5816 lines
226 KiB
Plaintext
5816 lines
226 KiB
Plaintext
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Essays in Radical Empiricism
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by
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William James
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(1842-1910) American Philosopher & Psychologist,
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Founder of Pragmatism
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Here follows the (almost) complete work of William James' Essays in Radical
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Empiricism, transcribed by Phillip McReynolds. [ Not included is the last
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chapter, "La Notion de Conscience," since the chapter is completely in
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French and I could not be bothered to type it in at present. I will
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probably scan it in sooner or later and am working on a translation.
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Expect updates accordingly.]
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Page numbers are from the Longmans, Green and Co. edition of Essays in
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Radical Empiricism and A Pluralistic Universe in one volume, published
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in 1943. Underscores bewteen words indicate italics in the original.
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To the best of my knowledge this work is now in the public domain as it
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was copyrighted 1912 by Henry James, who died in 1916.
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There are probably mistakes here. If you let me know about them, I'll
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attempt to correct them. In any case, no warranty is issued
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as to the correctness or completeness of this work nor
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concerning its suitability to any purpose whatsoever. If you accept
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these conditions you may freely use and distribute this transcription as
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you like, provided that you don't try to sell it or otherwise make a
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profit off of my work.
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Phillip McReynolds
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MCREYNPA@CTRVAX.VANDERBILT.EDU
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[Table of Contents]
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vii
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VOLUME I. ESSAYS IN RADICAL EMPIRICISM
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I. DOES 'CONSCIOUSNESS' EXIST? 1
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II. A WORLD OF PURE EXPERIENCE 39
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III. THE THING AND ITS RELATIONS 92
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IV. HOW TWO MINDS CAN KNOW ONE THING 123
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V. THE PLACE OF AFFECTIONAL FACTS IN A WORLD
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OF PURE EXPERIENCE 137
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VI. THE EXPERIENCE OF ACTIVITY 155
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VII. THE ESSENCE OF HUMANISM 190
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VIII. LA NOTION DE CONSCIENCE 206
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1
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I
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DOES 'CONSCIOUSNESS' EXIST?
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'THOUGHTS' and 'things' are names for two
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sorts of object, which common sense will always
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find contrasted and will always practically
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oppose to each other. Philosophy, reflecting
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on the contrast, has varied in the
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past in her explanations of it, and may be
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expected to vary in the future. At first,
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'spirit and matter,' 'soul and body,' stood for
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a pair of equipollent substances quite on a par
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in weight and interest. But one day Kant undermined
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the soul and brought in the transcendental
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ego, and ever since then the bipolar
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relation has been very much off its balance.
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The transcendental ego seems nowadays in
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rationalist quarters to stand for everything, in
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empiricist quarters for almost nothing. In the
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hands of such writers as Schuppe, Rehmke,
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Natorp, Munsterberg -- at any rate in his
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2
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earlier writings, Schubert-Soldern and others,
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the spiritual principle attenuates itself to a
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thoroughly ghostly condition, being only a
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name for the fact that the 'content' of experience
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_is_known_. It loses personal form and activity
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-- these passing over to the content --
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and becomes a bare _Bewusstheit_ or _Bewusstsein_
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_uberhaupt_ of which in its own right absolutely
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nothing can be said.
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I believe that 'consciousness,' when once it
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has evaporated to this estate of pure diaphaneity,
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is on the point of disappearing altogether.
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It is the name of a nonentity, and has no right
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to a place among first principles. Those who
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still cling to it are clinging to a mere echo, the
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faint rumor left behind by the disappearing
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'soul' upon the air of philosophy. During the
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past year, I have read a number of articles
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whose authors seemed just on the point of abandoning
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the notion of consciousness,(1) and substituting
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for it that of an absolute experience
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not due to two factors. But they were not
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---
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1 Articles by Bawden, King, Alexander, and others. Dr. Perry is
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frankly over the border
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---
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3
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quite radical enough, not quite daring enough
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in their negations. For twenty years past I
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have mistrusted 'consciousness' as an entity;
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for seven or eight years past I have suggested
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its non-existence to my students, and tried to
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give them its pragmatic equivalent in realities
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of experience. It seems to me that the hour
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is ripe for it to be openly and universally discarded.
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To deny plumply that 'consciousness' exists
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seems so absurd on the face of it -- for undeniably
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'thoughts' do exist -- that I fear some
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readers will follow me no farther. Let me then
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immediately explain that I mean only to deny
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that the word stands for an entity, but to insist
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most emphatically that it does stand for a
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function. There is, I mean, no aboriginal stuff
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or quality of being, contrasted with that of
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which material objects are made, out of which
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our thoughts of them are made; but there is a
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function in experience which thoughts perform,
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and for the performance of which this
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4
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quality of being is invoked. That function is
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_knowing_. 'Consciousness' is supposed necessary
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to explain the fact that things not only
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are, but get reported, are known. Whoever
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blots out the notion of consciousness from his
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list of first principles must still provide in some
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way for that function's being carried on.
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I
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My thesis is that if we start with the supposition
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that there is only one primal stuff or
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material in the world, a stuff of which everything
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is composed, and if we call that stuff
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'pure experience,' the knowing can easily be
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explained as a particular sort of relation
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towards one another into which portions of
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pure experience may enter. The relation itself
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is a part of pure experience; one if its 'terms'
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becomes the subject or bearer of the knowledge,
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the knower,(1) the other becomes the object
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known. This will need much explanation
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before it can be understood. The best way to
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1 In my _Psychology_ I have tried to show that we need no knower
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other than the 'passing thought.' [_Principles of Psychology, vol. I,
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pp. 338 ff.]
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---
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5
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get it understood is to contrast it with the alternative
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view; and for that we may take the
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recentest alternative, that in which the evaporation
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of the definite soul-substance has proceeded
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as far as it can go without being yet
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complete. If neo-Kantism has expelled earlier
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forms of dualism, we shall have expelled all
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forms if we are able to expel neo-kantism in its
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turn.
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For the thinkers I call neo-Kantian, the word
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consciousness to-day does no more than signalize
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the fact that experience is indefeasibly dualistic
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in structure. It means that not subject,
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not object, but object-plus-subject is the minimum
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that can actually be. The subject-object
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distinction meanwhile is entirely different from
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that between mind and matter, from that between
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body and soul. Souls were detachable,
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had separate destinies; things could happen to
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them. To consciousness as such nothing can
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happen, for, timeless itself, it is only a witness
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of happenings in time, in which it plays no
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part. It is, in a word, but the logical correlative
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of 'content' in an Experience of which the
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peculiarity is that _fact_comes_to_light_ in it, that
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_awareness_of_content_ takes place. Consciousness
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as such is entirely impersonal -- 'self' and its
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activities belong to the content. To say that I
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am self-conscious, or conscious of putting forth
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volition, means only that certain contents, for
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which 'self' and 'effort of will' are the names,
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are not without witness as they occur.
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Thus, for these belated drinkers at the Kantian
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spring, we should have to admit consciousness
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as an 'epistemological' necessity, even if
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we had no direct evidence of its being there.
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But in addition to this, we are supposed by
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almost every one to have an immediate consciousness
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of consciousness itself. When the
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world of outer fact ceases to be materially present,
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and we merely recall it in memory, or
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fancy it, the consciousness is believed to stand
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out and to be felt as a kind of impalpable inner
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flowing, which, once known in this sort of experience,
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may equally be detected in presentations
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of the outer world. "The moment we try
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to fix out attention upon consciousness and to
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see _what_, distinctly, it is," says a recent writer,
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7
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"it seems to vanish. It seems as if we had before
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us a mere emptiness. When we try to introspect
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the sensation of blue, all we can see is
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the blue; the other element is as if it were diaphanous.
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Yet it _can_ be distinguished, if we
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look attentively enough, and know that there
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is something to look for."(1) "Consciousness"
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(Bewusstheit), says another philosopher, "is
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inexplicable and hardly describable, yet all conscious
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experiences have this in common that
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what we call their content has a peculiar reference
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to a centre for which 'self' is the name,
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in virtue of which reference alone the content
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is subjectively given, or appears.... While
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in this way consciousness, or reference to a
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self, is the only thing which distinguishes a conscious
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content from any sort of being that
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might be there with no one conscious of it, yet
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this only ground of the distinction defies all
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closer explanations. The existence of consciousness,
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although it is the fundamental fact of
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psychology, can indeed be laid down as certain,
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can be brought out by analysis, but can
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---
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1 G.E. Moore: _Mind_, vol. XII, N.S., [1903], p.450.
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---
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8
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neither be defined nor deduced from anything
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but itself."(1)
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'Can be brought out by analysis,' this
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author says. This supposes that the consciousness
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is one element, moment, factor -- call it
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what you like -- of an experience of essentially
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dualistic inner constitution, from which, if you
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abstract the content, the consciousness will remain
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revealed to its own eye. Experience, at
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this rate, would be much like a paint of which
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the world pictures were made. Paint has a dual
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constitution, involving, as it does, a menstruum (2)
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(oil, size or what not) and a mass of
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content in the form of pigment suspended
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therein. We can get the pure menstruum by
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letting the pigment settle, and the pure pigment
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by pouring off the size or oil. We operate
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here by physical subtraction; and the usual
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view is, that by mental subtraction we can
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separate the two factors of experience in an
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---
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1 Paul Natorp: _Einleitung_in_die_Psychologie_, 1888, pp. 14, 112.
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2 "Figuratively speaking, consciousness may be said to be the one
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universal solvent, or menstruum, in which the different concrete kinds
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of psychic acts and facts are contained, whether in concealed or in
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obvious form." G.T.Ladd: _Psychology,_Descriptive_and_Explanatory_,
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1894, p.30.
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---
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9
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analogous way -- not isolating them entirely,
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but distinguishing them enough to know that
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they are two.
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II
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Now my contention is exactly the reverse of
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this. _Experience,_I_believe,_has_no_such_inner_duplicity;_
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_and_the_separation_of_it_into_consciousness_
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_and_content_comes,_not_by_way_of_subtraction,_
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_but_by_way_of_addition_ -- the addition, to a
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given concrete piece of it, other sets of experiences,
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in connection with which severally its
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use or function may be of two different kinds.
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The paint will also serve here as an illustration.
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In a pot in a paint-shop, along with other
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paints, it serves in its entirety as so much saleable
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matter. Spread on a canvas, with other
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paints around it, it represents, on the contrary,
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a feature in a picture and performs a spiritual
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function. Just so, I maintain, does a given undivided
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portion of experience, taken in one
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context of associates, play the part of a knower,
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of a state of mind, of 'consciousness'; while in
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a different context the same undivided bit of
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experience plays the part of a thing known, of
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an objective 'content.' In a word, in one group
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it figures as a thought, in another group as a
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thing. And, since it can figure in both groups
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simultaneously we have every right to speak of
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it as subjective and objective, both at once.
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The dualism connoted by such double-barrelled
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terms as 'experience,' 'phenomenon,'
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'datum,' '_Vorfindung_' -- terms which, in philosophy
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at any rate, tend more and more to replace
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the single-barrelled terms of 'thought'
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and 'thing' -- that dualism, I say, is still preserved
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in this account, but reinterpreted, so
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that, instead of being mysterious and elusive,
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it becomes verifiable and concrete. It is an affair
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of relations, it falls outside, not inside, the
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single experience considered, and can always
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be particularized and defined.
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The entering wedge for this more concrete
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way of understanding the dualism was fashioned
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by Locke when he made the word 'idea'
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stand indifferently for thing and thought, and
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by Berkeley when he said that what common
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sense means by realities is exactly what the
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philosopher means by ideas. Neither Locke
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nor Berkeley thought his truth out into perfect
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clearness, but it seems to me that the conception
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I am defending does little more than consistently
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carry out the 'pragmatic' method
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which they were the first to use.
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If the reader will take his own experiences,
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he will see what I mean. Let him begin with a
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perceptual experience, the 'presentation,' so
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called, of a physical object, his actual field of
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vision, the room he sits in, with the book he is
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reading as its centre; and let him for the present
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treat this complex object in the common-
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sense way as being 'really' what it seems to be,
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namely, a collection of physical things cut out
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from an environing world of other physical
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things with which these physical things have
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actual or potential relations. Now at the same
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time it is just _those_self-same_things_ which his
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mind, as we say, perceives; and the whole philosophy
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of perception from Democritus's time
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downwards has just been one long wrangle over
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the paradox that what is evidently one reality
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should be in two places at once, both in outer
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space and in a person's mind. 'Representative'
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theories of perception avoid the logical
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paradox, but on the other hand the violate the
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reader's sense of life, which knows no intervening
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mental image but seems to see the room
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and the book immediately just as they physically
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exist.
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The puzzle of how the one identical room can
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be in two places is at bottom just the puzzle of
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how one identical point can be on two lines. It
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can, if it be situated at their intersection; and
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similarly, if the 'pure experience' of the room
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were a place of intersection of two processes,
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which connected it with different groups of associates
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respectively, it could be counted twice
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over, as belonging to either group, and spoken
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of loosely as existing in two places, although it
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would remain all the time a numerically single
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thing.
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Well, the experience is a member of diverse
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processes that can be followed away from it
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along entirely different lines. The one self-
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identical thing has so many relations to the
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rest of experience that you can take it in disparate
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systems of association, and treat it as
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belonging with opposite contexts. In one of
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these contexts it is your 'field of consciousness';
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in another it is 'the room in which you
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sit,' and it enters both contexts in its wholeness,
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giving no pretext for being said to attach
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itself to consciousness by one of its parts or
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aspects, and to out reality by another. What
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are the two processes, now, into which the
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room-experience simultaneously enters in this
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way?
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One of them is the reader's personal biography,
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the other is the history of the house of
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which the room is part. The presentation, the
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experience, the _that_ in short (for until we have
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decided _what_ it is it must be a mere _that_) is the
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last term in a train of sensations, emotions,
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decisions, movements, classifications, expectations,
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etc., ending in the present, and the first
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term in a series of 'inner' operations
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extending into the future, on the reader's
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part. On the other hand, the very same _that_
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is the _terminus_ad_quem_ of a lot of previous
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physical operations, carpentering, papering,
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furnishing, warming, etc., and the _terminus_a_
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_quo_ of a lot of future ones, in which it will be
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concerned when undergoing the destiny of a
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physical room. The physical and the mental
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operations form curiously incompatible groups.
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As a room, the experience has occupied that
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spot and had that environment for thirty
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years. As your field of consciousness it may
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never have existed until now. As a room, attention
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will go on to discover endless new details
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in it. As your mental state merely, few
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new ones will emerge under attention's eye.
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AS a room, it will taken an earthquake, or a
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gang of men, and in any case a certain amount
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of time, to destroy it. As your subjective
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state, the closing of your eyes, or any instantaneous
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play of your fancy will suffice. IN the
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real world, fire will consume it. IN your mind,
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you can let fire play over it without effect. As
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an outer object, you must pay so much a
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month to inhabit it. As an inner content, you
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may occupy it for any length of time rent-free.
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If, in short, you follow it in the mental direction,
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15
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taking it along with events of personal
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biography solely, all sorts of things are true
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of it which are false, and false of it which are
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true if you treat it as a real thing experienced,
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follow it in the physical direction, and relate it
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to associates in the outer world.
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III
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So far, all seems plain sailing, but my thesis
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will probably grow less plausible to the reader
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when I pass form percepts to concepts, or from
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the case of things presented to that of things
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remote. I believe, nevertheless, that here also
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the same law holds good. If we take conceptual
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manifolds, or memories, or fancies, they
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also are in their first intention mere bits
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of pure experience, and, as such, are single _thats_
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which act in one context as objects, and in another
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context figure as mental states. By taking
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them in their first intention, I mean ignoring
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their relation to possible perceptual experiences
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with which they may be connected,
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which they may lead to and terminate in, and
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which then they may be supposed to 'represent.'
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16
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Taking them in this way first, we confine
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the problem to a world merely 'thought-
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of' and not directly felt or seen. This world,
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just like the world of percepts, comes to us at
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first as a chaos of experiences, but lines of order
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soon get traced. We find that any bit of it
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which we may cut out as an example is connected
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with distinct groups of associates, just
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as our perceptual experiences are, that these
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associates link themselves with it by different
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relations,(2) and that one forms the inner history
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of a person, while the other acts as an impersonal
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'objective' world, either spatial and temporal,
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or else merely logical or mathematical,
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or otherwise 'ideal.'
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The first obstacle on the part of the reader to
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seeing that these non-perceptual experiences
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---
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2 Here as elsewhere the relations are of course _experienced_
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relations, members of the same originally chaotic manifold of non-
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perceptual experience of which the related terms themselves are
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parts.
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---
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|
|
17
|
|
have objectivity as well as subjectivity will
|
|
probably be due to the intrusion into his mind
|
|
of _percepts_, that third group of associates with
|
|
which the non-perceptual experiences have relations,
|
|
and which, as a whole, they 'represent,'
|
|
standing to them as thoughts to things. This
|
|
important function of non-perceptual experiences
|
|
complicates the question and confuses
|
|
it; for, so used are we to treat percepts as
|
|
the sole genuine realities that, unless we keep
|
|
them out of the discussion, we tend altogether
|
|
to overlook the objectivity that lies in non-
|
|
perceptual experiences by themselves. We
|
|
treat them, 'knowing' percepts as they do, as
|
|
through and through subjective, and say that
|
|
they are wholly constituted of the stuff called
|
|
consciousness, using this term now for a kind
|
|
of entity, after the fashion which I am seeking
|
|
to refute.(1)
|
|
|
|
Abstracting, then, from percepts altogether,
|
|
what I maintain is, that any single non-perceptual
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Of the representative functions of non-perceptual experience as a
|
|
whole, I will say a word in a subsequent article; it leads too far into
|
|
the general theory of knowledge for much to be said about it in a short
|
|
paper like this.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
experience tends to get counted twice
|
|
over, just as a perceptual experience does, figuring
|
|
in one context as an object or field of objects,
|
|
in another as a state of mind: and all this
|
|
without the least internal self-diremption on its
|
|
own part into consciousness and content. It is
|
|
all consciousness in one taking; and, in the
|
|
other, all content.
|
|
|
|
I find this objectivity of non-perceptual experiences,
|
|
this complete parallelism in point of
|
|
reality between the presently felt and the remotely
|
|
thought, so well set forth in a page of
|
|
Munsterberg's _Grundzuge_, that I will quote it
|
|
as it stands.
|
|
|
|
"I may only think of my objects," says Professor
|
|
Munsterberg; "yet, in my living thought
|
|
they stand before me exactly as perceived objects
|
|
would do, no matter how different the two
|
|
ways of apprehending them may be in their
|
|
genesis. The book here lying on the table before
|
|
me, and the book in the next room of which I
|
|
think and which I mean to get, are both in the
|
|
same sense given realities for me, realities
|
|
which I acknowledge and of which I take account.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
If you agree that the perceptual object
|
|
is not an idea within me, but that percept and
|
|
thing, as indistinguishably one, are really experienced
|
|
_there_, _outside_, you ought not to believe
|
|
that the merely thought-of object is hid away
|
|
inside of the thinking subject. The object of
|
|
which I think, and of whose existence I take
|
|
cognizance without letting it now work upon
|
|
my senses, occupies its definite place in the
|
|
outer world as much as does the object which I
|
|
directly see."
|
|
|
|
"What is true of the here and the there, is
|
|
also true of the now and the then. I know of
|
|
the thing which is present and perceived, but I
|
|
know also of the thing which yesterday was
|
|
but is no more, and which I only remember.
|
|
Both can determine my present conduct, both
|
|
are parts of the reality of which I keep account.
|
|
It is true that of much of the past I am uncertain,
|
|
just as I am uncertain of much of what
|
|
is present if it be but dimly perceived. But the
|
|
interval of time does not in principle alter my
|
|
relation to the object, does not transform it
|
|
from an object known into a mental state....
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
The things in the room here which I survey,
|
|
and those in my distant home of which I think,
|
|
the things of this minute and those of my long-
|
|
vanished boyhood, influence and decide me
|
|
alike, with a reality which my experience of
|
|
them directly feels. They both make up my
|
|
real world, they make it directly, they do not
|
|
have first to be introduced to me and mediated
|
|
by ideas which now and here arise
|
|
within me.... This not-me character
|
|
of my recollections and expectations does not
|
|
imply that the external objects of which I am
|
|
aware in those experiences should necessarily
|
|
be there also for others. The objects of dreamers
|
|
and hallucinated persons are wholly without
|
|
general validity. But even were they centaurs
|
|
and golden mountains, they still would
|
|
be 'off there,' in fairy land, and not 'inside' of
|
|
ourselves."(1)
|
|
|
|
This certainly is the immediate, primary,
|
|
naif, or practical way of taking our thought-of
|
|
world. Were there no perceptual world to
|
|
serve as its 'reductive,' in Taine's sense, by
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Munsterberg: _Grundzuge_der_Psychologie_, vol. I, p. 48.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
being 'stronger' and more genuinely 'outer'
|
|
(so that the whole merely thought-of world
|
|
seems weak and inner in comparison), our
|
|
world of thought would be the only world, and
|
|
would enjoy complete reality in our belief.
|
|
This actually happens in our dreams, and in
|
|
our day-dreams so long as percepts do not
|
|
interrupt them.
|
|
|
|
And yet, just as the seen room (to go back to
|
|
our late example) is _also_ a field of consciousness,
|
|
so the conceived or recollected room is
|
|
_also_ a state of mind; and the doubling-up of the
|
|
experience has in both cases similar grounds.
|
|
|
|
The room thought-of, namely, has many
|
|
thought-of couplings with many thought-of
|
|
things. Some of these couplings are inconstant,
|
|
others are stable. In the reader's personal history
|
|
the room occupies a single date -- he saw
|
|
it only once perhaps, a year ago. Of the house's
|
|
history, on the other hand, it forms a permanent
|
|
ingredient. Some couplings have the curious
|
|
stubbornness, to borrow Royce's term, of
|
|
fact; others show the fluidity of fancy -- we let
|
|
them come and go as we please. Grouped with
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
the rest of its house, with the name of its town,
|
|
of its owner, builder, value, decorative plan,
|
|
the room maintains a definite foothold, to
|
|
which, if we try to loosen it, it tends to return
|
|
and to reassert itself with force.(1) With these
|
|
associates, in a word, it coheres, while to other
|
|
houses, other towns, other owners, etc., it shows
|
|
no tendency to cohere at all. The two collections,
|
|
first of its cohesive, and, second, of its
|
|
loose associates, inevitably come to be contrasted.
|
|
We call the first collection the system
|
|
of external realities, in the midst of which the
|
|
room, as 'real,' exists; the other we call the
|
|
stream of internal thinking, in which, as a
|
|
'mental image,' it for a moment floats.(2) The
|
|
room thus again gets counted twice over. It
|
|
plays two different roles, being _Gedanke_ and
|
|
_Gedachtes_, the thought-of-an-object, and the
|
|
object-thought-of, both in one; and all this
|
|
without paradox or mystery, just as the same
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Cf. A.L. Hodder: _The_Adversaries_of_the_Sceptic_, pp.94-99.
|
|
|
|
2 For simplicity's sake I confine my exposition to 'external'
|
|
reality. But there is also the system of ideal reality in which the
|
|
room plays its part. Relations of comparison, of classification,
|
|
serial order, value, also are stubborn, assign a definite place to the
|
|
room, unlike the incoherence of its places in the mere rhapsody of our
|
|
successive thoughts.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
23
|
|
material thing may be both low and high, or
|
|
small and great, or bad and good, because of its
|
|
relations to opposite parts of an environing
|
|
world.
|
|
|
|
As 'subjective' we say that the experience
|
|
represents; as 'objective' it is represented.
|
|
What represents and what is represented is here
|
|
numerically the same; but we must remember
|
|
that no dualism of being represented and representing
|
|
resides in the experience _per_se_. In
|
|
its pure state, or when isolated, there is no self-
|
|
splitting of it into consciousness and what the
|
|
consciousness is 'of.' Its subjectivity and objectivity
|
|
are functional attributes solely, , realized
|
|
only when the experience is 'take,' i.e.,
|
|
talked-of, twice, considered along with its two
|
|
differing contexts respectively, by a new retrospective
|
|
experience, of which that whole past
|
|
complication now forms the fresh content.
|
|
|
|
The instant field of the present is at all times
|
|
what I call the 'pure' experience. It is only
|
|
virtually or potentially either object or subject
|
|
as yet. For the time being, it is plain, unqualified
|
|
actuality, or existence, a simple _that_. In this
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
_naif_ immediacy it is of course _valid_; it is _there_,
|
|
we _act_ upon it; and the doubling of it in retrospection
|
|
into a state of mind and a reality intended
|
|
thereby, is just one of the acts. The
|
|
'state of mind,' first treated explicitly as such
|
|
in retrospection, will stand corrected or confirmed,
|
|
and the retrospective experience in its
|
|
turn will get a similar treatment; but the immediate
|
|
experience in its passing is always
|
|
'truth,'(1) practical truth, _something_to_act_on_, at
|
|
its own movement. If the world were then and
|
|
there to go out like a candle, it would remain
|
|
truth absolute and objective, for it would be
|
|
'the last word,' would have no critic, and no
|
|
one would ever oppose the thought in it to the
|
|
reality intended.(2)
|
|
|
|
I think I may now claim to have made my
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Note the ambiguity of this term, which is taken sometimes
|
|
objectively and sometimes subjectively.
|
|
|
|
2 In the _Psychological_Review_ for July [1904], Dr. R.B.Perry has
|
|
published a view of Consciousness which comes nearer to mine than any
|
|
other with which I am acquainted. At present, Dr. Perry thinks, every
|
|
field of experience is so much 'fact.' It becomes 'opinion' or
|
|
'thought' only in retrospection, when a fresh experience, thinking the
|
|
same object, alters and corrects it. But the corrective experience
|
|
becomes itself in turn corrected, and thus the experience as a whole is
|
|
a process in which what is objective originally forever turns
|
|
subjective, turns into our apprehension of the object. I strongly
|
|
recommend Dr. Perry's admirable article to my readers.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
25
|
|
thesis clear. Consciousness connotes a kind of
|
|
external relation, and does not denote a special
|
|
stuff or way of being. _The_peculiarity_of_our_experiences,_
|
|
_that_they_not_only_are,_but_are_known,_
|
|
_which_their_'conscious'_quality_is_invoked_to_
|
|
_explain,_is_better_explained_by_their_relations_--
|
|
_these_relations_themselves_being_experiences_--_to_
|
|
_one_another_.
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
Were I now to go on to treat of the knowing
|
|
of perceptual by conceptual experiences, it
|
|
would again prove to be an affair of external
|
|
relations. One experience would be the knower,
|
|
the other the reality known; and I could
|
|
perfectly well define, without the notion of
|
|
'consciousness,' what the knowing actually
|
|
and practically amounts to -- leading-towards,
|
|
namely, and terminating-in percepts, through
|
|
a series of transitional experiences which the
|
|
world supplies. But I will not treat of this,
|
|
space being insufficient.(1) I will rather consider
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 I have given a partial account of the matter in _Mind_, vol. X, p.
|
|
27, 1885, and in the _Psychological_Review_, vol. II, p. 105, 1895. See
|
|
also C.A. Strong's article in the
|
|
_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_Scientific_Methods_, vol I, p.
|
|
253, May 12, 1904. I hope myself very soon to recur to the matter.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
26
|
|
a few objections that are sure to be urged
|
|
against the entire theory as it stands.
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
First of all, this will be asked: "If experience
|
|
has not 'conscious' existence, if it be not
|
|
partly made of 'consciousness,' of what then
|
|
is it made? Matter we know, and thought we
|
|
know, and conscious content we know, but
|
|
neutral and simple 'pure experience' is something
|
|
we know not at all. Say _what_ it consists
|
|
of -- for it must consist of something -- or be
|
|
willing to give it up!"
|
|
|
|
To this challenge the reply is easy. Although
|
|
for fluency's sake I myself spoke early in this
|
|
article of a stuff of pure experience, I have now
|
|
to say that there is no _general_ stuff of which experience
|
|
at large is made. There are as many
|
|
stuffs as there are 'natures' in the things experienced.
|
|
If you ask what any one bit of pure
|
|
experience is made of, the answer is always the
|
|
|
|
27
|
|
same: "It is made of _that_, of just what appears,
|
|
of space, of intensity, of flatness, brownness,
|
|
heaviness, or what not." Shadworth Hodgson's
|
|
analysis here leaves nothing to be desired.(1)
|
|
Experience is only a collective name
|
|
for all these sensible natures, and save for time
|
|
and space (and, if you like, for 'being') there
|
|
appears no universal element of which all
|
|
things are made.
|
|
|
|
VI
|
|
|
|
The next objection is more formidable, in
|
|
fact it sounds quite crushing when one hears
|
|
it first.
|
|
|
|
"If it be the self-same piece of pure experience,
|
|
taken twice over, that serves now as thought and now as thing" -- so the
|
|
objection runs -- "how comes it that its attributes
|
|
should differ so fundamentally in the two takings.
|
|
As thing, the experience is extended; as
|
|
thought, it occupies no space or place. As
|
|
thing, it is red, hard, heavy; but who ever heard
|
|
|
|
28
|
|
of a red, hard or heavy thought? Yet even
|
|
now you said that an experience is made of
|
|
just what appears, and what appears is just
|
|
such adjectives. How can the one experience
|
|
in its thing-function be made of them, consist
|
|
of them, carry them as its own attributes, while
|
|
in its thought-function it disowns them and
|
|
attributes them elsewhere. There is a self-contradiction
|
|
here from which the radical dualism
|
|
of thought and thing is the only truth that can
|
|
save us. Only if the thought is one kind of
|
|
being can the adjectives exist in it 'intentionally'
|
|
(to use the scholastic term); only if the
|
|
thing is another kind, can they exist in it constituitively
|
|
and energetically. No simple subject
|
|
can take the same adjectives and at one
|
|
time be qualified by it, and at another time be
|
|
merely 'of' it, as of something only meant or
|
|
known."
|
|
|
|
The solution insisted on by this objector, like
|
|
many other common-sense solutions, grows
|
|
the less satisfactory the more one turns it in
|
|
one's mind. To begin with, _are_ thought and
|
|
thing as heterogeneous as is commonly said?
|
|
|
|
29
|
|
|
|
No one denies that they have some categories
|
|
in common. Their relations to time are identical.
|
|
Both, moreover, may have parts (for
|
|
psychologists n general treat thoughts as having
|
|
them); and both may be complex or simple.
|
|
Both are of kinds, can be compared, added and
|
|
subtracted and arranged in serial orders. All
|
|
sorts of adjectives qualify our thoughts which
|
|
appear incompatible with consciousness, being
|
|
as such a bare diaphaneity. For instance, they
|
|
are natural and easy, or laborious. They are
|
|
beautiful, happy, intense, interesting, wise,
|
|
idiotic, focal, marginal, insipid, confused,
|
|
vague, precise, rational, causal, general, particular,
|
|
and many things besides. Moreover,
|
|
the chapters on 'Perception' in the psychology-
|
|
books are full of facts that make for the
|
|
essential homogeneity of thought with thing.
|
|
How, if 'subject' and 'object' were separated
|
|
'by the whole diameter of being,' and had no
|
|
attributes and common, could it be so hard to
|
|
tell, in a presented and recognized material
|
|
object, what part comes in thought the sense-
|
|
organs and what part comes 'out of one's own
|
|
|
|
30
|
|
head'? Sensations and apperceptive ideas fuse
|
|
here so intimately that you can no more tell
|
|
where one begins and the other ends, than you
|
|
can tell, in those cunning circular panoramas
|
|
that have lately been exhibited, where the real
|
|
foreground and the painted canvas join together.(1)
|
|
|
|
Descartes for the first time defined thought
|
|
as the absolutely unextended, and later philosophers
|
|
have accepted the description as correct.
|
|
But what possible meaning has it to say
|
|
that, when we think of a foot-rule or a square
|
|
yard, extension is not attributable to our
|
|
thought? Of every extended object the _adequate_
|
|
mental picture must have all the extension
|
|
of the object itself. The difference between
|
|
objective and subjective extension is
|
|
one of relation to a context solely. In the mind
|
|
the various extents maintain no necessarily
|
|
stubborn order relatively to each other, while
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Spencer's proof of his 'Transfigured Realism' (his doctrine that
|
|
there is an absolutely non-mental reality) comes to mind as a splendid
|
|
instance of the impossibility of establishing radical heterogeneity
|
|
between thought and thing. All his painfully accumulated points of
|
|
difference run gradually into their opposites, and are full of
|
|
exceptions.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
31
|
|
in the physical world they bound each other
|
|
stably, and, added together, make the great
|
|
enveloping Unit which we believe in and call
|
|
real Space. As 'outer,' they carry themselves
|
|
adversely, so to speak, to one another, exclude
|
|
one another and maintain their distances;
|
|
while, as 'inner,' their order is loose, and they
|
|
form a _durcheinander_ in which unity is lost.(1)
|
|
But to argue from this that inner experience is
|
|
absolutely inextensive seems to me little short
|
|
of absurd. The two worlds differ, not by the
|
|
presence or absence of extension, but by the
|
|
relations of the extensions which in both
|
|
worlds exist.
|
|
|
|
Does not this case of extension now put us
|
|
on the track of truth in the case of other qualities?
|
|
It does; and I am surprised that the facts
|
|
should not have been noticed long ago. Why,
|
|
for example, do we call a fire hot, and water
|
|
wet, and yet refuse to say that our mental
|
|
state, when it is 'of' these objects, is either wet
|
|
or hot? 'Intentionally,' at any rate, and when
|
|
|
|
32
|
|
the mental state is a vivid image, hotness and
|
|
wetness are in it just as much as they are in the
|
|
physical experience. The reason is this, that,
|
|
as the general chaos of all our experiences gets
|
|
sifted, we find that there are some fires that
|
|
will always burn sticks and always warm our
|
|
bodies, and that there are some waters that
|
|
will always put out fires; while there are other
|
|
fires and waters that will not act at all. The
|
|
general group of experiences that _act_, that do
|
|
not only possess their natures intrinsically, but
|
|
wear them adjectively and energetically, turning
|
|
them against one another, comes inevitably
|
|
to be contrasted with the group whose members,
|
|
having identically the same natures, fail
|
|
to manifest them in the 'energetic' way.(1) I
|
|
make for myself now an experience of blazing
|
|
fire; I place it near my body; but it does not
|
|
warm me in the least. I lay a stick upon it, and
|
|
the stick either burns or remains green, as I
|
|
please. I call up water, and pour it on the fire,
|
|
and absolutely no difference ensues. I account
|
|
|
|
33
|
|
for all such facts by calling this whole train
|
|
of experiences unreal, a mental train. Mental
|
|
fire is what won't burn real sticks; mental water
|
|
is what won't necessarily (though of course
|
|
it may) put out even a mental fire. Mental
|
|
knives may be sharp, but they won't cut real
|
|
wood. Mental triangles are pointed, but their
|
|
points won't wound. With 'real' objects, on
|
|
the contrary, consequences always accrue; and
|
|
thus the real experiences get sifted from the
|
|
mental ones, the things from out thoughts of
|
|
them, fanciful or true, and precipitated together
|
|
as the stable part of the whole experience-
|
|
chaos, under the name of the physical
|
|
world. Of this our perceptual experiences are
|
|
the nucleus, they being the originally _strong_
|
|
experiences. We add a lot of conceptual experiences
|
|
to them, making these strong also in
|
|
imagination, and building out the remoter
|
|
parts of the physical world by their means;
|
|
and around this core of reality the world
|
|
of laxly connected fancies and mere rhapsodical
|
|
objects floats like a bank of clouds.
|
|
In the clouds, all sorts of rules are violated
|
|
|
|
34
|
|
which in the core are kept. Extensions there
|
|
can be indefinitely located; motion there obeys
|
|
no Newton's laws.
|
|
|
|
VII
|
|
|
|
There is a peculiar class of experience to
|
|
which, whether we take them as subjective or
|
|
as objective, we _assign their several natures as
|
|
attributes, because in both contexts they affect
|
|
their associates actively, though in neither
|
|
quite as 'strongly' or as sharply as things affect
|
|
one another by their physical energies. I
|
|
refer here to _appreciations_, which form an ambiguous
|
|
sphere of being, belonging with emotion
|
|
on the one hand, and having objective 'value'
|
|
on the other, yet seeming not quite inner nor
|
|
quite outer, as if a diremption had begun but
|
|
had not made itself complete.
|
|
|
|
Experiences of painful objects, for example,
|
|
are usually also painful experiences; perceptions
|
|
of loveliness, of ugliness, tend to pass
|
|
muster as lovely or as ugly perceptions; intuitions
|
|
of the morally lofty are lofty intuitions.
|
|
|
|
35
|
|
Sometimes the adjective wanders as if uncertain
|
|
where to fix itself. Shall we speak of
|
|
seductive visions or of visions of seductive
|
|
things? Of healthy thoughts or of thoughts
|
|
of healthy objects? Of good impulses, or of
|
|
impulses towards the good? Of feelings of
|
|
anger, or of angry feelings? Both in the mind
|
|
and in the thing, these natures modify their
|
|
context, exclude certain associates and determine
|
|
others, have their mates and incompatibles.
|
|
Yet not as stubbornly as in the case of
|
|
physical qualities, for beauty and ugliness,
|
|
love and hatred, pleasant and painful can, in
|
|
certain complex experiences, coexist.
|
|
|
|
If one were to make an evolutionary construction
|
|
of how a lot of originally chaotic pure
|
|
experience became gradually differentiated
|
|
into an orderly inner and outer world, the
|
|
whole theory would turn upon one's success in
|
|
explaining how or why the quality of an experience,
|
|
once active, could become less so, and,
|
|
from being an energetic attribute in some
|
|
cases, elsewhere lapse into the status of an
|
|
|
|
36
|
|
inert or merely internal 'nature.' This would
|
|
be the 'evolution' of the psychical from the
|
|
bosom of the physical, in which the esthetic,
|
|
moral and otherwise emotional experiences
|
|
would represent a halfway stage.
|
|
|
|
VIII
|
|
|
|
But a last cry of _non_possumus_ will probably
|
|
go up from many readers. "All very pretty as
|
|
a piece of ingenuity," they will say, "but our
|
|
consciousness itself intuitively contradicts you.
|
|
We, for our part, _know_ that we are conscious.
|
|
We _feel_ our thought, flowing as a life within us,
|
|
in absolute contrast with the objects which it
|
|
so unremittingly escorts. We can not be faithless
|
|
to this immediate intuition. The dualism
|
|
is a fundamental _datum_: Let no man join what
|
|
God has put asunder."
|
|
|
|
My reply to this is my last word, and I
|
|
greatly grieve that to many it will sound materialistic.
|
|
I can not help that, however, for
|
|
I, too, have my intuitions and I must obey
|
|
them. Let the case be what it may in others, I
|
|
am as confident as I am of anything that, in
|
|
|
|
37
|
|
myself, the stream of thinking (which I recognize
|
|
emphatically as a phenomenon) is only a
|
|
careless name for what, when scrutinized, reveals
|
|
itself to consist chiefly of the stream of
|
|
my breathing. The 'I think' which Kant said
|
|
must be able to accompany all my objects, is
|
|
the 'I breath' which actually does accompany
|
|
them. There are other internal facts
|
|
besides breathing (intracephalic muscular adjustments,
|
|
etc., of which I have said a word in
|
|
my larger Psychology), and these increase the
|
|
assets of 'consciousness,' so far as the latter is
|
|
subject to immediate perception; but breath,
|
|
which was ever the original of 'spirit,' breath
|
|
moving outwards, between the glottis and the
|
|
nostrils, is, I am persuaded, the essence out of
|
|
which philosophers have constructed the entity
|
|
known to them as consciousness. _That_
|
|
_entity_is_fictitious,_while_thoughts_in_the_concrete_
|
|
_are_fully_real.__But_thoughts_in_the_concrete_are_
|
|
_made_of_the_same_stuff_as_things_are.
|
|
|
|
I wish I might believe myself to have made
|
|
|
|
38
|
|
that plausible in this article. IN another article
|
|
I shall try to make the general notion of a
|
|
world composed of pure experiences still more
|
|
clear.
|
|
|
|
39
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
A WORLD OF PURE EXPERIENCE
|
|
|
|
IT is difficult not to notice a curious unrest in
|
|
the philosophic atmosphere of the time, always
|
|
loosening of old landmarks, a softening of oppositions,
|
|
a mutual borrowing from one another reflecting
|
|
on the part of systems anciently closed,
|
|
and an interest in new suggestions, however
|
|
vague, as if the one thing sure were the inadequacy
|
|
of the extant school-solutions. The dissatisfaction
|
|
with these seems due for the most
|
|
part to a feeling that they are too abstract and
|
|
academic. Life is confused and superabundant,
|
|
and what the younger generation appears to
|
|
crave is more of the temperament of life in its
|
|
philosophy, even thought it were at some cost
|
|
of logical rigor and of formal purity. Transcendental
|
|
|
|
40
|
|
idealism is inclining to let the world
|
|
wag incomprehensibly, in spite of its Absolute
|
|
Subject and his unity of purpose. Berkeleyan
|
|
idealism is abandoning the principle of parsimony
|
|
and dabbling in panpsychic speculations.
|
|
Empiricism flirts with teleology; and,
|
|
strangest of all, natural realism, so long decently
|
|
buried, raises its head above the turf,
|
|
and finds glad hands outstretched from the
|
|
most unlikely quarters to help it to its feet
|
|
again. We are all biased by our personal feelings,
|
|
I know, and I am personally discontented
|
|
with extant solutions; so I seem to read the
|
|
signs of a great unsettlement, as if the upheaval
|
|
of more real conceptions and more fruitful
|
|
methods were imminent, as if a true landscape
|
|
might result, less clipped, straight-edged
|
|
and artificial.
|
|
|
|
If philosophy be really on the eve of any considerable
|
|
rearrangement, the time should be
|
|
propitious for any one who has suggestions of
|
|
his own to bring forward. For many years past
|
|
my mind has bee growing into a certain type
|
|
of _Weltanschauung_. Rightly or wrongly, I have
|
|
41
|
|
got to the point where I can hardly see things
|
|
in any other pattern. I propose, therefore, to
|
|
describe the pattern as clearly as I can consistently
|
|
with great brevity, and to throw my
|
|
description into the bubbling vat of publicity
|
|
where, jostled by rivals and torn by critics, it
|
|
will eventually either disappear from notice,
|
|
or else, if better luck befall it, quietly subside
|
|
to the profundities, and serve as a possible
|
|
ferment of new growths or a nucleus of new
|
|
crystallization.
|
|
|
|
I. RADICAL EMPIRICISM
|
|
|
|
I give the name of 'radical empiricism' to
|
|
my _Weltanschauung_. Empiricism is known as
|
|
the opposite of rationalism. Rationalism tends
|
|
to emphasize universals and to make wholes
|
|
prior to parts in the order of logic as well as in
|
|
that of being. Empiricism, on the contrary,
|
|
lays the explanatory stress upon the part, the
|
|
element, the individual, and treats the whole
|
|
as a collection and the universal as an abstraction.
|
|
My description of things, accordingly,
|
|
starts with the parts and makes of the whole
|
|
|
|
42
|
|
a being of the second order. It is essentially
|
|
a mosaic philosophy, a philosophy of plural
|
|
facts, like that of Hume and his descendants,
|
|
who refer these facts neither to Substances in
|
|
which they inhere nor to an Absolute Mind
|
|
that creates them as its objects. But it differs
|
|
from the Humian type of empiricism in one
|
|
particular which makes me add the epithet
|
|
radical.
|
|
|
|
To be radical, an empiricism must neither
|
|
admit into its constructions any element that
|
|
is not directly experienced, nor exclude from
|
|
them any element that is directly experienced.
|
|
For such a philosophy, _the_relations_that_connect_
|
|
_experiences_must_themselves_be_experienced_relations,_
|
|
_and_any_kind_of_relation_experienced_must_
|
|
_be_accounted_as_'real'_as_anything_else_in_the_
|
|
_system. Elements may indeed be redistributed,
|
|
the original placing of things getting corrected,
|
|
but a real place must be found for every kind
|
|
of thing experienced, whether term or relation,
|
|
in the final philosophic arrangement.
|
|
|
|
Now, ordinary empiricism, in spite of the
|
|
fact that conjunctive and disjunctive relations
|
|
|
|
43
|
|
present themselves as being fully co-ordinate
|
|
parts of experience, has always shown a tendency
|
|
to do away with the connections of
|
|
things, and to insist most on the disjunctions.
|
|
Berkeley's nominalism, Hume's statement that
|
|
whatever things we distinguish are as 'loose
|
|
and separate' as if they had 'no manner of connection.'
|
|
James Mill's denial that similars have
|
|
anything 'really' in common, the resolution
|
|
of the causal tie into habitual sequence, John
|
|
Mill's account of both physical things and
|
|
selves as composed of discontinuous possibilities,
|
|
and the general pulverization of all Experience
|
|
by association and the mind-dust
|
|
theory, are examples of what I mean.
|
|
|
|
The natural result of such a world-picture
|
|
has been the efforts of rationalism to correct
|
|
its incoherencies by the addition of trans-
|
|
experiential agents of unification, substances,
|
|
intellectual categories and powers, or Selves;
|
|
|
|
44
|
|
whereas, if empiricism had only been radical
|
|
and taken everything that comes without disfavor,
|
|
conjunction as well as separation, each
|
|
at its face value, the results would have called
|
|
for no such artificial correction. _Radical_empiricism,_
|
|
as I understand it, _does_full_justice_to_
|
|
_conjunctive_relations_, without, however, treating
|
|
them as rationalism always tends to treat
|
|
them, as being true in some supernal way, as if
|
|
the unity of things and their variety belonged
|
|
to different orders of truth and vitality altogether.
|
|
|
|
II. CONJUNCTIVE RELATIONS
|
|
|
|
Relations are of different degrees of intimacy.
|
|
Merely to be 'with' one another in a
|
|
universe of discourse is the most external relation
|
|
that terms can have, and seems to involve
|
|
nothing whatever as to farther consequences.
|
|
Simultaneity and time-interval come next, and
|
|
then space-adjacency and distance. After
|
|
them, similarity and difference, carrying the
|
|
possibility of many inferences. Then relations
|
|
of activity, tying terms into series involving
|
|
|
|
45
|
|
change, tendency, resistance, and the causal
|
|
order generally. Finally, the relation experienced
|
|
between terms that form states of mind,
|
|
and are immediately conscious of continuing
|
|
each other. The organization of the Self as a
|
|
system of memories, purposes, strivings, fulfilments
|
|
or disappointments, is incidental to
|
|
this most intimate of all relations, the terms
|
|
of which seem in many cases actually to compenetrate
|
|
and suffuse each other's being.
|
|
|
|
Philosophy has always turned on grammatical
|
|
particles. With, near, next, like, from,
|
|
towards, against, because, for, through, my --
|
|
these words designate types of conjunctive
|
|
relation arranged in a roughly ascending order
|
|
of intimacy and inclusiveness. _A_priori, we can
|
|
imagine a universe of withness but no nextness;
|
|
or one of nextness but no likeness, or of likeness
|
|
with no activity, or of activity with no purpose,
|
|
or of purpose with no ego. These would
|
|
be universes, each with its own grade of unity.
|
|
The universe of human experience is, by one or
|
|
another of its parts, of each and all these grades.
|
|
|
|
46
|
|
Whether or not it possibly enjoys some still
|
|
more absolute grade of union does not appear
|
|
upon the surface.
|
|
|
|
Taken as it does appear, our universe is to a
|
|
large extent chaotic. No one single type of connection
|
|
runs through all the experiences that
|
|
compose it. If we take space-relations, they
|
|
fail to connect minds into any regular system.
|
|
Causes and purposes obtain only among special
|
|
series of facts. The self-relation seems
|
|
extremely limited and does not link two different
|
|
selves together. _Prima_facie, if you should
|
|
liken the universe of absolute idealism to an
|
|
aquarium, a crystal globe in which goldfish
|
|
are swimming, you would have to compare the
|
|
empiricist universe to something more like one
|
|
of those dried human heads with which the
|
|
Dyaks of Borneo deck their lodges. The skull
|
|
forms a solid nucleus; but innumerable feathers,
|
|
leaves, strings, beads, and loose appendices
|
|
of every description float and dangle
|
|
from it, and, save that they terminate in it, seem
|
|
to have nothing to do with one another. Even
|
|
so my experiences and yours float and dangle,
|
|
|
|
47
|
|
terminating, it is true, in a nucleus of common
|
|
perception, but for the most part out of sight
|
|
and irrelevant and unimaginable to one another.
|
|
This imperfect intimacy, this bare relation
|
|
of _withness) between some parts of the
|
|
sum total of experience and other parts, is the
|
|
fact that ordinary empiricism over-emphasizes
|
|
against rationalism, the latter always tending
|
|
to ignore it unduly. Radical empiricism, on
|
|
the contrary, is fair to both the unity and the
|
|
disconnection. It finds no reason for treating
|
|
either as illusory. It allots to each its definite
|
|
sphere of description, and agrees that there
|
|
appear to be actual forces at work which tend,
|
|
as time goes on, to make the unity greater.
|
|
|
|
The conjunctive relation that has given
|
|
most trouble to philosophy is _the_co-conscious_
|
|
_transition_, so to call it, by which one experience
|
|
passes into another when both belong to the
|
|
same self. My experiences and your experiences are
|
|
'with' each other in various external ways, but
|
|
mine pass into mine, and yours pass into yours
|
|
in a way in which yours and mine never pass
|
|
|
|
48
|
|
into one another. Within each of our personal
|
|
histories, subject, object, interest and purpose
|
|
_are_continuous_or_may_be_continuous_.(1) Personal
|
|
histories are processes of change in time, and
|
|
_the_change_itself_is_one_of_the_things_immediately_
|
|
_experienced._ 'Change' in this case means continuous
|
|
as opposed to discontinuous transition.
|
|
But continuous transition is one sort of a
|
|
conjunctive relation; and to be a radical empiricist
|
|
means to hold fast to this conjunctive
|
|
relation of all others, for this is the strategic
|
|
point, the position through which, if a hole be
|
|
made, all the corruptions of dialectics and all
|
|
the metaphysical fictions pour into our philosophy.
|
|
The holding fast to this relation means
|
|
taking it at its face value, neither less nor more;
|
|
and to take it at its face value means first of all
|
|
to take it just as we feel it, and not to confuse
|
|
ourselves with abstract talk _about_ it, involving
|
|
words that drive us to invent secondary
|
|
conceptions in order to neutralize their
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 The psychology books have of late described the facts here with
|
|
approximate adequacy. I may refer to the chapters on 'The Stream of
|
|
Thought' and on the Self in my own _Principles_of_Psychology_, as well
|
|
as to S.H.Hodgson's _Metaphysics_of_Experience_, vol I., ch. VII and
|
|
VIII.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
49
|
|
suggestions and to make our actual experience
|
|
again seem rationally possible.
|
|
what I do feel simply when a later moment
|
|
of my experience succeeds an earlier one is that
|
|
though they are two moments, the transition
|
|
from the one to the other is _continuous_. Continuity
|
|
here is a definite sort of experience; just
|
|
as definite as is the _discontinuity-experience_
|
|
which I find it impossible to avoid when I seek
|
|
to make the transition from an experience of
|
|
my own to one of yours. In this latter case I
|
|
have to get on and off again, to pass from a
|
|
thing lived to another thing only conceived,
|
|
and the break is positively experienced and
|
|
noted. Though the functions exerted by my
|
|
experience and by yours may be the same (.e.g.,
|
|
the same objects known and the same purposes
|
|
followed), yet the sameness has in this case to
|
|
be ascertained expressly (and often with difficulty
|
|
and uncertainly) after the break has been
|
|
felt; whereas in passing from one of my own
|
|
moments to another the sameness of object and
|
|
interest is unbroken, and both the earlier and
|
|
the later experience are of things directly lived.
|
|
|
|
50
|
|
|
|
There is no other _nature_, no other whatness
|
|
than this absence of break and this sense of
|
|
continuity in that most intimate of all conjunctive
|
|
relations, the passing of one experience
|
|
into another when the belong to the same self.
|
|
And this whatness is real empirical 'content,'
|
|
just as the whatness of separation and discontinuity
|
|
is real content in the contrasted case.
|
|
Practically to experience one's personal continuum
|
|
in this living way is to know the originals
|
|
of the ideas of continuity and sameness, to
|
|
know what the words stand for concretely, to
|
|
own all that they can ever mean. But all experiences
|
|
have their conditions; and over-subtle
|
|
intellects, thinking about the facts here, and
|
|
asking how they are possible, have ended by
|
|
substituting a lot of static objects of conception
|
|
for the direct perceptual experiences.
|
|
"Sameness," they have said, "must be a stark
|
|
numerical identity; it can't run on from next to
|
|
next. Continuity can't mean mere absence of
|
|
gap; for if you say two things are in immediate
|
|
contact, _at_ the contact how can they be two?
|
|
If, on the other hand, you put a relation of
|
|
|
|
51
|
|
transition between them, that itself is a third
|
|
thing, and needs to be related or hitched to its
|
|
terms. An infinite series is involved," and so
|
|
on. The result is that from difficulty to difficulty,
|
|
the plain conjunctive experience has
|
|
been discredited by both schools, the empiricists
|
|
leaving things permanently disjoined, and
|
|
the rationalist remedying the looseness by their
|
|
Absolutes or Substances, or whatever other fictitious
|
|
agencies of union may have employed.
|
|
From all which artificiality we can
|
|
be saved by a couple of simple-reflections: first,
|
|
that conjunctions and separations are, at all
|
|
events, co-ordinate phenomena which, if we
|
|
take experiences at their face value, must be
|
|
accounted equally real; and second, that if we
|
|
insist on treating things as really separate
|
|
when they are given as continuously joined,
|
|
invoking, when union is required, transcendental
|
|
principles to overcome the separateness
|
|
we have assumed, then we ought to stand
|
|
ready to perform the converse act. We ought
|
|
to invoke higher principles of _dis_union, also, to
|
|
|
|
52
|
|
make our merely experienced _dis_junctions more
|
|
truly real. Failing thus, we ought to let the
|
|
originally given continuities stand on their own
|
|
bottom. We have no right to be lopsided or to
|
|
blow capriciously hot and cold.
|
|
|
|
III. THE COGNITIVE RELATION
|
|
|
|
The first great pitfall from which such a radical
|
|
standing by experience will save us is an
|
|
artificial conception of the _relations_between_
|
|
_knower_and_known_. Throughout the history of
|
|
philosophy the subject and its object have been
|
|
treated as absolutely discontinuous entities;
|
|
and thereupon the presence of the latter to the
|
|
former, or the 'apprehension' by the former of
|
|
the latter, has assumed a paradoxical character
|
|
which all sorts of theories had to be invented
|
|
to overcome. Representative theories
|
|
put a mental 'representation,' 'image,' or
|
|
'content' into the gap, as a sort of intermediary.
|
|
Common-sense theories left the gap
|
|
untouched, declaring our mind able to clear
|
|
it by a self-transcending leap. Transcendentalist
|
|
theories left it impossible to traverse by
|
|
|
|
53
|
|
finite knowers, and brought an Absolute in to
|
|
perform the saltatory act. All the while, in
|
|
the very bosom of the finite experience, every
|
|
conjunction required to make the relation intelligible
|
|
is given in full. Either the knower
|
|
and the known are:
|
|
|
|
(1) The self-same piece of experience taken
|
|
twice over in different contexts; or they are
|
|
|
|
(2) two pieces of _actual_ experience belonging
|
|
to the same subject, with definite tracts of
|
|
conjunctive transitional experience between
|
|
them; or
|
|
|
|
(3) the known is a _possible_ experience either
|
|
of that subject or another, to which the said
|
|
conjunctive transitions _would_lead, if sufficiently
|
|
prolonged.
|
|
|
|
To discuss all the ways in which one experience
|
|
may function as the knower of another,
|
|
would be incompatible with the limits
|
|
of this essay.91) I have just treated of type 1, the
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 For brevity's sake I altogether omit mention of the type
|
|
constituted by knowledge of the truth of general propositions. This
|
|
type has been thoroughly and, so far as I can see, satisfactorily,
|
|
elucidated in Dewey's _Studies_in_Logical_Theory_. Such propositions
|
|
are reducible to the S-is-P form; and the 'terminus' that verifies and
|
|
fulfils is the SP in combination. Of course percepts may be involved in
|
|
the mediating experiences, or in the 'satisfactoriness' of the P in its
|
|
new position.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
54
|
|
kind of knowledge called perception. This is
|
|
the type of case in which the mind enjoys direct
|
|
'acquaintance' with a present object. In
|
|
the other types the mind has 'knowledge-
|
|
about' an object not immediately there. Of
|
|
type 2, the simplest sort of conceptual knowledge,
|
|
I have given some account in two
|
|
articles.(1) Type 3 can always formally
|
|
and hypothetically be reduced to type 2, so
|
|
that a brief description of that type will put
|
|
the present reader sufficiently at my point
|
|
of view, and make him see what the actual
|
|
meanings of the mysterious cognitive relation
|
|
may be.
|
|
|
|
Suppose me to be sitting here in my library
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 These articles and their doctrine, unnoticed apparently by any one
|
|
else, have lately gained favorable comment from Professor Strong. Dr.
|
|
Dickinson S. Miller has independently thought out the same results,
|
|
which Strong accordingly dubs the James-Miller theory of cognition.
|
|
---
|
|
55
|
|
at Cambridge, at ten minutes' walk from
|
|
'Memorial Hall,' and to be thinking truly of
|
|
the latter object. My mind may have before
|
|
it only the name, or it may have a clear image,
|
|
or it may have a very dim image of the hall, but
|
|
such intrinsic differences in the image make no
|
|
difference in its cognitive function. Certain
|
|
_extrinsic_ phenomena, special experiences of
|
|
conjunction, are what impart to the image, be
|
|
it what it may, its knowing office.
|
|
|
|
For instance, if you ask me what hall I mean
|
|
by my image, and I call tell you nothing; or if I
|
|
fail to point or lead you towards the Harvard
|
|
Delta; or if, being led by you, I am uncertain
|
|
whether the Hall I see be what I had in mind
|
|
or not; you would rightly deny that I had
|
|
'meant' that particular hall at all, even though
|
|
my mental image might to some degree have
|
|
resembled it. The resemblance would count in
|
|
that case as coincidental merely, for all sorts
|
|
of things of a kind resemble one another in this
|
|
world without being held for that reason to
|
|
take cognizance of one another.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, if I can lead you to the
|
|
|
|
56
|
|
hall, and tell you of its history and present
|
|
uses; if in its presence I feel my idea, however
|
|
imperfect it may have been, to have led hither
|
|
and to be now _terminated_; if the associates of
|
|
the image and of the felt hall run parallel, so
|
|
that each term of the one context corresponds
|
|
serially, as I walk, with an answering term of
|
|
the others; why then my soul was prophetic,
|
|
and my idea must be, and by common consent
|
|
would be, called cognizant of reality. That percept
|
|
was what I _meant_, for into it my idea has
|
|
passed by conjunctive experiences of sameness
|
|
and fulfilled intention. Nowhere is there jar,
|
|
but every later moment continues and corroborates
|
|
an earlier one.
|
|
|
|
In this continuing and corroborating, taken
|
|
in no transcendental sense, but denoting definitely
|
|
felt transitions, _lies_all_that_the_knowing_
|
|
_of_a_percept_by_an_idea_can_possibly_contain_or_
|
|
_signify_. Wherever such transitions are felt, the
|
|
first experience _knows_ that last one. Where they
|
|
do not, or where even as possibles they can not,
|
|
intervene, there can be no pretence of knowing.
|
|
In this latter case the extremes will be connected,
|
|
|
|
57
|
|
if connected at all, by inferior relations
|
|
-- bare likeness or succession, or by 'withness'
|
|
alone. Knowledge of sensible realities thus
|
|
comes to life inside the tissue of experience. It
|
|
is _made_; and made by relations that unroll
|
|
themselves in time. Whenever certain intermediaries
|
|
are given, such that, as they develop
|
|
towards their terminus, there is experience
|
|
from point to point of one direction followed,
|
|
and finally of one process fulfilled, the result
|
|
is that _their_starting-point_thereby_becomes_a_
|
|
_knower_and_their_terminus_an_object_meant_or_
|
|
_known_. That is all that knowing (in the simple
|
|
case considered) can be known-as, that is
|
|
the whole of its nature, put into experiential
|
|
terms. Whenever such is the sequence of our
|
|
experiences we may freely say that we had the
|
|
terminal object 'in mind' from the outset, even
|
|
although _at_ the outset nothing was there in us
|
|
but a flat piece of substantive experience like
|
|
any other, with no self-transcendency about it,
|
|
and ny mystery save the mystery of coming
|
|
into existence and of being gradually followed
|
|
by other pieces of substantive experience, with
|
|
|
|
58
|
|
conjunctively transitional experiences between.
|
|
That is what we _mean_ here by the object's
|
|
being 'in mind.' Of any deeper more real way
|
|
of being in mind we have no positive conception,
|
|
and we have no right to discredit our
|
|
actual experience by talking of such a way
|
|
at all.
|
|
|
|
I know that many a reader will rebel at this.
|
|
"Mere intermediaries," he will say, "even
|
|
though they be feelings of continuously growing
|
|
fulfilment, only _separate_ the knower from
|
|
the known, whereas what we have in knowledge
|
|
is a kind of immediate touch of the one by the
|
|
other, an 'apprehension' in the etymological
|
|
sense of the word, a leaping of the chasm as by
|
|
lightning, an act by which two terms are smitten
|
|
into one, over the head of their distinctness.
|
|
All these dead intermediaries of yours
|
|
are out of each other, and outside of their
|
|
termini still."
|
|
|
|
But do not such dialectic difficulties remind
|
|
us of the dog dropping his bone and snapping
|
|
at its image in the water? If we knew any more
|
|
real kind of union _aliunde_, we might be entitled
|
|
|
|
59
|
|
to brand all our empirical unions as a sham.
|
|
But unions by continuous transition are the
|
|
only ones we know of, whether in this matter
|
|
of a knowledge-about that terminates in an
|
|
acquaintance, whether in personal identity, in
|
|
logical predication through the copula 'is,' or
|
|
elsewhere. If anywhere there were more absolute
|
|
unions realized, they could only reveal
|
|
themselves to us by just such conjunctive
|
|
results. These are what the unions are _worth_,
|
|
these are all that _we_can_ever_practically_mean_
|
|
by union, by continuity. Is it not time to
|
|
repeat what Lotze said of substances, that to
|
|
_act_like_ one is to _be_ one? Should we not say
|
|
here that to be experienced as continuous is to
|
|
be really continuous, in a world where experience
|
|
and reality come to the same thing? In
|
|
a picture gallery a painted hook will serve to
|
|
hang a painted chain by, a painted cable will
|
|
hold a painted ship. In a world where both the
|
|
terms and their distinctions are affairs of experience,
|
|
conjunctions that are experienced
|
|
must be at least as real as anything else. They
|
|
|
|
60
|
|
will be 'absolutely' real conjunctions, if we have
|
|
no transphenomenal Absolute ready, to derealize
|
|
the whole experienced world by, at a stroke.
|
|
If, on the other hand, we had such an Absolute,
|
|
not one of our opponents' theories of knowledge
|
|
could remain standing any better than
|
|
ours could; for the distinctions as well as the
|
|
conjunctions of experience would impartially
|
|
fall its prey. The whole question of how 'one'
|
|
thing can know 'another' would cease to be a
|
|
real one at all in a world where otherness itself
|
|
was an illusion.(1)
|
|
|
|
So much for the essentials of the cognitive
|
|
relation, where the knowledge is conceptual in
|
|
type, or forms knowledge 'about' an object. It
|
|
consists in intermediary experiences (possible,
|
|
if not actual) of continuously developing progress,
|
|
and, finally, of fulfilment, when the sensible
|
|
percept, which is the object, is reached.
|
|
The percept here not only _verifies_ the concept,
|
|
proves its function of knowing that percept to
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Mr. Bradley, not professing to know his absolute _aliunde_,
|
|
nevertheless derealizes Experience by alleging it to be everywhere
|
|
infected with self-contradiction. His arguments seem almost purely
|
|
verbal, but this is no place for arguing that point out.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
61
|
|
be true, but the percept's existence as the
|
|
terminus of the chain of intermediaries _creates_
|
|
the function. Whatever terminates that chain
|
|
was, because it now proves itself to be, what
|
|
the concept 'had in mind.'
|
|
|
|
The towering importance for human life of
|
|
this kind of knowing lies in the fact that an
|
|
experience that knows another can figure as
|
|
its _representative_, not in any quasi-miraculous
|
|
'epistemological' sense, but in the definite
|
|
practical sense of being its _substitute_ in various
|
|
operations, sometimes physical and sometimes
|
|
mental, which lead us to its associates and results.
|
|
By experimenting on our ideas of reality,
|
|
we may save ourselves the trouble of experimenting
|
|
on the real experiences which they
|
|
severally mean. The ideas form related systems,
|
|
corresponding point for point to the systems
|
|
which the realities form; and by letting an
|
|
ideal term call up its associates systematically,
|
|
we may be led to a terminus which the corresponding
|
|
real term would have led to in case
|
|
we had operated on the real world. And this
|
|
brings us to the general question of substitution.
|
|
62
|
|
|
|
IV. SUBSTITUTION
|
|
|
|
In Taine's brilliant book on 'Intelligence,'
|
|
substitution was for the first time named as
|
|
a cardinal logical function, though of course
|
|
the facts had always been familiar enough.
|
|
What, exactly, in a system of experiences, does
|
|
the 'substitution' of one of them for another
|
|
mean?
|
|
|
|
According to my view, experience as a whole
|
|
is a process in time, whereby innumerable
|
|
particular terms lapse and are superseded by
|
|
others that follow upon them by transitions
|
|
which, whether disjunctive or conjunctive in
|
|
content, are themselves experiences, and must
|
|
in general be accounted at least as real as
|
|
the terms which they relate. What the nature
|
|
of the event called 'superseding' signifies, depends
|
|
altogether on the kind of transition
|
|
that obtains. Some experiences simply abolish
|
|
their predecessors without continuing them
|
|
in any way. Others are felt to increase or to
|
|
enlarge their meaning, to carry out their purpose,
|
|
or to bring us nearer to their goal. They
|
|
|
|
63
|
|
'represent' them, and may fulfil their function
|
|
better than they fulfilled it themselves. But to
|
|
'fulfil a function' in a world of pure experience
|
|
can be conceived and defined in only one possible
|
|
way. IN such a world transitions and
|
|
arrivals (or terminations) are the only events
|
|
that happen, though they happen by so many
|
|
sorts of path. The only experience that one experience
|
|
can perform is to lead into another
|
|
experience; and the only fulfilment we can
|
|
speak of is the reaching of a certain experienced
|
|
end. When one experience leads to (or
|
|
can lead to) the same end as another, they
|
|
agree in function. But the whole system of
|
|
experiences as they are immediately given
|
|
presents itself as a quasi-chaos through which
|
|
one can pass out of an initial term in many
|
|
directions and yet end in the same terminus,
|
|
moving from next to next by a great many
|
|
possible paths.
|
|
|
|
Either one of these paths might be a functional
|
|
substitute for another, and to follow one
|
|
rather than another might on occasion be
|
|
an advantageous thing to do. As a matter of
|
|
|
|
64
|
|
fact, and in a general way, the paths that
|
|
run through conceptual experiences, that is,
|
|
through 'thoughts' or 'ideas' that 'know' the
|
|
things in which they terminate, are highly advantageous
|
|
paths to follow. Not only do they
|
|
yield inconceivably rapid transitions; but, owing
|
|
to the 'universal' character(1) which they
|
|
frequently possess, and to their capacity for
|
|
association with one another in great systems,
|
|
they outstrip the tardy consecutions of the
|
|
things themselves, and sweep us on towards
|
|
our ultimate termini in a far more labor-saving
|
|
way than the following of trains of sensible
|
|
perception ever could. Wonderful are the new
|
|
cuts and the short-circuits which the thought-
|
|
paths make. Most thought-paths, it is true,
|
|
are substitutes for nothing actual; they end
|
|
outside the real world altogether, in wayward
|
|
fancies, utopias, fictions or mistakes. But
|
|
where they do re-enter reality and terminate
|
|
therein, we substitute them always; and with
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Of which all that need be said in this essay is that it also can be
|
|
conceived as functional, and defined in terms of transitions, or of the
|
|
possibility of such.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
65
|
|
these substitutes we pass the greater number
|
|
of our hours.
|
|
|
|
This is why I called our experiences, taken
|
|
together, a quasi-chaos. There is vastly
|
|
more discontinuity in the sum total of experiences
|
|
than we commonly suppose. The objective
|
|
nucleus of every man's experience, his own
|
|
body, is, it is true, a continuous percept; and
|
|
equally continuous as a percept (thought we
|
|
may be inattentive to it) is the material environment
|
|
of that body, changing by gradual
|
|
transition when the body moves. But the
|
|
distant parts of the physical world are at all
|
|
times absent from us, and form conceptual
|
|
objects merely, into the perceptual reality of
|
|
which our life inserts itself at points discrete
|
|
and relatively rare. Round their several objective
|
|
nuclei, partly shared and common and
|
|
partly discrete, of the real physical world, innumerable
|
|
thinkers, pursuing their several lines
|
|
of physically true cogitation, trace paths that
|
|
intersect one another only at discontinuous
|
|
perceptual points, and the rest of the time are
|
|
quite incongruent; and around all the nuclei
|
|
|
|
66
|
|
of shared 'reality,' as around the Dyak's head
|
|
of my late metaphor, floats the vast cloud of
|
|
experiences that are wholly subjective, that
|
|
are non-substitutional, that find not even an
|
|
eventual ending for themselves in the perceptual
|
|
world -- there mere day-dreams and
|
|
joys and sufferings and wishes of the individual
|
|
minds. These exist _with_ one another, indeed,
|
|
and with the objective nuclei, but out
|
|
of them it is probable that to all eternity no
|
|
interrelated system of any kind will every be
|
|
made.
|
|
|
|
This notion of the purely substitutional or
|
|
conceptual physical world brings us to the most
|
|
critical of all steps in the development of
|
|
a philosophy of pure experience. The paradox
|
|
of self-transcendency in knowledge comes back
|
|
upon us here, but I think that our notions of
|
|
pure experience and of substitution, and our
|
|
radically empirical view of conjunctive transitions,
|
|
are _Denkmittel_ that will carry us safely
|
|
through the pass.
|
|
|
|
67
|
|
|
|
V. WHAT OBJECTIVE REFERENCE IS.
|
|
|
|
Whosoever feels his experience to be something
|
|
substitutional even while he has it, may
|
|
be said to have an experience that reaches
|
|
beyond itself. From inside of its own entity it
|
|
says 'more,' and postulates reality existing elsewhere.
|
|
For the transcendentalist, who holds
|
|
knowing to consist in a _salto_mortale_ across an
|
|
'epistemological chasm,' such an idea presents
|
|
no difficulty; but it seems at first sight as if it
|
|
might be inconsistent with an empiricism like
|
|
our own. Have we not explained that conceptual
|
|
knowledge is made such wholly by the
|
|
existence of things that fall outside of the
|
|
knowing experience itself -- by intermediary
|
|
experience and by a terminus that fulfils?
|
|
Can the knowledge be there before these elements
|
|
that constitute its being have come?
|
|
And, if knowledge be not there, how can objective
|
|
reference occur?
|
|
|
|
The key to this difficulty lies in the distinction
|
|
between knowing as verified and completed,
|
|
and the same knowing as in transit
|
|
|
|
68
|
|
and on its way. To recur to the Memorial
|
|
Hall example lately used, it is only when our
|
|
idea of the Hall has actually terminated in the
|
|
percept that we know 'for certain' that from
|
|
the beginning it was truly cognitive of _that_.
|
|
Until established by the end of the process, its
|
|
quality of knowing that, or indeed of knowing
|
|
anything, could still be doubted; and yet the
|
|
knowing really was there, as the result now
|
|
shows. We were _virtual_ knowers of the Hall
|
|
long before we were certified to have been its
|
|
actual knowers, by the percept's retroactive
|
|
validating power. Just so we are 'mortal' all
|
|
the time, by reason of the virtuality of the
|
|
inevitable event which will make us so when
|
|
it shall have come.
|
|
|
|
Now the immensely greater part of all our
|
|
knowing never gets beyond this virtual stage.
|
|
It never is completed or nailed down. I speak
|
|
not merely of our ideas of imperceptibles like
|
|
ether-waves or dissociated 'ions,' or of 'ejects'
|
|
like the contents of our neighbors' minds; I
|
|
speak also of ideas which we might verify if we
|
|
would take the trouble, but which we hold for
|
|
|
|
69
|
|
true although unterminated perceptually, because
|
|
nothing says 'no' to us, and there is no
|
|
contradicting truth in sight. _To_continue_thinking_
|
|
_unchallenged_is,_ninety-nine_times_out_of_a_
|
|
_hundred,_our_practical_substitute_for_knowing_in_
|
|
_the_completed_sense_. As each experience runs by
|
|
cognitive transition into the next one, and we
|
|
nowhere feel a collision with what we elsewhere
|
|
count as truth or fact, we commit ourselves to
|
|
the current as if the port were sure. We live,
|
|
as it were, upon the front edge of an advancing
|
|
wave-crest, and our sense of a determinate
|
|
direction in falling forward is all we cover of
|
|
the future of our path. It is as if a differential
|
|
quotient should be conscious and treat itself as
|
|
an adequate substitute for a traced-out curve.
|
|
Our experience, _inter_alia_, is of variations of
|
|
rate and of direction, and lives in these transitions
|
|
more than in the journey's end. The experiences
|
|
of tendency are sufficient to act upon
|
|
-- what more could we have _done_ at those
|
|
moments even if the later verification comes
|
|
complete?
|
|
|
|
This is what, as a radical empiricist, I say to
|
|
|
|
70
|
|
the charge that the objective reference which
|
|
is so flagrant a character of our experience involves
|
|
a chasm and a mortal leap. A positively
|
|
conjunctive transition involves neither chasm
|
|
nor leap. Being the very original of what we
|
|
mean by continuity, it makes a continuum
|
|
wherever it appears. I know full well that such
|
|
brief words as these will leave the hardened
|
|
transcendentalist unshaken. Conjunctive experiences
|
|
_separate_ their terms, he will still say: they
|
|
are third things interposed, that have themselves
|
|
to be conjoined by new links, and to invoke
|
|
them makes our trouble infinitely worse.
|
|
To 'feel' our motion forward is impossible.
|
|
Motion implies terminus; and how can terminus
|
|
be felt before we have arrived? The barest
|
|
start and sally forwards, the barest tendency
|
|
to leave the instant, involves the chasm and
|
|
the leap. Conjunctive transitions are the most
|
|
superficial of appearances, illusions of our sensibility
|
|
which philosophical reflection pulverizes
|
|
at a touch. Conception is our only trustworthy
|
|
instrument, conception and the Absolute
|
|
working hand in hand. Conception disintegrates
|
|
|
|
71
|
|
experience utterly, but its disjunctions
|
|
are easily overcome again when the Absolute
|
|
takes up the task.
|
|
|
|
Such transcendentalists I must leave, provisionally
|
|
at least, in full possession of their
|
|
creed. I have no space for polemics in this
|
|
article, so I shall simply formulate the empiricist
|
|
doctrine as my hypothesis, leaving it to
|
|
work or not work as it may.
|
|
|
|
Objective reference, I say then, is an incident
|
|
of the fact that so much of our experience
|
|
comes as an insufficient and consists of
|
|
process and transition. Our fields of experience
|
|
have no more definite boundaries than have
|
|
our fields of view. Both are fringed forever by
|
|
a _more_ that continuously develops, and that
|
|
continuously supersedes them as life proceeds.
|
|
The relations, generally speaking, are as real
|
|
here as the terms are, and the only complaint
|
|
of the transcendentalist's with which I could
|
|
at all sympathize would be his charge that, by
|
|
first making knowledge consist in external
|
|
relations as I have done, and by then confessing
|
|
|
|
72
|
|
that nine-tenths of the time these are
|
|
not actually but only virtually there, I have
|
|
knocked the solid bottom out of the whole
|
|
business, and palmed off a substitute of knowledge
|
|
for the genuine thing. Only the admission,
|
|
such a critic might say, that our ideas are
|
|
self-transcendent and 'true' already, in advance
|
|
of the experiences that are to terminate
|
|
them, can bring solidity back to knowledge
|
|
in a world like this, in which transitions and
|
|
terminations are only by exception fulfilled.
|
|
|
|
This seems to me an excellent place for
|
|
applying the pragmatic method. When a
|
|
dispute arises, that method consists in auguring
|
|
what practical consequences would be
|
|
different if one side rather than the other were
|
|
true. If no difference can be thought of, the
|
|
dispute is a quarrel over words. What then
|
|
would the self-transcendency affirmed to exist
|
|
in advance of all experiential mediation or
|
|
terminations, be _known-as?_ What would it
|
|
practically result in for _us_, were it true?
|
|
|
|
It could only result in our orientation, in the
|
|
turning of our expectations and practical tendencies
|
|
|
|
73
|
|
into the right path; and the right path
|
|
here, so long as we and the object are not yet
|
|
face to face (or can never get face to face, as in
|
|
the case of ejects), would be the path that led
|
|
us into the object's nearest neighborhood.
|
|
Where direct acquaintance is lacking, 'knowledge
|
|
about' is the next best thing, and an
|
|
acquaintance with what actually lies about the
|
|
object, and is most closely related to it, puts
|
|
such knowledge within our gasp. Ether-waves
|
|
and your anger, for example, are things in
|
|
which my thoughts will never _perceptually_ terminate,
|
|
but my concepts of them lead me to
|
|
their very brink, to the chromatic fringes and
|
|
to the hurtful words and deeds which are their
|
|
really next effects.
|
|
|
|
Even if our ideas did in themselves carry the
|
|
postulated self-transcendency, it would still
|
|
remain true that their putting us into possession
|
|
of such effects _would_be_the_sole_cash-_
|
|
_value_of_the_self-transcendency_for_us_. And this
|
|
cash-value, it is needless to say, is _verbatim_et_
|
|
_literatim_ what our empiricist account pays in.
|
|
On pragmatist principles, therefore, a dispute
|
|
|
|
74
|
|
over self-transcendency is a pure logomachy.
|
|
Call our concepts of ejective things self-
|
|
transcendent or the reverse, it makes no difference,
|
|
so long as we don't differ about the
|
|
nature of that exalted virtue's fruits -- fruits
|
|
for us, of course, humanistic fruits. If an
|
|
Absolute were proved to exist for other reasons,
|
|
it might well appear that _his_ knowledge is
|
|
terminated in innumerable cases where ours is
|
|
still incomplete. That, however, would be a
|
|
fact indifferent to our knowledge. The latter
|
|
would grow neither worse nor better, whether
|
|
we acknowledged such an Absolute or left him
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
So the notion of a knowledge still _in_transitu_
|
|
and on its way joins hands here with that
|
|
notion of a 'pure experience' which I tried to
|
|
explain in my [essay] entitled 'Does Consciousness
|
|
Exist?' The instant field of the
|
|
present is always experienced in its 'pure' state.
|
|
plain unqualified actuality, a simple _that_, as yet
|
|
undifferentiated into thing and thought, and
|
|
only virtually classifiable as objective fact or as
|
|
some one's opinion about fact. This is as true
|
|
|
|
75
|
|
when the field is conceptual as when it is perceptual.
|
|
'Memorial Hall' is 'there' in my idea
|
|
as much as when I stand before it. I proceed to
|
|
act on its account in either case. Only in the
|
|
later experience that supersedes the present
|
|
one is this _naif_ immediacy retrospectively split
|
|
into two parts, a 'consciousness' and its 'content,'
|
|
and the content corrected or confirmed.
|
|
While still pure, or present, any experience --
|
|
mine, for example, of what I write about in
|
|
these very lines -- passes for 'truth.' The
|
|
morrow may reduce it to 'opinion.' The transcendentalist
|
|
in all his particular knowledges is
|
|
as liable to this reduction as I am: his Absolute
|
|
does not save him. Why, then, need he quarrel
|
|
with an account of knowing that merely leaves
|
|
it liable to this inevitable condition? Why insist
|
|
that knowing is a static relation out of
|
|
time when it practically seems so much a function
|
|
of our active life? For a thing to be valid,
|
|
says Lotze, is the same as to make itself
|
|
valid. When the whole universe seems only
|
|
to be making itself valid and to be still incomplete
|
|
(else why its ceaseless changing?) why, of
|
|
|
|
76
|
|
all things, should knowing be exempt? Why
|
|
should it not be making itself valid like everything
|
|
else? That some parts of it may be already
|
|
valid or verified beyond dispute, the
|
|
empirical philosopher, of course, like any one
|
|
else, may always hope.
|
|
|
|
VI. THE CONTERMINOUSNESS OF DIFFERENT MINDS
|
|
|
|
With transition and prospect thus enthroned
|
|
in pure experience, it is impossible to subscribe
|
|
to the idealism of the English school.
|
|
Radical empiricism has, in fact, more affinities
|
|
with natural realism than with the views
|
|
of Berkeley or of Mill, and this can be easily
|
|
shown.
|
|
|
|
For the Berkeleyan school, ideas (the verbal
|
|
equivalent of what I term experiences) are discontinuous.
|
|
The content of each is wholly immanent,
|
|
and there are no transitions with
|
|
which they are consubstantial and through
|
|
which their beings may unite. Your Memorial
|
|
Hall and mine, even when both are percepts,
|
|
are wholly out of connection with each other.
|
|
|
|
77
|
|
Our lives are a congeries of solipsisms, out of
|
|
which in strict logic only a God could compose
|
|
a universe even of discourse. No dynamic
|
|
currents run between my objects and your
|
|
objects. Never can our minds meet in the
|
|
_same_.
|
|
|
|
The incredibility of such a philosophy is
|
|
flagrant. It is 'cold, strained, and unnatural'
|
|
in a supreme degree; and it may be doubted
|
|
whether even Berkeley himself, who took it
|
|
so religiously, really believed, when walking
|
|
through the streets of London, that his spirit
|
|
and the spirits of his fellow wayfarers had
|
|
absolutely different towns in view.
|
|
|
|
To me the decisive reason in favor of our
|
|
minds meeting in _some_ common objects at least
|
|
is that, unless I make that supposition, I have
|
|
no motive for assuming that your mind exists
|
|
at all. Why do I postulate your mind? Because
|
|
I see your body acting in a certain way.
|
|
Its gestures, facial movements, words and conduct
|
|
generally, are 'expressive,' so I deem it
|
|
actuated as my own is, by an inner life like
|
|
mine. This argument from analogy is my _reason_,
|
|
|
|
78
|
|
whether an instinctive belief runs before it
|
|
or not. But what is 'your body' here but a
|
|
percept in _my_ field? It is only as animating
|
|
_that_ object, _my_ object, that I have any occasion
|
|
to think of you at all. If the body that you
|
|
actuate be not the very body that I see there,
|
|
but some duplicate body of your own with
|
|
which that has nothing to do, we belong to
|
|
different universes, you and I, and for me to
|
|
speak of you is folly. Myriads of such universes
|
|
even now may coexist, irrelevant to one
|
|
another; my concern is solely with the universe
|
|
with which my own life is connected.
|
|
|
|
In that perceptual part of _my_ universe which
|
|
I call _your_ body, your mind and my mind meet
|
|
and may be called conterminous. Your mind
|
|
actuates that body and mine sees it; my
|
|
thoughts pass into it as into their harmonious
|
|
cognitive fulfilment; your emotions and volitions
|
|
pass into it as causes into their effects.
|
|
|
|
But that percept hangs together with all our
|
|
other physical percepts. They are of one stuff
|
|
with it; and if it be our common possession,
|
|
they must be so likewise. For instance, your
|
|
|
|
79
|
|
hand lays hold of one end of a rope and my
|
|
hand lays hold of the other end. We pull
|
|
against each other. Can our two hands be
|
|
mutual objects in this experience, and the rope
|
|
not be mutual also? What is true of the rope is
|
|
true of any other percept. Your objects are
|
|
over and over again the same as mine. If I
|
|
ask you _where_ some object of yours is, our old
|
|
Memorial Hall, for example, you point to _my_
|
|
Memorial Hall with _your_ hand which _I_see_. If
|
|
you alter an object in your world, put out a
|
|
candle, for example, when I am present, _my_
|
|
candle _ipso_facto_ goes out. It is only as altering
|
|
my objects that I guess you to exist. If your
|
|
objects do not coalesce with my objects, if they
|
|
be not identically where mine are, they must
|
|
be proved to be positively somewhere else.
|
|
But no other location can be assigned for them,
|
|
so their place must be what it seems to be, the
|
|
same.(1)
|
|
|
|
Practically, then, our minds meet in a world
|
|
of objects which they share in common, which
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 The notions that our objects are inside of our respective heads is
|
|
not seriously defensible, so I pass it by.
|
|
|
|
80
|
|
would still be there, if one or several of the
|
|
minds were destroyed. I can see no formal
|
|
objection to this supposition's being literally
|
|
true. On the principles which I am defending,
|
|
a 'mind' or 'personal consciousness' is the
|
|
name for a series of experiences run together by
|
|
certain definite transitions, and an objective
|
|
reality is a series of similar experiences knit by
|
|
different transitions. If one and the same experience
|
|
can figure twice, once in a mental and
|
|
once in a physical context (as I have tried, in
|
|
my article on 'Consciousness,' to show that it
|
|
can), one does not see why it might not figure
|
|
thrice, or four times, or any number of times,
|
|
by running into as many different mental contexts,
|
|
just as the same point, lying at their
|
|
intersection, can be continued into many different
|
|
lines. Abolishing any number of contexts
|
|
would not destroy the experience itself
|
|
or its other contexts, any more than abolishing
|
|
some of the point's linear continuations
|
|
would destroy the others, or destroy the point
|
|
itself.
|
|
|
|
I well know the subtle dialectic which insists
|
|
|
|
81
|
|
that a term taken in another relation must
|
|
needs be an intrinsically different term. The
|
|
crux is always the old Greek one, that the same
|
|
man can't be tall in relation to one neighbor,
|
|
and short in relation to another, for that would
|
|
make him tall and short at once. In this essay
|
|
I can not stop to refute this dialectic, so I pass
|
|
on, leaving my flank for the time exposed.
|
|
But if my reader will only allow that the same
|
|
'_now_' both ends his past and begins his future;
|
|
or that, when he buys an acre of land from his
|
|
neighbor, it is the same acre that successively
|
|
figures in the two estates; or that when I pay
|
|
him a dollar, the same dollar goes into his
|
|
pocket that came out of mine; he will also in
|
|
consistency have to allow that the same object
|
|
may conceivably play a part in, as being related
|
|
to the rest of, any number of otherwise
|
|
entirely different minds. This is enough for
|
|
my present point: the common-sense notion of
|
|
minds sharing the same object offers no special
|
|
logical or epistemological difficulties of its
|
|
own; it stands or falls with the general possibility
|
|
|
|
82
|
|
of things being in conjunctive relation with
|
|
other things at all.
|
|
|
|
In principle, then, let natural realism pass
|
|
for possible. Your mind and mine _may_ terminate
|
|
in the same percept, not merely against it,
|
|
as if it were a third external thing, but by inserting
|
|
themselves into it and coalescing with
|
|
it, for such is the sort of conjunctive union that
|
|
appears to be experienced when a perceptual
|
|
terminus 'fulfils.' Even so, two hawsers may
|
|
embrace the same pile, and yet neither one of
|
|
them touch any other part except that pile, of
|
|
what the other hawser is attached to.
|
|
|
|
It is therefore not a formal question, but
|
|
a question of empirical fact solely, whether
|
|
when you and I are said to know the 'same'
|
|
Memorial Hall, our minds do terminate at or in
|
|
a numerically identical percept. Obviously, as
|
|
a plain matter of fact, they do _not_. Apart from
|
|
color-blindness and such possibilities, we see
|
|
the Hall in different perspectives. You may be
|
|
on one side of it and I on another. The percept
|
|
of each of us, as he sees the surface of the Hall,
|
|
is moreover only his provisional terminus. The
|
|
|
|
83
|
|
next thing beyond my percept is not your
|
|
mind, but more percepts of my own into which
|
|
my first percept develops, the interior of the
|
|
Hall, for instance, or the inner structure of its
|
|
bricks and mortar. If our minds were in a
|
|
literal sense _con_terminous, neither could get
|
|
beyond the percept which they had in common,
|
|
it would be an ultimate barrier between
|
|
them -- unless indeed they flowed over it and
|
|
became 'co-conscious' over a still larger part
|
|
of their content, which (thought-transference
|
|
apart) is not supposed to be the case. In point
|
|
of fact the ultimate common barrier can always
|
|
be pushed, by both minds, farther than any
|
|
actual percept of either, until at last it resolves
|
|
itself into the mere notion of imperceptibles
|
|
like atoms or either, so that, where we do terminate
|
|
in percepts, our knowledge is only speciously
|
|
completed, being, in theoretic strictness,
|
|
only a virtual knowledge of those remoter
|
|
objects which conception carries out.
|
|
|
|
Is natural realism, permissible in logic, refuted
|
|
then by empirical fact? Do our minds
|
|
have no object in common after all?
|
|
|
|
84
|
|
|
|
Yet, they certainly have _Space_ in common.
|
|
On pragmatic principles we are obliged to predicate
|
|
sameness wherever we can predicate no
|
|
assignable point of difference. If two named
|
|
things have every quality and function indiscernible,
|
|
and are at the same time in the same
|
|
place, they must be written down as numerically
|
|
one thing under two different names. But
|
|
there is no test discoverable, so far as I know,
|
|
by which it can be shown that the place occupied
|
|
by your percept of Memorial Hall differs
|
|
from the place occupied by mine. The percepts
|
|
themselves may be shown to differ; but
|
|
if each of us be asked to point out where his
|
|
percept is, we point to an identical spot. All
|
|
the relations, whether geometrical or causal, of
|
|
the Hall originate or terminate in that spot
|
|
wherein our hands meet, and where each of us
|
|
begins to work if he wishes to make the Hall
|
|
change before the other's eyes. Just so it is
|
|
with our bodies. That body of yours which
|
|
you actuate and feel from within must be in
|
|
the same spot as the body of yours which I see
|
|
or touch from without. 'There' for me means
|
|
85
|
|
where I place my finger. If you do not feel my
|
|
finger's contact to be 'there' in _my_ sense, when
|
|
I place it on your body, where then do you feel
|
|
it? Your inner actuations of your body meet
|
|
my finger _there:_ it is _there_ that you resist its
|
|
push, or shrink back, or sweep the finger aside
|
|
with your hand. Whatever farther knowledge
|
|
either of us may acquire of the real constitution
|
|
of the body which we thus feel, you from
|
|
within and I from without, it is in that same
|
|
place that the newly conceived or perceived
|
|
constituents have to be located, and it is
|
|
_through_ that space that your and my mental
|
|
intercourse with each other has always to be
|
|
carried on, by the mediation of impressions
|
|
which I convey thither, and of the reactions
|
|
thence which those impressions may provoke
|
|
from you.
|
|
|
|
In general terms, then, whatever differing
|
|
contents our minds may eventually fill a place
|
|
with, the place itself is a numerically identical
|
|
content of the two minds, a piece of common
|
|
property in which, through which, and over
|
|
which they join. The receptacle of certain of
|
|
|
|
86
|
|
our experiences being thus common, the experiences
|
|
themselves might some day become
|
|
common also. If that day ever did come, our
|
|
thoughts would terminate in a complete empirical
|
|
identity, there would be an end, so far as
|
|
_those_ experiences went, to our discussions about
|
|
truth. No points of difference appearing, they
|
|
would have to count as the same.
|
|
|
|
VII. CONCLUSION
|
|
|
|
With this we have the outlines of a philosophy
|
|
of pure experience before us. At the outset
|
|
of my essay, I called it a mosaic philosophy.
|
|
In actual mosaics the pieces are held together
|
|
by their bedding, for which bedding of the Substances,
|
|
transcendental Egos, or Absolutes of
|
|
other philosophies may be taken to stand. In
|
|
radical empiricism there is no bedding; it is as
|
|
if the pieces clung together by their edges, the
|
|
transitions experienced between them forming
|
|
their cement. Of course such a metaphor is
|
|
misleading, for in actual experience the more
|
|
substantive and the more transitive parts run
|
|
into each other continuously, there is in general
|
|
|
|
87
|
|
no separateness needing to be overcome by an
|
|
external cement; and whatever separateness
|
|
is actually experienced is not overcome, it
|
|
stays and counts as separateness to the end.
|
|
But the metaphor serves to symbolize the fact
|
|
that Experience itself, taken at large, can grow
|
|
by its edges. That one moment of it proliferates
|
|
into the next by transitions which,
|
|
whether conjunctive or disjunctive, continue
|
|
the experiential tissue, can no, I contend, be
|
|
denied. Life is in the transitions as much as in
|
|
the terms connected; often, indeed, it seems to
|
|
be there more emphatically, as if our spurts
|
|
and sallies forward were the real firing-line of
|
|
the battle, were like the thin line of flame advancing
|
|
across the dry autumnal field which
|
|
the farmer proceeds to burn. In this line we
|
|
live prospectively as well as retrospectively.
|
|
It is 'of' the past, inasmuch as it comes expressly
|
|
as the past's continuation; it is 'of' the
|
|
future in so far as the future, when it comes,
|
|
will have continued _it_.
|
|
|
|
These relations of continuous transition experienced
|
|
are what make our experiences cognitive.
|
|
|
|
88
|
|
In the simplest and completest cases
|
|
the experiences are cognitive of one another.
|
|
When one of them terminates a previous series
|
|
of them with a sense of fulfilment, it, we say,
|
|
is what those other experiences 'had in view.'
|
|
The knowledge, in such a case, is verified; the
|
|
truth is 'salted down.' Mainly, however, we
|
|
live on speculative investments, or on our prospects
|
|
only. But living on things _in_posse_ is
|
|
as good as living in the actual, so long as our
|
|
credit remains good. It is evident that for the
|
|
most part it is good, and that the universe
|
|
seldom protests our drafts.
|
|
|
|
In this sense we at every moment can continue
|
|
to believe in an existing _beyond_. It is
|
|
only in special cases that our confident rush
|
|
forward gets rebuked. The beyond must, of
|
|
course, always in our philosophy be itself of an
|
|
experiential nature. If not a future experience
|
|
of our own or a present one of our neighbor, it
|
|
must be a thing in itself in Dr. Prince's and
|
|
Professor Strong's sense of the term -- that is,
|
|
it must be an experience _for_ itself whose relation
|
|
to other things we translate into the action
|
|
|
|
89
|
|
of molecules, ether-waves, or whatever else the
|
|
physical symbols may be.(1) This opens the
|
|
chapter of the relations of radical empiricism
|
|
to panspychism, into which I cannot enter
|
|
now.
|
|
|
|
The beyond can in any case exist simultaneously
|
|
-- for it can be experienced _to_have_existed_
|
|
simultaneously -- with the experience
|
|
that practically postulates it by looking in its
|
|
direction, or by turning or changing in the
|
|
direction of which it is the goal. Pending that
|
|
actuality of union, in the virtuality of which
|
|
the 'truth,' even now, of the postulation consists,
|
|
the beyond and its knower are entities
|
|
split off from each other. The world is in so far
|
|
forth a pluralism of which the unity is not fully
|
|
experienced as yet. But, as fast as verifications
|
|
come, trains of experience, once separate, run
|
|
into one another; and that is why I said, earlier
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Our minds and these ejective realities would still have space (or
|
|
pseudo-space, as I believe Professor Strong calls the medium of
|
|
interaction between 'things-in-themselves') in common. These would
|
|
exist _where_, and begin to act _where_, we locate the molecules, etc.,
|
|
and _where_ we perceive the sensible phenomena explained thereby.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
90
|
|
in my article, that the unity of the world is on
|
|
the whole undergoing increase. The universe
|
|
continually grows in quantity by new experiences
|
|
that graft themselves upon the older
|
|
mass; but these very new experiences often
|
|
help the mass to a more consolidated form.
|
|
|
|
These are the main features of a philosophy
|
|
of pure experience. It has innumerable other
|
|
aspects and arouses innumerable questions,
|
|
but the points I have touched on seem enough
|
|
to make an entering wedge. In my own mind
|
|
such a philosophy harmonizes best with a radical
|
|
pluralism, with novelty and indeterminism,
|
|
moralism and theism, and with the 'humanism'
|
|
lately sprung upon us by the Oxford and
|
|
the Chicago schools.(1) I can not, however, be
|
|
sure that all these doctrines are its necessary
|
|
and indispensable allies. It presents so many
|
|
points of difference, both from the common
|
|
sense and from the idealism that have made
|
|
our philosophic language, that it is almost
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 I have said something of this latter alliance in an article entitled
|
|
'Humanism and Truth,' in Mind, October, 1904. [Reprinted in
|
|
_The_Meaning_of_Truth_, pp. 51-101. Cf. also "humanism and Truth Once
|
|
More," below, pp. 244-265.]
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
difficult to state it as it is to think it out
|
|
clearly, and if it is ever to grow into a respectable
|
|
system, it will have to be built up by the
|
|
contributions of many co-operating minds. It
|
|
seems to me, as I said at the outset of this essay,
|
|
that many minds are, in point of fact, now
|
|
turning in a direction that points towards radical
|
|
empiricism. If they are carried farther by
|
|
my words, and if then they add their stronger
|
|
voices to my feebler one, the publication of
|
|
this essay will have been worth while.
|
|
|
|
92
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
THE THING AND ITS RELATIONS(1)
|
|
|
|
EXPERIENCE in its immediacy seems perfectly
|
|
fluent. The active sense of living which
|
|
we all enjoy, before reflection shatters our instinctive
|
|
world for us, is self-luminous and suggests
|
|
no paradoxes. Its difficulties are disappointments
|
|
and uncertainties. They are not
|
|
intellectual contradictions.
|
|
|
|
When the reflective intellect gets at work,
|
|
however, it discovers incomprehensibilities in
|
|
the flowing process. Distinguishing its elements
|
|
and parts, it gives them separate names,
|
|
and what it thus disjoins it can not easily put
|
|
together. Pyrrhonism accepts the irrationality
|
|
and revels in its dialectic elaboration.
|
|
Other philosophies try, some by ignoring,
|
|
some by resisting, and some by turning the
|
|
dialectic procedure against itself, negating its
|
|
first negations, to restore the fluent sense of
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Reprinted from _The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_
|
|
_Scientific_Methods_, vol II, No. 2, January 19, 1905. Reprinted also
|
|
as Appendix A in _A_Pluralistic_Universe, pp. 347-369. The authors
|
|
corrections have been adopted in the present text. ED.]
|
|
|
|
93
|
|
life again, and let redemption take the place of
|
|
innocence. The perfection with which any
|
|
philosophy may do this is the measure of its
|
|
human success and of its importance in philosophic
|
|
history. In [the last essay], 'A World
|
|
of Pure Experience,' I tried my own hand
|
|
sketchily at the problem, resisting certain
|
|
first steps of dialectics by insisting in a general
|
|
way that the immediately experienced conjunctive
|
|
relations are as real as anything else.
|
|
If my sketch is not to appear to _naif_, I must
|
|
come closer to details, and in the present essay
|
|
I propose to do so.
|
|
|
|
I
|
|
|
|
'Pure experience' is the name which I gave
|
|
to the immediate flux of life which furnishes
|
|
the material to our later reflection with its
|
|
conceptual categories. Only new-born babes,
|
|
or men in semi-coma from sleep, drugs, illnesses,
|
|
or blows, may be assumed to have an
|
|
experience pure in the literal sense of a _that_
|
|
which is not yet any definite _what_, tho' ready
|
|
to be all sorts of whats; full both of oneness
|
|
|
|
94
|
|
and of manyness, but in respects that don't
|
|
appear; changing throughout, yet so confusedly
|
|
that its phases interpenetrate and no
|
|
points, either of distinction or of identity,
|
|
can be caught. Pure experience in this state
|
|
is but another name for feeling or sensation.
|
|
But the flux of it no sooner comes than it
|
|
tends to fill itself with emphases, and these
|
|
salient parts become identified and fixed and
|
|
abstracted; so that experience now flows as if
|
|
shot through with adjectives and nouns and
|
|
prepositions and conjunctions. Its purity is
|
|
only a relative term, meaning to proportional
|
|
amount of unverbalized sensation which
|
|
it still embodies.
|
|
|
|
Far back as we go, the flux, both as a whole
|
|
and in its parts, is that of things conjunct and
|
|
separated. The great continua of time, space,
|
|
and the self envelope everything, betwixt
|
|
them, and flow together without interfering.
|
|
The things that they envelop come as separate
|
|
in some ways and as continuous in others.
|
|
Some sensations coalesce with some ideas, and
|
|
others are irreconcilable. Qualities compenetrate
|
|
|
|
95
|
|
one space, or exclude each other from it.
|
|
They cling together persistently in groups that
|
|
move as units, or else they separate. Their
|
|
changes are abrupt or discontinuous; and their
|
|
kinds resemble or differ; and, as they do so,
|
|
they fall into either even or irregular series.
|
|
|
|
In all this the continuities and the discontinuities
|
|
are absolutely co-ordinate matters of
|
|
immediate feeling. The conjunctions are as
|
|
primordial elements of 'fact' as are the distinctions
|
|
and disjunctions. In the same act by
|
|
which I feel that this passing minute is a new
|
|
pulse of my life, I feel that the old life continues
|
|
into it, and the feeling of continuance in
|
|
no wise jars upon the simultaneous feeling of a
|
|
novelty. They, too, compenetrate harmoniously.
|
|
Prepositions, copulas, and conjunctions,
|
|
'is,' is n't,' 'then,' 'before,' 'in,' 'on,' 'beside,'
|
|
'between,' 'next,' 'like,' 'unlike,' 'as,' 'but,'
|
|
flower out of the stream of pure experience, the
|
|
stream of concretes or the sensational stream,
|
|
as naturally as nouns and adjectives do, and
|
|
they melt into it again as fluidly when we
|
|
apply them to a new portion of the stream
|
|
|
|
96
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
If now we ask why we must thus translate
|
|
experience from a more concrete or pure into a
|
|
more intellectualized form, filling it with ever
|
|
more abounding conceptual distinctions, rationalism
|
|
and naturalism give different replies.
|
|
|
|
The rationalistic answer is that the theoretic
|
|
life is absolute and its interests imperative;
|
|
that to understand is simply the duty of man;
|
|
and that who questions this need must not be argued
|
|
with, for by the fact of arguing he gives away
|
|
his case.
|
|
|
|
The naturalist answer is that the environment
|
|
kills as well as sustains us, and that the
|
|
tendency of raw experience to extinguish the
|
|
experient himself is lessened just in the degree
|
|
in which the elements in it that have a practical
|
|
bearing upon life are analyzed out of the
|
|
continuum and verbally fixed and coupled together,
|
|
so that we may know what is in the
|
|
wind for us and get ready to react in time.
|
|
Had pure experience, the naturalist says, been
|
|
always perfectly healthy, there would never
|
|
|
|
97
|
|
have arisen the necessity of isolating or verbalizing
|
|
any of its terms. We should just have
|
|
experienced inarticulately and unintellectually
|
|
enjoyed. This leaning on 'reaction' in the
|
|
naturalist account implies that, whenever we
|
|
intellectualize a relatively pure experience, we
|
|
ought to do so for the sake of redescending
|
|
to the purer or more concrete level again;
|
|
and that if an intellect stays aloft among its
|
|
abstract terms and generalized relations, and
|
|
does not reinsert itself with its conclusions into
|
|
some particular point of the immediate stream
|
|
of life, it fails to finish out its function and
|
|
leaves its normal race unrun.
|
|
|
|
Most rationalists nowadays will agree that
|
|
naturalism gives a true enough account of the
|
|
way in which our intellect arose at first, but
|
|
they will deny these latter implications. The
|
|
case, they will say, resembles that of sexual
|
|
love. Originating in the animal need of getting
|
|
another generation born, this passion has developed
|
|
secondarily such imperious spiritual
|
|
needs that, if you ask why another generation
|
|
ought to be born at all, the answer is: 'Chiefly
|
|
|
|
98
|
|
that love may go on.' Just so with our intellect:
|
|
it originated as a practical means of serving
|
|
life; but it has developed incidentally the
|
|
function of understanding absolute truth; and
|
|
life itself now seems to be given chiefly as a
|
|
means by which that function may be prosecuted.
|
|
But truth and the understanding of it
|
|
lie among the abstracts and universals, so the
|
|
intellect now carries on its higher business
|
|
wholly in this region, without any need of
|
|
redescending into pure experience again.
|
|
|
|
If the contrasted tendencies which I thus
|
|
designate as naturalistic and rationalistic are
|
|
not recognized by the reader, perhaps an example
|
|
will make them more concrete. Mr.
|
|
Bradley, for instance, is an ultra-rationalist.
|
|
He admits that our intellect is primarily practical,
|
|
but says that, for philosophers,the practical
|
|
need is simply Truth. Truth, moreover,
|
|
must be assumed 'consistent.' Immediate experience
|
|
has to be broken into subjects and
|
|
qualities, terms and relations, to be understood
|
|
as truth at all. Yet when so broken it is less
|
|
consistent than ever. Taken raw, it is all undistinguished.
|
|
|
|
99
|
|
Intellectualized, it is all distinction
|
|
without oneness. 'Such an arrangement
|
|
may _work_, but the theoretic problem is
|
|
not solved.' The question is '_how_ the diversity
|
|
can exist in harmony with the oneness.' To go
|
|
back to pure experience is unavailing. 'Mere
|
|
feeling gives no answer to our riddle.' Even if
|
|
your intuition is a fact, it is not an _understanding_.
|
|
'It is a mere experience, and furnishes
|
|
no consistent view.' The experience offered as
|
|
facts or truths 'I find that my intellect rejects
|
|
because they contradict themselves. They
|
|
offer a complex of diversities conjoined in a
|
|
way which it feels is not its way and which it
|
|
can not repeat as its own. . . . For to be satisfied,
|
|
my intellect must understand, and it can
|
|
not understand by taking a congeries in the
|
|
lump'(1) So Mr. Bradley, in the sole interests
|
|
of 'understanding' (as he conceives that function),
|
|
turns his back on finite experience forever.
|
|
Truth must lie in the opposite direction,
|
|
the direction of the Absolute; and this kind of
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [F.H. Bradley: _Appearance_and_Reality_, second edition, pp.
|
|
152-153, 23, 118, 104, 108-109, 570.]
|
|
|
|
100
|
|
rationalism and naturalism, or (as I will now
|
|
call it) pragmatism, walk thenceforward upon
|
|
opposite paths. For the one, those intellectual
|
|
products are most truth which, turning their
|
|
face towards the Absolute, come nearest to
|
|
symbolizing its ways of uniting the many and
|
|
the one. For the other, those are most true
|
|
which most successfully dip back into the
|
|
finite stream of feeling and grow most easily
|
|
confluent with some particular wave or wavelet.
|
|
Such confluence not only proves the intellectual
|
|
operation to have been true (as an
|
|
addition may 'prove' that a subtraction is
|
|
already rightly performed), but it constitutes,
|
|
according to pragmatism, all that we mean by
|
|
calling it true. Only in so far as they lead us,
|
|
successfully or unsuccessfully, back into sensible
|
|
experience again, are our abstracts and
|
|
universals true or false at all.(1)
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
In Section VI of [the last essay], I adopted
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Compare Professor MacLennan's admirable _Auseinandersetzung_
|
|
with Mr. Bradley, in _The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_
|
|
_Scientific_Methods_, vol. I, [1904], pp. 403 ff., especially pp.
|
|
405-407.
|
|
|
|
101
|
|
in a general way the common-sense belief that
|
|
one and the same world is cognized by our
|
|
different minds; but I left undiscussed the
|
|
dialectical arguments which maintain that
|
|
this is logically absurd. The usual reason
|
|
given for its being absurd is that it assumes
|
|
one object (to wit, the world) to stand in two
|
|
relations at once; to my mind, namely, and
|
|
again to yours; whereas a term taken in a
|
|
second relation can not logically be the same
|
|
term which it was at first.
|
|
|
|
I have heard this reason urged so often in
|
|
discussing with absolutists, and it would destroy
|
|
my radical empiricism so utterly, if it
|
|
were valid, that I am bound to give it an attentive
|
|
ear, and seriously to search its strength.
|
|
|
|
For instance, let the matter in dispute be
|
|
term M, asserted to be on the one hand related
|
|
to L, and on the other to N; and let the two
|
|
cases of relation be symbolized by L-M and
|
|
M-N respectively. When, now, I assume
|
|
that the experience may immediately come
|
|
and be given in the shape L-M-N, with
|
|
no trace of doubling or internal fission in the
|
|
|
|
102
|
|
M, I am told that this is all a popular delusion;
|
|
that L-M-N logically means two different
|
|
experiences, L-M and M-N, namely;
|
|
and that although the Absolute may, and indeed
|
|
must, from its superior point of view,
|
|
read its own kind of unity into M's two editions,
|
|
yet as elements in finite experience the
|
|
two M's lie irretrievably asunder, and the
|
|
world between them is broken and unbridged.
|
|
|
|
In arguing this dialectic thesis, one must
|
|
avoid slipping from the logical into the physical
|
|
point of view. It would be easy, in taking
|
|
a concrete example to fix one's ideas by, to
|
|
choose one in which the letter M should stand
|
|
for a collective noun of some sort, which noun,
|
|
being related to L by one of its parts and to
|
|
N by another, would inwardly be two things
|
|
when it stood outwardly in both relations.
|
|
Thus, one might say: 'David Hume, who
|
|
weighed so many stone by his body, influences
|
|
posterity by his doctrine.' The body and the
|
|
doctrine are two things, between which our
|
|
finite minds can discover no real sameness,
|
|
though the same never covers both of them.
|
|
|
|
103
|
|
And then, one might continue: 'Only an Absolute
|
|
is capable of uniting such a non-identity.'
|
|
We must, I say, avoid this sort of example, for
|
|
the dialectic insight, if true at all, must apply
|
|
to terms and relations universally. It must be
|
|
true of abstract units as well as of nouns collective;
|
|
and if we prove it by concrete examples
|
|
we must take the simplest, so as to avoid
|
|
irrelevant material suggestions.
|
|
|
|
Taken thus in all its generality, the absolutist
|
|
contention seems to use as its major
|
|
premise Hume's notion 'that all our distinct
|
|
perceptions are distinct existences, and that
|
|
the mind never perceives any real connexion
|
|
among distinct existences.'(1) Undoubtedly,
|
|
since we use two phrases in talking first about
|
|
'M's relation to L' and then about 'M's relation
|
|
to N,' we must be having, or must have
|
|
had, two distinct perceptions; -- and the rest
|
|
would then seem to follow duly. But the starting-
|
|
point of the reasoning here seems to be the
|
|
fact of the two _phrases_; and this suggests that
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Hume: _Treatise_of_Human_Nature_, Appendix, Selby-Bigge's
|
|
edition, p. 636.]
|
|
|
|
104
|
|
the argument may be merely verbal. Can it be
|
|
that the whole dialectic consists in attributing
|
|
to the experience talked-about a constitution
|
|
similar to that of the language in which we describe
|
|
it? Must we assert the objective doubleness
|
|
of the M merely because we have to name
|
|
it twice over when we name its two relations?
|
|
|
|
Candidly, I can think of no other reason
|
|
than this for the dialectic conclusion;(1) for, if
|
|
we think, not of our words, but of any simple
|
|
concrete matter which they may be held to
|
|
signify, the experience itself belies the paradox
|
|
asserted. We use indeed two separate concepts
|
|
in analyzing our object, but we know them all
|
|
the while to be but substitutional, and that the
|
|
M in L-M and the M in M-N _mean_ (i.e.,
|
|
are capable of leading to and terminating in)
|
|
one self-same piece, M, of sensible experience.
|
|
This persistent identity of certain units (or
|
|
emphases, or points, or objects, or members --
|
|
call them what you will) of the experience-
|
|
continuum, is just one of those conjunctive
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Technically, it seems classable as a 'fallacy of composition.' A
|
|
duality, predicable of the two wholes, L-M and M-N, is
|
|
forthwith predicated of one of their parts, M.
|
|
|
|
105
|
|
features of it, on which I am obliged to insist
|
|
so emphatically.(1) For samenesses are parts of
|
|
experience's indefeasible structure. When I
|
|
hear a bell-stroke and, as life flows on, its after
|
|
image dies away, I still hark back to it as 'that
|
|
same bell-stroke.' When I see a thing M, with
|
|
L to the left of it and N to the right of it, I see
|
|
it _as_ one M; and if you tell me I have had
|
|
to 'take' it twice, I reply that if I 'took' it a
|
|
thousand times I should still _see_it as a unity.(2)
|
|
Its unity is aboriginal, just as the multiplicity
|
|
of my successive takings is aboriginal. It
|
|
comes unbroken as _that_ M, as a singular which
|
|
I encounter; they come broken, as _those_ takings,
|
|
as my plurality of operations. The unity
|
|
and the separateness are strictly co-ordinate. I
|
|
do not easily fathom why my opponents should
|
|
find the separateness so much more easily understandable
|
|
that they must needs infect the
|
|
whole of finite experience with it, and relegate
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 See above, pp. 42 ff.
|
|
|
|
2 I may perhaps refer here to my _Principles_of_Psychology, vol. I,
|
|
pp. 459 ff. It really seems 'weird' to have to argue (as I am forced
|
|
now to do) for the notion that it is one sheet of paper (with its two
|
|
surfaces and all that lies between) which is both under my pen and on
|
|
the table while I write -- the 'claim' that it is two sheets seems so
|
|
brazen. Yet I sometimes suspect the absolutists of sincerity!
|
|
|
|
106
|
|
the unity (now taken as a bare postulate and
|
|
no longer as a thing positively perceivable) to
|
|
the region of the Absolute's mysteries. I do
|
|
not easily fathom this, I say, for the said opponents
|
|
are above mere verbal quibbling; yet all
|
|
that I can catch in their talk is the substitution
|
|
of what is true of certain words for what is
|
|
true of what they signify. They stay with the
|
|
words, -- not returning to the stream of life
|
|
whence all the meaning of them came, and
|
|
which is always ready to reabsorb them.
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
For aught this argument proves, then, we
|
|
may continue to believe that one thing can be
|
|
known by many knowers. But the denial of
|
|
one thing in many relations is but one application
|
|
of a still profounder dialectic difficulty.
|
|
Man can't be good, said the sophist, for man is
|
|
_man_ and _good_ is good; and Hegel(1) and Herbart
|
|
in their day, more recently A. Spir,(2) and most
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [For the author's criticism of Hegel's view of relations, cf.
|
|
_Will_to_Believe_, pp. 278-279, ED.]
|
|
|
|
2 [Cf. A. Spir: _Denken_und_Wirklichkeit_, part I, bk. III, ch. IV
|
|
(containing also account of Herbart). ED.]
|
|
|
|
107
|
|
recently and elaborately of all, Mr. Bradley,
|
|
informs us that a term can logically only be
|
|
a punctiform unit, and that not one of the
|
|
conjunctive relations between things, which
|
|
experience seems to yield, is rationally possible.
|
|
|
|
Of course, if true, this cuts off radical empiricism
|
|
without even a shilling. Radical empiricism
|
|
takes conjunctive relations at their face
|
|
value, holding them to be as real as the terms
|
|
united by them.(1) The world it represents as a
|
|
collection, some parts of which are conjunctively
|
|
and others disjunctively related. Two
|
|
parts, themselves disjoined, may nevertheless
|
|
hang together by intermediaries with which
|
|
they are severally connected, and the whole
|
|
world eventually may hang together similarly,
|
|
inasmuch as _some_ path of conjunctive transition
|
|
by which to pass from one of its parts
|
|
to another may always be discernible. Such
|
|
determinately various hanging-together may
|
|
be called _concatenated_ union, to distinguish it
|
|
from the 'through-and-through' type of union,
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [See above, pp. 42, 49.]
|
|
|
|
108
|
|
'each in all and all in each' (union of _total_
|
|
_conflux_, as one might call it), which monistic
|
|
systems hold to obtain when things are taken
|
|
in their absolute reality. In a concatenated
|
|
world a partial conflux often is experienced.
|
|
Our concepts and our sensations are confluent;
|
|
successive states of the same ego, and feelings
|
|
of the same body are confluent. Where the
|
|
experience is not of conflux, it may be of
|
|
conterminousness (things with but one thing
|
|
between); or of contiguousness (nothing between);
|
|
or of likeness; or of nearness; or of
|
|
simultaneousness; or of in-ness; or of on-ness;
|
|
or of for-ness; or of simple with-ness; or even of
|
|
mere and-ness, which last relation would make
|
|
of however disjointed a world otherwise, at any
|
|
rate for that occasion a universe 'of discourse.'
|
|
Now Mr. Bradley tells us that none of these
|
|
relations, as we actually experience them, can
|
|
possibly be real.(1) My next duty, accordingly,
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Here again the reader must beware of slipping from logical into
|
|
phenomenal considerations. It may well be that we _attribute_ a certain
|
|
relation falsely, because the circumstances of the case, being complex,
|
|
have deceived us. At a railway station we may take our own train,
|
|
and not the one that fills our window, to be moving. We here put
|
|
motion in the wrong place in the world, but in its original place the
|
|
motion is a part of reality. What Mr. Bradley means is nothing like
|
|
this, but rather that such things as motion are nowhere real, and
|
|
that, even in their aboriginal and empirically incorrigible seats,
|
|
relations are impossible of comprehension.
|
|
|
|
109
|
|
must be to rescue radical empiricism from Mr.
|
|
Bradley. Fortunately, as it seems to me, his
|
|
general contention, that the very notion of relation
|
|
is unthinkable clearly, has been successfully
|
|
met by many critics.(1)
|
|
|
|
It is a burden to the flesh, and an injustice
|
|
both to readers and to the previous writers, to
|
|
repeat good arguments already printed. So, in
|
|
noticing Mr. Bradley, I will confine myself to
|
|
the interests of radical empiricism solely.
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
The first duty of radical empiricism, taking
|
|
given conjunctions at their face-value, is to
|
|
class some of them as more intimate and some
|
|
as more external. When two terms are _similar_,
|
|
their very natures enter into the relation.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Particularly so by Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison, in his _Man_and_
|
|
_the_Cosmos_; by L.T. Hobhouse, in chapter XII ("The Validity of
|
|
Judgement") of his _Theory_of_Knowledge_; and by F.C.S. Schiller, in his
|
|
_Humanism_, essay XI. Other fatal reviews (in my opinion) are Hodder's,
|
|
in the _Psychological_Review_, vol. I [1894], p. 307; Stout's in the
|
|
_Proceedings_of_the_Aristotelian_Society, 1901-2, p.1; and MacLennan's
|
|
in [_The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_Scientific_Methods_,
|
|
vol. I, 1904, p. 403].
|
|
|
|
110
|
|
Being _what_ they are, no matter where or when,
|
|
the likeness never can be denied, if asserted.
|
|
It continues predictable as long as the terms
|
|
continue. Other relations, the _where_ and the
|
|
_when_, for example, seems adventitious. The
|
|
sheet of paper may be 'off' or 'on' the table,
|
|
for example; and in either case the relation
|
|
involves only the outside of its terms. Having
|
|
an outside, both of them, they contribute by it
|
|
to the relation. It is external: the term's inner
|
|
nature is irrelevant to it. Any book, any table,
|
|
may fall into the relation, which is created _pro_
|
|
_hac_vice_, not by their existence, but by their
|
|
causal situation. It is just because so many of
|
|
the conjunctions of experience seem so external
|
|
that a philosophy of pure experience must tend
|
|
to pluralism in its ontology. So far as things
|
|
have space-relations, for example, we are free
|
|
to imagine them with different origins even. If
|
|
they could get to _be_, and get into space at all,
|
|
then they may have done so separately. Once
|
|
there, however, they are _additives_ to one another,
|
|
and, with no prejudice to their natures,
|
|
all sorts of space-relations may supervene between
|
|
|
|
111
|
|
them. The question of how things could
|
|
come to be anyhow, is wholly different from
|
|
the question what their relations, once the
|
|
being accomplished, may consist in.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bradley now affirms that such external
|
|
relations as the space-relations which we here
|
|
talk of must hold of entirely different subjects
|
|
from those of which the absence of such relations
|
|
might a moment previously have been
|
|
plausibly asserted. Not only is the _situation_
|
|
different when the book is on the table, but
|
|
the _book_itself_ is different as a book, from what
|
|
it was when it was off the table.(1) He admits
|
|
that "such external relations seem possible
|
|
and even existing. . . . That you do not alter
|
|
what you compare or rearrange in space seems
|
|
to common sense quite obvious, and that on
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Once more, don't slip from logical into physical situations. Of
|
|
course, if the table be wet, it will moisten the book, or if it be
|
|
slight enough and the book be heavy enough, the book will break it down.
|
|
But such collateral phenomena are not the point at issue. The point is
|
|
whether the successive relations 'on' and 'not-on' can rationally (not
|
|
physically) hold of the same constant terms, abstractly taken.
|
|
Professor A.E. Taylor drops from logical into material considerations
|
|
when he instances color-contrast as a proof that A, 'as contra-
|
|
distinguished from B, is not the same thing as mere A not in any way
|
|
affected' (_Elements_of_Metaphysics_, p. 145). Note the substitution,
|
|
for 'related' of the word 'affected,' which begs the whole question.
|
|
|
|
112
|
|
the other side there are as obvious difficulties
|
|
does not occur to common sense at all. And I
|
|
will begin by pointing out these difficulties. . . .
|
|
There is a relation in the result, and this relation,
|
|
we hear, is to make no difference in its
|
|
terms. But, if so, to what does it make a difference?
|
|
[_Does_n't_it_make_a_difference_to_us_on-_
|
|
_lookers,_at_least?_] and what is the meaning and
|
|
sense of qualifying the terms by it? [_Surely_the_
|
|
_meaning_is_to_tell_the_truth_about_their_relative_
|
|
_position_.1] If, in short, it is external to the terms,
|
|
how can it possibly be true _of_ them? [_Is_it_the_
|
|
_'intimacy'_suggested_by_the_little_word_'of,'_here,_
|
|
_which_I_have_understood,_that_is_the_root_of_Mr._
|
|
_Bradley's_trouble?] . . . If the terms from their
|
|
inner nature do not enter into the relation,
|
|
then, so far as they are concerned, they seem
|
|
related for no reason at all. . . . Things are spatially
|
|
related, first in one way, and then become
|
|
related in another way, and yet in no
|
|
way themselves are altered; for the relations,
|
|
it is said, are but external. But I reply that, if
|
|
----
|
|
|
|
1 But "is there any sense," asks Mr. Bradley, peevishly, on p. 579,
|
|
"and if so, what sense in truth that is only outside and 'about'
|
|
things?" Surely such a question may be left unanswered.
|
|
|
|
113
|
|
so, I can not _understand_ the leaving by the
|
|
terms of one set of relations and their adoption
|
|
of another fresh set. The process and its
|
|
result to the terms, if they contribute nothing
|
|
to it [_Surely_they_contribute_to_it_all_there_is_
|
|
_'of'_it!_] seem irrational throughout. [_If_'irrational'_
|
|
_here_means_simply_'non-rational,'_or_non-_
|
|
_deducible_from_the_essence_of_either_term_singly,_it_
|
|
_is_no_reproach;_if_it_means_'contradicting'_such_
|
|
_essence,_Mr._Bradley_should_show_wherein_and_
|
|
_how._] But, if they contribute anything, they
|
|
_must surely be affected internally. [_Why_so,_
|
|
_if_they_contribute_only_their_surface?__In_such_
|
|
_relations_as_'on,'_'a_foot_away,'_'between,'_'next,'_
|
|
_etc.,_only_surfaces_are_in_question._] . . . If the
|
|
terms contribute anything whatever, then the
|
|
terms are affected [_inwardly_altered?_] by the
|
|
arrangement. . . . That for working purposes
|
|
we treat, and do well to treat, some relations
|
|
as external merely I do not deny, and that of
|
|
course is not the question at issue here. That
|
|
question is . . . whether in the end and in
|
|
principle a mere external relation -_i.e.,_a_relation_
|
|
_which_can_change_without_forcing_its_terms_
|
|
|
|
114
|
|
_to_change_their_nature_simultaneously_] is possible
|
|
and forced on us by the facts."(1)
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bradley next reverts to the antinomies
|
|
of space, which, according to him, prove it to
|
|
be unreal, although it appears as so prolific a
|
|
medium of external relations; and he then concludes
|
|
that "Irrationality and externality can
|
|
not be the last truth about things. Somewhere
|
|
there must be a reason why this and that appear
|
|
together. And this reason and reality
|
|
must reside in the whole from which terms and
|
|
relations are abstractions, a whole in which
|
|
their internal connection must lie, and out of
|
|
which from the background appear those fresh
|
|
results which never could have come from
|
|
the premises." And he adds that "Where the
|
|
whole is different, the terms that qualify and
|
|
contribute to it must so far be different. . . .
|
|
They are altered so far only [_How_far?_ farther_
|
|
_than_externally,_yet_not_through_and_through?_]
|
|
but still they are altered. . . . I must insist
|
|
that in each case the terms are qualified by
|
|
their whole [_Qualified_how?--Do_their_external_
|
|
|
|
115
|
|
_relations,_situations,_dates,_etc.,_changed_as_these_
|
|
_are_in_the_new_whole,_fail_to_qualify_them_'far'_
|
|
enough?_], and that in the second case there is a
|
|
whole which differs both logically and psychologically
|
|
from the first whole; and I urge that
|
|
in contributing to the change the terms so far
|
|
are altered."
|
|
|
|
Not merely the relations, then, but the terms
|
|
are altered: _Und_zwar_ 'so far.' But just _how_
|
|
far is the whole problem; and 'through-and-
|
|
through' would seem (in spite of Mr. Bradley's
|
|
somewhat undecided utterances(1)) to be the
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 I say 'undecided,' because, apart from the 'so far,' what sounds
|
|
terribly half-hearted, there are passages in these very pages in which
|
|
Mr. Bradley admits the pluralistic thesis. Read, for example, what he
|
|
says, on p. 578, of a billiard ball keeping its 'character' unchanged,
|
|
though, in its change of place, its 'existence' gets altered; or what he
|
|
says, on p. 579, of the possibility that an abstract quality A, B, or C,
|
|
in a thing, 'may throughout remain unchanged' although the thing be
|
|
altered; or his admission that red-hairedness, both as analyzed out
|
|
of a man and when given with the rest of him, there may be 'no
|
|
change' p. 580). Why does he immediately add that for the pluralist
|
|
to plead the non-mutation of such abstractions would be an _ignoratio_
|
|
_elenchi?_ It is impossible to admit it to be such. The entire
|
|
_elenchus_ and inquest is just as to whether parts which you can
|
|
abstract from their inner nature. If they can thus mould various wholes
|
|
into new _gestalqualitaten_, then it follows that the same elements are
|
|
logically able to exist in different wholes [whether physically able
|
|
would depend on additional hypotheses]; that partial changes are
|
|
thinkable, and through-and-through change not a dialectic necessity;
|
|
that monism is only an hypothesis; and that an additively constituted
|
|
universe is a rationally respectable hypothesis also. All theses of
|
|
radical empiricism, in short, follow.
|
|
|
|
116
|
|
full Bradleyan answer. The 'whole' which he
|
|
here treats as primary and determinative of
|
|
each part's manner of 'contributing,' simply
|
|
_must_, when it alters, alter in its entirety. There
|
|
_must_ be total conflux of its parts, each into
|
|
and through each other. The 'must' appears
|
|
here as a _Machtspruch_, as an _ipse_dixit_ of Mr.
|
|
Bradley's absolutistically tempered 'understanding,'
|
|
for he candidly confesses that how
|
|
the parts _do_differ as they contribute to different
|
|
wholes, is unknown to him.(1)
|
|
|
|
Although I have every wish to comprehend
|
|
the authority by which Mr. Bradley's understanding
|
|
speaks, his words leave me wholly
|
|
unconverted. 'External relations' stand with
|
|
their withers all unwrung, and remain, for
|
|
aught he proves to the contrary, not only
|
|
practically workable, but also perfectly intelligible
|
|
factors of reality.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Op. cit., pp. 577-579.
|
|
|
|
117
|
|
|
|
VI
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bradley's understanding shows the
|
|
most extraordinary power of perceiving separations
|
|
and the most extraordinary impotence
|
|
in comprehending conjunctions. One would
|
|
naturally say 'neither or both,' but not so Mr.
|
|
Bradley. When a common man analyzes certain
|
|
_whats_ from out the stream of experience, he
|
|
understands their distinctness _as_thus_isolated_.
|
|
But this does not prevent him from equally
|
|
well understanding their combination with
|
|
each other _as_originally_experienced_in_the_concrete_,
|
|
or their confluence with new sensible experiences
|
|
in which they recur as 'the same.'
|
|
Returning into the stream of sensible presentation,
|
|
nouns and adjectives, and _thats_ and abstract
|
|
_whats_, grow confluent again, and the
|
|
word 'is' names all these experiences of conjunction.
|
|
Mr. Bradley understands the isolation
|
|
of the abstracts, but to understand the
|
|
combination is to him impossible.(1) "To understand
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 So far as I catch his state of mind, it is somewhat like this:
|
|
'Book,' 'table,' 'on' -- how does the existence of these three abstract
|
|
elements result in _this_ book being livingly on _this_table. Why is
|
|
n't the table on the book? Or why does n't the 'on' connect itself with
|
|
another book, or something that is not a table? Must n't something _in_
|
|
each of the three elements already determine the two others to _it_, so
|
|
that they do not settle elsewhere or float vaguely? Must n't the
|
|
_whole_fact_be_prefigured_in_each_part_, and exist _de_jure_ before it
|
|
can exist _de_fact?_ But, if so, in what can the jural existence
|
|
consist, if not in a spiritual miniature of the whole fact's
|
|
constitution actuating every partial factor as its purpose? But is this
|
|
anything but the old metaphysical fallacy of looking behind a fact
|
|
_in_esse_ for the ground of the fact, and finding it in the shape of the
|
|
very same fact _in_posse?_ Somewhere we must leave off with a
|
|
_constitution_ behind which there is nothing.
|
|
|
|
118
|
|
a complex AB," he says, "I must begin
|
|
with A or B. And beginning, say with A, if I
|
|
then merely find B, I have either lost A, or
|
|
I have got beside A, [_the_word_'beside'_seems_
|
|
_here_vital,_as_meaning_a_conjunction_'external'_
|
|
_and_therefore_unintelligible_] something else, and
|
|
in neither case have I understood.(1) For my
|
|
intellect can not simply unite a diversity, nor
|
|
has it in itself any form or way of togetherness,
|
|
and you gain nothing if, beside A and B,
|
|
you offer me their conjunction in fact. For to
|
|
my intellect that is no more than another external
|
|
element. And 'facts,' once for all, are
|
|
for my intellect not true unless they satisfy
|
|
it. . . . The intellect has in its nature no
|
|
principle of mere togetherness." (2)
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Apply this to the case of 'book-on-table'! W.J.
|
|
|
|
2 Op. cit., pp. 570, 572.
|
|
|
|
119
|
|
|
|
Of course Mr. Bradley has a right to define
|
|
'intellect' as the power by which we perceive
|
|
separations but not unions -- provided he
|
|
give due notice to the reader. But why then
|
|
claim that such a maimed and amputated
|
|
power must reign supreme in philosophy, and
|
|
accuse on its behoof the whole empirical
|
|
world of irrationality? It is true that he elsewhere
|
|
attributes to the intellect a _proprius_
|
|
_motus_ of transition, but says that when he
|
|
looks for _these_ transitions in the detail of living
|
|
experience, he 'is unable to verify such a
|
|
solution.'(1)
|
|
|
|
Yet he never explains what the intellectual
|
|
transitions would be like in case we had them.
|
|
He only defines them negatively -- they are
|
|
not spatial, temporal, predicative, or causal;
|
|
or qualitatively or otherwise serial; or in any
|
|
way relational as we naively trace relations,
|
|
for relations _separate_ terms, and need themselves
|
|
to be hooked on _ad_infinitum_. The nearest
|
|
approach he makes to describing a truly
|
|
intellectual transition is where he speaks of
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Op. cit., pp. 568, 569.
|
|
|
|
120
|
|
A and B as being 'united, each from its own
|
|
nature, in a whole which is the nature of both
|
|
alike.'(1) But this (which, _pace_ Mr. Bradley,
|
|
seems exquisitely analogous to 'taking' a congeries
|
|
in a 'lump,' if not to 'swamping') suggests
|
|
nothing but that _conflux_ which pure
|
|
experience so abundantly offers, as when
|
|
'space,' 'white' and 'sweet' are confluent in
|
|
a 'lump of sugar,' or kinesthetic, dermal, and
|
|
optical sensations confluent in 'my hand.'(2)
|
|
All that I can verify in the transitions which
|
|
Mr. Bradley's intellect desiderates as its _proprius_
|
|
_motus_ is a reminiscence of these and
|
|
other sensible conjunctions (especially space-
|
|
conjunctions), but a reminiscence so vague
|
|
that its originals are not recognized. Bradley
|
|
in short repeats the fable of the dog, the bone,
|
|
and its image in the water. With a world of
|
|
particulars, given in loveliest union, in conjunction
|
|
definitely various, and variously definite,
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Op. cit., p. 570.
|
|
|
|
2 How meaningless is the contention that in such wholes (or in
|
|
'book-on-table,' 'watch-in-pocket,' etc) the relation is an additional
|
|
entity _between_ the terms, needing itself to be related again to each!
|
|
Both Bradley (op. cit., pp. 32-33) and Royce (_The_World_and_the_
|
|
_Individual_, vol. I, p. 128) lovingly repeat this piece of profundity.
|
|
|
|
121
|
|
the 'how' of which you 'understand' as
|
|
soon as you see the fact of them,(1) for there is
|
|
no 'how' except the constitution of the fact
|
|
as given; with all this given him, I say, in pure
|
|
experience, he asks for some ineffable union in
|
|
the abstract instead, which, if he gained it,
|
|
would only be a duplicate of what he has already
|
|
in his full possession. Surely he abuses
|
|
the privilege which society grants to all us
|
|
philosophers, of being puzzle-headed.
|
|
|
|
Polemic writing like this is odious; but with
|
|
absolutism in possession in so many quarters,
|
|
omission to defend my radical empiricism
|
|
against its best known champion would count
|
|
as either superficiality or inability. I have to
|
|
conclude that its dialectic has not invalidated
|
|
in the least degree the usual conjunctions by
|
|
which the world, as experienced, hangs so variously
|
|
together. In particular it leaves an empirical
|
|
theory of knowledge(2) intact, and lets
|
|
us continue to believe with common sense that
|
|
|
|
122
|
|
one object _may_ be known, if we have any
|
|
ground for thinking that it _is_ known, to many
|
|
knowers.
|
|
|
|
In [the next essay] I shall return to this last
|
|
supposition, which seems to me to offer other
|
|
difficulties much harder for a philosophy of
|
|
pure experience to deal with than any of
|
|
absolutism's dialectic objections.
|
|
|
|
123
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
HOW TWO MINDS CAN KNOW
|
|
|
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ONE THING(1)
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IN [the essay] entitled 'Does Consciousness
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Exist?' I have tried to show that when we call
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an experience 'conscious,' that does not mean
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that it is suffused throughout with a peculiar
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modality of being ('psychic' being) as stained
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glass may be suffused with light, but rather
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that it stands in certain determinate relations
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to other portions of experience extraneous to
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itself. These form one peculiar 'context' for
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it; while, taken in another context of experiences,
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we class it as a fact in the physical
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world. This 'pen,' for example, is, in the first
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instance, a bald _that_, a datum, fact, phenomenon,
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content, or whatever other neutral or
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ambiguous name you may prefer to apply. I
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called it in that article a 'pure experience.' To
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get classed either as a physical pen or as some
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one's percept of a pen, it must assume a _function_,
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---
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1 [Reprinted from _The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_
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_Scientific_Methods_, vol II, No. 7, March 30, 1905.]
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124
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and that can only happen in a more complicated
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world. So far as in that world it is
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a stable feature, holds ink, marks paper and
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obeys the guidance of a hand, it is a physical
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pen. That is what we mean by being 'physical,'
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in a pen. So far as it is instable, on the
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contrary, coming and going with the movements
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of my eyes, altering with what I call my
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fancy, continuous with subsequent experiences
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of its 'having been' (in the past tense), it is the
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percept of a pen in my mind. Those peculiarities
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are what we mean by being 'conscious,'
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in a pen.
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In Section VI of another [essay](1) I tried to
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show that the same _that_, the same numerically
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identical pen of pure experience, can enter
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simultaneously into many conscious contexts,
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or, in other words, be an object for many different
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minds. I admitted that I had not space
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to treat of certain possible objections in that
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article; but in [the last essay] I took some of
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the objections up. At the end of that [essay]
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I said that a still more formidable-sounding
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---
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1 "A World of Pure Experience," above, pp. 39-91.
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125
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objections remained; so, to leave my pure-
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experience theory in as strong a state as possible,
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I propose to consider those objections now.
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I
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The objections I previously tried to dispose
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of were purely logical or dialectical. no one
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identical term, whether physical or psychical,
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it had been said, could be the subject of two
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relations at once. This thesis I sought to prove
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unfounded. The objections that now confront
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us arise from the nature supposed to inhere in
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psychic facts specifically. Whatever may be
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the case with physical objects, a fact of consciousness,
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it is alleged (and indeed very plausibly),
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can not, without self-contradiction, be
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treated as a portion of two different minds,
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and for the following reasons.
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In the physical world we make with impunity
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the assumption that one and the same
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material object can figure in an indefinitely
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large number of different processes at once.
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When, for instance, a sheet of rubber is pulled
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at its four corners, a unit of rubber in the middle
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of the sheet is affected by all four of the
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126
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pulls. It _transmits_ them each, as if it pulled in
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four different ways at once itself. So, an air-
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particle or an ether-particle 'compounds' the
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different directions of movement imprinted on
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it without obliterating their several individualities.
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It delivers them distinct, on the contrary,
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at as many several 'receivers' (ear, eye or what
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not) as may be 'tuned' to that effect. The apparent
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paradox of a distinctness like this surviving
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in the midst of compounding is a thing
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which, I fancy, the analyses made by physicists
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have by this time sufficiently cleared up.
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But if, on the strength of these analogies, one
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should ask: "Why, if two or more lines can run
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through one and the same geometrical point,
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or if two or more distinct processes of activity
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can run through one and the same physical
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thing so that it simultaneously plays a role
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in each and every process, might not two or
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more streams of personal consciousness include
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one and the same unit of experience so that it
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would simultaneously be a part of the experience
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of all the different minds?" one would be
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checked by thinking of a certain peculiarity by
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127
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which phenomena of consciousness differ from
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physical things.
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While physical things, namely, are supposed
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to be permanent and to have their 'states,' a
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fact of consciousness exists but once and _is_ a
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state. Its _esse_ is _sentiri_; it is only so far as it is
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felt; and it is unambiguously and unequivocally
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exactly _what_ is felt The hypothesis under
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consideration would, however, oblige it to be
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felt equivocally, felt now as part of my mind
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and again at the same time _not_ as a part of my
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mind, but of yours (for my mind is _not) yours),
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and this would seem impossible without doubling
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it into two distinct things, or, in other
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words, without reverting to the ordinary dualistic
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philosophy of insulated minds each knowing
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its object representatively as a third thing,
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-- and that would be to give up the pure-
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experience scheme altogether.
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Can we see, then, any way in which a unit of
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pure experience might enter into and figure in
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two diverse streams of consciousness without
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turning itself into the two units which, on our
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hypothesis, it must not be?
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128
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II
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There is a way; and the first step towards it
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is to see more precisely how the unit enters into
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either one of the streams of consciousness
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alone. Just what, from being 'pure,' does its
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becoming 'conscious' _once_ mean?
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It means, first, that new experiences have
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supervened; and, second, that they have
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borne a certain assignable relation to the unit
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supposed. Continue, if you please, to speak of
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the pure unit as 'the pen.' So far as the pen's
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successors do but repeat the pen or, being
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different from it, are 'energetically'(1) related
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to it, and they will form a group of stably
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existing physical things. So far, however, as
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its successors differ from it in another well-
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determined way, the pen will figure in their
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context, not as a physical, but as a mental fact.
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It will become a passing 'percept,' _my_ percept
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of that pen. What now is that decisive well-
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determined way?
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In the chapter on 'The Self,' in my _Principles_
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---
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1 [For an explanation of this expression, see above, p. 32.]
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129
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_of_Psychology_, I explained the continuous identity
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of each personal consciousness as a name
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for the practical fact that new experiences(1)
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come which look back on the old ones, find
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them 'warm,' and greet and appropriate them
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as 'mine.' These operations mean, when analyzed
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empirically, several tolerably definite
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things, viz.:
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1. That the new experience has past time for
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its 'content,' and in that time a pen that 'was';
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2. That 'warmth' was also about the pen,
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in the sense of a group of feelings ('interest'
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aroused, 'attention' turned, 'eyes' employed,
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etc.) that were closely connected with it and
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that now recur and evermore recur with unbroken
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vividness, though from the pen of now,
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which may be only an image, all such vividness
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may have gone;
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3. That these feelings are the nucleus of 'me';
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4. That whatever once was associated with
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them was, at least for that one moment,
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'mine' -- my implement if associated with
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---
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1 I call them 'passing thoughts' in the book -- the passage in point
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goes from pages 330 to 342 of vol. I.
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130
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hand-feelings, my 'percept' only, if only eye-
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feelings and attention-feelings were involved.
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The pen, realized in this retrospective way
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as my percept, thus figures as a fact of 'conscious'
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life. But it does so only so far as 'appropriation'
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has occurred; and appropriation
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is _part_of_the_content_of_a_later_experience_ wholly
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additional to the originally 'pure' pen. _That_
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pen, virtually both objective and subjective, is
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at its own moment actually and intrinsically
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neither. It has to be looked back upon and
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_used_, in order to be classed in either distinctive
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way. But its use, so called, is in the hands of
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the other experience, while _it_ stands, throughout
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the operation, passive and unchanged.
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If this pass muster as an intelligible account
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of how an experience originally pure can enter
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into one consciousness, the next question is as
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to how it might conceivably enter into two.
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III
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Obviously no new kind of condition would
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have to be supplied. All that we should have
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to postulate would be a second subsequent
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131
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experience, collateral and contemporary with
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the first subsequent one, in which a similar act
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of appropriation should occur. The two acts
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would interfere neither with one another nor
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with the originally pure pen. It would sleep
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undisturbed in its own past, no matter how
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many such successors went through their several
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appropriative acts. Each would know it
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as 'my' percept, each would class it as a 'conscious'
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fact.
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Nor need their so classing it interfere in the
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least with their classing it at the same time as
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a physical pen. Since the classing in both cases
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depends upon the taking of it in one group or
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another of associates, if the superseding experience
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were of wide enough 'span' it could think
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the pen in both groups simultaneously, and yet
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distinguish the two groups. It would then see
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the whole situation conformably to what, we
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call 'the representative theory of cognition,'
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and that is what we all spontaneously do. As a
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man philosophizing 'popularly,' I believe that
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what I see myself writing with is double -- I
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think it in its relations to physical nature, and
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132
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also in its relations to my personal life; I see
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that it is in my mind, but that it also is a
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physical pen.
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The paradox of the same experience figuring
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in two consciousnesses seems thus no paradox
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at all. To be 'conscious' means not simply to
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be, but to be reported, known, to have awareness
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of one's being added to that being; and
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this is just what happens when the appropriative
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experience supervenes. The pen-experience
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in its original immediacy is not aware of
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itself, it simply _is_, and the second experience is
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required for what we call awareness of it to
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occur.(1) The difficulty of understanding what
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happens here is, therefore, not a logical difficulty:
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there is no contradiction involved. It is
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an ontological difficulty rather. Experiences
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come on an enormous scale, and if we take
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---
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1 Shadworth Hodgson has laid great stress on the fact that the
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minimum of consciousness demands two subfeelings of which the
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second retrospects the first. (Cf. the section 'Analysis of Minima' in
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his _Philosophy_of_Reflection_, vol. I, p. 248; also the chapter
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entitled 'The Moment of Experience' in his _Metaphysic_of_Experience_,
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vol. I, p. 34.) 'We live forward, but we understand backward' is a
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phrase of Kierkegaard's which Hoffding quotes. [H. Hoffding: "A
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Philosophical Confession,"
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_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_Scientific_Methods_, vol. II,
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1905, p. 86.
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133
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them all together, they come in a chaos of
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incommensurable relations that we can not
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straighten out. We have to abstract different
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groups of them, and handle these separately
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if we are to talk of them at all. But how the
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experiences ever _get_themselves_made_, or _why_
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their characters and relations are just such
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as appear, we can not begin to understand..
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Granting, however, that, by hook or crook,
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they _can_ get themselves made, and can appear
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in the successions that I have so schematically
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described, then we have to confess that even
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although (as I began by quoting from the adversary)
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'a feeling only is as it is felt,' there is
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still nothing absurd in the notion of its being
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felt in two different ways at once, as yours,
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namely, and as mine. It is, indeed, 'mine' only
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as it is felt as mine, and 'yours' only as it is
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felt as yours. But it is felt as neither _by_itself_,
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but only when 'owned' by our two several remembering
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experiences, just as one undivided
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estate is owned by several heirs.
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134
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IV
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One word, now, before I close, about the
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corollaries of the view set forth. Since the
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acquisition of conscious quality on the part of
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an experience depends upon a context coming
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to it, it follows that the sum total of all experiences,
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having no context, can not strictly be
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called conscious at all. It is a _that_, an Absolute,
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a 'pure' experience on an enormous
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scale, undifferentiated and undifferentiable
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into thought and thing. This the post-Kantian
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idealists have always practically acknowledged
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by calling their doctrine an _Identitats-_
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_philosophie_. The question of the _Beseelung_ of
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the All of things ought not, then, even to be
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asked. No more ought the question of its _truth_
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to be asked, for truth is a relation inside of the
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sum total, obtaining between thoughts and
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something else, and thoughts, as we have seen,
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can only be contextual things. In these respects
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the pure experiences of our philosophy
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are, in themselves considered, so many little
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absolutes, the philosophy of pure experience
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135
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being only a more comminuted _Identitatsphilosphie_.(1)
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Meanwhile, a pure experience can be postulated
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with any amount whatever of span or
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field. If it exert the retrospective and appropriative
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function on any other piece of experience,
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the latter thereby enters into its own
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conscious stream. And in this operation time
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intervals make no essential difference. After
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sleeping, my retrospection is as perfect as it is
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between two successive waking moments of my
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time. Accordingly if, millions of years later, a
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similarly retrospective experience should anyhow
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come to birth, my present thought would
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form a genuine portion of its long-span conscious
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life. 'Form a portion,' I say, but not in
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the sense that the two things could be entitatively
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or substantively one -- they cannot,
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for they are numerically discrete facts -- but
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only in the sense that the _functions_ of my present
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thought, its knowledge, its purpose, its
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content and 'consciousness,' in short, being
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inherited, would be continued practically
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---
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1 [Cf. below, pp. 197, 202.]
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136
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unchanged. Speculations like Fechner's, of an
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Earth-soul, of wider spans of consciousness
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enveloping narrower ones throughout the cosmos,
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are, therefore, philosophically quite in
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order, provided they distinguish the functional
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from the entitative point of view, and do not
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treat the minor consciousness under discussion
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as a kind of standing material of which the
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wider ones _consist_.(1)
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---
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1 [Cf. _A_Pluralistic_Universe_, Lect. IV, 'Concerning Fechner,' and
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Lect. V, 'The Compounding of Consciousness.']
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137
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V
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THE PLACE OF AFFECTIONAL
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FACTS IN A WORLD OF PURE
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EXPERIENCE(1)
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COMMON sense and popular philosophy are as
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dualistic as it is possible to be. Thoughts, we
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all naturally think, are made of one kind of
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substance, and things of another. Consciousness,
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flowing inside us in the forms of conception
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or judgement, or concentrating itself in
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the shape of passion or emotion, can be directly
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felt as the spiritual activity which it is, and
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known in contrast with the space-filling, objective
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'content' which it envelops and accompanies.
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In opposition to this dualistic
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philosophy, I tried, in [the first essay] to show
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that thoughts and things are absolutely homogeneous
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as to their material, and that their
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opposition is only one of relation and of function.
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There is no thought-stuff different from
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thing-stuff, I said; but the same identical piece
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---
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1 [Reprinted from _The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_
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_Scientific_Methods_, vol II,, No. 11, May 25, 1905.]
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138
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of 'pure experience' (which was the name I
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gave to the _materia_prima_ of everything) can
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stand alternately for a 'fact of consciousness'
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or for a physical reality, according as it is taken
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in one context or in another. For the right
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understanding of what follows, I shall have to
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presuppose that the reader will have read that
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-essay].(1)
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The commonest objection which the doctrine
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there laid down runs up against is drawn
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from the existence of our 'affections.' In our
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pleasures and pains, our loves and fears and
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angers, in the beauty, comicality, importance
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or preciousness of certain objects and situations,
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we have, I am told by many critics, a
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great realm of experience intuitively recognized
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as spiritual, made, and felt to be made,
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of consciousness exclusively, and different in
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nature from the space-filling kind of being
|
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which is enjoyed by physical objects. In
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Section VII, of [the first essay], I treated of
|
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this class of experiences inadequately,
|
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---
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1 It will be still better if he shall have also read the [essay]
|
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entitled 'A World of Pure Experience,' which follows [the first] and
|
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develops its ideas still farther.
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139
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because I had to be brief. I now return to
|
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the subject, because I believe that, so far from
|
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invalidating my general thesis, these phenomena,
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when properly analyzed, afford it powerful
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support.
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The central point of the pure-experience theory
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is that 'outer' and 'inner' are names for
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two groups into which we sort experiences
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according to the way in which they act upon
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their neighbors. Any one 'content,' such as
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_hard_, let us say, can be assigned to either
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group. In the outer group it is 'strong,' it acts
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'energetically' and aggressively. Here whatever
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is hard interferes with the space its neighbors
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occupy. It dents them; is impenetrable
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by them; and we call the hardness then a physical
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hardness. In the mind, on the contrary,
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the hard thing is nowhere in particular, it
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dents nothing, it suffuses through its mental
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neighbors, as it were, and interpenetrates
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them. Taken in this group we call both it and
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them 'ideas' or 'sensations'; and the basis of
|
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the two groups respectively is the different
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type of interrelation, the mutual impenetrability,
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140
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on the one hand, and the lack of physical
|
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interference and interaction, on the other.
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That what in itself is one and the same
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entity should be able to function thus differently
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in different contexts is a natural consequence
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of the extremely complex reticulations
|
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in which our experiences come. To her offspring
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a tigress is tender, but cruel to every
|
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other living thing -- both cruel and tender,
|
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therefore, at once. A mass in movement resists
|
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every force that operates contrariwise to its
|
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own direction, but to forces that pursue the
|
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same direction, or come in at right angles, it is
|
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absolutely inert. It is thus both energetic and
|
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inert; and the same is true (if you vary the
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associates properly) of every other piece of
|
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experience. It is only towards certain specific
|
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groups of associates that the physical energies
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as we call them, of a content are put forth. In
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another group it may be quite inert.
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It is possible to imagine a universe of experiences
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in which the only alternative between
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neighbors would be either physical interaction
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or complete inertness. In such a world the
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141
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mental or the physical _status) of any piece of
|
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experience would be unequivocal. When active,
|
|
it would figure in the physical, and when
|
|
inactive, in the mental group.
|
|
|
|
But the universe we live in is more chaotic
|
|
than this, and there is room in it for the hybrid
|
|
or ambiguous group of our affectional experiences,
|
|
of our emotions and appreciative perceptions.
|
|
In the paragraphs that follow I shall
|
|
try to show:
|
|
|
|
(1) That the popular notion that these experiences
|
|
are intuitively given as purely inner
|
|
facts is hasty and erroneous; and
|
|
|
|
(2) That their ambiguity illustrates beautifully
|
|
my central thesis that subjectivity and
|
|
objectivity are affairs not of what an experience
|
|
is aboriginally made of, but of its classification.
|
|
Classifications depend on our temporary
|
|
purposes. For certain purposes it is
|
|
convenient to take things in one set of relations,
|
|
for other purposes in another set. In the
|
|
two cases their contexts are apt to be different.
|
|
In the case of our affectional experiences we
|
|
have no permanent and steadfast purpose that
|
|
|
|
142
|
|
obliges us to be consistent, so we find it easy to
|
|
let them float ambiguously, sometimes classing
|
|
them with our feelings, sometimes with
|
|
more physical realities, according to caprice
|
|
or to the convenience of the moment. Thus
|
|
would these experiences, so far from being
|
|
an obstacle to the pure experience philosophy,
|
|
serve as an excellent corroboration of its
|
|
truth.
|
|
|
|
First of all, then, it is a mistake to say, with
|
|
the objectors whom I began by citing, that
|
|
anger, love and fear are affections purely of the
|
|
mind. That, to a great extent at any rate, they
|
|
are simultaneously affections of the body is
|
|
proved by the whole literature of the James-
|
|
Lange theory of emotion.(1) All our pains,
|
|
moreover, are local, and we are always free to
|
|
speak of them in objective as well as in subjective
|
|
terms. We can say that we are aware of
|
|
a painful place, filling a certain bigness in our
|
|
organism, or we can say that we are inwardly
|
|
in a 'state' of pain. All our adjectives of
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. _The_Principles_of_Psychology_, vol. II, ch. XXV; and "The
|
|
Physical Basis of Emotion," _The_Psychological_Review_, vol. I, 1894,
|
|
p. 516.]
|
|
|
|
worth are similarly ambiguous -- I instanced
|
|
some of the ambiguities [in the first essay].(1)
|
|
Is the preciousness of a diamond a quality of
|
|
the gem? or is it a feeling in our mind? Practically
|
|
we treat it as both or as either, according
|
|
to the temporary direction of our thought.
|
|
'Beauty,' says Professor Santayana, 'is pleasure
|
|
objectified'; and in Sections 10 and 11 of
|
|
his work, _The_Sense_of_Beauty_, he treats in a
|
|
masterly way of this equivocal realm. The
|
|
various pleasures we receive from an object
|
|
may count as 'feelings' when we take them
|
|
singly, but when they combine in a total richness,
|
|
we call the result the 'beauty' of the
|
|
object, and treat it as an outer attribute which
|
|
our mind perceives. We discover beauty just as
|
|
we discover the physical properties of things.
|
|
Training is needed to make us expert in either
|
|
line. Single sensations also may be ambiguous.
|
|
Shall we say an 'agreeable degree of heat,' or
|
|
an 'agreeable feeling' occasioned by the degree
|
|
of heat? Either will do; and language would
|
|
lose most of its esthetic and rhetorical value
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [See above, pp. 34, 35.]
|
|
|
|
144
|
|
were we forbidden to project words primarily
|
|
connoting our affections upon the objects by
|
|
which the affections are aroused. The man
|
|
is really hateful; the action really mean; the
|
|
situation really tragic -- all in themselves and
|
|
quite apart from our opinion. We even go so
|
|
far as to talk of a weary road, a giddy height, a
|
|
jocund morning or a sullen sky; and the term
|
|
'indefinite' while usually applied only to our
|
|
apprehensions, functions as a fundamental
|
|
physical qualification of things in Spencer's
|
|
'law of evolution,' and doubtless passes with
|
|
most readers for all right.
|
|
|
|
Psychologists, studying our perceptions of
|
|
movement, have unearthed experiences in
|
|
which movement is felt in general but not
|
|
ascribed correctly to the body that really
|
|
moves. Thus in optical vertigo, caused by
|
|
unconscious movements of our eyes, both we
|
|
and the external universe appear to be in a
|
|
whirl. When clouds float by the moon, it is as
|
|
if both clouds and moon and we ourselves
|
|
shared in the motion. In the extraordinary
|
|
case of amnesia of the Rev. Mr. Hanna, published
|
|
|
|
145
|
|
by Sidis and Goodhart in their important
|
|
work on _Multiple_Personality_, we read that
|
|
when the patient first recovered consciousness
|
|
and "noticed an attendant walk across the
|
|
room, he identified the movement with that of
|
|
his own. He did not yet discriminate between
|
|
his own movements and those outside himself."(1)
|
|
Such experiences point to a primitive
|
|
stage of perception in which discriminations
|
|
afterwards needful have not yet been made.
|
|
A piece of experience of a determinate sort
|
|
is there, but there at first as a 'pure' fact.
|
|
Motion originally simply _is_; only later is it
|
|
confined to this thing or to that. Something
|
|
like this is true of every experience, however
|
|
complex, at the moment of its actual presence.
|
|
Let the reader arrest himself in the act of reading
|
|
this article now. _Now_ this is a pure experience,
|
|
a phenomenon, or datum, a mere _that_ or
|
|
content of fact. _'Reading'_simply_is,_is_there_;
|
|
and whether there for some one's consciousness,
|
|
or there for physical nature, is a question
|
|
not yet put. At the moment, it is there for
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Page 102.
|
|
|
|
146
|
|
neither; later we shall probably judge it to
|
|
have been there for both.
|
|
|
|
With the affectional experiences which we
|
|
are considering, the relatively 'pure' condition
|
|
lasts. In practical life no urgent need has
|
|
yet arisen for deciding whether to treat them
|
|
as rigorously mental or as rigorously physical
|
|
facts. So they remain equivocal; and, as the
|
|
world goes, their equivocality is one of their
|
|
great conveniences.
|
|
|
|
The shifting place of 'secondary qualities' in
|
|
the history of philosophy(1) is another excellent
|
|
proof of the fact that 'inner' and 'outer' are
|
|
not coefficients with which experiences come to
|
|
us aboriginally stamped, but are rather results
|
|
of a later classification performed by us for
|
|
particular needs. The common-sense stage of
|
|
thought is a perfectly definite practical halting-
|
|
place, the place where we ourselves can
|
|
proceed to act unhesitatingly. On this stage
|
|
of thought things act on each other as well
|
|
as on us by means of their secondary qualities.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. Janet and Seailles: _History_of_the_Problems_of_Philosophy_,
|
|
trans. by Monahan, part I, ch. III.]
|
|
|
|
Sound, as such, goes through the air
|
|
and can be intercepted. The heat of the fire
|
|
passes over, as such, into the water which it
|
|
sets a-boiling. It is the very light of the arc-
|
|
lamp which displaces the darkness of the midnight
|
|
street, etc. By engendering and translocating
|
|
just these qualities, actively efficacious
|
|
as they seem to be, we ourselves succeed in
|
|
altering nature so as to suit us; and until more
|
|
purely intellectual, as distinguished from practical,
|
|
needs had arisen, no one ever thought
|
|
of calling these qualities subjective. When,
|
|
however, Galileo, Descartes, and others found
|
|
it best for philosophic purposes to class sound,
|
|
heat, and light along with pain and pleasure
|
|
as purely mental phenomena, they could do so
|
|
with impunity.(1)
|
|
|
|
Even the primary qualities are undergoing
|
|
the same fate. Hardness and softness are effects
|
|
on us of atomic interactions, and the
|
|
atoms themselves are neither hard nor soft,
|
|
nor solid nor liquid. Size and shape are deemed
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. Descartes: _Meditation_ II; _Principles_of_Philosophy_,
|
|
part I, XLVIII.]
|
|
|
|
148
|
|
subjective by Kantians; time itself is subjective
|
|
according to many philosophers;(1) and
|
|
even the activity and causal efficacy which
|
|
lingered in physics long after secondary qualities
|
|
were banished are now treated as illusory
|
|
projections outwards of phenomena of our
|
|
own consciousness. There are no activities or
|
|
effects in nature, for the most intellectual
|
|
contemporary school of physical speculation.
|
|
Nature exhibits only _changes_, which habitually
|
|
coincide with one another so that their habits
|
|
are describable in simple 'laws.'(2)
|
|
|
|
There is no original spirituality or materiality
|
|
of being, intuitively discerned, then; but
|
|
only a translocation of experiences from one
|
|
world to another; a grouping of them with
|
|
one set or another of associates for definitely
|
|
practical or intellectual ends.
|
|
|
|
I will say nothing here of the persistent
|
|
ambiguity of _relations_. They are undeniable
|
|
parts of pure experience; yet, while common
|
|
sense and what I call radical empiricism stand
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. A.E. Taylor: _Elements_of_Metaphysics_, bk. III, ch. IV.]
|
|
|
|
2 [Cf. K. Pearson: _Grammar_of_Science_, ch. III.]
|
|
|
|
149
|
|
for their being objective, both rationalism and
|
|
the usual empiricism claim that they are exclusively
|
|
the 'work of the mind' -- the finite
|
|
mind or the absolute mind, as the case may be.
|
|
|
|
Turn now to those affective phenomena
|
|
which more directly concern us.
|
|
|
|
We soon learn to separate the ways in which
|
|
things appeal to our interests and emotions
|
|
from the ways in which they act upon one
|
|
another. It does not _work_ to assume that physical
|
|
objects are going to act outwardly by
|
|
their sympathetic or antipathetic qualities.
|
|
The beauty of a thing or its value is no force
|
|
that can be plotted in a polygon of compositions,
|
|
nor does its 'use' or 'significance' affect in
|
|
the minutest degree its vicissitudes or destiny
|
|
at the hands of physical nature. Chemical
|
|
'affinities' are a purely verbal metaphor; and,
|
|
as I just said, even such things as forces, tensions,
|
|
and activities can at a pinch be regarded
|
|
as anthropomorphic projections. So far, then,
|
|
as the physical world means the collection of
|
|
contents that determine in each other certain
|
|
|
|
150
|
|
regular changes, the whole collection of our
|
|
appreciative attributes has to be treated as
|
|
falling outside of it. If we mean by physical
|
|
nature whatever lies beyond the surface of our
|
|
bodies, these attributes are inert throughout
|
|
the whole extent of physical nature.
|
|
|
|
Why then do men leave them as ambiguous
|
|
as they do, and not class them decisively as
|
|
purely spiritual?
|
|
|
|
The reason would seem to be that, although
|
|
they are inert as regards the rest of physical
|
|
nature, they are not inert as regards that part
|
|
of physical nature which our own skin covers.
|
|
It is those very appreciative attributes of
|
|
things, their dangerousness, beauty, rarity,
|
|
utility, etc., that primarily appeal to our
|
|
attention. In our commerce with nature these
|
|
attributes are what give _emphasis_ to objects;
|
|
and for an object to be emphatic, whatever
|
|
spiritual fact it may mean, means also that it
|
|
produces immediate bodily effects upon us,
|
|
alterations of tone and tension, of heart-beat
|
|
and breathing, of vascular and visceral action.
|
|
The 'interesting' aspects of thins are thus
|
|
|
|
151
|
|
not wholly inert physically, though they be
|
|
active only in these small corners of physical
|
|
nature which our bodies occupy. That,
|
|
however, is enough to save them from being
|
|
classed as absolutely non-objective.
|
|
|
|
The attempt, if any one should make it, to
|
|
sort experience into two absolutely discrete
|
|
groups, with nothing but inertness in one of
|
|
them and nothing but activities in the other,
|
|
would thus receive one check. It would receive
|
|
another as soon as we examined the more
|
|
distinctively mental group; for though in that
|
|
group it be true that things do not act on one
|
|
another by their physical properties do not
|
|
dent each other or set fire to each other, they
|
|
yet act on each other in the most energetic
|
|
way by those very characters which are so
|
|
inert extracorporeally. It is by the interest
|
|
and importance that experiences have for us,
|
|
by the emotions they excite, and the purposes
|
|
they subserve, by their affective values, in
|
|
short, that their consecution in our several
|
|
conscious streams, as 'thoughts' of ours, is
|
|
mainly ruled. Desire introduces them; interest
|
|
|
|
152
|
|
holds them; fitness fixes their order and connection.
|
|
I need only refer for this aspect of
|
|
our mental life, to Wundt's article 'Ueber
|
|
psychische Causalitat,' which begins Volume
|
|
X. of his _Philosophische_Studien_.(1)
|
|
|
|
It thus appears that the ambiguous or amphibious
|
|
_status_ which we find our epithets of
|
|
value occupying is the most natural thing in
|
|
the world. It would, however, be an unnatural
|
|
status if the popular opinion which I cited
|
|
at the outset were correct. If 'physical' and
|
|
'mental' meant two different kinds of intrinsic
|
|
nature, immediately, intuitively, and
|
|
infallibly discernible, and each fixed forever
|
|
in whatever bit of experience it qualified,
|
|
one does not see how there could ever have
|
|
arisen any room for doubt or ambiguity.
|
|
But if, on the contrary, these words are
|
|
words of sorting, ambiguity is natural. For
|
|
then, as soon as the relations of a thing are
|
|
sufficiently various it can be sorted variously.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 It is enough for my present purpose if the appreciative characters
|
|
but _seem_ to act thus. Believers in an activity _an_sich_, other than
|
|
our mental experiences of activity, will find some farther reflections
|
|
on the subject in my address on 'The Experience of Activity.' [The next
|
|
essay. Cf. especially, p. 169. ED.]
|
|
|
|
153
|
|
Take a mass of carrion, for example, and the
|
|
'disgustingness' which for us is a part of the
|
|
experience. The sun caresses it, and the
|
|
zephyr wooes it as if it were a bed of roses.
|
|
So the disgustingness fails to _operate_ within
|
|
the realm of suns and breezes, -- it does not
|
|
function as a physical quality. But the carrion
|
|
'turns our stomach' by what seems a direct
|
|
operation -- it _does_ function physically, therefore,
|
|
in that limited part of physics. We can
|
|
treat it as physical or as non-physical according
|
|
as we take it in the narrower or in the wider
|
|
context, and conversely, of course, we must
|
|
treat it as non-mental or as mental.
|
|
|
|
Our body itself is the palmary instance of
|
|
the ambiguous. Sometimes I treat my body
|
|
purely as a part of outer nature. Sometimes,
|
|
again, I think of it as 'mine,' I sort it with
|
|
the 'me,' and then certain local changes and
|
|
determinations in it pass for spiritual happenings.
|
|
Its breathing is my 'thinking,' its sensorial
|
|
adjustments are my 'attention,' its
|
|
kinesthetic alterations are my 'efforts,' its
|
|
visceral perturbations are my 'emotions.'
|
|
|
|
154
|
|
The obstinate controversies that have arisen
|
|
over such statements as these (which sound so
|
|
paradoxical, and which can yet be made so
|
|
seriously) prove how hard it is to decide by
|
|
bare introspection what it is in experiences
|
|
that shall make them either spiritual or
|
|
material. It surely can be nothing intrinsic in
|
|
the individual experience. It is their way of
|
|
behaving towards each other, their system of
|
|
relations, their functions; and all these things
|
|
vary with the context in which we find it
|
|
opportune to consider them.
|
|
|
|
I think I may conclude, then (and I hope
|
|
that my readers are now ready to conclude
|
|
with me), that the pretended spirituality of
|
|
our emotions and of our attributes of value,
|
|
so far from proving an objection to the philosophy
|
|
of pure experience, does, when rightly
|
|
discussed and accounted for, serve as one of
|
|
its best corroborations.
|
|
|
|
155
|
|
|
|
VI
|
|
|
|
THE EXPERIENCE OF ACTIVITY(1)
|
|
|
|
BRETHREN OF THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION:
|
|
|
|
IN casting about me for a subject for your
|
|
President this year to talk about it has seemed
|
|
to me that our experiences of activity would
|
|
form a good one; not only because the topic
|
|
is so naturally interesting, and because it has
|
|
lately led to a good deal of rather inconclusive
|
|
discussion, but because I myself am growing
|
|
more and more interested in a certain systematic
|
|
way of handling questions, and want to get
|
|
others interested also, and this question strikes
|
|
me as one in which, although I am painfully
|
|
aware of my inability to communicate new
|
|
discoveries or to reach definitive conclusions,
|
|
I yet can show, in a rather definite manner,
|
|
how the method works.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 President's Address before the American Psychological Association,
|
|
Philadelphia Meeting, December, 1904. [Reprinted from _The_
|
|
_Psychological_Review_, vol. XII, No. 1, Jan., 1905. Also reprinted
|
|
with some omissions, as Appendix B, _A_Pluralistic_Universe, pp.
|
|
370-394. Pp. 166-167 have also been reprinted in
|
|
_Some_Problems_of_Philosophy_, p. 212. The present essay is referred to
|
|
in _Ibid._, p. 219, note. The author's corrections have been adopted
|
|
for the present text. ED.]
|
|
|
|
156
|
|
|
|
The way of handling things I speak of, is, as
|
|
you already will have suspected, that known
|
|
sometimes as the pragmatic method, sometimes
|
|
as humanism, sometimes as Deweyism,
|
|
and in France, by some of the disciples of
|
|
Bergson, as the Philosophie nouvelle. Professor
|
|
Woodbridge's _Journal_of_Philosophy_(1) seems
|
|
unintentionally to have become a sort of meeting
|
|
place for those who follow these tendencies
|
|
in America. There is only a dim identity
|
|
among them; and the most that can be said at
|
|
present is that some sort of gestation seems to
|
|
be in the atmosphere, and that almost any day
|
|
a man with a genius for finding the right word
|
|
for things may hit upon some unifying and
|
|
conciliating formula that will make so much
|
|
vaguely similar aspiration crystallize into
|
|
more definite form.
|
|
|
|
I myself have given the name of 'radical
|
|
empiricism' to that version of the tendency in
|
|
question which I prefer; and I propose, if you
|
|
will now let me, to illustrate what I mean by
|
|
radical empiricism, by applying it to activity
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [_The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_Scientific_Methods_.]
|
|
|
|
157
|
|
as an example, hoping at the same time incidentally
|
|
to leave the general problem of activity
|
|
in a slightly -- I fear very slightly -- more
|
|
manageable shape than before.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bradley calls the question of activity a
|
|
scandal to philosophy, and if one turns to the
|
|
current literature of the subject -- his own
|
|
writings included -- one easily gathers what
|
|
he means. The opponents cannot even understand
|
|
one another. Mr. Bradley says to Mr.
|
|
Ward: "I do not care what your oracle is,
|
|
and your preposterous psychology may here be
|
|
gospel if you please; . . . but if the revelation
|
|
does contain a meaning, I will commit
|
|
myself to this: either the oracle is so confused
|
|
that its signification is not discoverable, or,
|
|
upon the other hand, if it can be pinned down
|
|
to any definite statement, then that statement
|
|
will be false."(1) Mr. Ward in turn says
|
|
of Mr. Bradley: "I cannot even imagine the
|
|
state of mind to which his description applies.
|
|
. . . [It] reads like an unintentional travesty
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 _Appearance_and_Reality_, second edition. pp. 116-117. --
|
|
Obviously written _at_ Ward, though Ward's name is not mentioned
|
|
|
|
158
|
|
of Herbartian psychology by one who has
|
|
tried to improve upon it without being at the
|
|
pains to master it."(1) Munsterberg excludes a
|
|
view opposed to his own by saying that with
|
|
any one who holds it a _Verstandigung_ with
|
|
him is "_grundsatzlich_ausgeschlosen_"; and
|
|
Royce, in a review of _Stoud_,(2) hauls him over
|
|
the coals at great length for defending 'efficacy'
|
|
in a way which I, for one, never gathered
|
|
from reading him, and which I have
|
|
heard Stout himself say was quite foreign to
|
|
the intention of his text.
|
|
|
|
In these discussion distinct questions are
|
|
habitually jumbled and different points of
|
|
view are talked of _durcheinander_.
|
|
|
|
(1) There is a psychological question: "Have
|
|
we perceptions of activity? and if so, what are
|
|
they like, and when and where do we have
|
|
them?"
|
|
|
|
(2) There is a metaphysical question: "Is
|
|
there a _fact_ of activity? and if so, what idea
|
|
must we frame of it? What is it like? and what
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [_Mind_, vol. XII, 1887, pp. 573-574.]
|
|
|
|
2 _Mind_, N.S., vol. VI, [1897], p. 379.
|
|
|
|
159
|
|
does it do, if it does anything?" And finally
|
|
there is a logical question:
|
|
|
|
(3) "Whence do we _know_ activity? By our
|
|
own feelings of it solely? or by some other
|
|
source of information?" Throughout page
|
|
after page of the literature one knows not
|
|
which of these questions is before one; and
|
|
mere description of the surface-show of experience
|
|
is proffered as if it implicitly answered
|
|
every one of them. No one of the disputants,
|
|
moreover, tries to show what pragmatic consequences
|
|
his own view would carry, or what
|
|
assignable particular differences in any one's
|
|
experience it would make if his adversary's
|
|
were triumphant.
|
|
|
|
It seems to me that if radical empiricism be
|
|
good for anything, it ought, with its pragmatic
|
|
method and its principle of pure experience,
|
|
to be able to avoid such tangles, or at least
|
|
to simplify them somewhat. The pragmatic
|
|
method starts from the postulate that there is
|
|
no difference of truth that does n't make a
|
|
difference of fact somewhere; and it seeks to
|
|
determine the meaning of all differences of
|
|
160
|
|
opinion by making the discussion hinge as soon
|
|
as possible upon some practical or particular
|
|
issue. The principle of pure experience is also
|
|
a methodological postulate. Nothing shall be admitted
|
|
as fact, it says, except what can be
|
|
experienced at some definite time by some experient;
|
|
and for every feature of fact ever so
|
|
experienced, a definite place must be found
|
|
somewhere in the final system of reality. In
|
|
other words: Everything real must be experiencable
|
|
somewhere, and every kind of thing
|
|
experienced must be somewhere real.
|
|
|
|
Armed with these rules of method let us see
|
|
what face the problems of activity present to us.
|
|
|
|
By the principle of pure experience, either
|
|
the word 'activity' must have no meaning at
|
|
all, or else the original type and model of what
|
|
it means must lie in some concrete kind of
|
|
experience that can be definitely pointed out.
|
|
Whatever ulterior judgements we may eventually
|
|
come to make regarding activity, _that_sort_
|
|
of thing will be what the judgements are about.
|
|
The first step to take, then, is to ask where in
|
|
the stream of experience we seem to find what
|
|
|
|
161
|
|
we speak of as activity. What we are to think
|
|
of the activity thus found will be a later
|
|
question.
|
|
|
|
Now it is obvious that we are tempted to
|
|
affirm activity wherever we find anything
|
|
_going_on_. Taken in the broadest sense, any
|
|
apprehension of something _doing_, is an experience
|
|
of activity. Were our world describable
|
|
only by the words 'nothing happening,'
|
|
'nothing changing,' 'nothing doing,' we should
|
|
unquestionably call it an 'inactive' world.
|
|
Bare activity then, as we may call it, means
|
|
the bare fact of event or change. 'Change taking
|
|
place' is a unique content of experience,
|
|
one of those 'conjunctive' objects which radical
|
|
empiricism seeks so earnestly to rehabilitate
|
|
and preserve. The sense of activity is thus
|
|
in the broadest and vaguest way synonymous
|
|
with the sense of 'life.' We should feel our
|
|
own subjective life at least, even in noticing
|
|
and proclaiming an otherwise inactive world.
|
|
Our own reaction on its monotony would be
|
|
the one thing experienced there in the form of
|
|
something coming to pass.
|
|
|
|
162
|
|
|
|
This seems to be what certain writers have
|
|
in mind when they insist that for an experient
|
|
to be at all is to be active. It seems to justify,
|
|
or at any rate to explain, Mr. Ward's expression
|
|
that we _are_ only as we are active,(1) for
|
|
we _are_ only as experients; and it rules out Mr.
|
|
Bradley's contention that "there is no original
|
|
experience of anything like activity."(2) What
|
|
we ought to say about activities thus elementary,
|
|
whose they are, what they effect, or
|
|
whether indeed they effect anything at all --
|
|
these are later questions, to be answered only
|
|
when the field of experience is enlarged.
|
|
|
|
Bare activity would thus be predicable,
|
|
though there were no definite direction, no
|
|
actor, and no aim. Mere restless zigzag movement,
|
|
or a wild _Ideenflucht_, or _Rhapsodie_der_
|
|
_Wharnehmungen_, as Kant would say,(2) would
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 _Naturalism_and_Agnosticism_, vol. II, p.245. One thinks naturally
|
|
of the peripatetic _actus_primus_ and _actus_secundus_ here. ["Actus
|
|
autem est _duplex_: _primus_ et _secundus_. Actus quidem primus est
|
|
forma, et integritas sei. Actus autem secundus est operatio." Thomas
|
|
Aquinas: _Summa_Theologica_, edition of Leo XIII, (1894), vol. I,
|
|
p. 391. Cf. also Blanc: _Dictionaire_de_Philosophie_, under 'acte.'
|
|
ED.]
|
|
|
|
2 [_Appearance_and_Reality_, second edition, p. 116.]
|
|
|
|
3 [_Kritik_der_reinen_Vernunft,_Werke_, (1905), vol. IV, p. 110
|
|
(trans. by Max Muller, second edition, p. 128).]
|
|
|
|
constitute and active as distinguished from an
|
|
inactive world.
|
|
|
|
But in this actual world of ours, as it is
|
|
given, a part at least of the activity comes
|
|
with definite direction; it comes with desire
|
|
and a sense of goal; it comes complicated with
|
|
resistances which it overcomes or succumbs to,
|
|
and with the efforts which the feeling of resistance
|
|
so often provokes; and it is in complex
|
|
experiences like these that the notions of
|
|
distinct agents, and of passivity as opposed
|
|
to activity arise. Here also the notion of
|
|
causal efficacy comes to birth. Perhaps the
|
|
most elaborate work ever done in descriptive
|
|
psychology has been the analysis by various
|
|
recent writers of the more complex activity-
|
|
situations.(1) In their descriptions, exquisitely
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 I refer to such descriptive work as Ladd's (_Psychology,_
|
|
_Descriptive_and_Explanatory_, part I, chap. V, part II, chap. XI, part
|
|
III, chaps. XXV and XXVI); as Sully's (_The_Human_Mind_, part V); as
|
|
Stout's (_Analytic_Psychology_, book I, chap. vi, and book II, chaps. I,
|
|
II, and III); as Bradley's (in his long series of articles on Psychology
|
|
in _Mind)_; as Titchener's (_Outline_of_Psychology_, part I, chap. vi);
|
|
as Shand's (_Mind_, N.S., III, 449; IV, 450; VI, 289); as Ward's
|
|
(_Mind_, XII, 67; 564); as Loveday's (_Mind_, N.S., X, 455); as
|
|
Lipp's (Vom Fuhlen, Wollen Und Denken, 1902, chaps II, IV, VI);
|
|
and as Bergson's (_Revue_Philosophique_, LIII, 1) -- to mention only
|
|
a few writings which I immediately recall.
|
|
|
|
subtle some of them,91) the activity appears as
|
|
the _gestaltqualitat_ or the _fundirte_inhalt_ (or as
|
|
whatever else you may please to call the conjunctive
|
|
form) which the content falls into
|
|
when we experience it in the ways which the
|
|
describers set forth. Those factors in those
|
|
relations are what we mean by activity-situations;
|
|
and to the possible enumeration and
|
|
accumulation of their circumstances and ingredients
|
|
there would seem to be no natural
|
|
bound. Every hour of human life could contribute
|
|
to the picture gallery; and this is the
|
|
only fault that one can find with such descriptive
|
|
industry -- where is it going to stop?
|
|
Ought we to listen forever to verbal pictures
|
|
of what we have already in concrete form in
|
|
our own breasts?(2) They never take us off the
|
|
superficial plane. We knew the facts already --
|
|
less spread out and separated, to be sure -- but
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Their existence forms a curious commentary on Prof. Munsterberg's
|
|
dogma that will-attitudes are not describable. He himself has
|
|
contributed in a superior way to their description, both in his
|
|
_Willenshandlung_, and in his _Grundzuge_ [_der_Psychologie_], part II,
|
|
chap. IX, section 7.
|
|
|
|
2 I ought myself to cry _peccavi_, having been a voluminous sinner in
|
|
my own chapter on the will. [_Principles_of_Psychology_, vol. II, chap.
|
|
XXVI.]
|
|
|
|
165
|
|
we knew them still. We always felt our own
|
|
activity, for example, as 'the expansion of an
|
|
idea with which our Self is identified, against
|
|
an obstacle';(1) and the following out of such a
|
|
definition through a multitude of cases elaborates
|
|
the obvious so as to be little more than an
|
|
exercise in synonymic speech.
|
|
|
|
All the descriptions have to trace familiar
|
|
outlines, and to use familiar terms. The activity
|
|
is, for example, attributed either to a
|
|
physical or to a mental agent, and is either
|
|
aimless or directed. If directed it shows tendency.
|
|
The tendency may or may not be resisted.
|
|
If not, we call the activity immanent, as
|
|
when a body moves in empty space by its momentum,
|
|
or our thoughts wander at their own
|
|
sweet will. If resistance is met, _its_ agent complicates
|
|
the situation. If now, in spite of resistance,
|
|
the original tendency continues, effort
|
|
makes its appearance, and along with effort,
|
|
strain or squeeze. Will, in the narrower sense
|
|
of the word, then comes upon the scene, whenever,
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. F.H. Bradley, _Appearance_and_Reality_, second edition, pp.
|
|
96-97.]
|
|
|
|
166
|
|
along with the tendency, the strain and
|
|
squeeze are sustained. But the resistance may
|
|
be great enough to check the tendency, or even
|
|
to reverse its path. In that case, we (if 'we' were
|
|
the original agents or subjects of the tendency)
|
|
are overpowered. The phenomenon turns into
|
|
one of tension simply, or of necessity succumbed-
|
|
to, according as the opposing power is
|
|
only equal, or is superior to ourselves.
|
|
|
|
Whosoever describes an experience in such
|
|
terms as these describes an experience _of_ activity.
|
|
If the word have any meaning, it must
|
|
denote what there is found. _There_ is complete
|
|
activity in its original and first intention.
|
|
What is 'known-as' is what there appears.
|
|
The experiencer of such a situation possesses all
|
|
that the idea contains. He feels the tendency,
|
|
the obstacle, the will, the strain, the triumph, or
|
|
the passive giving up, just as he feels the time,
|
|
the space, the swiftness or intensity, the movement,
|
|
the weight and color, the pain and pleasure,
|
|
the complexity, or whatever remaining
|
|
characters the situation may involve. He goes
|
|
through all that ever can be imagined where
|
|
|
|
167
|
|
activity is supposed. If we suppose activities
|
|
to go on outside of our experience, it is in forms
|
|
like these that we must suppose them, or else
|
|
give them some other name; for the word
|
|
'activity' has no imaginable content whatever
|
|
save these experiences of process, obstruction,
|
|
striving, strain, or release, ultimate _qualia_ as
|
|
they are of the life given us to be known.
|
|
|
|
Were this the end of the matter, one might
|
|
think that whenever we had successfully lived
|
|
through an activity-situation we should have
|
|
to be permitted, without provoking contradiction,
|
|
to say that we had been really active,
|
|
that we had met real resistance and had really
|
|
prevailed. Lotze somewhere says that to be an
|
|
entity all that is necessary is to _gelten_ as an
|
|
entity, to operate, or be felt, experienced, recognized,
|
|
or in any way realized, as such.(1) in
|
|
our activity-experiences the activity assuredly
|
|
fulfils Lotze's demand. It makes itself
|
|
_gelten_. It is witnessed at its work. no matter
|
|
what activities there may really be in this extraordinary
|
|
universe of ours, it is impossible
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. above, p. 59, note.]
|
|
|
|
168
|
|
for us to conceive of any one of them being
|
|
either lived through or authentically known
|
|
otherwise than in this dramatic shape of something
|
|
sustaining a felt purpose against felt
|
|
obstacles and overcoming or being overcome.
|
|
What 'sustaining' means here is clear to anyone
|
|
who has lived through the experience, but to
|
|
no one else; just as 'loud,' 'red,' 'sweet,' mean
|
|
something only to beings with ears, eyes, and
|
|
tongues. The _percipi_ in these originals of experience
|
|
is the _esse_; the curtain is the picture.
|
|
If there is anything hiding in the background,
|
|
it ought not to be called activity, but should
|
|
get itself another name.
|
|
|
|
This seems so obviously true that one might
|
|
well experience astonishment at finding so
|
|
many of the ablest writers on the subject
|
|
flatly denying that the activity we live through
|
|
in these situations is real. Merely to feel active
|
|
is not to be active, in their sight. The agents
|
|
that appear in the experience are not real
|
|
agents, the resistances do not really resist, the
|
|
effects that appear are not really affects at all.(1)
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 _Verborum_gratia_: "The feeling of activity is not able, _qua_
|
|
feeling, to tell us anything about activity" (Loveday: _Mind_, N.S.,
|
|
vol, X, [1901], p. 463; "A sensation or feeling or sense of activity ...
|
|
is not, looked at in another way, an experience _of_ activity at all.
|
|
It is a mere sensation shut up within which you could by no reflection
|
|
get the idea of activity. . . . Whether this experience is or is not
|
|
later on a character essential to our perception and our idea of
|
|
activity, it, as it comes first, is only so for extraneous reasons and
|
|
only so for an outside observer" (Bradley, _Appearance_and_Reality_,
|
|
second edition, p.605); "In dem Tatigkeitsgefuhle liegt an sich nicht
|
|
der geringste Beweis fur das Vorhandesein einer psychischen Tatigkeit"
|
|
(Munsterberg: _Grundzuge_der_Psychologie_). I could multiply similar
|
|
quotations and would have introduced some of them into my text to make
|
|
it more concrete, save that the mingling of different points of view in
|
|
most of these author's discussions (not in Munsterberg's) make it
|
|
impossible to disentangle exactly what they mean. I am sure in any
|
|
case, to be accused of misrepresenting them totally, even in this note,
|
|
by omission of the context, so the less I name names and the more I
|
|
stick to abstract characterization of a merely possible style of
|
|
opinion, the safer it will be. And apropos of misunderstandings, I may
|
|
add to this note a complaint on my own account. Professor Stoud, in the
|
|
excellent chapter on 'Mental Activity,' in vol. I of his
|
|
_Analytic_Psychology_, takes me to task for identifying spiritual
|
|
activity with certain muscular feelings and gives quotations to bear him
|
|
out. They are from certain paragraphs on 'the Self' in which my attempt
|
|
was to show what the central nucleus of the activities that we call
|
|
'ours' is. [_Principles_of_Psychology_, vol. I, pp. 299-305.] I found
|
|
it in certain intracephalic movements which we habitually oppose, as
|
|
'subjective,' to the activities of the transcorporeal world. I sought
|
|
to show that there is no direct evidence that we feel the activity of an
|
|
inner spiritual agent as such (I should now say the activity of
|
|
'consciousness' as such, see [the first essay], 'Does Consciousness
|
|
Exist?'). There are, in fact, three distinguishable 'activities' in the
|
|
field of discussion: the elementary activity involved in the mere
|
|
_that_ of experience, in the fact that _something_ is going on, and the
|
|
farther specification of this _something_ into two _whats_, an activity
|
|
felt as 'ours,' and an activity ascribed to objects. Stout, as I
|
|
apprehend him, identifies 'our' activity with that of the total
|
|
experience-process, and when I circumscribe it as a part thereof,
|
|
accuses me of treating it as a sort of external appendage to itself
|
|
(Stout: op.cit., vol. I, pp. 162-163), as if I 'separated the activity
|
|
from the process which is active.' But all the processes in question
|
|
are active, and their activity is inseparable from their being. My book
|
|
raised only the question of _which_ activity deserved the name of
|
|
'ours.' So far as we are 'persons,' and contrasted and opposed to an
|
|
'environment,' movements in our body figure as our activities; and I am
|
|
unable to find any other activities that are ours in this strictly
|
|
personal sense. There is a wider sense in which the whole 'choir of
|
|
heaven and furniture of the earth,' and their activities, are ours, for
|
|
they are our 'objects.' But 'we' are here only another name for the
|
|
total process of experience, another name for all that is, in fact; and
|
|
I was dealing with the personal and individualized self exclusively in
|
|
the passages with which Professor Stout finds fault.
|
|
|
|
The individualized self, which I believe to be the only thing
|
|
properly called self, is a part of the content of the world experienced.
|
|
The world experienced (otherwise called the 'field of consciousness')
|
|
comes at all times with our body at its centre, centre of vision, centre
|
|
of action, centre of interest. Where the body is is 'here': when the
|
|
body acts is 'now'; what the body touches is 'this'; all other things
|
|
are 'there' and 'then' and 'that.' These words of emphasized position
|
|
imply a systematization of things with reference to a focus of action
|
|
and interest which lies in the body; and the systematization is now so
|
|
instinctive (was it ever not so?) that no developed or active experience
|
|
exists for us at all except in that ordered form. So far as 'thoughts'
|
|
and 'feelings' can be active, there activity terminates in the activity
|
|
of the body, and only through first arousing its activities can they
|
|
begin to change those of the rest of the world. [Cf. also
|
|
_A_Pluralistic_Universe_, p. 344, note 8. ED.] The body is the storm
|
|
centre, the origin of co-ordinates, the constant place of stress in all
|
|
that experience-train. Everything circles round it, and is felt from
|
|
its point of view. The word 'I,' then, is primarily a noun of position,
|
|
just like 'this' and 'here.' Activities attached to 'this' position
|
|
have prerogative emphasis, and, if activities have feelings, must be
|
|
felt in a particular way. The word 'my designates the kind of emphasis.
|
|
I see no inconsistency whatever in defending, on the one hand, 'my'
|
|
activities as unique and opposed to those of outer nature, and, on the
|
|
other hand, in affirming, after introspection, that they consist in
|
|
movements in the head. The 'my' of them is the emphasis, the feeling of
|
|
perspective-interest in which they are dyed.
|
|
|
|
169
|
|
It is evident from this that mere descriptive
|
|
analysis of any one of our activity-experiences
|
|
is not the whole story, that there is something
|
|
|
|
170
|
|
still to tell _about_ them that has led such able
|
|
writers to conceive of a _Simon-pure_ activity,
|
|
an activity _an_sich_, that does, and does n't
|
|
|
|
171
|
|
merely appear to us to do, and compared with
|
|
whose real doing all this phenomenal activity
|
|
is but a specious sham.
|
|
|
|
The metaphysical question opens here; and
|
|
I think that the state of mind of one possessed
|
|
by it is often something like this: "It is all very
|
|
well," we may imagine him saying, "to talk
|
|
about certain experience-series taking on the
|
|
form of feelings of activity, just as they might
|
|
take on musical or geometric forms. Suppose
|
|
that they do so; suppose we feel a will to stand
|
|
a strain. Does our feeling do more than _record_
|
|
the fact that the strain is sustained? The _real_
|
|
activity, meanwhile, is the _doing_ of the fact;
|
|
and what is the doing made of before the record
|
|
is made. What in the will _enables_ it to act thus?
|
|
And these trains of experience themselves, in
|
|
which activities appear, what makes them _go_
|
|
at all? Does the activity in one bit of experience
|
|
bring the next bit into being? As an empiricist
|
|
|
|
172
|
|
you cannot say so, for you have just
|
|
declared activity to be only a kind of synthetic
|
|
object, or conjunctive relation experienced between
|
|
bits of experience already made. But
|
|
what made them at all? What propels experience
|
|
_uberhaupt_ into being? _There_ is the activity
|
|
that _operates_; the activity _felt_ is only
|
|
its superficial sign."
|
|
|
|
To the metaphysical question, popped upon
|
|
us in this way, I must pay serious attention
|
|
ere I end my remarks; but, before doing so, let
|
|
me show that without leaving the immediate
|
|
reticulations of experience, or asking what
|
|
makes activity itself act, we still find the distinction
|
|
between less real and more real activities
|
|
forced upon us, and are driven to much
|
|
soul-searching on the purely phenomenal plane.
|
|
|
|
We must not forget, namely, in talking of
|
|
the ultimate character of our activity-experiences,
|
|
that each of them is but a portion of a
|
|
wider world, one link in the vast chain of processes
|
|
of experience out of which history is
|
|
made. Each partial process, to him who lives
|
|
through it, defines itself by its origin and its
|
|
|
|
173
|
|
goal; but to an observer with a wider mind-
|
|
span who should live outside of it, that goal
|
|
would appear but as a provisional halting-
|
|
place, and the subjectively felt activity would
|
|
be seen to continue into objective activities
|
|
that led far beyond. We thus acquire a habit,
|
|
in discussing activity-experiences, of defining
|
|
them by their relation to something more. If
|
|
an experience be one of narrow span, it will be
|
|
mistaken as to what activity it is and whose.
|
|
You think that _you_ are acting while you are
|
|
only obeying someone's push. You think you
|
|
are doing _this_, but you are doing something of
|
|
which you do not dream. For instance, you
|
|
think you are but drinking this glass; but you
|
|
are really creating the liver-cirrhosis that will
|
|
end your days. You think you are just driving
|
|
this bargain, but, as Stevenson says somewhere,
|
|
you are laying down a link in the policy
|
|
of mankind.
|
|
|
|
Generally speaking, the onlooker, with his
|
|
wider field of vision, regards the _ultimate_outcome_
|
|
of an activity as what it is more really
|
|
doing; and _the_most_previous_agent_ ascertainable,
|
|
|
|
174
|
|
being the first source of action, he regards
|
|
as the most real agent in the field. The others
|
|
but transmit the agent's impulse; on him
|
|
we put responsibility; we name him when one
|
|
asks us 'Who's to blame?'
|
|
|
|
But the most previous agents ascertainable,
|
|
instead of being a longer span, are often of
|
|
much shorter span than the activity in view.
|
|
Brain-cells are our best example. My brain-
|
|
cells are believed to excite each other from
|
|
next to next (by contiguous transmission of
|
|
katabolic alteration, let us say) and to have
|
|
been doing so long before this present stretch
|
|
of lecturing-activity on my part began. If any
|
|
one cell-group stops its activity, the lecturing
|
|
will cease or show disorder of form. _Cessante_
|
|
_causa,_cessat_et_effectus_ -- does not this look as
|
|
if the short-span brain activiteis were the more
|
|
real activities, and the lecturing activities
|
|
on my part only their effects? Moreover, as
|
|
Hume so clearly pointed out,(1) in my mental
|
|
activity-situation the words physically to be
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [_Enquiry_Concerning_Human_Understanding_, sect VII, part I,
|
|
Selby-Bigge's edition, pp. 65 ff.]
|
|
|
|
175
|
|
uttered are represented as the activity's immediate
|
|
goal. These words, however, cannot
|
|
be uttered without intermediate physical processes
|
|
in the bulb and vagi nerves, which processes
|
|
nevertheless fail to figure in the mental
|
|
activity-series at all. That series, therefore,
|
|
since it leaves out vitally real steps of action,
|
|
cannot represent the real activities. It is something
|
|
purely subjective; the _facts_ of activity
|
|
are elsewhere. They are something far more
|
|
interstitial, so to speak, than what my feelings
|
|
record.
|
|
|
|
The _real_ facts of activity that have in point
|
|
of fact been systematically pleaded for by
|
|
philosophers have, so far as my information
|
|
goes, been of three principal types.
|
|
|
|
The first type takes a consciousness of wider
|
|
time-span than ours to be the vehicle of the
|
|
more real activity. Its will is the agent, and its
|
|
purpose is the action done.
|
|
|
|
The second type assumes that 'ideas' struggling
|
|
with one another are the agents, and
|
|
that the prevalence of one set of them is the
|
|
action.
|
|
|
|
176
|
|
|
|
The third type believes that never-cells are
|
|
the agents, and that resultant motor discharges
|
|
are the acts achieved.
|
|
|
|
Now if we must de-realize our immediately
|
|
felt activity-situations for the benefit of either
|
|
of these types of substitute, we ought to know
|
|
what the substitution practically involves.
|
|
_What_practical_difference_ought_it_to_make_if_,
|
|
instead of saying naively that 'I' am active
|
|
now in delivering this address, I say that _a_
|
|
_wider_thinker_is_active_, or that _certain_ideas_are_
|
|
_active_, or that _certain_nerve-cells_are_active_, in
|
|
producing the result?
|
|
|
|
This would be the pragmatic meaning of the
|
|
three hypotheses. Let us take them in succession
|
|
in seeking a reply.
|
|
|
|
If we assume a wider thinker, it is evident
|
|
that his purposes envelope mine. I am really
|
|
lecturing _for_ him; and although I cannot surely
|
|
know to what end, yet if I take him religiously,
|
|
I can trust it to be a good end, and willingly
|
|
connive. I can be happy in thinking that my
|
|
activity transmits his impulse, and that his
|
|
ends prolong my own. Son long as I take him
|
|
|
|
177
|
|
religiously, in short, he does not de-realize my
|
|
activities. He tends rather to corroborate the
|
|
reality of them, so long as I believe both them
|
|
and him to be good.
|
|
|
|
When now we turn to ideas, the case is different,
|
|
inasmuch as ideas are supposed by the
|
|
association psychology to influence each other
|
|
only from next to next. The 'span' of an idea
|
|
or pair of ideas, is assumed to be much smaller
|
|
instead of being larger than that of my total
|
|
conscious field. The same results may get
|
|
worked out in both cases, for this address is
|
|
being given anyhow. But the ideas supposed
|
|
to 'really' work it out had no prevision of the
|
|
whole of it; and if I was lecturing for an absolute
|
|
thinker in the former case, so, by similar
|
|
reasoning, are my ideas now lecturing for me,
|
|
that is, accomplishing unwittingly a result
|
|
which I approve and adopt. But, when this
|
|
passing lecture is over, there is nothing in the
|
|
bare notion that ideas have been its agents
|
|
that would seem to guarantee that my present
|
|
purposes in lecturing will be prolonged. _I_ may
|
|
have ulterior developments in view; but there
|
|
|
|
178
|
|
is no certainty that my ideas as such will wish
|
|
to, or be able to, work them out.
|
|
|
|
The like is true if nerve-cells be the agents.
|
|
The activity of a nerve-cell must be conceived
|
|
of as a tendency of exceedingly short reach, an
|
|
'impulse' barely spanning the way to the next
|
|
cell -- for surely that amount of actual 'process'
|
|
must be 'experienced' by the cells if what
|
|
happens between them is to deserve the name
|
|
of activity at all. But here again the gross
|
|
resultant, as _I_ perceive it, is indifferent to the
|
|
agents, and neither wished or willed or foreseen.
|
|
Their being agents now congruous with
|
|
my will gives me no guarantee that like results
|
|
will recur again from their activity. In point
|
|
of fact, all sorts of other results do occur. My
|
|
mistakes, impotencies, perversions, mental obstructions,
|
|
and frustrations generally, are also
|
|
results of the activity of cells. Although these
|
|
are letting me lecture now, on other occasions
|
|
they make me do things that I would willingly
|
|
not do.
|
|
|
|
The question _Whose_is_the_real_activity?_ is
|
|
thus tantamount to the question _What_will_be_
|
|
|
|
179
|
|
_the_actual_results?_ Its interest is dramatic; how
|
|
will things work out? If the agents are of
|
|
one sort, one way; if of another sort, they may
|
|
work out differently. The pragmatic
|
|
meaning of the various alternatives, in short,
|
|
is great. It makes no merely verbal difference
|
|
which opinion we take up.
|
|
|
|
You see it is the old dispute come back!
|
|
Materialism and teleology; elementary short-
|
|
span actions summing themselves 'blindly,' or
|
|
far foreseen ideals coming with effort into act.
|
|
|
|
Naively we believe, and humanly and dramatically
|
|
we like to believe, that activities
|
|
both of wider and of narrower span are at
|
|
work in life together, that both are real, and
|
|
that the long-span tendencies yoke the others
|
|
in their service, encouraging them in the right
|
|
direction, and damping them when they tend
|
|
in other ways. But how to represent clearly
|
|
the _modus_operandi_ of such steering of small
|
|
tendencies by large ones is a problem which
|
|
metaphysical thinkers will have to ruminate
|
|
upon for many years to come. Even if such
|
|
control should eventually grow clearly picturable,
|
|
|
|
180
|
|
the question how far it is successfully
|
|
exerted in this actual world can be answered
|
|
only by investigating the details of fact. No
|
|
philosophic knowledge of the general nature
|
|
and constitution of tendencies, or of the relation
|
|
of larger to smaller ones, can help us to
|
|
predict which of all the various competing
|
|
tendencies that interest us in this universe are
|
|
likeliest to prevail. We know as an empirical
|
|
fact that far-seeing tendencies often carry out
|
|
their purpose, but we know also that they are
|
|
often defeated by the failure of some contemptibly
|
|
small process on which success depends.
|
|
A little thrombus in a statesman's
|
|
meningeal artery will throw an empire out of
|
|
gear. I can therefore not even hint at any solution
|
|
of the pragmatic issue. I have only wished
|
|
to show you that that issue is what gives the
|
|
real interest to all inquiries into what kinds of
|
|
activity may be real. Are the forces that really
|
|
act in the world more foreseeing or more blind?
|
|
As between 'our' activities as 'we' experience
|
|
them, and those of our ideas, or of our brain-
|
|
cells, the issue is well-defined.
|
|
|
|
181
|
|
|
|
I said a while back(1) that I should return to
|
|
the 'metaphysical' question before ending; so,
|
|
with a few words about that, I will now close
|
|
my remarks.
|
|
|
|
In whatever form we hear this question propounded,
|
|
I think that it always arises from two
|
|
things, a belief that _causality_ must be exerted
|
|
in activity, and a wonder as to how causality is
|
|
made. If we take an activity-situation at its
|
|
face-value, it seems as if we caught _in_flagrante_
|
|
_delicto_ the very power that makes facts come
|
|
and be. I now am eagerly striving, for example,
|
|
to get this truth which I seem half to
|
|
perceive, into words which shall make it show
|
|
more clearly. If the words come, it will seem as
|
|
if the striving itself had drawn or pulled them
|
|
into actuality out from the state of merely
|
|
possible being in which they were. How is this
|
|
feat performed? How does the pulling _pull?_
|
|
How do I get my hold on words not yet existent,
|
|
and when they come by what means have
|
|
I _made_ them come? Really it is the problem of
|
|
creation; for in the end the question is: How do
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Page 172.
|
|
|
|
182
|
|
I make them _be?_ Real activities are those
|
|
that really make things be, without which
|
|
the things are not, and with which they are
|
|
there. Activity, so far as we merely feel it, on
|
|
the other hand, is only an impression of ours,
|
|
it may be maintained; and an impression is,
|
|
for all this way of thinking, only a shadow of
|
|
another fact.
|
|
|
|
Arrived at this point, I can do little more
|
|
than indicate the principles on which, as it
|
|
seems to me, a radically empirical philosophy
|
|
is obliged to rely in handling such a dispute.
|
|
|
|
If there _be_ real creative activiteis in being,
|
|
radical empiricism must say, somewhere they
|
|
must be immediately lived. Somewhere the
|
|
_that_ of efficacious causing and the _what_ of it
|
|
must be experienced in one, just as the what
|
|
and the that of 'cold' are experienced in one
|
|
whenever a man has the sensation of cold here
|
|
and now. It boots not to say that our sensations
|
|
are fallible. They are indeed; but to see
|
|
the thermometer contradict us when we say 'it
|
|
is cold' does not abolish cold as a specific nature
|
|
from the universe. Cold is the arctic
|
|
|
|
183
|
|
circle if not here. Even so, to feel that our
|
|
train is moving when the train beside our window
|
|
moves, to see the moon through a telescope
|
|
come twice as near, or to see two pictures
|
|
as one solid when we look through a
|
|
stereoscope at them, leaves motion, nearness,
|
|
and solidity still in being -- if not here,
|
|
yet each in its proper seat elsewhere. And
|
|
wherever the seat of real causality _is_, as ultimately
|
|
known 'for true' (in nerve-processes,
|
|
if you will, that cause our feelings of activity
|
|
as well as the movements which these
|
|
seem to prompt), a philosophy of pure experience
|
|
can consider the real causation as no other
|
|
_nature_ of thing than that which even our
|
|
most erroneous experiences appears to be at
|
|
work. Exactly what appears there is what we
|
|
_mean_ by working, though we may later come
|
|
to learn that working was not exactly _there_.
|
|
Sustaining, persevering, striving, paying with
|
|
effort as we go, hanging on, and finally achieving
|
|
our intention -- this _is_ action, this _is_ effectuation
|
|
in the only shape in which, by a pure
|
|
experience-philosophy, the whereabouts of it
|
|
|
|
184
|
|
anywhere can be discussed. Here is creation
|
|
in its first intention, here is causality at work.(1)
|
|
To treat this offhand as the bare illusory surface
|
|
of a world whose real causality is an unimaginable
|
|
ontological principle hidden in the
|
|
cubic deeps, is, for the more empirical way of
|
|
thinking, only animism in another shape. You
|
|
explain your given fact by your 'principle,' but
|
|
the principle itself, when you look clearly at it,
|
|
turns out to be nothing but a previous little
|
|
spiritual copy of the fact. Away from that one
|
|
and only kind of fact your mind, considering
|
|
causality, can never get.(2)
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 Let me not be told that this contradicts [the first essay], 'Does
|
|
Consciousness Exist?' (see especially page 32), in which it was said
|
|
that while 'thoughts' and 'things' have the same natures, the natures
|
|
work 'energetically' on each other in the things (fire burns, water
|
|
wets, etc.) but not in the thoughts. Mental activity-trains are
|
|
composed of thoughts, yet their members do work on each other, they
|
|
check, sustain, and introduce. They do so when the activity is merely
|
|
associational as well as when effort is there. But, and this is my
|
|
reply, they do so by other parts of their nature than those that
|
|
energize physically. One thought in every developed activity-series is
|
|
a desire or thought of purpose, and all the other thoughts acquire a
|
|
feeling tone from their relation of harmony or oppugnancy to this. The
|
|
interplay of these secondary tones (among which 'interest,'
|
|
'difficulty,' and 'effort' figure) runs the drama in the mental series.
|
|
In what we term the physical drama these qualities play absolutely no
|
|
part. The subject needs careful working out; but I can see no
|
|
inconsistency.
|
|
|
|
2 I have found myself more than once accused in print of being the
|
|
assertor of a metaphysical principle of activity. Since literary
|
|
misunderstandings retard the settlement of problems, I should like to
|
|
say that such an interpretation of the pages I have published on Effort
|
|
and on Will is absolutely foreign to what I mean to express.
|
|
[_Principles_of_Psychology_, vol II, ch. XXVI.] I ow all my doctrines
|
|
on this subject to Renouvier; and Renouvier, as I understand him, is (or
|
|
at any rate then was) an out and out phenomenalist, a denier of 'forces'
|
|
in the most strenuous sense. [Cf. Ch. Renouvier:
|
|
_Esquisse_d'une_Classification_Systematique_des_Doctrines_Philosophiques_
|
|
(1885), vol. II, pp. 390-392; _Essais_de_Critique_Generale_ (1859), vol.
|
|
II, sections ix, xiii. For an acknowledgement of the author's general
|
|
indebtedness to Renouvier, cf. _Some_Problems_of_Philosophy_, p. 165,
|
|
note. ED.] Single clauses in my writing, or sentences read out of
|
|
their connection, may possibly have been compatible with a
|
|
transphenomenal principle of energy; but I defy anyone to show a single
|
|
sentence which, taken with its context, should be naturally held to
|
|
advocate that view. The misinterpretation probably arose at first from
|
|
my defending (after Renouvier) the indeterminism of our efforts. 'Free
|
|
will' was supposed by my critics to involve a supernatural agent. As a
|
|
matter of plain history the only 'free will' I have ever thought of
|
|
defending is the character of novelty in fresh activity-situations. If
|
|
an activity-process is the form of a whole 'field of consciousness,' and
|
|
if each field of consciousness is not only in its totality unique (as is
|
|
now commonly admitted) but has its elements unique (since in that
|
|
situation they are all dyed in the total) then novelty is perpetually
|
|
entering the world and what happens there is not pure _repetition_, as
|
|
the dogma of the literal uniformity of nature requires.
|
|
Activity-situations come, in short, each with an original touch. A
|
|
'principle' of free will if there were one, would doubtless manifest
|
|
itself in such phenomena, but I never say, nor do I now see, what the
|
|
principle could do except rehearse the phenomenon beforehand, or why it
|
|
ever should be invoked.
|
|
|
|
186
|
|
for philosophy is to leave off grubbing underground
|
|
for what effects effectuation, or what
|
|
makes action act, and to try to solve the concrete
|
|
questions of where effectuation in this
|
|
world is located, of which things are the true
|
|
causal agents there, and of what the more
|
|
remote effects consist.
|
|
|
|
From this point of view the greater sublimity
|
|
traditionally attributed to the metaphysical
|
|
inquiry, the grubbing inquiry, entirely disappears.
|
|
If we could know what causation
|
|
really and transcendentally is in itself, the only
|
|
_use_ of the knowledge would be to help us to
|
|
recognize an actual cause when we had one,
|
|
and so to track the future course of operations
|
|
more intelligently out. The mere abstract
|
|
inquiry into causation's hidden nature
|
|
is not more sublime than any other inquiry
|
|
equally abstract. Causation inhabits no more
|
|
sublime level than anything else. It lives,
|
|
apparently, in the dirt of the world as well
|
|
as in the absolute, or in man's unconquerable
|
|
mind. The worth and interest of the world
|
|
consists not in its elements, be these elements
|
|
|
|
187
|
|
things, or be they the conjunctions of things;
|
|
it exists rather in the dramatic outcome in
|
|
the whole process, and in the meaning of the
|
|
succession stages which the elements work out.
|
|
|
|
My colleague and master, Josiah Royce, in
|
|
a page of his review of Stout's _Analytic_Psychology(1)
|
|
has some fine words on this point
|
|
with which I cordially agree. I cannot agree
|
|
with his separating the notion of efficacy from
|
|
that of activity altogether (this I understand
|
|
to be one contention of his) for activities are
|
|
efficacious whenever they are real activities at
|
|
all. But the inner nature both of efficacy and
|
|
of activity are superficial problems, I understand
|
|
Royce to say; and the only point for us
|
|
in solving them would be their possible use in
|
|
helping us to solve the far deeper problem of
|
|
the course and meaning of the world of life.
|
|
Life, says our colleague, is full of significance,
|
|
of meaning, of success and of defeat, of hoping
|
|
and of striving, of longing, of desire, and of
|
|
inner value. It is a total presence that embodies
|
|
worth. To live our own lives better in
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 _Mind_, N.S., vol. VI, 1897; cf. pp. 392-393.
|
|
|
|
188
|
|
this presence is the true reason why we wish to
|
|
know the elements of things; so even we psychologists
|
|
must end on this pragmatic note.
|
|
|
|
The urgent problems of activity are thus
|
|
more concrete. They are all problems of the
|
|
true relation of longer-span to shorter-span
|
|
activities. When, for example, a number of
|
|
'ideas' (to use the name traditional in psychology)
|
|
grow confluent in a larger field of
|
|
consciousness, do the smaller activities still
|
|
co-exist with the wider activities then experienced
|
|
by the conscious subject? And, if so,
|
|
do the wide activities accompany the narrow
|
|
ones inertly, or do they exert control? Or do
|
|
they perhaps utterly supplant and replace
|
|
them and short-circuit their effects? Again,
|
|
when a mental activity-process and a brain-
|
|
cell series of activities both terminate in the
|
|
same muscular movement, does the mental
|
|
process steer the neural processes or not? Or,
|
|
on the other hand, does it independently short-
|
|
circuit their effects? Such are the questions
|
|
that we must begin with. But so far am I from
|
|
suggesting any definitive answer to such questions,
|
|
|
|
189
|
|
that I hardly yet can put them clearly.
|
|
They lead, however, into that region of pan-
|
|
psychic and ontologic speculation of which
|
|
Professors Bergson and Strong have lately enlarged
|
|
the literature in so able and interesting
|
|
a way.(1) The result of these authors seem
|
|
in many respects dissimilar, and I understand
|
|
them as yet but imperfectly; but I cannot help
|
|
suspecting that the direction of their work is
|
|
very promising, and that they have the hunter's
|
|
instinct for the fruitful trails.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
1 [Cf. _A_Pluralistic_Universe_, Lect. VI (on Bergson); H. Bergson:
|
|
_Creative_Evolution_, trans. by A. Mitchell; C.A. Strong:
|
|
_Why_the_Mind_Has_a_Body_, ch. XII. ED.]
|
|
|
|
190
|
|
|
|
VII
|
|
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THE ESSENCE OF HUMANISM(1)
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HUMANISM is a ferment that has 'come to
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stay.'(2) It is not a single hypothesis of theorem,
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and it dwells on no new facts. It is
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rather a slow shifting in the philosophic perspective,
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making things appear as from a new
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centre of interest or point of sight. Some
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writers are strongly conscious of the shifting,
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others half unconscious, even though their own
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vision may have undergone much change. The
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result is no small confusion in debate, the half-conscious
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humanists often taking part against
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the radical ones, as if they wished to count
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upon the other side.(3)
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---
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1 [Reprinted from
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_The_Journal_of_Philosophy,_Psychology_and_Scientific_Methods_, vol. II,
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No. 5, March 2, 1905. Also reprinted, with slight changes in
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_The_Meaning_of_Truth_, pp. 121-135. The author's corrections have been
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adopted for the present text. ED.]
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2 [Written _apropos_ of the appearance of three articles in _Mind_,
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N.S., vol. XIV, No. 53, January, 1905: "'Absolute' and 'Relative'
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Truth," H.H.Joachim; "Professor James on 'Humanism and Truth,'"
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H.W.B.Joseph; "Applied Axioms," A. Sidgwick. Of these articles the
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second and third "continue the humanistic (or pragmatistic)
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controversy," the first "deeply connects with it." ED.]
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3 Professor Baldwin, for example. His address 'On Selective
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Thinking' (_Psychological_Review_, [vol. V], 1898, reprinted in his
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volume, _Development_and_Evolution) seems to me an unusually
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well-written pragmatic manifesto. Nevertheless in 'The Limits of
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Pragmatism' (ibid., [vol. XI], 1904), he (much less clearly) joins in
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the attack.
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191
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If humanism really be the name for such
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a shifting of perspective, it is obvious that
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the whole scene of the philosophic stage will
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change in some degree if humanism prevails.
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The emphasis of things, their foreground and
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background distribution, their sizes and values,
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will not keep just the same.(1) If such
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pervasive consequences be involved in humanism,
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it is clear that no pains which philosophers
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may take, first in defining it, and then in
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furthering, checking, or steering its progress,
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will be thrown away.
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It suffers badly at present from incomplete
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definition. Its most systematic advocates,
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Schiller and Dewey, have published fragmentary
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---
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1 The ethical changes, it seems to me, are beautifully made evident
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in Professor Dewey's series of articles, which will never get the
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attention they deserve till they are printed in a book. I mean: 'The
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Significance of Emotions,' _Psychological_Review_, vol. II, [1895], p.
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13; 'The Reflex Arc Concept in Psychology,' ibid., vol. III [1896], p.
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357; 'Psychology and Social Practice,' ibid., vol. VII, [1900], p. 105;
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'Interpretation of Savage Mind,' ibid., vol. IX, [1902], p.217; 'Green's
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Theory of the Moral Motive,' _Philosophical_Review_, vol. I, [1892], p.
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593; 'Self-realization as the Moral Ideal,' ibid., vol. II, [1893], p.
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652; 'The Psychology of Effort,' ibid., vol. VI, [1897], p.43; 'The
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Evolutionary Method as Applied to Morality,' ibid., vol XI, [1902], pp.
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107, 353; 'Evolution and Ethics,' _Monist_, vol. VIII, [1898], p.321; to
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mention only a few.
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192
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programs only; and its bearing on many
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vital philosophic problems has not been traced
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except by adversaries who, scenting heresies in
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advance, have showered blows on doctrines --
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subjectivism and scepticism, for example --
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that no good humanist finds it necessary to
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entertain. By their still greater reticences, the
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anti-humanists have, in turn, perplexed the
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humanists. Much of the controversy has involved
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the word 'truth.' It is always good in
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debate to know your adversary's point of view
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authentically. But the critics of humanism
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never define exactly what the word 'truth'
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signifies when they use it themselves. The
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humanists have to guess at their view; and
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the result has doubtless been much at beating of
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the air. Add to all this, great individual differences
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in both camps, and it becomes clear that
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nothing is so urgently needed, at the stage
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which things have reached at present, as a
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sharper definition by each side of its central
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point of view.
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Whoever will contribute any touch of
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sharpness will help us to make sure of what's
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193
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what and who is who. Anyone can contribute
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such a definition, and, without it, no one
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knows exactly where he stands. If I offer my
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own provisional definition of humanism(1) now
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and here, others may improve it, some adversary
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may be led to define his own creed more sharply
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by the contrast, and a certain quickening
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of the crystallization of general opinion
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may result.
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I
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The essential service of humanism, as I conceive
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the situation, is to have seen that _though_
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_one_part_of_our_experience_may_lean_upon_another_
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_part_to_make_it_what_it_is_in_any_one_of_several_
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_aspects_in_which_it_may_be_considered,_experience_
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_as_a_whole_is_self-containing_and_leans_
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_on_nothing_.
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Since this formula also expresses the main
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contention of transcendental idealism, it needs
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abundant explication to make it unambiguous.
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---
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1 [The author employs the term 'humanism' either as a synonym
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for 'radical empiricism' (cf. e.g, above, p. 156); or as that general
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philosophy of life of which 'radical empiricism' is the theoretical
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ground (cf. below, p. 194). For other discussions of 'humanism,' cf.
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below, essay XI, and _The_Meaning_of)Truth_, essay III. ED.]
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194
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It seems, at first sight, to confine itself to
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denying theism and pantheism. But, in fact,
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it need not deny either; everything would
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depend on the exegesis; and if the formula
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ever became canonical, it would certainly
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develop both right-wing and left-wing interpreters.
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I myself read humanism theistically
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and pluralistically. If there be a God, he is
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no absolute all-experiencer, but simply the
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experiencer of widest actual conscious span.
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Read thus, humanism is for me a religion
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susceptible of reasoned defence, though I am
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well aware how many minds there are to whom
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it can appeal religiously only when it has
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been monistically translated. Ethically the
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pluralistic form of it takes for me a stronger
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hold on reality than any other philosophy I
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know of -- it being essentially a _social_ philosophy,
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a philosophy of _'co,'_ in which conjunctions
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do the work. But my primary reason
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for advocating it is its matchless intellectual
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economy. It gets rid, not only of the standing
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'problems' that monism engenders ('problem
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of evil,' 'problem of freedom,' and the
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like), but of other metaphysical mysteries and
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paradoxes as well.
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It gets rid, for example, of the whole agnostic
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controversy, by refusing to entertain the hypothesis
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of trans-empirical reality at all. It gets rid
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of any need for an absolute of the Bradleyan
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type (avowedly sterile for intellectual
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purposes) by insisting that the conjunctive
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relations found within experience are faultlessly
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real. It gets rid of the need of an absolute
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of the Roycean type (similarly sterile) by
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its pragmatic treatment of the problem of
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knowledge [a treatment of which I have already
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given a version in two very inadequate
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articles].(1) As the views of knowledge, reality
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and truth imputed to humanism have been
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those so far most fiercely attacked, it is in
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regard to these ideas that a sharpening of
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focus seems most urgently required. I proceed
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therefore to bring the view which _I_ impute
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to humanism in these respects into focus as
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briefly as I can.
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---
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1 [Omitted from reprint in _Meaning_of_Truth_. The articles referred
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to are 'Does Consciousness Exist?' and 'A World of Pure Experience,'
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reprinted above.]
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196
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II
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If the central humanistic thesis, printed
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above in italics, be accepted, it will follow
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that, if there be any such thing at all as knowing,
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the knower and the object known must
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both be portions of experience. One part of
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experience must, therefore, either
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(1) Know another part of experience -- in
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other words, parts must, as Professor Woodbridge
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says,(1) represent _one_another_ instead of
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representing realities outside of 'consciousness'
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-- this case is that of conceptual knowledge; or else
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(2) They must simply exist as so many ultimate
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_thats_ or facts of being, in the first instance;
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an then, as a secondary complication,
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and without doubling up its entitative singleness,
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any one and the same _that_ must figure
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alternately as a thing known and as a knowledge
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of the thing, by reason of two divergent
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kinds of context into which, in the general
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course of experience, it gets woven.(2)
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---
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1 In _Science_, November 4, 1904, p. 599.
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2 This statement is probably excessively obscure to any who
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has not read my two articles, 'Does Consciousness Exist?' and 'A World
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of Pure Experience.'
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197
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This second case is that of sense-perception.
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There is a stage of thought that goes beyond
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common sense, and of it I shall say more presently;
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but the common-sense stage is a perfectly
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definite halting-place of thought, primarily
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for the purposes of action; and, so long
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as we remain on the common-sense stage of
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thought, object and subject _fuse_ in the fact of
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'presentation' or sense-perception -- the pen
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and hand which I now _see_ writing, for example,
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_are_ the physical realities which those words
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designate. In this case there is no self-transcendency
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implied in the knowing. Humanism,
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here, is only a more comminuted _Identitasphilosophie_.(1)
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In case (1), on the contrary, the representative
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experience does transcend itself in knowing
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the other experience that is its object. No
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one can talk of the knowledge of the one by the
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other without seeing them as numerically distinct
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entities, of which the one lies beyond the
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other and away from it, along some direction
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---
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1 [Cf. above, p. 134; and below, p.202.]
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198
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and with some interval, that can be definitely
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named. But, if the talker be a humanist, he
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must also see this distance-interval concretely
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and pragmatically, and confess it to consist
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of other intervening experiences -- of possible
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ones, at all events, if not of actual. To call my
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present idea of my dog, for example, cognitive
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of the real dog means that, as the actual tissue
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of experience is constituted, the idea is capable
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of leading into a chain of other experiences
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on my part that go from next to next and
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terminate at last in vivid sense-perceptions
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of a jumping, barking, hairy body. Those _are_
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the real dog, the dog's full presence, for my
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common sense. If the supposed talker is a
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profound philosopher, although they may not
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_be_ the real dog for him, they _mean_ the real dog,
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are practical substitutes for the real dog, as
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the representation was a practical substitute
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for them, that real dog being a lot of atoms,
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say, or of mind-stuff, that lie _where_ the sense-
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perceptions lie in his experience as well as in
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my own.
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199
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III
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The philosopher here stands for the stage of
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thought that goes beyond the stage of common
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sense; and the difference is simply that he
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'interpolates' and 'extrapolates,' where common
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sense does not. For common sense, two
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men see the same identical real dog. Philosophy,
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noting actual differences in their perceptions,
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points out the duality of these latter,
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and interpolates something between them as
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a more real terminus -- first, organs, viscera,
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etc.; next, cells; then, ultimate atoms; lastly,
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mind-stuff perhaps. The original sense-termini
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of the two men, instead of coalescing with
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each other and with the real dog-object, as at
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first supposed, are thus help by philosophers to
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be separated by invisible realities with which
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at most, they are conterminous.
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Abolish, now, one of the percipients, and
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the interpolation changes into 'extrapolation.'
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The sense-terminus of the remaining percipient
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is regarded by the philosopher as not quite
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reaching reality. He has only carried the procession
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of experiences, the philosopher thinks,
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200
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to a definite, because practical, halting-place
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somewhere on the way towards an absolute
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truth that lies beyond.
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The humanist sees all the time, however,
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that there is no absolute transcendency even
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about the more absolute realities thus conjectured
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or believed in. The viscera and cells
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are only possible percepts following upon that
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of the outer body. The atoms again, though
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we may never attain to human means of perceiving
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them, are still defined perceptually.
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The mind-stuff itself is conceived as a kind
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of experience; and it is possible to frame the
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hypothesis (such hypotheses can by no logic
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be excluded from philosophy) of two knowers
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of a piece of mind-stuff and the mind-stuff
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itself becoming 'confluent' at the moment at
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which our imperfect knowing might pass into
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knowing of a completed type. Even so do you
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and I habitually represent our two perceptions
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and the real dog as confluent, though only provisionally,
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and for the common-sense stage
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of thought. If my pen be inwardly made of
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mind-stuff, there is no confluence _now_ between
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201
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that mind-stuff and my visual perception of
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the pen. But conceivably there might come to
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be such confluence; for, in the case of my hand,
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the visual sensations and the inward feelings
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of the hand, its mind-stuff, so to speak, are even
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now as confluent as any two things can be.
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There is, thus, no breach in humanistic
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epistemology. Whether knowledge be taken
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as ideally perfected, or only as true enough to
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pass muster for practice, it is hung on one continuous
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scheme. Reality, howsoever remote, is
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always defined as a terminus within the general
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possibilities of experience; and what knows it is
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defined as an experience _that_'represents'_it,_in_
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_the_sense_of_being_substitutable_for_it_in_our_thinking_
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because it leads to the same associates, _or_
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_in_the_sense_of_'point_to_it'_ through a chain
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of other experiences that either intervene or
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may intervene.
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Absolute reality here bears the same relation
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to sensation as sensation bears to conception
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or imagination. Both are provisional or final
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termini, sensation being only the terminus
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at which the practical man habitually stops,
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202
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while the philosopher projects a 'beyond' in
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the shape of more absolute reality. These
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termini, for the practical and the philosophical
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stages of thought respectively, are self-
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supporting. They are not 'true' of anything
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lese, they simply _are_, are _real_. They 'lean
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on nothing,' as my italicized formula said.
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Rather does the whole fabric of experience
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lean on them, just as the whole fabric of the
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solar system, including many relative positions,
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leans, for its absolute position in space,
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on any one of its constituent stars. Here,
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again, one gets a new _Identitatsphilosophie_ in
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pluralistic form.(1)
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IV
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If I have succeeded in making this at all
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clear (though I fear that brevity and abstractness
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between them may have made me fail),
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the reader will see that the 'truth' of our mental
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operations must always ben an intra-experiential
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affair. A conception is reckoned true by
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common sense when it can be made to lead to a
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---
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1 [Cf. above, pp. 134, 197.]
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203
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sensation. The sensation, which for common
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sense is not so much 'true' as 'real,' is held to
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be _provisionally_ true by the philosopher just
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in so far as it _covers_ (abuts at, or occupies the
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place of) a still more absolutely real experience,
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in the possibility of which to come remoter
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experient the philosopher finds reason
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to believe.
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Meanwhile what actually _does_ count for true
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to any individual trower, whether he be philosopher
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or common man, is always a result of his
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_apperceptions_. If a novel experience, conceptual
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or sensible, contradict too emphatically our
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pre-existent system of beliefs, in ninety-nine
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cases out of a hundred it is treated as false.
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Only when the older and the newer experiences
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are congruous enough to mutually apperceive
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and modify each other, does what we treat as
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an advance in truth result. [Having written of
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this point in an article in reply to Mr. Joseph's
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criticism of my humanism, I will say no more
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about truth here, but refer the reader to that
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review.(1)] In no case, however, need truth
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---
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1 [Omitted from reprint in _Meaning_of_Truth_. The review referred
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to is reprinted below, pp. 244-265, under the title "Humanism and Truth
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Once More." ED.]
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consist in a relation between our experiences
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and something archetypal or trans-experiential.
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Should we ever reach absolutely terminal
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experiences, experiences in which we all agreed,
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which were superseded by no revised continuations,
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these would not be _true_, they would be
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_real_, they would simply _be_, and be indeed the
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angles, corners, and linchpins of all reality, on
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which the truth of everything else would be
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stayed. Only such _other_ thins as led to these
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by satisfactory conjunctions would be 'true.'
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Satisfactory connection of some sort with such
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termini is all that the word 'truth' means.
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On the common-sense stage of thought sense-
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presentations serve as such termini. our ideas
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and concepts and scientific theories pass for
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true only so far as they harmoniously lead back
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to the world of sense.
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I hope that many humanists will endorse
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this attempt of mine to trace the more essential
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features of that way of viewing things. I
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feel almost certain that Messrs. Dewey and
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205
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Schiller will do so. If the attackers will also
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take some slight account of it, it may be that
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discussion will be a little less wide of the mark
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than it has hitherto been.
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.
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