature. In short, no doctrine better calculated to stir us to activity or more potent to sustain our efforts has ever issued from the philosophic study. It is true that to gain these hopes we must make bold to take some risks. If our action is a real factor in the course of events, it is impossible to exclude the contingency that if we act wrongly it may be an influence for ill. To the chance of salvation there must correspond a risk of damnation. We select the condi tions under which reality shall appear to us, but this very selection selects us, and if we cannot contrive to reach a harmony in our intercourse with the real, we perish. But to many this very element of danger will but add to the zest of life. For it cannot but appear by far more interesting than the weary grinding out of a predetermined course of things which issues in meaning less monotony from the unalterable nature of the All. And the infinite boredom with which this conception of the course of nature would afflict us, must be commingled with an equal measure of disgust when we realise that on this same theory the chief ethical issues are eternally and inexorably decided against us. Loyal co-operation and Promethean revolt grow equally unmeaning. For man can never have a ground for action against the Absolute. It is eternally and inherently and irredeemably perfect, and so leaves no ground for the hope that the ' appearances ' which make up our world may somehow be remoulded into conformity with our ideals. As they cannot now impair the inscrutable perfection of the Whole, they need not ever alter to pander to a criticism woven out of the delusive dreams of us poor creatures of illusion. i ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS 15 It is a clear gain, therefore, when Pragmatism holds out to us a prospect of a world that can become better, and even has a distant chance of becoming perfect, in a sense which we are able to appreciate. The only thing that could be preferred to this would be a universe whose perfection could not only be metaphysically deduced, but actually experienced : but such a one our universe emphatically is not. Hence the indetermination which, as Professor James has urged,1 Pragmatism seems to introduce into our conception of the world is in the main an advantage. It brings out a connexion with the ethical conception of Freedom and the old problems involved in it, which I cannot here consider fully. I will only say this, that while determinism has of course an absolutely indefeasible status as a scientific postulate, and is the only assumption we can use in our practical calculations, we may yet have to recognise the reality of a certain measure of indeter mination. It is a peculiarity of ethics that this indeter mination is forced upon it, but in itself it is probably universal. In its valuation, however, I should differ from Professor James : I should regard it neither as good nor as ineradicable. And I should contend that our indeter- minism cannot have the slightest ethical value unless it both vindicates and emphasises our moral responsibility. And this brings me to the last point I wish to make, viz. the stimulus to our feeling of moral responsibility which must accrue from the doctrine of Pragmatism. It contains such a stimulus, alike in its denial of a mechanical determination of the world which is involved in its partial determination by our action, and in its admission that by wrong action we may evoke a hostile response, and so provoke our ruin. But in addition it must be pointed out that if every cognition, however theoretical, have practical value, it is potentially a moral act. We may incur indeed the gravest responsibilities in selecting the aims of our cognitive activities. We may become not merely wise or foolish but also good or bad by willing to 1 Will to Believe, p. ix. 16 HUMANISM i know the good or the bad ; nay, our very will to know may so alter the conditions as to evoke a response con genial with its character. It is a law of our nature that what we seek that we shall, in some measure, find. And so, like a rainbow, Life glitters in all the colours ; like a rainbow also it adjusts itself to every beholder. To the dayflies of fashion life seems ephemeral ; to the seeker after permanence, it strikes its roots into eternity. To the empty, it is a yawning chasm of inanity ; to the full, it is a source of boundless interest. To the indolent, it is a call to despairing resignation ; to the strenuous, a stimulus to dauntless energy. To the serious, it is fraught with infinite significance ; to the flippant, it is all a somewhat sorry jest. To the melancholic, each hope is strangled in its birth ; to the sanguine, two hopes spring from every grave of one. To the optimistic, life is a joy ineffable ; to the pessimistic, the futile agony of an atrocious and unending struggle. To love it seems that in the end all must be love ; to hate and envy it becomes a hell. The cosmic order, which to one displays the unswerving rigour of a self-sufficient mechanism, grows explicable to another only by the direct guidance of the hand of God. To those of little faith the heavens are dumb ; to the faithful, they disclose the splendours of a beatific vision. And so each sees Life as what he has it in him to perceive, and variously transfigures what, without his vision, were an unseen void. But all are not equally clear-sighted, and which sees best, time and trial must establish. We can but stake our little lives upon the ventures of our faith. And, willing or unwilling, that we do and must. And now in conclusion let me avow that after professing to discuss the relations of Philosophy and Practice, I must seem to have allotted an undue share of my time to the former, and to have done little more than adumbrate the practical consequences of my philosophy. In extenuation I must urge that the stream of Truth which waters the fertile fields of Conduct has its sources in the remote and ETHICAL BASIS OF METAPHYSICS 17 lonely uplands, inter apices philosophies, where the cloud- capped crags and slowly grinding glaciers of metaphysics soar into an air too chill and rare for our abiding habita tion, but keenly bracing to the strength of an audacious climber. Here lie our watersheds ; hither lead the passes to the realms unknown ; hence part our ways, and here it is that we must draw the frontier lines of Right and Wrong. And, moreover, I believe that in the depths of every soul there lurks a metaphysic aspiration to these heights, a craving to behold the varied patterns that com pose life's whole spread out in their connexion. With the right guides such ascents are safe, and even though at first twinges of mountain-sickness may befall us, yet in the end we shall return refreshed from our excursion and strengthened to endure the drudgery and commonplace that are our daily portion. II 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE1 A DISCOURSE CONCERNING PRAGMATISM ARGUMENT The idealistic art of passing into ' other ' worlds. A visit to Plato in a world of superior ' reality.' The difficulty of proving the reality of such experiences to others unless they lead to useful knowledge. Is the true always useful? Aristotle denies the connexion between theoretic truth and practical use, and prefers the former as higher and diviner. The Pragmatist rejection of this dogma of the superior dignity of speculation. Four possibilities as to the relation of Knowledge and Action, (i) Plato's view : Knowledge the presupposition of Action, to which it naturally leads — the True the source of the Good ; (2) Aristotle's : Pure Know ledge unrelated to Action, the highest Truth to the Good for man ; (3) Kant's : the same relation, but Action ultimately superior to Knowledge ; (4) Pragmatism the converse of Plato's, i.e. Action primary, Knowledge secondary, the Good the source of the True. Critiqtie of Aristotelianisni. — (i) 'Truth' not superhuman, but as human as 'Good.' 'True' means true for us as practical beings. The recognition of ' objective truth ' a gradual achievement and = the construction of a common world in which we can act together. (2) Per ceived reality relative to our senses. (3) The ' eternal ' truths postulates. (4) Theoretical principles, like practical, get their meaning from their use, and are called ' true ' if they prove useful. Hence ' necessary ' truth on\y=needful. Implications of the dicta the true is useful and the useless is false. No really useless knowledge, for the apparently useful is not knowledge. Examples — Knowledge about the Absolute and about an ' other ' world unconnected with this. IT will readily be understood that once the idealistic art of waking oneself up out of our world of appearances and thereby passing into one of higher reality2 is fully mastered, the temptation to exercise it becomes practically irresistible. Nevertheless, it was not until nearly two years (as men 1 From Mind, N.S. No. 42 (April 1902). with some additions. 2. Cp. pp. 113 note, 283-5. 18 ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 19 reckon time) after the first memorable occasion when he discoursed to me concerning the adaptation of the Ideal State to our present circumstances l that I succeeded in sufficiently arousing my soul to raise it once again to that supernal Academe where the divine Plato meditates in holy groves beside a fuller and more limpid stream than the Attic Ilissus. When I was breathlessly projected into his world, Plato was reclining gracefully beside a moss-grown boulder and listening attentively to a lively little man who was dis coursing with an abundance of animation and gesticulation. When he observed me, he stopped his companion, who immediately came hurrying towards me, and after politely greeting me, amiably declared that the Master would be delighted to converse with me. I noticed that he was a dapper little man, apparently in the prime of life, though beginning to grow rather bald about the temples. He was carefully robed, and his beard and his hair, such as it was, were scented. One could not help being struck by his refined, intelligent countenance, and his quick, observant eyes. As soon as Plato had welcomed me, his companion went off to get, he said, a garden chair from a gleaming marble temple (it turned out to be a shrine of the Muses) at a little distance, and I naturally inquired of Plato who the obliging little man was. ' Why, don't you know ? ' he replied, ' don't you re cognise my famous pupil, Aristotle ? ' ' Aristotle ! No, I should never have supposed he was like that.' ' What then would you have expected ? ' ' Well, I should have expected a bigger man for one thing, and one far less agreeable. To tell the truth, I should have expected Aristotle to be very bumptious and conceited.' ' You are not quite wrong,' said Plato with an indulgent smile, ' he was all you say, when he first came hither. 1 The contents of this interview have not yet been divulged, for reasons which will appear from the course of the present narrative. 20 HUMANISM ii But this is Aristotle with the conceit taken out of him, so that you now behold him reduced to his true proportions and can see his real worth.' 1 Ah ! that explains much. I now see why you are even greater and more impressive than I expected, and why he appears to be on such good terms with you once more.' ' Oh yes, we have made up our differences long ago, and he has now again the same keen, unassuming spirit with which he first charmed me, as a boy. Not that I was ever very angry with him even formerly. Of course his criticisms were unfair, and, as you say, his great abilities rendered him conceited, but you must remember that he had to make a place for himself in the philosophic world, and that he could do this only by attacking the greatest reputation in that world, viz. mine. But you see he is returning, and I want to ask you how you fared after our last meeting. Did you find it difficult to get back to your world ? ' ' I hardly know, Plato, how I managed it. And, oh, the difference when I awoke in the morning ! How sordid all things seemed ! ' ' And did you tell your pupils what my answers were to your questions ? ' ' I did, and they were much interested, and, I am afraid I must add, amused.' ' And after that what did you do ? Did you persuade your political men to enact laws in the Ecclesia such as those we showed to be best ? ' ' I fear I have not yet quite succeeded in doing this.' ' Why, what objections have you failed to overcome ? ' ' I have not yet even overcome the first and greatest objection of all. I have not published the account of our conversation.' ' Why not ? ' ' To tell you the truth, I was afraid ; I feared that your arguments might fare ill among the British Philistines.' 'Why should they fare ill, seeing that, both for other reasons and to please you, I was conservative, wonderfully how, amid all my reforms, and proposed nothing revolu- ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 21 tionary, but essayed only gently to turn to the light the eyes of the Cave-dwellers whom you mention ? ' ' You don't know how insensitive they are to the light.' ' Yet I was only preaching to them the necessity of self-realisation.' ' I know that ; but your language would have sounded unfamiliar.' ' Then you should repeat it, until it sounds familiar.' ' How splendidly you must have lectured, Plato ! I hardly dare however to follow your advice. However mildly I might put them, your proposals would have shocked the British public.' ' And yet you told me that the infinitely more re volutionary and unsparing proposals of my Republic command universal admiration, and are held to be salutary in the education of youth.' ' Ah, but then they are protected by the decent obscurity of a learned language ! ' ' Surely your language is learned enough, and by the time they have passed through your mind my ideas will be obscure enough to make them decent and safe.' ' You are victorious as ever, Plato, in argument. But you do not persuade me, because there is another obstacle, even greater than that which I have mentioned.' ' Will you not tell me what it is ? ' ' I hardly know how to put it. But though it now seems almost too absurd even to suggest such a thing, you know everybody to whom I spoke disbelieved that I had really conversed with you, and thought that I had dreamt it all, or even invented the whole matter.' ' That, as you say, is too absurd.' ' Nevertheless, so long as people believed this, you see it was vain for me to try to persuade them of the excellence of your proposals. For I do not happen to have been born the son of a king myself, and am of no account for such purposes.' ' Still they could not have supposed that you could have invented all you said yourself.' ' I am afraid they did.' 22 HUMANISM ii ' That was very unreasonable of them.' ' I am not so sure of that. For after all they had only my word for it that I had really met you.' ' But did they not recognise what I said, and my manner of saying it ? ' ' Not so as to feel sure.' 'And did they not think your whole account intrinsically probable and consistent ? ' ' I hope I made it appear so.' ' Surely they did not think that you could invent a world like mine ? ' ' I suppose they thought I might have dreamt it.' ' What, a world so much better, more beautiful, co herent and rational, and, in two words, more real, than that in which they lived ? ' ' There is nothing in all this to make it seem less of a dream rather than more.' ' Do you think they will believe you after this second visit ? ' ' I doubt it. Why should they ? ' ' It would seem, then, that we have no means of con vincing these wretches of the truth.' ' I fear not ; so long as they can reasonably maintain that it is no truth at all.' ' You do not surely propose to defend their conduct ? ' ' No, but I think it is by no means as unreasonable as you suppose.' ' I see that you are preparing to assert a greater paradox than ever I listened to from Zeno.' ' I am afraid that it may appear such.' 'Will you not quickly utter it? You see how keenly Aristotle is watching you, like a noble dog straining at the leash.' ' Let me say this, then, that though I can no more doubt your existence and that of the lovely world wherein you abide than I can my own, yet I cannot blame my fellow men for refusing to credit all this on my sole assertion. They have not seen you, nor can they, seeing that you will neither descend to them nor can they rise ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 23 to you. Your world and theirs have nothing in common, and so do not exist for each other.' ' You forget yourself, my friend.' ' True, I am a link between them. But what I have experienced is not directly part of their experience. It is far more probable, therefore, that I am lying or deluded than that I should establish a connexion between two worlds. Before they need, or indeed can, admit that what I say is true, I must show them how, in consequence of my visits to your higher world, I am enabled to act more successfully in theirs. You see, Plato, I am exactly in the position of your liberated Cave-dweller when he returns to his fellow-prisoners. They need not, can not, and will not, believe that I speak the truth concerning what I have seen above, unless I am also able to discern better the shadows in their cave below.' ' And this must surely be the case.' ' I notice that you assumed this, but you did not explain how it was that the higher knowledge of the Ideas, for example the ability to understand the motions of the heavenly bodies, was useful for enabling men to live better.' ' But surely Knowledge is one and the True and the Beautiful must also be useful.' ' I am not denying that, although your friend Aristotle would, unless he has greatly changed his opinion ; I am only saying that you have assumed this too lightly.' Instead of replying Plato looked at Aristotle, who with a slight hesitation ventured to suggest that possibly I was right, and that he had always been of the opinion that his master had overrated the practical usefulness of scientific knowledge. Plato meditated for a while before replying. ' It is possible that there are difficulties here which escaped my notice formerly. But did I not prove that the soul attuned to the harmonies of the higher sphere of true reality was also necessarily that most capable of dealing with the discords of phenomenal existence ? ' ' No doubt, Plato, your spectator of all time and all existence is a very beautiful being, and I too trust that in 24 HUMANISM n the end you may be right in thinking that Truth and Goodness must be harmonious. But neither in your time, nor in the many years that have passed since, has it come about that the pursuit of abstract knowledge has engendered the perfect man. I greatly doubt whether you convinced even your own brothers by your argument in the Republic, and you have certainly failed to convince those who have deemed themselves the greatest philosophers from the time of Aristotle to the present day. They would all in private scoff at the notion that speculative knowledge was by nature conducive to practical excellence, even though a few of the more prudent might not think it expedient to state this in public, while as for the great majority, they are always crying aloud that it is sacrilege and profanation to demand practical results from their meditations, and that only an utterly vulgar and ill- educated mind is even interested in the practical con sequences which theoretical researches may chance to have. And this temper we observe not only among the philosophers proper, who are few and speak a " language of the gods " unintelligible to the many, but also more patently among those who pursue the sciences and the arts, and hold that " Truth for the sake of Truth " and " Art for the sake of Art " alone are worthy of their consideration.' ' Is it true, Aristotle, that you also hold such opinions ? ' ' May I be permitted, oh my master, to expound my views at length, and yet briefly, as compared with the importance of the subject ? You know that I do not find the method of question and answer the most convenient to express my thoughts (Plato nodded). Well, then, let me say first of all that I do not hold it true that specula tive wisdom (crofca) is the same as practical wisdom ($povqari<$}, or that the latter is naturally developed out of the former. I must, therefore, with all respect agree with our critic from a lower world that you have too easily identified the two. They are quite distinct, and have nothing to do with each other.' Then observing an involuntary shudder on my part, a 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 25 ' Oh, I know,' he continued, ' what you are wishing to object. How can aofyia exist without the help of p6wr]9 e'^etz/), appertains to practical wisdom. ' Without it, therefore, speculative wisdom could not exist among men, or at least could not be self-supporting. But it does not follow that it thereby becomes dependent on practical wisdom, and still less, derivative from it. Practical wisdom serves speculative like a faithful servant. It is the trusty steward who has so to order the household that its master may have leisure for his holy avocations. It would be truer, therefore, to say that practical wisdom depends on speculative, without which life would lose its savour. But best of all is it to say that the two are essentially distinct and connected only by the bond of an external necessity. ' Having shown thus that practical and theoretical activity (evepyeia) are different in kind, let me explain next why the latter is the better, and the relation between them which I have described is a just one. ' They differ in their psychological character, in their object and in their value. Practical wisdom is the function of a lower and altogether inferior " part of the soul," of that " passive reason " (vovs TradrjrtKo^ which we put forth only while we deal with a " matter " whose resistance we cannot wholly master. Speculative activity, on 1 Cp. Eth. Nich. vi. 12, i. 26 HUMANISM n the other hand, is the divine imperishable part of us which, small as it is in bulk in most men, is yet our true self. ' Again the object of practical wisdom is the good for man and the transitory flow of appearances in the im permanent part of the universe. But the good which is the object of our practical pursuit is peculiar and restricted to man. It is different for men and for fishes,1 and although I do not deny that man's is the higher and that therefore fishing is legitimate sport, I feel bound to point out that there are many things in the world far diviner than man. The object of speculation, on the other hand, is the eternal and immutable which is common to all. I mean to include under this not merely the eternal truths, such as the principles of metaphysics and mathematics, but the eternal existences of the heavenly bodies and the unvarying character of the perceptions which are the same for all beings, e.g., those of colour, shape, size, etc. ' Whence it follows, lastly, that the value of speculation is incomparably superior to that of practice. It is not useful, and that it should occasionally lead to useful results is merely a regrettable accident. In itself it is beautiful and the beautiful is self-sufficient. But it is not useful, because it is exalted far above the useful, and to demand use for knowledge is, literally, impiety. For to contemplate the immutable objects of theoretical truth is in the strictest sense to lead the life divine. For it contemplates the higher and more perfect, even though it cannot grasp the absolutely perfect as continuously as God can contemplate His own absolute perfection. Still to do this, in however passing a fashion, is to rise above death and impermanence and decay. It is to immortalise oneself. 4 It follows, therefore, logically and in point of fact, that any attempt to hinder or control the concern with Pure Truth, is an outrage upon what is highest and best and holiest in human nature, an outrage which the law should punish and all good men rebuke, with the utmost severity. Truth demands not merely toleration for herself from the State, but also the unsparing suppression of 1 Cp. Eth. Nick. vi. 7, 4. ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 27 every form of Error, of every one who from whatever motive, whether from ignorance or sordidness or a mis taken and degrading moral enthusiasm, attempts to put any hindrance in the way of her absolute supremacy.' Towards the end of this diatribe, to which I had at various points shown myself unable to listen without writhing, Aristotle had wrought himself up into a state of fervour of which I should hardly have deemed him capable. Plato, however, skilfully provided for the con tinuation of the discussion by blandly remarking : — ' Bravo, Aristotle, you have spoken most interestingly, and shown not only the analytic subtlety for which you are famous, but also that true enthusiasm which proves that you are not merely a logical perforating machine for windbags and other receptacles of gaseous matter. I will leave it, however, to our visitor to answer you, partly because the question has, it would seem, grown somewhat beyond my ken, and partly because I can see that he has not a little to say, and foresee that your differences will prove most entertaining and instructive.' ' You are right, Plato, in thinking that I differ pro foundly with the doctrine to which Aristotle has just given such eloquent expression. But I feel that I am hardly equal single-handed to cope with Aristotle, and I wish that lames were present to support me and to persuade you both of what I believe to be right and reasonable.' ' And who is lames ? ' ' A philosopher, Plato, of the Hyperatlanteans, very different from the " bald-headed little tinkers " who are philosophers, not by the grace of God, but by the favour of some wretched " thinking-shop," and a man (or shall I rather call him a god ?) after your own heart. But, alas, he has been bridled, like Theages, by his own, and so has not yet been enabled to set forth fully the doctrine which he has named l Pragmatism, and which I would fain advance against that of Aristotle.' 1 Strictly speaking, I am reminded, it was Mr. C. S. Peirce, but it would seem to follow from pragmatist principles that a doctrine belongs to him who makes an effective use of it. 28 HUMANISM n ' You describe a man whom I should be eager to welcome. You must bring him with you the next time you come, having told him what we have discussed.' ' I will if I can.' ' As for your present difficulty, you need not be afraid. You shall argue, with me as judge, and I will see to it that Aristotle obtains no unfair advantage over you.' ' You embolden me to try my best.' ' I do not think that courage is what you lack.' ' If I have courage, it is like yours, that which comes nearest to tfiat of despair.' ' I never quite despaired.' ' Nor will I, though it is hard not to, to one regarding the present position of philosophy.' ' Aristotle is beginning to think that you are not going to answer him.' ' Then I will delay no longer. And first of all let me say that besides the views which have been taken by you and by Aristotle there seem to me to be two others, and that if you have no objection, I will state them, first recapitulating your own.' ' I have never an objection to be instructed.' ' I will begin with your own view then. It seemed to me to assume that there was no real or ultimate difference between the use of the reason in matters practical and matters theoretical. Knowledge was one and all action depended on knowledge, right action presupposing right knowledge. Knowledge, therefore, was useful, and there was no real opposition between the True and the Good, because the True could not but be good and the Good true. Nevertheless, Goodness was born of Truth rather than Truth of Goodness. Have I understood you aright?' ' You have put things more definitely than I did, but not perhaps amiss.' ' Aristotle, on the other hand, whom we have just heard, clearly thinks that Truth and Goodness have nothing to do with each other.' ' Pardon me, there is a goodness also of Truth, and in a sense speculative activity (dewpia) is also action ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 29 ' Yes, I know that ; you mean as exercise of function ? The speculative life also is something we do, it is the exercise of a characteristic human activity, and so has an excellence and contributes to our happiness.' ' Precisely.' ' Very well then, what I meant was that you did not derive practical from theoretic activity.' ' Certainly not' ' The two are as far opposed as is practically possible.' ' Yes.' ' But speculative wisdom is by far the loftier ? ' ' Of course.' ' And far too lofty to be useful ? ' ' So I maintain.' ' Very well again. Now for a third view. Is it not possible to maintain with you that the practical and the speculative reason are different and opposed to each other, but that the former is the superior, so that in the end we must believe and practically act on what we do not know to be true ? And is not this the converse of your view, Aristotle ? ' ' I suppose it is, but if that is your view, I tell you frankly that I never heard anything more absurd.' ' In that case it is lucky, perhaps, that it is not my view.' ' Who then has been confused enough in his mind to propound it ? ' ' It is the view of the great Scythian, Kant, who nearly criticised the reason out of the world.' ' Ah, I know, a queer little hunchback of a barbarian ! He came here once, not so long ago, but would not stay and could not say anything intelligible. I could only make out that he was seeking the Infinite (faugh !), and was impelled by something he called a Categorical Im perative (unknown alike to logic and to grammar). Possessed by evil demons he seemed to us. Nothing Hellenic about him at all events ! ' ' I don't wonder at what you say, nor that Plato agrees with you. Nevertheless, he was a remarkable man, on his 30 HUMANISM n way, perhaps, to a higher truth, to which we may follow him, passing through the absurdity of his actual view, which is far greater than I have had time to indicate.' ' Let us go on, then, at once to something more reasonable.' ' I will go on then to the view of the Pragmatists. May one not say, fourthly, that there is no opposition between speculative and practical wisdom because the former arises out of the latter and remains always deriva tive and secondary and subservient and useful ? ' ' One may say that or any other nonsense, but if one does, one must say what one means. And one cannot always prove what one says.' ' I thought that would excite you, Aristotle. But I thought it better to reveal to you the whole aim of my argument before I proceeded to reach it.' ' You are still far from your aim.' ' I am coming to it, in good time. Meanwhile have you observed that this position which I hope to reach is the exact converse of the first, of Plato's ? ' ' You mean that you also deny the opposition between dewpla and 7r/oa|t9, but derive the former from the latter ? ' ' Exactly so. I entirely deny the independence of the speculative reason. And I assert that you were quite wrong in drawing the distinctions you did between the objects of dewpia and of Trpagis.' ' Do you then deny that the good which is the aim of practical wisdom is merely human ? ' ' Not at all ; but I assert that the true, which you imagine to be in some sense superhuman, is also merely human. It is the true for us, the true for us as practical beings, just as the good is the good for us.' < How so?' ' Why, quite simply. Are not colour and shape and size perceived by the senses ? ' ' Certainly.' ' And are not the senses human, and relative to us and to our needs in life, in the same way as our perception of the good and the sweet ? ' ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 31 ' I don't see why I need suppose them to be merely human.' ' I don't see how you can show them to be anything more. How do you know that your fishes see white as you do ? And even if they did, that would only show that their senses were constructed like yours, and fitted to see and avoid you when you dangle a worm before their eyes with evil intent. And, generally, how do you fancy you can refute Protagoras' great maxim " that which appears to each, is ? " It is literally true, as soon as we look more exactly. Each being in the universe from your God (if indeed He be in the universe) down to the humblest blackbeetle, has his own individual way of perceiving his experience, and when we say that several perceive the same things what we really mean is that they act in a corresponding manner towards them. When you and I both see " red," that means that we agree in the arranging of colours, but leaves inscrutable (and indeed unmeaning) the question whether your experience in seeing " red " is the same as mine. ' And this agreement is both difficult, partial, and derivative. It is the fruit of much effort and of a long struggle, and not an original endowment. It has had to be carried to a certain pitch in order that it might be possible for men to live together at all. It has grown because it was useful and advantageous and those who could manage to perceive things in practically the same way prospered at the expense of those who could not. Thus the objectivity of our perceptions is essentially practical and useful and teleological. How then can you venture to ascribe to the gods, with whom you do not live, the perceptions which have come to exist as " the same " for your senses, only in order that you might be able to live with your fellow creatures ? ' ' Even though our senses are different may we not perceive by their means the divine order of the same universe which higher beings perceive by such modes of cognition as are worthy of them ? ' ' Really, Aristotle, it astonishes me that you, living in 32 HUMANISM „ a more real world, should still cling to the independently objective reality of the world you have now quitted for more than 2000 years. Do you perceive it now ? ' ' No, but I did, and it may still be a part of the world which I no longer perceive.' ' Where then is it with reference to your present world ? Is it north, south, east, or west ? Or is it not in the same space with it at all ? ' 4 Still it is in space. And I still perceive a world.' ' So does every one who dreams. Your perceiving it, therefore, is no proof that it is ultimately real. And if you had entirely forgotten what you experienced formerly, would you even be able to assert that it once was realtor you ? Would not its reality have become like unto the reality of a forgotten dream ? How can you venture, then, to attribute to all beings perception of one and the same world ? ' ' Perhaps I was mistaken about the world in which I then lived. But this present world at least is real, and seems to me fair enough to be worthy of being perceived even by the gods.' ' It is real no doubt for you, and for me also, while I am in it. But you may remember that what started the argument was the difficulty I had in convincing the denizens of your former world of the superior reality of this in which we now are. And, besides, how do you know that beings still higher than you, if you do not resent my mentioning such, may not enjoy the contempla tion of worlds vastly more perfect even than yours ? ' ' Still this process cannot go on to infinity. You must at last conceive a world of ultimate reality, the contempla tion of which by the supreme being would be absolute truth.' ' No doubt ; you are speaking of what Plato would call the world of Ideas. But still that does not affect the argument. The world and the truth and the good we were discussing are those relative to us.' ' I see that I was wrong in basing my argument for absolute truth on the perceptions of the senses. But of ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 33 the eternal truths of mathematics and the like one may surely affirm that they necessarily exist for all intelli gences ? ' ' Even this is more than I can grant you.' ' How so ? ' ' They seem to me to be also relative to us ; nay, human institutions of the plainest kind.' ' Is it not self-evident and absolutely certain that the straight line is the shortest between two points ? ' ' That is the definition of distance. It will do in the sense in which you use it, if I may add, " for one living in a spatial world which behaves like ours, and apparently yours, once he has succeeded in postulating a system of geometry which suits his world."' ' I really do not understand you.' ' I fear I have not the space to explain myself, and to show you the practical aim of our assumptions concerning " Space," even if I dared to discuss the foundations of geometry in the presence of Plato. But it really does not affect my point. What I desire to maintain is that the eternal truths are at bottom postulates, demands we make upon our experience because we need them in order that it may become a cosmos fit to live in.' ' But I do not find myself postulating them at all. They are plainly self-evident and axiomatic.' ' That is only because your axioms are postulates so ancient and so firmly rooted that no one now thinks of disputing them.' ' Your doctrine seems as monstrous as it is unfamiliar.' ' I can neither help that nor establish it fully at this juncture. Perhaps, if the gods are willing, I shall find another occasion l to expound to you the proofs of this doctrine, and even, if the gods are gracious, to convince you. For it seems to me that in a manner you already admit the principle of my doctrine.' ' It would greatly surprise me if I did.' ' You contend, do you not, that concerning ethical matters it is impossible to have the right opinion without, 1 See the essay on ' Axioms as Postulates ' in Personal Idealism. D 34 HUMANISM n at the same time or before, having the right habit of action ? ' ' And do I not contend rightly ? ' ' I am not denying that your view is right, though perhaps you over-emphasise the impossibility of separating ethical theory from ethical practice. What I should like you to see, however, is that this same doctrine may be extended also to speculative matters. Why should we not contend that the true meaning and right understanding of theoretical principles also appears only to him who is proposing to use them practically ? Can we not say that the Scythian was both prudent and wise who would not grant that 2 and 2 made 4 until he knew what use was to be made of the admission ? Just as the wicked man destroys his intellectual insight into ethical truth by his action,1 so the mere theorist destroys his insight and understanding of " theoretical " truth by refusing to use that truth and to apply it practically, failing to see that, both in origin and intention, it is a mass of thoroughly practical devices to enable us to live better.' ' I cannot admit that the two cases are at all parallel. In practical matters indeed I rightly hold that action and insight are so conjoined as not to admit of separation, but to extend this doctrine to the apprehension of theoretic truth would lead to many absurdities.' ' For instance ? ' ' Well, for one thing, you would have to go into training for the attainment of philosophic insight after the fashion of an Indian Gymnosophist whom I once met in Asia and who wished to convert me to the pernicious doctrine that all things were one.' ' How did he propose to effect this ? ' ' Well, in the first place he declared that truths could not be implanted in the soul by argument, but must grow out of its essence by its own action. So he refused to give any rational account of his opinions, but told me that if I submitted to his discipline, I should infallibly come to see for myself what he knew to be true. I asked 1 Cp. Eth. Nick. vi. 12, 10. ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 35 him how, and was amused to find that he wanted me to sit in the sun all day in a stiff and upright posture, breathing in a peculiar way, stopping the right nostril with the thumb, and then slowly drawing in the breath through the left, and breathing it out through the right. By doing this and repeating the sacred word " Om " ten athousand times daily, he assured me I should become a god, nay, greater than all gods. I asked him how soon this fate was likely to befal me, if I tried. He thought enlightenment might come to me in one year, or ten, or more. It all depended on me. I replied that even if I failed to get a sunstroke I should be more likely to become an idiot than a god, but that I should already be one if I tried anything so silly. You, however, seem to me to be committing yourself to the same absurdity when you try to extend to contemplation the method which is appropriate only to action.' ' But that, Aristotle, is just the point to be proved. My contention is that Pragmatism extends to the ac quisition of theoretical principles a method as appropriate to them as to practice. As for Gymnosophistic, I think that your Indian friend's method was really quite different. For though he professed to reach truth by training, there was no rational connexion between the truths he aimed at and the methods he advocated, which indeed could only produce self-deception. In moral matters, on the other hand, it is, as you say, necessary to dispose the mind for the perception of truth by appropriate action. If we declined to do this we should not start with a mind free from bias and impartially open to every belief — for that is impossible — but with one biassed by different action in a different direction. So that really the training you demand is only what is needed to clear away the anti- moral prejudices to which our character would otherwise predispose us. Is this not so ? ' ' Certainly ; you speak well so far.' ' Thank you. May I point out next that the method of Pragmatism is precisely the same in theoretic as in practical matters ? In neither can the truth or falsehood 36 HUMANISM n of a conception be decided in the abstract and without experience of the manner of its working. It gets its real meaning only in, from, and by, its use : apart from its use the meaning of any " truth " remains potential. And you can use it only if you desire to use it. And the desire to use it can only arise if it makes a difference to you whether or not you conceive it, and, if so, how. You must, therefore, desire, or, as I should say, postulate it, if you are to have it at all. If, on the other hand, your practical experience suggests to you that a certain con ception would be useful, if it were true, you will reasonably give it a trial to see whether it is not " true," and if thus you discover it and find that you can work with it, you will certainly call it " true " and believe that it is " true," and has been so from all eternity, and all this the more confidently and profoundly, the more extensively useful it appears. Thus it is by hypothetically postulating what we desire to be true because we expect it to be useful, and accepting it as true if we can in any way render it useful, that we seem to me manifestly to come by our principles. Nor do I see how we could really come by them in any other way, or that we should be prudent if we admitted their claims to truth on any other ground.' ' Might they not be self-evident ? ' ' Self-evidence only seems an accident of our state of mind and in no Way a complete guarantee of truth. Much that was false has been accepted as self-evident and no doubt still is. Its self-evidence only means that we have ceased to question a principle, or not yet begun to do so.' ' And can you not see that there are intrinsically necessary truths ? ' ' Not a bit. Unless by necessary you mean needful, an intrinsic necessity seems to me a contradiction. Necessity is always dependence, and so hypothetical.' ' You blaspheme horribly against the highest beings in the universe, the Deity and the Triangle ! ' ' Even though you should threaten to impale me on the acutest angle of the most acute-angled specimen of the latter you can find in your world of " necessary matter " USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 37 aX\o)9 e%eiy), 1 should not refrain from speaking thus. For I want you to see the exact point of my doctrine, and where it diverges from your own.' 'Of course — I see that. If you can prove your derivation of the Axioms and show that the necessary is only the needful, the speculative reason must say a long farewell to its independence.' ' Perhaps it will be none the worse for that.' At this point Plato interposed a question. ' Have I understood you rightly, most astonishing young man, to affirm that theoretic truth was wholly derivative and subservient to practical purposes ? ' ' You have.' ' In that case would you not have to regard theoretic falsehood as, in the last resort, practical uselessness ? ' ' You are quite right, Plato, and I am glad I have made my point so clear to you.' ' And would you contend generally that the " useless " and the " false " were not two things but one ? ' ' Not quite. For the useless is not always dismissed as " false." It may also be rejected as " unreal," as is done by those who, deeming dreams to be useless, account them unreal. And perhaps it might be most accurate to call the " useless " " unmeaning " rather than " false." But that hardly matters, for we surely may call the unmeaning " false " or " unreal " as suits our purpose.' ' It seems however that you do not say that the false is useless ? ' ' Certainly not, Plato, I would not deprive you of all men of your " noble lies ".' z ' Nor would you say that the useful and the true were quite the same ? ' ' Not, except in the ideal state, in which no use could be found but for the whole truth, and all were too reason able and too well educated to desire to pursue seeming " truths " which were useless and therefore to be judged false. But might we not ask Aristotle to tell us all that logically follows from the two propositions which I am 1 Republic, 414 C. 38 HUMANISM n maintaining, viz. that whatever is true is useful and that whatever is useless is false ? ' ' Yes. I think you could assist us greatly, Aristotle, by doing this.' ' I shall do so with the greatest pleasure, that, to wit, of logical contemplation. If whatever is true is useful it follows that (i) nothing true is useless, and (2) that notliing useless is true, that (3) whatever is useless is false, that (4) some things useful are true, and (5) not false, while (6) some things false are useless and (7) not useful. But since your second proposition that whatever is tiseless is false, is the third of those which follow from your first, that whatever is true is useful, being indeed its " obverted contra-positive," it is clear that in this also all the others are implied.' ' What a thing it is to be a formal logician and con versant with the forms of immediate inference ! I myself have never been able to break myself of the habit of trying to convert an universal affirmative simply, and I suppose I ought now to be able to guess how far you are from agreeing with a statement which I found lately in a book by one of your Oxford sophists,1 who seemed to be discussing much the same questions, that " the false is the same as the theoretically untenable " ? You would rather say that it was " the same as the practically untenable " ? ' ' Of course. Or rather I would go on to say that the theoretically untenable always turns out to be so called because it is practically untenable.' ' The sophist whom, with difficulty, I read seemed to see no way from the one to the other.' ' I don't suppose he wished to. It would have upset his whole philosophy, and you know how ready philosophers are to declare inexplicable and not to be grasped by man whatever " difficulty " reveals the errors into which they have plunged.' ' Yes, there is no Tartaros to which they would not willingly descend rather than confess that they have started on the wrong track. But even you have asserted 1 Bradley, Appearance and Reality, p. 155. ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 39 the existence of a better way rather than shown it to us.' ' I must confess, Plato, that much as I should have wished to show you that my way is both practical and practicable I have not had the time to do this. But if I had, I feel sure that I could do so.' ' Say on ; there is no limit but life itself to the search for Truth.' ' That is all very well for you, whose abode has been in these pleasant places for so long, and to whom, it seems, there comes neither death nor change. But / have to go back.' ' To your pupils ? ' ' Yes, and already I feel the premonitory heaviness in my feet. It will slowly creep upwards, and when it reaches the head I shall go to sleep and wake again in another world far from you.' ' I am sorry ; though it will interest us to see how you vanish. But before you pass away, will you not, seeing that all truth you say is practical, tell us what in this case is the practical application of the " truths " you have championed ? ' ' With the greatest pleasure, Plato, that is what I was coming back to. They form my excellent excuse for neglecting to tell men about your ideas.' ' I do not quite see how.' ' Why, so long as my knowledge of your world is useless to them, it is for them, literally and in the completest way, false ! ' ' But surely both they and you must admit that there is much useless knowledge ? ' ' There is much, of course, which is so called, and actually is useless for certain purposes, but nothing which can be so for all. Much that is ' useless ' is so because certain persons refuse to use it or are unable to do so. Pearls are useless to swine, and, as Herakleitos said, gold to asses. And so neither ass nor hog could truly call them precious. Or, again, often what is called useless is that which is indirectly useful. It is useful as logically 40 HUMANISM n completing a system of knowledge which is useful in other parts and as a whole. Or perhaps in some cases the use has not yet been discovered. A great deal of mathe matics would be in this position. Or lastly, there is a good deal of knowledge which is comparatively, or as Aristotle would say, accidentally, useless, because the time spent in acquiring it might be more usefully employed otherwise. For instance, you might count the hairs on Aristotle's head, and the knowledge might enable you to win a bet that their number was less than a myriad. But ordinarily such knowledge would be deemed useless seeing that you might have been better employed.' ' But would these explanations cover all the facts ? ' ' Not perhaps quite all in our world, in which there is also seeming " useless knowledge," which is not really knowledge at all, but falsely so called ; being as it were a parasitic growth upon the real and useful knowledge, or even a perversion thereof, a sort of harmless tumour or malignant cancer, which would not arise in a healthy state and should be extirpated wherever it appears.' ' Still it exists.' ' As evil exists ; indeed it seems to be merely one aspect of the evil that exists.' ' Are you not now extending your explanations so far that your paradox is in danger of becoming a truism ? Can you any longer give me an instance of really useless knowledge ? ' ' Of course not, Plato, seeing that my contention is that whatever is truly knowledge is useful, and whatever is not useful is not truly knowledge, while in proportion as any alleged knowledge is seen to be useless it is in danger of being declared false ! The only illustration I can give, therefore, is of knowledge falsely so-called, which is thought to be useful, but is really useless, and therefore false or, if you prefer, unmeaning.' ' Even of that we should like an example.' ' I see, Plato, that you are willing to embroil me with most of the philosophers in my world. For if I am to ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 41 speak what is in my mind, I must say that knowledge of the Absolute or, what comes to the same, of the Un knowable, seems to me to be of the kind you require. Aristotle, no doubt, might speak similarly of your own Idea of the Good.' ' Oh, but I intended it to be supremely useful both in knowledge and in action.' ' No doubt you did, but because you were not able to make this plain, Aristotle would not admit it to be true.' ' We had better let bygones be bygones.' ' Very well ; let me in that case give you another example, which now concerns us nearly, of knowledge which seems false, because it seems useless. I mean knowledge about the world in which we now are, regarded with the eyes of those whom in a little while I shall no longer dare to call benighted dwellers in the Cave. Until we can make our world useful to them, it is false : I am a liar and you are the unreal figments of my creative imagination.' 'You quite alarm me. Can you not devise a way, then, whereby we might prove ourselves useful, and so existent, to your friends ? ' ' Certainly. Could you not appear at a meeting of the Society for Psychical Research and deliver a lecture, in your beautiful Attic, on the immortality of the soul ? That would be very useful ; it might induce some few really to concern themselves with what is to befal them after death, and lead them perhaps to amend their lives. I know the Secretary of the Society quite well, and I think we could arrange a good meeting for you ! ' ' Ev^tjpei wvOptoire. I could not think of such a thing : it would be too degrading. Besides, to tell you the truth, I have long ceased to feel any practical interest in the generality of men and their world. I would do something for you, but you already know and do not need persuading. Can I not do something to benefit you personally, whether it was useful, and therefore con vincing, to others or not ? ' 42 HUMANISM n ' I suppose, Plato, it is conceivable that you could, if you liked, but that it is very likely that you would not like.' ' I have already told you that I will do anything short of mixing myself up with a world like yours. I once tried it, soon after I came here, but I soon discovered that Herakleitos was right in thinking that souls retained their power of smell. Indeed, I suppose my nose must have become absurdly sensitive, for I was driven back by the stench of blood before I had got very far into its sphere. I simply could not go on.' ' I do not wonder. Things are as bad as ever in this respect, except that we have grown more hypocritical about our murders. But I can tell you how you could not only help me, but even persuade the others.' ' How ? ' ' By useful knowledge.' ' Of what ? ' ' Could you not by some divination predict to me what horses were about to win what races, or what stocks were going to rise or fall how far ? Such know ledge would be most useful and therefore truest by the admission of all men : it would enable me to amass great riches, and if I were rich enough all would believe whatever I might choose to say. Money talks, as the saying is, and none dare doubt but that it speaks the truth. In this manner I might get men to credit the whole story of my visit to you. For my credit would then be practically limitless.' ' I suppose you are joking and do not seriously expect of me anything so atrocious. Besides, why should you attribute to me, or to any of those who have departed to higher spheres, any such capacity for knowing what goes on in the world we are glad to have abandoned ? ' ' I am sure I don't know ; only that is what men commonly suppose about such matters. They think that there is far more education in death than ever there was in life, and that even the greatest fool, as soon as ever he is dead, may be expected to be wise enough to ii 'USELESS' KNOWLEDGE 43 know all things, and good enough to place his knowledge at their disposal.' ' They seem to me as foolish as they are selfish.' ' No doubt ; still there is that germ of truth about their action which we saw. Whatever knowledge cannot be rendered somehow useful cannot be esteemed real.' ' Alas, that it should be so ! ' ' I do not on the whole regret it, although I can see it must annoy you to be considered as part of the non existent of which you always thought so meanly. But really I must be going, and return to my Cave to convince, if possible, my fellow Troglodytes that you still live and think, and to impress on them, if I can, the importance of the " two-world problem," both for its own sake and as an illustration of the truth of Pragmatism.' Ill TRUTH x ARGUMENT Importance of the question What is Truth ? when not asked rhetorically. I. Answers logical, (i) Truth as agreement with reality. Breaks down over the question of the knowledge of this agreement. (2) Truth as systematic coherence. Open to objections on the ground (i) that not all systems true ; (2) no system true ; (3) many systems are true ; (4) truth even if system, is more than system, (i) How about systematic false hood ? (2) How about the imperfection of all actual systems ? (3) How about the possibility of alternative systems ? (4) How about systems not accepted as true because distasteful, and agreeable truth accepted without being systematic ? Is this last argument an invalid appeal to psychology ? No, for there is no ' pure ' thought, and without psychological interest, etc. , thought could neither progress nor be described. The psychological side of ' system ' and ' coherence. ' The necessity of immediate appre hension. Coherence feelings. The infinite regress in inference if its immediacy be denied. Non-logical 'coherence.' Interest as the cause of coherence. II. Answers psychological. Question as to (i) the psychical nature of the recognition of truth ; (2) the objects to which this recognition is referred. ( I ) Truth as a forrrf of value. Valuation at first random and individual. Question of the ultimateness of the truth-valuation. Meaning ' simple ' and ' complex ' for a pragmatist psychology. Truth-valuation ' simple ' for logic. III. (2) Objectivity of truth. 'Truth' and 'fact,' 'formal ' as a means to 'material' truth. Subjective truth-valuations gradually organised (i) into subordination to individual, (2) into conformity with social ends. Usefulness as the principle of selection and criterion of truth. Need for the social recognition of truth. Special cases explained. Of all philosophic questions that of Truth is perhaps the most hackneyed and unanswerable, when treated in the usual fashion. Now the usual fashion is to indulge either in ecstatic rhapsodies about the sacredness of 1 This paper was written for this volume in order to complete, with Axioms as Postulates and the two essays which precede it, the outline of a pragmatist theory of knowledge. It will, I hope, be observed that although these four papers do not of course claim to be exhaustive, they supplement one another. 44 in TRUTH 45 Truth or in satirical derision of pretensions to have actually attained it. Both these procedures are assured beforehand of popular applause, but both render the question — What is Truth ? one thoroughly rhetorical, and so perhaps the one is the proper answer to the other, and ' jesting Pilate ' has a right to smile at the enthusiast. Nor have the philosophers done much to improve the situation. Ever since one of Plato's ' noblest lies ' proclaimed the doctrine that philosophers are lovers of truth, they have been quite willing to believe this, and have often found a people willing to be deceived politely willing to admit it. But perhaps because their passion, even when most genuine, was too distantly ' platonic,' this philosophic love of truth has hardly influenced perceptibly the course of things, and it might remain in doubt whether the Pragmatist philosopher also would care and dare to obtain some more substantial token of Truth's favours, were it not that the cheapest condemna tion of his new attempt is to accuse him of a malicious joy in the destruction of Truth's very notion. It becomes incumbent on him therefore to defend himself against such slanders, and to make clear how exactly he proposes to approach, and in what sense to derive, the notion of Truth. I intend, therefore, in this essay to examine — I. the chief current definitions of Truth, which lay claim to logical validity, and to show that they are neither tenable, nor even intelligible, without reference to its psychological character ; II. to describe that psychological character ; and III. to explain how Pragmatism extends and alters the traditional conceptions on the subject. Under the head of unpsychological, logical, or ' meta physical' definitions may be instanced (i) the well-known dictum that truth consists in an ' agreement ' or ' corre spondence ' of thought with its object, viz. reality. This however speedily leads to a hopeless impasse, once the 46 HUMANISM m question is raised — How are we to know whether or not our ' truth ' ' corresponds ' or ' agrees ' with its real object ? For to decide this question must we not be able to compare ' thought ' and ' reality,' and to contemplate each apart from the other? This however seems impossible. ' Thought ' and ' Reality ' cannot be got apart, and consequently the doctrine of their ' correspondence ' has in the end no meaning. We are not aware of any reality except by its representation in our ' thought,' and per contra, the whole meaning of ' thought ' resides ultimately in its reference to ' reality.' Again, even if it were assumed that somehow the independent reality mirrored itself in our thought, how should we discover whether or not this image was ' true,' i.e. agreed with the in accessible reality it claimed to represent ? This whole theory of truth therefore would seem futile. Having started from the radically untrue and unworkable assumption that ' truth ' and ' fact,' ' thought ' and ' reality,' are two things which have to be brought into relation, it is inevitably driven to the admission that no such relation can validly be established. (2) A second logical definition looks at first more promising. It conceives truth as essentially systematic coherence, the ' true ' being that which ' fits ' into a ' system,' the ' false ' that which is discrepant with it. This has the immense advantage of not creating the chasm between ' truth ' and ' reality ' in which the former definition was engulfed. Both these conceptions remain immanent in the process of knowledge, which is the construction of a system of ' reality ' known to be ' true ' by the coherence of its parts. Now this account undoubtedly brings out important features in the nature of Truth, but as it stands, it is so incomplete and misleading that we can hardly follow the fashionable logic of the day in accepting it as all we can reasonably want to know about truth. In fact, when we discount the air of mystery, the obscure phraseology and the pompous magniloquence with which this doctrine is propounded, we shall find that all it comes to is that in TRUTH 47 consistency is a mark of truth, and that when we find that we can maintain our conceptual interpretations of our experiences we come to treat them as realities. But to take the pronouncement that truth is what Jits in a system as therefore final would be ludicrously rash, and to detect the limitations of the formula, it suffices to consider what may be said in favour of a string of counter-propositions, such as, e.g. (i) that not all ' systems ' are true, (2) that no 'system' is 'true, (3) that many systems are true, and (4) that even if all truth be systematic, it is not thereby adequately defined. (1) To define truth as systematic is at once to raise the question of systematic falsehood. For there can be no doubt that false assumptions also tend to complete themselves in a system of inferences, to cohere together, to assimilate fresh facts, and to interpret them into con formity with themselves; in short, to assume all the logical features that are claimed for ' truth.' Does it not follow, therefore, that something more than systematic coherence is needed to determine truth ? As, therefore, not all systems are true, must we not suggest a further criterion to distinguish true from false ? The reply to this objection would have to take the form largely of an acceptance thereof. It would have to be admitted that in proportion as a falsehood or a lie became more systematic, its prospects of being accepted as true grew greater, that coherent lies did often win acceptance, and that a perfectly coherent lie (or error) would be tantamount to absolute truth. Lies can be called false only when they have been found out, and they are found out just because sooner or later they do not fit into our system of ' truth.' These systematic falsehoods are never quite systematic enough, and so the mimicry of truth by false systems, so far from subverting, rather con firms the doctrine that truth is systematic. (2) This defence prepares the way for a new assault. It would be adequate if we really had an indefeasible system of absolute truth by whose aid we might detect the inconsistencies of the pseudo- systems. But where 48 HUMANISM m shall we find such truth ? The bodies of ' truth ' which de facto we acknowledge in our sciences are all partial systems, incomplete in themselves and discrepant with each other. If nothing short of absolute truth is perfectly systematic, and if all our systems are imperfect, is not all our ' truth ' tainted with falsehood, and must it not be admitted that no (actual) ' systems ' are ' true ' ? To talk of the mimicry of true by false systems is misleading ; we should remember that, in addition to the protective mimicry of Bates, there exists another form (' Miillerian ') in which the mimics co-operate to advertise the undesirable character they have in common. And so our systems may all be mimicking each other and may all be false. Again, I think, the contention must in substance be admitted. The actual systems of our sciences are con tinually being convicted of error, and cannot seriously sustain their claim to the deference due only to the perfect system. Still, in extenuation one might urge (a] that ignorance is not necessarily error, nor incompleteness falsehood ; ($) that experience would seem to show that even when coherent systems of interpretation have to be recast, what occurs is a transformation rather than a revolution, reinterpreting rather than destroying the ' truths ' of the older order. Though, therefore, our ' systems ' may not be wholly ' true,' we may conceive them as progressively approximating to the truth. And so (c} we must conceive them as in the end converging in one absolute and all-embracing system which alone would be indubitably and strictly ' true.' (3) This last defence, however, still contains a hazardous assumption. Is the ideal of a complete system absolutely true really the straightforward, unambiguous notion which it seems ? Are we entitled to argue from the unity of a concept to a similar unity of the concrete ways of exempli fying that concept, and so to assume that there is one system and no more, into which all truth must finally be fitted ? The assumption is a seductive one, and underlies all monistic argument. But still it is an assumption, and begs some very puzzling questions. It assumes the in TRUTH 49 absolute determination of the universe, and it is only on this assumption that the inference is cogent, that ' truth ' and ' reality ' can only be completely construed in one single way. If we doubt, or deny, or demand proof, of this assumption, it may well be that many alternative systems may be ' true,' that ' reality ' can be constructed in various ways by our varying efforts. The poet may have exaggerated in suggesting There are nine-and-sixty ways Of composing tribal lays, And every single one of them is right ; but still the more sincerely and completely we recognise the presence of human activity in the construction of ' truth ' and ' reality,' the more clearly is their contingence suggested, and the less plausible does it seem that all these apparently arbitrary procedures are foredoomed to issue in the unveiling of one single, inevitable, and pre-existing ' system.' And if we doubt the legitimacy of this assump tion, it follows at once that we cannot decide the measure of truth possessed by our actual bodies of knowledge by the mere test of systematic coherence. System A may need reinterpretation into A' to fit in with system B in the final system X ; but we might as well or better reinterpret B into B', so that it would fit with A into the final system Y. In such a case are we to consider A + B' or A' + B as ultimately true ? In short, our logic as well as our metaphysic will have to concern itself more scrupulously and less perfunctorily with pluralistic possibilities. (4) The last objection has brought out the fact that in assuming truth to be univocally determined by the con ception of a ' system,' we went too far, and uncritically settled an important issue ; we have now to face a criticism urging that the conception of a system in another direction does not go far enough to determine the nature of ' truth.' To win from us recognition as ' truth,' it is not enough to have a number of coherent judgments connected in a system. The ' system ' to be true must also have value E 50 HUMANISM m in our eyes ; the demand for ' system ' is but part of a larger demand for a ' harmony ' (actual or at least ideal) in our experience ; it is not merely a matter of formal logical consistency, but also of emotional satisfaction. Hence no system is judged intellectually ' true ' unless it is also a good deal more than this, and embraces and satisfies other than the abstractly intellectual aspects of experience. Thus no completely pessimistic system is ever judged completely ' true ' ; because it leaves unre- moved and unresolved a sense of final discord in existence, it must ever stimulate anew to fresh efforts to overcome the discrepancy.1 And conversely, it is by no means rare that what impresses us as conducive to harmony should be declared ' true ' with little or no inquiry into its syste matic coherence ; indeed, it is probably such perception of their aesthetic self-evidence that accounts for the adoption of the ' axiomatic ' postulates that form first principles for knowledge.2 Thus the notion of ' system ' proves doubly insufficient to define ' truth.' There is ' system ' which is not valued as ' true,' and there is ' truth ' which is so valuable that it need not be ' system.' We need ' system ' only as a means to the higher notion of ' harmony,' 3 and where we can get the latter without the former, we can readily dis pense with it. The bulk, however, of logicians would in all probability strenuously object to this last argument. They would protest against the contamination of the question of ' truth ' with questions of ' harmony ' and ' valuation.' To refer to these is to overpass the bounds of logic, it is to trespass on the lower ground of psychology in which thought soon gets bogged in the reedy marshes of psychical fact. No good can come of such an intermixture of psychology with logic ; our criterion of truth must be logical, our thought ' pure.' To talk of desire, interest, and feeling in a logical context is sheer madness, and to require logical theory to take account of their existence is to require it to adjust itself to the alogical. 1 Cp. p. 200. 2 Cp. Personal Idealism, p. 123. 3 Cp. p. 189. in TRUTH 51 If the defence of logical conventions is imprudent enough to take this ground, it can meet with nothing but disaster. For we shall at once have to defy the logician (i) to produce his 'pure' thought ; (2) to account for the movement of thought by anything but an appeal to psychological motives, desire, feeling, interest, attention, will, etc. ; (3) even to describe what he conceives to happen in strictly logical terms and without constant recourse to psychology. The first two of these points will probably be conceded by all except belated Hegelians, but the third may need some illustration, the more so as we may draw from it also an independent (fifth) reason for denying the adequacy of the conception of truth as a system. I may point out therefore (5) that the ultimate terms of this (as of every other) definition of Truth are primarily psychological. If we take it that a ' system ' means a body of coherent judgments, it needs but a little reflection to see that the logical evaluation of the 'system' presupposes its psychical existence, and the previous discussion of a number of psychological questions. (i) How, e.g. is the system recognised? (2) What is the nature, and (3) the cause of its ' coherence ' ? As to (i) it must surely be admitted that the logical system to be a system for us must be apprehended as such by us. Before, that is, an alleged ' truth ' can be subjected to logical reflection, it has to be actually judged ' true ' ; its truth has to be felt before it is understood. Even, therefore, if logic could find and reserve for itself among our conscious processes such a thing as a process of ' pure ' thought, a distinct mental act would yet be necessary for its apprehension, and this act would be psychological. In other words, any actually occurring truth is, in the first place, a psychic process, and as such is conditioned by a variety of psychological influences of the kind just mentioned. The attempt, therefore, to represent ' thought ' and a fortiori ' truth,' as wholly an affair of mediation fails ; at every step in its progress the mediate inference has to 52 HUMANISM m be immediately recognised, and the mediate ' knowledge- about ' rests upon and returns into an immediate ' acquaint- ance-with.'1 If, therefore, we call them respectively ' thought ' and ' feeling,' we shall have to say that an ' element ' of ' feeling ' is bound up with and accompanies every act of ' thought,' and that no actual thought either is or can be conceived as ' pure.' Now if such be the state of the case, why on earth, should it not be recognised in logic ? Logic, I presume, in the very act of constituting norms for thought, pre supposes the facts of thought, and if all actual thinking, good, bad, or indifferent, is impelled by interest, then interest ipso facto must become a factor in the logical analysis of thought. Why, then, should we insist on tortuous and complicated misdescriptions in terms of ' pure thought ' of processes which are quite simple when we consent to regard their full psychic nature ? 2 (2) Mutatis mutandis, what has been said of the logical system applies also to its ' coherence.' The coherence of judgments is a psychical fact which justifies, nay demands, psychological treatment. We find accord ingly that it is (a) a matter of immediate apprehension. However we refine upon the logical concept of coherence, we can do nothing without observing that de facto judg ments stick together. (&) We observe also certain co herence ' feelings,' whose strength is best measured by that of the feeling of (logical) necessity 3 which supervenes when we try to part the ' coherent ' judgments. Truths ' cohere ' when they afford us the peculiar satisfaction of feeling that they 'belong together,' and that it is 'impossible' to separate them.4 1 James, Princ. of Psych, i. p. 221. - All the squabbles about the ' activity ' or ' movement ' of thought are due to perversities of this sort. Abstract thought is not active, or even alive ; it does not exist. What is active is the thinking being with a certain psychical idio syncrasy in consequence whereof he pursues his ends by various means, among which thinking is one. The nature of his thought everywhere refers to the purpose of his thinking. 3 See Personal Idealism, p. 70, note. 4 It is never strictly impossible to reject a 'truth,' only in some cases the cost is excessive. To accept, e.g. a formal contradiction, stultifies the assumption of all thinking, and should consequently debar us from the further use of thinking. in TRUTH 53 And (V) if the cohesion of our thoughts, the belonging together, e.g. of A — B, were not immediately felt, but had to be established by mediate reasoning, it would follow that for any two truths to cohere a reason would have to be alleged why they should do so. But this would have to be another truth, and the attempt to ' understand ' the immediate psychical cohesion would have to be renewed upon this, until it became obvious that an infinite process was implicit in the simplest inference.1 Is it not much more reasonable to suppose that the cohesiveness is a psychical feature of the thinking itself? Finally (d] it would seem that not every sort of coherence in thought was regarded as logically important. The sort of coherences, e.g. which proceed from associations and lead to puns and plays upon words are relegated to that undignified limbo in which fallacies are huddled together. But if not all coherence is logical, then the logician plainly needs a preliminary psychology to distinguish for him the kind of coherence which is his concern. (3) If logic is to make the attempt to exclude psychology, the real cause of logical coherence must be pronounced to be extralogical. For it is nothing that can plausibly be represented 2 as inherent in the nature of thought qua thought, i.e. of thought as logicians abstractly conceive it. The cause of logical coherence may be summed up in the one word interest, and ' thought ' which is not set in motion by interest does not issue in thinking at all. If, therefore, interest is to be tabooed, the whole theory of thought becomes a mere mass of useless machinery. For it is interest which starts, propels, This is too much, and we usually prefer to reconsider the thought that has ended in a contradiction. Moreover, if we desire to entertain contradictory beliefs, there is a much easier way ; we have merely to refuse to think them together. This indeed is what the great majority of men have always done. 1 For an amusing illustration of this existence of an immediate apprehension in all mediate cogency see ' Lewis Carroll's ' dialogue between Achilles and the Tortoise in Mind, N.S. No. 14, p. 278. 2 I am willing to suppose it just possible to translate all the features of our thinking into a completely and consistently intellectualist phraseology. Philo sophers have made endless attempts to do so, but none have succeeded, though it is I suppose a merit of Hegel's to have tried more elaborately, and to have failed more obscurely, than the rest. But the philosophers' insistence on reducing everything to pure thought is merely one of their professional prejudices. 54 HUMANISM m sustains, and guides the ' movement ' of our thought. It effects the necessary selection among the objects of our attention, accepting what is consonant, and rejecting what is discrepant, with our aim in thinking. If, then, the purposiveness of our thought is its central feature psycho logically, how can a logic set it aside without the grossest travesty? How fundamental is the fact of purposive interest in mental life is apparent from the cases where the normal control of consciousness is weakened or suspended. In sleepiness, reverie, dream, delirium, mad ness, etc., the purposive guidance of our thought grows lax — with the result that anarchy speedily overtakes the soul. Thoughts ' cross ' the mind in the most ' illogical ' way, and though our mental images may still continue to carry meaning, they have ceased to mean anything coherent, and pro tanto logical thinking ceases to exist. Thus in trying to understand the doctrine that truth is system we have been driven to the conclusion that in psychology, if anywhere, the clue to the mystery of truth must lie. For not only the definitions we have examined, but all others of the sort, must presuppose a psychological treatment of the psychical facts.2 II Let us turn therefore to psychology. And to begin with let us formulate our pyschological questions more precisely, as (i) what is the psychical nature of the ' recognition* of ' truth1 ? and (2) to what part of our experience is this recognition attached1} To the first question the summary answer would appear to be that Truth is a form of Value, and for this reason related to, and largely interchangeable with, our other modes of valuation. Now such valuation of our experience is a natural, and in the normal consciousness an almost uninterrupted, process. We are for ever judging things as ' true ' and ' false,' ' good ' and ' bad,' 1 The definition, e.g. that truth is what we are forced to believe, obviously implies psychological presuppositions as to the nature of 'belief and 'necessity.' in TRUTH 55 ' beautiful ' and ' ugly,' ' pleasant ' and ' unpleasant' So continuous is this habit that existence without ' appreci ation/ ' fact ' without ' value,' is rather a figment of abstraction than a psychical experience. Now it is the de facto existence of this habit of valuation that gives rise to the normative sciences, and the function of logic as a normative science is to regulate and systematise our valuations of ' true ' and ' false.' For of course thes^ logical valuations also will need normative treatmen At first they are bestowed by individuals pretty much at random. Anything may commend itself to anybody, as ' true,' nay, even as the truth,1 and there are no guarantees that any man's valuations will be consistent with any other man's, or even with his own at other times. It is only as the needs of social intercourse and of consistent living grow more urgent that de facto ' truth ' grows systematic and ' objective,' i.e. that there come to be truths which are ' the same for all.' And finally, when most of the hard work has actually been done, the logician arises and ' reflects ' on the genesis of ' truth,' which, in the end, he mostly misrepresents. It is fairly plain, therefore, that the psychical fact of the existence of truth-valuation must be the starting-point of the psychological account of truth. Whether it should be called the foundation of the whole structure, or whether it should not be likened to the intrinsic nature of the bricks of which the structure is built up, seems to be a matter of the choice of metaphors. It is clear at any rate that without this valuation there would be no ' truth ' at all. Of course, however, further psychological questions may be raised about it. We may ask, for instance, whether the fact that we judge things true and false is psychologically simple and ultimate, or whether we could not analyse out a common element of value from our various valuations. The answer to such questions might grow long and somewhat intricate, but we are hardly bound to go into them very deeply. It will suffice to 1 Cp. the inexhaustible variety of the ' systems ' of religion and philosophy. 56 HUMANISM m point out that the ' simple ' in psychology can only mean what it is no use to analyse further.1 In other words, the distinction of ' simple ' and ' complex ' is always relative to the purpose of the inquiry. The ' elements ' out of which the ' complex ' states of mind are put together do not exist as psychic facts. In the actual experiencing, most states of consciousness form peculiar and recognisable wholes of experience, which feel ( simple.' Thus the taste of lemonade is emphatically not the taste of sugar plus the taste of lemon ; though of course it is by squeezing the lemon and dissolving the sugar that we compose the lemonade and procure ourselves the taste. The ex periences which really are ' complex ' to feeling are comparatively rare, as as e.g. when we feel the struggle of incompatible desires. On the other hand, when we reflect upon our experience, it is easy enough to represent it all as ' complex,' and to break it up into factors, which, we say, were present unobserved in the experience. But the justification of this procedure is that it enables us to control the original experience, and the factors which the 4 analysis ' arrives at are whatever aids this purpose. It is in no wise incumbent on us to go on making distinc tions for their own sake and from inconsistent points of view, without aim and without end. Indeed the practice, though it seems to form the chief delight of some philosophers, must be pronounced to be as such trivial, irrelevant, and invalid. We have a right therefore to declare ' simple ' and ultimate what it is useless to treat as ' complex ' for the purpose in hand, and in this instance we shall do well to avail ourselves of this right. For an analysis of the valuation ' true ' and ' false,' whether or not it is possible for other purposes, would hardly be germane to logic. 1 I owe this definition to Prof. A. W. Moore's excellent account of the functional theory of knowledge in Locke in the Chicago University Contributions to Philosophy, vol. iii. p. 23. in TRUTH 57 in We are however still sufficiently remote from what is ordinarily meant by ' truth.' For truth is conceived as something ' objective ' and ' coherent,' while the truth- valuations we have recognised are subjective and so far seem chaotic. We may have found indeed the bricks out of which the temple of Truth is to be built, but as yet we have but a heap of bricks and nothing like a temple. Before, moreover, we can venture to erect the actual structure of objective Truth we must consider (a) the nature of the ground over which the truth-valuation is used, ($) the way in which our bricks cohere, i.e. the ' formal ' nature of truth. As to («), the use of ' truth ' lies in the valuation of ' fact.' The objects of our contemplation when valued as ' true ' become ' facts,' and ' facts ' (or what we take to be such) become available for knowledge when valued as 'true.' The system of truth therefore is constructed by an interpretation of ' fact.' But this interpretation conforms to certain building laws, as it were. It consists in the use of concepts, and rests on the fundamental principles of thought. Hence ($) these result in a certain formal character of truth. Whatever is harmonious (' consistent ') with the fundamental assumptions of our conceptual interpretation of reality is in one sense ' true.' But it is truth in a narrower sense than that required for ' material ' truth.1 In its fullest sense our truth must harmonise, not only with its own ways of thinking but with our whole experience, and it might well be that the merely formal truth of consistency proved unable to attain results of value for our wider purpose, and so was not fully ' true.' In point of fact it is useful, though not adequate ; to show that a ' truth ' follows formally is not enough to prove it de facto true ; to show that it involves a formal flaw is enough to invalidate it. For we would rather renounce our conclusion than the use of our formal principles. 1 Cp. p. 98 note. 58 HUMANISM m After premising which we may return to our problem of constructing an objective truth out of subjective truth- valuations, of, as we saw, the most varied nature. Every one of these subjective valuations is the product of a psychological interest, and aims at the satisfaction of such an interest. But even in the individual there is a good deal of regulation of his subjective valuations ; there is a tendency to the consolidation and subordination of interests under the main purposes of his life. Hence many of his initial interests will be suppressed, and the valuations which ministered to them will tend to be withdrawn, to be judged useless and, ultimately, false. In other words, there begins to operate among our subjective truth-valuations the great Pragmatist principle of selection, viz. that the ' useless ' is not to be valued as ' true.' The ' use ' appealed to and the ' truth ' extracted by this criterion are, it is true, only individual. But not even of the individual is it true to say that his feeling a thing ' true ' and calling it so makes it so. The question of the sustaining of the valuation after it is made is a distinct one, and that perhaps to which we mostly want an answer when we inquire : What is truth ? This question becomes more intricate, but also more interesting, when we take into account the social environ ment. For man is a social being, and truth indubitably is to a large extent a social product. For even though every truth may start in a minority of one, its hold upon existence is exceedingly precarious, unless it can con trive to get itself more extensively appreciated. Those unfortunate enough to have acquired and retained an exclusive view of truth are usually secluded in prisons or asylums, unless their ' truth ' is so harmlessly abstruse as not to lead to action, when they are sometimes allowed to be philosophers ! Truth, then, to be really safe, has to be more than an individual valuation ; it has to win social recognition, to transform itself into a common property. But how? It is by answering this question that Pragmatism claims to have made a real advance in our in TRUTH 59 comprehension of truth. It contends that once more, only more signally and clearly than in the individual's case, it is the usefulness and efficiency of the propositions for which ' truth ' is claimed that determines their social recognition. The use -criterion selects the individual truth -valuations, and constitutes thereby the objective truth which obtains social recognition. Hence in the fullest sense of Truth its definition must be pragmatist. Truth is the useful, efficient, workable, to which our practical experience tends to restrict our truth-valuations ; if anything the reverse of this professes to be true, it is (sooner or later) detected and rejected. As an account of Truth this is not so much a speculative theory as a description of plain fact. When ever we observe a struggle between two rival theories of events we find that it is ultimately the greater con- duciveness of the victor to our use and convenience that determines our preference and its consequent acceptance as true. Illustrations of this fact might be multiplied without limit. It will suffice however to allude to the well - known fact that what decided the rejection of the Ptolemaic epicycles in favour of the Copernican astronomy was not any sheer failure to represent celestial motions, but the growing cumbrousness of the assumptions and the growing difficulty of the calculations which its ' truth ' involved. Similarly when I affirm (as I have now been doing for a good dozen years) that the metaphysical theory of the Absolute Is false, I only mean that it is useless, that it simplifies nothing and complicates everything, and that its supposed advantages are one and all illusory. And I hope that as the pragmatist way of looking at things grows to be more familiar, more of my philosophic confreres will allow themselves to perceive these simple facts. Of course there still remain complications of detail about the doctrine that social usefulness is an ultimate determinant of ' truth.' It is obvious, for example, that delicate questions may arise out of the fact that not only does what works receive social recognition, but also that 60 HUMANISM in what receives social recognition for this very reason largely works. Again, there may be old-established mental industries which have outlived their usefulness, but have not yet been condemned as false. Other truths again are intrinsically of so individual a character that society accepts, e.g. Smith's statement that he has a headache, or that he dreamt a dream, on his ipse dixit. And while new truths are struggling for recognition, it may come about that much that is useful is thought to be useless and vice versa, and that the discrepancy between truth as it is supposed, and as it turns out, to be, grows great. Then, again, few societies are so severely organised with a sole view to efficiency as not to tolerate a considerable number of useless persons pursuing 1 useless ' knowledge, or useful knowledge in a useless way. Of course there is a certain amount of social pressure brought to bear upon such persons, but it is not enough to produce complete social agreement, and the elimination of all discrepant truth. Indeed, the toleration of socially useless, and even pernicious ' truths,' which are individually entertained, seems on the whole to be increasing. This only shows that we can afford the luxury. In earlier times the thinkers of divergent views had short shrift granted them, and so as the result of much past brutality we now enjoy considerable bodies of ' objective ' truth. And considering how much use philosophers have always made of this indulgence to differ from their fellows, it would be gracious if they at least gave honour where honour was due, and appreciated the labours of their ancestors, instead of attributing the whole credit of the conformity which exists to the initial constitution of the Absolute. Or if they insist on it, they might at least, in common fairness, attempt to tell us to whom the discredit should attach for the discrepancy and nonconformity, which exist no less and are by far more troublesome, even if they are too indolent to help in the practical work of science, which enlarges the limits of practical agreement and constitutes objective truth. To sum up ; the answer to the question — What is in TRUTH 61 Truth ? — to which our Pragmatism has conducted us, is this. As regards the psychical fact of the truth- valuation, Truth may be called an ultimate function of our intel lectual activity. As regards the objects valued as 'true,' Truth is that manipulation of them which turns out upon trial to be useful, primarily for any human end, but ultimately for that perfect harmony of our whole life which forms our final aspiration. IV LOTZE'S MONISM1 ARGUMENT Lotze's proof of Monism fails because (i) he was not entitled to postulate an underlying unity of things ; (2) his argument for it is unsound and con tradictory ; (3) it has no scientific value, nor (4) can it be equated with God ; nor (5), even when it has been, does it contribute anything to religious philosophy. (i) A Unity of the Universe or Absolute, on Lotze's own showing, is not needed to explain the interaction of things, and in its sole tenable form is insufficient to refute Pluralism. Lotze's own view of Substance refutes his Absolute. (2) Lotze not entitled to hypos- tasise his unity, nor is its immanent causality more intelligible than the transeunt causality of things. The argument from commensurability invalid. Can commensurability be conceived as a fortuitous growth ? (3) The Absolute guarantees neither causality, nor orderly succession, nor change, nor rationality, nor the existence of spiritual beings. (4) Its identification with God assumed and not proved, and really impossible. (5) It aggravates the problem of Freedom, Change, and Evil. A real ' God ' must be a moral being and provable a posteriori from the facts of our actual world. All the a priori proofs worthless because too wide. LOTZE'S reputation as a sound and cautious thinker deservedly stands so high that any attempt to question the cogency of his argument is naturally received with suspicion, and needs to be fully and clearly established before its conclusions can win acceptance. As, however, no true view is in the long run strengthened by stifling the objections against it, and no false view can in the end be considered beneficial to the highest interests of man kind without thereby implying a profoundly pessimistic divorce between Truth and Goodness, I will venture to set forth my reasons for denying the success of Lotze's proof of Monism. And while I trust that my criticism 1 Reprinted (with some additions) from The Philosophical Review of May 1896. 62 iv LOTZE'S MONISM 63 will always remain sensible of the extent of my obligations to the author criticised, I feel it would be useless to try to conceal on that account the extent of my divergence from him, and so will commence by stating the proposi tions which I hope to establish in the course of this paper. They are as follows : I. That Lotze had not on his own principles any ground for seeking an underlying unity of things. II. That his argument in reaching it is unsound^ and conflicts with his own truer insight. III. That, when reached, it throivs no light on any of the problems it is supposed to explain. IV. That it is not essentially connected with the religious conception of a God, nor with Lotze 's treatment of that conception. V. That even when it is so connected^ it does not contribute anything of value to religious philosophy. I am aware that these propositions do not mince matters, and that I shall probably be called on to explain how a thinker of Lotze's eminence should have laid himself open to such sweeping censure. I may therefore fittingly preface my remarks by a theory of the way in which such lapses are psychologically explicable. The theory I would advance is in brief that the elaborate thoroughness and detail of Lotze's discussions occasionally avenge themselves on Lotze also, by generating a readiness finally to accept the first clue out of the labyrinth which offers itself, so that at the end of a chapter full of the subtlest and minutest criticism he sometimes consents to adopt views which certainly would not have passed muster at the beginning. A similar effect produced on the reader, who is loth to believe that the display of so much acumen should be followed by momentary relapses into untenable positions, relaxes his critical atten tion, and so possibly explains his acquiescence in Lotze's conclusions. I have sometimes felt that the process 64 HUMANISM iv in question is well exhibited, e.g. in the chapter on Time in the Metaphysics, and that the disproportionate abrupt ness and the obscurity of its conclusion are similarly conditioned by a temporary lapse of the critical faculty. The fullest statement of the grounds on which Lotze asserts the existence of an underlying unity of things is of course to be found in the sixth and seventh chapters of the ^Metaphysics (since the Outlines of the Philosophy of Religion merely accepts it as established in the Meta physics}, and though the argument is well known, it will not be inappropriate to sketch its course in so far as it bears on the present discussion. It will be remembered that Lotze is driven to postulate a unity of things by the metaphysical difficulties discovered in the conception of Causation, taken as the assertion that one thing influences another. The impossibility of explaining such transeunt causation compels to the inference that things are not really separate and independent, but embraced in a unity which is the medium in which they exist, and renders superfluous any further question as to how change in A passes over to become a change in B. Thus by means of this unity, which in the Philosophy of Religion is frankly called the Absolute, all transeunt becomes immanent action, and is held thereby to have been explained. The next step, which it requires careful reading to recognise as an advance at all, is to treat this unity as prior to, and more real than, the plurality of things it serves to connect. Accordingly {Met. § 70) it is hypostasised as ' the single truly existing substance,' and it is explained at length how the self- maintenance of the identical meaning of this Absolute may be conceived as producing the world of experience with its regular succession of phenomena. The discussion closes with a vigorous protest against recognising ' things ' as anything more than actions of the Absolute upon spiritual beings, which, by being centres of experience, are thereby rendered independent of the Absolute (§§ 97, 93). It seems on the face of it that the argument ends in iv LOTZE'S MONISM 65 something very like self-contradiction, inasmuch as it seems to assert that spiritual beings are ipso facto independent of the Absolute, after inferring the existence of that Absolute from the fact that ' things ' (in which spiritual beings are presumably included, even if they do not constitute the whole class) could not be independent.1 But I hope to show that verbal contradictions are not the only nor the most serious flaws to be found in Lotze's argument. I. It is in the first place by no means clear that a unity of things must be specially provided to account for the fact that things act on one another. That necessity only exists if the problem it is to solve is a valid one, i.e. if the fact of interaction really requires explanation. If it does not, there is no basis for any further argument. And it may be plausibly contended that it does not. For interaction is essential to the existence of the world in a more fundamental manner than even Lotze suggests. It is the condition of there being a world at all. Without it there could be no things, no plurality, and hence no assemblage of things, no world. For each of the possible constituents of a world, holding no sort of communication with any other, would remain shut up in itself. It is easy to illustrate this by showing that in every case in which we predicate the coexistence of several things, we imply that they, directly or indirectly, act on one another. E.g. in the case of the gravitation of all the bodies in the universe, the interaction is direct ; in the case, e.g., of Hamlet and the Chimera it takes place through the mediwm of a mind which connects them. But interaction in some way there must be, if coexistence is to be recognised. We may therefore confidently affirm that witJiout interaction there is no coexistence, and without coexistence there is no world. The existence of 1 Lotze generally prefers to use ' -unabhdngig' when proving that there must be an all-embracing unity, ' selbstdnd ig ' when showing that the unity cannot embrace the conscious centres of experience. But he sometimes, as e.g. in Outlines of Philosophy of Religion, § 18, uses selbstandig also in the first case, so that the verbal conflict is complete. The English translation obscures the point by rendering selbstandig by ' self-dependent ' in § 98 and by ' independent ' in §69. F 66 HUMANISM iv interaction is just as primary a fact as the existence of the world itself, and the assertion that things act on one another is, in Kant's phrasing, an ' analytical ' proposition, which merely expands what was already asserted in saying ' there is a world.' But is this latter proposition one which requires explanation? Have we not learnt from Lotze himself1 that it is an improper question to ask why there should be a world at all, since the given existence of the world is the basis and presupposition of all our questionings ? That has always seemed to me one of the most luminous and valuable of Lotze's contributions to philosophy, and if it is an error to attempt to derive the existence of the world, it must be equally mistaken to derive the interaction of the world's elements. For coexistence and interaction have been shown to be equivalent. The problem of interaction, therefore, disappears. Or rather, it is merged in that of the existence of a world in general of which it is a variant. And the existence of a world is not a problem for philosophy. There is not, then, on Lotze's principles any need to recognise any unity of things other than that which consists of their actual interactions. Having a plurality of interacting things given it, our thought may distinguish a unity implied in this, viz. the possibility of their interaction. But this unity is not more real or more valuable than the plurality, but less so. Nor can it be extolled as the ground of all reality. It is merely an ideal reflexion of the actual. It does not assert more than that when a thing is actual it must be conceived as also possible, and in this case we are forbidden to pry into the questions how either the actuality or the possibility came about. So far from unity in this sense therefore being a royal road to Monism, it is the common ground which Monism shares with Pluralism ; nay, it is the very fact which, by implying plurality, renders possible the metaphysical doctrine that plurality is the ultimate term of all real philosophic explanation. 1 E.g., Met. §§ 5 and u, Trans, pp. 36, 46. iv LOTZE'S MONISM 67 Similar conclusions may be extracted from Lotze's theory of substantiality. He tells us (§ 37, Trans, p. 100) that the notion of a kernel of substance is a useless superstition, that " it is not in virtue of a substance con tained in them that things are, they are when they are able to produce an appearance of there being a substance in them." All this is excellent and most important. For it marks the abandonment of the unknowable substrate view of substance and the return to the older and truer conception of Aristotle, that a thing is what it does, that substance is actuality (evepyeia*) and not potentiality (Svvafju,?}.1 But presumably that declaration is applicable also to "the single truly existing substance" (Trans. § 70, p. 167), and we ought then to say 'it is not in virtue of a single substance underlying them that things are ; they are when they are able to produce the appearance of there being such a substance.' In other words, we have no real right to infer that there is a substantial One underlying the interactions of the Many.2 The unity which is involved as a conceptual possibility in the actual plurality is a unity in the Many and of the Many, and must not be hypostasised into anything transcendent or more truly existent. If it is, the problem of the relations of the One and the Many at once becomes insoluble, simply because by calling it existent we are compelled to construe its existence as analogous to that of the Many, which it cannot be if its function is to be that of uniting the Many. Is not then the necessity of the One as the world-ground an illusion of the same order as that of an underlying substance ? It appears, then, that Lotze sets out to find a unity which, on his own showing, he did not need to find, and finds it in a way which conflicts with the implications of his own doctrine of the self-evidence of the world's exist ence and of his own view of substantiality. II. In tracing the further development of Lotze's conception of the Unity of Things, the point of capital 1 See the essay on Activity and Substance, §§ i, 7. 2 Cp. p. 224, note. 68 HUMANISM iv importance is the process whereby the unity becomes hypostasised into a real existence superior to the plurality which it unites. To explain interaction there is only needed a unity in the Many, not a One creating and embracing the Many, a union, not a unit. And, as we have seen, that union does not need explanation. Lotze, however, having failed to see that in its general and abstract form the possibility of causation needs not to be deduced, has to reject transeunt action as inexplicable and to try to substitute immanent action in its place. We are accordingly told that the interactions of things become intelligible when regarded as the ways in which the Absolute changes its states. The question as to why it is intrinsically a more intelligible conception that a being should change its own states rather than those of another is not raised in this connexion. We are merely told that de facto we do not " scruple about accepting it as a given fact " (§ 68, Trans, p. 1 64). Yet in § 46 Lotze had clearly seen that while we treat " this immanent operation, which develops state out of state within one and the same essential being, as a matter of fact calling for no further effort of thought," " this operation in its turn remains completely incomprehensible in respect of the manner in which it comes about." " We acquiesce in the notion of immanent operation, not as though we had any insight into its genesis, but because we feel no hindrance to recognising it without question as a given fact." Does not this pretty decisively admit that the superior in telligibility of immanent as compared with transeunt action is not logical but merely psychological, and due to the familiarity with it which we seem to find in our own inner experience ? But is it permissible to argue that because immanent action passes unchallenged in our own case it should therefore do so likewise in the case of the Absolute ? Perhaps we shall be able to decide this when we have analysed the reasons why it seems natural to us that one state of our consciousness should be followed by another. Let us ask then why we should change. That question IV LOTZE'S MONISM 69 may be taken in two senses, according as the stress is laid on the ' we ' or on the ' change.' In the first case the question will refer to the preservation of identity in immanent change, and can be answered only by an appeal to inner experience. That Alt A^ A3 are all states of A is in our own case based on our feeling of our continuity and identity. We can change, because we are conscious beings with a feeling of our identity. But in so far as we have here the ground for our easy acceptance of the conception of immanent action, it is evidently inapplicable to the Absolute. We can neither feel the Absolute's continuity like our own, nor even infer it like other people's on the analogy of our own. For if the Absolute can be conceived as conscious at all, its consciousness would differ radically from ours in that it would be all- embracing, not merely in the sense of having representa tions of all things within it, but in the sense of actually being and feeling the inner and unique continuity of each thing. If, secondly, we ask why we change, instead of remaining as we are, our common reason seems unhesitatingly to answer, either because we are stimulated from without, or because our psychical condition is disequilibrated, is one of unsatisfied desire, so that we long to change it. In neither case do we consider ourselves subject to unprovoked and capricious changes. In the first case, immanent change in ourselves distinctly presupposes transeunt action upon us from without and consists only of our self-maintenance against such action. In the second case there is pre supposed a defect of nature which puts a good we desire beyond our reach. But in the Absolute immanent change can be explained in neither of these two ways. There is nothing outside it to stimulate it to self- maintenance. And we cannot rashly ascribe to an Absolute which is to have any religious value an essential want or defect in its nature. The very considerations, therefore, that render immanent action intelligible in our own case are utterly unthinkable in that of the Absolute ; the very reasons which render it natural that we should change render it 70 HUMANISM iv very unreasonable that the Absolute should. If it does change, both the fact and the manner of that change must remain wholly inexplicable facts. And if transeunt action be a mystery, immanent action in the Absolute is not only as great a mystery, but, in addition, comes very near to being an absurdity. Taking next the argument from commensurability (Met. § 69), I cannot see either that it validly leads to any conclusion at all, or to the conclusion Lotze desires. It argues from the fact that all things are comparable or commensurable to a ground of this commensurability. If all things had been quite incommensurable, like, e.g., sweet and red, there would have been no principle of connexion between them. There would have been no reason to expect the consequence F from the relation of two incommensurables A and B, rather than any other. For that relation would have been the same as that of A to M or B to N or M to N. Hence there would be no reason for any definite connexion whatever. Commensur ability, therefore, being a fact, its origin from a single root in the permanent immanence of the elements of the world in one being is rendered probable. Now I cannot see the cogency of this argument. Its very statement seems defective, and involves an ' un distributed middle ' in arguing from the common incom mensurability of the relation of A to B and of M to N to their identity, in spite of the fact that incommensurables may be very various. And even if we overlooked this, the logical inference from the supposition that every pair of the world's elements stood in the same relation would seem to be not to a world of a chaotic and infinite variety, but to one of eternal monotony, in which whatever com bination of elements was tried the same consequence always ensued ! Nor, looking at the matter more broadly, can I see that commensurability proves anything. In a very general sense it must, of course, be granted ; for if the elements of a proposed universe had turned out to be absolutely incommensurable, no world could have resulted. There iv LOTZE'S MONISM 71 cannot, therefore, be any things strictly incommensurable in the world, — even red, sweet, and loud are comparable at least as sensations, — and it is mere tautology to say that the elements forming a world must have been com mensurable to form a world. Nor does this carry us beyond the possibility of interaction which we saw was implied in actual plurality. Moreover, it would seem that by arguing from the existence of commensurability to a source of commensur- ability Lotze rendered his argument obnoxious to an objection which he elsewhere admits to be valid. The course of his argument here runs parallel to that of the old teleological argument, which has been so successfully challenged by Darwinism.1 The teleological argument in biology proceeded from the given existence of adaptation in structure to an intelligent source of that adaptation — i.e. it argued from an adaptation to an adapter. But Darwinism seemed to show that the same result might occur without supposing any original and pre-existent fitness of structure, merely by the survival of better adapted structures. And as against this objection Lotze admits that the old teleology loses its demonstrative force : he admits (Phil, of Religion, § 1 1 s. f.) that the completely automatic origin even of the most perfectly adapted system is not impossible, but only improbable, and that it is not unthinkable (loc. cit. § 1 2 s. f.) that an original Chaos should develop itself into a purposively ordered nature. But if so, a logical extension of the same argument would seem to be fatal to Lotze's position here. Why should not the initial commensurability of the elements of the world itself have arisen by a process of natural selection similar to that which has guided its subsequent development ? Given the necessary conditions, and the argument seems to work equally well. Just as in the biological field it presupposed the possibility of indefinite variation in all directions, so here in ontology it might, it seems, suppose an indefinite multitude of elements of 1 See, however, the essay on Darwinism and Design. 72 HUMANISM iv possible worlds, some commensurable, the immensely greater number not If so, it would be possible to con ceive the world as constituting itself out of a fortuitous concourse of the atoms which happened to be congruous or commensurable, while those which were not would simply stay out, and appear in the actual results as little as the countless variations which did not survive. In both cases the essence of the argument would be the same, and consist in destroying the unique peculiarity of the actual result by regarding it as one out of an indefinite number of possible results. Against the atheism thus implicit in the Darwinian method Lotze's argument seems to afford no adequate protection. He cannot show that the inference he draws to an underlying unity of the world is the only one conceivable. The supposed origin of a commensurable world out of an indefinite number of commensurable and incommensurable elements is thinkable. Whether, to be sure, it is also tenable is another question, which, personally, I would answer by a strenuous negative. For if the immense majority of things were really incommensurable with us and our world, they would be unknowable. Hence we could have no positive ground for affirming their existence. And we have no right to affirm unknowables merely for the sake of discrediting the known. Hence this bare possibility could not, to my mind, be actually propounded as an explanation of the order of nature, nor held to detract from the purposiveness we actually find there. But this protest does not help Lotze ; the bare possibility of thinking such a process is enough to set aside his contention that his own solution is alone conceivable.1 His argument moved wholly in the region of abstract metaphysics, and as an abstract possibility the Darwinian plea seems just as sound. We have not, I hold, the right to apply it to our actual world, but Lotze's argument is in no better case. Altogether, then, it would seem as if ' not proven ' was the most lenient verdict that could be passed on Lotze's derivation of the Unity of Things. 1 Cp. Microc. ii. p. 598. iv LOTZE'S MONISM 73 III. But what shall we say of the metaphysical value of this conception in the explanation of things ? (1) It has already been shown that it does nothing to solve the problem of Causation and to relieve the difficulty Lotze discovers in the action of things on one another. (2) Does it explain, then, the orderly succession of events ? Lotze labours hard to show this. He regards the changes of the world as being so ordered by the Absolute as to preserve at each moment the unchanging self-identity of the Absolute, the equation M= M, and to give " a new identical expression of the same meaning," in a harmony which is " not pre-established, but which at each moment reproduces itself through the power of the one existence." This hypothetical meaning of the Absolute has to explain all the peculiarities about the succession of events which Lotze finds in the world and all those he wishes to find. Nor, obviously, is it possible to gainsay him so long as that meaning is admitted to be inscrutable. One can protest only that an inscrutable meaning is no better than none at all. But for all that I would contend that the introduction of the Absolute had made events not easier to understand but harder. At first indeed it might seem, as Lotze argues (Mel. § 72), that when one thing in the world changes, the rest must maintain the identical meaning of the world by counterbalancing changes. But what if we raise the question why anything should change at all ? (3) It will appear, I think, that no rational case is made out for the existence of change at all. The conception of the Absolute in itself contains no suggestion of change. The only thing we know about it, viz. the unchanging identity of the meaning it preserves in the world, distinctly suggests an equal immutability for the expression of that meaning. Thus the fact of change has to be accepted as empirically characteristic of the Absolute, but it is rendered more unintelligible by the assertion that all the changing aspects of things always mean one and the same thing. (4) The belief that the world has a meaning, that 74 HUMANISM ,v the riddle of life has an answer, has always been the common inspiration of religious, philosophic, and scientific minds. To be disabused of it would plunge us into the deepest abyss of negation where scepticism fraternises with pessimism. Hence it is at first reassuring to hear Lotze speaking so emphatically of the meaning of the universe as the supreme law which determines the suc cession of events. It is not until one attempts to work out the conception in connexion with his Absolute, that one is regretfully forced to the conclusion that the meaning of the universe is really unmeaning. Lotze tells us that the meaning of the Absolute has to be maintained against the changes set up, we know not how, in its parts. That is the reason why B follows on A in orderly succession. But how can any action of the parts of the whole conceivably imperil the identical meaning of the whole? They have not a TTOV arw outside the universe whence they could break in upon its order and affect its meaning or value. And if these could be in any way jeopardised, why should not any means be as competent to re-establish the equation M = M as any other ? Why should not C or X or F follow as effectively on A as B ? Where there is absolute choice of means, unvarying order becomes inexplicable. One would expect rather an agreeably various or sportively miraculous succession of events. Thus the introduction of an Absolute, on which no laws are binding, because it makes them all, really leaves the order of the world at the mercy of a principle which for ever threatens to reduce it to Chaos. Nay, more ; neither the existences nor the changes of the world can have any meaning if they are absolutely dependent on the Absolute, and are merely instruments in the expression of its ' identical meaning.' That meaning may be expressed by one thing as well as by another, it may be preserved by one variation as surely as by another. Thus both events and existences lose all special significance or relation to the supposed meaning. The same holds true of the past of the world with respect iv LOTZE'S MONISM 75 to its subsequent course. The caprice of the Absolute cannot be controlled even by its own past. (5) The foregoing will have shown, I hope, that Lotze was not very successful in avoiding the besetting sin of all Monism, whenever it is sincerely scrutinised, viz. that of reducing the Many to mere phantoms, whose existence is otiose and impotent. But a disregard of the practical absurdities that might result from too rigid a theory was not one of Lotze's weaknesses, and so when we come to the last sections of his ontology we find him saving the significance of the Many by a volte-face which is assuredly more creditable to his heart than to his head. He recognises that beings which are merely immanent in the Absolute have no raison d'etre, and so denies the existence of things. Spiritual beings, on the other hand, in virtue of their consciousness, detach themselves from and step out of the Absolute ; they stand as it were on their own feet and become independent members of the cosmos. I heartily agree ; but I am at a loss how to reconcile this with the previous course of his argument. What use was there in emphasising the one ground of all existence, if finally everybody that is anybody is to escape and ' detach ' himself from the underlying unity of the Absolute ? Doubtless Lotze's doctrine is here completely in accord with the facts, doubtless it is true, as Professor Pringle Pattison says, that a spiritual being preserves its own centre even in its dealings with the Deity ; no doubt also Lotze's own doctrine required such quasi-independent spirits to provoke Providence by the freaks of their free will and to generate the necessary friction in order to make the Absolute's maintenance of its identical meaning something more than child's play ; but how is the incomprehensible feat accomplished ? The points mentioned should, I believe, suffice to prove my contention that the Absolute is not a principle of explanation that has any scientific or philosophic value. It resolves no difficulties, it aggravates many, it creates some of an utterly insoluble character. And by undoing ;6 HUMANISM iv his own work in the case of conscious beings and insisting on detaching them from his Absolute, Lotze himself may be considered to have afforded practical confirmation of this view. IV. It remains to discuss the identification of the Unity of Things with the Deity. In the Outlines of the Philosophy of Religion Lotze accepts the Unity of Things which renders interaction possible as the basis of the conception of God, thereby making his metaphysical argument his means of proving the existence of God. One might have expected him therefore to go on to develop the conse quences of this conception and to show how they agreed with the religious notions on the subject. This is not, however, what Lotze actually does. He makes no attempt to show that the Unity of Things, as discovered by metaphysics, must be susceptible of the religious predicates, must be conceived as personal, holy, just, and wise, nor that these attributes may be inferred from the manner in which the Absolute unites the universe. Instead of this, he contents himself with entitling his second chapter ' Further Determinations of the Absolute,' and then goes on to prove that God cannot rightly be conceived as other than spiritual and personal. Now against the contents of this chapter I have not a word to say ; his argument in it seems to me most admirable and cogent. What I do wish to protest against is the way in which he shifts his ground, is the yu,era/3ao-t9 et? aXXo 761/09 which his method at this point involves. For instead of developing a metaphysical conception, he here passes over to a criticism of popular conceptions of and objections to the nature of the Deity, and these are in every case disposed of by arguments which have nothing to do with the Absolute's function of unifying the world. Thus the spirituality of God is proved by showing that materialism is inadequate and dualism sterile ; His personality, by showing that while no analogy in our experience justifies conceptions like those of an unconscious reason or impersonal spirit, our own personality is so imperfect that perfect personality is capable of forming an ideal which can be attributed to iv LOTZE'S MONISM 77 the Deity. But what has all this to do with the Unity of Things? Such arguments are quite independent of his metaphysical monism, and are not brought into any logical connexion with it merely by calling the Unity of Things God. It would have been far more to the purpose to show how the Unity of Things could be personal and moral. I would contend, then, that just as the hypostasisation of the Unity of Things was unnecessary in the Metaphysics, so its deification is unnecessary in the Philosophy of Religion, Not even for monotheistic religions is there any necessary transition from the assertion of one Absolute to that of one God. For the unity of the Godhead in monotheism is primarily directed against the disorders of polytheism, and intended to safeguard the unity of plan and operation in the Divine governance of the world ; it cannot be equated with the unity of the Absolute, unless the conceptions of plan and guidance are applicable to the latter. But this is just what we have seen they are not : the Absolute could have no plan and could guide nothing ; its unity therefore has no religious value. The reason, then, for this hiatus in Lotze's argumenta tion is simply this, that an Absolute is not a God and that none of the Divine attributes can be extracted from it. Hence Lotze must perforce derive them from con siderations of a different kind. V. In the sequel, moreover, this derivation of the Deity from the metaphysical unity of things is for the most part ignored, and the interesting discussions in which Lotze elucidates the nature of the fundamental religious concep tions presuppose nothing but the traditional conceptions and historically given problems of religious philosophy. Throughout the whole of this most valuable part of Lotze's book (§§ 21-70) I cannot find that he expresses any opinion rendered logically' necessary by his doctrine of the Absolute, while there seem to be several, e.g., the defence of Free Will, which accord with it but badly. As already stated, Lotze cannot dispense with this conception in order to uphold the conception of a Divine governance, 78 HUMANISM iv which re-establishes the ' identical meaning ' of the world against the disturbances due to free actions. And it is in this way that he explains the fact that the world exhibits a succession of phases, all of which, we are required to believe, mean one and the same thing. But the reflection is obvious that these ' free ' actions also are included in the Absolute, and that their existence is one of its given characteristics. Metaphysically, therefore, we have to say that the Absolute is subject to these un caused perturbations, which exhibit its internal instability. It is this inner instability which is the ultimate ground for change, and the question which in the Metaphysics (§ 83) Lotze tried so hard to put aside, viz. as to the reason why the Absolute is in motion, returns with renewed force. Lotze had there contended that the motion must be accepted as a fact and its direction likewise. But can the kind of motion be similarly accepted ? We may not in ordinary life require an explanation when we see a man walking in the usual fashion, but when we see him staggering along as though about to fall and only just preserving his equilibrium, we think that such a mode of progression requires an explanation, and probably put it down to alcohol. Yet this somewhat undignified simile, si parva licet componere magnis, exactly expresses the characteristic motion of the Absolute according to Lotze. The world is ever recovering the equilibrium which is constantly endangered ; it maintains itself in a constant struggle against the consequences of its own inner in stability. And what we call Evil is merely one of the incidents of the struggle. If then it were true that the motion of the world required no explanation, it would be equally true that the evil of the world required none. But this is not only a conclusion monstrous in itself, but one by no means accepted by Lotze. He admits that the problem of Evil is a real one, and only regrets the failure of all the solutions proffered. But of this more anon. At present I content myself with noting that though the admission of Free Will affords a logical ground for the conception of a Divine guidance and providence, iv LOTZE'S MONISM 79 it re-arouses scruples about the Absolute which had only with difficulty been quieted. It is not until we come to § 71 that the Unity of Things intervenes again in Lotze's discussion, and then it intervenes with disastrous effect For it is appealed to only to refute the attempt to account for the existence of Evil by the limitations of the divine activity by the original nature of the world's constituents. But, Lotze remarks, if so, it would be necessary to assume a second superior deity in order to account for the action of the first upon such a world. And if we admit that the Deity is to be identified with the unity which makes interaction possible, it must be admitted that his objection is quite sound. But with this rejection of a Deity who can have an intelligent purpose, and a need to guide the course of the world just because he is not unlimited in the choice of his means, vanishes the last hope of solving the problem of Evil. The magnitude of that problem and the futility of all the solutions he mentions is quite frankly confessed by Lotze both in Philosophy of Religion (§§ 70-74) and in the Microcosm (Trans, ii. pp. 716 ff.). He admits that pessimistic inferences might quite well be drawn from this failure of philosophy, and does not believe that pessimism can theoretically be refuted. But pessimism is merely a cheap and easy way of getting rid of the problem, and he himself prefers to cling to the belief in a solution he can not see, and to persevere in a search which is nobler and more difficult. Thus in Lotze also knowledge finally has to take shelter with faith and to return dejected to the home whence it set out with such sanguine hopes of making clear the riddle of existence. Lotze's language is certainly frank enough, and if frankness were all that is needed his honest declaration of his insolvency might be condoned. But one has a right to expect that a philo sopher whose arguments lead him into such manifest bankruptcy should be prompted thereby to re-examine and possibly to revise his premisses ; and this Lotze fails to do. The suspicion that the nature of the Absolute which he has identified with the Deity may have something 8o HUMANISM iv to do with the lamentable failure of his attempts to account for Evil never seems to enter his mind. The conclusions of his philosophy may be in the most patent conflict with the facts, but so much the worse for the facts. We are bidden to have faith in the impossible, if necessary, and pessimism is waved aside with a sneer as being too easy and obvious. Now that a writer ordinarily as sympathetic as Lotze should have acquiesced in so flimsy a theodicy shows, I think, the desperate straits to which he was reduced, and seriously detracts from the value of his religious philosophy. I am very far from denying that an element of faith must enter into our ultimate convictions about the world ; for whoever admits the reality of Evil and the possibility of its elimination thereby declares his faith in an ideal which is not yet realised. But surely we have a right to demand that our intellect should only be required to believe in a solution which it does not see, not in one which it sees to be impossible. Now the nature of faith is of the latter sort on Lotze's theory, as we shall see and as he all but admits. It may be meritorious to attempt what is difficult, but it is mere folly to attempt the impossible. Very few, therefore, whether pessimists or otherwise, are likely to be attracted by Lotze's ' faith.' And his sneer at pessimism is a little ungenerous. Pessimism may be cheap and easy and obvious intellectually. That is an excellent reason for meeting it with the strongest, most comprehensible and obvious arguments we can, — to prevent simpler minds from falling into it. But pessimism is assuredly not a cheap and easy view to hold emotionally. The burden of most lives is so heavy that none can desire to crush them selves down utterly by dwelling on the futility and worth- lessness of it all. No one, therefore, is willingly a pessimist : every one would fain believe in a more inspiriting view. But all the encouragement Lotze gives is that pessimism is theoretically tenable and any other view is extremely difficult ! Yet he is quite right ; that is all the encouragement he is able to give. He cannot account for the existence of iv LOTZE'S MONISM Si Evil ; he cannot deny that it conflicts utterly with his conception of God. For he has from the very first scorned the common philosophic device of calling God a power which has no moral attributes or preferences. His God is intended to be theistic and not a mere cloak for pantheism. Yet by identifying God with the Absolute he inevitably opens the way for this very kind of pantheism. Once equate God with the totality of existence, and no one can understand how there can be in the All an element which is alien to the All. All the phases of existence, therefore, are alike characteristic of the All. God is evil as well as good, or better still, non-moral and indifferent, manifesting himself in all things alike. But this conception, to which its premisses irresistibly drive Lotze's argument, no less than every other form of Monism, is certainly neither the God of what is commonly under stood as religion, nor can it do the work of one. It is as impotent as a practical power as it was sterile as a theoretical principle. Its sole value would seem to have been to have drawn attention to certain incompatibilities and inconsistencies in the existing conception of the Deity. And the importance of that service should not lightly be disparaged. If Lotze's careful, candid, and yet sym pathetic examination failed to clear away the incompati bilities alluded to, we may be sure that others will not succeed, and that it is time to consider whether the requirements both of religion and of philosophy may not be better met by a different conception of the Deity. We must not be tempted by the ease with which an (unmeaning) Absolute is arrived at to accept it in lieu of the more difficult demonstration of a real God. And I believe that a clearer conception of the Deity, more clearly differentiated from the All of things, could not fail also to be of the greatest practical value. At present the con ception of the Deity is not clearly defined ; it melts away into mist at various points ; it requires a certain ' atmo sphere ' to be perceived. But a God who requires an ' atmosphere ' has to be kept at a certain distance by his worshippers, and so is conducive neither to intimacy of G 82 HUMANISM iv communion nor to robustness of faith. This, however, is a line of thought I must leave to theologians to work out. The general philosophical conclusion which I would draw from Lotze's lack of success in defining the con ception of God is that of the futility of the a priori proofs of God's existence. Their common weakness lies in their being far too abstract. They are in consequence applicable to the conception of a universe as such and not to our particular world. Thus the ontological proof argues that there must be a God from the fact that there is a world at all ; the cosmological, from the fact of causation taken in the abstract : the physico-theological, even, is made to argue quite generally from order to a designer thereof. Lotze's proof from interaction is of an exactly similar character. It argues generally and abstractly from the existence of interaction to a ground of interaction. It is, in fact, a form of the ontological proof, since interaction is the presupposition of there being a world at all. Now the flaw in all these arguments is the same. They fail because they attempt to prove too much. If they hold at all, they hold quite generally and are applicable to any sort of a world. In any world we could argue from its existence to a God, from its change to a First Cause, from its arrangement to a designer, from its interaction to a single ground of its possibility ; the argument is in each case quite unaffected by the nature of the world about which it is used. It follows that the God derived by such an argument must similarly be catholic in his applicability and indifferent to the contents of the world. The best and the worst of thinkable worlds must alike have God for their cause and for the ground of their interaction. The inference from the world to God would be equally good, therefore, in Heaven and in Hell. The deity, therefore, inferred by this mode of argumentation must be essentially indifferent to moral distinctions, and this is the ultimate reason why the attempt to ascribe moral attributes to him in the end iv LOTZE'S MONISM 83 invariably breaks down. In Lotze's case, e.g., the world would just as much imply a God whether its interactions were perfectly harmonious or utterly discordant; and God, therefore, cannot be conceived as a principle deciding which of these thinkable cases is to be realised. Now all this is not at all what we wanted the proofs of God's existence to do. We did not want a proof which held good in all thinkable universes, but one which should hold in our actual given world, and give us an assurance that whatever might be the misfortunes of possible universes, there was in ours a power able and willing to direct its course. But this the ' proofs ' haughtily declined to do ; they mocked us instead with characterless deities ' for application to any universe.' Yet there is not, at least in the case of the cosmological and physico - theological proofs, any reason why they should not be given a specific application. On the contrary, a much stronger argument can be made for assuming a cause and beginning of its motion for our existing order of things than for ' a universe ' as such, for interpreting the actual order and development of our world by an intelligent purpose than a mere order in the abstract. Even the ontological proof, if we adopt Lotze's version of its real meaning (Phil, of Religion, § 6), may be given a more pointed reference by making it express the con viction that the totality of the True and the Good and the Beautiful must be provided with a home in our world. Thus the objections to all the proofs may be obviated by making the proofs a posteriori, and basing them, not on the nature of existence in the abstract, but on the nature of our empirical world. The same might be done also with the argument from interaction : it might be claimed that the peculiar nature of the interaction of things was such that a single underlying existence might be inferred in our case, although in general a unity in the Many was alone needed. And indeed Lotze comes very near at times to seeing that this was the proper method of proving the unity of things, as, e.g., when (Met. §§85, 90) he insists that his Absolute is never actual as an 84 HUMANISM iv abstract form which subsequently receives a content, but always has a perfectly determinate and concrete value. But if so, why did he use such perfectly abstract arguments in order to prove its existence ? Why did he not derive the Absolute in its concreteness from the concrete facts in which it manifests itself? Had he done so, he would have disarmed most of the above criticism and would have closed the road to many a misconception and many a difficulty. It would have been needless to ask, e.g., why the Absolute should be in motion, for in arriving at it we should have had to state the reason not only for the motion but also for its amount and direction. Again, it would have been superfluous to puzzle ourselves as to how the One united the Many ; for it would have been as a definite mode of combining the Many that we should have found the One. No doubt such methods of discovering first principles are less easy, less sweeping, and therefore less attractive ; the philosopher moves more smoothly in a cloudland where he can manipulate abstractions which seem to assume whatever shape he wills. But the philosophic interpretation of the concrete experiences of life is far safer and, in the end, more satisfying. And whatever the defects of his own practice, it is to Lotze as much as to any one that we owe the conviction that even the most imposing castles which philosophers have builded in the air have had no other source than the experience of the actual whence to draw their materials and their inspiration. V NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY AND THE KANTIAN A PRIORI1 ARGUMENT Importance of geometry as a type of philosophic method, and consequently of the metageometrical ideas. I. Fallacy of the fourth-dimension analogy. Non-Euclidean three dimensional 'spaces,' come with Euclidean under the genus of general geometry. They form coherent and thinkable systems analogous to Euclid's, but so far not useful because too com plicated. II. Necessity of distinguishing between perceptual and conceptual spaces. Geometrical spaces all alike conceptual constructions, and the physical world not ' in ' any one of them. III. Philosophic im portance of this. The ' certainty of geometry ' not peculiar, but identical with the logical necessity of consistent assumptions elsewhere. The real validity of geometry empirical and = its usefulness when applied. Universality and necessity of geometrical judgments as results of postulation. Kant's account of space vitiated by his failure to observe the ambiguities of the term. FROM the days of Pythagoras and Plato down to those of Kant and Herbart the mathematical sciences, and especially geometry, have played so important a part in the discussions of philosophers as models of method and patterns of certitude, that philosophy cannot but be extremely sensitive to any change or progress occurring in the views of mathematicians. Accordingly the philo sophic world was considerably startled, not so many years ago, to hear that certain mathematicians and physicists had had the audacity to question the assumptions con- 1 From the Philosophical Review of March 1896, since when the subject has not, of course, stood still. I am painfully aware that as an account of meta- geometry this paper is quite inadequate, but as students of philosophy are still obfuscated with the mystical mathematics of metaphysicians, and as even so able and detailed a work as Mr. Russell's Foundations of Geometry has failed to make clear the capital importance of the distinction of perceptual and conceptual space, even so slight a treatment may retain some pedagogical value. 85 86 HUMANISM v cerning the nature of Space, which had been consecrated by the tradition of 2000 years and set forth in the geometry of Euclid. The possibilities of non-Euclidean spaces, which were as yet necessarily ill-defined and ill- understood, promptly attracted the adherents of all views for which orthodox science appeared to have no room, and no notion seemed too fantastic to become credible, if not intelligible, in space of four or more dimensions. The mathematicians themselves, who were engaged in elaborating the new conceptions, were too busy or too uncertain of their ground to resist successfully this inundation of extravagance, and the consequent discredit into which the subject fell seems to have killed the general interest in it everywhere but in France. Mean while mathematicians proceeded quietly with the work of analysing the new conceptions and of deducing their consequences, and thereby reached a clearer consciousness of their import. The result has been that saner views have begun to prevail, and that the sensational features of the new geometry have been mitigated or eliminated. The question has become arguable without the opposing champions considering each other respectively unintelli gible cranks or unimaginative stick-in-the-muds. Not but what the rhapsodical view still periodically finds expression in print,1 but the tendency of the interesting exchange of opinions which has been going on for the last few years in the French philosophical and scientific journals between MM. Delbceuf, Renouvier, Poincar£, Calinon, Lechalas, de Broglie, etc., seems to me to be decidedly in the direction of agreement based upon a retreat from extreme and extravagant positions on either side. In other words, the blare of trumpets which announced and advertised the arrival of the new claimant to scientific recognition is over, the pachydermatous ears of the established conservatism have recovered from the shock, and preparations are being made to assign to the newcomer a definite place in the array of the sciences. The time then seems to be becoming opportune for 1 E.g. , Monist, iv. p. 483. v NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY 87 attempting to summarise some of the results of this controversy, with a view to (a) bringing out the most important points established by the new ' metageometry,' ($) considering what light they throw on the nature of Space, (c} estimating what changes will have to be made in the references to geometry which philosophers have been so addicted to making. It is indeed possible that the attempt is still premature, that the parties are still too bitter to be completely reconciled, that the subject is still too inchoate and chaotic for its full significance to be determined. In that case the present writer would console himself with the reflection that his efforts can at least do no harm, and may possibly even do good by inducing philosophers to revise their antiquated notions concerning the meaning of the conception of ' Space.' I. I shall begin, therefore, by referring to a point which the metageometers have not to my mind satisfactorily established, and that is the value of the conception of a fourth dimension. I say advisedly ' of the conception,' for the actual existence, or even the possibility of imagining, a fourth dimension seems to have been practically given up. The chief value of the conception seems nowadays to be situated in the possibility of making symmetrical solids coincide by revolving them in a fourth dimension. But this seems a somewhat slender basis on which to found the conception of a fourth dimension, and the same end could apparently1 also be achieved by means of the conception of a ' spherical ' space. Here then, probably, is the reason why of late the fourth dimension has not been so prominent in the forefront of the battle, and why its place has, with a great advance in intelligibility, been taken by spherical and pseudo-spherical three-dimensional ' space.' It is on rendering these latter thinkable that the non- Euclideans have concentrated their efforts, and, so far as I can judge, they have, in a large measure, been successful. It has been shown that Euclidean geometry may, nay, logically must, be regarded as a special case of general 1 Cp. Delboeuf, Rev. Phil. xix. 4. 88 HUMANISM v geometry, and as logically on a par with spherical and pseudo-spherical geometry. It is a species of a genus, and the differentia which constitutes it is the famous ' postulate of Euclid,' which Euclid postulated because he could not prove it, and which the failures of all his successors have only brought into clearer light as an indispensable presupposition. The non-Euclideans, on the other hand, have shown that it does not require proof, because it embodies the definition of the sort of space dealt with by ordinary geometry ; and that in both of its equivalent forms, whether as the axiom of parallels or of the equality of the angles of a triangle to two right angles, it forms a special case intermediate between that of spherical and that of pseudo-spherical space. In spherical space nothing analagous to the Euclidean parallels is to be found ; in pseudo- spherical space, on the other hand, not one, but two ' parallels ' may be drawn through any point. So while spherical triangles always have their angles greater than two right angles, the pseudo-spherical triangles always have them less than two right angles. Moreover, the Euclidean case can always be reached by supposing the 'parameter' of the non-Euclidean spaces infinitely large. So much for the possibility of a general geometry, including the Euclidean amongst others. It has also, I think, been shown that the non-Euclidean geometries would form coherent and consistent systems, like the Euclidean, in which an indefinite number of propositions might be shown to follow from their initial definitions. They are, that is to say, thoroughly thinkable and free from contradiction, and intellectually on a level with the Euclidean conception of space. They are thinkable, — but (as yet) no more ; and this explains their defence against the two objections upon which their more unprejudiced opponents incline to lay most stress. It is objected (i) that there is, e.g., no such thing as a spherical space, only a spherical surface. True ; but there is nothing to prevent us from conceiving the peculiar properties of a spherical surface as pervading every portion of the space it bounds. We can conceive a spherical surface of a v NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY 89 constant curvature making up the texture of space, just as well as the Euclidean plane surface. This intrinsic texture would produce uniform and calculable deformation or ' crinkling ' in all bodies immersed in it, and these might conceivably be aware of this deformation as they moved in a non-Euclidean space, just as they are now aware of the direction of their movements. In the ' Euclidean ' case the homogeneity of Space is entire in all respects, in the spherical only in some. It is argued (2) that meta- geometry is dependent on Euclidean geometry, because it is reached only through the latter. But it is not clear that it may not be logically independent, even though historically it has developed out of Euclidean geometry, and even though psychologically the latter affords the simplest means of representing spatial images. And it has become clear that both the conception of a ' manifold ' and that of a ' general ' space admitting of specific determinations is logically prior to that of Euclidean space. Theoretically, then, metageometry seems to be able to give a very good account of itself. But it must be confessed that this at present only accentuates its practical failure. It is admitted that Euclidean geometry yields the simplest formulas for calculating spatial relations, and even M. Calinon x hardly ventures to hope that non-Euclidean formulas will be found serviceable. Metageometers mostly confine themselves to supposing imaginary worlds, of which the laws would naturally suggest a non-Euclidean formulation.2 In short, practically the supremacy of the old geometry remains incontestable, because of its greater simplicity and consequent facility of application. II. I pass on to the second question, the light thrown by non-Euclidean geometry on the nature of Space. In this respect incomparably its most important achievement seems to have been to force upon all the distinction between perceptual and conceptual space, or rather spaces. On this point both parties are at one, and we find, e.g., 1 Rev. Phil, xvii . 12. 2 E.g. , M. Poincar6, Rev. de Mlt. iii. 6, pp. 641 ff. 90 HUMANISM v M. Delboeuf1 and M. Poincare2 stating the characteristics of Euclidean space and its fundamental distinction from perceptual space in almost identical terms. The former is one, empty, homogeneous, continuous, infinite, infinitely divisible, identical, invariable ; the latter is many, filled, heterogeneous, continuous only for perception (if the atomic view of matter holds), probably finite, not infinitely divisible and variable. Both sides agree that our physical world is neither in Euclidean nor in non-Euclidean space, both of which are conceptual abstractions ; their dispute is merely as to which furnishes the proper method for calculating spatial phenomena.3 Thus all geometrical spaces are grounded on the same experience of physical space, which they interpret differently, while seeking to simplify and systematise it by means of the various postulates which define them. But if conceptual and perceptual space are so different, have they anything in common but the name ? If the former are abstracted from the latter, upon what principles and by what methods does the abstraction proceed ? I conceive the answer to this important question to be, by the same methods as those by which ' real ' or physical space is developed out of the psychological spaces. For, as M. Poincare4 well shows, we form our notion of real space by fusing together the data derived from visual, tactile, and motor sensations. That fusion is largely accomplished by ignoring the differences between their several deliverances and by correcting the appearances to one sense by another, in such a manner as to give the most complete and trustworthy perception of the object. We manipulate the data of the senses in order to perceive things (in ' real ' space), and at a higher stage the same purposive process yields conceptual space, of course at first in its simplest form, the Euclidean. And (though I have not found this stated) all the characteristics of Euclidean space may be shown to have been constructed 1 Rev. Phil, xviii. n. 2 Rev. de Mft. iii. p. 632. 3 Cp. Calinon, Rev. Phil, xviii. 12, " Sur I'inde'termination g^ometrique de 1'univers. ' 4 Loc. cit. v NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY 91 in this manner. Just as, e.g., the varying appearances of things to the different senses were ignored in order to arrive at their ' real ' place, so the varying and irregular deformations to which they are subjected at different places, when abstracted from, lead to the homogeneity of space. They are slight enough to be neglected, but if they were larger and followed some definite and simple law, they might suggest a non - Euclidean geometry. Similarly, geometrical space is one and infinite, because as soon as we abolish any boundary in thouglit, we can abolish all ; it is infinitely divisible, because as soon as the division is conceived of as proceeding in thought the same act may be repeated as often as we please. And so on ; geometrical space appears throughout as a con struction of the intellect, which proceeds by the ordinary methods of that intellect in the achievement of its peculiar purposes. Nor is there anything new or mysterious about the process ; no new faculty need be invoked, no new laws of mental operation need be formulated. III. That the philosophic importance of this result is capital, is surely evident. The certainty of geometry is thereby shown to be nothing but the certainty with which conclusions follow from non-contradictory premisses, and in each geometry it flows from the definitions. The certainty with which the sum of the angles of a triangle may be asserted to equal two right angles in Euclidean geometry, is precisely the same as that with which it may be shown to be greater or less in non-Euclidean systems. And this shows that certainty in the sense of intrinsic consistency has nothing to do with the question of the real validity of a geometry. The latter depends on the possibility of systematising our spatial experience by means of the geometry. Our experience being what it is, we find the Euclidean the simplest and most effective system, alike to cover the facts and to calculate the divergences between the ideal and the actual results ; and so we use it. But if our experience were different, a non-Euclidean system might conceivably seem preferable. In short, as applied, a geometry is not certain, but useful. 92 HUMANISM v Again, the necessity of geometry is simply the necessity of a logical inference — hypothetical, and in no wise peculiar to geometry. Similarly, the universality of geometrical judgments is by no means peculiar to them, but may be explained as arising out of the methodological character of the assumptions on which they rest. If we decide to make certain assumptions because they are the most serviceable, we can certainly know beforehand that we shall always and under all circumstances judge accordingly. To expect us to do otherwise, would be to expect us to stultify ourselves. And certainly we have a great in terest in upholding the universal validity of geometrical judgments. Is it a small thing to be able to draw a figure on paper in one's study, and on the strength of it, and by virtue of the homogeneity of space, to draw inferences about what happens beyond the path of the outmost sun ? Should we not be incredible idiots, if we allowed any cheat of appearances to cajole us into a moment's doubt of so precious an organon of knowledge ? It would seem, then, that the chief result of metageometry is to raise into clearer consciousness the nature of the complex processes whereby we organise our experiences, and to assimilate the case of space to our procedure elsewhere.1 But it has already become abundantly evident that a view of Space, such as that propounded, provokes conflicts with ancient and venerable views that have long adorned the histories of Philosophy. Among them Kant's con ception of the a-priority of Space is pre-eminent. At a cursory glance it might indeed seem as though the new geometry afforded a welcome support to the Kantian position. If Euclidean geometry alone could prove the possibility of synthetic judgments a priori, could enrich us with absolutely certain knowledge absolutely independent of experience, could sustain an all-embracing, though empty, form of pure intuition, surely now that it is reinforced by an indefinite number of sister sciences, a boundless extension of our a priori knowledge might 1 Cp. Personal Idealism, pp. 111-116. v NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY 93 reasonably be anticipated. Unfortunately it proves a case of ( too many cooks ' and the embarrassment of riches, rather than of ' the more the merrier.' To suppose three a priori forms of intuition corresponding to the three geometries is evidently not feasible, for they are in hope less conflict with each other. If it is a universal and necessary truth that the angles of a triangle are equal to two right angles, it cannot be an equally universal and necessary truth that they are greater, according as we happen to be speaking of a Euclidean or of a spherical triangle. Clearly, there must be something seriously wrong about the assumed relation of geometry to space, or about the import of the criterion of apriority. Just as the de facto existence of geometry seemed to Kant to prove the possibility of an a priori intuition of Space, so the de facto existence of metageometry indicates the derivative nature of an intuition Kant had considered ultimate. And the analysis thus necessitated rapidly discovers the seat of the error. Kant, like all philosophers before and far too many since his time, regards the conception of Space as simple and primary and the word as un ambiguous. He does not distinguish between physical and geometrical space, between the problems of pure and of applied geometry. Hence he is forced to make his Anschauung an unintelligible hybrid between a percept and a concept, to argue alternately that ' space ' could not be either, and to infer that it must therefore be some third thing. The possibility that it might be both never struck him. Still less did he suspect that each of these alternatives was complex, and that perceptual space was constructed out of no less than three sensory spaces, while it was susceptible of three different conceptual interpretations. What Kant calls ' space ' therefore is not really one, but seven, and the force of his argument is made by their union. Confined to any one of them, the argument falls to pieces. When we see these facts as clearly as the development of metageometry has compelled us to see them, we must surely confess that the Kantian account of 94 HUMANISM Space is hopelessly and demonstrably antiquated and can lend no support to the rest of his system. And should we not henceforth take care to eschew the vice of talking vaguely of ' space ' without specifying what kind of space we mean, whether conceptual or perceptual, and what form of each ? Even pedagogically, one would think, there can no longer be any advantage in confusing what is capable of being so clearly distinguished. It would exceed my limits if I were to try to investigate whether Kant has not been guilty of a parallel confusion between felt succession and conceptual time in his account of the latter, still more were I to discuss whether after the withdrawal of the ' forms of pure intuition ' any meaning could continue to be assigned to the Kantian conception of the a priori} I shall conclude, therefore, with the hope that some of the many professed believers in the Transcendental Aesthetic will not disdain to define their position in face of the development of modern meta- geometry. 1 Cp. Personal Idealism, pp. 68-91. VI THE METAPHYSICS OF THE TIME-PROCESS1 ARGUMENT Significance of Dr. McTaggart's admission that the Hegelian Dialectic cannot explain the reality of succession 'in Time.' The reason of its failure, viz. that Time, Change, and Individuality are features of Reality we abstract from in our formation of Concepts. Hence abstract metaphysics always fail to account for Reality. Must we then either accept sceptic ism or reject a procedure on which all science rests ? No ; for to admit the defects of our thought-symbols for reality need merely stimulate us to improve them. As for science, it uses abstractions in a radically differ ent way, to test and to predict experience. Thus ' law ' is a methodo logical device for practical purposes. Science practical both in its origin and in its criterion, and ethics as the science of ends conditions meta physics. Such an ethical metaphysic accepts and implies the reality of the Time-process. And therefore it has a right to look forward to the realisation of its ends in time, and forms the true Evolutionism. I DO not know whether Dr. McTaggart's interesting investigation of the relations of the Hegelian Dialectic to Time (or rather to the Time-process 2) has obtained the attention it merits, but the problem he has so ably handled is of such vital importance, and the attitude of 1 Published in Mind, N.S. 13 (January 1895), as a reply to Dr. McTaggart's articles in N.S. , Nos. 8 and 10, which were subsequently included in his Studies in the Hegelian Dialectic, chap. v. , to which Dr. McTaggart has appended a note (pp. 197-202) replying to me (as far as his standpoint permitted). His chief contention is that the ' timeless' concept is not, as I maintained, a methodo logical device but a necessity of thought. To which the reply is that all ' necessities of thought ' are primarily methodological devices. See Axioms as Postulates. I have reprinted the article as it stood. 2 I prefer to use the latter phrase in order to indicate that I do not regard ' Time ' as anything but an abstraction formed to express an ultimate character istic of our experience, and in order to check, if possible, the tendency of metaphysicians to substitute verbal criticism of that abstraction for a consideration of the facts which we mean when we say, e.g. that 'the world is in Time.' Of that tendency, I fear, even Dr. McTaggart cannot always be acquitted (e.g. Studies in the Hegelian Dialectic, pp. 161-163), and it seems to me to be at the root of most of the metaphysical puzzles on the subject. 95 96 HUMANISM vi current philosophy towards it is so obscure, that no apology is needed for a further discussion of his results. That those results came upon me with the shock of novelty I cannot, indeed, pretend ; for the impossibility of reconciling the truth of the Dialectic with the reality of the Time-process has long been familiar to me as the chief, and, to me. insuperable difficulty of the Hegelian position. I propose, therefore, to take for granted the reluctant conclusion of Dr. McTaggart's almost scholastic ingenuity, namely, that there is no known way of reconciling the (admitted) existence of the Time-process with the (alleged) ' eternal perfection of the Absolute Idea' — at all events until some other commentator of Hegelism has attempted to revise and refute Dr. McTaggart's arguments — and I wish to consider what inferences may be drawn from it with respect to the method of metaphysical speculation in general. Before doing so, however, I ought, perhaps, to say a word on what Dr. McTaggart himself inclines to regard as the positive result of his inquiry, the fact namely that he has not been able to show that there is no possible synthesis of the Absolute Idea with the Time-process, and that he is consequently " entitled to believe that one more synthesis remains as yet unknown, which shall overcome the last and most persistent of the contradictions inherent in appearance." For faint as is the hope which nourishes this belief, and groundless as are the assumptions from which that hope may, I think, be shown to spring, one may yet congratulate Dr. McTaggart on the candour with which he distinguishes his faith in the Unknown Synthesis from the cogency of a logical demonstration, and on the diffidence with which he declines to avail himself of the easy convenience of Mr. Bradley 's maxim that " what may be, and must be, that certainly is." For certainly, if one does not scruple to regard utter ignorance as the possibility that ' may be," and the subjective need of saving one's own theory as the necessity that ' must be,' there is no difficulty which cannot be evaded by the application of that maxim and vi METAPHYSICS OF TIME-PROCESS 97 no contradiction which cannot be so ' reconciled.' My only fear would be that if such an axiom were admitted at the beginning of philosophy, it would also prove its end. Dr. McTaggart, however, is to be congratulated on having eschewed the dangers of Mr. Bradley's ' short way with the insoluble,' and on preferring to base his accept ance of conflicting views on the ancient, time-honoured and extra-logical principle of Faith. Still more admir able, perhaps, is the robustness of a faith which overlooks the curious inconsistency of denying the metaphysical value of Time, and yet expecting from the Future the discovery of the ultimate synthesis on which one's whole metaphysic depends. For myself I avow that such faith is beyond my reach. If I were driven to the conclusion that the inexorable necessities of my mental constitution directly conflicted with patent and undeniable facts of experience, I fear I should be beset by a sceptical distrust of the ultimate rationality of all things rather than solaced by the vision of an ' unknown synthesis.' But in this case I hope to show that there is no need to respect a faith one cannot share, and that Dr. McTaggart has given more to faith than faith demands. If the contradiction cannot be solved, it can at least be exposed and explained. And unless I am very much mistaken, it will appear that the incompatibility between the assertion of the reality of the Time-process and its comprehension by any system of ' eternal ' logical truth (whether Hegel's or anybody else's) has its origin in very simple and obvious considerations. Dr. McTaggart cannot find room for the reality of the Time-process, i.e. of the world's changes in time and space, within the limits of Hegel's Dialectic. But is this an exclusive peculiarity or difficulty of Hegel's position ? Is the Time-process any more intelligible on the assumptions of any other purely logical * system, as, for instance, on those of Plato or Spinoza ? I think the difficulty will be found to recur in all these systems. And this shows that it is not accidental, but intrinsic 1 I.e. intellectualist. H 98 HUMANISM vi to the modus operandi of all systems of abstract metaphysics. They cannot account for the time-factor in Reality, because they have ab initio incapacitated themselves from accounting for Time as for change, imperfection and particularity — for all indeed that differentiates the realities of our experience from the ideals of our thought. And their whole method of procedure rendered this result inevitable. They were systems of abstract truth, and based on the assumption on which the truth of abstraction rests.1 They aimed at emancipating philosophy from the flux to which all human experience is subject, at interpreting the world in terms of conceptions, which should be true not here and now, but ' eternally ' and independently of Time and Change. Such conceptions, naturally, could not be based upon probable inferences from the actual condition of the world at, or during, any time, but had to be derived from logical necessities arising out of the eternal nature of the human mind as such. Hence those conceptions were necessarily abstract, and among the things they abstracted from was the time- aspect of Reality. Once abstracted from, the reference to Time could not, of course, be recovered, any more than the indi viduality of Reality can be deduced, when once ignored. The assumption is made that, in order to express the 4 truth ' about Reality, its ' thisness,' individuality, change and its immersion in a certain temporal and spatial environment may be neglected, and the timeless validity of a conception is thus substituted for the living, changing and perishing existence we contemplate. Now it is not my purpose here to dispute, or even to examine, the correctness of that assumption itself. What I wish here to point out is merely that it is unreasonable to expect from such premisses to arrive at a deductive justification 1 I have in this sentence purposely used ' truth ' in two senses, in order to emphasise a distinction, which is too often overlooked, between the conceptual interpretation of reality, which is truth in the narrower sense, and the validity or practical working of those conceptual symbols, which constitutes their truth in a wider sense. In the former sense ' truth ' is merely a claim which may, or may not, be ratified by experience (see below, p. 100, and above, p. 57). vi METAPHYSICS OF TIME-PROCESS 99 of the very characteristics of Reality that have been excluded. The true reason, then, why Hegelism can give no reason for the Time -process, i.e. for the fact that the world is ' in time,' and changes continuously, is that it was constructed to give an account of the world irrespective of Time and Change. If you insist on having a system of eternal and immutable ' truth,' you can get it only by abstracting from those characteristics of Reality, which we try to express by the terms individuality, time, and change. But you must pay the price for a formula that will enable you to make assertions that hold good far beyond the limits of your experience. And part of the price is that you will in the end be unable to give a rational explanation of those very characteristics, which had been dismissed at the outset as irrelevant to a rational explanation. Thus the whole contradiction arises from a desperate attempt to eat one's cake and yet have it, to secure the eternal possession of absolute truth and yet to profit by its development in time ! Surely this is not a fitting occasion for invoking that supreme faculty of Faith to which philosophy, perhaps as much as theology, must ultimately appeal ! If these considerations are valid, the idea of accounting for the time -process of the world on any system of abstract metaphysics is a conceptual jugglery foredoomed to failure, and must be declared mistaken in principle. But there remain two questions of great importance : (i) Do such systems of abstract metaphysics lose all value ? (2) Is there any other way of manipulating the time-process so as to fit it into a coherent systematic account of the world ? In answering the first question it will be necessary to supplement the negative criticism of the claims of abstract metaphysics by tracing the consequences of their utter rejection. I have so far contended that no abstract metaphysic could say the last word about the world, on the ground that it was ex vi definitionis forced to reject some of the chief characteristics of that world. But if it ioo HUMANISM vi cannot give us the whole truth, can it give us any truth ? Is not the alternative to the rejection of the full claims of Hegelism (and kindred systems) a sceptical despair of the power of the reason to find a clue out of the labyrinth of experience ? Such a plea would not be devoid of a certain plausi bility. Stress might be laid on the fact that the funda mental assumption of all abstract metaphysics is the fundamental assumption also of all science, that the whole imposing structure of the ' laws of nature ' is formulated without reference to the temporal and spatial environment and the individual peculiarities of the things which ' obey ' these laws, and so likewise lays claim to an eternal validity. How then can Metaphysic dare to reject an assumption which supports the whole of Science ? Again, it may be urged that from its very nature philosophy is an interpretation of experience in terms of thought, and must necessarily exhibit the intrinsic peculiarities of human thought. If abstraction, therefore, is characteristic of all our thinking, if all truth is abstract, it would seem that all philosophy must stand or fall with the abstract formulas in which alone our thought can take cognisance of reality, and may not dream of casting off the shackles, or denying the sufficiency, of the systems of abstract truth which the ingenuity of the past has propounded. Nevertheless I incline to think that it is possible to steer the human reason safely through between the Scylla of Scepticism and the Charybdis of an Idea absolutely irreconcilable with experience. But to do so it is im perative to define exactly the part played by abstraction in a philosophic account of the world. Evidently, in the first place, it does not follow that because all truth in the narrower sense (v. note, p. 98) is abstract, i.e. because all philosophy must be couched in abstract terms, therefore the whole truth about the universe in the wider sense, i.e. the ultimate account that can be given of it, can be compressed into a single abstract formula, and that the scheme of things is nothing more than, e.g., the self-development of the Absolute Idea. To vi METAPHYSICS OF TIME-PROCESS 101 draw this inference would be to confuse the thought- symbol, which is, and must be, the instrument of thought, with that which the symbol expresses, often only very imperfectly, viz. the reality which is ' known ' only in experience, and can never be evoked by the incantations of any abstract formula. If we avoid this confusion we shall no longer be prone to think that we have disposed of the thing symbolised when we have brought home imperfection and contradiction to the formulas whereby we seek to express it — an accusation which, I fear, might frequently be made good against the destructive part of Mr. Bradley's " Appearance and Reality " — to suppose, e.g., that Time and Change cannot really be characteristic of the universe, because our thought, in attempting to represent them by abstract symbols often contradicts itself. For evidently the contradiction may result as well from the inadequacy of our symbols to express realities of whose existence we are directly assured by other factors in experience, and which consequently are data rather than problems for thought, as from the ' merely apparent ' character of their reality, and the moral to be drawn may only be the old one, that it is the function of thought to mediate and not to create.1 If so, our proper attitude will be this, that while we shall not hesitate to represent the facts of experience by conceptual symbols, we shall always be on our guard against their misrepresenting them, and ever alive to the necessity of interpreting jour symbols by a reference to reality. In this manner I conceive that it would be possible to utilise the terms of abstract metaphysics, whenever they seemed to yield useful formulas, without erecting them into fetishes and giving them the entire mastery over our reason. From the tyranny of abstractions there would thus always be an appeal to the immediacy of living experience, and by it many a difficulty which appals on paper would be shown to be shadowy in the field. And conversely, it would perhaps be possible for philosophy to grapple somewhat more effectively with the real difficulties of actual life. 1 Dr. McTaggart has commented on this passage (Studies, pp. 110-113). 102 HUMANISM vi Nor can I see why philosophers should fight shy of such a procedure. For surely the admission that philosophy is an interpretation of experience in terms of thought does not preclude us from the reinterpretation of our symbols by a reference to experience wherever that may seem expedient and profitable. Why should we commit ourselves to a task which must prove either illusory or impossible, that of the rational deduction of the self- evident ? It is true that philosophic explanation came into being because experience is not wholly self-explaining. But to admit this is not to imply that everything requires explanation. For all explanation must set out from certain data, which may either be accepted as facts or considered self-evident, and in no wise necessitate or justify the attempt to explain everything, an attempt which must ultimately derive everything from nothing, by the power alone of an intentionally obscure vocabulary. What the data of such an ultimate explanation of the world should be, admits, of course, of further discussion ; but I can see no reason in the nature of philosophy as such why the characteristic of Time should not be one of them. And if by a frank recognition of the reality of Time, Im perfection and Individuality we can reach a deeper, more complete and workable insight into the facts of experience, why should our philosophy be worse than one which is driven to reject them by ancient prejudices concerning the perfections which the world ought to possess ? The abstractions of metaphysics, then, exist as ex planations of the concrete facts of life, and not the latter as illustrations of the former ; and the Absolute Idea also is not exempt from this rule. Nor is it to a different conclusion concerning the subordination of abstract meta physics that we are led by the consideration of the first argument adduced in their favour, the fact that all science shares their assumption. That all science abstracts from the particularity and time-reference of phenomena, and states its laws in the shape of eternal and universal truths, is perfectly true. But this fact will not bear the inference it is sought to vi METAPHYSICS OF TIME-PROCESS 103 draw in favour of abstract metaphysics, and must not be allowed to prejudice the inquiry into the proper method of discovering an ultimate theory of the universe. For in the first place the treatment of its initial assumption by science differs widely from that of metaphysics. Science does not refuse to interpret the symbols with which it operates ; on the contrary, it is only their applicability to the concrete facts originally abstracted from that is held to justify their use and to establish their ' truth.' The mathematical abstractions which enable astronomers to calculate the path of a star are justified by their ap proximate correspondence with its observed position, and if there were any extensive or persistent divergence between the calculation and experience, astronomers would be quite ready to revise their assumptions to the extent even of changing their fundamental notions concerning the nature of space. But in the case of metaphysics the same principle is not, apparently, to apply. If the Dialectic of the Absolute Idea does not accord in its results with the facts of life, we are not to suspect the Dialectic. It possesses an intrinsic certainty by right divine which no failure can be admitted to impair. If the logical (or rather psychological} development of the Idea fails to account for the development in time, we may at the utmost postulate an ' unknown synthesis.' This may be philosophy, but it does not look like science. In the second place, let us ask why science abstracts from the particularity of reality. Not, certainly, because it does not observe it. Nor yet because it ascribes to the deductions from its universal laws a precision which they do not possess. On the contrary, it cheerfully admits that all the laws of nature are hypotheses, represent not the facts but tendencies, and are to be used merely as formulas for calculating the facts. But why should we want to calculate the facts by such universal formulas ? The answer to this question brings us to the roots of the matter. We make the fundamental assumption of science that there are universal and eternal laws, i.e. that the individuality of things together with their spatial and 104 HUMANISM vi temporal context may be neglected, not because we are convinced of its theoretic validity, but because we are constrained by its practical convenience. We want to be able to make predictions abotit the future behaviour of things for the purpose of shaping our own conduct accordingly. Hence attempts to forecast the future have been the source of half the superstitions as well as of the whole of the science of mankind. But no method of divination ever invented could compete in ingenuity and gorgeous simplicity with the assumption of universal laws which hold good without reference to time ; and so in the long run it alone could meet the want or practical necessity in question. In other words that assumption is a methodological device, and ultimately reposes on the practical necessity of discovering formulas for calculating events in the rough, without awaiting or observing their occurrence. To assert this methodological character of eternal truths is not, of course, to deny their validity — for it is evident that unless the nature of the world had lent itself to a very consider able extent to such interpretation, the assumption of ' eternal ' laws would have served our purposes as little as those of astrology, necromancy, chiromancy, and catoptro- mancy. What, however, must be asserted is that this assumption is not an ultimate term in the explanation of the world. That does not, of course, matter to Science, which is not concerned with such ultimate explanation, and for which the assumption is at all events ultimate enough. But it does matter to philosophy that the ultimate theoretic assumption should have a methodological character. To say that we assume the truth of abstraction because we wish to attain certain ends, is to subordinate theoretic ' truth ' to a teleological implication ; to say that, the assumption once made, its truth is ' proved ' by its prac tical working, by the way in which it stands the test of experience, is to assert this same subordination only a little less directly. For the question of the ' practical working of a truth will always ultimately be found vi METAPHYSICS OF TIME-PROCESS 105 to resolve itself into the question whether we can live by it. In any case, then, it appears that scientific knowledge is not an ultimate and unanalysable term in the explana tion of things : Science subordinates itself to the needs and ends of life alike whether we regard its origin — practical necessity, or its criterion — practical utility. But if so, the procedure of Science can no longer be quoted in support of the attempt to found our ultimate philosophy upon abstract and ' eternal ' universals. If the abstraction from time, place, and individuality is conditioned by practical aims, the next inquiry must evidently concern the nature of these practical aims, to which all theoretic knowledge is ultimately subsidiary. And if those aims can be formed into a connected and coherent system, it will be to the discipline which achieves this that we shall look for an ultimate account of the world. Is there then a science which gives an orderly account of the ends of life that are or should be aimed at ? Surely Ethics is as much of a science as abstract metaphysics, and if it be the science of ultimate ends, it seems to follow that our ultimate metaphysic tmist be ethical? Let us consider next what the attitude of such an ethical metaphysic would be to the metaphysical preten sions of abstract universals and of the Time- process respectively. It seems clear, in the first place, that prac tical aims, or a system thereof, do not easily lend themselves to statement in terms of abstract universals. For an end or purpose seems to be intrinsically the affair of a finite individual in space and time, and the attempt to regard the timeless, immutable and universal as possessed of ends seems to meet with insuperable difficulties. If, therefore, the ultimate explanation of the world is to be in terms of ends, it would seem as though it must be in terms of individual ends, realised in and through the Time-process. Nor is there anything repugnant to reason in the concep tion of an end realised in a time-process that would render it difficult for a Ideological explanation to admit the 1 All this seems a very fairly definite anticipation of modern pragmatism (1903). 106 HUMANISM vi reality of the Time-process. On the contrary, if the tran sition from means to end were instantaneous, the distinc tion between them would vanish, and lose all meaning. Still less has it been found repugnant either to the reason or to the feelings of men to regard the Time-process as the realisation of an end or even of a multitude of indi vidual ends, e.g. as a process of spiritual redemption. There is, therefore, perfect harmony between an ethical metaphysic and the existence of individuals in Time and Space, while that existence is found to be irreconcilable with any abstract metaphysical formula. We must conclude, then, that the method of explaining the ultimate nature of the world by an abstract universal formula, or a series of such, is not supported by the methodological use of similar formulas in the natural sciences, which, rightly considered, leads to very different inferences. What compensation then has it to offer us for its inability to take account of many of the chief data which a comprehensive philosophy has to explain ? Surely the full reality which has to be explained is the individual in the Time-process. And though it will remain no trivial task to exhibit the rationality of the Real, it has yet become evident that rationality is but one of several attri butes to be predicated of Reality, and that a mere ration alism or 'panlogism,' therefore, can never be anything but a one-sided philosophy. We have to consider next the second question raised (on p. 99) as to whether by pursuing a different method philosophy is able to recognise the reality of the Time- process. And if such philosophic recognition is possible, what is the metaphysical value and methodological bearing of the reality of Time (or rather of the Time-process) ? Or is there possibly, as Dr. McTaggart suggests (loc. cit. p. 1 66), "something about Time which renders it unfit, in metaphysics, for the ultimate explanation of the universe"? The prejudice to this effect is no doubt well- founded from the standpoint of a philosophy whose initial abstraction excludes Time. But if we decline to hamper ourselves by a method which fails de facto to account for vi METAPHYSICS OF TIME-PROCESS 107 Time and imperfection, while its claim de jure had to be disallowed as ignoring the supreme practical limitations under which the whole understanding operates, the case is different. It has already been shown that an ethical metaphysic has no difficulty in conceiving the ultimate end as realisable in the Time-process. And indeed from such a standpoint it is possible to indicate an explanation even of the Becoming which is so puzzling a characteristic of the Real, and the source of all our conceptions of Time and Change — it may be ascribed to the struggle of finite existence to attain that ultimate end. Instead of being left over as an inexplicable surd at the conclusion of a metaphysical explanation, the Time-process thus becomes an integral part of that explanation, and a fruitful source of inquiry opens out to philosophy concerning its value in the discovery and estimation of ultimate truth. It would be impossible within the limits of this essay to attempt any detailed account of the metaphysical conclusions to which the admission of the reality of the Time-process would lead. Suffice it to say that I am convinced that the system we should arrive at would prove no less coherent and complete than any of the great systems of abstract metaphysics, and that the difficulties which it may at first sight seem to involve are due to an (incon sistent) reversion to the methods of abstract metaphysics. There are, however, two points which it seems necessary to emphasise. The first is that a metaphysic of the Time- process will stand in the same relation to the explanation of phenomena by their history, as a metaphysic of abstract ideas stands to their explanation by universal laws, i.e. the Historical Method will represent the application in science of the metaphysical principle. But while to an abstract metaphysic the Historical Method must ultimately be foolishness, a metaphysic of the Time -process will justify that method by expressing it in a metaphysical, i.e. final, form. And this alone would suffice to prove its superiority ; for nowadays we can as little dispense with the explanation of things by their history as with their explanation by universal ' laws.' A philosophy, then, io8 HUMANISM vi which admits both and vindicates the use of the one, with out invalidating the other (even though it regards its importance as methodological and subordinate rather than as supreme), is manifestly superior to a philosophy which absolutely rejects one of the most valuable of the working assumptions of science. And if we regard the fact that there is a development of the world in Time as the essence of Evolution, it is obvious that only a theory which accepts this Time-process as an ultimate datum will be capable of yielding a philosophy of Evolution and is worthy of the name of Evolutionism. The second point concerns the ultimate difficulties which are left over on every known system of philosophy, and form antinomies which are insoluble for the human reason as it stands. Such on Dr. McTaggart's theory are the existence of change and imperfection, such, in his opinion, would be the beginning of the Time-process on mine. Now in face of these facts an abstract metaphysic is in an extremely awkward position. If it scorns to excuse its failure by pious phrases concerning the infinite capacity of a non-human mind to solve the insoluble, if it dreads to have recourse to the more impious dpyos \6 1 REALITY AND 'IDEALISM ARGUMENT Four questions about Reality — (i) how do we come to assert it, (2) its primary character, (3) its criteria, (4) its ultimate character. Epistemo- logical and metaphysical reality. Primarily everything is real, but none of the current criteria for sifting it absolutely trustworthy in theory. Their value is practical, and practical value is really the ultimate criterion. Can we claim speculative value for such a test ? Yes, if the whole process of knowing be conceived as an attempt to render our experience harmonious. At present our success is imperfect, and so divergent views may still be taken of ultimate reality. Hence it is unnecessary to regard the real as a combination of abstract universals and quite possible to treat a plurality of individual persons as ultimate. THE readers of Mr. Ritchie's papers will have learnt by this time that they may expect to be entertained with a clear account of his views, neatly phrased and intelligibly presented, and not disdainful of an occasional touch of humour. And in these respects they will have not been disappointed by his brilliant disquisition on — What is reality ? — in the May number of the Philosophical Review. But if they sought fresh light on one of the most puzzling and fundamental of philosophic problems, it is to be feared that they were not equally well satisfied. Mr. Ritchie's paper is polemical rather than investigatory, and he seems more concerned to make dialectical points against his adversaries than to probe his subject to the bottom. And as his adversaries' views are very various, and often have little in common but their disagreement 1 From the Philosophical Review of September 1892. The late Professor D. G. Ritchie, whose premature demise I, in common with all his pupils, have not ceased to deplore, reprinted the article to which this is a reply in a volume of essays entitled Darwin and Hegel (1893), pp. 77-108. vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM1 in with Mr. Ritchie's, and as, moreover, they are not stated or definitely referred to, the total effect is somewhat confusing. Nor is the confusion improved by the way in which Mr. Ritchie discusses some two or three different questions about reality in the same breath. The justifica tion in his mind for this procedure evidently lies in the fact that they all offer a basis for objections to his own views, which he would, perhaps, not object to have called Neo-Hegelian. But this does not constitute any intrinsic kinship between the views he criticises, and his discussion would have gained largely if he had added to his classification of the various sorts of reality a classification of the various questions that may be raised about it. It would be too much, perhaps, to expect Mr. Ritchie to excel the rest of his school as much in substance as he does in style, but it seems evident that he has, as little as they, kept clear of the Hegelian confusion of epistem- ology and metaphysics, to which Professor Seth l has of late drawn so much attention. There are at least four questions, which Mr. Ritchie's paper trenches upon. They are — I. How do we know that there is any reality at all, or how do we come to assert an external world ? II. What is reality at the beginning of inquiry, i.e. what is the primary datum to be explained ? III. How is it to be explained — by what criteria do we inquire into reality ? IV. What does reality turn out to be — after inquiry ? Of these, I. and III. seem to be epistemological, while II. is psychological, and IV. plainly metaphysical. Mr. Ritchie does not seem to distinguish II. from III., attributes his answer to III. without more ado to IV., and refers to I. only at the end, by way of meeting a logical objection to his view of IV. This confusion is shown also in his method of proof. His real purpose is to establish certain metaphysical views as to the nature of ultimate reality, but he treats his subject for the most part as if it were an epistemological inquiry into the criteria 1 Now Professor Pringle Pattison. ii2 HUMANISM vii of reality, and when, after establishing his metaphysical view of reality to his satisfaction, he is confronted l by the logical impossibility of identifying thought with its object, he suddenly throws us back upon the primary subjectivity of all experience. And all this without a hint of a /lera/Sacrt? et? aXXo 70/05. The connexion is no doubt clear enough to Mr. Ritchie's mind, if, as must be supposed, he follows T. H. Green in his fearful and wonderful leap from the fact that all phenomena appear to some individual self to the conclusion that they are, therefore, appearances to a universal self; but he might at least have warned us that his opponents have repeatedly declared their inability to compass such saltatory exercises, and regard the two halves of the argument as belonging respectively to epistemology and to metaphysics, and the transition from the one to the other as a paralogism. If, however, we refuse to take this Greenian salto mortale, it is evident that the first question must be settled before any of the rest can arise at all. For, as Professor Seth has so well pointed out, realism and idealism mean very different things according as they are taken in an epistemological or a metaphysical sense, and " it is possible to be epistemologically a strenuous realist and an idealist in the metaphysical sense of the term." 2 Nay, " it is only in virtue of epistemological realism that we can avoid scepticism, and so much as begin our journey towards metaphysical idealism." If, then, epistemological idealism is solipsism and " twin brother to scepticism," it must be surmounted before the nature of reality can be discussed. If it is not surmounted — cadit quastio — it becomes futile to discuss whether the real is one or many, whether its criterion is consistency or what, if there is no objectivity at all. Mr. Ritchie has, of course, a perfect right to call a halt here, and to refuse to discuss anything further until his opponents have successfully emerged from the clutches of subjective idealism. But once they have been permitted to escape, 1 Darwin and Hegel, p. 102. 2 Philosophical Review, i. p. 142. vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 113 once he has conceded the objectivity of the phenomena which form the content of consciousness, he is not entitled to revert to the prior question. In other words, the discussion of the question — What is reality ? — presupposes a settlement of the question — Is there reality ? — in the affirmative. It is only when reality has been admitted to exist that we can begin to distinguish the real from the unreal, and to enumerate the different sorts and criteria of each. It is necessary in the next place to put the primitive datum explicandum in the proper light. The primary psychological fact is that everything that is is real, and that the burden of proof lies on those who deny that anything is real. Nor does Mr. Ritchie dispute this, though he minimises its importance, and apparently fails to see that reality in this sense rests on a totally different footing from all others. For it is the primary fact which all the rest are more or less complete theories to explain, and to which they must be referred in order to test their validity. If they prove capable of explaining what they set out to explain, we may reach a loftier view of reality, which will transfigure our primary datum for us, but which even so cannot be considered in abstraction from its basis ; if they do not, the other ' senses of reality ' are worthless. For their work is hypothetical and derivative, and if the conditions under which we ascribed reality to these interpreters of reality are not fulfilled, their raison d'etre has vanished. But reality survives — even though its inscrutable flux of phenomena should laugh to scorn the attempts at comprehending it which it provokes. But this unique position of primary reality Mr. Ritchie quite fails to appreciate.1 Hence it is on the basis of an 1 He does not even succeed in proving the unreality of dreams, by saying that they are not self-coherent nor follow in an intelligible sequence on the events of previous dreams. For their ' incoherence ' is not, as a rule, intrinsic, nor anything that exists for the dream consciousness in the actual experiencing : it is an ex post facto judgment (resting usually on an imperfect memory) which is passed on them in our waking life. But awaking involves a breach of continuity, and the consciousness which condemns the dream-experience is no longer the consciousness which experienced it. And are we so sure that the coherence of our ' waking ' life would survive a similar breach of continuity, such as might be I ii4 HUMANISM vn insufficient recognition of the psychological data that he proposes to consider what reality is. This question is plainly an ontological one, but Mr. Ritchie treats it as if it were epistemological, and = ' How do we know a pheno menon to be (ultimately) real ? ' I.e. he substitutes for the ontological inquiry into the ratio essendi of reality an epistemological inquiry into its ratio cognoscendi or the criterion of reality, and then unhesitatingly attributes to his results a metaphysical validity. Yet he seems quite unaware that such a method, even if successful, would be defective and inadequate. Even at its best, even if it could be shown that reality could be known only as a coherent system of thought -relations, it would not necessarily follow that reality was nothing more, and he would not necessarily have proved anything but the impotence of his thought to grasp reality, by reducing his symbolical expressions for reality to absurdity and contradiction. Thus his proofs cannot prove what he desires, and his refutations only recoil upon his method. But it may be shown also that his criterion is not valid. He suggests l a triple test of rationality, a triple basis for the metaphysical assertion that reality is thought, (i) "The agreement between the inferences drawn from the experience of our different senses ; (2) the agreement between the judgments of different persons ; (3) the harmony of present experience with the results of their and our previous experience, constitute between them the test of reality." It is to be feared that effected, e.g. by ' death ' if we ' awake ' after it ? For comparison therefore with the intelligible sequence of successive dreams, we should require an intelligible sequence in successive lives to make the parallel complete. Unless, then, Mr. Ritchie has a transcendent knowledge of another life, whereby he judges our waking life to be real, because of its coherence and intelligibleness from the standpoint of the former, his comparison fails. It is true that we sometimes suspect our dreams while still dreaming (though as all dreams are 'near waking,' we cannot be said to be 'nearer waking" then). But does not our waking life lie under the same suspicion on the same grounds ? If it is permissible for once to appeal from the ' plain man ' to the man of genius, is it not ' a mad, mad world, my masters ' ? Have not seers, prophets, and philosophers in all ages testified that our earthly life was but a dream ? And if to these divinely-inspired ' dreamers ' we owe all the religions that have swayed the lives of men, must not dreams and hallucinations be accounted most real — in Mr. Ritchie's ' ethical ' sense ? 1 Loc. cit. p. 80. vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 115 " between them " they fall very far short of giving a trustworthy test of reality. (1) The first is open to objection as a matter of fact. It is doubtful how far the testimonies of the various senses really corroborate one another, and how far they are not rather incommensurable and referred to the same ' thing ' for reasons of practical convenience. Are after images and overtones, which regularly accompany sights and sounds, to be esteemed unreal because we generally find it convenient to neglect them ? And yet it is hard to say to what data of touch they correspond. Again, what can this criterion make of cases of hyperassthesia of one sense, or of an occasional activity of some special sensitiveness ? Are they to be rejected because they necessarily lie beyond confirmation by the other senses ? As far as this criterion goes, there is nothing to prevent a real thing from contravening it, and an ' unreal ' thing from conforming to it. Is ' Pepper's ghost ' unreal because it cannot be touched ? Or is a hallucination affecting several senses to be esteemed real ? (2) The second criterion is no better than the first. So Mr. Ritchie ' smells a rat,' in the case of his hypo thetical mouse,1 and limits its value by stipulating that B, C, D, and E (who do not see it) should have good eyesight. But how is it to be established that A (who does see it) does not considerably surpass them in the delicacy of his senses? In this difficulty, Mr. Ritchie proposes to call in expert opinion in the shape of " a hungry cat." (What scorn he would pour on such an appeal to the lower animals if it were a question of establishing the objectivity of an apparition !) Very good. But how if the cat side with the minority ? It is to be hoped that Mr. Ritchie will prefer science to democracy, and the authoritative judgment of Athanasius and the cat against the rest of the world ! If he does not, he might work out an amusing theory making the Referendum the ultimate test of reality. That, at least, would be a definite method of utilising the experience 1 Loc. cit. p. 80. n6 HUMANISM vn of others, such as is at present lacking. We act quite inconsistently in sometimes submitting to the superior delicacy of the expert's senses, and sometimes rejecting it. A room full of unmusical or inartistic people would hardly dispute about tones or colours with a single musician or painter, but an assembly of non-sensitives would probably deny that Macbeth saw a ghost (though who more qualified than Macbeth to see the ghost of Banquo ?). The colour-blind, perhaps because they are in a minority, do not dispute the objectivity of colours they cannot see, but upon what logical principle should we be less forbearing towards those who claim to see the ultra-violet and infra-red rays of the spectrum, or the luminosity of a magnetic field ? — In short, just as the excluding value of non-conformity was impaired in the first case by the possibility of genuine hyperaesthesia in the individual, so in the second it is impaired by the possibility of collective hypersesthesia. And just as in the first case conformity did not exclude error, owing to the possibility of complex hallucination, so it fails in the second, owing to the possibility of collective hallucina tion. (3) The third criterion at first seems more valuable — until we recollect that every new fact and every new experience is in some degree out of harmony with and contradictory of our previous experience.1 Would it not be strange, then, to allow our own inexperience, and the stupidity of our ancestors to exercise an absolute censor ship over the growth of knowledge ? Besides, it so happens that in most cases when ' universal experience ' is appealed to, its voice is self-contradictory. (What right have we, e.g. to reject countless traditions in order to prove that miracles are ' contrary to experience ' ?) But perhaps Mr. Ritchie does not contend that any one of his criteria is singly sufficient as a test of reality and proposes to employ them collectively. But if so, should he not show some probability that they will 1 As " Herakleitos " says (in Mind! p. 28), "is not the new of two things one, either itself false, or what renders all else false?" vn REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 117 always, or even normally, tend in the same direction ? And even if they did, that would establish, not the collective theoretic certainty of criteria, each of which was individually fallible, much less a necessary basis for meta physical inferences, but only a sort of practical probability, which it might be convenient to act upon. Thus the boasted rationality of the real reduces itself to this : upon Mr. Ritchie's own showing rationality is not an ultimate test, but resolvable into the three criteria he mentions, and in the end their value turns out to be practical ! Yet it may be that humbling the pretensions of this pseudo-rationality does good service in drawing attention to the commonest and most influential of the practical tests of reality, which may be said to have underlain and guided the development of all the rest. It lies in the fact emphasised by Professor James in his wonderful chapter on the perception of reality l that that is ad judged real which has intimate "relation to our emotional and active life," i.e. practical value. It is this criterion which has constituted the objective world of ordinary men, by excluding from it the world of dreams, hallucina tions, and the transient though normal ' illusions of the senses.' It is this which accounts for the superior reality so often ascribed to feelings, especially to pleasure and pain, which Mr. Ritchie mentions.2 It is this which absorbs into it Mr. Ritchie's fifth, or ' ethical,' sense of reality. It is this, lastly, which has moulded the whole development of the intellect, and so pervades all Mr. Ritchie's criteria and reduces them to dependence upon it. Hence if we are to speak of any ' main (derivative) sense of reality ' at all, it must certainly be conceded to Professor James that " whatever things have intimate and continuous connexion with my life, are things of whose reality I cannot doubt." But though there can be no doubt of the practical importance of this criterion, there may be much about its speculative value. The history of the practical struggle which has evolved us and our minds seems to offer but 1 Pnnc. of Psych, ii. 295. 2 Darwin and Hegel, pp. 82-83. n8 HUMANISM VII slender guarantees that our faculties should have been fitted for, and our energies directed towards, those aspects of reality which are of the greatest theoretic importance,1 and hence arguments from practical or moral necessity, universal desires, and the like, are not usually supposed to yield the safest approach to the ultimate reality of things. And not only must it be said that Mr. Ritchie's tests are not, properly speaking, rational at all, but it must be pointed out that he actually shrinks from mentioning in this place the test of rationality in its simplest and severest shape, viz. that of conformity to the necessary laws ot our thought. The omission is surprising, and one would fain ascribe it to the perception that it would have been too palpable a begging of the issue to have made conformity with the laws of thought the test of reality in an argument designed to show that reality ultimately lay in the determinations of our thought. Or can it be due to the fact that the chief characteristic of reality is its Becoming, and that Becoming and its defiance of the law of Contradiction is what our thought has never been able to grasp ? Yet the criterion is not without value. We are reluctant to admit facts and explanations which seem to contravene it, such as, e.g. the four-dimensionality of Space and the illusoriness of Time, and would only accept them as inferences, e.g. from the untying of Zollner's knots and the alleged occurrence of premonitions, in the very last resort. What then is the result of a critical survey of the various criteria of reality ? Is it not that though all may be of service, none can be entirely relied upon as the ratio cognoscendi of reality ? There is no royal road to omniscience any more than to omnipotence, even though we do not hold with Mr. Ritchie that the two coincide. The cognition of reality is a slow and arduous process, and of its possession we cannot be sure until we possess it whole. The only certain and ultimate test of reality is the absence of internal friction, is its undisputed occupa- 1 Else should we not have developed, e.g. an electric sense? vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 119 tion of the field of consciousness, in a word, its self- sufficiency. It is because reality does not display this character that thought has to be called in to interpret it. If it did, there would be no distinction between real and unreal, between what is ' really ' presented and ' merely imagined,' between the self and the world, and there would be no such thing as thought. As Professor James so well points out l a hallucinatory candle occupying the whole field of consciousness would be equivalent to a real one. But as a matter of fact the contents of consciousness present no such permanence and self- evidence ; their initial state is a fleeting succession of conflicting presenta tions which supplant and contradict one another. Some of these are frequently followed by painful, others by pleasurable feelings, and the penalty of idle acquiescence in the flux of phenomena is rapid death. So a dire necessity is laid upon the subject to distinguish himself from the world, and to set about thinking how phenomena may be controlled. He naturally begins by ascribing to the phenomena which are followed by pains or other practically important consequences a reality not shared by the rest. This first interpretation of the chaos of presentations is probably the first for which we can have direct testimony, and represents the view of reality taken by savages and small children. It is merely an extension of this view when the ' plain man,' in the condition of ' natural realism ' distinguishes hallucinations, fancies, and dreams from true reality. To effect this he uses whatever tests seem most practically useful — among others those of ' coherence ' and ' consistency.' Thus, the plain man's view is simply the first stage in the attempt to reach a harmony of the real. The view of the physicists represents a second and subsequent stage. And Mr. Ritchie's philosophy of the ultimate nature of reality is possibly a third. Each leads on to the other, because each is successively recognised not to be a coherent and consistent account of the world and not to eliminate the irrational and unsatisfactory 1 Princ. of Psychology, ii. 287. 120 HUMANISM VII element in experience. The plain man's ' things,' the physicist's ' atoms,' and Mr. Ritchie's ' Absolute,' are all of them more or less persevering and well-considered schemes to interpret the primary reality of phenomena, and in this sense Mr. Ritchie is entitled to call the ' sunrise ' a theory.1 But the chaos of presentations, out of which we have (by criteria ultimately practical] isolated the phenomenon we subsequently call sunrise, is not a theory, but the fact which has called all theories into being. In addition to generating hypothetical objects to explain phenomena, this process of the interpretation of reality by our thought also bestows a derivative reality on the abstractions themselves with which thought works. If they are the instruments wherewith thought accomplishes such effects upon reality, they must surely be themselves real. Hence philosophers have long asserted the reality of Ideas, and we commonly hold the triangle and the space of mathematical abstraction to be the real triangle and the real space. (Mr. Ritchie's fourth sense.) Similarly the goals to which the methods of our thought tend — its intrinsic ideals — acquire a hypothetical reality of a lofty order. For it is evident that if the real nature of phenomena is to be discovered by the way of thought, the supreme ideals of that thought must be, or be realised fy, the ultimate reality. But it would not follow that those ideals would render reality mere thought. For they might point either at a reality which should transcend thought, or at one of which thought should be but a single activity — even as it is now the activity of real beings. But it is needless to discuss what would happen to thought if reality had been rendered harmonious, in view of the fact that no philosophy has succeeded in doing this. The whole attempt is dependent for its validity on its success, and its success is, to put it mildly, imperfect. The scientific view of atoms goes behind the popular view of things/ because it holds that the latter do not construct a tenable view of phenomena. Mr. Ritchie would treat 1 Darwin and Hegel, p. 91. vn REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 121 the atoms similarly. But would he seriously contend that he can already give an entirely consistent, coherent, and intelligible view of the whole world, giving a reason why everything is exactly what it is and not otherwise? Of course Mr. Ritchie does not lay claim to such omniscience. But if he cannot, in what respect is he better than those publicans and sinners, the ' plain men ' and the realists ? If he cannot, why make such a fuss about formal coherency and consistency as the test of reality? By his own admission they represent a postulate which is never actually realised, and for aught we know never can be. If he cannot, lastly, what boots it to explain that though reality is not thought for us, it is for God ? l This free and easy appeal to the Deity, in the midst of a discussion of human knowledge, in order to silence an opponent and to fill up any gap in the argument, ought surely to be as severely reprobated as the mediaeval practice of ascribing any ill-understood fact or bit of knowledge to the agency of the Devil. The question is not whether to a divine mind, supposing its existence to be tenable in Mr. Ritchie's sense, Reality is Thought, but whether that assertion is a valid defence against the objection that Mr. Ritchie has given away his case when he has admitted that reality is not thought to human minds. Until, then, Mr. Ritchie can bring rather more convincing proof of his approaching apotheosis and omniscience, it must be contended that he has neither made out his assertion that rationality is the test of reality, nor its connexion with the metaphysical dogma that the real is ultimately the thought of a ' divine mind.' This question as to the ultimate nature of reality, forming the ultimate problem of ontology, brings us to the fourth and last question which may be raised about reality. And enough has been said concerning the imperfections of our methods of interpreting reality, to render it clear that we are perhaps hardly yet entitled to give any very confident answer to this question. From a purely scientific standpoint, I can see no reason for 1 Darwin and Hegel, p. 88. 122 HUMANISM VII attempting to prejudge the answer. It is pre-eminently a question to be met with a solvitur ambulando. From other points of view no doubt several different answers may be given, and Mr. Ritchie's pantheistic doctrine doubtless remains tenable, even though its epistemological basis be insecure. But at least as much may be claimed for the doctrine which Mr. Ritchie is most anxious to refute, the doctrine which denies most emphatically that existence is ever reducible to essence, and holds that the individual is the real. At all events it is, I think, possible to show that this doctrine is neither uncritical nor unable to maintain itself against Mr. Ritchie's objections. Mr. Ritchie regards it as the uncritical product of the popular Vorstellung, because it makes its appearance at a very early stage in the interpretation of reality. But this should rather speak in its favour, if it is able to reassert its validity after the fullest critical examination of the facts and of objections such as Mr. Ritchie's. Those objections arise in the first place out of his failure to appreciate the development in our conceptions of individuality and reality which has corresponded to the evolution of the objects which they symbolise, and in the second, out of his misunderstanding the respective positions which his opponents' logic assigns to thought- symbols and that which they symbolise. To say that the individual is the real and that the real is individual, is to make a proposition concerning a reality beyond it. It draws our attention to a fact which its terms cannot fully express. It is an adjectival description of reality in terms of thought-symbols. But it is not substantival. It is no definition of reality, but a reference to it, which expresses a characteristic feature intelligibly to real beings who can feel the extra-logical nature of reality. Hence it does not even necessarily state the essence of reality ; * for the theoretic validity (not the practical convenience) of the doctrine of essence is called in question, and the fortunes of the expression certainly do not affect the existence of 1 I should now (1903) define ' essence ' systematically in terms of purpose. vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 123 reality. But Mr. Ritchie treats it as if the sum and substance of all reality were supposed to be contained in it, and dissects it mercilessly in order to show that there is nothing in it. But in criticising the terms of the proposition he thinks he annihilates also the reality beyond it. He is mistaken ; for he tramples only on the shadow of his foe. The individual and the real (i.e. the thing symbolised by those symbols of our speech) are not a couple of categories, nor even fully defined concepts. They are just sign-posts, which to a purely thinking mind might convey no meaning, or the contradictory meanings Mr. Ritchie criticises, but which are meant for beings who are real as well as rational. Mr. Ritchie wilfully strips himself of one of his chief means of understanding the world when he abstracts from his own reality, and is then puzzled to find that he must be either nothing or an unknowable thing-in-itself, if he be not a bundle of universal thought-relations. So he comes to the absurd conclusion that he is made up of the products of one of his own activities ! Does not this remind one of the hero of Andersen's fairy tale, who became subservient to his shadow? And so it is not surprising that to one who holds that the individual is the real, his polemic l should appear a a-xiafjua^ia, which cannot grasp the logical position of reality, and results only in a series of hystera protera. For example, the individual is not ' everything which is called one ' — things are called one because we attribute to them this extra-logical character of individuality. Nor is the individual what can be expressed by a single term — because the latter is only the nearest logic can get to expressing individuality. The individual is not a spiritual or thinking substance — because the whole category of substance rests upon and is abstracted from the individual, is an attempt thought makes to symbolise a substantivity, which its own adjectivity never properly expresses. The individual is more than a meeting-point of universals, because universals are not individuals, nor able to form 1 Darwin and Hegel, pp. 93-100. 124 HUMANISM VII one, however many of them meet together. But they never do meet in numbers sufficient for a quorum : the attempt to reduce the individuals to universals generates an infinite process, which is never equivalent to the finite individual. It is not, then, any logical difficulty which compels us to modify the original sense of the assertion that individuality is an ultimate and definitely determined characteristic of reality, but the general flux of reality itself. The individual also is in process, and so individu ality becomes a characteristic of which reality may be seen to have less or more. The individuality of a drop of water is very evanescent ; the individuality of a schoolboy, or even of a mule, is often found to be a very stubborn fact. Once we have degrees, we can form a standard of individuality ; and the scale may be prolonged inferentially beyond what is actually given. Individuality thereby becomes a hypothesis and an ideal, as well as a characteristic of reality. The atom of physics is such a hypothetical prolongation of the individual in one direction. Monads and the like, are prolongations in another, and, in the writer's opinion, a far more promising, direction. So we can come to say that an individual is lacking in individuality, i.e. shows this universal characteristic of reality too indistinctly, seems to lend himself too easily to ' explanation ' by universals, seems to borrow too much from others, and the like. But this in nowise trenches upon the value of individu ality. It simply postulates that we must learn to think of the individuality of the real as we have learned to think of its reality, not as a completed being, but as a becoming, i.e. as being a process. That which we designate by the term individuality is a varying and growing quantity, never wholly absent, but not always fully developed. At the one end of the process are the atoms — of which we can hardly discern the individuality. At the other end are — let us say the angels — individuals so perfectly individualised that, as mediaeval doctors taught, each would form a species by himself. vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 125 And with all deference to the magni nominis umbra, wherewith the Absolute has overshadowed the minds of philosophers, it seems to me that it is to some such conclusion as this that the course of science tends, rather than to a single merely rational ' universal law/ from which all existences might be necessarily deduced by purely logical processes. Of the difficulties which the latter alternative involves Mr. Ritchie gives us a sample on page 95, which is valuable as containing a recognition by one of his school, belated and inadequate though that recognition be, of the gravity of questions that should have been considered before ever it was enunciated that reality was Thought. This is not the place to discuss what meaning, if any, can be attached to the dictum that ' Thought realises (does not this covertly reassert the distinction it pretends to explain away ?) itself in its Other in order to return into itself,' but it may be remarked that Mr. Ritchie's ' dilemma/ which drives him to such a solution, presents no difficulties to those who hold that the real is individual. For if the universe be constituted by the interactions of real individuals, some or all of whom display as one of their activities what we call ' thought/ there is no such ' irrational ' and ' alien ' Other as troubles Mr. Ritchie ; for what ' confronts thought ' is merely the whole of which it is the part and the practical interpreter. Nor does thought itself ever claim more for itself than this, whether it be in its reference of every proposition to a reality beyond it, or in its recognition of the necessity that an activity pre supposes a real being as its substrate, or in its ultimate foundation of all proof on the self-evident. Thus it is only an infirmity of our reason, causing us to hypostasise abstractions, which leads us to speak of ' universal laws of nature/ as if they were more than shorthand expressions for the habitual interactions of realities. But as the subtlety of our insight draws nearer to the subtlety of nature, the crudeness of our ' universal laws ' begins to appear. We grow better able to appreciate the real individuality of things, and so substitute specific 126 HUMANISM vn ' laws ' for general. We no longer ascribe John Doe's death to the universal mortality of humanity, but get the doctor to tell us precisely why John Doe, and no other, died. As we know him better, we do not account for a friend's conduct ' because he is a man,' but by a ' because he is this man.' In all our explanations we seek to get down to the particular, to do justice to the individual peculiarity of things, to enlarge the part assigned to personal idiosyncrasy. On the other hand, the less we know about a thing the more confidently can we lump it together with others and the more general are the state ments which the calculus of probabilities emboldens us to make about it. Hence though in the case of the lower orders of individuality such appreciation of the peculiar nature of each thing may still be an impracticable and indefinitely distant ideal, with regard to higher orders the principle is well established. We could hardly say with the poet that ' the proper study for mankind is man,' if there were not, even in the meanest, an inexhaustible store of idiosyncratic reactions, — an individuality, in short, which becomes more and more conspicuous as we pass from the lower to the higher, and looks less and less like a combination of abstract universals ! Hence, if we are to hazard any assertions concerning ' Omniscience,' is it not clear that it could have no use for universals, and so far from regarding the individual as compounded of them, would apprehend the idiosyncrasy of each thing in its action, without the clumsy mediation of ' universal laws ' ? In conclusion, then, let us contend against Mr. Ritchie that other views than his own of ultimate reality are tenable, that they answer the epistemological and meta physical difficulties at least as well as his, and are at least as deserving of the name of idealism (if Berkeley retains any claim to the doctrine he discovered !), and that they are far concreter and in closer interaction with the sciences than a metempirical misconception like the Absolute. Nor need we blush to own that a view like ours would not prove the popular Vorstellung of ' persons ' vii REALITY AND 'IDEALISM' 127 wholly false (even though it would tend to regard ' things ' as being only ' persons ' of a lower development of individuality), and so might prove more attractive to the ' plain man.' For it is possible to be ' critical,' without disregarding either humanity or reality. VIII DARWINISM AND DESIGN1 ARGUMENT Question as to the Value of the Argument from Design in the light of Darwinism. Its theological importance ; its intrinsic flaws. The Darwinian explanation of adaptation without adapting, by Variation and Natural Selection. Is it final ? I. Natural Selection proves too much ; it would apply equally to automata. But if intelligence is wholly inefficacious why was it developed? II. The causes of Variation lie beyond the scope of Darwinism, and to explain Evolution, therefore, other factors must be added. III. Natural Selection does not necessarily lead to change of species, nor exclude degeneration, nor guarantee pro gression. A variable factor, therefore, must be added. IV. Darwinism does not explain the origin of adaptation, but presupposes it. Nor need the struggle to adapt be more than the preservation of this initial adapta tion. The struggle for bare existence brings no growth of adaptation ; it is only when intelligence aims at ends and transforms the struggle for life into one for good life that improvement conies. V. The true significance of Darwinism the discovery of Natural Selection. Indefinite variation a methodological assumption justified as a simplifying abstrac tion. VI. But if it is understood as a description of actual fact, it rules out teleology a priori and quite apart from fact. Teleology and the calculus of probability. Hypothetically it is always possible to postulate a non-teleological context to any apparently teleological event. Per contra it is practically impossible to disprove the teleological interpreta tion, and ultimately both views are postulations of a will to believe and rest on an act of faith. VII. Summary : Darwinism not incompatible with teleology if its assumptions are taken as methodological, and it is arbitrary to take them as more. It is not necessarily hostile to teleology and even indirectly furthers it by throwing into relief the miracle of pro gress. Evolutionism not necessarily unteleological. THE question which is proposed for consideration in the present essay concerns the value of what has been called the Argument from Design, in the light, not so much of 1 Published in the Contemporary Review for June 1897. It had been my intention to have followed this paper up with discussions of other scientific views of Evolution (which explains my success in avoiding so much as the mention of Prof. Weismann's name), and finally to attempt the philosophic formulation of the conception of Progress which the current science assumes and the current 128 vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 129 the very various and widely spread modes of thought grouped together under -the name of Evolutionism, but rather of the particular form of Evolutionism which has been popularised by the labours of Charles Darwin, and not undeservedly bears his name. In face of the Darwinian theory, and the account it gives of the pedigree of life, are we any longer entitled to entertain the notion that a more than human intelligence has anywhere or in any way contributed to the making of what now exists? Is there any evidence to be found in the constitution or working of any part of nature which directly testifies to a divine creator ? These are old questions which, in some form or other, men have probably asked ever since they were men, and will probably continue to ask until they have become beasts or angels. Their practical importance will readily be admitted. For clearly out- attitude towards life will be very different, according as we believe it to be inspired and guided by intelligence, or hold it to be the fortuitous product of blind mechanisms, whose working our helpless human intelli gence can observe but in no wise control. Although the Argument from Design has been taken as a rough description of the subject to be treated, it will yet be convenient, at the outset, both to restrict and to expand its scope. It will be restricted in that the discussion will turn exclusively on the argument as based on living nature ; it will be expanded, in that that subject will include the question of the action of intelli gence generally in producing the present condition of things. That is to say, the possibility that though no traces of a divine intelligence are to be found in the history of the organic world, there has yet to be admitted the action of human and animal intelligence, will not be overlooked. For the world may have been brought into its present shape by intelligent efforts, if not by intelligent direction. We are not bound to assert a divine activity metaphysic denies, without comprehending its nature. But dis aliter visum, and the paper (to which § IV. and. the end of § VI. are additions), seemed worth including even as a fragment. For a discussion of the ultimate philosophic significance of Teleology, cp. Personal Idealism, pp. 118-121. K 130 HUMANISM via as soon as we have asserted the activity of intelligence. So it has to be confessed that before the Argument from Design has any theological value, three things have to be shown — (i) that intelligence, i.e. action directed to a purpose, has been at work ; (2) that the intelligence has not been that of any of the admitted existences ; and (3) that from its mode of action this intelligence may fairly be deemed divine. But if it is necessary to draw attention to a leap which the theologian's logic is too apt to commit, it is no less important to point out that the denial of the Argument from Design logically leads much further than its opponents commonly dare to go. For it would seem that a complete denial of design in nature must deny the efficacy of all intelligence as such. A consistently mechanical view has to regard all intelligence as otiose, as an ' epi-phenomenal by-product,' or fifth wheel to the cart, in absence of which the given results would no less have occurred. And so, if this view were the truth, we should have to renounce all effort to direct our fated and ill-fated course adown the stream of time. Our con sciousness would be an unmeaning accident. On the other hand, if intelligence played the part in history alleged by the second theory of its action, we might still cherish a hope of steering the bark that carries our fortunes at least into a temporary harbour ; if that of the first theory, we might be moved to strain every muscle at the behest of a helmsman who could envisage the goal with unerring eye. We have, then, three alternatives, of which the old ' Argument from Design ' undertook to represent one. It was a simple-minded argument, as befitted a time when the eventful history through which life has passed, and the real intricacy of its phenomena, were as yet scarcely suspected. It contented itself with observing the variety and ingenuity of the means whereby living beings attained their ends. The structure of the eye and the ear, the prescience of instinct, the processes of growth and birth, etc., provided it with inexhaustible material for vni DARWINISM AND DESIGN 131 respectful admiration. Surely all this could not be the result of blind chance, of unintelligent matter — it pro ceeded from the hand of God. In more modern language, the Argument from Design essentially argued from the existence of adaptation to the existence of an adapter. Beings would not have been so admirably fitted for their conditions of life unless they had been intelligently ' fitted ' for them. And the adaptations were so wonderful that the adapter must have been divine. Now, it is easy to see that in this shape the Argument from Design has several weak points quite apart from the attacks which Darwinism has made on it. (i) The thought of evolution, of a cosmic process, revealing itself in the course of time, the thought that lends grandeur and strength to the modern versions of the ancient plea, was entirely foreign to it. Consequently it took the process of adapting, whereby the adaptation arose to be instantaneous and complete. Consequently it was sadly perplexed by the fact that many adaptations were far from perfect. When Helmholtz pointed out the optical defects of the eye, and the ease with which they might have been remedied, the defenders of the old teleology were at a loss to answer a sacrilegious but exceedingly awkward criticism. They could not admit what now the teleological evolutionist may say without wincing — • viz. that the adaptations in themselves, and as they now exist, form a somewhat imperfect and insufficient testi mony to divine agency, and no testimony at all for a divine omnipotence. And, (2) it was not shown that animal intelligence might not have constructed the adaptations actually found. That suggestion could be ruled out only so long as the belief in the fixity of species prevailed ; but it became far more tenable so soon as practically unlimited time was allowed to intelligent effort to reach the degree of adaptation exhibited. And so there was nothing for it but to ascribe to the direct contrivance of the Deity every adaptation and every instinct found in the organic world, to burden, for 132 HUMANISM vm example, the divine conscience with the fiendish ingenuity with which a sphex-wasp stings into helplessness the caterpillars it has selected to be the living food of its young. The defence of the divine intelligence, in short, was maintained at a ruinous expense to the divine benevolence. Thus the old Argument from Design was in a bad way even before Darwinism appeared upon the scene with pretensions to deliver the coup de grace. Darwin himself, it is true, did not assert that no adapter existed. But he did what was more effective ; he suggested an alternative way in which adaptation might have arisen. This was not immediately fatal to the theory of intelligent effort as such ; for in human beings, at least, that theory was generally admitted as a vera causa, and so could be co-ordinated with the Darwinian explanation. But it did leave the theory of an inferred divine adapter in the logically indefensible position of being an additional and superfluous explanation of facts already sufficiently explained in other ways. Darwin's alternative consisted in showing that the existence of adaptations is conceivable and possible, although there has been neither an adapter nor any process of active adapting, but merely a sifting or eliminating of the ' unfitter.' To show this, he required only two of the postulates of his theory — (a) the existence of variability in living organisms ; and (&) the struggle for existence among them leading to the survival of the fitter, or com paratively fit, and the elimination of the unfitter, or comparatively unfit. The variability of organisms was further conceived as of such a character as to lead to what were called 'accidental' variations in every direction. This was to indicate that no special tendency to vary in any direction more than in any other was to be assumed, and that the causes of variation, which Darwin forbore to investigate, did not favour one sort of variation rather than another. Darwin, therefore, supposed nature to start with an indefinitely large supply of variations, some adaptive, the immensely greater number not. These vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 133 were sifted by the process of Natural Selection, which eliminated the non-adapted and ill-adapted, so that only the fit survived, and after a time organisms would be, in a general way, adapted to their conditions of life. The process by which these adaptations arose, therefore, was a purely mechanical one, and did not imply any in telligence. The sifting of variations by natural selection would no more imply a purposive ordering than the successive depositing of lighter and lighter detritus as a river flows out into the sea. The anti-teleologically minded, to whom the support which biological facts had seemed to give to the belief in design had long been hateful, were naturally delighted with this easy and obvious way of disposing of the appearance of intelligent adaptation. They loudly pro claimed the disappearance of the Argument from Design, and even their critics only ventured to object that Darwinism had substituted one kind of teleology for another, and made the good (or survival) of the organism determine the conduct adopted by the race. That was a poor consolation, and, in my opinion, an illusory one. For it is not for tJie sake of the organism's good that the conduct is adopted, but it so happens that conduct can only become prevalent when it has survival - value, and that the prevalent conduct and that adapted to the conditions of life must coincide. In reality the process is not teleological, but purely mechanical. This appears quite clearly if it is supposed to act upon beings conceived to be devoid of all intelligence, and it turns out that it acts equally well. If animals were mere automata, their variations would be sifted by natural selection in just the same way, and it is quite possible and legitimate to apply Darwinian methods of argument to astronomical physics and the chemistry of the elements. But if the Darwinian assumptions are equally applicable to automata, they are, ultimately and in principle, just as fatal to the view that animal intelligence plays any part at all in the history of life as they are to the belief in its divine direction, and this logical implication is already 134 HUMANISM vm appearing in the ultra -Darwinian writings. It is quite consistent of them to speak of the ' omnipotence ' of natural selection and to reject or minimise all other possible factors, like intelligent effort, use and disuse, physical and chemical conditions, etc., as directive forces in Organic Evolution. If, then, Variation and Natural Selection are the alpha and omega of the matter, and adequate to account for all the facts, it would seem to be beyond doubt that there is no longer any place for any sort of teleological argument. Nevertheless, it may reasonably be contended that this inference would be entirely erroneous, for the reasons to be presently set forth. I. The case with which the Darwinian argument dis penses with all intelligence as a factor in survival excites suspicion. It is proving too much to show that adaptation might equally well — i.e, as completely, if not as rapidly — have arisen in automata. For we are strongly persuaded that we ourselves are not automata, and strive hard to adapt ourselves. In us at least, therefore, intelligent effort is a source of adaptation. And the same will surely be admitted in the case of the higher animals. How far down the possibility of such intelligent co-operation in a greater or less degree is admissible, depends very much on people's preconceived notions ; but we are, at all events, unable to fix any definite inferior limit beyond which influence of intelligence cannot penetrate. Intelligence, therefore, is a vera causa as a source of adaptations at least co-ordinate with Natural Selection, and this can be denied only if it is declared inefficacious everywhere^ if all living beings, ourselves included, are declared to be automata. But should this be attempted — and it would seem to be involved, e.g. in the assumption of ' psychophysical parallelism ' — a peculiar difficulty arises on the basis of the Darwinian theory itself. If intelligence has no efficacy in promoting adaptation — i.e. if it has no survival- value, how comes it to be developed at all? On the Darwinian assumptions only those qualities can be vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 135 developed which have a value for survival. This must be true also of intelligence, which, consequently, cannot be mere surplusage. It must therefore be admitted that Darwinism is demonstrably wrong and refutes itself, if it seeks to deny the possibility of purposive adaptation and to regard all adaptation as the result of a mechanical natural selection. If, however, intelligence is re-admitted as a vera causa, there arises at least a possibility that other intelligence besides that of the known living beings may have been operative in the world's history. II. We may scrutinise the initial assumptions of Darwinism from which the anti-teleological consequences flowed. We may ask whether variation is really as ' indefinite ' and ' accidental ' as represented. Is it really so impossible to say anything about its causes ? We are here entering on a battlefield of science where the reputations of experts are still being made and unmade. Hence it behoves a philosopher to be careful. Nevertheless one may venture to make some remarks on the general aspects of the question, and to assert that the matter cannot possibly be left where Darwinism would leave it. Thus (i) Darwinism puts aside the question of the origin of variations. They are ' accidental,' that is, beyond the pale of inquiry. Yet it seems to be a perfectly good and legitimate scientific question to ask — whence these variations ? What, in Professor E. D. Cope's parlance, was the origin of the fittest ? how, in Dr. J. G. Schurman's words, do you account for the arrival as well as for the survival of the fittest.1 (2) Darwinism assumes the occurrence of indefinite variation in every direction. That assumption is, as we shall see, essential and quite justifiable as a methodological device in examining the facts and in working out the theory of Natural Selection ; but we have a perfect right to ask whether it is actually itself a fact. That is, the study of the variations which actually occur is a perfectly legitimate one, and as initiated — e.g., in Bateson's recent 1 Ethical Import of Darwinism, p. 78. 136 HUMANISM vm work on the subject l — it very distinctly suggests that variation is frequently discontinuous, and that it is to these discontinuous ' sports ' rather than to the accumula tion of slight differences that we have to look for the origin of many new species. In both these respects, then, the non - Darwinian evolutionists seek to penetrate deeper into the nature of Organic Evolution than Darwin needed to do when he established the reality and importance of Natural Selection, and when Darwin's followers speak of the ' omnipotence of Natural Selection,' they fail to observe that their opponents have really turned their flank. For while they do not deny the reality of Natural Selection, they go on to solve problems which, on the basis of Darwinism, cannot be discussed. Hence the Darwinians have not really any logical locus standi — e.g., in many of their objections to the ' Lamarckian ' factors in evolution. Biologists must be left a free hand in their attempts to determine the nature and source of the variations actually occurring, and in their theories to account for them. If, after admitting the existence of natural selection, they go on to say that variations are not indefinite and their causes not in determinable, Darwinian orthodoxy has no right to interfere. Or if it mistakenly does try to interfere, its defeat is certain. For it is practically certain that some influences which can only be called ' Lamarckian ' must affect both the number and the character of the variations. Living organisms are subject to the general physical and chemical laws of nature, and these render variations in certain directions practically impossible. It is very probable also that they produce certain definite effects upon the organisms exposed to them, and thus give a definite direction to variation. Thus the force of gravity imposes limits on the size to which organisms can grow upon the earth ; high and low temperatures produce definite effects upon all living tissue. Starvation also will stunt the growth of all organisms. The efficacy, then, of these additional factors in determining both what sort of 1 Materials for the Study of Variation. vni DARWINISM AND DESIGN 137 variations can occur, and in what directions organisms can vary, can hardly be disputed. Yet this admission would seem to be a sufficient refutation of the extreme claim that Natural Selection alone is competent to account for everything and exhausts the list of the factors in organic evolution which are logically admissible. It follows that if the Darwinian factors are not an adequate and complete account of what really happens, we are at liberty to supplement them by any additional factors we may require. Some such factors, such as geographical isolation, are, of course, admitted even by the ultra -Darwinians ; others, like sexual selection and the inherited effects of use and disuse, were adopted by Darwin himself; others, again, like the sensibility of organisms and their conscious efforts to attain their ends, are at least tolerated as worth discussing. What part, if any, these factors actually play in the history of organisms is still sub judice and cannot here be determined. It is enough for the present argument that Darwinism is not entitled to bar them out a priori as methodologically inadmissible. For if they are not inadmissible, a breach is made in the iron barrier with which the original con ception of a mechanically complete Darwinism shut out every possibility of teleology. It is so far attenuated that it can no longer reject a priori the suggestion of the possibility of one more teleological factor, viz. of a purposive direction of the course of variation. Such a purposive direction would still be hard to prove, because its action would be cloaked under a mass of other causes of variation, and because it would perhaps only display itself clearly in the occurrence of variations leading on to new species or new eras; but it would no longer be unthink able, and that would be no slight step towards a teleology. III. It has been shown so far that if Darwinism is, as may easily be done, made into a dogmatic denial of the share of intelligence in Organic Evolution and of the admissibility of determinable causes, of a limited number, and of a definite direction of variations, it is demonstrably wrong ; we shall go on to assert that in any form it 138 HUMANISM VIII leaves unexplained the main point, the very point it was invented to explain, viz. Organic Evolution itself. That may seem a startling statement when one remembers that what led Darwin to propound his theory was precisely the evidence for Organic Evolution, the evidence of the descent of the existing forms of life from widely different ancestors. Yet the statement is made under a due sense of responsibility and with a full intention of proving it. Darwin put forward his theory as an account of the origin of species — it is asserted that there is nothing in that theory in itself to account for the origination of species. At least, in the sense that Darwinism formulates causes which would logically lead to the evolution of new forms of life. The Darwinian factors only state certain conditions under which organisms have evolved, but they contain nothing that would necessarily cause them to evolve. They simply state that Natural Selection is a general condition under which all life exists, whether it evolves or not. It is equally applicable to species which change and species which do not. Every form of life is continually subject to the action of Natural Selection, weeding out the notfit and promoting the survival of the fit. But it does not follow that any particular form of life will be transformed. The conditions of success may be so various and so variable that on the whole no possible variation can obtain the victory over any other, and as a whole the species remains as it was. Let us illustrate the way in which a species under natural selection may yet persist unchanged. Suppose there is in a definite area an animal, say an anemone, which has a certain range of temperature and is variable, so that while the mass of the species is violet, it tends to vary in the direction both of blue and of red. Suppose, further, that the blue variety can stand the cold best and the red the heat, while the violet is intermediate in these respects. Now suppose a succession of unusually cold seasons. Clearly the blue anemones will flourish at the expense of the violet, and the red will nearly die out. Next suppose a succession of warm seasons ; clearly the red will recover vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 139 their strength and the preponderance of the blue will be reduced. At the end of the cycle, red, blue, and violet will very likely exist in their original proportions. That is, though the Darwinian factors, variability and natural selection, have been fully and continually operative, the species has not changed. Such a case, though I have intentionally chosen an imaginary one, is not merely hypothetical ; it is illustrated by a small but sufficient number of persistent species which have remained unchanged from very early geological times. Darwin himself1 mentions the Nautilus, the Lingula, and the order of the Foraminifera, antique stick-in-the-muds literally and metaphorically, which are the Chinese of the animal world and have persisted without change from the Laurentian and Silurian ages. And over shorter periods a similar persistence under Natural Selection is the normal condition of the organic world. Indeed, specific stability is a much commoner result of Natural Selection than Evolution. And further, not only are the Darwinian factors perfectly compatible with a changeless persistence of species, but they are equally well satisfied by change in a direction which is the reverse of that which is actually found to prevail. For not merely progressive evolution but also degeneration may come about under the impartial operation of variability and Natural Selection. Under certain circumstances the more lowly organised may be the fitter — i.e. the better adapted to cope with the conditions of life that prevail at the time ; and then the higher must either die out or degenerate. Hence biologists are familiar with countless instances of de generation everywhere. We ourselves are degenerate in far more obvious and undeniable ways than sensationalists like Nordau contend. We have lost our fur — all except a few patches on the head — our ancestral tails, our pineal eye, our sturdy claws and prehensile toes, the tapering tips of our ears and the graceful power of attentively pricking them up ; the vermiform appendix indeed remains as a 1 Origin of Species, ii. pp. 83, 90, 117. 140 HUMANISM vm joy to the evolutionist and a profit to the doctor, but to the patient the useless and dangerous relic of a damnosa hereditas. And all this degeneration has taken place under the action of Natural Selection. Not but what there has also been much progression, and that in the aggregate its amount has far exceeded that of degeneration. That is just the reason why we speak of the history of life as an evolution. Life has been on the whole progressive ; but progress and retro gression have both been effected under the same ' law ' of Natural Selection. How, then, can the credit of that result be ascribed to Natural Selection ? Natural Selection is equally ready to bring about degeneration or to leave things unchanged. How, then, can it be that which determines which of the three possible (and actual) cases shall be realised ? Let us grant that Natural Selection is a permanent condition of life, from which no beings can at any time escape. But for that very reason it cannot be the principle of differentiation which decides which of the alternative courses the evolution of life will in fact pursue. It cannot be Natural Selection that causes one species to remain stationary, another to degenerate, a third to develop into a higher form. The constant pressure which it exercises on organisms does not in the least explain the actual course of evolution any more than the constant pressure of the atmosphere determines the direction in which we walk. The cause of the particular changes which have led to the existing forms of life cannot be found in an unchanging law of all life ; it must be sought in forces whose intermittent action has made an instrument of Natural Selection. It is clear, then, that to explain the changes which have resulted in the existing forms of life some variable factor has to be added to Natural Selection. And as to the nature of that factor Darwinism, qua Darwinism, tells us nothing. There may have been one or more of them, they may have been of all sorts. They may have been nothing more recondite than climatic changes or geo graphical isolation, to mention two of Darwin's favourite via DARWINISM AND DESIGN 141 explanations when Natural Selection stands in need of something to help it out in order that it may proceed to the origination of species. Now clearly these causes of the transmutation of species, and others that might be instanced, are under the proper conditions adequate to produce new species — though there is no apparent reason why they should so predominantly produce higher species —but that does not concern us here. The point to be emphasised is that these additional factors lie beyond the scope of the peculiarly Darwinian factors, which can have nothing to say on the question whether they are to be accepted or rejected. As long as the action of Natural Selection as a permanent and universal condition of life is conceded, there is nothing further to be said by the Darwinian theory. If, then, there is no other scientific objection to it, the notion of a purposive direction of variation becomes admissible. Nay, it would be possible to combine a belief in special creation with that in Natural Selection, and claim that while Natural Selection alone could not give rise to a new species, Natural Selection plus special creation might account for the distribution and succession of species. We should thus reach the paradoxi cal result, that whereas Natural Selection was expressly invented to supersede special creation, there is no necessity to regard the two theories as incompatible ! I mention this paradox merely to illustrate by it the helplessness of mere Natural Selection and the necessity of appealing to subsidiary theories in order to account for the facts of Organic Evolution. Of course, there is an abundance of such subsidiary theories, and many of them are quite unteleological. One may, for instance, continue to object to teleology on a variety of general grounds. Only those objections will not be specially grounded in Darwinism, and so far as the latter goes, it will not be possible to rule out the supposition that the process of Evolution may be guided by an intelligent design. IV. A further logical limitation of Darwinism is of a still more fundamental character. We have seen that 142 HUMANISM VIII Darwinism can supply no theory of the origin of Variation. Nor does it necessarily lead to the transmutation of species. Nor does it as such involve a growth of adaptation or yield an adequate account of Progress. But more than all this, it does not even give an account of the origin of adaptation. A little reflection will show that a certain amount of adaptation must always be conceived to pre exist before Natural Selection can begin to operate, the amount, namely, which is requisite to enable the organisms to exist, out of which the ' fit ' are subsequently to be selected. There must be an existence of the fit before there can be a survival of the fitter, and beings must be capable of existing at all before the question of their living better and surviving can be raised. Hence the initial degree of adaptation needed for the existence of organisms in the world together must always be pre supposed by the Darwinian theory. It must renounce therefore its claim to have accounted for adaptation as such, and so to have wholly superseded the teleological argument. Indeed, it may be questioned whether it ever involves any growth of adaptation, or does more than describe the means by which an already existing adaptation is preserved through changes in the conditions of existence. It is clear that a thing must be before it can be selected. And to be, it must always be adapted to the conditions of existence. It cannot be said to grow better adapted, unless it actually manages to exist more copiously, or fully, or easily. But can this be said to be true of the ordinary Darwinian version of the history of organisms ? Is it true that they have grown better adapted, and are better able to survive ? Is not the struggle for existence, now as ever, a struggle for a bare livelihood ? It boots not to suggest that many or most of the beings who now just manage to exist would have lived in comfort in a former age ; for apart from the dubious truth of the assertion, it is clear the fitness of each being must be measured by its ability to exist under the conditions of its own time and place. What seems to happen is rather this : we start with vni DARWINISM AND DESIGN 143 adaptation, with a sufficient equilibrium between the organism and its conditions of life to allow of its existence (for a season). But this equilibrium is constantly en dangered by the changes in its conditions of life ; hence there is constant need for an adaptive response to these changes, for novelty of adaptation. This response some somehow manage to effect, and so survive ; the rest do not, and therefore perish. And it is this process which we dignify with the name of Natural Selection. But it is the name only for the mechanism which just keeps alive the sacred fire of life ; it neither lights it nor improves its radiance. Nor do we come upon any incontestable traces of improvement until we come upon the traces of intelligence. It is only with beings that aim at ends, conceive goods and frame ideals of better living, that there begins that funding of the power over life which renders possible the pursuit, not of mere life, but of good life, and transfigures the struggle for existence by an ethical ideal. Natural Selection is a universal condition of life, but it is not for us a model or a guide. It is non-moral and relieves us of no moral responsibility ; it remains within our power to mould it well or ill. V. It will, perhaps, be objected that in the anxiety to invalidate the anti-teleological implications of Darwinism we have gone too far, and denied its whole scientific importance. For what is the value of Natural Selection if it does not explain Evolution ? Such a result is too monstrously paradoxical to be accepted as the outcome of any argument, however solid it may seem. This objection should be welcomed by anticipation, because it leads on to a discussion of the real scientific value of the Darwinian theory, and in so doing traces to its real source the prima facie conflict between Darwinism and teleology. In reality there is not involved in any thing that has been said any disparagement of Darwin's tireless scientific labour, nor does anything that has been said in the slightest detract from the permanent value and immense importance of his work. What is disputed is not the valuable part of his work, nor the true meaning 144 HUMANISM VIII of his theory, and these remain intact when a misinter pretation of his theory and a misapplication of his results are controverted. What, then, is the true significance of Darwin's work ? It is to have established once and for all the reality, univers ality, and importance of Natural Selection as a condition of organic life. That has been its main achievement rather than the refutation of crude theories of creation and teleology, or even the assignment of an all-sufficient cause for the changes of organic forms. It is somewhat difficult to establish this view by direct citation from the utterances either of Darwin or of the other leading Darwinians, for the reason that Darwin stumbled upon Natural Selection in the endeavour to prove Evolution, and never was greatly interested in, or even competent to discuss, the logic of his theory. Hence its fundamental conceptions are intro duced quite innocently and without formal definition, as if their meaning could not possibly be mistaken ; hence, also, terms like 'indefinite,' 'endless,' 'fortuitous,' sometimes only mean, respectively, 'not obviously limited,' 'in sufficient quantities,' and ' unexplored ' ; sometimes, as will be shown presently, they seem, quite unconsciously, to mean much more.1 This state of things, is, however, explained when we remember that there is abundant autobiographical evidence that Darwin himself elaborated his theory in support of evolutionism against creationism, and by con crete examples rather than by abstract deductions ; for by such methods he would naturally not become fully conscious of its logical implications. Hence the extraction of the logical root of the Darwinian theory becomes a matter of philosophical interpretation which may be repre sented somewhat as follows. Suspecting Natural Selection to play a part in the Evolution of life, Darwin had to determine what part of the total effect was due to the factor which he called 1 Similarly Darwinian discussions of the definition of 'higher' and 'lower,' of the persistence of lower forms and of the source of progression generally find refuge in our immense ignorance of the past, and exhibit only the reluctance of their authors to tie themselves down to precise formulations. — Cp. Origin of Species, ii. pp. 117, 151, 243, 274. Wallace, Darwinism, p. 120. vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 145 Natural Selection. To solve that problem he adopted, no doubt instinctively, the method by which all scientific investigation proceeds in dealing with a complicated problem. That method is that of abstraction, of abstrac tion as a means of simplification. We isolate the factor of which we seek to determine the value by taking cases in which the other factors may be supposed to neutralise each other, and so to be irrelevant to the result. Our result is abstract, but, if the analysis has been carefully done, it is applicable to the concrete facts. That is precisely what Darwin did. The phenomena of life are immensely complicated, and there was ample reason to suppose that they were affected by all sorts of influences. To lay bare the effect of Natural Selection, it was necessary to simplify them by constructing an ideal case from which other influences might be excluded. That is the logical significance of the fundamental assumptions of Darwinism. Darwin knew that organisms varied. He did not know how much, or in what direction. But if there was a definite direction about the variation of organisms, this clearly might in various ways retard or accelerate the action of Natural Selection, and would in any event cloak it. It is obvious, for example, that if a race of elephants tend to vary in the direction of whiteness, then, though that variety may be weaker and less well equipped for the struggles of life, there will always be a certain supply of not-yet-eliminated white elephants.1 Again the fate of the variety will be widely different, according as men consider them unlucky and kill them, or sacred and watch over them with especial care. In order, therefore, to avoid the initial complications introduced by a possible tendency of variation in a definite direction, it was logically necessary for Darwin to assume that as a whole Variation had no definite direction. Variations occurred of all sorts, advantageous, disadvantageous, and indifferent, hence, as a whole, 1 It is supposed that albinos tend to be produced by in-breeding, and hence the supply is always kept up in spite of Natural Selection. L 146 HUMANISM vm Variation was indefinite. Darwin, that is, did not facilitate his task by supposing a mass of favourable variations to give Natural Selection a good start ; favourable variations were no commoner than they would have been if they had been drawn at random from an indefinite supply of possible variations of all sorts. Similarly, in order to avoid the complicating question whether these variations were not produced by definite causes, and so tended in a definite direction, Darwin said in effect — Let us suppose these indefinite variations to be accidental. That is, let us waive the question of where they came from. And in this way he arrived at the assumption of indefinite accidental variation on which his theory proceeded. It is clear, then, that this essential assumption of Darwinism was originally methodological, that it was a simplification of the facts assumed for purposes of analysis and easier calculation. This is, of course, an everyday procedure in all the sciences, and if a methodological assumption has been skilfully selected, it does excellent service. Now Darwin's assumption was an exceedingly skilful one : for whether or not it was true that Variation was absolutely indefinite and void of direction, it yet ordinarily seemed sufficiently indefinite to enable the ideal theoretical case to throw a most instructive light upon the actual facts. Perhaps the character of the assumption of indefinite variation is best illustrated by a parallel methodological fiction which has also played a great part in history. I refer to the assumption of ' the economic man ' in political economy. In order to build up the science of wealth, the early economists disentangled the primary laws of wealth-production by the methodological assump tion of the ' economic man.' They said : Let us consider man as a wealth-producing animal ; let us suppose, therefore, that the production of wealth is his sole object in life. In that case the economic man must be taken as (i) absolutely laborious, as never distracted from his work by emotional indisposition or laziness, as a perfect vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 147 wealth-producing machine ; (2) he must be taken as absolutely intelligent, as always using the best means to his end, as knowing how to use his labour to best advantage, and how to sell its products in the most advantageous manner ; (3) he must be taken as absolutely selfish, as absolutely disregardful of any consideration but that of how he could acquire the largest possible amount of wealth. Having thus simplified economic facts, let us see what will happen. And they proceeded to build up the science of abstract economics. When it was objected to them that their methodological assumption, the economic man, did not exist in reality, the wiser among them replied : ' Of course we know that, but the conditions of actual business are sufficiently close to what they would be under our ideal conditions to have much light thrown on them by the latter.' And they gave thereby a clue through the labyrinth of facts to the economists who succeeded them, and were able by means of it to calculate the effects in various departments of the inaccuracy of the methodological assumption of the ' economic man.' Now ' the economic man ' is an exact parallel to the ' accidental ' and ' indefinite ' variation of Darwin. They are both methodological assumptions, travesties of the truth, if taken as full and complete accounts of the actual facts, epoch-making and indispensable organa of science, if properly used. And the parallel extends still further. As philosophers are well aware, there is everywhere in the sciences a tendency to forget that methodological assumptions are not necessarily true because they are useful,1 a tendency to assert as a fact what was at first assumed as an abstraction and a fiction for greater convenience in examining the facts. Alike in ordinary life and in science we are almost without exception given over, not to the adoration of an unknown god, but to the worship of forgotten abstractions and methodological 1 Even so excellent a thing as Pragmatism may be overdone ! In fact it usually is, by its critics and in popular thinking, when methodological assumptions of limited applicability are mistaken for absolute truths. 148 HUMANISM vm fictions, and happy is he who can avoid bending the knee to such bogeys. And this idolatry leads to terrible confusions, as these very cases show. When ' the economic man ' is taken seriously, and made a practical ideal, he leads to results which are incompatible with the maintenance of political and social cohesion, and with the sanctity of moral laws. And he provokes a reaction even worse than himself in the direction of revolutionary socialism. So, too, with the Darwinian assumption. When it is taken as a fact and as the last word on the subject of evolution, it leaves no room for the Argument from Design, and leads to consequences entirely inconsistent with any teleology. Moreover, the misrepresentation of the principle of indefinite variation is a very easy and common one, and has been adopted in this very article in exhibiting the conflict between Darwinism and teleology. But, once it is recognised as a misinterpretation, as a case of confusing a method of examining facts with the facts themselves, the danger of any further conflict is averted. It remains to give practical confirmation of this inter pretation of the real meaning of the Darwinian principle. To do so, it may be pointed out, in the first place, that Darwin assumed the indefiniteness of Variation initially upon utterly insufficient evidence, or, rather, upon no relevant evidence at all. For he was not in the position to make any positive statements about the variations that actually occurred, and had not had the time to study them exhaustively. In fact, it is only in these days that the actual facts of Variation are beginning to be observed and recorded, and many generations of workers will probably pass away before it will be possible to state with approximate certainty what variations actually take place, and can be conceived as likely to take place. If, then, Darwin's knowledge of Variation were to be regarded as the logical basis for asserting Variation to be in fact indefinite, the foundations of Darwinism would have been extremely insecure, and Darwin ought to have begun with an exhaustive study of variations before broaching vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 149 his theory. Did he, as was to be expected from so exceptionally cautious an inquirer, subject himself to this preliminary investigation ? He did nothing of the sort. He simply pointed to the known variety of variations as approximately illustrative of his conception of ' indefinite variation,' and went ahead. I can find nothing more formal than a request l that ' the endless number of slight variations and individual differences occurring in our domestic productions, and in a lesser degree in those under nature, be borne in mind.' In other words, he did not attempt to prove the existence of indefinite variation in its literal sense ; he took it for granted for the methodo logical reasons aforesaid. Was it wrong to do this ? Not unless science is deprived of the right of making methodological assumptions. And the practical justifica tion of Darwin's procedure is seen in the fact that his theory has in the ripeness of time provided a guiding thread and an impetus to the study of facts that might otherwise long have eluded the grasp of science. VI. That the facts of Organic Evolution really play a very small part in producing the speculative bearing of Darwinism will appear also if we inquire into the reason of its anti-teleological action as commonly under stood. For it turns out that the destructive action of Darwinism is a by-product of the theory which lurked in the innocent-looking phrase, ' indefinite variation.' We have seen that, as a method of investigating the facts, that phrase is thoroughly defensible ; but then in that shape it does not really touch the question of teleology at all. For if the variations are only called indefinite in order to determine the working of Natural Selection, then the possibility of their purposive occurrence is not thereby excluded. On the other hand, let us take the phrase as a description of an actual fact. If there are an indefinite number of variations, and if they tend in an indefinite number of directions, it follows that the variations in any 1 Origin of Species, \. p. 97. 150 HUMANISM VIII one direction will not be more than an infinitesimal portion of the whole. It is not necessary, therefore, to adduce any special cause for those particular variations ; they need not be regarded as due to anything more than chance, that is, to causes which do not in any intelligent way discriminate in their favour. That advantageous variations should occasionally occur is no more remark able, or in need of explanation, than that by throwing dice long enough we should occasionally throw sixes. If, then, indefinite variation be an actual fact, no special intelligence need be assumed to account even for the most abnormal variation. In other words, a principle has been adopted which rules out tlie hypotJiesis of intelligent direction a priori, if we forget or fail to perceive that indefinite variation is a methodological assumption. And being a priori, the principle would rule out the hypothesis whatsoever the facts were, and however much they might suggest the action of intelligence. Intelligence is non suited by the way in which the question is put, and irrespective of the facts of the case. Yet all this is due to nothing more mysterious than an application of the calculus of probabilities, for, as all who are even slightly familiar with that calculus are aware, even the most improbable result may be expected to occur if a sufficiency of cases be given. It is highly improbable, for example, that any one should, by fair dealing, acquire a hand containing thirteen trumps at whist. But if he had played some 640,000,000,000 hands, he might fairly expect to hold all the trumps on one occasion. Everything that happens may be due to chance, and no matter how improbabilities are multiplied, we never altogether eliminate the infinitesimal probability that everything is due to chance. Supposing we were to try to persuade an obstinate materialist that our conduct was dictated by a purpose and due to intelligence, and was not the action of an automatic mechanism which had by some strange chance put on a delusive appearance of purposiveness. However intelligently we acted, we could not convince our adversary, if he were permitted viii DARWINISM AND DESIGN 151 to regard our action as one out of a series of actions displaying no intelligence. He would cheerfully admit that the action seemed intelligent, and by itself would justify the inference to a real intelligence behind it. But he would urge, if I take it as the one intelligent action out of an indefinite number of unintelligent actions, there is nothing in it that need cause surprise or calls for the assumption of real intelligence. We might try to convince him by multiplying the symptoms of intelligence, but in vain. For, though he would admit the growing improb ability of such a continuous series of apparently purposive actions, he could still expand the context of non-purposive actions rapidly enough to maintain his theory of their chance origination.1 If, therefore, an indefinite number of non-adaptive variations be really granted, no adaptations, however numerous and complete, can ever prove an intelligent cause of variation. Even if all the known facts testified aloud to the operation of an adapting intelligence, the Darwinian assumption might still be used to disprove all teleology, if unbounded license were given for the invention of hypothetical variations ! Now, of course it is not contended that variations as known are all obviously adaptive ; it is claimed rather that we do not know enough about them to say what their actual character is. But it must most strenuously be asserted that the Darwinian theory cannot be quoted as destructive of the action of purposive intelligence in organic evolution until the occurrence of indefinite variation has been raised from the position of a methodological device to that of an incontestable fact. And even then it may be doubted whether the fortuitous character of the facts could ever be rendered incontestable. To defy refutation by the facts the teleo- logist has merely to adopt a device analogous to that of his opponent. Just as the latter could always assume a non-teleological extension of what seemed a teleological ordering, so the former can always assume a secret 1 Cp. pp. 71-72. 152 HUMANISM vm teleology within the seeming chance. This he can do in several ways ; most thoroughly by assuming that the order purposed exactly coincided with the results of a fortuitous distribution, and was intended so to do. This ingenuity, however, would somewhat overreach itself. It would have to conceive the intelligence immanent in the world's order as one aiming at concealment. For our only method of discriminating between the results of ' design ' and ' chance ' is to observe a deviation from the fortuitous distribution (which betrays no preference for any particular result) in the direction of what may be conceived as a more valuable result. Hence in the case supposed, the deviation being nil, we should have no reason to suspect the presence of intelligence. And generally, one would have to hold that a supposition which rendered the results of ' design ' and ' chance ' undistinguishable abolished also the difference between the two conceptions ; a world governed by such an intelligence would be no better than one wholly due to ' chance.' 1 By supposing, therefore, that the ' design ' makes no difference^ the teleologist would defeat his purpose. But he can assume the intelligent deviation to be of whatever magnitude the facts demand, and by assuming it to be small enough he can suppose a purposively guided order which mimics chance, just as the anti- teleologist could explain ' design ' as a mimicry by chance. And so he can conceive a (really) teleological order in- finitesimally different from one merely fortuitous, and the mere tabulation of statistics will never decide its actual character. The mere record of the throws will never tell us that once in a hundred throws the dice came up sixes by intelligent design (of a nefarious kind). And yet that single throw might have sufficed to win the game ! Now in the history of Organic Evolution the really valuable events which help on progress are certainly of the extremest rarity. It is only once in an aeon that 1 Cp. James, Varieties of Religious Experience, pp. 443-447, and Philosophical Conceptions and Practical Results, pp. 9-11. vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 153 an ' accidental ' variation distinguishes itself from a myriad others by lifting organic structure permanently on to a higher plane. It is only once in centuries that a genius is born who does the same for social progress : the great events in history are utterly unique, and turn the course of things so thoroughly that they need never be repeated. But all uniqueness makes a mock of Science, which ' explains ' by finding uniformities. Hence the teleological and the anti-teleological interpre tation of events will never decide their conflict by appealing to the facts : for in the facts each finds what it wills and comes prepared to see. And yet the facts will not wholly bear out either, so long as they present traces of what we can describe as disorder in the one case, or order in the other. The decision therefore needs an act of choice ; it eminently calls for the exercise of our ' will to believe ' ; it rests, like all the ultimate assumptions of our knowledge, upon an act of faith. VII. The position, then, is this: I. If we take the Darwinian assumptions as methodological, they are perfectly legitimate, most fruitful and valuable, and establish the fundamental biological law of Natural Selection. But there is no conflict with the belief in teleology, and the Argument from Design remains un impaired. 2. If we take the Darwinian assumption as representing a fact, it is certainly destructive of all teleology. But the fact is not established and is open to grave doubts on scientific grounds, while its destruction of the teleological argument is simply a foregone conclusion a priori. 3. If, while admitting that indefinite variation has not been shown to exist, we yet contend that it is the sole working assumption by which the facts can be investigated, and that the possibility of a purposive guidance must be rigidly excluded from Science, we simply beg the question. For certainly, if all the evidence is to be interpreted in accordance with such canons, no evidence for teleology can ever be found. One need not object to people wearing blue spectacles if they like — they are in fact 154 HUMANISM vm often useful, if not ornamental — but it is ludicrous to maintain that everything is blue because we insist on looking through the spectacles. This ought to constitute a sufficiently explicit answer to the question, Is Darwinism, properly understood, necessarily hostile to teleology ? Not only have we been able to answer that question by an emphatic negative, but we have uncovered the source of the misunderstanding which led to the question. We might go on to raise rather the opposite question, and ask, Does Darwinism in any way tend to strengthen the Argument from Design and the belief in teleology ? That would, perhaps, be asking too much ; its services in this respect seem to be mostly of an indirect sort. It is often invigorating to be attacked, especially when the assault can be successfully repulsed, and perhaps in this sense the Argument from Design is the stronger for having been impugned in the name of Darwinism. More can perhaps be extracted from another point brought out by Darwinism — viz., from the fact that Natural Selection is a universal law of life operating indifferently, whether there is stagnation, degeneration, or progression. From this it may be inferred that the ghastly law of struggle for existence, the cruel necessity which engages every living thing in almost unceasing warfare, while not itself the cause of progression, is yet capable of being rendered subservient to the cause of progression. The progress, the adaptations, actually found, are certainly not due to Natural Selection : yet neither does Natural Selection form an obstacle to their occurrence. Nay, we may conjecture that the power which makes for progress, a power which we may divine to work for nobler ends, is lord also of Natural Selection, and can render it a pliable instrument of its purpose, a sanction to enforce the law of progress, a goad to urge on laggards. What that power may be Darwinism cannot directly tell us. Before we could ascribe to it a pronouncedly teleological character, we should have to measure our strength against a number of possible factors in Organic vin DARWINISM AND DESIGN 155 Evolution as ' mechanical ' as Darwinism. But I believe it could be shown that all these mechanical laws of Evolu tion, from Spencer's law of differentiation downwards, fail just where Darwinism pure and simple failed — viz., in accounting for the historical fact of progress. Either, therefore, we should have to admit that an as yet unformu- lated mechanical law of Evolution accounted for progres sion, or that it was due to an agency of a different order, to the guidance of an intelligent and purposive activity. It may be suggested, however, that a critical examination of the current mechanical theories of Evolution must distinctly strengthen the belief that there has been opera tive in the history of life an intelligent force to which we must ascribe the progression and direction of the process of Evolution. And inasmuch as Darwinism occupies a leading place among these mechanical theories, its exam ination will greatly conduce to that result. We have discussed so far only mechanical theories of Evolution. But in itself Evolution is not necessarily bound to be mechanical ; it is perfectly possible to regard it as the gradual working out of a divine purpose. And once we adopt the evolutionist standpoint, it is clear that the Argument from Design is materially and perceptibly strengthened, (i) Positively, because Evolutionism lets us as it were behind the scenes and shows us how means are adapted to ends in the gradual process of Evolution. This renders easier and more comprehensible the belief underlying all teleology in a power that intelligently adapts means to ends. (2) Negatively, Evolutionism greatly weakens the objection to the teleological argument based on the imperfection of existing adaptations. We are no longer compelled to proclaim everything already perfect ; it suffices that we can find nourishment for the faith that everything is being made perfect. If, then, Evolutionism strengthens the Argument from Design, the latter indirectly owes a debt of gratitude to the theories which have facilitated the adoption of the Evolutionist standpoint. And among these Darwinism stands pre-eminent. Evolutionism was as old as one of 156 HUMANISM vm the earliest of Greek philosophies ; l but it was not until Darwinism made it a household word that it could force its way into the consciousness of men at large. And as a philosopher who regards Evolutionism in some form as affording the most hopeful method of approaching the mystery of existence, I am inclined to hold that when historical perspective has cleared away the molehills we have made into mountains, it will be here that will be found Darwin's most momentous and enduring service to knowledge and to mankind. 1 That of Anaximander : see Mind I p. 129. IX THE PLACE OF PESSIMISM IN PHILOSOPHY.1 ARGUMENT To prove that Pessimism is an ultimate attitude of will. (i) It is not merely disappointed hedonism. (2) It may result from the breakdown of any ideal of value. Now any system of values may be judged (a) adequate, (b) inadequate, (c) inapplicable, to Life. Similarly in judgments of Fact, reality is judged (a) knowable (b) unknowable, (c) inexhaustible. But the ' critical ' solutions (c) reduce themselves to (b). All our modes of Valuation stand and fall together, and ' Truth ' is among them. Hence Optimism and Pessimism become ultimate alterna tives. Still Pessimism is secondary. Practical value of this issue. THE aim of this essay is to show that logically Pessimism should be taken in a far wider and more fundamental sense than is commonly assigned to it, and that when this is done, it forms an attitude towards the ultimate questions of philosophy which is not susceptible of being resolved into any other, and cannot be refuted, but only accepted or rejected. It forms one of those ultimate alternatives the choice between which rests essentially upon an act of will. In attempting to establish this view, it will be convenient to start by determining what we are to under stand by the term Pessimism. It has been customary to subordinate the treatment of the subject too much to the particular views of representative pessimist writers, and to pay too little regard to the logical connection of the pessimist positions. Hence, a belief has become current that Pessimism might be summed up in the assertion that life was not worth living, because in it the 1 Reprinted (with a few additions) from the International Journal of Ethics, for Oct. 1897, 157 158 HUMANISM ix pains predominated over the pleasures, and the whole question was thus reduced to one of the possibility and result of the hedonistic calculus. Now, it is true that the doctrines of Schopenhauer and von Hartmann lend themselves to such a narrowing of the issue, but I believe that it is possible to demonstrate the essential shallowness and logical inadequacy of a transition which is psycho logically so easy as to have been made almost universally. In the argument that life is not worth living because it involves an excess of pain, the second clause states a reason for the first, and, if it is proved, the conclusion inevitably follows. What has not been observed, however, is that even if it should not be proved, the conclusion may yet be true, because it may rest on other reasons. To argue that because one ground for a conclusion is unsound, the conclusion itself cannot be established, would evidently be nothing else than the familiar logical fallacy of denying the antecedent — until it has been shown that no other grounds are possible. But this is not the case here. The condemnation of life, which Pessimism essays to pronounce, does not necessarily rest on a single basis : it forms an attitude of thought which has been linked with the assertion of the predominance of pain by a mere accident of historical development. It is quite possible to condemn life on various grounds without holding it to be predominantly painful. It is possible to condemn it, not because it has too little pleasure, but because it has too little of the other ends which are recognised as good in themselves, because it has too little virtue or knowledge or beauty or duration. Life may shock us into a denial of its value also by its moral, its aesthetic, its intellectual deficiencies : it may seem so brief, so nauseatingly petty and contemptible that the game is not worth the candle. In all such cases the Pessimism cuts itself adrift from its supposed hedonist basis ; and, even where the hedonist standard is retained, it need not be of an egoistic character. It may be sympathy with the misery of others that tempts us like the Buddha, like the Preacher in Thomson's City of Dreadful Night, to condemn life. ix PESSIMISM IN PHILOSOPHY 159 Again, it is possible to argue, more subtly, that the unhappiness is the effect rather than the cause of the worthlessness of life. It is " not that life is valueless because it is unhappy, but that it is unhappy because it is valueless." l But what enables man thus to apply to life the standards by which it is itself condemned ? Nothing surely but the fact that he is capable of framing an ideal of worth, an ideal of something worth striving for and of holding it up to reality as a mirror in which to behold its deficiencies. It is because we systematise our valuations and so form ideal standards which alone bestow true value upon life, that we can condemn it because it nowhere allows us to attain perfect happiness or full knowledge or complete goodness or aesthetic harmony. Now, it is evident that the deficiencies in life which the formation of those ideals enables us to detect will act as a potent stimulus to progress so long as the deficiencies seem comparatively small and the ideals appear attainable; if, however, we allow our ideals to outgrow our means of reaching them, the chasm between them and the actual will become too deep to be bridged by hope ; we shall despair of attaining our heart's desire and bitterly condemn the inadequacy of the actual. Thus Pessimism will ever hover like a dark cloud over the path of progress, ready to oppress with gloom alike the cowardice that despairs and the temerity that outstrips, prematurely and recklessly, the limitations of the practicable. It is a natural and almost inevitable phase in spiritual development, which results whenever any object of desire is found to be unattainable, and it has no exclusive affinity for the details of a petti fogging calculation of probable pleasures and pains. The sole reason why the question of Pessimism has mostly been debated on a hedonistic basis is because Happiness is the one ideal which is universally comprehended, which allures by its elusive glitter even the coarsest and most commonplace of men. Having thus freed Pessimism from its entanglement in 1 Riddles of the Sphinx, p. 99. 160 HUMANISM IX hedonistic disputes, we may proceed to determine its deepest nature. That nature would seem to consist in the denial of the value of life, in whatever terms and by whatever standards it may be formulated. If Pessimism springs from the experience of pain, it will deny the value of life because happiness is unattainable ; if from moral' indignation, because goodness is unattainable ; if from aesthetic disgust, because beauty is unattainable ; if from scepticism, because knowledge is unattainable. But in each case the value of life will be denied. It makes no difference to Pessimism whether a man despair because the world is so miserable, or so bad, or so hideous, or so inscrutable. It follows from this that Pessimism is essentially a certain definite attitude towards the great and well- recognised class of judgments which are known as judg ments of Value (Werturteile}. Now, judgments of Value are possible about everything that is experienced, and are usually contrasted with judgments of Fact in that they do not inquire what a thing is, but what it is worth. And, like the primary judgments of Fact, alike whether they are ethical, aesthetical, or merely emotional or affective, they are primarily relative, — i.e. they assert that something has value for this purpose or that, for this aspect or that, of human nature. But just as the logical judgments must ultimately be accommodated in a coherent system of Truth, so the judgments of Value must ultimately all be referred to some supremely valuable end of action, or Summuni Bonum. It will be possible then to estimate life as a Whole by this supreme standard of Value, and to discuss whether it satisfies it or not. If, as the outcome of such discussion, it shall appear that no coherent system can be framed, and that our valuations fail, their failure will create the situation on which Pessimism forms the emotional reaction. Now as the result of such discussion, only three alter natives seem thinkable : I. We may conclude that Life is adequate to the attainment of the supreme end of action, and that, ix PESSIMISM IN PHILOSOPHY 161 consequently, it has value and is worth living. That is the position taken by every form of Optimism. II. We may decide that Life is inadequate to meet the requirements of the standard applied to it ; that, consequently, it has no value, and so is not worth living. That is the conclusion implied in every form of Pessimism. III. We may object on principle to the attempt to answer the question, and contend that it should not be raised, arguing, e.g., that it does not follow from the fact that the value of everything in life may be determined, that we can determine the value of life as a whole. That may be called the agnostic or — with a reference to the Kantian denial of metaphysics and its analogous answer to the ultimate question of knowledge — the critical answer. It is worth pointing out that these three modes of treating the ultimate question of Value correspond exactly to the ultimate modes of answering the question as to the ultimate Fact. We answer the final problem of theoretic knowledge also in three ways : ( I ) We may declare that existence is ultimately knowable, and explain its nature in more or less tentative systems of constructive metaphysics. (2) We may deny that in the end any thing can be known. That is the sceptical attitude. (3) We may protest that human knowledge is not com petent to solve its ultimate problems, and has no right to raise the question. That is the attitude of a ' Criticism y which shrouds the ultimate metaphysical truth in the unfathomable obscurity of the Thing-in-itself, and yet Tantalus-like, is ever tormented by the phantom of a satisfaction which it believes to be hopelessly beyond its reach. Whichever kind of ultimate question, then, we raise, whether that of the nature of ultimate facts or that of their valuation, three alternatives seem possible. But we can hardly avoid asking further whether they are all equally tenable. That is a difficult question which I cannot here discuss exhaustively. The proper academic M 162 HUMANISM IX thing to do would be, I suppose, either to evade an answer altogether or to decide in favour of the third alternative, — which is nearly as unsatisfactory as no answer at all, — and to finish up with a learned sneer at those who venture on ' dogmatic ' conclusions. But, for once, I should like to dare to be dogmatic — at least to some extent — and to indicate some reasons at least for eliminating that third alternative. For it seems to me that it reduces itself to the second, that the emotional value of 'no answer' is equivalent to an answer in the negative. Nor can I see why, if judgments of Value are rightly and properly made, they should not be applicable to the scheme of things as a whole. Certainly we make this assumption in the case of the judgments of intellectual Value, — i.e. in determin ing the value of our judgments of Fact. We assume that because judgments of relative truth and falsity are made, the former can ultimately be fitted into a coherent and congruous system of Truth. That is, we recognise that in the end Truth too is Value^ and decline to predicate the ' truth ' of any ' fact ' which seems discordant with our system. Indeed it is by such a reference to logical values that we discriminate among the ' facts ' which claim reality, and grant or refuse their application. But if we are entitled to hold that there is Truth, and not merely judgments relatively true, — in other words, that is, that our logical valuations may be combined into a system, and that the ideal of Truth is valid of Reality and controls it, — why should we not be equally entitled to affirm similar validity for the ideals of Goodness and Happiness ? 2 If Experience as a whole can be judged true or false, coherent or incoherent, why should it not be judged as a whole good or bad ? At all events, it cannot be taken for granted, without attempt at argument, that human judgments of ' good ' and ' bad ' mean nothing to the whole, while (equally human) judgments of ' true ' and ' false ' may be appealed to to extract its inmost mysteries.3 1 Cp. pp. 54-55. 2 Cp. pp. 260-261. 3 Cp. pp. 9-10. ix PESSIMISM IN PHILOSOPHY 163 And, moreover, the attempt to draw such a distinction would seem to break down even on the theoretic side. Granted that our theoretical account of the world had denied to all the judgments of Value, except those which use the predicates of ' true ' and ' false/ all ultimate significance, yet the fact would remain that such judgments were made and formed an integral part of life. They would remain, therefore, as an inexplicable factor in the world. And the more we realised the importance of this factor and the manner in which it permeates all our activities and directs even the intellect when it is seeking to deny it, the more doubtful should we become whether we had explained anything while this was left inexplicable. That is, we should inevitably be impelled towards scepticism on the theoretic side, and the practical reflex of scepticism is, as I have elsewhere shown, nothing else than Pessimism.1 It remains to ask whether the problems of Value or of Fact are more ultimate, and whether ultimately the one may not be subordinated to the other. I believe that they may and must, and that the antithesis between them is ultimately noxious because all values are facts and all facts are values, i.e. the product of one or other of our modes of valuation.2 But once more I can only very briefly indicate the ground for this conclusion. I shall here confine myself to observing that mere intellection is impotent (97 Sidvoia avrrj ovOev /az>et), that the human mind is essentially purposive, that in its activity the judgments and ideals of Value supply the motive power to the judgments of Fact, and that, in the absence of anything valuable to be reached by them, no reason can be assigned why such judgments should be made. Hence if judgments of Fact, in spite of their illusory logical independence, seem psychologically to be rendered possible by and rest on 1 Riddles of the Sphinx, ch. iii. and iv. 2 The issue raised by Pragmatism may also be stated as being whether logical valuations alone shall be allowed to constitute 'facts,' or whether this privilege may not, under the proper conditions, be extended to the rest. And however the question is decided, it is obvious that the conception of ' Truth ' needs further scrutiny and can no longer be naively taken for granted. 1 64 HUMANISM ix judgments of Value, does not the question — What is life worth ? — become the most ultimate of all ? Thus, with respect to this question, Optimism and Pessimism seem to supply the sole alternatives ; nor does it seem feasible still further to reduce their multiplicity to unity by alleging any formal ground for subordinating Pessimism to Optimism. For, as we have seen, the same ideals which, while they are regarded as attainable, confer Value upon existence, once they are despaired of, plunge us into irremediable Pessimism. The most that can be said is that just as in logical judgments negation results from the failure of an affirmation, just as scepticism springs from a painfully achieved distrust of knowledge, so Pessimism is always secondary, and results from the breakdown of some optimistic scheme of Value. But even so it would seem to follow that Pessimism must be theoretically possible so long as such a scheme of Value can be felt to be inadequate and rejected ; that is, so long as there persists a breach between the ideal and the actual. What, then, is the practical conclusion to which the argument conducts us ? It has vindicated for the question of Pessimism a position of paramount theoretic importance which would entail a far more serious treatment than is generally accorded to it in the teaching of Philosophy. And in view of the vast accumulations of of unco-ordinated and uncorrelated knowledge which Philosophy has in these days to think over and digest, in order that mankind may not utterly lose its bearings in the cosmos, philosophers may well shrink from taking up the burden of a problem of such magnitude and difficulty as that of Pessimism. But even if Philosophy could renounce its task of giving a rational account of every phase of experience, I should yet hesitate to hold that its acceptance of this problem would be pure loss, or in the end would prove detrimental to its true interests. To assume responsibility is potentially to acquire power, and no question is better calculated than this of Pessimism to make Philosophy a power in human life, for none can ix PESSIMISM IN PHILOSOPHY 165 bring it into closer contact with the actual problems of men's lives. And does not the whole history of its past show that Philosophy has never been more flourishing and influential than in periods when it has seemed to make some response to the outcry of the human soul, to the question — What shall I do to be saved ? If, then, Philosophy takes courage to do its duty, if it addresses itself to the question of the Value of Life and grapples with the Demon of Despair that besets the souls of many, who shall say that there is not still in store for it a career of unprecedented splendour among the forces that may mould the destinies of man ? X CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES ARGUMENT M. the real hero of Faust, but his character concealed behind his 'masks.' He is really a philosophic pessimist who knows his opposition to be futile. His pessimism compared with Faust's. How he has grown cheerful and an intellectualist. The meaning of Gretchen's criticism. M. as the Schalk. Not seriously concerned to win Faust's soul. Absurdity of the vulgar interpretation. M. as Faust's redeemer. But he has recourse to miracle ; which spoils the argument from Faust's redemption. The possibility of redeeming M. IT has often been remarked that the Devil tends to become the real hero of any work of art into which he is introduced. However that may be, he is certainly the hero of the greatest poem in modern literature, of Goethe's Faust. Properly to appreciate Mephistopheles, it is fortunately not necessary to depreciate the other chief characters of the drama, to minimise Gretchen as an episode which usually comes earlier in the history of a German student, and to disparage Faust as an effete pedant, who, even when saved by the might of the Devil and the gracious permission of the Deity, remains to the end essentially commonplace and thoroughly deserving of eternal reunion with so excellent a Hausfrau as Gretchen would doubtless have developed into. But there certainly is an air of paradox about the assertion that Mephistopheles is the real hero of Faust, and so it becomes necessary to clear away the prejudices that have obscured his character. We must try to understand Mephistopheles himself, to understand, that is, why he has become a rebel against the divine order, to 1 66 x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 167 reconstruct his history, to conjecture how he became the Devil he is, to perceive wherein his devilry consists. What we need is, in short, a sympathetic study of his personality and point of view, which, without daubing him with luminous paint in the hope of representing him as an angel of light, shall do justice to the interest of his character and function, and to the brilliance of his achievements. Indeed, we may even generalise and say that a sympathetic appreciation of the Devil is always an essential of every real Theodicy, of every vindication of the Divine Justice which scorns to stultify itself by effecting an illusory reconciliation of God and the Devil by means of their common absorption in the Absolute, and to reduce them, along with everything else, to vapid ' aspects ' of that all-embracing but neutral unity. Let us examine therefore . the fascinating personality of Mephistopheles, whom every man and most women (other than a sweet innocent like Gretchen) must surely have preferred to Dr. juris Faustus, and with whom the more experienced Helen of Part II. has clearly to the discerning eye a secret understanding. The chief difficulty in understanding Mephistopheles arises from his fondness for disguises. He is always masquerading. He masquerades as the dutiful attendant in the courts of Heaven, whose antics almost wrest a smile of approval from the gravity of God ; l he masquerades as an unattached poodle in search of a master,2 as a travelling scholar,3 as a nobleman in gorgeous robes of gold and crimson,4 as a capped and gowned professor,5 as a limping charlatan,6 as a king of beasts,7 a ratcatcher,3 a magician,9 a financier,10 a showman,11 a prompter,12 a doctor,13 a Phorkyad,14 a duenna,15 a strategist,16 a minister,17 and a fool.18 And he knows his weakness and several times alludes to it, e.g. — 1 Prologue in Heaven. 7 Witches' Kitchen, Scene vi. J3 Act II. Scene i. 2 Scene ii. 8 Street, Scene xix. 14 Ibid. Scene iii. a Study, Scene iii. 9 Part II. Act I. 15 Act III. 4 Scene iv. 10 Ibid. Scene iv. 16 Act IV. Scene ii. 5 Ibid. n Ibid. Scene vi. 17 Act V. Scene iii. 6 Cellar, Scene vi. 12 Ibid. Scene vii, 18 Act V. Scene vi. 168 HUMANISM x Komm, gib mir deinen Rock und Miitze, Die Maske muss mir kostlich stehn. and again — Mein Mdskchen da weissagt geheimen Sinn ; Sie fiihlt, dass ich ganz sicher ein Genie, Vielleicht sogar der Teufel, bin. But after all the subtlest of his disguises, his most habitual mask, is one which deceives all the other characters in Faust, except the Lord, and has, so far as I know, utterly deceived all Goethe's readers except myself. I mean his disguise as a mediaeval devil. That of course is his great part, and he plays it very well, with an exquisitely humorous perception of its absurdity. For of course he knows quite well that he is nothing of the sort. Indeed, he is often telling us so, either because he wearies of the grotesqueness of the disguise imposed on him by universal prejudice, or because he knows that he will warn in vain a besotted audience which insists that he shall appear in horns and hoofs and full regimentals as a devil. And yet the success of this mask constitutes the real tragedy of his situation. To have to play the part of an obscene and silly mediaeval fiend, even in jest, renders him ridiculous. It impedes the expression of his genius, it obscures the spiritual grandeur of his attitude, and in the end conducts him to what seems a most grotesque conclusion. For, like Job, he is ignominiously smitten with boils, and leaves the scene as the vanquished victim of an overpowering literary tradition. To appreciate therefore the real subtlety and depth of his spirit we must strip off this mask also and recognise his real genius. For Mephisto is a genius, as even Gretchen, a highly prejudiced witness, must admit. And what is rare in a genius, he is also a wit and a philosopher, of the profoundest, and this combination renders the Faust the finest study of philosophic Pessimism in any language. Not one of the professed pessimists, not even the Buddha, not even Schopenhauer, not even James Thomson, has succeeded in expressing the dire philosophy of negation more effectively and consistently x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 169 than the poet in his sketch of Mephistophelianism. Clear, candid, and consistent, Mephistopheles records his incisive and uncompromising protest against the whole order of the world, and scorns to practise any concealment of his meaning. If his doctrine has escaped detection, it has been by reason of his Bismarckian frankness in divulging it. One can only suppose that people have been too much distracted by the show of his diabolism to perceive this, too greatly fascinated by the horns and hoofs of his ruminant mask to recognise beneath his pranks the corroding wit, the Galgenhumor, of a despairing sage. Yet from the first his words were plain. In his very first interview with Faust he reveals himself — Ich bin der Geist, der stets verneint, Und das mit Recht ; denn alles, was entsteht, 1st wert, dass es zu Grunde geht ; Drum besser war's, dass nichts entstiinde. And similarly in the Prologue in Heaven he had protested against the misery and futility of existence, and when the Lord asked him whether he would ever come only to bring accusations against his creation and to disapprove of everything — Kommst du nur immer anzuklagen ? 1st auf der Erde ewig dir nichts recht ? he at once replies — Nein, Herr ! ich find' es dort, wie immer, herzlich schlecht. It is this conviction of the intrinsic worthlessness of existence that turns him into an agency of destruction. Not-being is preferable to Being, and so it is good to destroy. But it is unnecessary to hate : Mephisto, though as a good pessimist he heartily wishes our extinc tion, is not the enemy of mankind. Nay, he even pities the wretches whose torment is his function, and sickens of his job — Die Menschen dauern mich in ihren Jammertagen, Ich mag sogar die Armen selbst nicht plagen. i;o HUMANISM x Mephisto then is perfectly clear about his position. And he also sees its hopelessness. He is too complete a pessimist to suppose that his protest can be of avail. He is well aware that he cannot destroy the world he condemns, either wholesale or in detail. Und freilich ist damit nicht viel getan. Was sich dem Nichts entgegen stellt Das Etwas, diese plumpe Welt, So viel als ich schon unternommen, Ich wusste nicht ihr beizukommen, If he evades therefore Faust's retort So setzest du der ewig regen, Der heilsam schaffenden Gewalt Die kalte Teufelsfaust entgegen, Die sich vergebens tiickisch ballt ! Was anders suche zu beginnen, Des Chaos wunderlicher Sohn ! it is not that he is under any illusion. He, the Lord, and Faust all agree that his work for evil is futile and productive of good. He has therefore every right to announce himself as Ein Teil von jener Kraft, Die stets das Bose will und stets das Gute schafft. Nor does he deny the Lord's description of his beneficent and stimulating, but from his own point of view futile, activity — Des Menschen Tatigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen, Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh' ; Drum geb' ich gern ihm den Gesellen zu, Der reizt und wirkt und muss, als Teufel, schafifen. It is instructive to compare this pessimism with that to which Faust had succumbed at the beginning of the action, and to see how much deeper it cuts. Faust's discontent with the cosmic scheme is quite a petty, personal, and superficial affair. In Faust's first soliloquy the jaded old professor, who has exhausted all the know ledge of his age and finally himself, has, naturally enough, discovered that all is vanity. His lowered vitality can x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 171 no longer sustain even the ideal to which he had sacrificed his life. And so he despairs even of knowledge. As a last wild attempt he tries the short cut of magic. But the spirit world does not open out its splendours to the invocations of lassitude and fear. Faust shows himself deficient in the daring needed to meet the Earth- spirit as an equal, and so he is rejected. Then in humiliation and disgust he turns to question the worth of life — in the characteristic phrases of a bookworm ! Soil ich vielleicht in tausend Buchern lesen, Dass iiberall die Menschen sich gequalt, Dass hie und da ein Gliicklicher gewesen ? He makes a first, and therefore ineffectual, attempt to poison himself, but (a true German !) is restrained by sentimental reminiscences of the faith of his childhood. This scene alone would be enough to prove that he has in no wise overcome the love of life. He does well, therefore, to confess — Zwei Seelen wohnen, ach, in meiner Brust ! whereof the one clings closely to his earthly life. It is hard to suppose that his life is in serious danger ; so feeble an attempt at suicide is not the symptom of a serious Pessimism. In his second interview with Mephisto, Faust is more impressive. His tedium vitcs rises to the superb de nunciation of life which begins In jedem Kleide werd' ich wohl die Pein Des engen Erdenlebens fiihlen, and culminates in the comprehensive curse which ends Fluch sei der Hoffnung ! Fluch dem Glauben ! Und Fluch vor alien der Geduld ! This forms the high-water mark of Faustian pessimism. But even here the skilled psychologist will note an undertone of nervous irritation and impatience which stamps it as a passing ebullition, provoked, perhaps, by the stimulating presence of Mephisto. 172 HUMANISM x It is clear, then, that in point of profundity Faust's pessimism cannot vie with that of Mephistopheles ; you might string together the woes of a dozen Fausts and yet fail to fathom the clarified depths of Mephisto's world- negating indignation. And Mephisto's pessimism is not merely profound ; it is also individual. It is neither the regulation abstraction of the text-books, nor derived from any bookish source whatever. It takes its peculiar colour ing from his personal character. Mephistopheles is essentially a cheerful pessimist. Cheerful pessimism sounds paradoxical, and I hardly think that an abstract logic, scorning the lessons of psychology, would credit its existence. But if we consider the point psychologically it will seem natural enough. It is only in its primary form that pessimism is incompatible with cheerfulness ; the lapse of time here, too, may work the strangest transformations. Now Mephistopheles is very old ; indeed, it is mainly his preter natural age that renders him a supernatural being. His pessimism, therefore, is likewise very old ; it has confronted the inane spectacle of life's nothingness for aeons. If there fore we would understand him, we must seize this clue : Bedenkt der Teufel, der ist alt, So werdet alt ihn zu verstehn. Now in ordinary life the pessimist rarely grows old. Pessimism is not a creed conducive to longevity. But even within the narrow limits of ordinary life it seems hardly possible that pessimistic emotion should long retain the intensity of its first outburst. Here, as elsewhere, time must surely dull the sharpness of the initial agony. If we can endure to live on at all we must always somehow adapt ourselves to life. Passionate pain must smoulder down into settled sentiment, which becomes less emotional and more intellectual as it grows older. Now Mephistopheles has long survived the discovery of the vanity of life. For untold ages he has lived with, and despite, this thought, as a critical spectator of all life's futile cruelties. And so he has grown accustomed to its presence — x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 173 O glaube mir, der manche tausend Jahre An dieser harten Speise kaut. His wounds are scarred over, though their memory remains. Is it not natural then that he should long have ceased to feel the misery of life, and long have replaced it by a merely intellectual conviction, which would scarce impede the pleasurable exercise of his faculties ? We are often told that with a hard heart and a good digestion a man can stand much : how much more a demon who could certainly dispense with a heart, and probably with a digestion ? And so he is not personally miserable. The note of personal suffering mingles no longer with his indictment of the world : nay, he may even feel relief at having cast off all personal responsibility for the senseless spectacle. Well may he be serene, and even gay — his pessimism, like his witches' elixir, is very old and defecated — Das auch nicht mehr im mindsten stinkt. In a word, Mephisto has become a thorough intellectualist, and complete intellectualism is perhaps the most diabolical thing we can conceive. For to evil-doing, as to all other carnal pleasures, cometh satiety at the last. But not so to intellectual contemplation. To its idle curiosity nothing is good, nothing evil, nothing sacred, nothing shocking, but everything is food for a reflection, cold and unending and unsparing. It peeps and pries upon a mother's grave ; it is equally at home in Heaven and in Hell. Once therefore it has judged and passed its condemnation, there is no obvious reason why any recrudescence of feeling should lead it to reverse its verdict. It is this intellectualism which Gretchen has detected in Mephisto, and which forms the really valid ground for her otherwise thoroughly feminine dislike. Not that of course we should be justified in taking Mephisto altogether at her valuation. Indeed, there is a pre posterous incongruity in the thought of judging the cosmic spirit of negation by the feminine intuitions of a 174 HUMANISM x little grisette, who is madly in love and furiously jealous of the ascendency which a more powerful mind has over her lover. We must allow a large discount for a woman's instinctive mischief-making when she intervenes between man and man. Es tut mir lang schon weh, Das ich dich in der Gesellschaft seh'. Gretchen fears and hates him because she suspects in him, and rightly, a danger to her love, an obstacle to a mesalliance which would have domesticated Faust and unfitted him for further ventures. And so she insinuates all she can, and has apparently succeeded in getting her view accepted by the public. Wo er nur mag zu uns treten, Mein' ich sogar, ich liebte dich nicht mehr is her last and unfairest appeal. That too is an old, old story, as old as the way of a man with a maid. Still in a way Gretchen is right — despite the defects of her grammar — Man sieht, dass er an nichts keinen Anteil nimmt ; Es steht ihm an der Stirn geschrieben, Dass er nicht mag eine Seele lieben. Only that is Mephisto's intellectualism. He himself sees clearly that the struggle is for the control of Faust, and that if the liaison with Gretchen is to come to a respectable conclusion there is an end of his designs on Faust (or rather of the Lord's designs whereof he is the instrument). And so he takes ruthlessly effective steps to bring about a separation. Gretchen is an obstacle in his path, and so she is removed. But he never expresses the least hatred for her : the expression of her hate he interprets as a tribute to his intellectual eminence, and takes quite coolly — Sie fiihlt, dass ich ganz sicher ein Genie, Vielleicht sogar der Teufel, bin. x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 175 The paradox of Mephisto's combination of cheerfulness with pessimism is thus explained by the recognition of his age and intellectualism. But these very features seem to render more urgent another difficulty. Mephistopheles is far too clear-sighted not to see that all his efforts are futile, that he is ever being overruled by a higher power and turned into another's agent. Why then does he persist in his activity ? The readiest reply to this would doubtless be — Why should he not ? If all things are futile, why one thing more than any other? To a thorough pessimist what does it matter what he does ? In general this reply is sound enough, but I hardly think that it explains the peculiar features of this case. I should incline rather to question whether after all it is so sure that Mephistopheles does persist in efforts whose futility he recognises. The answer will depend on how seriously you take him. If you take him quite seriously, you must certainly answer — Yes. He professes to the end to busy himself with Faust's damnation. But are you intended, or even entitled, to take him seriously ? It seems to me that we have the highest authority for holding that Mephisto is not serious. The Lord himself tells us that Mephisto is the Schalk, the imp or merry-andrew, among fiends — Von alien Geistern, die verneinen, 1st mir der Schalk am wenigsten zur Last. And throughout the play he acts up to this character. Hatred, gloom, and gravity are foreign to his nature. It was by eschewing these that he escaped from the miseries of his pessimism. He no longer despairs of life, because he has trained himself to laugh at it, forming thus the counterpart of the Lord, der sick das Lachen abgewohnt, who has seen the high seriousness of all things. So Mephistopheles laughs at a world he cannot alter, or abolish. His satisfaction comes from satirising all the world, from the unimpeded exercise of his sarcastic wit. He mocks at God, men and angels, nay, even at professors ! 176 HUMANISM x Nor does his mockery spare himself. He is as ready to make a fool of himself as of any one. But withal he is always good-tempered and good-humoured : not even Faust's very trying temper ever leads him on to lose his own. Is it at all likely then, that he should be grimly in earnest about his diabolic mission ? Is it his serious ambition to capture the soul of Faust ? Why then should he, in the very act of engaging in his wager with the Lord, ostentatiously proclaim that he cares nought for the dead ? Fiir einen Leichnam bin ich nicht zu Haus. A remark by the way, the truth of which is fully attested by his preference of earth to hell as a place of residence. Or, again, does he seriously believe that a contract signed with blood is needed ? Why, then, does he turn the whole thing into farce ? Once more, does he really want Faust's services in hell ? What for ? What possible use could he have for a more than middle-aged German professor ? And would a serious and conscientious devil allow himself to be cheated of his prey, by a sheer lapse of attention ? And why finally, if he desired to see Faust damned, did he not leave him severely alone ? Had he done so, would not Faust eventually have committed suicide, and so have inevitably fallen into his domain ? Surely these questions answer themselves. The vulgar interpretation of Mephistopheles is absurd. The truth is that Mephistopheles is never serious. He knows that the whole conception of a soul-hunting devil is a mediaeval anachronism. He knows also that he can do nothing, that however reluctant, his freedom is but semblance, that he is a helpless instrument in the hands of a God who tells him outright Dit darfst nur frci erscheinen. And so being deprived of every other satisfaction, he derides the cosmic order which constrains him. Wherefore he plays the fool throughout. He is bent on amusing himself ; not on ruining Faust, or capturing souls by methods whose crudity would shame a Hottentot magician. Had x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 177 he been serious, would he ever have dreamt of accepting the impossible bet which the Lord proposes ? — Zieh diesen Geist von seinem Urquell ab. Would he have agreed to the preposterous conditions Faust imposes on him ? For P'aust proposes to consider himself damned when he shall consider himself satisfied, and demand the continuation of the present moment : Werd' ich zum Augenblicke sagen, Verweile doch, du bist so schon ! is to be the signal for his damnation ! The absurdity of this is plain : A man who is capable of declaring himself satisfied is not damned: he is Jiappy. And if Heaven be the satisfaction of desire, he has ipso facto attained Heaven. It was philosophically impossible, therefore, that the story should end in anything but the salvation of Faust.1 Thus it is that the encounter with Mephisto sets Faust's feet upon the pathway of salvation. MephistopJicles is Faust's real redeemer. He it is who rescues Faust from the fatal listlessness into which he had fallen and revives his interest in life. Faust is never nearer damnation than before Mephistopheles appears. Not that, as we saw, he was really likely to commit suicide just yet. He would doubtless have pursued his theoretical study of the subject a little further first, and perhaps, e.g. have tried to read through the Sacred Books of the East. But the inanity of his life would have continued to prey upon him, and after a few more fits of depression and a few more attempts, he might have succeeded. For, as he justly says, he was at a critical time of life ; too old to amuse himself, too young to refrain from yearning and trying — Ich bin zu alt um nur zu spielen, Zu Jung um ohne Wunsch zu sein. Then Mephistopheles enters his life and revives his interest in it, by telling him about the worlds unrealised 1 Unless, indeed (as the author of the Third Part of Faust wittily suggested), Faust's severest trials only begin after he has got to Heaven, and has to act as pedagogue to the ' blessed boys ' (selige Knaben] mentioned in the final scene. N i;8 HUMANISM x which cannot be read up in books. Before they start together Faust has recovered the use of the imperative, and demands to be initiated into every form of human experience. Mephisto laughs at the psychological im possibility involved, and has difficulty in dissuading Faust from reverting to his old hankering after the infinite. But he slowly makes a man of him. Faust scorns the animal pleasures of the coarsest debauchery. He escapes lightly from the snares of the affections in the brief tragedy of Gretchen, which scars his soul with mingled memories of ecstasy and guilt. He pays his homage to the aesthetic ideal by his descent into the fairyland of Art. But even Helen cannot paralyse a spirit 1 so astutely guided : he returns, to be initiated into the realities of politics. Thus in the end Mephistopheles bridges for him the gulf 'twixt word and deed which he had once imagined could be traversed by a trick of mistranslation.2 And so Faust finds his real life's work in action. It is working and ruling that mature him and make him ripe for the life eternal. But to what, I should like to know, does he owe this whole career, if not to the unwearying aid of Mephistopheles ? How else could the philosopher have become king, the obscure pedant a prince of the Empire ? Not that on this account we need ascribe to Mephisto any special merit, or suppose that his motives will bear scrutiny. Mephisto knows no doubt that he is redeeming Faust ; but he does not help him in order to save him, any more than he attends him, in order to tempt him. The truth is that tempting is not seriously in his line : amusing is, and indeed I suspect that if the tradition be true that cards are a diabolic invention, it must have been to Mephisto that we owe them, but rather to his ingenuity in amusing himself than to his desire to ruin others. He seems to make his one solitary attempt at tempting in the excursion into Auerbach's cellar, but even there a doubt remains. If Mephisto 1 Wen Helena paralysirt, Der kommt so leicht nicht zu Verstande. 2 Cp. Scene in the Study. x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 179 meant it as a serious temptation to drunkenness, how are we to explain the incorrigible frivolity with which he sacrifices all prospect of success by playing pranks upon the worthy topers ? Does he not here, as always, prejudice his alleged design by a reckless pursuit of the moment's joke ? And after that Mephisto only obeys orders, and finds the ways and means for the whims of Faust.1 His position is indeed sufficiently abject. He is ruled by Faust, and overruled by the Lord, and perfectly aware of it. But he manages none the less to get some fun out of his servitude, and is never in better form than when, quite gratuitously and without the least advantage to his supposed design, he is taking Faust's pupils for him and playing the professor. And after all, as he knows that in any case he can accomplish nothing, he does not greatly care what he does. Never theless, it is somewhat curious that he does not play the fool still more extensively, stays so long with Faust, and abstains from wrecking the joint enterprises in which they were engaged. I can only suppose that he must have found Faust personally amusing, and that his restless striving was interesting to a mind which could never delude itself into thinking any end worth the attaining. Nevertheless, it is very remarkable that even Mephisto- pheles cannot save Faust without a miracle. That is the great flaw, psychologically speaking, in the poem. The Faust we meet at first has sunk to such a state that a moral miracle alone can save him. He has almost, if not wholly, lost the taste for life, the faith in life, and the vitality to respond to the new vistas which Mephisto's art displays. To offer such a man all the delights of earth is as futile as to appoint a dyspeptic king of Cocagne, or to equip a blind man with the ring of Gyges. He is too old to enjoy, too young to be indifferent. At his first interview Mephistopheles attempts to reawaken Faust's love of life by conjuring up seductive 1 It is true that, as in tradition bound, he takes Faust with him to the Walpurgisnacht. But was not Faust by this time wearying of Gretchen and ready to desert her ? So Mephisto points out with calm scorn in repelling Faust's coarse reproaches (scene in i8o HUMANISM x dreams. But at their second meeting Faust receives him with imprecations on life. This convinces Mephistopheles that a miracle is necessary. Faust must be rejuvenated. By drinking the witch's potion he rids himself of the infirmities which thirty years of study have heaped upon his body and his spirit. This is the turning-point of the plot. Without this renewal of youth could Faust have captivated Gretchen or eloped with Argive Helen ? And what savant of fifty-five would not trust himself, even without the devil's aid, to achieve great things, nay, perhaps, to realise the Platonic dream of the domination of the wise, if he could suddenly find himself restored to the vigour of twenty-five ? But such a miracle must hopelessly break up the natural course of psychological development, and so the Faust does not answer the practical question which Pessimism forces on our notice, the question, namely — What to do with those for whom life has lost its savour? I must confess that so far as human sight as yet extends this problem seems insoluble. Perhaps a good rest, a dip in Lethe, and the resumption of a more attractive life might be therapeutic agents of sufficient power, and something of the sort may possibly yet be found to be among the resources of Providence. But how about Mephisto's own salvation ? His case is very different, and it has to be considered, without the poet's aid,1 merely by a study of his character. We must note first that his pessimism is not of Faust's type ; his vitality is not exhausted, nor has he wearied of the world or of himself. He is still willing to be amused, and is certainly amusing. So far therefore from sinking into the inaction of despair, he is the stimulus to progress in a world which, but for him, would grow inert. Says the Lord Des Menschen Tatigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen ; Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh' ; 1 In private conversation Goethe seems however to have realised that the spiritual problem he had chosen required to be completed by the salvation of Mephistopheles. Only he did not think his contemporaries were enlightened enough to tolerate this notion. x CONCERNING MEPHISTOPHELES 181 Drum geb' ich gern ihm den Gesellen zu, Der reizt und wirkt, und muss, als Teufel, schaffen. There is activity enough about Mephisto and to spare ; but it is of the wrong kind. It is frivolous, for all the pessimism out of which it grew. It has no serious purpose of its own, and now aims only at an intellectual play with a scheme of things it confronts without approving. And this is just the reason why it is impotent, why it becomes subservient to an alien end. Aiming at nothing, Mephistopheles, the unbelieving scoffer, cannot but become a servant of the Lord. But he is a bad servant and an unwilling, and remains a blot upon a universe which condones such service, and so reveals its imperfection and its impotence. Impotent though he seems, his mere existence indicates the limitation of what we fondly deemed Omnipotence. The redemption, therefore, of Mephisto is the postulate of a complete Theodicy, on grounds both metaphysical and moral. Our moral sensibility demands that there shall be no hopeless evil. And our reason enforces this demand by showing that we cannot call good a world of which any part is evil, without destroying the whole meaning of good. For metaphysics the ultimate solidarity of things is such as to demand universal salvation. No universe is perfect in which any part is imperfect ; for the suffering of any part that is imperfect must produce a sympathetic tremor in the whole. But these are topics which perhaps transcend the bounds of literary criticism ; though they might well provide food for thought for the theologians who have prided themselves on the popularity of their hells, and for the philosophers who have too easily proved the perfection of the world by excluding from its notion all that makes ' perfection ' worth the having.1 It is clear, then, that Mephisto must be saved. But he can be saved only by working on his actual character. He must be led to remould himself. He must be driven out of his idle intellectualism, out of his critical role of an unconcerned spectator of all time and all existence, includ- 1 Cp. p. 3. 182 HUMANISM x ing his own actions. It is here that the real difficulty lies. If he were merely inert, he could, like man, be forced into action. But be is active enough ; only he feels no responsibility for his actions, which he regards as dis passionately as the operations of natural forces. The only chance therefore would seem to be to get him to take up his personal responsibility, to reverse the policy which has driven him into his attitude of passive and futile, but unanswerable, protest. He must no longer be overruled in every action ; he must no longer feel that Du darfst auch da nur frei erscheinen, that his spontaneous agency is mere illusion. Give him real freedom to choose alternatives, real power to try his hand at shaping a world that will realise his ideals, and he may then convince himself, that it is better to help on the Divine purpose than to thwart it. Whether he will or not remains uncertain, as in the case of every one of us ; but it is from this contingency alone that the real interest and tragic significance of the cosmic drama spring. This much at least seems clear, that a theodicy which strives to oppress opposition by omnipotence must overreach itself: sheer force can overcome Mephisto as little as Prometheus. XI ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES1 ARGUMENT Mr. F. H. Bradley's antithesis of ' Appearance ' and ' Reality ' as a catchword. II. His criterion of the ' non-contradiction ' of ultimate reality. But ( I ) the criterion not ultimate, and used too recklessly. It is applied to merely verbal difficulties. It is meaningless to call an unknowable Absolute real, and this explains nothing about appearances. Nothing even apparently real can be really contradictory. Non-contradiction is only a special form of Harmony, and the rejection of contradiction is only a form of the struggle towards satisfaction. Other modes of reaching harmony. Harmony a postulate. (2) The criterion stultifies itself by condemning everything, nor is it saved by the doctrine of 'Degrees.' III. A valid doctrine of the relation of appearance to reality must eschew the transcendence which renders Mr. Bradley's Absolute futile. Necessity of retaining a grasp on reality throughout. The growth of reality: (i) the reality of immediate experience our starting-point and end. (2) ' Higher realities ' inferred to explain it, but remain secondary. Their variety and relativity to purpose and need of a final synthesis in (3) ultimate reality. IV. As to this five principles to be laid down (i) Ultimate Reality must be made a real explanation. (2) 'Appearances' must be really preserved. (3) Primary reality of immediate experience to be recognised. The reality even of dreams. The reality of the higher world of Religion. How Idealism makes a difference. (4) The greater efficiency of the higher reality. (5) Why Ultimate Reality must be absolutely satisfactory. Because otherwise it would not be regarded as ultimate. Why truth cannot be evil. If it were, its pursuit would cease. Only complete satisfaction would bring finality of knowledge, and that only if not merely conceived, but actually experienced. The ' beatific vision ' as the ideal of knowledge. THE ambition of this paper is not, as might perhaps wrongly be conjectured from a hasty perusal of its title, 1 This essay appeared in Mind for July 1903 (N.S. No. 47). The chief additions are in IV. (3), (4), and (5). The constructive problem it deals with is that indicated at the end of Axioms as Postulates (Personal Idealism, p. 133). 133 184 HUMANISM xi to provide an Outline of Cosmetic Philosophy, and still less to carry owls to Athens by exhorting philosophers to an observation of social proprieties they have rarely shown any tendency to set aside. Its aim is rather to examine the nature and scope of the familiar antithesis between ' appearance ' and ' reality/ the vogue of which I cannot but regard as the chief constructive result of the work of the greatest of English sceptics, Mr. F. H. Bradley. In Oxford, at all events, this antithesis has been an immense success. It is ever hovering on the tongue alike of tutor and of tiro in philosophical discussion, and provides them with a universal solution for the most refractory of facts. It seems to have become the magic master-key which opens — and closes — every door, the all -accommodating receptacle into which every mystery may be made to enter and to disappear ; in short, it is just now the greatest of the catchwords wherewith we conjure reason into topsy turvydom and common sense out of its senses. If its Olympian author ever deigned to look upon the struggles and contentions of lesser and lower mortals, he would doubtless be vastly amused to see what an Alpha and Omega of Philosophy had sprung invulnerable from his subtle brain. But being myself immersed in the struggle of teaching and having a certain responsibility in seeing to it that what is called thought involves thinking and affords proper training in mental precision and clearness, I find that this antithesis has become to me a consider able nuisance, and also, it must be confessed, a bit of a bore. I propose, therefore, to probe into it a little, and to examine its pretensions, with a view to seeing whether the relation of ' appearance ' to ' reality ' cannot be put on a different and, to me, more satisfactory footing. II I must begin however by raising a very general, and, I think, very fundamental, objection to Mr. Bradley's method of constructing the wonderful edifice of his xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 185 metaphysics. I venture to assert with the utmost trepidation, and at the risk of being crushed, like the rest of Mr. Bradley's critics, by a sarcastic footnote to his next article, that in putting forward his fundamental assumption that ' ultimate Reality ' is such that it does not contradict itself, and in erecting this into an absolute criterion, he builds in part on an unsound foundation which has not reached the bottom rock, in part on an airy pinnacle, a sort of what in Alpine parlance is called a gendarme, which will not bear the weight of the mountains of paradox which are subsequently heaped upon it. (i) By the first charge what I mean to convey is that the ultimateness of Mr. Bradley's absolute criterion has been taken for granted far too easily. But before adducing reasons for this contention, I must disavow every intention of impugning the validity of the Principle of Contradiction as such. I accept it fully and without reserve ; nay more, I use it every day of my life. But my intellectual conscience impels me to ask — As what must I accept it ? And in what sense ? To these questions Mr. Bradley's criterion of non- contradiction appears to supply no obvious answer. It is enunciated quite abstractly, and it is not clear to me that, as stated, it has a sense adequate to bear the metaphysical structure put upon it, or indeed any sense at all.1 The meaning of Mr. Bradley's ' absolute criterion ' (as of everything else) must therefore be sought in its applications. But Mr. Bradley's applications seem to me to warrant the utmost suspicion, if not of the principle in the abstract, yet of the sense in which it is actually used. A principle which asserts itself alone contra mundum, and convicts the whole universe of self- contradiction may surely give pause to the most reckless. There is no need, therefore, to question the principle in 1 As Mr. Alfred Sidgwick well says, "every fact that changes its character in the least degree proves to us daily that the ' Laws of Thought/ those pillars of elementary logic, are too ideal and abstract to be interpreted as referring to the actual things or particular cases that names are supposed to denote." — Distinction and the Criticism of Beliefs, p. 21. 186 HUMANISM XI the abstract : in the abstract it may mean anything or nothing. But in the particular way in which Mr. Bradley proceeds to use it, it is open to much exception, and I find myself unable to admit its claim to ultimateness, while it is obvious that Mr. Bradley has for once simply taken over his allegation from the classical (and intel- lectualist) tradition of Herbart and Hegel. I shall discuss however only the former point, as it is clear that if the Principle of the impossibility of self-contradiction in the Real can be shown not to be ultimate, it will follow that Mr. Bradley was wrong in taking it to be such. My first question must be to inquire what shall be held to constitute such self-contradiction as will render a supposed reality amenable to the jurisdiction of the absolute criterion ? Mr. Bradley appears to hold that any quibble will suffice to bring an aspirant to reality before the revolutionary tribunal of his incorruptible philosophy, and that an unguarded phrase, such as ordinary language can scarcely abstain from, is evidence enough for ordering off to instant execution the wretched ' appearance ' which had dared to simulate ' reality.' But surely justice should require some more decisive proof of iniquity than the fact that something which claims to be real can be formulated in what appear to be contradictory terms ? For may it not be the contradiction rather than the reality which is ' appearance ' ? Yet such apparent contradiction is all that Mr. Bradley's negative dialectics seem in the great majority of instances to prove. It is a result which does not astonish me, but seems to be of little value. In words everything can be made to look contradictory, and Mr. Bradley has but completed the work of Gorgias and Zeno, with his own peculiar brilliance and incisiveness. But I do not see that this necessarily proves more than that language has not yet been rendered wholly adequate to the description of reality. And it ought not to be necessary to remind serious thinkers that to dazzle the spectators by a display of dialectical fireworks is not to explain the universe. The most illusory of seeming realities is worthy, not merely of xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 187 being ridden down and ' riddled with contradictions ' and left for dead upon the field, but also of being understood. And I am at a loss to see how to call it self-contradictory and then forthwith to invoke a self-subsistent, in accessible Absolute, which includes all appearances and transcends all apprehension and inexplicably atones for the incurable defects of our actual experience, is to explain it, or anything else whatsoever. As against such cavalier methods I should protest that only propositions are properly contradictory, that only a reasoning being can contradict itself, and that it is an abuse of language to describe our use of incompatible statements about the same reality as an inherent con tradiction in the reality itself. Indeed, I should combat Mr. Bradley's contention that everything sooner or later turns out to be self- contradictory with the axiom that notJiing which exists, in however despicable a sense, can really be contradictory. The very fact of its existence shows that the ' contradictions,' which our thought dis covers in it, are in some way illusory, that the reality ' somehow ' (to use Mr. Bradley's favourite word in this connexion) overpowers, swallows, reconciles, transcends, and harmonises them.1 If therefore it appears ' contradictory,' the fault is ours. It is, in Herbart's language, a zufdllige Ansicht. It can be purged of its apparent contradiction, and it is our duty to effect this and to interpret it into a harmony with itself which our mind can grasp. Only of course I can see that this purification may require something more than a dialectical juggle with terms : we may need a real discovery, we may have to make a real advance, before the refractory ore of ' appearance ' will yield us the pure gold of ' reality.' I have intentionally used a word which seems to me to give the clue out of the labyrinth into which Mr. Bradley has beguiled the fair maid, Philosophy. The conception of Harmony seems to me to be one legitimately applicable to ultimate reality and to contain a meaning 1 Unless indeed the internal conflict which is described as a ' contradiction ' be the essential nature of all reality as such — as some extreme pessimists have contended. 1 88 HUMANISM XI which I vainly look for in that of 'contradiction.' It forms a postulate higher and more ultimate than that of non-contradiction, which indeed seems to be only a special case thereof, viz. that of a harmony among the contents of our thought. The contradictory involves a jar or discord in the mind, which most people in their normal condition feel to be unpleasant (when they perceive it), and this is the first and immediate reason why we avoid contradictions and reject the contradictory. The second reason is that our Thinking rests on the Principle of Contradiction, and that if we admitted the contradictory, we should have (if we were consistent) to give up thinking. But thinking is too inveterate a habit (at least in some of us), and on the whole too useful, to permit of the serious adoption of this alternative. Thus the struggle to avoid and remove contradictions appears as an integral part of the great cosmic striving towards satisfaction, 'harmony, and equilibrium, in which even the inanimate appears more suo to participate.1 In this struggle the intellectual machinery which works by the Principle of Contradiction plays an important part, and we should fare but ill without its aid. But it is not our sole resource. An apparent contra diction can be cleared out of the road to harmony by other means than a course of dialectics terminating in a flight to an asylum ignoranticz, miscalled the Absolute, (i) I would venture therefore to remind Mr. Bradley of many excellent things he has himself said about the immediacy of feeling. (2) It would seem that in certain modes of aesthetic contemplation the so-called self-con tradictions of the discursive reason may vanish into a self-evident harmony. (3) It is well known that our immediate experience enables us to accept, without scruple or discomfort, as given and ultimate fact what philo sophers have vainly essayed for centuries to construe to thought. The fact of change is perhaps the most flagrant example. But in the last resort our own existence, and that of the world, is similarly inconceivable and 1 See p. 214. xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 189 underivable for a philosophy which makes a point of honour of systematically denying the factual, and labours vainly to reduce all immediate ' acquaintance with ' to discursive ' knowledge about.' And lastly, (4) if the worst should come to the worst, the solution ambulando — which in this instance we may translate ' by going on ' —is always open to a philosophy which has not wantonly insisted on closing the last door to hope by assuming the unreality of ' time ' (i.e. of the experience-process).1 For these reasons then I am forced to conclude that Mr. Bradley, in appealing to the principle that the Real is not self-contradictory, has not succeeded in expressing it in its complete and ultimate form. His ' absolute criterion ' is not the whole, but a part of the greater principle of Harmony. And inasmuch as our experience is plainly not as yet harmonious, it is clear that the principle is a Postulate. We must conceive the Real to be harmonious, not because we have any formal and a priori assurance of the fact, but because we desire it to be so and are willing to try whether it cannot become so. (2) My second charge can be dealt with more sum marily. It concerns the immense disproportion between the foundation of Mr. Bradley 's system and the super structure he has built upon it. Mr. Bradley argues from his absolute criterion to the conclusion that everything which is ordinarily esteemed real, everything which any one can know or care about, is pervaded with unreality, is ' mere appearance ' in a greater or less degree of degradation.'2 In this Mr. Bradley appears to carry the policy of ' thorough ' to an excess which renders his whole 1 Cp. p. 109. 2 I cannot here criticise this ' doctrine of degrees ' as fully as it deserves. It appears to be the only obstacle to our accounting Mr. Bradley's philosophy the purest scepticism (or rather nihilism), but I cannot but regard it as thoroughly indefensible, and even unintelligible. For, as Mr. H. V. Knox has pointed out to me, it seems impossible even to state it without recurring to a number of the lower categories which Mr. Bradley had previously invalidated. Otherwise the consideration of the different amounts of rearrangement required for the ' con version ' of ' appearances ' into the Absolute, of the greater or less intervals separating them from it, of the varying lengths of time needed to see through an appearance, would seem to be simply irrelevant, and unable to establish the distinctions of kind among appearances which are aimed at. Yet strangely enough, Time, Space, and Quantity have themselves been written down as ' mere HUMANISM xi method unendurable. If only he had exempted a few trifles, like religion and morality, from this reduction to illusion, we might have tolerated his onslaughts on the abstractions of metaphysics ; as it is, there is nothing that can withstand the onset of his awful Absolute. Now if anything of the sort had happened to a philosophic argument of my own, I should have been appalled. I should have felt that something had gone wrong, that some secret source of error must have sprung up somewhere, or that I must somehow have misunder stood my principle. If the result of my intellectual manipulations of the world had been to convict it of radical absurdity, I should have regarded this as a reflection, not on the universe, but on the method I had used. I should have felt I had failed intellectually, and must try again in another way.1 I should never have dared to condemn the universe in reliance on so protracted an argument from so narrow a basis. In the last resort I might even have doubted the validity of my principle. I should certainly have doubted its application. Mr. Bradley, apparently, is exempt from any such scruples, but, at the risk of making a deplorable exhibition of the crassest ' common -sense,' I must submit that a system which culminates in so huge a paradox thereby discredits its foundations. And so Mr. Bradley's final Ascension from the sphere of Appearances and Reception into the bosom of the Absolute reminds me of nothing so much as of the fabled ' rope- trick ' of the Indian jugglers. Ill Only a strong conviction of its necessity, together with a habit of outspokenness learnt from Mr. Bradley's appearances' (Appear, and Real. pp. 362, 364, 369, etc., first ed. ), and Mr. Bradley makes no attempt to show how the reality of appearances can be re habilitated by a reversion to points of view which themselves are appearances. It is as though to atone for his haste in calling all men liars, the psalmist had proceeded to accept the testimony of the most egregious liars to the veracity of the rest. 1 Mr. Bradley's critical canon is apparently the reverse of this. E.g. in dis cussing the sense in which the self is real, he argues that ' ' if none defensible can be found, such a failure, I must insist, ought to end the question." — App. and Real. p. 76. xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 191 own example, could have embarked me on so painful a criticism of the cardinal doctrine of Appearance and Reality. Before proceeding from it to the easier and more congenial task of expounding what I conceive to be the real relation of these conceptions, I must however add a word on a point already hinted at, viz., that Mr. Bradley has not really extricated us from that slough of agnosticism, to which their more porcine instincts are ever drawing back even philosophers to wallow. Indeed, his facetious remark about Mr. Spencer's Unknowable,1 that it is taken for God " simply and solely because we do not know what the devil it can be," might, with quite as much propriety, be applied to his own Absolute. For though he has reserved for it the title of Sole and Supreme Reality, it is only used to cast an indelible slur on all human reality and knowledge. It ' absorbs,' ' transcends,' ' transmutes,' etc., all our knowledge and experience. It is therefore quite as unknowable as Mr. Spencer's monstrosity, and adds insult to injury by dubbing us and our concerns ' mere appearances.' And after all the scorn we have seen poured on the futility of an unknowable reality as the explanation of anything, it passes my comprehension how these consequences of his doctrine should have escaped the notice, I do not say of his disciples, but of Mr. Bradley's own acuteness. It is useless however to speculate how far Mr. Bradley knows himself to be a sceptic, until he chooses to confess, and I had better proceed to state what I conceive to be the true relation of reality to appearance. Mr. Bradley's fundamental error seems to me to be his ^typtoyio?, the separation he has effected between them by violently disrupting their continuity. Once we do this, we are lost. The ' reality ' we have severed from its ' appearances ' can never be regained, and we remain, as Mr. Bradley holds, enmeshed in a web of appearances, and impotent to attain a knowledge or experience of Reality. But all this appears to be the consequence of a gratuitous error of judgment. We should never have admitted that in 1 App. and Real. p. 128, footnote. 192 HUMANISM xi grasping a higher reality we were abandoning the reality of the lower. In the ascent to Truth we can never lose touch with a continuous reality. I should liken the advance of knowledge to a severe rock-climb on which we must secure our handhold and our foothold at every step. Rightly used, the rope of metaphysical speculation is an added safeguard which unites the workers at their different posts ; it must not be made into an instrument to juggle with. Mr. Bradley, on the other hand, seems to tell us that we can never reach the summit of our ambitions unless we can throw our rope up into the air and climb up after it into the hypercosmic void. We must begin therefore with reality as well as end with it, and cling to it all the way as closely as we can. We must not argue, ' if appearance, not reality,' but ' though appearance, yet reality.' Unless we do this any ultimate Reality we may vainly imagine will effect no contact with our knowledge and our life, but float off into the Empyrean beyond our ken. Now the only reality we can start with is our own personal, immediate experience. We may lay it down therefore that all immediate experience is as suck real, and that no ultimate reality can be reached except from this basis and upon the stimulation of such immediate experience. From this we start ; to this, sooner or later, we must in some way return, under penalty of finding all our explanations shattered, like bubbles, into emptiness. In other words, the distinction of ' appearance and reality ' is not one which transcends our experience, but one which arises in it. It does not constitute a relation between our world and another, nor tempt us to an im possible excursion into a realm inexorably reserved for the supreme delectation of the Absolute. It always remains relative to our knowledge of our world.1 And it in no wise warrants any disparagement of ' mere appearances.' The most transparent of appearances, so long as it exists 1 If I am quibbled with I will even say that for me it remains relative to my knowledge of my world. xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 193 at all, retains its modicum of reality, and remains, from one important point of view, fundamentally real. For let us consider how we proceed to ascertain the higher realities which are rashly thought to abrogate the lower. We start, indubitably, with an immediate ex perience of some sort. But we do not rest therein. If we could, there would be no further question. Our immediate experience would suffice ; it would be the sole and complete reality. Appearances would be the reality and reality would truly appear. In heaven, no doubt, such would be the case. But our case, as yet, is different : our experience is woefully discordant and inadequate. In other words, our experience is not that of a perfect world. We are neither disposed, therefore, nor able, to accept it as it appears to be. Its surface-value will not enable us to meet our obligations : we are compelled therefore to discount our immediate experience, to treat it as an appearance of something ulterior which will supplement its deficiency. We move on, therefore, from our starting- point, taking our immediate experience as the symbol which transmits to us the glad tidings of a higher reality, whereof it partly manifests the nature. The ' realities ' of ordinary life and science are all of this secondary order : they rest upon inferences from our immediate experience which have been found to work.1 And the process of reaching them is everywhere the same : we experiment with notions which are suggested to our intelligence by our immediate experience, until we hit upon one which seems to be serviceable for some purpose which engrosses us. And then we declare real the conception which serves our purpose, nay more real, because more potent, than the immediate experience for the satisfaction of our desire. Only, as life is complex, its sciences are many and its purposes are various ; so there will be a multitude of such higher realities con- 1 Of course I do not deny, and indeed in a different context I should even insist, that the assumption of these higher realities alters our immediate experience for us. That indeed is the chief proof of their value : assumptions which make no difference are otiose and so invalid. And we should hardly get where we want, if we could not each day start a little higher up. O 194 HUMANISM xi flicting with each other and competing for our allegiance. And, superficially, they will look very different. Never theless, the ultimate realities of the physicist, whether they be atoms or ions or vortex-rings or electrons, have reached their proud position by no other process than that by which the savage has devised the crudities of his Happy Hunting Grounds or the old-fashioned theologian the atrocities of his Hell. They remain on the same plane of interpretation, and all alike are attempts, more or less successful, to supplement some unsatisfactory feature or other in our primary experience. It is easy to see how from this point we may reach the conception of an Ultimate Reality. The ' higher realities ' are conceived differently for the purposes of our various sciences and various pursuits, and so there will arise a need for an adjustment of their rival claims, and a question as to which (if any) of them is to be accepted as the final reality. Is the ' real world,' e.g., the cosmic conception postulated by geometry, or by physics, or by psychology, or by ethics ? Is it a whirl of self- moving ' matter,' or a chaos of mental processes, or must we assume a Prime Mover and a Self? Again, it is obvious that a higher reality may afford very imperfect satisfaction from some points of view and may have to be transcended by one still higher, and that this process cannot cease until we arrive at the conception of an Ultimate Reality capable of including and harmonising all the lower realities. And this, of course, would con tain the final explanation of our whole experience, the final solution of our every perplexity. IV Thus the struggle to attain a glimpse of such an Ultimate Reality forms the perennial content of the drama of Philosophy. But that struggle is foredoomed to failure, unless we can manage to avoid certain pitfalls and to hold fast to certain guiding principles. (i) The Ultimate Reality must be made into a real xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 195 explanation. It must never therefore be allowed to become transcendent, and to sever its connexion with the world of ' appearances ' which it was devised to explain. There must always be preserved a pathway leading up to it from the lowest ' appearances ' and down to them from the Throne of Thrones, in order that the angels of the Lord may travel thereon. If this be neglected, the ultimate reality will become unknowable, incapable of explaining the appearances, and therefore invalid.1 (2) The ' appearances ' must be really preserved. They must not be stripped of their reality or neglected as mere appearances, merely because we fancy that we have seen in them glimpses of something higher. So long as they exist at all, they are real. The world really is coloured, and noisy, and hard, and painful, and spacious, and fleeting, notwithstanding the objections of our wise acres, and there is excellent sense even in maintaining that the earth is flat (some of it) and that the sun does rise and set. Even a nightmare does not become less real and oppressive because you have survived, and traced it to too generous an indulgence in lobster salad. For (3) it must never be forgotten that the immediate experience is after all in a way more real, i.e, more directly real, than the ' higher realities ' which are said to ' explain ' it. For the latter are inferred and postulated simply and solely for the purpose of ' explaining ' the former, and their reality consequently rests for us upon that of the former. Or in so far as the higher realities are more than inferences, they become such by entering into immediate experience and transfiguring it.2 The dependence of all ulterior reality upon immediate experience is easy to illustrate. I sit in my armchair and read, what I will call one of the more severely scholastic works on philosophy. There appears to me my friend Jones who has come to tell me that my friend 1 It is clear that this objection alone would justify the rejection of Mr. Bradley' s Absolute. But, so far as I can understand it, it seems to be constitu tionally incapable of complying with any of the conditions I am laying down. 2 The simplest example of this is the way in which the results of thought attain immediacy in perception. 196 HUMANISM xi Smith has been arrested on a charge of bigamy and wants me to bail him out. I have no reason to doubt the veracity of Jones or the reality of the situation. I feel therefore the urgent necessity for instant action, and, hastening to the rescue, I — awake with a start ! It was all a dream, you will say. On the contrary, I reply, it was all a reality. While I lived through it, the experience was as vivid and real as anything I ever experienced. It is so still : the thought of Smith's bigamy — he happens to be the primmest of old bachelors — -still affords me uncontrollable amusement. It is true that I have now modified my opinion as to the order of ' reality ' to which the experience belonged. I had thought that it belonged to our common waking world ; I now regard it as belong ing to a more beautiful dream-world of my own.1 We, see, therefore, how the ' higher ' reality depends on the immediate. The reality of Smith's excessive susceptibility, of Jones's visit, and of the bigamy itself, rested upon and was relative to that of my dream-experience. When my experience changed, I was no longer entitled to infer the existence of my previous realities in the world of my waking life.2 The application of this principle is quite general. A change in any particular ' appearance ' may entirely in validate the argument for the ' reality ' which served to explain it in its previous condition ; its annihilation would destroy the ground for the assumption of this reality ; and the annihilation of all appearances would obviously destroy all the reasons for assuming any reality.3 The principle is one of considerable speculative importance, for it enables us to conceive how we should think the reality of a ' lower ' to be related to that of a ' higher ' world of experience, if and when we experienced such a transition from one to the other. And to Religion, of course, this is a point of capital importance. For 1 And possibly also of Jones, if (as sometimes happens) he also dreamt the story he told me. 2 Cp. pp. 18, 32, 43, 284. 3 Hence we may say that Mr. Bradley 's maltreatment of ' appearances ' destroys all 'reality.' xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 197 unless we can conceive how the higher or ' spiritual ' world can transcend and absorb, without negating, the lower or ' material ' world, the postulates of the religious consciousness must continue to seem idle fairy tales to the austere reason of the systematic thinker. Moreover this dependence of derivative realities on primary experience has a most important bearing on the philosophic status of Idealism. At present Idealism remains in the position of an unprofitable paradox, because none of those who have professed a theoretic belief in it have cared or dared to act upon their theory. And so the argument for it is among those which, in Hume's phrase, admit of no answer and carry no con viction ; and yet, strangely enough, idealist philosophers, so far from being disconcerted by it, seem to be rather proud of this fact. Why else should they perpetually be apologising for what they conceive to be the paradox of their doctrine, and explaining that it really leaves the empirical reality of things entirely untouched ? Idealism, they say, opens no royal roads to higher realms : it makes no practical difference to the reality of anything, save, perhaps, that it enables the philosopher to recoil at will upon a point of view not understanded of the vulgar. To all of which, as humanists, we must reply, that this defence but aggravates the charge. It proves Idealism to be either worthless or pernicious : the latter, if its sole function is to gratify a philosophic pride ; the former, if it really makes no difference. And while a temporary air of paradox is not unbecoming to the youth of a novel view, it is the plain duty of every doctrine that seriously pretends to maintain itself as truth before the public to turn itself into an accepted truism as quickly as it can. If therefore Idealism really means anything, it must enable the idealist to regard reality differently from the realist, and to act differently in virtue of his truer insight. To say that Idealism makes no difference is thus to pronounce its utter condemnation. It is to admit that it is the same thing as Realism, variously named, i.e. to render it a ip8 HUMANISM XI useless subtlety. And must we not as pragmatists concede, that if it were really useless, it would incon- testably be false ? * To be true at all, therefore, Idealism must make a difference, but what shall we say it is ? It seems to me that if Idealism is right in its fundamental conten tion that existence is experience, and if we really try to live up to this insight, the difference which it ought to make is quite clearly this : that while the idealist does not deny the relative reality of his actual experience, he does not feel bound to commit himself in his inmost soul to the assertion also of its absolute reality. That is, he will make a certain inward reservation as to the ultimate reality of an imperfect world ; he will hold himself free to contemplate with a certain irony the brute facts of an experience he cannot wholly master, free also to uphold in their despite the ultimate validity of the ideals his spirit craves ; in short, he will possess a reserve of strength not open to his rivals, wherewith to meet the buffetings of circumstance. Practically also he will be more alert to seize upon whatever chances offer to effect improvements in an actual order he does not hold to be definitive : he will hold himself prepared to advance to worlds of a higher and more harmonious order,2 and to welcome whatever indications of their possibility may float within his ken. The vision of the realist, on the other hand, conceiving himself to be cognisant of a final, rigid, and independent reality, should be undeviatingly fixed upon and bounded by the ' brute ' facts of his actual experience : this he must regard as final, and he will thus debar himself from all experiments that might extend its borders or transform the context, and so the texture, of his universe. As for the soi-disant idealists who can draw no inference from their creed, we must contend that they have really failed to grasp its essence, and are unworthy of the name they have assumed. For the bow of Odysseus belongs to him alone who can bend it, and, if need be, use it upon the enemies of truth. 1 Cp. pp. 38-40. '- Cp. pp. 18, 22, 282. xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 199 (4) The reality of the ' higher reality ' must be made to depend throughout on its efficiency. This follows implicitly from what we have already established. Immediate experience forms the touchstone whereby we test the value of our inferred realities, and if they can contribute nothing valuable to its elucidation, their assumption is nothing but vanity and vexation of spirit. For what started the whole cognitive process was just the felt un- satisfactoriness of our immediate experience : our inferences must approve themselves as specifics against this disease, by their ability to supplement the actual, by the power they give us to transform our experiences. The trans mutation of appearances therefore must not be represented as an inscrutable privilege of the Absolute ; it must be made a weapon mortal hands can actually wield. This in fact is what we are continually doing ; it is the whole aim of our conceptual manipulation of experience. If to ' think ' it left ' reality ' the same, we should not waste our lives upon what is to most a painful and irksome business ; but in point of fact our thought ministers to our perceptions and so alleviates the burden of life. The results of our past thought enter into and transform our immediate perceptions and render them more adequate as guides to action. And this is what we want our thought to do and why we value it. Intellectualist prejudice indeed has interpreted this process into an excuse for ' analysing ' perception into ' thought ' ; it is better regarded as a proof of the practical value of thought and of the teleological character of conception. What will in the last resort decide, therefore, whether an inferred reality really exists or is merely a figment of the imagination, is the way it works, and the power which its aid confers. The assumption, e.g., of the earth's rotundity is ' true,' and preferable to the ' flat-earth ' theory, because on the whole it works better and accounts better for the course of our experience. Similarly, if I am comparing the merits of the scientific theory that the transmission of light is effected by the vibrations of a hypothetical reality called the ' ether ' with those of a more poetic theory that 200 HUMANISM XI it is due to the flapping of equally hypothetical cherubs ' wings, my decision will certainly be affected by the consideration that I can probably discover regular ways of manipulating the ether, but can hardly hope to control the movements of the cherubs. An assumed reality, then, approves itself to be true in proportion as it shows itself capable of rendering our life more harmonious ; it exposes itself to rejection as false in proportion as it either fails to affect our experiences, or exercises a detrimental effect upon them. Knowledge is power, because we decline to recognise as knowledge what ever does not satisfy our lust for power, It follows (5) that Ultimate Reality must be absolutely satisfactory. For that is the condition of our accepting it as such. So long as the most ultimate reality we have reached in thought or deed falls short in any respect of giving complete satisfaction, the struggle to harmonise experience must go on, lead to fresh efforts, and inspire the suspicion that something must exist to dissolve away our faintest discords. We cannot acquiesce therefore in what we have found. Or rather our acquiescence in it would at most betray the exhaustion of despair. To this we might be reduced for a season, but the hope would always rise anew that somehow there was something better, truer and more real lurking behind the apparent ulti mates of our knowledge. For illustration I need merely appeal to the well-known fact that an ' other ' world is always conceived as a ' better ' world. The absolutely satisfactory alone would rise superior to such doubts. It would be psychologically impossible to suspect it of bearing hidden horrors in its breast. The thought is no doubt abstractly conceivable, but a human mind could hardly be found seriously to entertain it. Similarly we might play with the idea of a progress in knowledge which should not only fail to be a progress in harmony, but should reveal fresh horrors at every step, until by the time absolute truth had been reached the cumulative cruelty of what we were forced to recognise as ultimate reality surpassed our most hideous imaginings as far as our knowledge xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 201 surpassed that of a Bushman. Now I do not for a moment suppose that common sense can be terrified with such suggestions into regarding them as more than the nightmares of a mind distraught, and I venture to think that a pragmatist philosophy can show that common sense is right. For there is a serious fallacy in the notion that the pursuit of Truth could reveal a chamber of horrors in the innermost shrine, and that we could all be forced to acknowledge and adore an ultimate reality in this monstrous guise. If this were truth, we should decline to believe it, and to accept it as true. We should insist that there must be some escape from the Minotaur, some way out of the Labyrinth in which our knowledge had involved our life. And even if we could be forced to the admission that the pursuit of truth necessarily and inevitably brought us face to face with some unbearable atrocity — an undertaking which seems so far to have over taxed even Mr. Bradley's ingenuity — a simple expedient would remain. As soon as the pursuit of truth was generally recognised to be practically noxious, we should simply give it up. If its misguided votaries morbidly persisted in their diabolical pursuit of ' truth regardless of the consequences,' they would be stamped out, as the Indian Government has stamped out the Thugs. Nor is this mere imagining. The thing has happened over and over again. All through the Middle Ages most branches of knowledge were under black suspicion as hostile to human welfare. They languished accordingly, and some of them, such as, e.g., Psychical Research, are still under a cloud. It is hardly necessary to allude to Comte's drastic proposals for the State regulation of science, and every teacher knows that the Civil Service Commissioners in the last resort prescribe what shall be taught (and how) throughout the land. In short the fact is patent to all who will open their eyes that in a thousand ways society is ever controlling, repressing, or encouraging, the cognitive activities of its members.1 And not only would this be done, but it would be an 1 Cp. pp. 58-60 and 247-249. 202 HUMANISM xi entirely reasonable thing to do in the case supposed. If the pursuit of knowledge really aggravated, instead of relieving, the burden of life, it would be irrational. If every step we took beyond ' appearances ' were but an augmentation of the disharmony in our experience, there would be no gain in taking it. The alleged knowledge would be worse than useless, and we should fare better without it We should have to train ourselves therefore to make the most of appearances, to make no effort to get behind them. And natural selection would see to it that those did not survive who remained addicted to a futile and noxious pursuit. This then would be the worst that could happen ; the frivolity and thoughtlessness of the day-fly might pay better than the deadly earnest of the sage. But the day-fly would ipso facto have become incapable of assenting to the extravagances of ultra- pessimism. From the worst possibility let us turn to the best. The best that has been mentioned is that by Faith and daring we should find an experience that would conduct us to the fortunate thought of an ultimate reality capable of completely harmonising our experience. And a merely intellectualist philosophy would have no reason, I presume, to ask for more than this. But just as before we conceived the principle of non- contradiction to be a form of the wider principle of harmony, so now we can hardly rest content with a reality which is merely conceived as the ground of complete satisfaction. For so long as it remains a mere conception, it must remain doubtful whether it could be realised in actual fact. To remove this doubt, therefore, our ultimate reality would have actually to establish the perfect harmony. By this achievement alone, i.e. by returning to our immediate experience and trans muting it into a form in which doubt would have become impossible, would it finally put an end to every doubt of its own ultimateness. But by this same achievement it would have dissolved our original problem. The antithesis of ' appearance ' and ' reality ' would have vanished. Ultimate reality having become immediate experience xi ON PRESERVING APPEARANCES 203 the two would coincide, and we should have entered into the fruition of their union. And so should we not finally catch a glimpse of an ideal which, in its own way, theology has dreamt of as ' the Beatific Vision ' ? The ideal of knowledge, as of the life to which it ministers, would not be an infinitely complex system of relations about which one might argue without end, but the vision, or immediate perception, of a reality which had absorbed all truth and so had become, as it were, intellectually transparent, and in which the whole meaning of the cosmic scheme was summed up and luminously comprehended — not only understood, but seen to be very good, and more than this, to be supremely beautiful. In other words, the bliss which Aristotle tried so hard to attribute to a Deity scornful of all communion with a suffering universe, could never be derived from a discursive ' thinking upon thought ' ; x it would have to take the form of an cestlietic contemplation of the perfect and all-embracing harmony.2 1 Not that Aristotle's vo-rjffis is really discursive. His thought (though not always his language) has really quite outgrown the Platonic antithesis of sensation and thought. 2 For suggestions as to how this Beatific Vision can be conceived as attainable, see the next essay. XII ACTIVITY AND SUBSTANCE1 ARGUMENT Need for a reconstruction of the conception of Substance by means of the Aristotelian conception of 'Evtpyeia. I. Its historical antecedents. The antithesis of the Process and Per manence view of existence, Eleaticism — Heracliteanism — Platonism. Aristotle's criticism of Plato's ovaia. as mere potentiality — his advance in forming the conception of evep-yfLa. II. Aristotli s statement of his doctrine. 'Evtpyeia as Substance — not a form of Ktv-rjffLs but vice versa. When perfected it no longer implies 'motion' or 'change.' Hence the Divine activity is continuous and eternal and tvtpyeia dKivrjaias. III. Its consequences. Perfect happiness — the transition from Time to Eternity — 'Evtpyeia d.Kivr](ria.s a scientific conception of ' Heaven.' IV. The paradoxes of the doctrine. How can there be activity, life, or consciousness without change ? V. Their explanation. The difficulty not in the facts but in the arbi trary interpretation we have put upon them. Thus (i) the equilibrium of motions is conceivable as the perfection, not as the cessation, of 'motion,' (2) perfect metabolism would transcend change, and (3) so would a perfect consciousness. VI. Advantages of so conceiving Activity. Rejection of ' Becoming ' and 'Rest' as ideals. Conceivableness of 'Heaven' and 'Eternity.' Avoidance of the ' Dissipation of Energy.' Spencer's see-saw as to the interpretation of ' equilibration.' VII. The old theory of Substance worthless. If ' Substance ' is conceived as the substratum of change it becomes unknowable and explains nothing. Berkeley detected this in the case of material, Hume in that of spiritual, ' substance.' Psychology has recently found it out in the case of the ' Soul ' and physics in that of 'matter.' ' Energy ' as the only physical reality. Lotze's criticism and reconstruction of substantiality. VIII. The Activity without motion as the ultimate ideal of Being. Activity the sole substance — how it produces the illusion of a substratum in which reality is never found. It is in proportion as the real actualises its possibilities in a harmonious form that it assumes the features of an ultimate ideal. The value of such an ideal. 1 The greater part of this appeared in Mind, N.S. 36, Oct. 1900, under the title of The Conception of 'T&vtpyeia 'A/ciio/crt'cxs. But it has been revised and con siderably expanded. 204 xii ACTIVITY AND SUBSTANCE 205 MY aim in this essay is to throw out some suggestions for a reconstruction of the conception of Substance which the work of the sciences so sorely needs, but to which modern Philosophy, although Hume had cleared the ground by showing the worthlessness of the old notion of substance,1 has as yet contributed so little of a really constructive character. This aim I hope to achieve by going back to Aristotle and extricating from an unmerited obscurity the Aristotelian ideal of Being, which seems to me to have formulated the only useful and valid conception of Sub stantiality nearly 2300 years ago. I am aware that this sounds incredible, and would be so, if that conception had ever been properly understood. But this has never been the case ; for reasons arising partly from the facility with which appearances generate the vulgar notion of Substance as the unchanging substratum of change, but also not unconnected with the brevity of Aristotle's extant utter ances on the subject. The worst of packing truth in a nutshell is that, so bestowed, it cannot safely navigate the stream of time and will probably float down it without notice. My first task, therefore, will be to expound more fully the Aristotelian conception of Energeia, to show how it culminates in an activity which transcends change and motion (evepyeia a/az^cria?), and to remove the paradoxes which this seems superficially to involve. I can then proceed to show that this conception completely supersedes the vulgar notion of Substance, that it alone is of service in the sciences and competent to satisfy the intellectual and emotional demands we must make upon our conception of ultimate Being, arid thereby not only removes a number of misconceptions which have been a constant source of trouble in science and philosophy, but goes far to relieve philosophy from the opprobrium of terminating in incon ceivable mysteries. I propose to trace, therefore, (i) the historical ante cedents of Aristotle's doctrine, (2) his own statements of it, (3) its consequences, (4) the objections to it, (5) the 1 I refer of course to his criticism of the Self in the Treatise. 206 HUMANISM XII answers to these, (6) its advantages over rival theories of substance, (7) the worthlessness of the latter, and finally (8) the value of the Aristotelian conception as an ultimate ideal. The history of thought, like that of politics, has largely been the history of great antitheses which have kept up their secular conflict from age to age. In the course of that history it may often have seemed that the one side of such an antithesis had finally triumphed over the other, but in the next generation it has often appeared that its rival had rallied its forces and restated its position to such effect that the preponderance of opinion has once more swung back to its side. Perhaps the most important metaphysically of these antitheses is that which has at different times been formulated as that between Teveo-i? and Ovcria, 'Ez/epyeta and r/E£t9, Becoming and Being, Change and Immutability, Process and Permanence, and it will be necessary to cast a rapid retrospect over its varying fortunes in order to appreciate the full significance of Aristotle's doctrine. It will suffice for this purpose to start with the metaphysic of the Eleatics, taking it as the extremest, crudest, most abstract, and therefore most impressive, representative of what I may call, for purposes of reference, the permanence-view of the ultimate nature of existence. In the Eleatics the affirmation of Being took the form of a rigid immutable "Ov, whose uncompromising unity reduced all motion, change and plurality to an inexplicable illusion, and remorselessly crushed out the whole signifi cance of human life. This uncanny Monism was defended with a dialectical ability which has never since been equalled, and Zeno's proofs of the impossibility of motion are still full of instruction for philosophers of all schools. But in the philosophy of Heraclitus Nemesis overtakes the Eleatics. Heraclitus affirms against them the ultimate reality of Becoming, the unlimited all-pervading Process, which unremittingly surges in the circling road, the 6'So Kara), wherein all things stream away (TTUVTU pel /cat ov8e.v fj.evet). In spite of the somewhat sinister denial of permanence implied in this addition, Heracliteanism may well have seemed to restore to the universe the life which Eleaticism had made impossible. But in Plato the pendulum swings back again to the side of ovcria. Rightly or wrongly, he detected in Heracliteanism consequences which seemed to him fatal to the possibility of knowledge, and instead of seeking to determine the actual limits of the Flux and betaking himself to the practical methods science has since elaborated in order to know it, he preferred to reject Heracliteanism and to propound a revised, and greatly improved, Eleati cism. He points out our need of a TTOV o-rw, which is not swept away in the Flux, of a fixed standard whereby to measure and render knowable the flow of Becoming, and in his theory of Ideas he conceived himself to have supplied this demand. In it plurality is, in a manner, recognised in the plurality of the Ideas, united though they are in the Idea of the Good, while the phenomenal world is admitted not to be wholly illusory, being pera^v rov OVTOS Kal pr) oWo?, intermediate between the Ideas and the principle of impermanence, the mystery of which Plato seems to have thought he could resolve by calling it the ' Non-Existent.' In the end, however, the Idea remains the only true reality, and the Idea as such is unchanging Being, out of Space and Time. Hence to call anything, e.g., Pleasure, a ' Becoming ' (yevecri,^ is ipso facto to cast a slur upon its reality and to disqualify it for the position of the Chief Good which must be, he thinks, an abiding ' ousia.' In Aristotle the tables are once more turned. To Aristotle the real world, i.e., the world whereof we desire an explanation, is after all the world of change in which we move and live, rather than the system of immutable and timeless ' laws ' which we devise for its explanation. Hence Plato's changeless ' ousiai ' seem to him too distant and divorced to explain the world, A conception of Substance which is to explain the facts of the world must 208 HUMANISM xn not subsist in an impassible immutability in the super- celestial seclusion of a transcendent TOTTO? VOIJTOS : if Substance meant no more than this, it would be a mere potentiality (SiW/u?). If ovaia, therefore, is not immanent and does not assert itself in the world of phenomena, but remains an inert and secluded SiW/w?, it is lifeless and worthless. For the potentiality owes its visibility, its value, nay, its very existence, to the glow shed upon it by the actual exercise of function {energeid}. Hence the ' universal ' (ica06\ov*), if it is to be truly valuable either for science or for practice, must be in the world and pervade it ; or, in his technical phrase, must display itself in actuality (evepyela) by the way it actually works. Not that Aristotle denies the validity of the considerations which led Plato to frame his conception of ovaia ; he denies only its adequacy. In his anxiety to escape out of the Heraclitean flux Plato had overshot the mark : he had committed himself to a conception of Being too rigid and remote to explain the Becoming of phenomena. The highest conception must be 'Evepyeia and not AiWyiu?, the actual functioning of a substance whose real nature is only so revealed. This too is the ultimate reason why, in his Ethics, Aristotle denies that apery is the Good, and contends that the Good, EuSat/AoWa, must be the exercise of the eft? (SiW/us), evepyeia tear apenjv. A merely statical treat ment of the truly valuable will not suffice : the Good is not merely ajadr) i/crtvcrt? in exercise, and a disposition (££49) is only valuable as the basis and potentiality of an evepyeia. In this way the whole of Aristotle's philosophy, both in its constructive and in its critical aspects as a reply to Plato, may be enunciated in the one word, ' Energeia? It has indeed always been more or less recognised that into this technical term Aristotle has packed all that was most distinctive, most original, most fundamental, and most profound in his philosophy. Now in philosophy all real originality is constructive — for you cannot pull down without a standing ground whence to effect the operation — and all real con- xii ACTIVITY AND SUBSTANCE 209 structiveness is also critical, for, as the earliest Pharaohs already knew, the most effective and unanswerable way of abolishing your rival's constructions is to use them up in your own. Hence it is that Aristotle's conception of Energeia constitutes both his really effective criticism of Plato, a criticism whose massive weight is far more crushing than the querulous and dialectical quibbling which he so often seems to substitute for serious apprecia tion of his master's work, and also the really decisive step in his advance beyond Plato. But the step was such a great one, and advances into regions so remote from our habitual modes of thinking, that not even the lapse of twenty centuries has rendered it easy to follow in his footsteps. II It follows from his rehabilitation of the Process-view of the world that Aristotle has (a] to establish the superiority of his conception of evepyeia over the Platonic conception of ovcria, (<£) that he has to distinguish it from the conception of tclvrjcri^ or ryeveais, which had succumbed to the Platonic criticism. The first point is of course easy enough to establish. It suffices to point out that a substance apart from its activity is an abstraction, or, in Aristotle's words, that the actuality is naturally prior to the potentiality, that to be is to be active} This simple truth, that a substantiality which does nothing is nothing, is now of course familiar enough, and perhaps best known in the Herbartian formula, ' without causality no substantiality,' though it lies at the roots also of Hume's criticism of substantiality. But the very fact that it has so often to be reaffirmed shows the strength of the natural prejudices against which it has had to contend. The same remark applies with tenfold force to the second point, viz. the difficulty of grasping the constructive aspect of the conception of Energeia. It has not ceased to appear paradoxical to us because of our inveterate, but 1 Cp. esp. Eth. Nich. ix. 7, 4 (1168 a 6) ia^v d' tvfpyeiq.. P 210 HUMANISM XII quite illogical, habit of regarding a ' function ' (evepyeta) as a sort of ' process ' (yevea-is*), or even — when we try to be particularly ' scientific ' — as ultimately reducible to a sort of ' motion.' In other words, we ordinarily subsume Aristotle's evepyeta under the conception of what he would have called tciwiya-ts. And if we do this, his notion of an activity without motion (evepyeia a/a^crta?) must seem the very height of paradox, a paradox whereof the edge has not been blunted by the progress of two thousand years. But the fault is ours ; we have unwittingly employed conceptions which are the precise opposite of the device whereby Aristotle turned the flank of the Platonic criticism and established his own conception of 'Evepyeia. In superseding by it the Platonic ovo-ia he could not, of course, merely revert to the earlier conceptions of ' be coming ' and ' motion ' whose logical annihilation Plato had effected. He was bound to provide something new in his conception of Energeia, and to distinguish it from both its precursors. And he does it. He does not fall into the trap to which we succumb when we regard a ' function ' (evepyeia) as a sort of ' process ' (yevea-is), or, materialistically, try to reduce all things to ' matter ' in ' motion.' He does the very opposite. Instead of classifying evepyeia under icivrjcris, he simply makes evepyeia the wider and supremer notion, and subsumes under it as a peculiar species, viz. an imperfect evepyeia. that is, arises from the longing of the imperfect for the perfect, of the ' matter ' (i/Xi?) for the ' form ' (et&o?) ; it is simply the process whereby it reaches whatever degree of perfection the inherent limitations of its nature concede to it. 1 Cp. e.g. Physics, iii. 2, 201 b 31, r; /aV^tm tvtpyfia fj^v ns etccu doKfi a.T€\7)S 5t, viii. 5, 257 b 8, iov. Metaph. 0, 6, 1048 b 29 iracra yap Kivrjcrt.? dreXTjs. Cp. also Eth. Nich. x. 3, 1174 a 19, where it is explained that i]doj>rj is not Kivtjais, because it does not need perfecting (being indeed what itself perfects fvtpyeia), while Kivrjffis does. ACTIVITY AND SUBSTANCE 211 ca, on the other hand, does not essentially or necessarily imply motion or change. In fact in the typical case, the perfect exercise of function by the senses, there is neither ' motion ' (/averts) nor ' change ' (aAAot'wcri?) nor ' passivity ' (7rdo"%eiv} ; the appropriate stimulus rouses the organ to activity and the organ functions naturally in grasping it ; * when this process is free from friction (' impediment ') perception is perfect and accompanied by pleasure (77801/77). Man, unfortunately, only catches brief glimpses of this happy state of things : our activity cannot be sustained, because, owing to the defectiveness (Trov^pia or (/>aiA,or?7<>) of a composite nature adulterated with ' matter ' (#A,77), we grow weary and allow our attention to wander and cannot be continuously active (o-fz/e^oo? evepyelv)? But God is not so hampered ; his is a pure and perfect nature ; he is pure Form, unimpeded by Matter, and always completely and actually all that he can be. Hence the divine evepyeia is kept up inexhaustibly,3 and ever generates the supreme pleasure, simple and incorruptible, of self- contemplation (1/0770-4,9 vorjcretos), which constitutes the divine happiness. It follows, as a matter of course, that this dvepyeia is above and beyond Kivqaw ; it is evepyeia aKivrjcrias or r/pe^ia. Hence in a famous passage — whose fame is yet unequal to its merits 4 — we are told that " if the nature of anything were simple, the same action would ever be sweetest to it. And this is the reason why God always enjoys a single and simple pleasure ; for there is not only an activity of motion, but also one void of motion, and pleasure is rather in constancy 5 than in motion. And change of all things is sweet, as the poet hath it, because of a certain defect." ( 1 Eth. Nich. x. 4, 5, 1174 b 14. 2 Ibid. x. 4, 9, 1175 a 4. 3 This is true also of the heavenly bodies, by reason of their more perfect ij\i}. Cp. Metaph. 1050 b 22. 4 Eth. Nich. vii. 14, 8 (1154 b 25-31). 5 ripf/jda cannot be translated ' rest ' without misleading. For ' rest ' to us = non-activity, which to Aristotle is tantamount to non-existence. He uses the word in order to express the steady and effortless maintenance of a perfect equilibrium. Cp. An. Post. ii. 19, where the same word is used to describe the emergence of the logical universal, i.e. of the constancy of meaning, out of the flux of psychological 'ideas.' 6 Cp. also Metaph. A. 7, 1072 b 16. 212 HUMANISM xn The immense significance of this passage has been strangely overlooked and the commentators say singularly little about it. Thus, of the two latest editors of the Ethics^ Prof. Stewart accuses Aristotle of waxing poetical, while Prof. Burnet finds nothing to say about it at all , and as this has occurred after I had vainly attempted to call attention to it,1 I think I may assume that still further comment is needed to help modern minds to grasp the beauty and importance of Aristotle's thought. Ill It follows from the above that the perfect or divine life is one of unceasing and unchanging activity, which is also an eternal consciousness of supreme happiness. And yet nothing happens in it. It is eternal, not in the illusory sense in which geometrical triangles and epistemological monstrosities (like e.g., Green's Eternal Self -Consciousness} are put out of Time by a trick of abstraction, but because it can be shown to have a positive nature, which precludes the conditions which engender time-consciousness. For, as Aristotle was well aware, (objective) Time is a creature of Motion ; it depends on the motions whereby alone it can be measured ; it is the ' number ' of motion (/aircrew? dpi@/j,6s~). If then /aV^o-i? arises out of the imperfection of an evepyeia, the perfecting of an evepyeia will necessarily involve the disappearance of Time, together with that of Motion. Or, as I have elsewhere expressed it,2 Time is the measure of the impermanence of the imperfect, and the perfecting of the time-consciousness would carry us out of Time into Eternity. In other words, the conception of *~Eivepyeia ' ' A.Kivr)?) KOL evepyeia), as Aristotle has contended. (V) To Consciousness it seems at first harder to apply this same interpretation. For what most impresses us about consciousness is the flux of Becoming, which is the world's aspiration to Being. Consciousness flows with a fluidity which is quite incapable of precise, and almost of intelligible, statement. It is a perpetual transition from object to object, not one of which it can retain for a fraction of a second, and in which nothing ever occurs twice. To suggest, then, that it may persist, in an eternal fixation of unchanging objects, would seem to be the very acme of insanity. Nevertheless, the Aristotelian theory here also has no quarrel with the facts : it only contends for their better and more logical interpretation. To infer from the facts the ' relativity ' of all consciousness and Hobbes' dictum sentire semper idem et nil sentire ad idem recidunt, appears to it either a truism or an error, and in no wise decisive.1 It is a truism, if it asserts that sensation in time involves change, and that all our experience is in time. It is an error, if it is taken as the starting-point of an argument which either proposes to conduct us out of consciousness 1 Cp. Riddles of the Sphinx, ch. xii. § 5. xn ACTIVITY AND SUBSTANCE 217 and to represent it as an unmeaning accident in a scheme of things which when perfectly equilibrated would tran scend it, or even to bind us Ixion-like on an unresting wheel of change. For the facts are susceptible of a better interpretation. May we not regard the flow of appearances as a defect, not as a merit, of consciousness, engendered as an adaptive response to the vicissitudes of a defective world ? May not impermanence in consciousness (as elsewhere) mark the Trovrjpia of a v