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To the Memory of John Stuart Mill from whom I first learned the
pragmatic openness of mind and whom my fancy likes to picture as
our leader were he alive to-day.
Preface
The lectures that follow were delivered at the Lowell Institute
in Boston in November and December, 1906, and in January, 1907, at
Columbia University, in New York. They are printed as delivered,
without developments or notes. The pragmatic movement, so-called--I
do not like the name, but apparently it is too late to change it--
seems to have rather suddenly precipitated itself out of the air. A
number of tendencies that have always existed in philosophy have
all at once become conscious of themselves collectively, and of
their combined mission; and this has occurred in so many countries,
and from so many different points of view, that much unconcerted
statement has resulted. I have sought to unify the picture as it
presents itself to my own eyes, dealing in broad strokes, and
avoiding minute controversy. Much futile controversy might have
been avoided, I believe, if our critics had been willing to wait
until we got our message fairly out.
If my lectures interest any reader in the general subject, he
will doubtless wish to read farther. I therefore give him a few
references.
Probably the best statements to begin with however, are
F. C. S.
Schiller's in his 'Studies in Humanism,' especially the essays
numbered i, v, vi, vii, xviii and xix. His previous essays and in
general the polemic literature of the subject are fully referred to
in his footnotes.
Furthermore, see G. Milhaud: le Rationnel, 1898, and the fine
articles by Le Roy in the Revue de Metaphysique, vols. 7, 8 and 9.
Also articles by Blondel and de Sailly in the Annales de
Philosophie Chretienne, 4me Serie, vols. 2 and 3. Papini announces
a book on Pragmatism, in the French language, to be published very
soon.
To avoid one misunderstanding at least, let me say that there is
no logical connexion between pragmatism, as I understand it, and a
doctrine which I have recently set forth as 'radical empiricism.'
The latter stands on its own feet. One may entirely reject it and
still be a pragmatist.
Harvard University, April, 1907.
Lecture I: The
Present Dilemma in Philosophy
In the preface to that admirable collection of essays of his
called 'Heretics,' Mr. Chesterton writes these words: "There are
some people--and I am one of them--who think that the most
practical and important thing about a man is still his view of the
universe. We think that for a landlady considering a lodger, it is
important to know his income, but still more important to know his
philosophy. We think that for a general about to fight an enemy, it
is important to know the enemy's numbers, but still more important
to know the enemy's philosophy. We think the question is not
whether the theory of the cosmos affects matters, but whether, in
the long run, anything else affects them."
I think with Mr. Chesterton in this matter. I know that you,
ladies and gentlemen, have a philosophy, each and all of you, and
that the most interesting and important thing about you is the way
in which it determines the perspective in your several worlds. You
know the same of me. And yet I confess to a certain tremor at the
audacity of the enterprise which I am about to begin. For the
philosophy which is so important in each of us is not a technical
matter; it is our more or less dumb sense of what life honestly and
deeply means. It is only partly got from books; it is our
individual way of just seeing and feeling the total push and
pressure of the cosmos. I have no right to assume that many of you
are students of the cosmos in the class-room sense, yet here I
stand desirous of interesting you in a philosophy which to no small
extent has to be technically treated. I wish to fill you with
sympathy with a contemporaneous tendency in which I profoundly
believe, and yet I have to talk like a professor to you who are not
students. Whatever universe a professor believes in must at any
rate be a universe that lends itself to lengthy discourse. A
universe definable in two sentences is something for which the
professorial intellect has no use. No faith in anything of that
cheap kind! I have heard friends and colleagues try to popularize
philosophy in this very hall, but they soon grew dry, and then
technical, and the results were only partially encouraging. So my
enterprise is a bold one. The founder of pragmatism himself
recently gave a course of lectures at the Lowell Institute with
that very word in its title-flashes of brilliant light relieved
against Cimmerian darkness! None of us, I fancy, understood ALL
that he said--yet here I stand, making a very similar venture.
I risk it because the very lectures I speak of DREW--they
brought good audiences. There is, it must be confessed, a curious
fascination in hearing deep things talked about, even tho neither
we nor the disputants understand them. We get the problematic
thrill, we feel the presence of the vastness. Let a controversy
begin in a smoking-room anywhere, about free-will or God's
omniscience, or good and evil, and see how everyone in the place
pricks up his ears. Philosophy's results concern us all most
vitally, and philosophy's queerest arguments tickle agreeably our
sense of subtlety and ingenuity.
Believing in philosophy myself devoutly, and believing also that
a kind of new dawn is breaking upon us philosophers, I feel
impelled, per fas aut nefas, to try to impart to you some news of
the situation.
Philosophy is at once the most sublime and the most trivial of
human pursuits. It works in the minutest crannies and it opens out
the widest vistas. It 'bakes no bread,' as has been said, but it
can inspire our souls with courage; and repugnant as its manners,
its doubting and challenging, its quibbling and dialectics, often
are to common people, no one of us can get along without the
far-flashing beams of light it sends over the world's perspectives.
These illuminations at least, and the contrast-effects of darkness
and mystery that accompany them, give to what it says an interest
that is much more than professional.
The history of philosophy is to a great extent that of a certain
clash of human temperaments. Undignified as such a treatment may
seem to some of my colleagues, I shall have to take account of this
clash and explain a good many of the divergencies of philosophers
by it. Of whatever temperament a professional philosopher is, he
tries when philosophizing to sink the fact of his temperament.
Temperament is no conventionally recognized reason, so he urges
impersonal reasons only for his conclusions. Yet his temperament
really gives him a stronger bias than any of his more strictly
objective premises. It loads the evidence for him one way or the
other, making for a more sentimental or a more hard-hearted view of
the universe, just as this fact or that principle would. He trusts
his temperament. Wanting a universe that suits it, he believes in
any representation of the universe that does suit it. He feels men
of opposite temper to be out of key with the world's character, and
in his heart considers them incompetent and 'not in it,' in the
philosophic business, even tho they may far excel him in
dialectical ability.
Yet in the forum he can make no claim, on the bare ground of his
temperament, to superior discernment or authority. There arises
thus a certain insincerity in our philosophic discussions: the
potentest of all our premises is never mentioned. I am sure it
would contribute to clearness if in these lectures we should break
this rule and mention it, and I accordingly feel free to do so.
Of course I am talking here of very positively marked men, men
of radical idiosyncracy, who have set their stamp and likeness on
philosophy and figure in its history. Plato, Locke, Hegel, Spencer,
are such temperamental thinkers. Most of us have, of course, no
very definite intellectual temperament, we are a mixture of
opposite ingredients, each one present very moderately. We hardly
know our own preferences in abstract matters; some of us are easily
talked out of them, and end by following the fashion or taking up
with the beliefs of the most impressive philosopher in our
neighborhood, whoever he may be. But the one thing that has COUNTED
so far in philosophy is that a man should see things, see them
straight in his own peculiar way, and be dissatisfied with any
opposite way of seeing them. There is no reason to suppose that
this strong temperamental vision is from now onward to count no
longer in the history of man's beliefs.
Now the particular difference of temperament that I have in mind
in making these remarks is one that has counted in literature, art,
government and manners as well as in philosophy. In manners we find
formalists and free-and-easy persons. In government, authoritarians
and anarchists. In literature, purists or academicals, and
realists. In art, classics and romantics. You recognize these
contrasts as familiar; well, in philosophy we have a very similar
contrast expressed in the pair of terms 'rationalist' and
'empiricist,' 'empiricist' meaning your lover of facts in all their
crude variety, 'rationalist' meaning your devotee to abstract and
eternal principles. No one can live an hour without both facts and
principles, so it is a difference rather of emphasis; yet it breeds
antipathies of the most pungent character between those who lay the
emphasis differently; and we shall find it extraordinarily
convenient to express a certain contrast in men's ways of taking
their universe, by talking of the 'empiricist' and of the
'rationalist' temper. These terms make the contrast simple and
massive.
More simple and massive than are usually the men of whom the
terms are predicated. For every sort of permutation and combination
is possible in human nature; and if I now proceed to define more
fully what I have in mind when I speak of rationalists and
empiricists, by adding to each of those titles some secondary
qualifying characteristics, I beg you to regard my conduct as to a
certain extent arbitrary. I select types of combination that nature
offers very frequently, but by no means uniformly, and I select
them solely for their convenience in helping me to my ulterior
purpose of characterizing pragmatism. Historically we find the
terms 'intellectualism' and 'sensationalism' used as synonyms of
'rationalism' and 'empiricism.' Well, nature seems to combine most
frequently with intellectualism an idealistic and optimistic
tendency. Empiricists on the other hand are not uncommonly
materialistic, and their optimism is apt to be decidedly
conditional and tremulous. Rationalism is always monistic. It
starts from wholes and universals, and makes much of the unity of
things. Empiricism starts from the parts, and makes of the whole a
collection-is not averse therefore to calling itself pluralistic.
Rationalism usually considers itself more religious than
empiricism, but there is much to say about this claim, so I merely
mention it. It is a true claim when the individual rationalist is
what is called a man of feeling, and when the individual empiricist
prides himself on being hard- headed. In that case the rationalist
will usually also be in favor of what is called free-will, and the
empiricist will be a fatalist-- I use the terms most popularly
current. The rationalist finally will be of dogmatic temper in his
affirmations, while the empiricist may be more sceptical and open
to discussion.
I will write these traits down in two columns. I think you will
practically recognize the two types of mental make-up that I mean
if I head the columns by the titles 'tender-minded' and
'tough-minded' respectively.
THE TENDER-MINDED
Rationalistic (going by 'principles'), Intellectualistic,
Idealistic, Optimistic, Religious, Free-willist, Monistic,
Dogmatical.
THE TOUGH-MINDED
Empiricist (going by 'facts'), Sensationalistic, Materialistic,
Pessimistic, Irreligious, Fatalistic, Pluralistic, Sceptical.
Pray postpone for a moment the question whether the two
contrasted mixtures which I have written down are each inwardly
coherent and self-consistent or not--I shall very soon have a good
deal to say on that point. It suffices for our immediate purpose
that tender-minded and tough-minded people, characterized as I have
written them down, do both exist. Each of you probably knows some
well-marked example of each type, and you know what each example
thinks of the example on the other side of the line. They have a
low opinion of each other. Their antagonism, whenever as
individuals their temperaments have been intense, has formed in all
ages a part of the philosophic atmosphere of the time. It forms a
part of the philosophic atmosphere to-day. The tough think of the
tender as sentimentalists and soft-heads. The tender feel the tough
to be unrefined, callous, or brutal. Their mutual reaction is very
much like that that takes place when Bostonian tourists mingle with
a population like that of Cripple Creek. Each type believes the
other to be inferior to itself; but disdain in the one case is
mingled with amusement, in the other it has a dash of fear.
Now, as I have already insisted, few of us are tender-foot
Bostonians pure and simple, and few are typical Rocky Mountain
toughs, in philosophy. Most of us have a hankering for the good
things on both sides of the line. Facts are good, of course--give
us lots of facts. Principles are good--give us plenty of
principles. The world is indubitably one if you look at it in one
way, but as indubitably is it many, if you look at it in another.
It is both one and many--let us adopt a sort of pluralistic monism.
Everything of course is necessarily determined, and yet of course
our wills are free: a sort of free-will determinism is the true
philosophy. The evil of the parts is undeniable; but the whole
can't be evil: so practical pessimism may be combined with
metaphysical optimism. And so forth--your ordinary philosophic
layman never being a radical, never straightening out his system,
but living vaguely in one plausible compartment of it or another to
suit the temptations of successive hours.
But some of us are more than mere laymen in philosophy. We are
worthy of the name of amateur athletes, and are vexed by too much
inconsistency and vacillation in our creed. We cannot preserve a
good intellectual conscience so long as we keep mixing
incompatibles from opposite sides of the line.
And now I come to the first positively important point which I
wish to make. Never were as many men of a decidedly empiricist
proclivity in existence as there are at the present day. Our
children, one may say, are almost born scientific. But our esteem
for facts has not neutralized in us all religiousness. It is itself
almost religious. Our scientific temper is devout. Now take a man
of this type, and let him be also a philosophic amateur, unwilling
to mix a hodge- podge system after the fashion of a common layman,
and what does he find his situation to be, in this blessed year of
our Lord 1906? He wants facts; he wants science; but he also wants
a religion. And being an amateur and not an independent originator
in philosophy he naturally looks for guidance to the experts and
professionals whom he finds already in the field. A very large
number of you here present, possibly a majority of you, are
amateurs of just this sort.
Now what kinds of philosophy do you find actually offered to
meet your need? You find an empirical philosophy that is not
religious enough, and a religious philosophy that is not empirical
enough for your purpose. If you look to the quarter where facts are
most considered you find the whole tough-minded program in
operation, and the 'conflict between science and religion' in full
blast. Either it is that Rocky Mountain tough of a Haeckel with his
materialistic monism, his ether-god and his jest at your God as a
'gaseous vertebrate'; or it is Spencer treating the world's history
as a redistribution of matter and motion solely, and bowing
religion politely out at the front door:--she may indeed continue
to exist, but she must never show her face inside the temple. For a
hundred and fifty years past the progress of science has seemed to
mean the enlargement of the material universe and the diminution of
man's importance. The result is what one may call the growth of
naturalistic or positivistic feeling. Man is no law-giver to
nature, he is an absorber. She it is who stands firm; he it is who
must accommodate himself. Let him record truth, inhuman tho it be,
and submit to it! The romantic spontaneity and courage are gone,
the vision is materialistic and depressing. Ideals appear as inert
by- products of physiology; what is higher is explained by what is
lower and treated forever as a case of 'nothing but'--nothing but
something else of a quite inferior sort. You get, in short, a
materialistic universe, in which only the tough-minded find
themselves congenially at home.
If now, on the other hand, you turn to the religious quarter for
consolation, and take counsel of the tender-minded philosophies,
what do you find?
Religious philosophy in our day and generation is, among us
English- reading people, of two main types. One of these is more
radical and aggressive, the other has more the air of fighting a
slow retreat. By the more radical wing of religious philosophy I
mean the so- called transcendental idealism of the Anglo-Hegelian
school, the philosophy of such men as Green, the Cairds, Bosanquet,
and Royce. This philosophy has greatly influenced the more studious
members of our protestant ministry. It is pantheistic, and
undoubtedly it has already blunted the edge of the traditional
theism in protestantism at large.
That theism remains, however. It is the lineal descendant,
through one stage of concession after another, of the dogmatic
scholastic theism still taught rigorously in the seminaries of the
catholic church. For a long time it used to be called among us the
philosophy of the Scottish school. It is what I meant by the
philosophy that has the air of fighting a slow retreat. Between the
encroachments of the hegelians and other philosophers of the
'Absolute,' on the one hand, and those of the scientific
evolutionists and agnostics, on the other, the men that give us
this kind of a philosophy, James Martineau, Professor Bowne,
Professor Ladd and others, must feel themselves rather tightly
squeezed. Fair-minded and candid as you like, this philosophy is
not radical in temper. It is eclectic, a thing of compromises, that
seeks a modus vivendi above all things. It accepts the facts of
darwinism, the facts of cerebral physiology, but it does nothing
active or enthusiastic with them. It lacks the victorious and
aggressive note. It lacks prestige in consequence; whereas
absolutism has a certain prestige due to the more radical style of
it.
These two systems are what you have to choose between if you
turn to the tender-minded school. And if you are the lovers of
facts I have supposed you to be, you find the trail of the serpent
of rationalism, of intellectualism, over everything that lies on
that side of the line. You escape indeed the materialism that goes
with the reigning empiricism; but you pay for your escape by losing
contact with the concrete parts of life. The more absolutistic
philosophers dwell on so high a level of abstraction that they
never even try to come down. The absolute mind which they offer us,
the mind that makes our universe by thinking it, might, for aught
they show us to the contrary, have made any one of a million other
universes just as well as this. You can deduce no single actual
particular from the notion of it. It is compatible with any state
of things whatever being true here below. And the theistic God is
almost as sterile a principle. You have to go to the world which he
has created to get any inkling of his actual character: he is the
kind of god that has once for all made that kind of a world. The
God of the theistic writers lives on as purely abstract heights as
does the Absolute. Absolutism has a certain sweep and dash about
it, while the usual theism is more insipid, but both are equally
remote and vacuous. What you want is a philosophy that will not
only exercise your powers of intellectual abstraction, but that
will make some positive connexion with this actual world of finite
human lives.
You want a system that will combine both things, the scientific
loyalty to facts and willingness to take account of them, the
spirit of adaptation and accommodation, in short, but also the old
confidence in human values and the resultant spontaneity, whether
of the religious or of the romantic type. And this is then your
dilemma: you find the two parts of your quaesitum hopelessly
separated. You find empiricism with inhumanism and irreligion; or
else you find a rationalistic philosophy that indeed may call
itself religious, but that keeps out of all definite touch with
concrete facts and joys and sorrows.
I am not sure how many of you live close enough to philosophy to
realize fully what I mean by this last reproach, so I will dwell a
little longer on that unreality in all rationalistic systems by
which your serious believer in facts is so apt to feel
repelled.
I wish that I had saved the first couple of pages of a thesis
which a student handed me a year or two ago. They illustrated my
point so clearly that I am sorry I cannot read them to you now.
This young man, who was a graduate of some Western college, began
by saying that he had always taken for granted that when you
entered a philosophic class-room you had to open relations with a
universe entirely distinct from the one you left behind you in the
street. The two were supposed, he said, to have so little to do
with each other, that you could not possibly occupy your mind with
them at the same time. The world of concrete personal experiences
to which the street belongs is multitudinous beyond imagination,
tangled, muddy, painful and perplexed. The world to which your
philosophy-professor introduces you is simple, clean and noble. The
contradictions of real life are absent from it. Its architecture is
classic. Principles of reason trace its outlines, logical
necessities cement its parts. Purity and dignity are what it most
expresses. It is a kind of marble temple shining on a hill.
In point of fact it is far less an account of this actual world
than a clear addition built upon it, a classic sanctuary in which
the rationalist fancy may take refuge from the intolerably confused
and gothic character which mere facts present. It is no EXPLANATION
of our concrete universe, it is another thing altogether, a
substitute for it, a remedy, a way of escape.
Its temperament, if I may use the word temperament here, is
utterly alien to the temperament of existence in the concrete.
REFINEMENT is what characterizes our intellectualist philosophies.
They exquisitely satisfy that craving for a refined object of
contemplation which is so powerful an appetite of the mind. But I
ask you in all seriousness to look abroad on this colossal universe
of concrete facts, on their awful bewilderments, their surprises
and cruelties, on the wildness which they show, and then to tell me
whether 'refined' is the one inevitable descriptive adjective that
springs to your lips.
Refinement has its place in things, true enough. But a
philosophy that breathes out nothing but refinement will never
satisfy the empiricist temper of mind. It will seem rather a
monument of artificiality. So we find men of science preferring to
turn their backs on metaphysics as on something altogether
cloistered and spectral, and practical men shaking philosophy's
dust off their feet and following the call of the wild.
Truly there is something a little ghastly in the satisfaction
with which a pure but unreal system will fill a rationalist mind.
Leibnitz was a rationalist mind, with infinitely more interest in
facts than most rationalist minds can show. Yet if you wish for
superficiality incarnate, you have only to read that charmingly
written 'Theodicee' of his, in which he sought to justify the ways
of God to man, and to prove that the world we live in is the best
of possible worlds. Let me quote a specimen of what I mean.
Among other obstacles to his optimistic philosophy, it falls to
Leibnitz to consider the number of the eternally damned. That it is
infinitely greater, in our human case, than that of those saved he
assumes as a premise from the theologians, and then proceeds to
argue in this way. Even then, he says:
"The evil will appear as almost nothing in comparison with the
good, if we once consider the real magnitude of the City of God.
Coelius Secundus Curio has written a little book, 'De Amplitudine
Regni Coelestis,' which was reprinted not long ago. But he failed
to compass the extent of the kingdom of the heavens. The ancients
had small ideas of the works of God. ... It seemed to them that
only our earth had inhabitants, and even the notion of our
antipodes gave them pause. The rest of the world for them consisted
of some shining globes and a few crystalline spheres. But to-day,
whatever be the limits that we may grant or refuse to the Universe
we must recognize in it a countless number of globes, as big as
ours or bigger, which have just as much right as it has to support
rational inhabitants, tho it does not follow that these need all be
men. Our earth is only one among the six principal satellites of
our sun. As all the fixed stars are suns, one sees how small a
place among visible things our earth takes up, since it is only a
satellite of one among them. Now all these suns MAY be inhabited by
none but happy creatures; and nothing obliges us to believe that
the number of damned persons is very great; for a VERY FEW
INSTANCES AND SAMPLES SUFFICE FOR THE UTILITY WHICH GOOD DRAWS FROM
EVIL. Moreover, since there is no reason to suppose that there are
stars everywhere, may there not be a great space beyond the region
of the stars? And this immense space, surrounding all this region,
... may be replete with happiness and glory. ... What now becomes
of the consideration of our Earth and of its denizens? Does it not
dwindle to something incomparably less than a physical point, since
our Earth is but a point compared with the distance of the fixed
stars. Thus the part of the Universe which we know, being almost
lost in nothingness compared with that which is unknown to us, but
which we are yet obliged to admit; and all the evils that we know
lying in this almost-nothing; it follows that the evils may be
almost-nothing in comparison with the goods that the Universe
contains."
Leibnitz continues elsewhere: "There is a kind of justice which
aims neither at the amendment of the criminal, nor at furnishing an
example to others, nor at the reparation of the injury. This
justice is founded in pure fitness, which finds a certain
satisfaction in the expiation of a wicked deed. The Socinians and
Hobbes objected to this punitive justice, which is properly
vindictive justice and which God has reserved for himself at many
junctures. ... It is always founded in the fitness of things, and
satisfies not only the offended party, but all wise lookers-on,
even as beautiful music or a fine piece of architecture satisfies a
well-constituted mind. It is thus that the torments of the damned
continue, even tho they serve no longer to turn anyone away from
sin, and that the rewards of the blest continue, even tho they
confirm no one in good ways. The damned draw to themselves ever new
penalties by their continuing sins, and the blest attract ever
fresh joys by their unceasing progress in good. Both facts are
founded on the principle of fitness, ... for God has made all
things harmonious in perfection as I have already said."
Leibnitz's feeble grasp of reality is too obvious to need
comment from me. It is evident that no realistic image of the
experience of a damned soul had ever approached the portals of his
mind. Nor had it occurred to him that the smaller is the number of
'samples' of the genus 'lost-soul' whom God throws as a sop to the
eternal fitness, the more unequitably grounded is the glory of the
blest. What he gives us is a cold literary exercise, whose cheerful
substance even hell-fire does not warm.
And do not tell me that to show the shallowness of rationalist
philosophizing I have had to go back to a shallow wigpated age. The
optimism of present-day rationalism sounds just as shallow to the
fact-loving mind. The actual universe is a thing wide open, but
rationalism makes systems, and systems must be closed. For men in
practical life perfection is something far off and still in process
of achievement. This for rationalism is but the illusion of the
finite and relative: the absolute ground of things is a perfection
eternally complete.
I find a fine example of revolt against the airy and shallow
optimism of current religious philosophy in a publication of that
valiant anarchistic writer Morrison I. Swift. Mr. Swift's anarchism
goes a little farther than mine does, but I confess that I
sympathize a good deal, and some of you, I know, will sympathize
heartily with his dissatisfaction with the idealistic optimisms now
in vogue. He begins his pamphlet on 'Human Submission' with a
series of city reporter's items from newspapers (suicides, deaths
from starvation and the like) as specimens of our civilized regime.
For instance:
"'After trudging through the snow from one end of the city to
the other in the vain hope of securing employment, and with his
wife and six children without food and ordered to leave their home
in an upper east side tenement house because of non-payment of
rent, John Corcoran, a clerk, to-day ended his life by drinking
carbolic acid. Corcoran lost his position three weeks ago through
illness, and during the period of idleness his scanty savings
disappeared. Yesterday he obtained work with a gang of city snow
shovelers, but he was too weak from illness and was forced to quit
after an hour's trial with the shovel. Then the weary task of
looking for employment was again resumed. Thoroughly discouraged,
Corcoran returned to his home late last night to find his wife and
children without food and the notice of dispossession on the door.'
On the following morning he drank the poison.
"The records of many more such cases lie before me [Mr. Swift
goes on]; an encyclopedia might easily be filled with their kind.
These few I cite as an interpretation of the universe. 'We are
aware of the presence of God in His world,' says a writer in a
recent English Review. [The very presence of ill in the temporal
order is the condition of the perfection of the eternal order,
writes Professor Royce ('The World and the Individual,' II, 385).]
'The Absolute is the richer for every discord, and for all
diversity which it embraces,' says F. H. Bradley (Appearance and
Reality, 204). He means that these slain men make the universe
richer, and that is Philosophy. But while Professors Royce and
Bradley and a whole host of guileless thoroughfed thinkers are
unveiling Reality and the Absolute and explaining away evil and
pain, this is the condition of the only beings known to us anywhere
in the universe with a developed consciousness of what the universe
is. What these people experience IS Reality. It gives us an
absolute phase of the universe. It is the personal experience of
those most qualified in all our circle of knowledge to HAVE
experience, to tell us WHAT is. Now, what does THINKING ABOUT the
experience of these persons come to compared with directly,
personally feeling it, as they feel it? The philosophers are
dealing in shades, while those who live and feel know truth. And
the mind of mankind-not yet the mind of philosophers and of the
proprietary class-but of the great mass of the silently thinking
and feeling men, is coming to this view. They are judging the
universe as they have heretofore permitted the hierophants of
religion and learning to judge THEM. ...
"This Cleveland workingman, killing his children and himself
[another of the cited cases], is one of the elemental, stupendous
facts of this modern world and of this universe. It cannot be
glozed over or minimized away by all the treatises on God, and
Love, and Being, helplessly existing in their haughty monumental
vacuity. This is one of the simple irreducible elements of this
world's life after millions of years of divine opportunity and
twenty centuries of Christ. It is in the moral world like atoms or
sub-atoms in the physical, primary, indestructible. And what it
blazons to man is the ... imposture of all philosophy which does
not see in such events the consummate factor of conscious
experience. These facts invincibly prove religion a nullity. Man
will not give religion two thousand centuries or twenty centuries
more to try itself and waste human time; its time is up, its
probation is ended. Its own record ends it. Mankind has not sons
and eternities to spare for trying out discredited systems...."
[Footnote: Morrison I. Swift, Human Submission, Part Second,
Philadelphia, Liberty Press, 1905, pp. 4- 10.]
Such is the reaction of an empiricist mind upon the rationalist
bill of fare. It is an absolute 'No, I thank you.' "Religion," says
Mr. Swift, "is like a sleep-walker to whom actual things are
blank." And such, tho possibly less tensely charged with feeling,
is the verdict of every seriously inquiring amateur in philosophy
to-day who turns to the philosophy-professors for the wherewithal
to satisfy the fulness of his nature's needs. Empiricist writers
give him a materialism, rationalists give him something religious,
but to that religion "actual things are blank." He becomes thus the
judge of us philosophers. Tender or tough, he finds us wanting.
None of us may treat his verdicts disdainfully, for after all, his
is the typically perfect mind, the mind the sum of whose demands is
greatest, the mind whose criticisms and dissatisfactions are fatal
in the long run.
It is at this point that my own solution begins to appear. I
offer the oddly-named thing pragmatism as a philosophy that can
satisfy both kinds of demand. It can remain religious like the
rationalisms, but at the same time, like the empiricisms, it can
preserve the richest intimacy with facts. I hope I may be able to
leave many of you with as favorable an opinion of it as I preserve
myself. Yet, as I am near the end of my hour, I will not introduce
pragmatism bodily now. I will begin with it on the stroke of the
clock next time. I prefer at the present moment to return a little
on what I have said.
If any of you here are professional philosophers, and some of
you I know to be such, you will doubtless have felt my discourse so
far to have been crude in an unpardonable, nay, in an almost
incredible degree. Tender-minded and tough-minded, what a barbaric
disjunction! And, in general, when philosophy is all compacted of
delicate intellectualities and subtleties and scrupulosities, and
when every possible sort of combination and transition obtains
within its bounds, what a brutal caricature and reduction of
highest things to the lowest possible expression is it to represent
its field of conflict as a sort of rough-and-tumble fight between
two hostile temperaments! What a childishly external view! And
again, how stupid it is to treat the abstractness of rationalist
systems as a crime, and to damn them because they offer themselves
as sanctuaries and places of escape, rather than as prolongations
of the world of facts. Are not all our theories just remedies and
places of escape? And, if philosophy is to be religious, how can
she be anything else than a place of escape from the crassness of
reality's surface? What better thing can she do than raise us out
of our animal senses and show us another and a nobler home for our
minds in that great framework of ideal principles subtending all
reality, which the intellect divines? How can principles and
general views ever be anything but abstract outlines? Was Cologne
cathedral built without an architect's plan on paper? Is refinement
in itself an abomination? Is concrete rudeness the only thing
that's true?
Believe me, I feel the full force of the indictment. The picture
I have given is indeed monstrously over-simplified and rude. But
like all abstractions, it will prove to have its use. If
philosophers can treat the life of the universe abstractly, they
must not complain of an abstract treatment of the life of
philosophy itself. In point of fact the picture I have given is,
however coarse and sketchy, literally true. Temperaments with their
cravings and refusals do determine men in their philosophies, and
always will. The details of systems may be reasoned out piecemeal,
and when the student is working at a system, he may often forget
the forest for the single tree. But when the labor is accomplished,
the mind always performs its big summarizing act, and the system
forthwith stands over against one like a living thing, with that
strange simple note of individuality which haunts our memory, like
the wraith of the man, when a friend or enemy of ours is dead.
Not only Walt Whitman could write "who touches this book touches
a man." The books of all the great philosophers are like so many
men. Our sense of an essential personal flavor in each one of them,
typical but indescribable, is the finest fruit of our own
accomplished philosophic education. What the system pretends to be
is a picture of the great universe of God. What it is--and oh so
flagrantly!--is the revelation of how intensely odd the personal
flavor of some fellow creature is. Once reduced to these terms (and
all our philosophies get reduced to them in minds made critical by
learning) our commerce with the systems reverts to the informal, to
the instinctive human reaction of satisfaction or dislike. We grow
as peremptory in our rejection or admission, as when a person
presents himself as a candidate for our favor; our verdicts are
couched in as simple adjectives of praise or dispraise. We measure
the total character of the universe as we feel it, against the
flavor of the philosophy proffered us, and one word is enough.
"Statt der lebendigen Natur," we say, "da Gott die Menschen
schuf hinein"--that nebulous concoction, that wooden, that
straight-laced thing, that crabbed artificiality, that musty
schoolroom product, that sick man's dream! Away with it. Away with
all of them! Impossible! Impossible!
Our work over the details of his system is indeed what gives us
our resultant impression of the philosopher, but it is on the
resultant impression itself that we react. Expertness in philosophy
is measured by the definiteness of our summarizing reactions, by
the immediate perceptive epithet with which the expert hits such
complex objects off. But great expertness is not necessary for the
epithet to come. Few people have definitely articulated
philosophies of their own. But almost everyone has his own peculiar
sense of a certain total character in the universe, and of the
inadequacy fully to match it of the peculiar systems that he knows.
They don't just cover HIS world. One will be too dapper, another
too pedantic, a third too much of a job-lot of opinions, a fourth
too morbid, and a fifth too artificial, or what not. At any rate he
and we know offhand that such philosophies are out of plumb and out
of key and out of 'whack,' and have no business to speak up in the
universe's name. Plato, Locke, Spinoza, Mill, Caird, Hegel--I
prudently avoid names nearer home!--I am sure that to many of you,
my hearers, these names are little more than reminders of as many
curious personal ways of falling short. It would be an obvious
absurdity if such ways of taking the universe were actually true.
We philosophers have to reckon with such feelings on your part. In
the last resort, I repeat, it will be by them that all our
philosophies shall ultimately be judged. The finally victorious way
of looking at things will be the most completely IMPRESSIVE way to
the normal run of minds.
One word more--namely about philosophies necessarily being
abstract outlines. There are outlines and outlines, outlines of
buildings that are FAT, conceived in the cube by their planner, and
outlines of buildings invented flat on paper, with the aid of ruler
and compass. These remain skinny and emaciated even when set up in
stone and mortar, and the outline already suggests that result. An
outline in itself is meagre, truly, but it does not necessarily
suggest a meagre thing. It is the essential meagreness of WHAT IS
SUGGESTED by the usual rationalistic philosophies that moves
empiricists to their gesture of rejection. The case of Herbert
Spencer's system is much to the point here. Rationalists feel his
fearful array of insufficiencies. His dry schoolmaster temperament,
the hurdy-gurdy monotony of him, his preference for cheap
makeshifts in argument, his lack of education even in mechanical
principles, and in general the vagueness of all his fundamental
ideas, his whole system wooden, as if knocked together out of
cracked hemlock boards--and yet the half of England wants to bury
him in Westminster Abbey.
Why? Why does Spencer call out so much reverence in spite of his
weakness in rationalistic eyes? Why should so many educated men who
feel that weakness, you and I perhaps, wish to see him in the Abbey
notwithstanding?
Simply because we feel his heart to be IN THE RIGHT PLACE
philosophically. His principles may be all skin and bone, but at
any rate his books try to mould themselves upon the particular
shape of this, particular world's carcase. The noise of facts
resounds through all his chapters, the citations of fact never
cease, he emphasizes facts, turns his face towards their quarter;
and that is enough. It means the right kind of thing for the
empiricist mind.
The pragmatistic philosophy of which I hope to begin talking in
my next lecture preserves as cordial a relation with facts, and,
unlike Spencer's philosophy, it neither begins nor ends by turning
positive religious constructions out of doors--it treats them
cordially as well.
I hope I may lead you to find it just the mediating way of
thinking that you require.
Lecture II: What Pragmatism
Means
Some years ago, being with a camping party in the mountains, I
returned from a solitary ramble to find everyone engaged in a
ferocious metaphysical dispute. The corpus of the dispute was a
squirrel--a live squirrel supposed to be clinging to one side of a
tree-trunk; while over against the tree's opposite side a human
being was imagined to stand. This human witness tries to get sight
of the squirrel by moving rapidly round the tree, but no matter how
fast he goes, the squirrel moves as fast in the opposite direction,
and always keeps the tree between himself and the man, so that
never a glimpse of him is caught. The resultant metaphysical
problem now is this: DOES THE MAN GO ROUND THE SQUIRREL OR NOT? He
goes round the tree, sure enough, and the squirrel is on the tree;
but does he go round the squirrel? In the unlimited leisure of the
wilderness, discussion had been worn threadbare. Everyone had taken
sides, and was obstinate; and the numbers on both sides were even.
Each side, when I appeared, therefore appealed to me to make it a
majority. Mindful of the scholastic adage that whenever you meet a
contradiction you must make a distinction, I immediately sought and
found one, as follows: "Which party is right," I said, "depends on
what you PRACTICALLY MEAN by 'going round' the squirrel. If you
mean passing from the north of him to the east, then to the south,
then to the west, and then to the north of him again, obviously the
man does go round him, for he occupies these successive positions.
But if on the contrary you mean being first in front of him, then
on the right of him, then behind him, then on his left, and finally
in front again, it is quite as obvious that the man fails to go
round him, for by the compensating movements the squirrel makes, he
keeps his belly turned towards the man all the time, and his back
turned away. Make the distinction, and there is no occasion for any
farther dispute. You are both right and both wrong according as you
conceive the verb 'to go round' in one practical fashion or the
other."
Altho one or two of the hotter disputants called my speech a
shuffling evasion, saying they wanted no quibbling or scholastic
hair-splitting, but meant just plain honest English 'round,' the
majority seemed to think that the distinction had assuaged the
dispute.
I tell this trivial anecdote because it is a peculiarly simple
example of what I wish now to speak of as THE PRAGMATIC METHOD. The
pragmatic method is primarily a method of settling metaphysical
disputes that otherwise might be interminable. Is the world one or
many?--fated or free?--material or spiritual?--here are notions
either of which may or may not hold good of the world; and disputes
over such notions are unending. The pragmatic method in such cases
is to try to interpret each notion by tracing its respective
practical consequences. What difference would it practically make
to anyone if this notion rather than that notion were true? If no
practical difference whatever can be traced, then the alternatives
mean practically the same thing, and all dispute is idle. Whenever
a dispute is serious, we ought to be able to show some practical
difference that must follow from one side or the other's being
right.
A glance at the history of the idea will show you still better
what pragmatism means. The term is derived from the same Greek word
[pi rho alpha gamma mu alpha], meaning action, from which our words
'practice' and 'practical' come. It was first introduced into
philosophy by Mr. Charles Peirce in 1878. In an article entitled
'How to Make Our Ideas Clear,' in the 'Popular Science Monthly' for
January of that year [Footnote: Translated in the Revue
Philosophique for January, 1879 (vol. vii).] Mr. Peirce, after
pointing out that our beliefs are really rules for action, said
that to develope a thought's meaning, we need only determine what
conduct it is fitted to produce: that conduct is for us its sole
significance. And the tangible fact at the root of all our thought-
distinctions, however subtle, is that there is no one of them so
fine as to consist in anything but a possible difference of
practice. To attain perfect clearness in our thoughts of an object,
then, we need only consider what conceivable effects of a practical
kind the object may involve--what sensations we are to expect from
it, and what reactions we must prepare. Our conception of these
effects, whether immediate or remote, is then for us the whole of
our conception of the object, so far as that conception has
positive significance at all.
This is the principle of Peirce, the principle of pragmatism. It
lay entirely unnoticed by anyone for twenty years, until I, in an
address before Professor Howison's philosophical union at the
university of California, brought it forward again and made a
special application of it to religion. By that date (1898) the
times seemed ripe for its reception. The word 'pragmatism' spread,
and at present it fairly spots the pages of the philosophic
journals. On all hands we find the 'pragmatic movement' spoken of,
sometimes with respect, sometimes with contumely, seldom with clear
understanding. It is evident that the term applies itself
conveniently to a number of tendencies that hitherto have lacked a
collective name, and that it has 'come to stay.'
To take in the importance of Peirce's principle, one must get
accustomed to applying it to concrete cases. I found a few years
ago that Ostwald, the illustrious Leipzig chemist, had been making
perfectly distinct use of the principle of pragmatism in his
lectures on the philosophy of science, tho he had not called it by
that name.
"All realities influence our practice," he wrote me, "and that
influence is their meaning for us. I am accustomed to put questions
to my classes in this way: In what respects would the world be
different if this alternative or that were true? If I can find
nothing that would become different, then the alternative has no
sense."
That is, the rival views mean practically the same thing, and
meaning, other than practical, there is for us none. Ostwald in a
published lecture gives this example of what he means. Chemists
have long wrangled over the inner constitution of certain bodies
called 'tautomerous.' Their properties seemed equally consistent
with the notion that an instable hydrogen atom oscillates inside of
them, or that they are instable mixtures of two bodies. Controversy
raged; but never was decided. "It would never have begun," says
Ostwald, "if the combatants had asked themselves what particular
experimental fact could have been made different by one or the
other view being correct. For it would then have appeared that no
difference of fact could possibly ensue; and the quarrel was as
unreal as if, theorizing in primitive times about the raising of
dough by yeast, one party should have invoked a 'brownie,' while
another insisted on an 'elf' as the true cause of the phenomenon."
[Footnote: 'Theorie und Praxis,' Zeitsch. des Oesterreichischen
Ingenieur u. Architecten-Vereines, 1905, Nr. 4 u. 6. I find a still
more radical pragmatism than Ostwald's in an address by Professor
W. S. Franklin: "I think that the sickliest notion of physics, even
if a student gets it, is that it is 'the science of masses,
molecules and the ether.' And I think that the healthiest notion,
even if a student does not wholly get it, is that physics is the
science of the ways of taking hold of bodies and pushing them!"
(Science, January 2, 1903.)]
It is astonishing to see how many philosophical disputes
collapse into insignificance the moment you subject them to this
simple test of tracing a concrete consequence. There can BE no
difference any- where that doesn't MAKE a difference elsewhere--no
difference in abstract truth that doesn't express itself in a
difference in concrete fact and in conduct consequent upon that
fact, imposed on somebody, somehow, somewhere and somewhen. The
whole function of philosophy ought to be to find out what definite
difference it will make to you and me, at definite instants of our
life, if this world- formula or that world-formula be the true
one.
There is absolutely nothing new in the pragmatic method.
Socrates was an adept at it. Aristotle used it methodically. Locke,
Berkeley and Hume made momentous contributions to truth by its
means. Shadworth Hodgson keeps insisting that realities are only
what they are 'known-as.' But these forerunners of pragmatism used
it in fragments: they were preluders only. Not until in our time
has it generalized itself, become conscious of a universal mission,
pretended to a conquering destiny. I believe in that destiny, and I
hope I may end by inspiring you with my belief.
Pragmatism represents a perfectly familiar attitude in
philosophy, the empiricist attitude, but it represents it, as it
seems to me, both in a more radical and in a less objectionable
form than it has ever yet assumed. A pragmatist turns his back
resolutely and once for all upon a lot of inveterate habits dear to
professional philosophers. He turns away from abstraction and
insufficiency, from verbal solutions, from bad a priori reasons,
from fixed principles, closed systems, and pretended absolutes and
origins. He turns towards concreteness and adequacy, towards facts,
towards action, and towards power. That means the empiricist temper
regnant, and the rationalist temper sincerely given up. It means
the open air and possibilities of nature, as against dogma,
artificiality and the pretence of finality in truth.
At the same time it does not stand for any special results. It
is a method only. But the general triumph of that method would mean
an enormous change in what I called in my last lecture the
'temperament' of philosophy. Teachers of the ultra-rationalistic
type would be frozen out, much as the courtier type is frozen out
in republics, as the ultramontane type of priest is frozen out in
protestant lands. Science and metaphysics would come much nearer
together, would in fact work absolutely hand in hand.
Metaphysics has usually followed a very primitive kind of quest.
You know how men have always hankered after unlawful magic, and you
know what a great part, in magic, WORDS have always played. If you
have his name, or the formula of incantation that binds him, you
can control the spirit, genie, afrite, or whatever the power may
be. Solomon knew the names of all the spirits, and having their
names, he held them subject to his will. So the universe has always
appeared to the natural mind as a kind of enigma, of which the key
must be sought in the shape of some illuminating or power-bringing
word or name. That word names the universe's PRINCIPLE, and to
possess it is, after a fashion, to possess the universe itself.
'God,' 'Matter,' 'Reason,' 'the Absolute,' 'Energy,' are so many
solving names. You can rest when you have them. You are at the end
of your metaphysical quest.
But if you follow the pragmatic method, you cannot look on any
such word as closing your quest. You must bring out of each word
its practical cash-value, set it at work within the stream of your
experience. It appears less as a solution, then, than as a program
for more work, and more particularly as an indication of the ways
in which existing realities may be CHANGED.
THEORIES THUS BECOME INSTRUMENTS, NOT ANSWERS TO ENIGMAS, IN
WHICH WE CAN REST. We don't lie back upon them, we move forward,
and, on occasion, make nature over again by their aid. Pragmatism
unstiffens all our theories, limbers them up and sets each one at
work. Being nothing essentially new, it harmonizes with many
ancient philosophic tendencies. It agrees with nominalism for
instance, in always appealing to particulars; with utilitarianism
in emphasizing practical aspects; with positivism in its disdain
for verbal solutions, useless questions, and metaphysical
abstractions.
All these, you see, are ANTI-INTELLECTUALIST tendencies. Against
rationalism as a pretension and a method, pragmatism is fully armed
and militant. But, at the outset, at least, it stands for no
particular results. It has no dogmas, and no doctrines save its
method. As the young Italian pragmatist Papini has well said, it
lies in the midst of our theories, like a corridor in a hotel.
Innumerable chambers open out of it. In one you may find a man
writing an atheistic volume; in the next someone on his knees
praying for faith and strength; in a third a chemist investigating
a body's properties. In a fourth a system of idealistic metaphysics
is being excogitated; in a fifth the impossibility of metaphysics
is being shown. But they all own the corridor, and all must pass
through it if they want a practicable way of getting into or out of
their respective rooms.
No particular results then, so far, but only an attitude of
orientation, is what the pragmatic method means. THE ATTITUDE OF
LOOKING AWAY FROM FIRST THINGS, PRINCIPLES, 'CATEGORIES,' SUPPOSED
NECESSITIES; AND OF LOOKING TOWARDS LAST THINGS, FRUITS,
CONSEQUENCES, FACTS.
So much for the pragmatic method! You may say that I have been
praising it rather than explaining it to you, but I shall presently
explain it abundantly enough by showing how it works on some
familiar problems. Meanwhile the word pragmatism has come to be
used in a still wider sense, as meaning also a certain theory of
TRUTH. I mean to give a whole lecture to the statement of that
theory, after first paving the way, so I can be very brief now. But
brevity is hard to follow, so I ask for your redoubled attention
for a quarter of an hour. If much remains obscure, I hope to make
it clearer in the later lectures.
One of the most successfully cultivated branches of philosophy
in our time is what is called inductive logic, the study of the
conditions under which our sciences have evolved. Writers on this
subject have begun to show a singular unanimity as to what the laws
of nature and elements of fact mean, when formulated by
mathematicians, physicists and chemists. When the first
mathematical, logical and natural uniformities, the first LAWS,
were discovered, men were so carried away by the clearness, beauty
and simplification that resulted, that they believed themselves to
have deciphered authentically the eternal thoughts of the Almighty.
His mind also thundered and reverberated in syllogisms. He also
thought in conic sections, squares and roots and ratios, and
geometrized like Euclid. He made Kepler's laws for the planets to
follow; he made velocity increase proportionally to the time in
falling bodies; he made the law of the sines for light to obey when
refracted; he established the classes, orders, families and genera
of plants and animals, and fixed the distances between them. He
thought the archetypes of all things, and devised their variations;
and when we rediscover any one of these his wondrous institutions,
we seize his mind in its very literal intention.
But as the sciences have developed farther, the notion has
gained ground that most, perhaps all, of our laws are only
approximations. The laws themselves, moreover, have grown so
numerous that there is no counting them; and so many rival
formulations are proposed in all the branches of science that
investigators have become accustomed to the notion that no theory
is absolutely a transcript of reality, but that any one of them may
from some point of view be useful. Their great use is to summarize
old facts and to lead to new ones. They are only a man-made
language, a conceptual shorthand, as someone calls them, in which
we write our reports of nature; and languages, as is well known,
tolerate much choice of expression and many dialects.
Thus human arbitrariness has driven divine necessity from
scientific logic. If I mention the names of Sigwart, Mach, Ostwald,
Pearson, Milhaud, Poincare, Duhem, Ruyssen, those of you who are
students will easily identify the tendency I speak of, and will
think of additional names.
Riding now on the front of this wave of scientific logic Messrs.
Schiller and Dewey appear with their pragmatistic account of what
truth everywhere signifies. Everywhere, these teachers say, 'truth'
in our ideas and beliefs means the same thing that it means in
science. It means, they say, nothing but this, THAT IDEAS (WHICH
THEMSELVES ARE BUT PARTS OF OUR EXPERIENCE) BECOME TRUE JUST IN SO
FAR AS THEY HELP US TO GET INTO SATISFACTORY RELATION WITH OTHER
PARTS OF OUR EXPERIENCE, to summarize them and get about among them
by conceptual short-cuts instead of following the interminable
succession of particular phenomena. Any idea upon which we can
ride, so to speak; any idea that will carry us prosperously from
any one part of our experience to any other part, linking things
satisfactorily, working securely, simplifying, saving labor; is
true for just so much, true in so far forth, true INSTRUMENTALLY.
This is the 'instrumental' view of truth taught so successfully at
Chicago, the view that truth in our ideas means their power to
'work,' promulgated so brilliantly at Oxford.
Messrs. Dewey, Schiller and their allies, in reaching this
general conception of all truth, have only followed the example of
geologists, biologists and philologists. In the establishment of
these other sciences, the successful stroke was always to take some
simple process actually observable in operation--as denudation by
weather, say, or variation from parental type, or change of dialect
by incorporation of new words and pronunciations--and then to
generalize it, making it apply to all times, and produce great
results by summating its effects through the ages.
The observable process which Schiller and Dewey particularly
singled out for generalization is the familiar one by which any
individual settles into NEW OPINIONS. The process here is always
the same. The individual has a stock of old opinions already, but
he meets a new experience that puts them to a strain. Somebody
contradicts them; or in a reflective moment he discovers that they
contradict each other; or he hears of facts with which they are
incompatible; or desires arise in him which they cease to satisfy.
The result is an inward trouble to which his mind till then had
been a stranger, and from which he seeks to escape by modifying his
previous mass of opinions. He saves as much of it as he can, for in
this matter of belief we are all extreme conservatives. So he tries
to change first this opinion, and then that (for they resist change
very variously), until at last some new idea comes up which he can
graft upon the ancient stock with a minimum of disturbance of the
latter, some idea that mediates between the stock and the new
experience and runs them into one another most felicitously and
expediently.
This new idea is then adopted as the true one. It preserves the
older stock of truths with a minimum of modification, stretching
them just enough to make them admit the novelty, but conceiving
that in ways as familiar as the case leaves possible. An outree
explanation, violating all our preconceptions, would never pass for
a true account of a novelty. We should scratch round industriously
till we found something less excentric. The most violent
revolutions in an individual's beliefs leave most of his old order
standing. Time and space, cause and effect, nature and history, and
one's own biography remain untouched. New truth is always a
go-between, a smoother-over of transitions. It marries old opinion
to new fact so as ever to show a minimum of jolt, a maximum of
continuity. We hold a theory true just in proportion to its success
in solving this 'problem of maxima and minima.' But success in
solving this problem is eminently a matter of approximation. We say
this theory solves it on the whole more satisfactorily than that
theory; but that means more satisfactorily to ourselves, and
individuals will emphasize their points of satisfaction
differently. To a certain degree, therefore, everything here is
plastic.
The point I now urge you to observe particularly is the part
played by the older truths. Failure to take account of it is the
source of much of the unjust criticism leveled against pragmatism.
Their influence is absolutely controlling. Loyalty to them is the
first principle--in most cases it is the only principle; for by far
the most usual way of handling phenomena so novel that they would
make for a serious rearrangement of our preconceptions is to ignore
them altogether, or to abuse those who bear witness for them.
You doubtless wish examples of this process of truth's growth,
and the only trouble is their superabundance. The simplest case of
new truth is of course the mere numerical addition of new kinds of
facts, or of new single facts of old kinds, to our experience--an
addition that involves no alteration in the old beliefs. Day
follows day, and its contents are simply added. The new contents
themselves are not true, they simply COME and ARE. Truth is what we
say about them, and when we say that they have come, truth is
satisfied by the plain additive formula.
But often the day's contents oblige a rearrangement. If I should
now utter piercing shrieks and act like a maniac on this platform,
it would make many of you revise your ideas as to the probable
worth of my philosophy. 'Radium' came the other day as part of the
day's content, and seemed for a moment to contradict our ideas of
the whole order of nature, that order having come to be identified
with what is called the conservation of energy. The mere sight of
radium paying heat away indefinitely out of its own pocket seemed
to violate that conservation. What to think? If the radiations from
it were nothing but an escape of unsuspected 'potential' energy,
pre- existent inside of the atoms, the principle of conservation
would be saved. The discovery of 'helium' as the radiation's
outcome, opened a way to this belief. So Ramsay's view is generally
held to be true, because, altho it extends our old ideas of energy,
it causes a minimum of alteration in their nature.
I need not multiply instances. A new opinion counts as 'true'
just in proportion as it gratifies the individual's desire to
assimilate the novel in his experience to his beliefs in stock. It
must both lean on old truth and grasp new fact; and its success (as
I said a moment ago) in doing this, is a matter for the
individual's appreciation. When old truth grows, then, by new
truth's addition, it is for subjective reasons. We are in the
process and obey the reasons. That new idea is truest which
performs most felicitously its function of satisfying our double
urgency. It makes itself true, gets itself classed as true, by the
way it works; grafting itself then upon the ancient body of truth,
which thus grows much as a tree grows by the activity of a new
layer of cambium.
Now Dewey and Schiller proceed to generalize this observation
and to apply it to the most ancient parts of truth. They also once
were plastic. They also were called true for human reasons. They
also mediated between still earlier truths and what in those days
were novel observations. Purely objective truth, truth in whose
establishment the function of giving human satisfaction in marrying
previous parts of experience with newer parts played no role
whatever, is nowhere to be found. The reasons why we call things
true is the reason why they ARE true, for 'to be true' MEANS only
to perform this marriage-function.
The trail of the human serpent is thus over everything. Truth
independent; truth that we FIND merely; truth no longer malleable
to human need; truth incorrigible, in a word; such truth exists
indeed superabundantly--or is supposed to exist by
rationalistically minded thinkers; but then it means only the dead
heart of the living tree, and its being there means only that truth
also has its paleontology and its 'prescription,' and may grow
stiff with years of veteran service and petrified in men's regard
by sheer antiquity. But how plastic even the oldest truths
nevertheless really are has been vividly shown in our day by the
transformation of logical and mathematical ideas, a transformation
which seems even to be invading physics. The ancient formulas are
reinterpreted as special expressions of much wider principles,
principles that our ancestors never got a glimpse of in their
present shape and formulation.
Mr. Schiller still gives to all this view of truth the name of
'Humanism,' but, for this doctrine too, the name of pragmatism
seems fairly to be in the ascendant, so I will treat it under the
name of pragmatism in these lectures.
Such then would be the scope of pragmatism--first, a method; and
second, a genetic theory of what is meant by truth. And these two
things must be our future topics.
What I have said of the theory of truth will, I am sure, have
appeared obscure and unsatisfactory to most of you by reason of us
brevity. I shall make amends for that hereafter. In a lecture on
'common sense' I shall try to show what I mean by truths grown
petrified by antiquity. In another lecture I shall expatiate on the
idea that our thoughts become true in proportion as they
successfully exert their go-between function. In a third I shall
show how hard it is to discriminate subjective from objective
factors in Truth's development. You may not follow me wholly in
these lectures; and if you do, you may not wholly agree with me.
But you will, I know, regard me at least as serious, and treat my
effort with respectful consideration.
You will probably be surprised to learn, then, that Messrs.
Schiller's and Dewey's theories have suffered a hailstorm of
contempt and ridicule. All rationalism has risen against them. In
influential quarters Mr. Schiller, in particular, has been treated
like an impudent schoolboy who deserves a spanking. I should not
mention this, but for the fact that it throws so much sidelight
upon that rationalistic temper to which I have opposed the temper
of pragmatism. Pragmatism is uncomfortable away from facts.
Rationalism is comfortable only in the presence of abstractions.
This pragmatist talk about truths in the plural, about their
utility and satisfactoriness, about the success with which they
'work,' etc., suggests to the typical intellectualist mind a sort
of coarse lame second-rate makeshift article of truth. Such truths
are not real truth. Such tests are merely subjective. As against
this, objective truth must be something non-utilitarian, haughty,
refined, remote, august, exalted. It must be an absolute
correspondence of our thoughts with an equally absolute reality. It
must be what we OUGHT to think, unconditionally. The conditioned
ways in which we DO think are so much irrelevance and matter for
psychology. Down with psychology, up with logic, in all this
question!
See the exquisite contrast of the types of mind! The pragmatist
clings to facts and concreteness, observes truth at its work in
particular cases, and generalizes. Truth, for him, becomes a class-
name for all sorts of definite working-values in experience. For
the rationalist it remains a pure abstraction, to the bare name of
which we must defer. When the pragmatist undertakes to show in
detail just WHY we must defer, the rationalist is unable to
recognize the concretes from which his own abstraction is taken. He
accuses us of DENYING truth; whereas we have only sought to trace
exactly why people follow it and always ought to follow it. Your
typical ultra- abstractionist fairly shudders at concreteness:
other things equal, he positively prefers the pale and spectral. If
the two universes were offered, he would always choose the skinny
outline rather than the rich thicket of reality. It is so much
purer, clearer, nobler.
I hope that as these lectures go on, the concreteness and
closeness to facts of the pragmatism which they advocate may be
what approves itself to you as its most satisfactory peculiarity.
It only follows here the example of the sister-sciences,
interpreting the unobserved by the observed. It brings old and new
harmoniously together. It converts the absolutely empty notion of a
static relation of 'correspondence' (what that may mean we must ask
later) between our minds and reality, into that of a rich and
active commerce (that anyone may follow in detail and understand)
between particular thoughts of ours, and the great universe of
other experiences in which they play their parts and have their
uses.
But enough of this at present? The justification of what I say
must be postponed. I wish now to add a word in further explanation
of the claim I made at our last meeting, that pragmatism may be a
happy harmonizer of empiricist ways of thinking, with the more
religious demands of human beings.
Men who are strongly of the fact-loving temperament, you may
remember me to have said, are liable to be kept at a distance by
the small sympathy with facts which that philosophy from the
present-day fashion of idealism offers them. It is far too
intellectualistic. Old fashioned theism was bad enough, with its
notion of God as an exalted monarch, made up of a lot of
unintelligible or preposterous 'attributes'; but, so long as it
held strongly by the argument from design, it kept some touch with
concrete realities. Since, however, darwinism has once for all
displaced design from the minds of the 'scientific,' theism has
lost that foothold; and some kind of an immanent or pantheistic
deity working IN things rather than above them is, if any, the kind
recommended to our contemporary imagination. Aspirants to a
philosophic religion turn, as a rule, more hopefully nowadays
towards idealistic pantheism than towards the older dualistic
theism, in spite of the fact that the latter still counts able
defenders.
But, as I said in my first lecture, the brand of pantheism
offered is hard for them to assimilate if they are lovers of facts,
or empirically minded. It is the absolutistic brand, spurning the
dust and reared upon pure logic. It keeps no connexion whatever
with concreteness. Affirming the Absolute Mind, which is its
substitute for God, to be the rational presupposition of all
particulars of fact, whatever they may be, it remains supremely
indifferent to what the particular facts in our world actually are.
Be they what they may, the Absolute will father them. Like the sick
lion in Esop's fable, all footprints lead into his den, but nulla
vestigia retrorsum. You cannot redescend into the world of
particulars by the Absolute's aid, or deduce any necessary
consequences of detail important for your life from your idea of
his nature. He gives you indeed the assurance that all is well with
Him, and for his eternal way of thinking; but thereupon he leaves
you to be finitely saved by your own temporal devices.
Far be it from me to deny the majesty of this conception, or its
capacity to yield religious comfort to a most respectable class of
minds. But from the human point of view, no one can pretend that it
doesn't suffer from the faults of remoteness and abstractness. It
is eminently a product of what I have ventured to call the
rationalistic temper. It disdains empiricism's needs. It
substitutes a pallid outline for the real world's richness. It is
dapper; it is noble in the bad sense, in the sense in which to be
noble is to be inapt for humble service. In this real world of
sweat and dirt, it seems to me that when a view of things is
'noble,' that ought to count as a presumption against its truth,
and as a philosophic disqualification. The prince of darkness may
be a gentleman, as we are told he is, but whatever the God of earth
and heaven is, he can surely be no gentleman. His menial services
are needed in the dust of our human trials, even more than his
dignity is needed in the empyrean.
Now pragmatism, devoted tho she be to facts, has no such
materialistic bias as ordinary empiricism labors under. Moreover,
she has no objection whatever to the realizing of abstractions, so
long as you get about among particulars with their aid and they
actually carry you somewhere. Interested in no conclusions but
those which our minds and our experiences work out together, she
has no a priori prejudices against theology. IF THEOLOGICAL IDEAS
PROVE TO HAVE A VALUE FOR CONCRETE LIFE, THEY WILL BE TRUE, FOR
PRAGMATISM, IN THE SENSE OF BEING GOOD FOR SO MUCH. FOR HOW MUCH
MORE THEY ARE TRUE, WILL DEPEND ENTIRELY ON THEIR RELATIONS TO THE
OTHER TRUTHS THAT ALSO HAVE TO BE ACKNOWLEDGED.
What I said just now about the Absolute of transcendental
idealism is a case in point. First, I called it majestic and said
it yielded religious comfort to a class of minds, and then I
accused it of remoteness and sterility. But so far as it affords
such comfort, it surely is not sterile; it has that amount of
value; it performs a concrete function. As a good pragmatist, I
myself ought to call the Absolute true 'in so far forth,' then; and
I unhesitatingly now do so.
But what does TRUE IN SO FAR FORTH mean in this case? To answer,
we need only apply the pragmatic method. What do believers in the
Absolute mean by saying that their belief affords them comfort?
They mean that since in the Absolute finite evil is 'overruled'
already, we may, therefore, whenever we wish, treat the temporal as
if it were potentially the eternal, be sure that we can trust its
outcome, and, without sin, dismiss our fear and drop the worry of
our finite responsibility. In short, they mean that we have a right
ever and anon to take a moral holiday, to let the world wag in its
own way, feeling that its issues are in better hands than ours and
are none of our business.
The universe is a system of which the individual members may
relax their anxieties occasionally, in which the don't-care mood is
also right for men, and moral holidays in order--that, if I mistake
not, is part, at least, of what the Absolute is 'known-as,' that is
the great difference in our particular experiences which his being
true makes for us, that is part of his cash-value when he is
pragmatically interpreted. Farther than that the ordinary
lay-reader in philosophy who thinks favorably of absolute idealism
does not venture to sharpen his conceptions. He can use the
Absolute for so much, and so much is very precious. He is pained at
hearing you speak incredulously of the Absolute, therefore, and
disregards your criticisms because they deal with aspects of the
conception that he fails to follow.
If the Absolute means this, and means no more than this, who can
possibly deny the truth of it? To deny it would be to insist that
men should never relax, and that holidays are never in order. I am
well aware how odd it must seem to some of you to hear me say that
an idea is 'true' so long as to believe it is profitable to our
lives. That it is GOOD, for as much as it profits, you will gladly
admit. If what we do by its aid is good, you will allow the idea
itself to be good in so far forth, for we are the better for
possessing it. But is it not a strange misuse of the word 'truth,'
you will say, to call ideas also 'true' for this reason?
To answer this difficulty fully is impossible at this stage of
my account. You touch here upon the very central point of Messrs.
Schiller's, Dewey's and my own doctrine of truth, which I cannot
discuss with detail until my sixth lecture. Let me now say only
this, that truth is ONE SPECIES OF GOOD, and not, as is usually
supposed, a category distinct from good, and co-ordinate with it.
THE TRUE IS THE NAME OF WHATEVER PROVES ITSELF TO BE GOOD IN THE
WAY OF BELIEF, AND GOOD, TOO, FOR DEFINITE, ASSIGNABLE REASONS.
Surely you must admit this, that if there were NO good for life in
true ideas, or if the knowledge of them were positively
disadvantageous and false ideas the only useful ones, then the
current notion that truth is divine and precious, and its pursuit a
duty, could never have grown up or become a dogma. In a world like
that, our duty would be to SHUN truth, rather. But in this world,
just as certain foods are not only agreeable to our taste, but good
for our teeth, our stomach and our tissues; so certain ideas are
not only agreeable to think about, or agreeable as supporting other
ideas that we are fond of, but they are also helpful in life's
practical struggles. If there be any life that it is really better
we should lead, and if there be any idea which, if believed in,
would help us to lead that life, then it would be really BETTER FOR
US to believe in that idea, UNLESS, INDEED, BELIEF IN IT
INCIDENTALLY CLASHED WITH OTHER GREATER VITAL BENEFITS.
'What would be better for us to believe'! This sounds very like
a definition of truth. It comes very near to saying 'what we OUGHT
to believe': and in THAT definition none of you would find any
oddity. Ought we ever not to believe what it is BETTER FOR US to
believe? And can we then keep the notion of what is better for us,
and what is true for us, permanently apart?
Pragmatism says no, and I fully agree with her. Probably you
also agree, so far as the abstract statement goes, but with a
suspicion that if we practically did believe everything that made
for good in our own personal lives, we should be found indulging
all kinds of fancies about this world's affairs, and all kinds of
sentimental superstitions about a world hereafter. Your suspicion
here is undoubtedly well founded, and it is evident that something
happens when you pass from the abstract to the concrete, that
complicates the situation.
I said just now that what is better for us to believe is true
UNLESS THE BELIEF INCIDENTALLY CLASHES WITH SOME OTHER VITAL
BENEFIT. Now in real life what vital benefits is any particular
belief of ours most liable to clash with? What indeed except the
vital benefits yielded by OTHER BELIEFS when these prove
incompatible with the first ones? In other words, the greatest
enemy of any one of our truths may be the rest of our truths.
Truths have once for all this desperate instinct of
self-preservation and of desire to extinguish whatever contradicts
them. My belief in the Absolute, based on the good it does me, must
run the gauntlet of all my other beliefs. Grant that it may be true
in giving me a moral holiday. Nevertheless, as I conceive it,--and
let me speak now confidentially, as it were, and merely in my own
private person,--it clashes with other truths of mine whose
benefits I hate to give up on its account. It happens to be
associated with a kind of logic of which I am the enemy, I find
that it entangles me in metaphysical paradoxes that are
inacceptable, etc., etc.. But as I have enough trouble in life
already without adding the trouble of carrying these intellectual
inconsistencies, I personally just give up the Absolute. I just
TAKE my moral holidays; or else as a professional philosopher, I
try to justify them by some other principle.
If I could restrict my notion of the Absolute to its bare
holiday- giving value, it wouldn't clash with my other truths. But
we cannot easily thus restrict our hypotheses. They carry
supernumerary features, and these it is that clash so. My disbelief
in the Absolute means then disbelief in those other supernumerary
features, for I fully believe in the legitimacy of taking moral
holidays.
You see by this what I meant when I called pragmatism a mediator
and reconciler and said, borrowing the word from Papini, that he
unstiffens our theories. She has in fact no prejudices whatever, no
obstructive dogmas, no rigid canons of what shall count as proof.
She is completely genial. She will entertain any hypothesis, she
will consider any evidence. It follows that in the religious field
she is at a great advantage both over positivistic empiricism, with
its anti-theological bias, and over religious rationalism, with its
exclusive interest in the remote, the noble, the simple, and the
abstract in the way of conception.
In short, she widens the field of search for God. Rationalism
sticks to logic and the empyrean. Empiricism sticks to the external
senses. Pragmatism is willing to take anything, to follow either
logic or the senses, and to count the humblest and most personal
experiences. She will count mystical experiences if they have
practical consequences. She will take a God who lives in the very
dirt of private fact-if that should seem a likely place to find
him.
Her only test of probable truth is what works best in the way of
leading us, what fits every part of life best and combines with the
collectivity of experience's demands, nothing being omitted. If
theological ideas should do this, if the notion of God, in
particular, should prove to do it, how could pragmatism possibly
deny God's existence? She could see no meaning in treating as 'not
true' a notion that was pragmatically so successful. What other
kind of truth could there be, for her, than all this agreement with
concrete reality?
In my last lecture I shall return again to the relations of
pragmatism with religion. But you see already how democratic she
is. Her manners are as various and flexible, her resources as rich
and endless, and her conclusions as friendly as those of mother
nature.
Lecture III: Some Metaphysical Problems Pragmatically
Considered
I am now to make the pragmatic method more familiar by giving
you some illustrations of its application to particular problems. I
will begin with what is driest, and the first thing I shall take
will be the problem of Substance. Everyone uses the old distinction
between substance and attribute, enshrined as it is in the very
structure of human language, in the difference between grammatical
subject and predicate. Here is a bit of blackboard crayon. Its
modes, attributes, properties, accidents, or affections,--use which
term you will,--are whiteness, friability, cylindrical shape,
insolubility in water, etc., etc. But the bearer of these
attributes is so much chalk, which thereupon is called the
substance in which they inhere. So the attributes of this desk
inhere in the substance 'wood,' those of my coat in the substance
'wool,' and so forth. Chalk, wood and wool, show again, in spite of
their differences, common properties, and in so far forth they are
themselves counted as modes of a still more primal substance,
matter, the attributes of which are space occupancy and
impenetrability. Similarly our thoughts and feelings are affections
or properties of our several souls, which are substances, but again
not wholly in their own right, for they are modes of the still
deeper substance 'spirit.'
Now it was very early seen that all we know of the chalk is the
whiteness, friability, etc., all WE KNOW of the wood is the
combustibility and fibrous structure. A group of attributes is what
each substance here is known-as, they form its sole cash-value for
our actual experience. The substance is in every case revealed
through THEM; if we were cut off from THEM we should never suspect
its existence; and if God should keep sending them to us in an
unchanged order, miraculously annihilating at a certain moment the
substance that supported them, we never could detect the moment,
for our experiences themselves would be unaltered. Nominalists
accordingly adopt the opinion that substance is a spurious idea due
to our inveterate human trick of turning names into things.
Phenomena come in groups--the chalk-group, the wood-group,
etc.--and each group gets its name. The name we then treat as in a
way supporting the group of phenomena. The low thermometer to-day,
for instance, is supposed to come from something called the
'climate.' Climate is really only the name for a certain group of
days, but it is treated as if it lay BEHIND the day, and in general
we place the name, as if it were a being, behind the facts it is
the name of. But the phenomenal properties of things, nominalists
say, surely do not really inhere in names, and if not in names then
they do not inhere in anything. They ADhere, or COhere, rather,
WITH EACH OTHER, and the notion of a substance inaccessible to us,
which we think accounts for such cohesion by supporting it, as
cement might support pieces of mosaic, must be abandoned. The fact
of the bare cohesion itself is all that the notion of the substance
signifies. Behind that fact is nothing.
Scholasticism has taken the notion of substance from common
sense and made it very technical and articulate. Few things would
seem to have fewer pragmatic consequences for us than substances,
cut off as we are from every contact with them. Yet in one case
scholasticism has proved the importance of the substance-idea by
treating it pragmatically. I refer to certain disputes about the
mystery of the Eucharist. Substance here would appear to have
momentous pragmatic value. Since the accidents of the wafer don't
change in the Lord's supper, and yet it has become the very body of
Christ, it must be that the change is in the substance solely. The
bread-substance must have been withdrawn, and the divine substance
substituted miraculously without altering the immediate sensible
properties. But tho these don't alter, a tremendous difference has
been made, no less a one than this, that we who take the sacrament,
now feed upon the very substance of divinity. The substance-notion
breaks into life, then, with tremendous effect, if once you allow
that substances can separate from their accidents, and exchange
these latter.
This is the only pragmatic application of the substance-idea
with which I am acquainted; and it is obvious that it will only be
treated seriously by those who already believe in the 'real
presence' on independent grounds.
MATERIAL SUBSTANCE was criticized by Berkeley with such telling
effect that his name has reverberated through all subsequent
philosophy. Berkeley's treatment of the notion of matter is so well
known as to need hardly more than a mention. So far from denying
the external world which we know, Berkeley corroborated it. It was
the scholastic notion of a material substance unapproachable by us,
BEHIND the external world, deeper and more real than it, and needed
to support it, which Berkeley maintained to be the most effective
of all reducers of the external world to unreality. Abolish that
substance, he said, believe that God, whom you can understand and
approach, sends you the sensible world directly, and you confirm
the latter and back it up by his divine authority. Berkeley's
criticism of 'matter' was consequently absolutely pragmatistic.
Matter is known as our sensations of colour, figure, hardness and
the like. They are the cash-value of the term. The difference
matter makes to us by truly being is that we then get such
sensations; by not being, is that we lack them. These sensations
then are its sole meaning. Berkeley doesn't deny matter, then; he
simply tells us what it consists of. It is a true name for just so
much in the way of sensations.
Locke, and later Hume, applied a similar pragmatic criticism to
the notion of SPIRITUAL SUBSTANCE. I will only mention Locke's
treatment of our 'personal identity.' He immediately reduces this
notion to its pragmatic value in terms of experience. It means, he
says, so much consciousness,' namely the fact that at one moment of
life we remember other moments, and feel them all as parts of one
and the same personal history. Rationalism had explained this
practical continuity in our life by the unity of our
soul-substance. But Locke says: suppose that God should take away
the consciousness, should WE be any the better for having still the
soul-principle? Suppose he annexed the same consciousness to
different souls, | should we, as WE realize OURSELVES, be any the
worse for that fact? In Locke's day the soul was chiefly a thing to
be rewarded or punished. See how Locke, discussing it from this
point of view, keeps the question pragmatic:
Suppose, he says, one to think himself to be the same soul that
once was Nestor or Thersites. Can he think their actions his own
any more than the actions of any other man that ever existed? But |
let him once find himself CONSCIOUS of any of the actions of
Nestor, he then finds himself the same person with Nestor. ... In
this personal identity is founded all the right and justice of
reward and punishment. It may be reasonable to think, no one shall
be made to answer for what he knows nothing of, but shall receive
his doom, his consciousness accusing or excusing. Supposing a man
punished now for what he had done in another life, whereof he could
be made to have no consciousness at all, what difference is there
between that punishment and being created miserable?
Our personal identity, then, consists, for Locke, solely in
pragmatically definable particulars. Whether, apart from these
verifiable facts, it also inheres in a spiritual principle, is a
merely curious speculation. Locke, compromiser that he was,
passively tolerated the belief in a substantial soul behind our
consciousness. But his successor Hume, and most empirical
psychologists after him, have denied the soul, save as the name for
verifiable cohesions in our inner life. They redescend into the
stream of experience with it, and cash it into so much small-change
value in the way of 'ideas' and their peculiar connexions with each
other. As I said of Berkeley's matter, the soul is good or 'true'
for just SO MUCH, but no more.
The mention of material substance naturally suggests the
doctrine of 'materialism,' but philosophical materialism is not
necessarily knit up with belief in 'matter,' as a metaphysical
principle. One may deny matter in that sense, as strongly as
Berkeley did, one may be a phenomenalist like Huxley, and yet one
may still be a materialist in the wider sense, of explaining higher
phenomena by lower ones, and leaving the destinies of the world at
the mercy of its blinder parts and forces. It is in this wider
sense of the word that materialism is opposed to spiritualism or
theism. The laws of physical nature are what run things,
materialism says. The highest productions of human genius might be
ciphered by one who had complete acquaintance with the facts, out
of their physiological conditions, regardless whether nature be
there only for our minds, as idealists contend, or not. Our minds
in any case would have to record the kind of nature it is, and
write it down as operating through blind laws of physics. This is
the complexion of present day materialism, which may better be
called naturalism. Over against it stands 'theism,' or what in a
wide sense may be termed 'spiritualism.' Spiritualism says that
mind not only witnesses and records things, but also runs and
operates them: the world being thus guided, not by its lower, but
by its higher element.
Treated as it often is, this question becomes little more than a
conflict between aesthetic preferences. Matter is gross, coarse,
crass, muddy; spirit is pure, elevated, noble; and since it is more
consonant with the dignity of the universe to give the primacy in
it to what appears superior, spirit must be affirmed as the ruling
principle. To treat abstract principles as finalities, before which
our intellects may come to rest in a state of admiring
contemplation, is the great rationalist failing. Spiritualism, as
often held, may be simply a state of admiration for one kind, and
of dislike for another kind, of abstraction. I remember a worthy
spiritualist professor who always referred to materialism as the
'mud-philosophy,' and deemed it thereby refuted.
To such spiritualism as this there is an easy answer, and Mr.
Spencer makes it effectively. In some well-written pages at the end
of the first volume of his Psychology he shows us that a 'matter'
so infinitely subtile, and performing motions as inconceivably
quick and fine as those which modern science postulates in her
explanations, has no trace of grossness left. He shows that the
conception of spirit, as we mortals hitherto have framed it, is
itself too gross to cover the exquisite tenuity of nature's facts.
Both terms, he says, are but symbols, pointing to that one
unknowable reality in which their oppositions cease.
To an abstract objection an abstract rejoinder suffices; and so
far as one's opposition to materialism springs from one's disdain
of matter as something 'crass,' Mr. Spencer cuts the ground from
under one. Matter is indeed infinitely and incredibly refined. To
anyone who has ever looked on the face of a dead child or parent
the mere fact that matter COULD have taken for a time that precious
form, ought to make matter sacred ever after. It makes no
difference what the PRINCIPLE of life may be, material or
immaterial, matter at any rate co-operates, lends itself to all
life's purposes. That beloved incarnation was among matter's
possibilities.
But now, instead of resting in principles after this stagnant
intellectualist fashion, let us apply the pragmatic method to the
question. What do we MEAN by matter? What practical difference can
it make NOW that the world should be run by matter or by spirit? I
think we find that the problem takes with this a rather different
character.
And first of all I call your attention to a curious fact. It
makes not a single jot of difference so far as the PAST of the
world goes, whether we deem it to have been the work of matter or
whether we think a divine spirit was its author.
Imagine, in fact, the entire contents of the world to be once
for all irrevocably given. Imagine it to end this very moment, and
to have no future; and then let a theist and a materialist apply
their rival explanations to its history. The theist shows how a God
made it; the materialist shows, and we will suppose with equal
success, how it resulted from blind physical forces. Then let the
pragmatist be asked to choose between their theories. How can he
apply his test if the world is already completed? Concepts for him
are things to come back into experience with, things to make us
look for differences. But by hypothesis there is to be no more
experience and no possible differences can now be looked for. Both
theories have shown all their consequences and, by the hypothesis
we are adopting, these are identical. The pragmatist must
consequently say that the two theories, in spite of their
different-sounding names, mean exactly the same thing, and that the
dispute is purely verbal. [I am opposing, of course, that the
theories HAVE been equally successful in their explanations of what
is.]
For just consider the case sincerely, and say what would be the
WORTH of a God if he WERE there, with his work accomplished arid
his world run down. He would be worth no more than just that world
was worth. To that amount of result, with its mixed merits and
defects, his creative power could attain, but go no farther. And
since there is to be no future; since the whole value and meaning
of the world has been already paid in and actualized in the
feelings that went with it in the passing, and now go with it in
the ending; since it draws no supplemental significance (such as
our real world draws) from its function of preparing something yet
to come; why then, by it we take God's measure, as it were. He is
the Being who could once for all do THAT; and for that much we are
thankful to him, but for nothing more. But now, on the contrary
hypothesis, namely, that the bits of matter following their laws
could make that world and do no less, should we not be just as
thankful to them? Wherein should we suffer loss, then, if we
dropped God as an hypothesis and made the matter alone responsible?
Where would any special deadness, or crassness, come in? And how,
experience being what is once for all, would God's presence in it
make it any more living or richer?
Candidly, it is impossible to give any answer to this question.
The actually experienced world is supposed to be the same in its
details on either hypothesis, "the same, for our praise or blame,"
as Browning says. It stands there indefeasibly: a gift which can't
be taken back. Calling matter the cause of it retracts no single
one of the items that have made it up, nor does calling God the
cause augment them. They are the God or the atoms, respectively, of
just that and no other world. The God, if there, has been doing
just what atoms could do--appearing in the character of atoms, so
to speak-- and earning such gratitude as is due to atoms, and no
more. If his presence lends no different turn or issue to the
performance, it surely can lend it no increase of dignity. Nor
would indignity come to it were he absent, and did the atoms remain
the only actors on the stage. When a play is once over, and the
curtain down, you really make it no better by claiming an
illustrious genius for its author, just as you make it no worse by
calling him a common hack.
Thus if no future detail of experience or conduct is to be
deduced from our hypothesis, the debate between materialism and
theism becomes quite idle and insignificant. Matter and God in that
event mean exactly the same thing--the power, namely, neither more
nor less, that could make just this completed world--and the wise
man is he who in such a case would turn his back on such a
supererogatory discussion. Accordingly, most men instinctively, and
positivists and scientists deliberately, do turn their backs on
philosophical disputes from which nothing in the line of definite
future consequences can be seen to follow. The verbal and empty
character of philosophy is surely a reproach with which we are, but
too familiar. If pragmatism be true, it is a perfectly sound
reproach unless the theories under fire can be shown to have
alternative practical outcomes, however delicate and distant these
may be. The common man and the scientist say they discover no such
outcomes, and if the metaphysician can discern none either, the
others certainly are in the right of it, as against him. His
science is then but pompous trifling; and the endowment of a
professorship for such a being would be silly.
Accordingly, in every genuine metaphysical debate some practical
issue, however conjectural and remote, is involved. To realize
this, revert with me to our question, and place yourselves this
time in the world we live in, in the world that HAS a future, that
is yet uncompleted whilst we speak. In this unfinished world the
alternative of 'materialism or theism?' is intensely practical; and
it is worth while for us to spend some minutes of our hour in
seeing that it is so.
How, indeed, does the program differ for us, according as we
consider that the facts of experience up to date are purposeless
configurations of blind atoms moving according to eternal laws, or
that on the other hand they are due to the providence of God? As
far as the past facts go, indeed there is no difference. Those
facts are in, are bagged, are captured; and the good that's in them
is gained, be the atoms or be the God their cause. There are
accordingly many materialists about us to-day who, ignoring
altogether the future and practical aspects of the question, seek
to eliminate the odium attaching to the word materialism, and even
to eliminate the word itself, by showing that, if matter could give
birth to all these gains, why then matter, functionally considered,
is just as divine an entity as God, in fact coalesces with God, is
what you mean by God. Cease, these persons advise us, to use either
of these terms, with their outgrown opposition. Use a term free of
the clerical connotations, on the one hand; of the suggestion of
gross-ness, coarseness, ignobility, on the other. Talk of the
primal mystery, of the unknowable energy, of the one and only
power, instead of saying either God or matter. This is the course
to which Mr. Spencer urges us; and if philosophy were purely
retrospective, he would thereby proclaim himself an excellent
pragmatist.
But philosophy is prospective also, and, after finding what the
world has been and done and yielded, still asks the further
question 'what does the world PROMISE?' Give us a matter that
promises SUCCESS, that is bound by its laws to lead our world ever
nearer to perfection, and any rational man will worship that matter
as readily as Mr. Spencer worships his own so-called unknowable
power. It not only has made for righteousness up to date, but it
will make for righteousness forever; and that is all we need. Doing
practically all that a God can do, it is equivalent to God, its
function is a God's function, and is exerted in a world in which a
God would now be superfluous; from such a world a God could never
lawfully be missed. 'Cosmic emotion' would here be the right name
for religion.
But is the matter by which Mr. Spencer's process of cosmic
evolution is carried on any such principle of never-ending
perfection as this? Indeed it is not, for the future end of every
cosmically evolved thing or system of things is foretold by science
to be death and tragedy; and Mr. Spencer, in confining himself to
the aesthetic and ignoring the practical side of the controversy,
has really contributed nothing serious to its relief. But apply now
our principle of practical results, and see what a vital
significance the question of materialism or theism immediately
acquires.
Theism and materialism, so indifferent when taken
retrospectively, point, when we take them prospectively, to wholly
different outlooks of experience. For, according to the theory of
mechanical evolution, the laws of redistribution of matter and
motion, tho they are certainly to thank for all the good hours
which our organisms have ever yielded us and for all the ideals
which our minds now frame, are yet fatally certain to undo their
work again, and to redissolve everything that they have once
evolved. You all know the picture of the last state of the universe
which evolutionary science foresees. I cannot state it better than
in Mr. Balfour's words: "The energies of our system will decay, the
glory of the sun will be dimmed, and the earth, tideless and inert,
will no longer tolerate the race which has for a moment disturbed
its solitude. Man will go down into the pit, and all his thoughts
will perish. The uneasy, consciousness which in this obscure corner
has for a brief space broken the contented silence of the universe,
will be at rest. Matter will know itself no longer. 'Imperishable
monuments' and 'immortal deeds,' death itself, and love stronger
than death, will be as though they had never been. Nor will
anything that is, be better or be worse for all that the labour,
genius, devotion, and suffering of man have striven through
countless generations to effect." [Footnote: The Foundations of
Belief, p. 30.]
That is the sting of it, that in the vast driftings of the
cosmic weather, tho many a jeweled shore appears, and many an
enchanted cloud-bank floats away, long lingering ere it be
dissolved--even as our world now lingers, for our joy-yet when
these transient products are gone, nothing, absolutely NOTHING
remains, of represent those particular qualities, those elements of
preciousness which they may have enshrined. Dead and gone are they,
gone utterly from the very sphere and room of being. Without an
echo; without a memory; without an influence on aught that may come
after, to make it care for similar ideals. This utter final wreck
and tragedy is of the essence of scientific materialism as at
present understood. The lower and not the higher forces are the
eternal forces, or the last surviving forces within the only cycle
of evolution which we can definitely see. Mr. Spencer believes this
as much as anyone; so why should he argue with us as if we were
making silly aesthetic objections to the 'grossness' of 'matter and
motion,' the principles of his philosophy, when what really dismays
us is the disconsolateness of its ulterior practical results?
No the true objection to materialism is not positive but
negative. It would be farcical at this day to make complaint of it
for what it IS for 'grossness.' Grossness is what grossness
DOES--we now know THAT. We make complaint of it, on the contrary,
for what it is NOT-- not a permanent warrant for our more ideal
interests, not a fulfiller of our remotest hopes.
The notion of God, on the other hand, however inferior it may be
in clearness to those mathematical notions so current in mechanical
philosophy, has at least this practical superiority over them, that
it guarantees an ideal order that shall be permanently preserved. A
world with a God in it to say the last word, may indeed burn up or
freeze, but we then think of him as still mindful of the old ideals
and sure to bring them elsewhere to fruition; so that, where he is,
tragedy is only provisional and partial, and shipwreck and
dissolution not the absolutely final things. This need of an
eternal moral order is one of the deepest needs of our breast. And
those poets, like Dante and Wordsworth, who live on the conviction
of such an order, owe to that fact the extraordinary tonic and
consoling power of their verse. Here then, in these different
emotional and practical appeals, in these adjustments of our
concrete attitudes of hope and expectation, and all the delicate
consequences which their differences entail, lie the real meanings
of materialism and spiritualism--not in hair-splitting abstractions
about matter's inner essence, or about the metaphysical attributes
of God. Materialism means simply the denial that the moral order is
eternal, and the cutting off of ultimate hopes; spiritualism means
the affirmation of an eternal moral order and the letting loose of
hope. Surely here is an issue genuine enough, for anyone who feels
it; and, as long as men are men, it will yield matter for a serious
philosophic debate.
But possibly some of you may still rally to their defence. Even
whilst admitting that spiritualism and materialism make different
prophecies of the world's future, you may yourselves pooh-pooh the
difference as something so infinitely remote as to mean nothing for
a sane mind. The essence of a sane mind, you may say, is to take
shorter views, and to feel no concern about such chimaeras as the
latter end of the world. Well, I can only say that if you say this,
you do injustice to human nature. Religious melancholy is not
disposed of by a simple flourish of the word insanity. The absolute
things, the last things, the overlapping things, are the truly
philosophic concerns; all superior minds feel seriously about them,
and the mind with the shortest views is simply the mind of the more
shallow man.
The issues of fact at stake in the debate are of course vaguely
enough conceived by us at present. But spiritualistic faith in all
its forms deals with a world of PROMISE, while materialism's sun
sets in a sea of disappointment. Remember what I said of the
Absolute: it grants us moral holidays. Any religious view does
this. It not only incites our more strenuous moments, but it also
takes our joyous, careless, trustful moments, and it justifies
them. It paints the grounds of justification vaguely enough, to be
sure. The exact features of the saving future facts that our belief
in God insures, will have to be ciphered out by the interminable
methods of science: we can STUDY our God only by studying his
Creation. But we can ENJOY our God, if we have one, in advance of
all that labor. I myself believe that the evidence for God lies
primarily in inner personal experiences. When they have once given
you your God, his name means at least the benefit of the holiday.
You remember what I said yesterday about the way in which truths
clash and try to 'down' each other. The truth of 'God' has to run
the gauntlet of all our other truths. It is on trial by them and
they on trial by it. Our FINAL opinion about God can be settled
only after all the truths have straightened themselves out
together. Let us hope that they shall find a modus vivendi!
Let me pass to a very cognate philosophic problem, the QUESTION
of DESIGN IN NATURE. God's existence has from time immemorial been
held to be proved by certain natural facts. Many facts appear as if
expressly designed in view of one another. Thus the woodpecker's
bill, tongue, feet, tail, etc., fit him wondrously for a world of
trees with grubs hid in their bark to feed upon. The parts of our
eye fit the laws of light to perfection, leading its rays to a
sharp picture on our retina. Such mutual fitting of things diverse
in origin argued design, it was held; and the designer was always
treated as a man-loving deity.
The first step in these arguments was to prove that the design
existed. Nature was ransacked for results obtained through separate
things being co-adapted. Our eyes, for instance, originate in
intra- uterine darkness, and the light originates in the sun, yet
see how they fit each other. They are evidently made FOR each
other. Vision is the end designed, light and eyes the separate
means devised for its attainment.
It is strange, considering how unanimously our ancestors felt
the force of this argument, to see how little it counts for since
the triumph of the darwinian theory. Darwin opened our minds to the
power of chance-happenings to bring forth 'fit' results if only
they have time to add themselves together. He showed the enormous
waste of nature in producing results that get destroyed because of
their unfitness. He also emphasized the number of adaptations
which, if designed, would argue an evil rather than a good
designer. Here all depends upon the point of view. To the grub
under the bark the exquisite fitness of the woodpecker's organism
to extract him would certainly argue a diabolical designer.
Theologians have by this time stretched their minds so as to
embrace the darwinian facts, and yet to interpret them as still
showing divine purpose. It used to be a question of purpose AGAINST
mechanism, of one OR the other. It was as if one should say "My
shoes are evidently designed to fit my feet, hence it is impossible
that they should have been produced by machinery." We know that
they are both: they are made by a machinery itself designed to fit
the feet with shoes. Theology need only stretch similarly the
designs of God. As the aim of a football-team is not merely to get
the ball to a certain goal (if that were so, they would simply get
up on some dark night and place it there), but to get it there by a
fixed MACHINERY OF CONDITIONS--the game's rules and the opposing
players; so the aim of God is not merely, let us say, to make men
and to save them, but rather to get this done through the sole
agency of nature's vast machinery. Without nature's stupendous laws
and counterforces, man's creation and perfection, we might suppose,
would be too insipid achievements for God to have designed
them.
This saves the form of the design-argument at the expense of its
old easy human content. The designer is no longer the old man-like
deity. His designs have grown so vast as to be incomprehensible to
us humans. The WHAT of them so overwhelms us that to establish the
mere THAT of a designer for them becomes of very little consequence
in comparison. We can with difficulty comprehend the character of a
cosmic mind whose purposes are fully revealed by the strange
mixture of goods and evils that we find in this actual world's
particulars. Or rather we cannot by any possibility comprehend it.
The mere word 'design' by itself has, we see, no consequences and
explains nothing. It is the barrenest of principles. The old
question of WHETHER there is design is idle. The real question is
WHAT is the world, whether or not it have a designer--and that can
be revealed only by the study of all nature's particulars.
Remember that no matter what nature may have produced or may be
producing, the means must necessarily have been adequate, must have
been FITTED TO THAT PRODUCTION. The argument from fitness to design
would consequently always apply, whatever were the product's
character. The recent Mont-Pelee eruption, for example, required
all previous history to produce that exact combination of ruined
houses, human and animal corpses, sunken ships, volcanic ashes,
etc., in just that one hideous configuration of positions. France
had to be a nation and colonize Martinique. Our country had to
exist and send our ships there. IF God aimed at just that result,
the means by which the centuries bent their influences towards it,
showed exquisite intelligence. And so of any state of things
whatever, either in nature or in history, which we find actually
realized. For the parts of things must always make SOME definite
resultant, be it chaotic or harmonious. When we look at what has
actually come, the conditions must always appear perfectly designed
to ensure it. We can always say, therefore, in any conceivable
world, of any conceivable character, that the whole cosmic
machinery MAY have been designed to produce it.
Pragmatically, then, the abstract word 'design' is a blank
cartridge. It carries no consequences, it does no execution. What
sort of design? and what sort of a designer? are the only serious
questions, and the study of facts is the only way of getting even
approximate answers. Meanwhile, pending the slow answer from facts,
anyone who insists that there is a designer and who is sure he is a
divine one, gets a certain pragmatic benefit from the term--the
same, in fact which we saw that the terms God, Spirit, or the
Absolute, yield us 'Design,' worthless tho it be as a mere
rationalistic principle set above or behind things for our
admiration, becomes, if our faith concretes it into something
theistic, a term of PROMISE. Returning with it into experience, we
gain a more confiding outlook on the future. If not a blind force
but a seeing force runs things, we may reasonably expect better
issues. This vague confidence in the future is the sole pragmatic
meaning at present discernible in the terms design and designer.
But if cosmic confidence is right not wrong, better not worse, that
is a most important meaning. That much at least of possible 'truth'
the terms will then have in them.
Let me take up another well-worn controversy, THE FREE-WILL
PROBLEM. Most persons who believe in what is called their free-will
do so after the rationalistic fashion. It is a principle, a
positive faculty or virtue added to man, by which his dignity is
enigmatically augmented. He ought to believe it for this reason.
Determinists, who deny it, who say that individual men originate
nothing, but merely transmit to the future the whole push of the
past cosmos of which they are so small an expression, diminish man.
He is less admirable, stripped of this creative principle. I
imagine that more than half of you share our instinctive belief in
free- will, and that admiration of it as a principle of dignity has
much to do with your fidelity.
But free-will has also been discussed pragmatically, and,
strangely enough, the same pragmatic interpretation has been put
upon it by both disputants. You know how large a part questions of
ACCOUNTABILITY have played in ethical controversy. To hear some
persons, one would suppose that all that ethics aims at is a code
of merits and demerits. Thus does the old legal and theological
leaven, the interest in crime and sin and punishment abide with us.
'Who's to blame? whom can we punish? whom will God punish?'--these
preoccupations hang like a bad dream over man's religious
history.
So both free-will and determinism have been inveighed against
and called absurd, because each, in the eyes of its enemies, has
seemed to prevent the 'imputability' of good or bad deeds to their
authors. Queer antinomy this! Free-will means novelty, the grafting
on to the past of something not involved therein. If our acts were
predetermined, if we merely transmitted the push of the whole past,
the free-willists say, how could we be praised or blamed for
anything? We should be 'agents' only, not 'principals,' and where
then would be our precious imputability and responsibility?
But where would it be if we HAD free-will? rejoin the
determinists. If a 'free' act be a sheer novelty, that comes not
FROM me, the previous me, but ex nihilo, and simply tacks itself on
to me, how can I, the previous I, be responsible? How can
I have any permanent CHARACTER that will stand still long enough
for praise or blame to be awarded? The chaplet of my days tumbles
into a cast of disconnected beads as soon as the thread of inner
necessity is drawn out by the preposterous indeterminist doctrine.
Messrs. Fullerton and McTaggart have recently laid about them
doughtily with this argument.
It may be good ad hominem, but otherwise it is pitiful. For I
ask you, quite apart from other reasons, whether any man, woman or
child, with a sense for realities, ought not to be ashamed to plead
such principles as either dignity or imputability. Instinct and
utility between them can safely be trusted to carry on the social
business of punishment and praise. If a man does good acts we shall
praise him, if he does bad acts we shall punish him--anyhow, and
quite apart from theories as to whether the acts result from what
was previous in him or are novelties in a strict sense. To make our
human ethics revolve about the question of 'merit' is a piteous
unreality--God alone can know our merits, if we have any. The real
ground for supposing free-will is indeed pragmatic, but it has
nothing to do with this contemptible right to punish which had made
such a noise in past discussions of the subject.
Free-will pragmatically means NOVELTIES IN THE WORLD, the right
to expect that in its deepest elements as well as in its surface
phenomena, the future may not identically repeat and imitate the
past. That imitation en masse is there, who can deny? The general
'uniformity of nature' is presupposed by every lesser law. But
nature may be only approximately uniform; and persons in whom
knowledge of the world's past has bred pessimism (or doubts as to
the world's good character, which become certainties if that
character be supposed eternally fixed) may naturally welcome free-
will as a MELIORISTIC doctrine. It holds up improvement as at least
possible; whereas determinism assures us that our whole notion of
possibility is born of human ignorance, and that necessity and
impossibility between them rule the destinies of the world.
Free-will is thus a general cosmological theory of PROMISE, just
like the Absolute, God, Spirit or Design. Taken abstractly, no one
of these terms has any inner content, none of them gives us any
picture, and no one of them would retain the least pragmatic value
in a world whose character was obviously perfect from the start.
Elation at mere existence, pure cosmic emotion and delight, would,
it seems to me, quench all interest in those speculations, if the
world were nothing but a lubberland of happiness already. Our
interest in religious metaphysics arises in the fact that our
empirical future feels to us unsafe, and needs some higher
guarantee. If the past and present were purely good, who could wish
that the future might possibly not resemble them? Who could desire
free-will? Who would not say, with Huxley, "let me be wound up
every day like a watch, to go right fatally, and I ask no better
freedom." 'Freedom' in a world already perfect could only mean
freedom to BE WORSE, and who could be so insane as to wish that? To
be necessarily what it is, to be impossibly aught else, would put
the last touch of perfection upon optimism's universe. Surely the
only POSSIBILITY that one can rationally claim is the possibility
that things may be BETTER. That possibility, I need hardly say, is
one that, as the actual world goes, we have ample grounds for
desiderating.
Free-will thus has no meaning unless it be a doctrine of RELIEF.
As such, it takes its place with other religious doctrines. Between
them, they build up the old wastes and repair the former
desolations. Our spirit, shut within this courtyard of sense-
experience, is always saying to the intellect upon the tower:
'Watchman, tell us of the night, if it aught of promise bear,' and
the intellect gives it then these terms of promise.
Other than this practical significance, the words God,
free-will, design, etc., have none. Yet dark tho they be in
themselves, or intellectualistically taken, when we bear them into
life's thicket with us the darkness THERE grows light about us. If
you stop, in dealing with such words, with their definition,
thinking that to be an intellectual finality, where are you?
Stupidly staring at a pretentious sham! "Deus est Ens, a se, extra
et supra omne genus, necessarium, unum, infinite perfectum,
simplex, immutabile, immensum, aeternum, intelligens,"
etc.,--wherein is such a definition really instructive? It means
less, than nothing, in its pompous robe of adjectives. Pragmatism
alone can read a positive meaning into it, and for that she turns
her back upon the intellectualist point of view altogether. 'God's
in his heaven; all's right with the world!'--THAT'S the heart of
your theology, and for that you need no rationalist
definitions.
Why shouldn't we all of us, rationalists as well as pragmatists,
confess this? Pragmatism, so far from keeping her eyes bent on the
immediate practical foreground, as she is accused of doing, dwells
just as much upon the world's remotest perspectives.
See then how all these ultimate questions turn, as it were, up
their hinges; and from looking backwards upon principles, upon an
erkenntnisstheoretische Ich, a God, a Kausalitaetsprinzip, a
Design, a Free-will, taken in themselves, as something august and
exalted above facts,--see, I say, how pragmatism shifts the
emphasis and looks forward into facts themselves. The really vital
question for us all is, What is this world going to be? What is
life eventually to make of itself? The centre of gravity of
philosophy must therefore alter its place. The earth of things,
long thrown into shadow by the glories of the upper ether, must
resume its rights. To shift the emphasis in this way means that
philosophic questions will fall to be treated by minds of a less
abstractionist type than heretofore, minds more scientific and
individualistic in their tone yet not irreligious either. It will
be an alteration in 'the seat of authority' that reminds one almost
of the protestant reformation. And as, to papal minds,
protestantism has often seemed a mere mess of anarchy and
confusion, such, no doubt, will pragmatism often seem to
ultra-rationalist minds in philosophy. It will seem so much sheer
trash, philosophically. But life wags on, all the same, and
compasses its ends, in protestant countries. I venture to think
that philosophic protestantism will compass a not dissimilar
prosperity.
Lecture IV: The One and the
Many
We saw in the last lecture that the pragmatic method, in its
dealings with certain concepts, instead of ending with admiring
contemplation, plunges forward into the river of experience with
them and prolongs the perspective by their means. Design,
free-will, the absolute mind, spirit instead of matter, have for
their sole meaning a better promise as to this world's outcome. Be
they false or be they true, the meaning of them is this meliorism.
I have sometimes thought of the phenomenon called 'total reflexion'
in optics as a good symbol of the relation between abstract ideas
and concrete realities, as pragmatism conceives it. Hold a tumbler
of water a little above your eyes and look up through the water at
its surface--or better still look similarly through the flat wall
of an aquarium. You will then see an extraordinarily brilliant
reflected image say of a candle-flame, or any other clear object,
situated on the opposite side of the vessel. No candle-ray, under
these circumstances gets beyond the water's surface: every ray is
totally reflected back into the depths again. Now let the water
represent the world of sensible facts, and let the air above it
represent the world of abstract ideas. Both worlds are real, of
course, and interact; but they interact only at their boundary, and
the locus of everything that lives, and happens to us, so far as
full experience goes, is the water. We are like fishes swimming in
the sea of sense, bounded above by the superior element, but unable
to breathe it pure or penetrate it. We get our oxygen from it,
however, we touch it incessantly, now in this part, now in that,
and every time we touch it we are reflected back into the water
with our course re- determined and re-energized. The abstract ideas
of which the air consists, indispensable for life, but irrespirable
by themselves, as it were, and only active in their re-directing
function. All similes are halting but this one rather takes my
fancy. It shows how something, not sufficient for life in itself,
may nevertheless be an effective determinant of life elsewhere.
In this present hour I wish to illustrate the pragmatic method
by one more application. I wish to turn its light upon the ancient
problem of 'the one and the many.' I suspect that in but few of you
has this problem occasioned sleepless nights, and I should not be
astonished if some of you told me it had never vexed you. I myself
have come, by long brooding over it, to consider it the most
central of all philosophic problems, central because so pregnant. I
mean by this that if you know whether a man is a decided monist or
a decided pluralist, you perhaps know more about the rest of his
opinions than if you give him any other name ending in IST. To
believe in the one or in the many, that is the classification with
the maximum number of consequences. So bear with me for an hour
while I try to inspire you with my own interest in the problem.
Philosophy has often been defined as the quest or the vision of
the world's unity. We never hear this definition challenged, and it
is true as far as it goes, for philosophy has indeed manifested
above all things its interest in unity. But how about the VARIETY
in things? Is that such an irrelevant matter? If instead of using
the term philosophy, we talk in general of our intellect and its
needs we quickly see that unity is only one of these. Acquaintance
with the details of fact is always reckoned, along with their
reduction to system, as an indispensable mark of mental greatness.
Your 'scholarly' mind, of encyclopedic, philological type, your man
essentially of learning, has never lacked for praise along with
your philosopher. What our intellect really aims at is neither
variety nor unity taken singly but totality.[Footnote: Compare A.
Bellanger: Les concepts de Cause, et l'activite intentionelle de
l'Esprit. Paris, Alcan, 1905, p. 79 ff.] In this, acquaintance with
reality's diversities is as important as understanding their
connexion. The human passion of curiosity runs on all fours with
the systematizing passion.
In spite of this obvious fact the unity of things has always
been considered more illustrious, as it were, than their variety.
When a young man first conceives the notion that the whole world
forms one great fact, with all its parts moving abreast, as it
were, and interlocked, he feels as if he were enjoying a great
insight, and looks superciliously on all who still fall short of
this sublime conception. Taken thus abstractly as it first comes to
one, the monistic insight is so vague as hardly to seem worth
defending intellectually. Yet probably everyone in this audience in
some way cherishes it. A certain abstract monism, a certain
emotional response to the character of oneness, as if it were a
feature of the world not coordinate with its manyness, but vastly
more excellent and eminent, is so prevalent in educated circles
that we might almost call it a part of philosophic common sense. Of
COURSE the world is one, we say. How else could it be a world at
all? Empiricists as a rule, are as stout monists of this abstract
kind as rationalists are.
The difference is that the empiricists are less dazzled. Unity
doesn't blind them to everything else, doesn't quench their
curiosity for special facts, whereas there is a kind of rationalist
who is sure to interpret abstract unity mystically and to forget
everything else, to treat it as a principle; to admire and worship
it; and thereupon to come to a full stop intellectually.
'The world is One!'--the formula may become a sort of number-
worship. 'Three' and 'seven' have, it is true, been reckoned sacred
numbers; but, abstractly taken, why is 'one' more excellent than
'forty-three,' or than 'two million and ten'? In this first vague
conviction of the world's unity, there is so little to take hold of
that we hardly know what we mean by it.
The only way to get forward with our notion is to treat it
pragmatically. Granting the oneness to exist, what facts will be
different in consequence? What will the unity be known-as? The
world is one--yes, but HOW one? What is the practical value of the
oneness for US?
Asking such questions, we pass from the vague to the definite,
from the abstract to the concrete. Many distinct ways in which
oneness predicated of the universe might make a difference, come to
view. I will note successively the more obvious of these ways.
1. First, the world is at least ONE SUBJECT OF DISCOURSE. If its
manyness were so irremediable as to permit NO union whatever of it
parts, not even our minds could 'mean' the whole of it at once: the
would be like eyes trying to look in opposite directions. But in
point of fact we mean to cover the whole of it by our abstract term
'world' or 'universe,' which expressly intends that no part shall
be left out. Such unity of discourse carries obviously no farther
monistic specifications. A 'chaos,' once so named, has as much
unity of discourse as a cosmos. It is an odd fact that many monists
consider a great victory scored for their side when pluralists say
'the universe is many.' "'The universe'!" they chuckle--"his speech
bewrayeth him. He stands confessed of monism out of his own mouth."
Well, let things be one in that sense! You can then fling such a
word as universe at the whole collection of them, but what matters
it? It still remains to be ascertained whether they are one in any
other sense that is more valuable.
2. Are they, for example, CONTINUOUS? Can you pass from one to
another, keeping always in your one universe without any danger of
falling out? In other words, do the parts of our universe HANG
together, instead of being like detached grains of sand?
Even grains of sand hang together through the space in which
they are embedded, and if you can in any way move through such
space, you can pass continuously from number one of them to number
two. Space and time are thus vehicles of continuity, by which the
world's parts hang together. The practical difference to us,
resultant from these forms of union, is immense. Our whole motor
life is based upon them.
3. There are innumerable other paths of practical continuity
among things. Lines of INFLUENCE can be traced by which they
together. Following any such line you pass from one thing to
another till you may have covered a good part of the universe's
extent. Gravity and heat-conduction are such all-uniting
influences, so far as the physical world goes. Electric, luminous
and chemical influences follow similar lines of influence. But
opaque and inert bodies interrupt the continuity here, so that you
have to step round them, or change your mode of progress if you
wish to get farther on that day. Practically, you have then lost
your universe's unity, SO FAR AS IT WAS CONSTITUTED BY THOSE FIRST
LINES OF INFLUENCE. There are innumerable kinds of connexion that
special things have with other special things; and the ENSEMBLE of
any one of these connexions forms one sort of system by which
things are conjoined. Thus men are conjoined in a vast network of
ACQUAINTANCESHIP. Brown knows Jones, Jones knows Robinson, etc.;
and BY CHOOSING YOUR FARTHER INTERMEDIARIES RIGHTLY you may carry a
message from Jones to the Empress of China, or the Chief of the
African Pigmies, or to anyone else in the inhabited world. But you
are stopped short, as by a non- conductor, when you choose one man
wrong in this experiment. What may be called love-systems are
grafted on the acquaintance-system. A loves (or hates) B; B loves
(or hates) C, etc. But these systems are smaller than the great
acquaintance-system that they presuppose.
Human efforts are daily unifying the world more and more in
definite systematic ways. We found colonial, postal, consular,
commercial systems, all the parts of which obey definite influences
that propagate themselves within the system but not to facts
outside of it. The result is innumerable little hangings-together
of the world's parts within the larger hangings-together, little
worlds, not only of discourse but of operation, within the wider
universe. Each system exemplifies one type or grade of union, its
parts being strung on that peculiar kind of relation, and the same
part may figure in many different systems, as a man may hold
several offices and belong to various clubs. From this 'systematic'
point of view, therefore, the pragmatic value of the world's unity
is that all these definite networks actually and practically exist.
Some are more enveloping and extensive, some less so; they are
superposed upon each other; and between them all they let no
individual elementary part of the universe escape. Enormous as is
the amount of disconnexion among things (for these systematic
influences and conjunctions follow rigidly exclusive paths),
everything that exists is influenced in SOME way by something else,
if you can only pick the way out rightly Loosely speaking, and in
general, it may be said that all things cohere and adhere to each
other SOMEHOW, and that the universe exists practically in
reticulated or concatenated forms which make of it a continuous or
'integrated' affair. Any kind of influence whatever helps to make
the world one, so far as you can follow it from next to next. You
may then say that 'the world IS One'--meaning in these respects,
namely, and just so far as they obtain. But just as definitely is
it NOT one, so far as they do not obtain; and there is no species
of connexion which will not fail, if, instead of choosing
conductors for it, you choose non- conductors. You are then
arrested at your very first step and have to write the world down
as a pure MANY from that particular point of view. If our intellect
had been as much interested in disjunctive as it is in conjunctive
relations, philosophy would have equally successfully celebrated
the world's DISUNION.
The great point is to notice that the oneness and the manyness
are absolutely co-ordinate here. Neither is primordial or more
essential or excellent than the other. Just as with space, whose
separating of things seems exactly on a par with its uniting of
them, but sometimes one function and sometimes the other is what
come home to us most, so, in our general dealings with the world of
influences, we now need conductors and now need non-conductors, and
wisdom lies in knowing which is which at the appropriate
moment.
4. All these systems of influence or non-influence may be listed
under the general problem of the world's CAUSAL UNITY. If the minor
causal influences among things should converge towards one common
causal origin of them in the past, one great first cause for all
that is, one might then speak of the absolute causal unity of the
world. God's fiat on creation's day has figured in traditional
philosophy as such an absolute cause and origin. Transcendental
Idealism, translating 'creation' into 'thinking' (or 'willing to'
think') calls the divine act 'eternal' rather than 'first'; but the
union of the many here is absolute, just the same--the many would
not BE, save for the One. Against this notion of the unity of
origin of all there has always stood the pluralistic notion of an
eternal self-existing many in the shape of atoms or even of
spiritual units of some sort. The alternative has doubtless a
pragmatic meaning, but perhaps, as far as these lectures go, we had
better leave the question of unity of origin unsettled.
5. The most important sort of union that obtains among things,
pragmatically speaking, is their GENERIC UNITY. Things exist in
kinds, there are many specimens in each kind, and what the 'kind'
implies for one specimen, it implies also for every other specimen
of that kind. We can easily conceive that every fact in the world
might be singular, that is, unlike any other fact and sole of its
kind. In such a world of singulars our logic would be useless, for
logic works by predicating of the single instance what is true of
all its kind. With no two things alike in the world, we should be
unable to reason from our past experiences to our future ones. The
existence of so much generic unity in things is thus perhaps the
most momentous pragmatic specification of what it may mean to say
'the world is One.' ABSOLUTE generic unity would obtain if there
were one summum genus under which all things without exception
could be eventually subsumed. 'Beings,' 'thinkables,'
'experiences,' would be candidates for this position. Whether the
alternatives expressed by such words have any pragmatic
significance or not, is another question which I prefer to leave
unsettled just now.
6. Another specification of what the phrase 'the world is One'
may mean is UNITY OF PURPOSE. An enormous number of things in the
world subserve a common purpose. All the man-made systems,
administrative, industrial, military, or what not, exist each for
its controlling purpose. Every living being pursues its own
peculiar purposes. They co-operate, according to the degree of
their development, in collective or tribal purposes, larger ends
thus enveloping lesser ones, until an absolutely single, final and
climacteric purpose subserved by all things without exception might
conceivably be reached. It is needless to say that the appearances
conflict with such a view. Any resultant, as I said in my third
lecture, MAY have been purposed in advance, but none of the results
we actually know in is world have in point of fact been purposed in
advance in all their details. Men and nations start with a vague
notion of being rich, or great, or good. Each step they make brings
unforeseen chances into sight, and shuts out older vistas, and the
specifications of the general purpose have to be daily changed.
What is reached in the end may be better or worse than what was
proposed, but it is always more complex and different.
Our different purposes also are at war with each other. Where
one can't crush the other out, they compromise; and the result is
again different from what anyone distinctly proposed beforehand.
Vaguely and generally, much of what was purposed may be gained; but
everything makes strongly for the view that our world is
incompletely unified teleologically and is still trying to get its
unification better organized.
Whoever claims ABSOLUTE teleological unity, saying that there is
one purpose that every detail of the universe subserves, dogmatizes
at his own risk. Theologians who dogmalize thus find it more and
more impossible, as our acquaintance with the warring interests of
the world's parts grows more concrete, to imagine what the one
climacteric purpose may possibly be like. We see indeed that
certain evils minister to ulterior goods, that the bitter makes the
cocktail better, and that a bit of danger or hardship puts us
agreeably to our trumps. We can vaguely generalize this into the
doctrine that all the evil in the universe is but instrumental to
its greater perfection. But the scale of the evil actually in sight
defies all human tolerance; and transcendental idealism, in the
pages of a Bradley or a Royce, brings us no farther than the book
of Job did-- God's ways are not our ways, so let us put our hands
upon our mouth. A God who can relish such superfluities of horror
is no God for human beings to appeal to. His animal spirits are too
high. In other words the 'Absolute' with his one purpose, is not
the man-like God of common people.
7. AESTHETIC UNION among things also obtains, and is very
analogous to ideological union. Things tell a story. Their parts
hang together so as to work out a climax. They play into each
other's hands expressively. Retrospectively, we can see that altho
no definite purpose presided over a chain of events, yet the events
fell into a dramatic form, with a start, a middle, and a finish. In
point of fact all stories end; and here again the point of view of
a many is that more natural one to take. The world is full of
partial stories that run parallel to one another, beginning and
ending at odd times. They mutually interlace and interfere at
points, but we cannot unify them completely in our minds. In
following your life-history, I must temporarily turn my attention
from my own. Even a biographer of twins would have to press them
alternately upon his reader's attention.
It follows that whoever says that the whole world tells one
story utters another of those monistic dogmas that a man believes
at his risk. It is easy to see the world's history pluralistically,
as a rope of which each fibre tells a separate tale; but to
conceive of each cross-section of the rope as an absolutely single
fact, and to sum the whole longitudinal series into one being
living an undivided life, is harder. We have indeed the analogy of
embryology to help us. The microscopist makes a hundred flat
cross-sections of a given embryo, and mentally unites them into one
solid whole. But the great world's ingredients, so far as they are
beings, seem, like the rope's fibres, to be discontinuous
cross-wise, and to cohere only in the longitudinal direction.
Followed in that direction they are many. Even the embryologist,
when he follows the DEVELOPMENT of his object, has to treat the
history of each single organ in turn. ABSOLUTE aesthetic union is
thus another barely abstract ideal. The world appears as something
more epic than dramatic.
So far, then, we see how the world is unified by its many
systems, kinds, purposes, and dramas. That there is more union in
all these ways than openly appears is certainly true. That there
MAY be one sovereign purpose, system, kind, and story, is a
legitimate hypothesis. All I say here is that it is rash to affirm
this dogmatically without better evidence than we possess at
present.
8. The GREAT monistic DENKMITTEL for a hundred years past has
been the notion of THE ONE KNOWER. The many exist only as objects
for his thought--exist in his dream, as it were; and AS HE KNOWS
them, they have one purpose, form one system, tell one tale for
him. This notion of an ALL-ENVELOPING NOETIC UNITY in things is the
sublimest achievement of intellectualist philosophy. Those who
believe in the Absolute, as the all-knower is termed, usually say
that they do so for coercive reasons, which clear thinkers cannot
evade. The Absolute has far-reaching practical consequences, some
of which I drew attention in my second lecture. Many kinds of
difference important to us would surely follow from its being true.
I cannot here enter into all the logical proofs of such a Being's
existence, farther than to say that none of them seem to me sound.
I must therefore treat the notion of an All-Knower simply as an
hypothesis, exactly on a par logically with the pluralist notion
that there is no point of view, no focus of information extant,
from which the entire content of the universe is visible at once.
"God's consciousness," says Professor Royce,[Footnote: The
Conception of God, New York, 1897, p. 292.] "forms in its wholeness
one luminously transparent conscious moment"--this is the type of
noetic unity on which rationalism insists. Empiricism on the other
hand is satisfied with the type of noetic unity that is humanly
familiar. Everything gets known by SOME knower along with something
else; but the knowers may in the end be irreducibly many, and the
greatest knower of them all may yet not know the whole of
everything, or even know what he does know at one single
stroke:--he may be liable to forget. Whichever type obtained, the
world would still be a universe noetically. Its parts would be
conjoined by knowledge, but in the one case the knowledge would be
absolutely unified, in the other it would be strung along and
overlapped.
The notion of one instantaneous or eternal Knower--either
adjective here means the same thing--is, as I said, the great
intellectualist achievement of our time. It has practically driven
out that conception of 'Substance' which earlier philosophers set
such store by, and by which so much unifying work used to be
done--universal substance which alone has being in and from itself,
and of which all the particulars of experience are but forms to
which it gives support. Substance has succumbed to the pragmatic
criticisms of the English school. It appears now only as another
name for the fact that phenomena as they come are actually grouped
and given in coherent forms, the very forms in which we finite
knowers experience or think them together. These forms of
conjunction are as much parts of the tissue of experience as are
the terms which they connect; and it is a great pragmatic
achievement for recent idealism to have made the world hang
together in these directly representable ways instead of drawing
its unity from the 'inherence' of its parts--whatever that may
mean--in an unimaginable principle behind the scenes.
'The world is one,' therefore, just so far as we experience it
to be concatenated, one by as many definite conjunctions as appear.
But then also NOT one by just as many definite DISjunctions as we
find. The oneness and the manyness of it thus obtain in respects
which can be separately named. It is neither a universe pure and
simple nor a multiverse pure and simple. And its various manners of
being one suggest, for their accurate ascertainment, so many
distinct programs of scientific work. Thus the pragmatic question
'What is the oneness known-as? What practical difference will it
make?' saves us from all feverish excitement over it as a principle
of sublimity and carries us forward into the stream of experience
with a cool head. The stream may indeed reveal far more connexion
and union than we now suspect, but we are not entitled on pragmatic
principles to claim absolute oneness in any respect in advance.
It is so difficult to see definitely what absolute oneness can
mean, that probably the majority of you are satisfied with the
sober attitude which we have reached. Nevertheless there are
possibly some radically monistic souls among you who are not
content to leave the one and the many on a par. Union of various
grades, union of diverse types, union that stops at non-conductors,
union that merely goes from next to next, and means in many cases
outer nextness only, and not a more internal bond, union of
concatenation, in short; all that sort of thing seems to you a
halfway stage of thought. The oneness of things, superior to their
manyness, you think must also be more deeply true, must be the more
real aspect of the world. The pragmatic view, you are sure, gives
us a universe imperfectly rational. The real universe must form an
unconditional unit of being, something consolidated, with its parts
co-implicated through and through. Only then could we consider our
estate completely rational. There is no doubt whatever that this
ultra-monistic way of thinking means a great deal to many minds.
"One Life, One Truth, one Love, one Principle, One Good, One
God"--I quote from a Christian Science leaflet which the day's mail
brings into my hands--beyond doubt such a confession of faith has
pragmatically an emotional value, and beyond doubt the word 'one'
contributes to the value quite as much as the other words. But if
we try to realize INTELLECTUALLY what we can possibly MEAN by such
a glut of oneness we are thrown right back upon our pragmatistic
determinations again. It means either the mere name One, the
universe of discourse; or it means the sum total of all the
ascertainable particular conjunctions and concatenations; or,
finally, it means some one vehicle of conjunction treated as
all-inclusive, like one origin, one purpose, or one knower. In
point of fact it always means one KNOWER to those who take it
intellectually to-day. The one knower involves, they think, the
other forms of conjunction. His world must have all its parts
co-implicated in the one logical-aesthetical-teleological
unit-picture which is his eternal dream.
The character of the absolute knower's picture is however so
impossible for us to represent clearly, that we may fairly suppose
that the authority which absolute monism undoubtedly possesses, and
probably always will possess over some persons, draws its strength
far less from intellectual than from mystical grounds. To interpret
absolute monism worthily, be a mystic. Mystical states of mind in
every degree are shown by history, usually tho not always, to make
for the monistic view. This is no proper occasion to enter upon the
general subject of mysticism, but I will quote one mystical
pronouncement to show just what I mean. The paragon of all monistic
systems is the Vedanta philosophy of Hindostan, and the paragon of
Vedantist missionaries was the late Swami Vivekananda who visited
our shores some years ago. The method of Vedantism is the mystical
method. You do not reason, but after going through a certain
discipline YOU SEE, and having seen, you can report the truth.
Vivekananda thus reports the truth in one of his lectures here:
"Where is any more misery for him who sees this Oneness in the
Universe...this Oneness of life, Oneness of everything? ...This
separation between man and man, man and woman, man and child,
nation from nation, earth from moon, moon from sun, this separation
between atom and atom is the cause really of all the misery, and
the Vedanta says this separation does not exist, it is not real. It
is merely apparent, on the surface. In the heart of things there is
Unity still. If you go inside you find that Unity between man and
man, women and children, races and races, high and low, rich and
poor, the gods and men: all are One, and animals too, if you go
deep enough, and he who has attained to that has no more delusion.
... Where is any more delusion for him? What can delude him? He
knows the reality of everything, the secret of everything. Where is
there any more misery for him? What does he desire? He has traced
the reality of everything unto the Lord, that centre, that Unity of
everything, and that is Eternal Bliss, Eternal Knowledge, Eternal
Existence. Neither death nor disease, nor sorrow nor misery, nor
discontent is there ... in the centre, the reality, there is no one
to be mourned for, no one to be sorry for. He has penetrated
everything, the Pure One, the Formless, the Bodiless, the
Stainless, He the Knower, He the Great Poet, the Self-Existent, He
who is giving to everyone what he deserves."
Observe how radical the character of the monism here is.
Separation is not simply overcome by the One, it is denied to
exist. There is no many. We are not parts of the One; It has no
parts; and since in a sense we undeniably ARE, it must be that each
of us is the One, indivisibly and totally. AN ABSOLUTE ONE, AND I
THAT ONE--surely we have here a religion which, emotionally
considered, has a high pragmatic value; it imparts a perfect
sumptuosity of security. As our Swami says in another place:
"When man has seen himself as one with the infinite Being of the
universe, when all separateness has ceased, when all men, all
women, all angels, all gods, all animals, all plants, the whole
universe has been melted into that oneness, then all fear
disappears. Whom to fear? Can I hurt myself? Can I kill myself? Can
I injure myself? Do you fear yourself? Then will all sorrow
disappear. What can cause me sorrow? I am the One Existence of the
universe. Then all jealousies will disappear; of whom to be
jealous? Of myself? Then all bad feelings disappear. Against whom
will I have this bad feeling? Against myself? There is none in the
universe but me. ... Kill out this differentiation; kill out this
superstition that there are many. 'He who, in this world of many,
sees that One; he who in this mass of insentiency sees that One
Sentient Being; he who in this world of shadow catches that
Reality, unto him belongs eternal peace, unto none else, unto none
else.'"
We all have some ear for this monistic music: it elevates and
reassures. We all have at least the germ of mysticism in us. And
when our idealists recite their arguments for the Absolute, saying
that the slightest union admitted anywhere carries logically
absolute Oneness with it, and that the slightest separation
admitted anywhere logically carries disunion remediless and
complete, I cannot help suspecting that the palpable weak places in
the intellectual reasonings they use are protected from their own
criticism by a mystical feeling that, logic or no logic, absolute
Oneness must somehow at any cost be true. Oneness overcomes MORAL
separateness at any rate. In the passion of love we have the mystic
germ of what might mean a total union of all sentient life. This
mystical germ wakes up in us on hearing the monistic utterances,
acknowledges their authority, and assigns to intellectual
considerations a secondary place.
I will dwell no longer on these religious and moral aspects of
the question in this lecture. When I come to my final lecture there
will be something more to say.
Leave then out of consideration for the moment the authority
which mystical insights may be conjectured eventually to possess;
treat the problem of the One and the Many in a purely intellectual
way; and we see clearly enough where pragmatism stands. With her
criterion of the practical differences that theories make, we see
that she must equally abjure absolute monism and absolute
pluralism. The world is one just so far as its parts hang together
by any definite connexion. It is many just so far as any definite
connexion fails to obtain. And finally it is growing more and more
unified by those systems of connexion at least which human energy
keeps framing as time goes on.
It is possible to imagine alternative universes to the one we
know, in which the most various grades and types of union should be
embodied. Thus the lowest grade of universe would be a world of
mere WITHNESS, of which the parts were only strung together by the
conjunction 'and.' Such a universe is even now the collection of
our several inner lives. The spaces and times of your imagination,
the objects and events of your day-dreams are not only more or less
incoherent inter se, but are wholly out of definite relation with
the similar contents of anyone else's mind. Our various reveries
now as we sit here compenetrate each other idly without influencing
or interfering. They coexist, but in no order and in no receptacle,
being the nearest approach to an absolute 'many' that we can
conceive. We cannot even imagine any reason why they SHOULD be
known all together, and we can imagine even less, if they were
known together, how they could be known as one systematic
whole.
But add our sensations and bodily actions, and the union mounts
to a much higher grade. Our audita et visa and our acts fall into
those receptacles of time and space in which each event finds its
date and place. They form 'things' and are of 'kinds' too, and can
be classed. Yet we can imagine a world of things and of kinds in
which the causal interactions with which we are so familiar should
not exist. Everything there might be inert towards everything else,
and refuse to propagate its influence. Or gross mechanical
influences might pass, but no chemical action. Such worlds would be
far less unified than ours. Again there might be complete
physico-chemical interaction, but no minds; or minds, but
altogether private ones, with no social life; or social life
limited to acquaintance, but no love; or love, but no customs or
institutions that should systematize it. No one of these grades of
universe would be absolutely irrational or disintegrated, inferior
tho it might appear when looked at from the higher grades. For
instance, if our minds should ever become 'telepathically'
connected, so that we knew immediately, or could under certain
conditions know immediately, each what the other was thinking, the
world we now live in would appear to the thinkers in that world to
have been of an inferior grade.
With the whole of past eternity open for our conjectures to
range in, it may be lawful to wonder whether the various kinds of
union now realized in the universe that we inhabit may not possibly
have been successively evolved after the fashion in which we now
see human systems evolving in consequence of human needs. If such
an hypothesis were legitimate, total oneness would appear at the
end of things rather than at their origin. In other words the
notion of the 'Absolute' would have to be replaced by that of the
'Ultimate.' The two notions would have the same content--the
maximally unified content of fact, namely--but their time-relations
would be positively reversed. [Footnote: Compare on the Ultimate,
Mr. Schiller's essay "Activity and Substance," in his book entitled
Humanism, p. 204.]
After discussing the unity of the universe in this pragmatic
way, you ought to see why I said in my second lecture, borrowing
the word from my friend G. Papini, that pragmatism tends to
UNSTIFFEN all our theories. The world's oneness has generally been
affirmed abstractly only, and as if anyone who questioned it must
be an idiot. The temper of monists has been so vehement, as almost
at times to be convulsive; and this way of holding a doctrine does
not easily go with reasonable discussion and the drawing of
distinctions. The theory of the Absolute, in particular, has had to
be an article of faith, affirmed dogmatically and exclusively. The
One and All, first in the order of being and of knowing, logically
necessary itself, and uniting all lesser things in the bonds of
mutual necessity, how could it allow of any mitigation of its inner
rigidity? The slightest suspicion of pluralism, the minutest wiggle
of independence of any one of its parts from the control of the
totality, would ruin it. Absolute unity brooks no degrees--as well
might you claim absolute purity for a glass of water because it
contains but a single little cholera-germ. The independence,
however infinitesimal, of a part, however small, would be to the
Absolute as fatal as a cholera-germ.
Pluralism on the other hand has no need of this dogmatic
rigoristic temper. Provided you grant SOME separation among things,
some tremor of independence, some free play of parts on one
another, some real novelty or chance, however minute, she is amply
satisfied, and will allow you any amount, however great, of real
union. How much of union there may be is a question that she thinks
can only be decided empirically. The amount may be enormous,
colossal; but absolute monism is shattered if, along with all the
union, there has to be granted the slightest modicum, the most
incipient nascency, or the most residual trace, of a separation
that is not 'overcome.'
Pragmatism, pending the final empirical ascertainment of just
what the balance of union and disunion among things may be, must
obviously range herself upon the pluralistic side. Some day, she
admits, even total union, with one knower, one origin, and a
universe consolidated in every conceivable way, may turn out to be
the most acceptable of all hypotheses. Meanwhile the opposite
hypothesis, of a world imperfectly unified still, and perhaps
always to remain so, must be sincerely entertained. This latter
hypothesis is pluralism's doctrine. Since absolute monism forbids
its being even considered seriously, branding it as irrational from
the start, it is clear that pragmatism must turn its back on
absolute monism, and follow pluralism's more empirical path.
This leaves us with the common-sense world, in which we find
things partly joined and partly disjoined. 'Things,' then, and
their 'conjunctions'--what do such words mean, pragmatically
handled? In my next lecture, I will apply the pragmatic method to
the stage of philosophizing known as Common Sense.
Lecture V: Pragmatism
and Common Sense
In the last lecture we turned ourselves from the usual way of
talking of the universe's oneness as a principle, sublime in all
its blankness, towards a study of the special kinds of union which
the universe enfolds. We found many of these to coexist with kinds
of separation equally real. "How far am I verified?" is the
question which each kind of union and each kind of separation asks
us here, so as good pragmatists we have to turn our face towards
experience, towards 'facts.'
Absolute oneness remains, but only as an hypothesis, and that
hypothesis is reduced nowadays to that of an omniscient knower who
sees all things without exception as forming one single systematic
fact. But the knower in question may still be conceived either as
an Absolute or as an Ultimate; and over against the hypothesis of
him in either form the counter-hypothesis that the widest field of
knowledge that ever was or will be still contains some ignorance,
may be legitimately held. Some bits of information always may
escape.
This is the hypothesis of NOETIC PLURALISM, which monists
consider so absurd. Since we are bound to treat it as respectfully
as noetic monism, until the facts shall have tipped the beam, we
find that our pragmatism, tho originally nothing but a method, has
forced us to be friendly to the pluralistic view. It MAY be that
some parts of the world are connected so loosely with some other
parts as to be strung along by nothing but the copula AND. They
might even come and go without those other parts suffering any
internal change. This pluralistic view, of a world of ADDITIVE
constitution, is one that pragmatism is unable to rule out from
serious consideration. But this view leads one to the farther
hypothesis that the actual world, instead of being complete
'eternally,' as the monists assure us, may be eternally incomplete,
and at all times subject to addition or liable to loss.
It IS at any rate incomplete in one respect, and flagrantly so.
The very fact that we debate this question shows that our KNOWLEDGE
is incomplete at present and subject to addition. In respect of the
knowledge it contains the world does genuinely change and grow.
Some general remarks on the way in which our knowledge completes
itself-- when it does complete itself--will lead us very
conveniently into our subject for this lecture, which is 'Common
Sense.'
To begin with, our knowledge grows IN SPOTS. The spots may be
large or small, but the knowledge never grows all over: some old
knowledge always remains what it was. Your knowledge of pragmatism,
let us suppose, is growing now. Later, its growth may involve
considerable modification of opinions which you previously held to
be true. But such modifications are apt to be gradual. To take the
nearest possible example, consider these lectures of mine. What you
first gain from them is probably a small amount of new information,
a few new definitions, or distinctions, or points of view. But
while these special ideas are being added, the rest of your
knowledge stands still, and only gradually will you 'line up' your
previous opinions with the novelties I am trying to instil, and
modify to some slight degree their mass.
You listen to me now, I suppose, with certain prepossessions as
to my competency, and these affect your reception of what I say,
but were I suddenly to break off lecturing, and to begin to sing
'We won't go home till morning' in a rich baritone voice, not only
would that new fact be added to your stock, but it would oblige you
to define me differently, and that might alter your opinion of the
pragmatic philosophy, and in general bring about a rearrangement of
a number of your ideas. Your mind in such processes is strained,
and sometimes painfully so, between its older beliefs and the
novelties which experience brings along.
Our minds thus grow in spots; and like grease-spots, the spots
spread. But we let them spread as little as possible: we keep
unaltered as much of our old knowledge, as many of our old
prejudices and beliefs, as we can. We patch and tinker more than we
renew. The novelty soaks in; it stains the ancient mass; but it is
also tinged by what absorbs it. Our past apperceives and co-
operates; and in the new equilibrium in which each step forward in
the process of learning terminates, it happens relatively seldom
that the new fact is added RAW. More usually it is embedded cooked,
as one might say, or stewed down in the sauce of the old.
New truths thus are resultants of new experiences and of old
truths combined and mutually modifying one another. And since this
is the case in the changes of opinion of to-day, there is no reason
to assume that it has not been so at all times. It follows that
very ancient modes of thought may have survived through all the
later changes in men's opinions. The most primitive ways of
thinking may not yet be wholly expunged. Like our five fingers, our
ear-bones, our rudimentary caudal appendage, or our other
'vestigial' peculiarities, they may remain as indelible tokens of
events in our race-history. Our ancestors may at certain moments
have struck into ways of thinking which they might conceivably not
have found. But once they did so, and after the fact, the
inheritance continues. When you begin a piece of music in a certain
key, you must keep the key to the end. You may alter your house ad
libitum, but the ground- plan of the first architect persists--you
can make great changes, but you cannot change a Gothic church into
a Doric temple. You may rinse and rinse the bottle, but you can't
get the taste of the medicine or whiskey that first filled it
wholly out.
My thesis now is this, that OUR FUNDAMENTAL WAYS OF THINKING
ABOUT THINGS ARE DISCOVERIES OF EXCEEDINGLY REMOTE ANCESTORS, WHICH
HAVE BEEN ABLE TO PRESERVE THEMSELVES THROUGHOUT THE EXPERIENCE OF
ALL SUBSEQUENT TIME. They form one great stage of equilibrium in
the human mind's development, the stage of common sense. Other
stages have grafted themselves upon this stage, but have never
succeeded in displacing it. Let us consider this common-sense stage
first, as if it might be final.
In practical talk, a man's common sense means his good judgment,
his freedom from excentricity, his GUMPTION, to use the vernacular
word. In philosophy it means something entirely different, it means
his use of certain intellectual forms or categories of thought.
Were we lobsters, or bees, it might be that our organization would
have led to our using quite different modes from these of
apprehending our experiences. It MIGHT be too (we cannot
dogmatically deny this) that such categories, unimaginable by us
to-day, would have proved on the whole as serviceable for handling
our experiences mentally as those which we actually use.
If this sounds paradoxical to anyone, let him think of
analytical geometry. The identical figures which Euclid defined by
intrinsic relations were defined by Descartes by the relations of
their points to adventitious co-ordinates, the result being an
absolutely different and vastly more potent way of handling curves.
All our conceptions are what the Germans call denkmittel, means by
which we handle facts by thinking them. Experience merely as such
doesn't come ticketed and labeled, we have first to discover what
it is. Kant speaks of it as being in its first intention a gewuehl
der erscheinungen, a rhapsodie der wahrnehmungen, a mere motley
which we have to unify by our wits. What we usually do is first to
frame some system of concepts mentally classified, serialized, or
connected in some intellectual way, and then to use this as a tally
by which we 'keep tab' on the impressions that present themselves.
When each is referred to some possible place in the conceptual
system, it is thereby 'understood.' This notion of parallel
'manifolds' with their elements standing reciprocally in
'one-to-one relations,' is proving so convenient nowadays in
mathematics and logic as to supersede more and more the older
classificatory conceptions. There are many conceptual systems of
this sort; and the sense manifold is also such a system. Find a
one-to-one relation for your sense-impressions ANYWHERE among the
concepts, and in so far forth you rationalize the impressions. But
obviously you can rationalize them by using various conceptual
systems.
The old common-sense way of rationalizing them is by a set of
concepts of which the most important are these:
Thing;
The same or different;
Kinds;
Minds;
Bodies;
One Time;
One Space;
Subjects and attributes;
Causal influences;
The fancied;
The real.
We are now so familiar with the order that these notions have
woven for us out of the everlasting weather of our perceptions that
we find it hard to realize how little of a fixed routine the
perceptions follow when taken by themselves. The word weather is a
good one to use here. In Boston, for example, the weather has
almost no routine, the only law being that if you have had any
weather for two days, you will probably but not certainly have
another weather on the third. Weather-experience as it thus comes
to Boston, is discontinuous and chaotic. In point of temperature,
of wind, rain or sunshine, it MAY change three times a day. But the
Washington weather-bureau intellectualizes this disorder by making
each successive bit of Boston weather EPISODIC. It refers it to its
place and moment in a continental cyclone, on the history of which
the local changes everywhere are strung as beads are strung upon a
cord.
Now it seems almost certain that young children and the inferior
animals take all their experiences very much as uninstructed
Bostonians take their weather. They know no more of time or space
as world-receptacles, or of permanent subjects and changing
predicates, or of causes, or kinds, or thoughts, or things, than
our common people know of continental cyclones. A baby's rattle
drops out of his hand, but the baby looks not for it. It has 'gone
out' for him, as a candle-flame goes out; and it comes back, when
you replace it in his hand, as the flame comes back when relit. The
idea of its being a 'thing,' whose permanent existence by itself he
might interpolate between its successive apparitions has evidently
not occurred to him. It is the same with dogs. Out of sight, out of
mind, with them. It is pretty evident that they have no GENERAL
tendency to interpolate 'things.' Let me quote here a passage from
my colleague G. Santayana's book.
"If a dog, while sniffing about contentedly, sees afar off his
master arriving after long absence...the poor brute asks for no
reason why his master went, why he has come again, why he should be
loved, or why presently while lying at his feet you forget him and
begin to grunt and dream of the chase--all that is an utter
mystery, utterly unconsidered. Such experience has variety,
scenery, and a certain vital rhythm; its story might be told in
dithyrambic verse. It moves wholly by inspiration; every event is
providential, every act unpremeditated. Absolute freedom and
absolute helplessness have met together: you depend wholly on
divine favour, yet that unfathomable agency is not distinguishable
from your own life. ...[But] the figures even of that disordered
drama have their exits and their entrances; and their cues can be
gradually discovered by a being capable of fixing his attention and
retaining the order of events. ...In proportion as such
understanding advances each moment of experience becomes
consequential and prophetic of the rest. The calm places in life
are filled with power and its spasms with resource. No emotion can
overwhelm the mind, for of none is the basis or issue wholly
hidden; no event can disconcert it altogether, because it sees
beyond. Means can be looked for to escape from the worst
predicament; and whereas each moment had been formerly filled with
nothing but its own adventure and surprised emotion, each now makes
room for the lesson of what went before and surmises what may be
the plot of the whole."[Footnote: The Life of Reason: Reason in
Common Sense, 1905, p. 59.]
Even to-day science and philosophy are still laboriously trying
to part fancies from realities in our experience; and in primitive
times they made only the most incipient distinctions in this line.
Men believed whatever they thought with any liveliness, and they
mixed their dreams with their realities inextricably. The
categories of 'thought' and 'things' are indispensable
here--instead of being realities we now call certain experiences
only 'thoughts.' There is not a category, among those enumerated,
of which we may not imagine the use to have thus originated
historically and only gradually spread.
That one Time which we all believe in and in which each event
has its definite date, that one Space in which each thing has its
position, these abstract notions unify the world incomparably; but
in their finished shape as concepts how different they are from the
loose unordered time-and-space experiences of natural men!
Everything that happens to us brings its own duration and
extension, and both are vaguely surrounded by a marginal 'more'
that runs into the duration and extension of the next thing that
comes. But we soon lose all our definite bearings; and not only do
our children make no distinction between yesterday and the day
before yesterday, the whole past being churned up together, but we
adults still do so whenever the times are large. It is the same
with spaces. On a map I can distinctly see the relation of London,
Constantinople, and Pekin to the place where I am; in reality I
utterly fail to FEEL the facts which the map symbolizes. The
directions and distances are vague, confused and mixed. Cosmic
space and cosmic time, so far from being the intuitions that Kant
said they were, are constructions as patently artificial as any
that science can show. The great majority of the human race never
use these notions, but live in plural times and spaces,
interpenetrant and DURCHEINANDER.
Permanent 'things' again; the 'same' thing and its various
'appearances' and 'alterations'; the different 'kinds' of thing;
with the 'kind' used finally as a 'predicate,' of which the thing
remains the 'subject'--what a straightening of the tangle of our
experience's immediate flux and sensible variety does this list of
terms suggest! And it is only the smallest part of his experience's
flux that anyone actually does straighten out by applying to it
these conceptual instruments. Out of them all our lowest ancestors
probably used only, and then most vaguely and inaccurately, the
notion of 'the same again.' But even then if you had asked them
whether the same were a 'thing' that had endured throughout the
unseen interval, they would probably have been at a loss, and would
have said that they had never asked that question, or considered
matters in that light.
Kinds, and sameness of kind--what colossally useful DENKMITTEL
for finding our way among the many! The manyness might conceivably
have been absolute. Experiences might have all been singulars, no
one of them occurring twice. In such a world logic would have had
no application; for kind and sameness of kind are logic's only
instruments. Once we know that whatever is of a kind is also of
that kind's kind, we can travel through the universe as if with
seven- league boots. Brutes surely never use these abstractions,
and civilized men use them in most various amounts.
Causal influence, again! This, if anything, seems to have been
an antediluvian conception; for we find primitive men thinking that
almost everything is significant and can exert influence of some
sort. The search for the more definite influences seems to have
started in the question: "Who, or what, is to blame?"--for any
illness, namely, or disaster, or untoward thing. From this centre
the search for causal influences has spread. Hume and 'Science'
together have tried to eliminate the whole notion of influence,
substituting the entirely different DENKMITTEL of 'law.' But law is
a comparatively recent invention, and influence reigns supreme in
the older realm of common sense.
The 'possible,' as something less than the actual and more than
the wholly unreal, is another of these magisterial notions of
common sense. Criticize them as you may, they persist; and we fly
back to them the moment critical pressure is relaxed. 'Self,'
'body,' in the substantial or metaphysical sense--no one escapes
subjection to THOSE forms of thought. In practice, the common-sense
DENKMITTEL are uniformly victorious. Everyone, however instructed,
still thinks of a 'thing' in the common-sense way, as a permanent
unit-subject that 'supports' its attributes interchangeably. No one
stably or sincerely uses the more critical notion, of a group of
sense- qualities united by a law. With these categories in our
hand, we make our plans and plot together, and connect all the
remoter parts of experience with what lies before our eyes. Our
later and more critical philosophies are mere fads and fancies
compared with this natural mother-tongue of thought.
Common sense appears thus as a perfectly definite stage in our
understanding of things, a stage that satisfies in an
extraordinarily successful way the purposes for which we think.
'Things' do exist, even when we do not see them. Their 'kinds' also
exist. Their 'qualities' are what they act by, and are what we act
on; and these also exist. These lamps shed their quality of light
on every object in this room. We intercept IT on its way whenever
we hold up an opaque screen. It is the very sound that my lips emit
that travels into your ears. It is the sensible heat of the fire
that migrates into the water in which we boil an egg; and we can
change the heat into coolness by dropping in a lump of ice. At this
stage of philosophy all non-European men without exception have
remained. It suffices for all the necessary practical ends of life;
and, among our own race even, it is only the highly sophisticated
specimens, the minds debauched by learning, as Berkeley calls them,
who have ever even suspected common sense of not being absolutely
true.
But when we look back, and speculate as to how the common-sense
categories may have achieved their wonderful supremacy, no reason
appears why it may not have been by a process just like that by
which the conceptions due to Democritus, Berkeley, or Darwin,
achieved their similar triumphs in more recent times. In other
words, they may have been successfully DISCOVERED by prehistoric
geniuses whose names the night of antiquity has covered up; they
may have been verified by the immediate facts of experience which
they first fitted; and then from fact to fact and from man to man
they may have SPREAD, until all language rested on them and we are
now incapable of thinking naturally in any other terms. Such a view
would only follow the rule that has proved elsewhere so fertile, of
assuming the vast and remote to conform to the laws of formation
that we can observe at work in the small and near.
For all utilitarian practical purposes these conceptions amply
suffice; but that they began at special points of discovery and
only gradually spread from one thing to another, seems proved by
the exceedingly dubious limits of their application to-day. We
assume for certain purposes one 'objective' Time that AEQUABILITER
FLUIT, but we don't livingly believe in or realize any such
equally-flowing time. 'Space' is a less vague notion; but 'things,'
what are they? Is a constellation properly a thing? or an army? or
is an ENS RATIONIS such as space or justice a thing? Is a knife
whose handle and blade are changed the 'same'? Is the 'changeling,'
whom Locke so seriously discusses, of the human 'kind'? Is
'telepathy' a 'fancy' or a 'fact'? The moment you pass beyond the
practical use of these categories (a use usually suggested
sufficiently by the circumstances of the special case) to a merely
curious or speculative way of thinking, you find it impossible to
say within just what limits of fact any one of them shall
apply.
The peripatetic philosophy, obeying rationalist propensities,
has tried to eternalize the common-sense categories by treating
them very technically and articulately. A 'thing' for instance is a
being, or ENS. An ENS is a subject in which qualities 'inhere.' A
subject is a substance. Substances are of kinds, and kinds are
definite in number, and discrete. These distinctions are
fundamental and eternal. As terms of DISCOURSE they are indeed
magnificently useful, but what they mean, apart from their use in
steering our discourse to profitable issues, does not appear. If
you ask a scholastic philosopher what a substance may be in itself,
apart from its being the support of attributes, he simply says that
your intellect knows perfectly what the word means.
But what the intellect knows clearly is only the word itself and
its steering function. So it comes about that intellects SIBI
PERMISSI, intellects only curious and idle, have forsaken the
common-sense level for what in general terms may be called the
'critical' level of thought. Not merely SUCH intellects
either--your Humes and Berkeleys and Hegels; but practical
observers of facts, your Galileos, Daltons, Faradays, have found it
impossible to treat the NAIFS sense-termini of common sense as
ultimately real. As common sense interpolates her constant 'things'
between our intermittent sensations, so science EXTRApolates her
world of 'primary' qualities, her atoms, her ether, her magnetic
fields, and the like, beyond the common-sense world. The 'things'
are now invisible impalpable things; and the old visible
common-sense things are supposed to result from the mixture of
these invisibles. Or else the whole NAIF conception of thing gets
superseded, and a thing's name is interpreted as denoting only the
law or REGEL DER VERBINDUNG by which certain of our sensations
habitually succeed or coexist.
Science and critical philosophy thus burst the bounds of common
sense. With science NAIF realism ceases: 'Secondary' qualities
become unreal; primary ones alone remain. With critical philosophy,
havoc is made of everything. The common-sense categories one and
all cease to represent anything in the way of BEING; they are but
sublime tricks of human thought, our ways of escaping bewilderment
in the midst of sensation's irremediable flow.
But the scientific tendency in critical thought, tho inspired at
first by purely intellectual motives, has opened an entirely
unexpected range of practical utilities to our astonished view.
Galileo gave us accurate clocks and accurate artillery-practice;
the chemists flood us with new medicines and dye-stuffs; Ampere and
Faraday have endowed us with the New York subway and with Marconi
telegrams. The hypothetical things that such men have invented,
defined as they have defined them, are showing an extraordinary
fertility in consequences verifiable by sense. Our logic can deduce
from them a consequence due under certain conditions, we can then
bring about the conditions, and presto, the consequence is there
before our eyes. The scope of the practical control of nature newly
put into our hand by scientific ways of thinking vastly exceeds the
scope of the old control grounded on common sense. Its rate of
increase accelerates so that no one can trace the limit; one may
even fear that the BEING of man may be crushed by his own powers,
that his fixed nature as an organism may not prove adequate to
stand the strain of the ever increasingly tremendous functions,
almost divine creative functions, which his intellect will more and
more enable him to wield. He may drown in his wealth like a child
in a bath-tub, who has turned on the water and who cannot turn it
off.
The philosophic stage of criticism, much more thorough in its
negations than the scientific stage, so far gives us no new range
of practical power. Locke, Hume, Berkeley, Kant, Hegel, have all
been utterly sterile, so far as shedding any light on the details
of nature goes, and I can think of no invention or discovery that
can be directly traced to anything in their peculiar thought, for
neither with Berkeley's tar-water nor with Kant's nebular
hypothesis had their respective philosophic tenets anything to do.
The satisfactions they yield to their disciples are intellectual,
not practical; and even then we have to confess that there is a
large minus-side to the account.
There are thus at least three well-characterized levels, stages
or types of thought about the world we live in, and the notions of
one stage have one kind of merit, those of another stage another
kind. It is impossible, however, to say that any stage as yet in
sight is absolutely more TRUE than any other. Common sense is the
more CONSOLIDATED stage, because it got its innings first, and made
all language into its ally. Whether it or science be the more
AUGUST stage may be left to private judgment. But neither
consolidation nor augustness are decisive marks of truth. If common
sense were true, why should science have had to brand the secondary
qualities, to which our world owes all its living interest, as
false, and to invent an invisible world of points and curves and
mathematical equations instead? Why should it have needed to
transform causes and activities into laws of 'functional
variation'? Vainly did scholasticism, common sense's
college-trained younger sister, seek to stereotype the forms the
human family had always talked with, to make them definite and fix
them for eternity. Substantial forms (in other words our secondary
qualities) hardly outlasted the year of our Lord 1600. People were
already tired of them then; and Galileo, and Descartes, with his
'new philosophy,' gave them only a little later their coup de
grace.
But now if the new kinds of scientific 'thing,' the corpuscular
and etheric world, were essentially more 'true,' why should they
have excited so much criticism within the body of science itself?
Scientific logicians are saying on every hand that these entities
and their determinations, however definitely conceived, should not
be held for literally real. It is AS IF they existed; but in
reality they are like co-ordinates or logarithms, only artificial
short-cuts for taking us from one part to another of experience's
flux. We can cipher fruitfully with them; they serve us
wonderfully; but we must not be their dupes.
There is no RINGING conclusion possible when we compare these
types of thinking, with a view to telling which is the more
absolutely true. Their naturalness, their intellectual economy,
their fruitfulness for practice, all start up as distinct tests of
their veracity, and as a result we get confused. Common sense is
BETTER for one sphere of life, science for another, philosophic
criticism for a third; but whether either be TRUER absolutely,
Heaven only knows. Just now, if I understand the matter rightly, we
are witnessing a curious reversion to the common-sense way of
looking at physical nature, in the philosophy of science favored by
such men as Mach, Ostwald and Duhem. According to these teachers no
hypothesis is truer than any other in the sense of being a more
literal copy of reality. They are all but ways of talking on our
part, to be compared solely from the point of view of their USE.
The only literally true thing is REALITY; and the only reality we
know is, for these logicians, sensible reality, the flux of our
sensations and emotions as they pass. 'Energy' is the collective
name (according to Ostwald) for the sensations just as they present
themselves (the movement, heat, magnetic pull, or light, or
whatever it may be) when they are measured in certain ways. So
measuring them, we are enabled to describe the correlated changes
which they show us, in formulas matchless for their simplicity and
fruitfulness for human use. They are sovereign triumphs of economy
in thought.
No one can fail to admire the 'energetic' philosophy. But the
hypersensible entities, the corpuscles and vibrations, hold their
own with most physicists and chemists, in spite of its appeal. It
seems too economical to be all-sufficient. Profusion, not economy,
may after all be reality's key-note.
I am dealing here with highly technical matters, hardly suitable
for popular lecturing, and in which my own competence is small. All
the better for my conclusion, however, which at this point is this.
The whole notion of truth, which naturally and without reflexion we
assume to mean the simple duplication by the mind of a ready-made
and given reality, proves hard to understand clearly. There is no
simple test available for adjudicating offhand between the divers
types of thought that claim to possess it. Common sense, common
science or corpuscular philosophy, ultra-critical science, or
energetics, and critical or idealistic philosophy, all seem
insufficiently true in some regard and leave some dissatisfaction.
It is evident that the conflict of these so widely differing
systems obliges us to overhaul the very idea of truth, for at
present we have no definite notion of what the word may mean. I
shall face that task in my next lecture, and will add but a few
words, in finishing the present one.
There are only two points that I wish you to retain from the
present lecture. The first one relates to common sense. We have
seen reason to suspect it, to suspect that in spite of their being
so venerable, of their being so universally used and built into the
very structure of language, its categories may after all be only a
collection of extraordinarily successful hypotheses (historically
discovered or invented by single men, but gradually communicated,
and used by everybody) by which our forefathers have from time
immemorial unified and straightened the discontinuity of their
immediate experiences, and put themselves into an equilibrium with
the surface of nature so satisfactory for ordinary practical
purposes that it certainly would have lasted forever, but for the
excessive intellectual vivacity of Democritus, Archimedes, Galileo,
Berkeley, and other excentric geniuses whom the example of such men
inflamed. Retain, I pray you, this suspicion about common
sense.
The other point is this. Ought not the existence of the various
types of thinking which we have reviewed, each so splendid for
certain purposes, yet all conflicting still, and neither one of
them able to support a claim of absolute veracity, to awaken a
presumption favorable to the pragmatistic view that all our
theories are INSTRUMENTAL, are mental modes of ADAPTATION to
reality, rather than revelations or gnostic answers to some
divinely instituted world-enigma? I expressed this view as clearly
as I could in the second of these lectures. Certainly the
restlessness of the actual theoretic situation, the value for some
purposes of each thought- level, and the inability of either to
expel the others decisively, suggest this pragmatistic view, which
I hope that the next lectures may soon make entirely convincing.
May there not after all be a possible ambiguity in truth?
Lecture VI:
Pragmatism's Conception of Truth
When Clerk Maxwell was a child it is written that he had a mania
for having everything explained to him, and that when people put
him off with vague verbal accounts of any phenomenon he would
interrupt them impatiently by saying, "Yes; but I want you to tell
me the PARTICULAR GO of it!" Had his question been about truth,
only a pragmatist could have told him the particular go of it. I
believe that our contemporary pragmatists, especially Messrs.
Schiller and Dewey, have given the only tenable account of this
subject. It is a very ticklish subject, sending subtle rootlets
into all kinds of crannies, and hard to treat in the sketchy way
that alone befits a public lecture. But the Schiller-Dewey view of
truth has been so ferociously attacked by rationalistic
philosophers, and so abominably misunderstood, that here, if
anywhere, is the point where a clear and simple statement should be
made.
I fully expect to see the pragmatist view of truth run through
the classic stages of a theory's career. First, you know, a new
theory is attacked as absurd; then it is admitted to be true, but
obvious and insignificant; finally it is seen to be so important
that its adversaries claim that they themselves discovered it. Our
doctrine of truth is at present in the first of these three stages,
with symptoms of the second stage having begun in certain quarters.
I wish that this lecture might help it beyond the first stage in
the eyes of many of you.
Truth, as any dictionary will tell you, is a property of certain
of our ideas. It means their 'agreement,' as falsity means their
disagreement, with 'reality.' Pragmatists and intellectualists both
accept this definition as a matter of course. They begin to quarrel
only after the question is raised as to what may precisely be meant
by the term 'agreement,' and what by the term 'reality,' when
reality is taken as something for our ideas to agree with.
In answering these questions the pragmatists are more analytic
and painstaking, the intellectualists more offhand and
irreflective. The popular notion is that a true idea must copy its
reality. Like other popular views, this one follows the analogy of
the most usual experience. Our true ideas of sensible things do
indeed copy them. Shut your eyes and think of yonder clock on the
wall, and you get just such a true picture or copy of its dial. But
your idea of its 'works' (unless you are a clock-maker) is much
less of a copy, yet it passes muster, for it in no way clashes with
the reality. Even tho it should shrink to the mere word 'works,'
that word still serves you truly; and when you speak of the
'time-keeping function' of the clock, or of its spring's
'elasticity,' it is hard to see exactly what your ideas can
copy.
You perceive that there is a problem here. Where our ideas
cannot copy definitely their object, what does agreement with that
object mean? Some idealists seem to say that they are true whenever
they are what God means that we ought to think about that object.
Others hold the copy-view all through, and speak as if our ideas
possessed truth just in proportion as they approach to being copies
of the Absolute's eternal way of thinking.
These views, you see, invite pragmatistic discussion. But the
great assumption of the intellectualists is that truth means
essentially an inert static relation. When you've got your true
idea of anything, there's an end of the matter. You're in
possession; you KNOW; you have fulfilled your thinking destiny. You
are where you ought to be mentally; you have obeyed your
categorical imperative; and nothing more need follow on that climax
of your rational destiny. Epistemologically you are in stable
equilibrium.
Pragmatism, on the other hand, asks its usual question. "Grant
an idea or belief to be true," it says, "what concrete difference
will its being true make in anyone's actual life? How will the
truth be realized? What experiences will be different from those
which would obtain if the belief were false? What, in short, is the
truth's cash-value in experiential terms?"
The moment pragmatism asks this question, it sees the answer:
TRUE IDEAS ARE THOSE THAT WE CAN ASSIMILATE, VALIDATE, CORROBORATE
AND VERIFY. FALSE IDEAS ARE THOSE THAT WE CANNOT. That is the
practical difference it makes to us to have true ideas; that,
therefore, is the meaning of truth, for it is all that truth is
known-as.
This thesis is what I have to defend. The truth of an idea is
not a stagnant property inherent in it. Truth HAPPENS to an idea.
It BECOMES true, is MADE true by events. Its verity is in fact an
event, a process: the process namely of its verifying itself, its
veri-FICATION. Its validity is the process of its valid-ATION.
But what do the words verification and validation themselves
pragmatically mean? They again signify certain practical
consequences of the verified and validated idea. It is hard to find
any one phrase that characterizes these consequences better than
the ordinary agreement-formula--just such consequences being what
we have in mind whenever we say that our ideas 'agree' with
reality. They lead us, namely, through the acts and other ideas
which they instigate, into or up to, or towards, other parts of
experience with which we feel all the while-such feeling being
among our potentialities--that the original ideas remain in
agreement. The connexions and transitions come to us from point to
point as being progressive, harmonious, satisfactory. This function
of agreeable leading is what we mean by an idea's verification.
Such an account is vague and it sounds at first quite trivial, but
it has results which it will take the rest of my hour to
explain.
Let me begin by reminding you of the fact that the possession of
true thoughts means everywhere the possession of invaluable
instruments of action; and that our duty to gain truth, so far from
being a blank command from out of the blue, or a 'stunt' self-
imposed by our intellect, can account for itself by excellent
practical reasons.
The importance to human life of having true beliefs about
matters of fact is a thing too notorious. We live in a world of
realities that can be infinitely useful or infinitely harmful.
Ideas that tell us which of them to expect count as the true ideas
in all this primary sphere of verification, and the pursuit of such
ideas is a primary human duty. The possession of truth, so far from
being here an end in itself, is only a preliminary means towards
other vital satisfactions. If I am lost in the woods and starved,
and find what looks like a cow-path, it is of the utmost importance
that I should think of a human habitation at the end of it, for if
I do so and follow it, I save myself. The true thought is useful
here because the house which is its object is useful. The practical
value of true ideas is thus primarily derived from the practical
importance of their objects to us. Their objects are, indeed, not
important at all times. I may on another occasion have no use for
the house; and then my idea of it, however verifiable, will be
practically irrelevant, and had better remain latent. Yet since
almost any object may some day become temporarily important, the
advantage of having a general stock of extra truths, of ideas that
shall be true of merely possible situations, is obvious. We store
such extra truths away in our memories, and with the overflow we
fill our books of reference. Whenever such an extra truth becomes
practically relevant to one of our emergencies, it passes from
cold-storage to do work in the world, and our belief in it grows
active. You can say of it then either that 'it is useful because it
is true' or that 'it is true because it is useful.' Both these
phrases mean exactly the same thing, namely that here is an idea
that gets fulfilled and can be verified. True is the name for
whatever idea starts the verification-process, useful is the name
for its completed function in experience. True ideas would never
have been singled out as such, would never have acquired a
class-name, least of all a name suggesting value, unless they had
been useful from the outset in this way.
From this simple cue pragmatism gets her general notion of truth
as something essentially bound up with the way in which one moment
in our experience may lead us towards other moments which it will
be worth while to have been led to. Primarily, and on the
common-sense level, the truth of a state of mind means this
function of A LEADING THAT IS WORTH WHILE. When a moment in our
experience, of any kind whatever, inspires us with a thought that
is true, that means that sooner or later we dip by that thought's
guidance into the particulars of experience again and make
advantageous connexion with them. This is a vague enough statement,
but I beg you to retain it, for it is essential.
Our experience meanwhile is all shot through with regularities.
One bit of it can warn us to get ready for another bit, can
'intend' or be 'significant of' that remoter object. The object's
advent is the significance's verification. Truth, in these cases,
meaning nothing but eventual verification, is manifestly
incompatible with waywardness on our part. Woe to him whose beliefs
play fast and loose with the order which realities follow in his
experience: they will lead him nowhere or else make false
connexions.
By 'realities' or 'objects' here, we mean either things of
common sense, sensibly present, or else common-sense relations,
such as dates, places, distances, kinds, activities. Following our
mental image of a house along the cow-path, we actually come to see
the house; we get the image's full verification. SUCH SIMPLY AND
FULLY VERIFIED LEADINGS ARE CERTAINLY THE ORIGINALS AND PROTOTYPES
OF THE TRUTH-PROCESS. Experience offers indeed other forms of
truth- process, but they are all conceivable as being primary
verifications arrested, multiplied or substituted one for
another.
Take, for instance, yonder object on the wall. You and I
consider it to be a 'clock,' altho no one of us has seen the hidden
works that make it one. We let our notion pass for true without
attempting to verify. If truths mean verification-process
essentially, ought we then to call such unverified truths as this
abortive? No, for they form the overwhelmingly large number of the
truths we live by. Indirect as well as direct verifications pass
muster. Where circumstantial evidence is sufficient, we can go
without eye- witnessing. Just as we here assume Japan to exist
without ever having been there, because it WORKS to do so,
everything we know conspiring with the belief, and nothing
interfering, so we assume that thing to be a clock. We USE it as a
clock, regulating the length of our lecture by it. The verification
of the assumption here means its leading to no frustration or
contradiction. VerifiABILITY of wheels and weights and pendulum is
as good as verification. For one truth-process completed there are
a million in our lives that function in this state of nascency.
They turn us TOWARDS direct verification; lead us into the
SURROUNDINGS of the objects they envisage; and then, if everything
runs on harmoniously, we are so sure that verification is possible
that we omit it, and are usually justified by all that happens.
Truth lives, in fact, for the most part on a credit system. Our
thoughts and beliefs 'pass,' so long as nothing challenges them,
just as bank-notes pass so long as nobody refuses them. But this
all points to direct face-to-face verifications somewhere, without
which the fabric of truth collapses like a financial system with no
cash- basis whatever. You accept my verification of one thing, I
yours of another. We trade on each other's truth. But beliefs
verified concretely by SOMEBODY are the posts of the whole
superstructure.
Another great reason--beside economy of time--for waiving
complete verification in the usual business of life is that all
things exist in kinds and not singly. Our world is found once for
all to have that peculiarity. So that when we have once directly
verified our ideas about one specimen of a kind, we consider
ourselves free to apply them to other specimens without
verification. A mind that habitually discerns the kind of thing
before it, and acts by the law of the kind immediately, without
pausing to verify, will be a 'true' mind in ninety-nine out of a
hundred emergencies, proved so by its conduct fitting everything it
meets, and getting no refutation.
INDIRECTLY OR ONLY POTENTIALLY VERIFYING PROCESSES MAY THUS BE
TRUE AS WELL AS FULL VERIFICATION-PROCESSES. They work as true
processes would work, give us the same advantages, and claim our
recognition for the same reasons. All this on the common-sense
level of, matters of fact, which we are alone considering.
But matters of fact are not our only stock in trade. RELATIONS
AMONG PURELY MENTAL IDEAS form another sphere where true and false
beliefs obtain, and here the beliefs are absolute, or
unconditional. When they are true they bear the name either of
definitions or of principles. It is either a principle or a
definition that 1 and 1 make 2, that 2 and 1 make 3, and so on;
that white differs less from gray than it does from black; that
when the cause begins to act the effect also commences. Such
propositions hold of all possible 'ones,' of all conceivable
'whites' and 'grays' and 'causes.' The objects here are mental
objects. Their relations are perceptually obvious at a glance, and
no sense-verification is necessary. Moreover, once true, always
true, of those same mental objects. Truth here has an 'eternal'
character. If you can find a concrete thing anywhere that is 'one'
or 'white' or 'gray,' or an 'effect,' then your principles will
everlastingly apply to it. It is but a case of ascertaining the
kind, and then applying the law of its kind to the particular
object. You are sure to get truth if you can but name the kind
rightly, for your mental relations hold good of everything of that
kind without exception. If you then, nevertheless, failed to get
truth concretely, you would say that you had classed your real
objects wrongly.
In this realm of mental relations, truth again is an affair of
leading. We relate one abstract idea with another, framing in the
end great systems of logical and mathematical truth, under the
respective terms of which the sensible facts of experience
eventually arrange themselves, so that our eternal truths hold good
of realities also. This marriage of fact and theory is endlessly
fertile. What we say is here already true in advance of special
verification, IF WE HAVE SUBSUMED OUR OBJECTS RIGHTLY. Our ready-
made ideal framework for all sorts of possible objects follows from
the very structure of our thinking. We can no more play fast and
loose with these abstract relations than we can do so with our
sense-experiences. They coerce us; we must treat them consistently,
whether or not we like the results. The rules of addition apply to
our debts as rigorously as to our assets. The hundredth decimal of
pi, the ratio of the circumference to its diameter, is
predetermined ideally now, tho no one may have computed it. If we
should ever need the figure in our dealings with an actual circle
we should need to have it given rightly, calculated by the usual
rules; for it is the same kind of truth that those rules elsewhere
calculate.
Between the coercions of the sensible order and those of the
ideal order, our mind is thus wedged tightly. Our ideas must agree
with realities, be such realities concrete or abstract, be they
facts or be they principles, under penalty of endless inconsistency
and frustration. So far, intellectualists can raise no protest.
They can only say that we have barely touched the skin of the
matter.
Realities mean, then, either concrete facts, or abstract kinds
of things and relations perceived intuitively between them. They
furthermore and thirdly mean, as things that new ideas of ours must
no less take account of, the whole body of other truths already in
our possession. But what now does 'agreement' with such three-fold
realities mean?--to use again the definition that is current.
Here it is that pragmatism and intellectualism begin to part
company. Primarily, no doubt, to agree means to copy, but we saw
that the mere word 'clock' would do instead of a mental picture of
its works, and that of many realities our ideas can only be symbols
and not copies. 'Past time,' 'power,' 'spontaneity'--how can our
mind copy such realities?
To 'agree' in the widest sense with a reality, CAN ONLY MEAN TO
BE GUIDED EITHER STRAIGHT UP TO IT OR INTO ITS SURROUNDINGS, OR TO
BE PUT INTO SUCH WORKING TOUCH WITH IT AS TO HANDLE EITHER IT OR
SOMETHING CONNECTED WITH IT BETTER THAN IF WE DISAGREED. Better
either intellectually or practically! And often agreement will only
mean the negative fact that nothing contradictory from the quarter
of that reality comes to interfere with the way in which our ideas
guide us elsewhere. To copy a reality is, indeed, one very
important way of agreeing with it, but it is far from being
essential. The essential thing is the process of being guided. Any
idea that helps us to DEAL, whether practically or intellectually,
with either the reality or its belongings, that doesn't entangle
our progress in frustrations, that FITS, in fact, and adapts our
life to the reality's whole setting, will agree sufficiently to
meet the requirement. It will hold true of that reality.
Thus, NAMES are just as 'true' or 'false' as definite mental
pictures are. They set up similar verification-processes, and lead
to fully equivalent practical results.
All human thinking gets discursified; we exchange ideas; we lend
and borrow verifications, get them from one another by means of
social intercourse. All truth thus gets verbally built out, stored
up, and made available for everyone. Hence, we must TALK
consistently just as we must THINK consistently: for both in talk
and thought we deal with kinds. Names are arbitrary, but once
understood they must be kept to. We mustn't now call Abel 'Cain' or
Cain 'Abel.' If we do, we ungear ourselves from the whole book of
Genesis, and from all its connexions with the universe of speech
and fact down to the present time. We throw ourselves out of
whatever truth that entire system of speech and fact may
embody.
The overwhelming majority of our true ideas admit of no direct
or face-to-face verification-those of past history, for example, as
of Cain and Abel. The stream of time can be remounted only
verbally, or verified indirectly by the present prolongations or
effects of what the past harbored. Yet if they agree with these
verbalities and effects, we can know that our ideas of the past are
true. AS TRUE AS PAST TIME ITSELF WAS, so true was Julius Caesar,
so true were antediluvian monsters, all in their proper dates and
settings. That past time itself was, is guaranteed by its coherence
with everything that's present. True as the present is, the past
was also.
Agreement thus turns out to be essentially an affair of
leading-- leading that is useful because it is into quarters that
contain objects that are important. True ideas lead us into useful
verbal and conceptual quarters as well as directly up to useful
sensible termini. They lead to consistency, stability and flowing
human intercourse. They lead away from excentricity and isolation,
from foiled and barren thinking. The untrammeled flowing of the
leading- process, its general freedom from clash and contradiction,
passes for its indirect verification; but all roads lead to Rome,
and in the end and eventually, all true processes must lead to the
face of directly verifying sensible experiences SOMEWHERE, which
somebody's ideas have copied.
Such is the large loose way in which the pragmatist interprets
the word agreement. He treats it altogether practically. He lets it
cover any process of conduction from a present idea to a future
terminus, provided only it run prosperously. It is only thus that
'scientific' ideas, flying as they do beyond common sense, can be
said to agree with their realities. It is, as I have already said,
as if reality were made of ether, atoms or electrons, but we
mustn't think so literally. The term 'energy' doesn't even pretend
to stand for anything 'objective.' It is only a way of measuring
the surface of phenomena so as to string their changes on a simple
formula.
Yet in the choice of these man-made formulas we cannot be
capricious with impunity any more than we can be capricious on the
common-sense practical level. We must find a theory that will WORK;
and that means something extremely difficult; for our theory must
mediate between all previous truths and certain new experiences. It
must derange common sense and previous belief as little as
possible, and it must lead to some sensible terminus or other that
can be verified exactly. To 'work' means both these things; and the
squeeze is so tight that there is little loose play for any
hypothesis. Our theories are wedged and controlled as nothing else
is. Yet sometimes alternative theoretic formulas are equally
compatible with all the truths we know, and then we choose between
them for subjective reasons. We choose the kind of theory to which
we are already partial; we follow 'elegance' or 'economy.' Clerk
Maxwell somewhere says it would be "poor scientific taste" to
choose the more complicated of two equally well-evidenced
conceptions; and you will all agree with him. Truth in science is
what gives us the maximum possible sum of satisfactions, taste
included, but consistency both with previous truth and with novel
fact is always the most imperious claimant.
I have led you through a very sandy desert. But now, if I may be
allowed so vulgar an expression, we begin to taste the milk in the
cocoanut. Our rationalist critics here discharge their batteries
upon us, and to reply to them will take us out from all this
dryness into full sight of a momentous philosophical
alternative.
Our account of truth is an account of truths in the plural, of
processes of leading, realized in rebus, and having only this
quality in common, that they PAY. They pay by guiding us into or
towards some part of a system that dips at numerous points into
sense-percepts, which we may copy mentally or not, but with which
at any rate we are now in the kind of commerce vaguely designated
as verification. Truth for us is simply a collective name for
verification-processes, just as health, wealth, strength, etc., are
names for other processes connected with life, and also pursued
because it pays to pursue them. Truth is MADE, just as health,
wealth and strength are made, in the course of experience.
Here rationalism is instantaneously up in arms against us. I can
imagine a rationalist to talk as follows:
"Truth is not made," he will say; "it absolutely obtains, being
a unique relation that does not wait upon any process, but shoots
straight over the head of experience, and hits its reality every
time. Our belief that yon thing on the wall is a clock is true
already, altho no one in the whole history of the world should
verify it. The bare quality of standing in that transcendent
relation is what makes any thought true that possesses it, whether
or not there be verification. You pragmatists put the cart before
the horse in making truth's being reside in verification-processes.
These are merely signs of its being, merely our lame ways of
ascertaining after the fact, which of our ideas already has
possessed the wondrous quality. The quality itself is timeless,
like all essences and natures. Thoughts partake of it directly, as
they partake of falsity or of irrelevancy. It can't be analyzed
away into pragmatic consequences."
The whole plausibility of this rationalist tirade is due to the
fact to which we have already paid so much attention. In our world,
namely, abounding as it does in things of similar kinds and
similarly associated, one verification serves for others of its
kind, and one great use of knowing things is to be led not so much
to them as to their associates, especially to human talk about
them. The quality of truth, obtaining ante rem, pragmatically
means, then, the fact that in such a world innumerable ideas work
better by their indirect or possible than by their direct and
actual verification. Truth ante rem means only verifiability, then;
or else it is a case of the stock rationalist trick of treating the
NAME of a concrete phenomenal reality as an independent prior
entity, and placing it behind the reality as its explanation.
Professor Mach quotes somewhere an epigram of Lessing's:
Sagt Hanschen Schlau zu Vetter Fritz, "Wie kommt es, Vetter
Fritzen, Dass grad' die Reichsten in der Welt, Das meiste Geld
besitzen?"
Hanschen Schlau here treats the principle 'wealth' as something
distinct from the facts denoted by the man's being rich. It
antedates them; the facts become only a sort of secondary
coincidence with the rich man's essential nature.
In the case of 'wealth' we all see the fallacy. We know that
wealth is but a name for concrete processes that certain men's
lives play a part in, and not a natural excellence found in Messrs.
Rockefeller and Carnegie, but not in the rest of us.
Like wealth, health also lives in rebus. It is a name for
processes, as digestion, circulation, sleep, etc., that go on
happily, tho in this instance we are more inclined to think of it
as a principle and to say the man digests and sleeps so well
BECAUSE he is so healthy.
With 'strength' we are, I think, more rationalistic still, and
decidedly inclined to treat it as an excellence pre-existing in the
man and explanatory of the herculean performances of his
muscles.
With 'truth' most people go over the border entirely, and treat
the rationalistic account as self-evident. But really all these
words in TH are exactly similar. Truth exists ante rem just as much
and as little as the other things do.
The scholastics, following Aristotle, made much of the
distinction between habit and act. Health in actu means, among
other things, good sleeping and digesting. But a healthy man need
not always be sleeping, or always digesting, any more than a
wealthy man need be always handling money, or a strong man always
lifting weights. All such qualities sink to the status of 'habits'
between their times of exercise; and similarly truth becomes a
habit of certain of our ideas and beliefs in their intervals of
rest from their verifying activities. But those activities are the
root of the whole matter, and the condition of there being any
habit to exist in the intervals.
'The true,' to put it very briefly, is only the expedient in the
way of our thinking, just as 'the right' is only the expedient in
the way of our behaving. Expedient in almost any fashion; and
expedient in the long run and on the whole of course; for what
meets expediently all the experience in sight won't necessarily
meet all farther experiences equally satisfactorily. Experience, as
we know, has ways of BOILING OVER, and making us correct our
present formulas.
The 'absolutely' true, meaning what no farther experience will
ever alter, is that ideal vanishing-point towards which we imagine
that all our temporary truths will some day converge. It runs on
all fours with the perfectly wise man, and with the absolutely
complete experience; and, if these ideals are ever realized, they
will all be realized together. Meanwhile we have to live to-day by
what truth we can get to-day, and be ready to-morrow to call it
falsehood. Ptolemaic astronomy, euclidean space, aristotelian
logic, scholastic metaphysics, were expedient for centuries, but
human experience has boiled over those limits, and we now call
these things only relatively true, or true within those borders of
experience. 'Absolutely' they are false; for we know that those
limits were casual, and might have been transcended by past
theorists just as they are by present thinkers.
When new experiences lead to retrospective judgments, using the
past tense, what these judgments utter WAS true, even tho no past
thinker had been led there. We live forwards, a Danish thinker has
said, but we understand backwards. The present sheds a backward
light on the world's previous processes. They may have been
truth-processes for the actors in them. They are not so for one who
knows the later revelations of the story.
This regulative notion of a potential better truth to be
established later, possibly to be established some day absolutely,
and having powers of retroactive legislation, turns its face, like
all pragmatist notions, towards concreteness of fact, and towards
the future. Like the half-truths, the absolute truth will have to
be MADE, made as a relation incidental to the growth of a mass of
verification-experience, to which the half-true ideas are all along
contributing their quota.
I have already insisted on the fact that truth is made largely
out of previous truths. Men's beliefs at any time are so much
experience funded. But the beliefs are themselves parts of the sum
total of the world's experience, and become matter, therefore, for
the next day's funding operations. So far as reality means
experienceable reality, both it and the truths men gain about it
are everlastingly in process of mutation-mutation towards a
definite goal, it may be--but still mutation.
Mathematicians can solve problems with two variables. On the
Newtonian theory, for instance, acceleration varies with distance,
but distance also varies with acceleration. In the realm of truth-
processes facts come independently and determine our beliefs
provisionally. But these beliefs make us act, and as fast as they
do so, they bring into sight or into existence new facts which re-
determine the beliefs accordingly. So the whole coil and ball of
truth, as it rolls up, is the product of a double influence. Truths
emerge from facts; but they dip forward into facts again and add to
them; which facts again create or reveal new truth (the word is
indifferent) and so on indefinitely. The 'facts' themselves
meanwhile are not TRUE. They simply ARE. Truth is the function of
the beliefs that start and terminate among them.
The case is like a snowball's growth, due as it is to the
distribution of the snow on the one hand, and to the successive
pushes of the boys on the other, with these factors co-determining
each other incessantly.
The most fateful point of difference between being a rationalist
and being a pragmatist is now fully in sight. Experience is in
mutation, and our psychological ascertainments of truth are in
mutation--so much rationalism will allow; but never that either
reality itself or truth itself is mutable. Reality stands complete
and ready-made from all eternity, rationalism insists, and the
agreement of our ideas with it is that unique unanalyzable virtue
in them of which she has already told us. As that intrinsic
excellence, their truth has nothing to do with our experiences. It
adds nothing to the content of experience. It makes no difference
to reality itself; it is supervenient, inert, static, a reflexion
merely. It doesn't EXIST, it HOLDS or OBTAINS, it belongs to
another dimension from that of either facts or fact-relations,
belongs, in short, to the epistemological dimension--and with that
big word rationalism closes the discussion.
Thus, just as pragmatism faces forward to the future, so does
rationalism here again face backward to a past eternity. True to
her inveterate habit, rationalism reverts to 'principles,' and
thinks that when an abstraction once is named, we own an oracular
solution.
The tremendous pregnancy in the way of consequences for life of
this radical difference of outlook will only become apparent in my
later lectures. I wish meanwhile to close this lecture by showing
that rationalism's sublimity does not save it from inanity.
When, namely, you ask rationalists, instead of accusing
pragmatism of desecrating the notion of truth, to define it
themselves by saying exactly what THEY understand by it, the only
positive attempts I can think of are these two:
1. "Truth is just the system of propositions which have an un-
conditional claim to be recognized as valid." [Footnote: A. E.
Taylor,
Philosophical Review, vol.
xiv, p. 288.]
2. Truth is a name for all those judgments which we find
ourselves under obligation to make by a kind of imperative duty.
[Footnote: H. Rickert, Der Gegenstand der Erkenntniss, chapter on
'Die Urtheilsnothwendigkeit.']
The first thing that strikes one in such definitions is their
unutterable triviality. They are absolutely true, of course, but
absolutely insignificant until you handle them pragmatically. What
do you mean by 'claim' here, and what do you mean by 'duty'? As
summary names for the concrete reasons why thinking in true ways is
overwhelmingly expedient and good for mortal men, it is all right
to talk of claims on reality's part to be agreed with, and of
obligations on our part to agree. We feel both the claims and the
obligations, and we feel them for just those reasons.
But the rationalists who talk of claim and obligation EXPRESSLY
SAY THAT THEY HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH OUR PRACTICAL INTERESTS OR
PERSONAL REASONS. Our reasons for agreeing are psychological facts,
they say, relative to each thinker, and to the accidents of his
life. They are his evidence merely, they are no part of the life of
truth itself. That life transacts itself in a purely logical or
epistemological, as distinguished from a psychological, dimension,
and its claims antedate and exceed all personal motivations
whatsoever. Tho neither man nor God should ever ascertain truth,
the word would still have to be defined as that which OUGHT to be
ascertained and recognized.
There never was a more exquisite example of an idea abstracted
from the concretes of experience and then used to oppose and negate
what it was abstracted from.
Philosophy and common life abound in similar instances. The
'sentimentalist fallacy' is to shed tears over abstract justice and
generosity, beauty, etc., and never to know these qualities when
you meet them in the street, because there the circumstances make
them vulgar. Thus I read in the privately printed biography of an
eminently rationalistic mind: "It was strange that with such
admiration for beauty in the abstract, my brother had no enthusiasm
for fine architecture, for beautiful painting, or for flowers." And
in almost the last philosophic work I have read, I find such
passages as the following: "Justice is ideal, solely ideal. Reason
conceives that it ought to exist, but experience shows that it can-
not. ... Truth, which ought to be, cannot be. ... Reason is
deformed by experience. As soon as reason enters experience, it
becomes contrary to reason."
The rationalist's fallacy here is exactly like the
sentimentalist's. Both extract a quality from the muddy particulars
of experience, and find it so pure when extracted that they
contrast it with each and all its muddy instances as an opposite
and higher nature. All the while it is THEIR nature. It is the
nature of truths to be validated, verified. It pays for our ideas
to be validated. Our obligation to seek truth is part of our
general obligation to do what pays. The payments true ideas bring
are the sole why of our duty to follow them.
Identical whys exist in the case of wealth and health. Truth
makes no other kind of claim and imposes no other kind of ought
than health and wealth do. All these claims are conditional; the
concrete benefits we gain are what we mean by calling the pursuit a
duty. In the case of truth, untrue beliefs work as perniciously in
the long run as true beliefs work beneficially. Talking abstractly,
the quality 'true' may thus be said to grow absolutely precious,
and the quality 'untrue' absolutely damnable: the one may be called
good, the other bad, unconditionally. We ought to think the true,
we ought to shun the false, imperatively.
But if we treat all this abstraction literally and oppose it to
its mother soil in experience, see what a preposterous position we
work ourselves into.
We cannot then take a step forward in our actual thinking. When
shall I acknowledge this truth and when that? Shall the
acknowledgment be loud?--or silent? If sometimes loud, sometimes
silent, which NOW? When may a truth go into cold-storage in the
encyclopedia? and when shall it come out for battle? Must I
constantly be repeating the truth 'twice two are four' because of
its eternal claim on recognition? or is it sometimes irrelevant?
Must my thoughts dwell night and day on my personal sins and
blemishes, because I truly have them?--or may I sink and ignore
them in order to be a decent social unit, and not a mass of morbid
melancholy and apology?
It is quite evident that our obligation to acknowledge truth, so
far from being unconditional, is tremendously conditioned. Truth
with a big T, and in the singular, claims abstractly to be
recognized, of course; but concrete truths in the plural need be
recognized only when their recognition is expedient. A truth must
always be preferred to a falsehood when both relate to the
situation; but when neither does, truth is as little of a duty as
falsehood. If you ask me what o'clock it is and I tell you that I
live at 95 Irving Street, my answer may indeed be true, but you
don't see why it is my duty to give it. A false address would be as
much to the purpose.
With this admission that there are conditions that limit the
application of the abstract imperative, THE PRAGMATISTIC TREATMENT
OF TRUTH SWEEPS BACK UPON US IN ITS FULNESS. Our duty to agree with
reality is seen to be grounded in a perfect jungle of concrete
expediencies.
When Berkeley had explained what people meant by matter, people
thought that he denied matter's existence. When Messrs. Schiller
and Dewey now explain what people mean by truth, they are accused
of denying ITS existence. These pragmatists destroy all objective
standards, critics say, and put foolishness and wisdom on one
level. A favorite formula for describing Mr. Schiller's doctrines
and mine is that we are persons who think that by saying whatever
you find it pleasant to say and calling it truth you fulfil every
pragmatistic requirement.
I leave it to you to judge whether this be not an impudent
slander. Pent in, as the pragmatist more than anyone else sees
himself to be, between the whole body of funded truths squeezed
from the past and the coercions of the world of sense about him,
who so well as he feels the immense pressure of objective control
under which our minds perform their operations? If anyone imagines
that this law is lax, let him keep its commandment one day, says
Emerson. We have heard much of late of the uses of the imagination
in science. It is high time to urge the use of a little imagination
in philosophy. The unwillingness of some of our critics to read any
but the silliest of possible meanings into our statements is as
discreditable to their imaginations as anything I know in recent
philosophic history. Schiller says the true is that which 'works.'
Thereupon he is treated as one who limits verification to the
lowest material utilities. Dewey says truth is what gives
'satisfaction.' He is treated as one who believes in calling
everything true which, if it were true, would be pleasant.
Our critics certainly need more imagination of realities. I have
honestly tried to stretch my own imagination and to read the best
possible meaning into the rationalist conception, but I have to
confess that it still completely baffles me. The notion of a
reality calling on us to 'agree' with it, and that for no reasons,
but simply because its claim is 'unconditional' or 'transcendent,'
is one that I can make neither head nor tail of. I try to imagine
myself as the sole reality in the world, and then to imagine what
more I would 'claim' if I were allowed to. If you suggest the
possibility of my claiming that a mind should come into being from
out of the void inane and stand and COPY me, I can indeed imagine
what the copying might mean, but I can conjure up no motive. What
good it would do me to be copied, or what good it would do that
mind to copy me, if farther consequences are expressly and in
principle ruled out as motives for the claim (as they are by our
rationalist authorities) I cannot fathom. When the Irishman's
admirers ran him along to the place of banquet in a sedan chair
with no bottom, he said, "Faith, if it wasn't for the honor of the
thing, I might as well have come on foot." So here: but for the
honor of the thing, I might as well have remained uncopied. Copying
is one genuine mode of knowing (which for some strange reason our
contemporary transcendentalists seem to be tumbling over each other
to repudiate); but when we get beyond copying, and fall back on
unnamed forms of agreeing that are expressly denied to be either
copyings or leadings or fittings, or any other processes
pragmatically definable, the WHAT of the 'agreement' claimed
becomes as unintelligible as the why of it. Neither content nor
motive can be imagine for it. It is an absolutely meaningless
abstraction. [Footnote: I am not forgetting that Professor Rickert
long ago gave up the whole notion of truth being founded on
agreement with reality. Reality, according to him, is whatever
agrees with truth, and truth is founded solely on our primal duty.
This fantastic flight, together with Mr. Joachim's candid
confession of failure in his book The Nature of Truth, seems to me
to mark the bankruptcy of rationalism when dealing with this
subject. Rickert deals with part of the pragmatistic position under
the head of what he calls 'Relativismus.' I cannot discuss his text
here. Suffice it to say that his argumentation in that chapter is
so feeble as to seem almost incredible in so generally able a
writer.]
Surely in this field of truth it is the pragmatists and not the
rationalists who are the more genuine defenders of the universe's
rationality.
Lecture VII: Pragmatism
and Humanism
What hardens the heart of everyone I approach with the view of
truth sketched in my last lecture is that typical idol of the
tribe, the notion of THE Truth, conceived as the one answer,
determinate and complete, to the one fixed enigma which the world
is believed to propound. For popular tradition, it is all the
better if the answer be oracular, so as itself to awaken wonder as
an enigma of the second order, veiling rather than revealing what
its profundities are supposed to contain. All the great single-word
answers to the world's riddle, such as God, the One, Reason, Law,
Spirit, Matter, Nature, Polarity, the Dialectic Process, the Idea,
the Self, the Oversoul, draw the admiration that men have lavished
on them from this oracular role. By amateurs in philosophy and
professionals alike, the universe is represented as a queer sort of
petrified sphinx whose appeal to man consists in a monotonous
challenge to his divining powers. THE Truth: what a perfect idol of
the rationalistic mind! I read in an old letter--from a gifted
friend who died too young--these words: "In everything, in science,
art, morals and religion, there MUST be one system that is right
and EVERY other wrong." How characteristic of the enthusiasm of a
certain stage of youth! At twenty-one we rise to such a challenge
and expect to find the system. It never occurs to most of us even
later that the question 'what is THE truth?' is no real question
(being irrelative to all conditions) and that the whole notion of
THE truth is an abstraction from the fact of truths in the plural,
a mere useful summarizing phrase like THE Latin Language or THE
Law.
Common-law judges sometimes talk about the law, and
school-masters talk about the latin tongue, in a way to make their
hearers think they mean entities pre-existent to the decisions or
to the words and syntax, determining them unequivocally and
requiring them to obey. But the slightest exercise of reflexion
makes us see that, instead of being principles of this kind, both
law and latin are results. Distinctions between the lawful and the
unlawful in conduct, or between the correct and incorrect in
speech, have grown up incidentally among the interactions of men's
experiences in detail; and in no other way do distinctions between
the true and the false in belief ever grow up. Truth grafts itself
on previous truth, modifying it in the process, just as idiom
grafts itself on previous idiom, and law on previous law. Given
previous law and a novel case, and the judge will twist them into
fresh law. Previous idiom; new slang or metaphor or oddity that
hits the public taste:--and presto, a new idiom is made. Previous
truth; fresh facts:--and our mind finds a new truth.
All the while, however, we pretend that the eternal is
unrolling, that the one previous justice, grammar or truth is
simply fulgurating, and not being made. But imagine a youth in the
courtroom trying cases with his abstract notion of 'the' law, or a
censor of speech let loose among the theatres with his idea of
'the' mother-tongue, or a professor setting up to lecture on the
actual universe with his rationalistic notion of 'the Truth' with a
big T, and what progress do they make? Truth, law, and language
fairly boil away from them at the least touch of novel fact. These
things MAKE THEMSELVES as we go. Our rights, wrongs, prohibitions,
penalties, words, forms, idioms, beliefs, are so many new creations
that add themselves as fast as history proceeds. Far from being
antecedent principles that animate the process, law, language,
truth are but abstract names for its results.
Laws and languages at any rate are thus seen to be man-made:
things. Mr. Schiller applies the analogy to beliefs, and proposes
the name of 'Humanism' for the doctrine that to an unascertainable
extent our truths are man-made products too. Human motives sharpen
all our questions, human satisfactions lurk in all our answers, all
our formulas have a human twist. This element is so inextricable in
the products that Mr. Schiller sometimes seems almost to leave it
an open question whether there be anything else. "The world," he
says, "is essentially [u lambda nu], it is what we make of it. It
is fruitless to define it by what it originally was or by what it
is apart from us; it IS what is made of it. Hence ... the world is
PLASTIC." [Footnote: Personal Idealism, p. 60.] He adds that we can
learn the limits of the plasticity only by trying, and that we
ought to start as if it were wholly plastic, acting methodically on
that assumption, and stopping only when we are decisively
rebuked.
This is Mr. Schiller's butt-end-foremost statement of the
humanist position, and it has exposed him to severe attack. I mean
to defend the humanist position in this lecture, so I will
insinuate a few remarks at this point.
Mr. Schiller admits as emphatically as anyone the presence of
resisting factors in every actual experience of truth-making, of
which the new-made special truth must take account, and with which
it has perforce to 'agree.' All our truths are beliefs about
'Reality'; and in any particular belief the reality acts as
something independent, as a thing FOUND, not manufactured. Let me
here recall a bit of my last lecture.
'REALITY' IS IN GENERAL WHAT TRUTHS HAVE TO TAKE ACCOUNT OF;
[Footnote: Mr. Taylor in his Elements of Metaphysics uses this
excellent pragmatic definition.] and the FIRST part of reality from
this point of view is the flux of our sensations. Sensations are
forced upon us, coming we know not whence. Over their nature,
order, and quantity we have as good as no control. THEY are neither
true nor false; they simply ARE. It is only what we say about them,
only the names we give them, our theories of their source and
nature and remote relations, that may be true or not.
The SECOND part of reality, as something that our beliefs must
also obediently take account of, is the RELATIONS that obtain
between our sensations or between their copies in our minds. This
part falls into two sub-parts: 1) the relations that are mutable
and accidental, as those of date and place; and 2) those that are
fixed and essential because they are grounded on the inner natures
of their terms--such as likeness and unlikeness. Both sorts of
relation are matters of immediate perception. Both are 'facts.' But
it is the latter kind of fact that forms the more important
sub-part of reality for our theories of knowledge. Inner relations
namely are 'eternal,' are perceived whenever their sensible terms
are compared; and of them our thought--mathematical and logical
thought, so- called--must eternally take account.
The THIRD part of reality, additional to these perceptions (tho
largely based upon them), is the PREVIOUS TRUTHS of which every new
inquiry takes account. This third part is a much less obdurately
resisting factor: it often ends by giving way. In speaking of these
three portions of reality as at all times controlling our belief's
formation, I am only reminding you of what we heard in our last
hour.
Now however fixed these elements of reality may be, we still
have a certain freedom in our dealings with them. Take our
sensations. THAT they are is undoubtedly beyond our control; but
WHICH we attend to, note, and make emphatic in our conclusions
depends on our own interests; and, according as we lay the emphasis
here or there, quite different formulations of truth result. We
read the same facts differently. 'Waterloo,' with the same fixed
details, spells a 'victory' for an englishman; for a frenchman it
spells a 'defeat.' So, for an optimist philosopher the universe
spells victory, for a pessimist, defeat.
What we say about reality thus depends on the perspective into
which we throw it. The THAT of it is its own; but the WHAT depends
on the WHICH; and the which depends on US. Both the sensational and
the relational parts of reality are dumb: they say absolutely
nothing about themselves. We it is who have to speak for them. This
dumbness of sensations has led such intellectualists as T.H. Green
and Edward Caird to shove them almost beyond the pale of
philosophic recognition, but pragmatists refuse to go so far. A
sensation is rather like a client who has given his case to a
lawyer and then has passively to listen in the courtroom to
whatever account of his affairs, pleasant or unpleasant, the lawyer
finds it most expedient to give.
Hence, even in the field of sensation, our minds exert a certain
arbitrary choice. By our inclusions and omissions we trace the
field's extent; by our emphasis we mark its foreground and its
background; by our order we read it in this direction or in that.
We receive in short the block of marble, but we carve the statue
ourselves.
This applies to the 'eternal' parts of reality as well: we
shuffle our perceptions of intrinsic relation and arrange them just
as freely. We read them in one serial order or another, class them
in this way or in that, treat one or the other as more fundamental,
until our beliefs about them form those bodies of truth known as
logics, geometries, or arithmetics, in each and all of which the
form and order in which the whole is cast is flagrantly
man-made.
Thus, to say nothing of the new FACTS which men add to the
matter of reality by the acts of their own lives, they have already
impressed their mental forms on that whole third of reality which I
have called 'previous truths.' Every hour brings its new percepts,
its own facts of sensation and relation, to be truly taken account
of; but the whole of our PAST dealings with such facts is already
funded in the previous truths. It is therefore only the smallest
and recentest fraction of the first two parts of reality that comes
to us without the human touch, and that fraction has immediately to
become humanized in the sense of being squared, assimilated, or in
some way adapted, to the humanized mass already there. As a matter
of fact we can hardly take in an impression at all, in the absence
of a pre-conception of what impressions there may possibly be.
When we talk of reality 'independent' of human thinking, then,
it seems a thing very hard to find. It reduces to the notion of
what is just entering into experience, and yet to be named, or else
to some imagined aboriginal presence in experience, before any
belief about the presence had arisen, before any human conception
had been applied. It is what is absolutely dumb and evanescent, the
merely ideal limit of our minds. We may glimpse it, but we never
grasp it; what we grasp is always some substitute for it which
previous human thinking has peptonized and cooked for our
consumption. If so vulgar an expression were allowed us, we might
say that wherever we find it, it has been already FAKED. This is
what Mr. Schiller has in mind when he calls independent reality a
mere unresisting [u lambda nu], which IS only to be made over by
us.
That is Mr. Schiller's belief about the sensible core of
reality. We 'encounter' it (in Mr. Bradley's words) but don't
possess it. Superficially this sounds like Kant's view; but between
categories fulminated before nature began, and categories gradually
forming themselves in nature's presence, the whole chasm between
rationalism and empiricism yawns. To the genuine 'Kantianer'
Schiller will always be to Kant as a satyr to Hyperion.
Other pragmatists may reach more positive beliefs about the
sensible core of reality. They may think to get at it in its
independent nature, by peeling off the successive man-made
wrappings. They may make theories that tell us where it comes from
and all about it; and if these theories work satisfactorily they
will be true. The transcendental idealists say there is no core,
the finally completed wrapping being reality and truth in one.
Scholasticism still teaches that the core is 'matter.' Professor
Bergson, Heymans, Strong, and others, believe in the core and
bravely try to define it. Messrs. Dewey and Schiller treat it as a
'limit.' Which is the truer of all these diverse accounts, or of
others comparable with them, unless it be the one that finally
proves the most satisfactory? On the one hand there will stand
reality, on the other an account of it which proves impossible to
better or to alter. If the impossibility prove permanent, the truth
of the account will be absolute. Other content of truth than this I
can find nowhere. If the anti-pragmatists have any other meaning,
let them for heaven's sake reveal it, let them grant us access to
it!
Not BEING reality, but only our belief ABOUT reality, it will
contain human elements, but these will KNOW the non-human element,
in the only sense in which there can be knowledge of anything. Does
the river make its banks, or do the banks make the river? Does a
man walk with his right leg or with his left leg more essentially?
Just as impossible may it be to separate the real from the human
factors in the growth of our cognitive experience.
Let this stand as a first brief indication of the humanistic
position. Does it seem paradoxical? If so, I will try to make it
plausible by a few illustrations, which will lead to a fuller
acquaintance with the subject.
In many familiar objects everyone will recognize the human
element. We conceive a given reality in this way or in that, to
suit our purpose, and the reality passively submits to the
conception. You can take the number 27 as the cube of 3, or as the
product of 3 and 9, or as 26 PLUS 1, or 100 MINUS 73, or in
countless other ways, of which one will be just as true as another.
You can take a chessboard as black squares on a white ground, or as
white squares on a black ground, and neither conception is a false
one. You can treat the adjoined figure [Figure of a 'Star of
David'] as a star, as two big triangles crossing each other, as a
hexagon with legs set up on its angles, as six equal triangles
hanging together by their tips, etc. All these treatments are true
treatments--the sensible THAT upon the paper resists no one of
them. You can say of a line that it runs east, or you can say that
it runs west, and the line per se accepts both descriptions without
rebelling at the inconsistency.
We carve out groups of stars in the heavens, and call them
constellations, and the stars patiently suffer us to do so--tho if
they knew what we were doing, some of them might feel much
surprised at the partners we had given them. We name the same
constellation diversely, as Charles's Wain, the Great Bear, or the
Dipper. None of the names will be false, and one will be as true as
another, for all are applicable.
In all these cases we humanly make an addition to some sensible
reality, and that reality tolerates the addition. All the additions
'agree' with the reality; they fit it, while they build it out. No
one of them is false. Which may be treated as the more true,
depends altogether on the human use of it. If the 27 is a number of
dollars which I find in a drawer where I had left 28, it is 28
minus 1. If it is the number of inches in a shelf which I wish to
insert into a cupboard 26 inches wide, it is 26 plus 1. If I wish
to ennoble the heavens by the constellations I see there,
'Charles's Wain' would be more true than 'Dipper.' My friend
Frederick Myers was humorously indignant that that prodigious
star-group should remind us Americans of nothing but a culinary
utensil.
What shall we call a THING anyhow? It seems quite arbitrary, for
we carve out everything, just as we carve out constellations, to
suit our human purposes. For me, this whole 'audience' is one
thing, which grows now restless, now attentive. I have no use at
present for its individual units, so I don't consider them. So of
an 'army,' of a 'nation.' But in your own eyes, ladies and
gentlemen, to call you 'audience' is an accidental way of taking
you. The permanently real things for you are your individual
persons. To an anatomist, again, those persons are but organisms,
and the real things are the organs. Not the organs, so much as
their constituent cells, say the histologists; not the cells, but
their molecules, say in turn the chemists.
We break the flux of sensible reality into things, then, at our
will. We create the subjects of our true as well as of our false
propositions.
We create the predicates also. Many of the predicates of things
express only the relations of the things to us and to our feelings.
Such predicates of course are human additions. Caesar crossed the
Rubicon, and was a menace to Rome's freedom. He is also an American
school-room pest, made into one by the reaction of our schoolboys
on his writings. The added predicate is as true of him as the
earlier ones.
You see how naturally one comes to the humanistic principle: you
can't weed out the human contribution. Our nouns and adjectives are
all humanized heirlooms, and in the theories we build them into,
the inner order and arrangement is wholly dictated by human
considerations, intellectual consistency being one of them.
Mathematics and logic themselves are fermenting with human
rearrangements; physics, astronomy and biology follow massive cues
of preference. We plunge forward into the field of fresh experience
with the beliefs our ancestors and we have made already; these
determine what we notice; what we notice determines what we do;
what we do again determines what we experience; so from one thing
to another, altho the stubborn fact remains that there IS a
sensible flux, what is true of it seems from first to last to be
largely a matter of our own creation.
We build the flux out inevitably. The great question is: does
it, with our additions, rise or fall in value? Are the additions
WORTHY or UNWORTHY? Suppose a universe composed of seven stars, and
nothing else but three human witnesses and their critic. One
witness names the stars 'Great Bear'; one calls them 'Charles's
Wain'; one calls them the 'Dipper.' Which human addition has made
the best universe of the given stellar material? If Frederick Myers
were the critic, he would have no hesitation in 'turning-down' the
American witness.
Lotze has in several places
made a deep suggestion. We naively assume, he says, a relation
between reality and our minds which may be just the opposite of the
true one. Reality, we naturally think, stands ready-made and
complete, and our intellects supervene with the one simple duty of
describing it as it is already. But may not our descriptions, Lotze
asks, be themselves important additions to reality? And may not
previous reality itself be there, far less for the purpose of
reappearing unaltered in our knowledge, than for the very purpose
of stimulating our minds to such additions as shall enhance the
universe's total value. "Die erhohung des vorgefundenen daseins" is
a phrase used by Professor Eucken somewhere, which reminds one of
this suggestion by the great Lotze.
It is identically our pragmatistic conception. In our cognitive
as well as in our active life we are creative. We ADD, both to the
subject and to the predicate part of reality. The world stands
really malleable, waiting to receive its final touches at our
hands. Like the kingdom of heaven, it suffers human violence
willingly. Man ENGENDERS truths upon it.
No one can deny that such a role would add both to our dignity
and to our responsibility as thinkers. To some of us it proves a
most inspiring notion. Signer Papini, the leader of italian
pragmatism, grows fairly dithyrambic over the view that it opens,
of man's divinely-creative functions.
The import of the difference between pragmatism and rationalism
is now in sight throughout its whole extent. The essential contrast
is that for rationalism reality is ready-made and complete from all
eternity, while for pragmatism it is still in the making, and
awaits part of its complexion from the future. On the one side the
universe is absolutely secure, on the other it is still pursuing
its adventures.
We have got into rather deep water with this humanistic view,
and it is no wonder that misunderstanding gathers round it. It is
accused of being a doctrine of caprice. Mr. Bradley, for example,
says that a humanist, if he understood his own doctrine, would have
to "hold any end however perverted to be rational if I insist on it
personally, and any idea however mad to be the truth if only some
one is resolved that he will have it so." The humanist view of
'reality,' as something resisting, yet malleable, which controls
our thinking as an energy that must be taken 'account' of
incessantly (tho not necessarily merely COPIED) is evidently a
difficult one to introduce to novices. The situation reminds me of
one that I have personally gone through. I once wrote an essay on
our right to believe, which I unluckily called the WILL to Believe.
All the critics, neglecting the essay, pounced upon the title.
Psychologically it was impossible, morally it was iniquitous. The
"will to deceive," the "will to make-believe," were wittily
proposed as substitutes for it.
THE ALTERNATIVE BETWEEN PRAGMATISM AND RATIONALISM, IN THE SHAPE
IN WHICH WE NOW HAVE IT BEFORE US, IS NO LONGER A QUESTION IN THE
THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE, IT CONCERNS THE STRUCTURE OF THE UNIVERSE
ITSELF.
On the pragmatist side we have only one edition of the universe,
unfinished, growing in all sorts of places, especially in the
places where thinking beings are at work.
On the rationalist side we have a universe in many editions, one
real one, the infinite folio, or edition de luxe, eternally
complete; and then the various finite editions, full of false
readings, distorted and mutilated each in its own way.
So the rival metaphysical hypotheses of pluralism and monism
here come back upon us. I will develope their differences during
the remainder of our hour.
And first let me say that it is impossible not to see a
temperamental difference at work in the choice of sides. The
rationalist mind, radically taken, is of a doctrinaire and
authoritative complexion: the phrase 'must be' is ever on its lips.
The belly-band of its universe must be tight. A radical pragmatist
on the other hand is a happy-go-lucky anarchistic sort of creature.
If he had to live in a tub like Diogenes he wouldn't mind at all if
the hoops were loose and the staves let in the sun.
Now the idea of this loose universe affects your typical
rationalists in much the same way as 'freedom of the press' might
affect a veteran official in the russian bureau of censorship; or
as 'simplified spelling' might affect an elderly schoolmistress. It
affects him as the swarm of protestant sects affects a papist
onlooker. It appears as backboneless and devoid of principle as
'opportunism' in politics appears to an old-fashioned french
legitimist, or to a fanatical believer in the divine right of the
people.
For pluralistic pragmatism, truth grows up inside of all the
finite experiences. They lean on each other, but the whole of them,
if such a whole there be, leans on nothing. All 'homes' are in
finite experience; finite experience as such is homeless. Nothing
outside of the flux secures the issue of it. It can hope salvation
only from its own intrinsic promises and potencies.
To rationalists this describes a tramp and vagrant world, adrift
in space, with neither elephant nor tortoise to plant the sole of
its foot upon. It is a set of stars hurled into heaven without even
a centre of gravity to pull against. In other spheres of life it is
true that we have got used to living in a state of relative
insecurity. The authority of 'the State,' and that of an absolute
'moral law,' have resolved themselves into expediencies, and holy
church has resolved itself into 'meeting-houses.' Not so as yet
within the philosophic class-rooms. A universe with such as US
contributing to create its truth, a world delivered to OUR
opportunisms and OUR private judgments! Home-rule for Ireland would
be a millennium in comparison. We're no more fit for such a part
than the Filipinos are 'fit for self-government.' Such a world
would not be RESPECTABLE, philosophically. It is a trunk without a
tag, a dog without a collar, in the eyes of most professors of
philosophy.
What then would tighten this loose universe, according to the
professors?
Something to support the finite many, to tie it to, to unify and
anchor it. Something unexposed to accident, something eternal and
unalterable. The mutable in experience must be founded on
immutability. Behind our de facto world, our world in act, there
must be a de jure duplicate fixed and previous, with all that can
happen here already there in posse, every drop of blood, every
smallest item, appointed and provided, stamped and branded, without
chance of variation. The negatives that haunt our ideals here below
must be themselves negated in the absolutely Real. This alone makes
the universe solid. This is the resting deep. We live upon the
stormy surface; but with this our anchor holds, for it grapples
rocky bottom. This is Wordsworth's "central peace subsisting at the
heart of endless agitation." This is Vivekananda's mystical One of
which I read to you. This is Reality with the big R, reality that
makes the timeless claim, reality to which defeat can't happen.
This is what the men of principles, and in general all the men whom
I called tender-minded in my first lecture, think themselves
obliged to postulate.
And this, exactly this, is what the tough-minded of that lecture
find themselves moved to call a piece of perverse abstraction-
worship. The tough-minded are the men whose alpha and omega are
FACTS. Behind the bare phenomenal facts, as my tough-minded old
friend Chauncey Wright, the great Harvard empiricist of my youth,
used to say, there is NOTHING. When a rationalist insists that
behind the facts there is the GROUND of the facts, the POSSIBILITY
of the facts, the tougher empiricists accuse him of taking the mere
name and nature of a fact and clapping it behind the fact as a
duplicate entity to make it possible. That such sham grounds are
often invoked is notorious. At a surgical operation I heard a
bystander ask a doctor why the patient breathed so deeply. "Because
ether is a respiratory stimulant," the doctor answered. "Ah!" said
the questioner, as if relieved by the explanation. But this is like
saying that cyanide of potassium kills because it is a 'poison,' or
that it is so cold to-night because it is 'winter,' or that we have
five fingers because we are 'pentadactyls.' These are but names for
the facts, taken from the facts, and then treated as previous and
explanatory. The tender-minded notion of an absolute reality is,
according to the radically tough-minded, framed on just this
pattern. It is but our summarizing name for the whole spread-out
and strung-along mass of phenomena, treated as if it were a
different entity, both one and previous.
You see how differently people take things. The world we live in
exists diffused and distributed, in the form of an indefinitely
numerous lot of eaches, coherent in all sorts of ways and degrees;
and the tough-minded are perfectly willing to keep them at that
valuation. They can stand that kind of world, their temper being
well adapted to its insecurity. Not so the tender-minded party.
They must back the world we find ourselves born into by "another
and a better" world in which the eaches form an All and the All a
One that logically presupposes, co-implicates, and secures each
EACH without exception.
Must we as pragmatists be radically tough-minded? or can we
treat the absolute edition of the world as a legitimate hypothesis?
It is certainly legitimate, for it is thinkable, whether we take it
in its abstract or in its concrete shape.
By taking it abstractly I mean placing it behind our finite life
as we place the word 'winter' behind to-night's cold weather.
'Winter' is only the name for a certain number of days which we
find generally characterized by cold weather, but it guarantees
nothing in that line, for our thermometer to-morrow may soar into
the 70's. Nevertheless the word is a useful one to plunge forward
with into the stream of our experience. It cuts off certain
probabilities and sets up others: you can put away your straw-hats;
you can unpack your arctics. It is a summary of things to look for.
It names a part of nature's habits, and gets you ready for their
continuation. It is a definite instrument abstracted from
experience, a conceptual reality that you must take account of, and
which reflects you totally back into sensible realities. The
pragmatist is the last person to deny the reality of such
abstractions. They are so much past experience funded.
But taking the absolute edition of the world concretely means a
different hypothesis. Rationalists take it concretely and OPPOSE it
to the world's finite editions. They give it a particular nature.
It is perfect, finished. Everything known there is known along with
everything else; here, where ignorance reigns, far otherwise. If
there is want there, there also is the satisfaction provided. Here
all is process; that world is timeless. Possibilities obtain in our
world; in the absolute world, where all that is NOT is from
eternity impossible, and all that IS is necessary, the category of
possibility has no application. In this world crimes and horrors
are regrettable. In that totalized world regret obtains not, for
"the existence of ill in the temporal order is the very condition
of the perfection of the eternal order."
Once more, either hypothesis is legitimate in pragmatist eyes,
for either has its uses. Abstractly, or taken like the word winter,
as a memorandum of past experience that orients us towards the
future, the notion of the absolute world is indispensable.
Concretely taken, it is also indispensable, at least to certain
minds, for it determines them religiously, being often a thing to
change their lives by, and by changing their lives, to change
whatever in the outer order depends on them.
We cannot therefore methodically join the tough minds in their
rejection of the whole notion of a world beyond our finite
experience. One misunderstanding of pragmatism is to identify it
with positivistic tough-mindedness, to suppose that it scorns every
rationalistic notion as so much jabber and gesticulation, that it
loves intellectual anarchy as such and prefers a sort of wolf-world
absolutely unpent and wild and without a master or a collar to any
philosophic class-room product, whatsoever. I have said so much in
these lectures against the over-tender forms of rationalism, that I
am prepared for some misunderstanding here, but I confess that the
amount of it that I have found in this very audience surprises me,
for I have simultaneously defended rationalistic hypotheses so far
as these re-direct you fruitfully into experience.
For instance I receive this morning this question on a
post-card: "Is a pragmatist necessarily a complete materialist and
agnostic?" One of my oldest friends, who ought to know me better,
writes me a letter that accuses the pragmatism I am recommending,
of shutting out all wider metaphysical views and condemning us to
the most terre-a-terre naturalism. Let me read you some extracts
from it.
"It seems to me," my friend writes, "that the pragmatic
objection to pragmatism lies in the fact that it might accentuate
the narrowness of narrow minds.
"Your call to the rejection of the namby-pamby and the
wishy-washy is of course inspiring. But although it is salutary and
stimulating to be told that one should be responsible for the
immediate issues and bearings of his words and thoughts, I decline
to be deprived of the pleasure and profit of dwelling also on
remoter bearings and issues, and it is the TENDENCY of pragmatism
to refuse this privilege.
"In short, it seems to me that the limitations, or rather the
dangers, of the pragmatic tendency, are analogous to those which
beset the unwary followers of the 'natural sciences.' Chemistry and
physics are eminently pragmatic and many of their devotees, smugly
content with the data that their weights and measures furnish, feel
an infinite pity and disdain for all students of philosophy and
meta-physics, whomsoever. And of course everything can be
expressed- -after a fashion, and 'theoretically'--in terms of
chemistry and physics, that is, EVERYTHING EXCEPT THE VITAL
PRINCIPLE OF THE WHOLE, and that, they say, there is no pragmatic
use in trying to express; it has no bearings--FOR THEM. I for my
part refuse to be persuaded that we cannot look beyond the obvious
pluralism of the naturalist and the pragmatist to a logical unity
in which they take no interest."
How is such a conception of the pragmatism I am advocating
possible, after my first and second lectures? I have all along been
offering it expressly as a mediator between tough-mindedness and
tender- mindedness. If the notion of a world ante rem, whether
taken abstractly like the word winter, or concretely as the
hypothesis of an Absolute, can be shown to have any consequences
whatever for our life, it has a meaning. If the meaning works, it
will have SOME truth that ought to be held to through all possible
reformulations, for pragmatism.
The absolutistic hypothesis, that perfection is eternal,
aboriginal, and most real, has a perfectly definite meaning, and it
works religiously. To examine how, will be the subject of my next
and final lecture.
Lecture VIII: Pragmatism
and Religion
At the close of the last lecture I reminded you of the first
one, in which I had opposed tough-mindedness to tender-mindedness
and recommended pragmatism as their mediator. Tough-mindedness
positively rejects tender-mindedness's hypothesis of an eternal
perfect edition of the universe coexisting with our finite
experience.
On pragmatic principles we cannot reject any hypothesis if
consequences useful to life flow from it. Universal conceptions, as
things to take account of, may be as real for pragmatism as
particular sensations are. They have indeed no meaning and no
reality if they have no use. But if they have any use they have
that amount of meaning. And the meaning will be true if the use
squares well with life's other uses.
Well, the use of the Absolute is proved by the whole course of
men's religious history. The eternal arms are then beneath.
Remember Vivekananda's use of the Atman: it is indeed not a
scientific use, for we can make no particular deductions from it.
It is emotional and spiritual altogether.
It is always best to discuss things by the help of concrete
examples. Let me read therefore some of those verses entitled "To
You" by Walt Whitman--"You" of course meaning the reader or hearer
of the poem whosoever he or she may be.
Whoever you are, now I place my hand upon you, that you be my
poem;
I whisper with my lips close to your ear,
I have loved many women and men, but I love none better than
you.
O I have been dilatory and dumb;
I should have made my way straight to you long ago;
I should have blabb'd nothing but you, I should have chanted
nothing but you.
I will leave all, and come and make the hymns of you;
None have understood you, but I understand you;
None have done justice to you--you have not done justice to
yourself;
None but have found you imperfect--I only find no imperfection in
you.
O I could sing such grandeurs and glories about you!
You have not known what you are--you have slumber'd upon yourself
all your life;
What you have done returns already in mockeries.
But the mockeries are not you;
Underneath them, and within them, I see you lurk;
I pursue you where none else has pursued you;
Silence, the desk, the flippant expression, the night, the
accustom'd routine, if these conceal you from others, or from
yourself, they do not conceal you from me;
The shaved face, the unsteady eye, the impure complexion, if
these
balk others, they do not balk me,
The pert apparel, the deform'd attitude, drunkenness, greed,
premature death, all these I part aside.
There is no endowment in man or woman that is not tallied in
you;
There is no virtue, no beauty, in man or woman, but as good is in
you;
No pluck, no endurance in others, but as good is in you;
No pleasure waiting for others, but an equal pleasure waits for
you.
Whoever you are! claim your own at any hazard!
These shows of the east and west are tame, compared to you;
These immense meadows--these interminable rivers--you are
immense
and interminable as they;
You are he or she who is master or mistress over them,
Master or mistress in your own right over Nature, elements,
pain,
passion, dissolution.
The hopples fall from your ankles--you find an unfailing
sufficiency;
Old or young, male or female, rude, low, rejected by the
rest,
whatever you are promulges itself;
Through birth, life, death, burial, the means are provided, nothing
is scanted;
Through angers, losses, ambition, ignorance, ennui, what you are
picks its way.
Verily a fine and moving poem, in any case, but there are two ways
of taking it, both useful.
One is the monistic way, the mystical way of pure cosmic
emotion. The glories and grandeurs, they are yours absolutely, even
in the midst of your defacements. Whatever may happen to you,
whatever you may appear to be, inwardly you are safe. Look back,
LIE back, on your true principle of being! This is the famous way
of quietism, of indifferentism. Its enemies compare it to a
spiritual opium. Yet pragmatism must respect this way, for it has
massive historic vindication.
But pragmatism sees another way to be respected also, the
pluralistic way of interpreting the poem. The you so glorified, to
which the hymn is sung, may mean your better possibilities
phenomenally taken, or the specific redemptive effects even of your
failures, upon yourself or others. It may mean your loyalty to the
possibilities of others whom you admire and love so, that you are
willing to accept your own poor life, for it is that glory's
partner. You can at least appreciate, applaud, furnish the
audience, of so brave a total world. Forget the low in yourself,
then, think only of the high. Identify your life therewith; then,
through angers, losses, ignorance, ennui, whatever you thus make
yourself, whatever you thus most deeply are, picks its way.
In either way of taking the poem, it encourages fidelity to
ourselves. Both ways satisfy; both sanctify the human flux. Both
paint the portrait of the YOU on a gold-background. But the
background of the first way is the static One, while in the second
way it means possibles in the plural, genuine possibles, and it has
all the restlessness of that conception.
Noble enough is either way of reading the poem; but plainly the
pluralistic way agrees with the pragmatic temper best, for it
immediately suggests an infinitely larger number of the details of
future experience to our mind. It sets definite activities in us at
work. Altho this second way seems prosaic and earthborn in
comparison with the first way, yet no one can accuse it of tough-
mindedness in any brutal sense of the term. Yet if, as pragmatists,
you should positively set up the second way AGAINST the first way,
you would very likely be misunderstood. You would be accused of
denying nobler conceptions, and of being an ally of
tough-mindedness in the worst sense.
You remember the letter from a member of this audience from
which I read some extracts at our previous meeting. Let me read you
an additional extract now. It shows a vagueness in realizing the
alternatives before us which I think is very widespread.
"I believe," writes my friend and correspondent, "in pluralism;
I believe that in our search for truth we leap from one floating
cake of ice to another, on an infinite sea, and that by each of our
acts we make new truths possible and old ones impossible; I believe
that each man is responsible for making the universe better, and
that if he does not do this it will be in so far left undone.
"Yet at the same time I am willing to endure that my children
should be incurably sick and suffering (as they are not) and I
myself stupid and yet with brains enough to see my stupidity, only
on one condition, namely, that through the construction, in
imagination and by reasoning, of a RATIONAL UNITY OF ALL THINGS, I
can conceive my acts and my thoughts and my troubles as
SUPPLEMENTED: BY ALL THE OTHER PHENOMENA OF THE WORLD, AND AS
FORMING--WHEN THUS SUPPLEMENTED--A SCHEME WHICH I APPROVE AND ADOPT
AS MY I OWN; and for my part I refuse to be persuaded that we
cannot look beyond the obvious pluralism of the naturalist and
pragmatist to a logical unity in which they take no interest or
stock."
Such a fine expression of personal faith warms the heart of the
hearer. But how much does it clear his philosophic head? Does the
writer consistently favor the monistic, or the pluralistic,
interpretation of the world's poem? His troubles become atoned for
WHEN THUS SUPPLEMENTED, he says, supplemented, that is, by all the
remedies that THE OTHER PHENOMENA may supply. Obviously here the
writer faces forward into the particulars of experience, which he
interprets in a pluralistic-melioristic way.
But he believes himself to face backward. He speaks of what he
calls the rational UNITY of things, when all the while he really
means their possible empirical UNIFICATION. He supposes at the same
time that the pragmatist, because he criticizes rationalism's
abstract One, is cut off from the consolation of believing in the
saving possibilities of the concrete many. He fails in short to
distinguish between taking the world's perfection as a necessary
principle, and taking it only as a possible terminus ad quem.
I regard the writer of this letter as a genuine pragmatist, but
as a pragmatist sans le savoir. He appears to me as one of that
numerous class of philosophic amateurs whom I spoke of in my first
lecture, as wishing to have all the good things going, without
being too careful as to how they agree or disagree. "Rational unity
of all things" is so inspiring a formula, that he brandishes it
offhand, and abstractly accuses pluralism of conflicting with it
(for the bare names do conflict), altho concretely he means by it
just the pragmatistically unified and ameliorated world. Most of us
remain in this essential vagueness, and it is well that we should;
but in the interest of clear-headedness it is well that some of us
should go farther, so I will try now to focus a little more
discriminatingly on this particular religious point.
Is then this you of yous, this absolutely real world, this unity
that yields the moral inspiration and has the religious value, to
be taken monistically or pluralistically? Is it ante rem or in
rebus? Is it a principle or an end, an absolute or an ultimate, a
first or a last? Does it make you look forward or lie back? It is
certainly worth while not to clump the two things together, for if
discriminated, they have decidedly diverse meanings for life.
Please observe that the whole dilemma revolves pragmatically
about the notion of the world's possibilities. Intellectually,
rationalism invokes its absolute principle of unity as a ground of
possibility for the many facts. Emotionally, it sees it as a
container and limiter of possibilities, a guarantee that the upshot
shall be good. Taken in this way, the absolute makes all good
things certain, and all bad things impossible (in the eternal,
namely), and may be said to transmute the entire category of
possibility into categories more secure. One sees at this point
that the great religious difference lies between the men who insist
that the world MUST AND SHALL BE, and those who are contented with
believing that the world MAY BE, saved. The whole clash of
rationalistic and empiricist religion is thus over the validity of
possibility. It is necessary therefore to begin by focusing upon
that word. What may the word 'possible' definitely mean?
To unreflecting men the possible means a sort of third estate of
being, less real than existence, more real than non-existence, a
twilight realm, a hybrid status, a limbo into which and out of
which realities ever and anon are made to pass. Such a conception
is of course too vague and nondescript to satisfy us. Here, as
elsewhere, the only way to extract a term's meaning is to use the
pragmatic method on it. When you say that a thing is possible, what
difference does it make?
It makes at least this difference that if anyone calls it
impossible you can contradict him, if anyone calls it actual you
can contradict HIM, and if anyone calls it necessary you can
contradict him too. But these privileges of contradiction don't
amount to much. When you say a thing is possible, does not that
make some farther difference in terms of actual fact?
It makes at least this negative difference that if the statement
be true, it follows that there is nothing extant capable of
preventing the possible thing. The absence of real grounds of
interference may thus be said to make things not impossible,
possible therefore in the bare or abstract sense.
But most possibles are not bare, they are concretely grounded,
or well-grounded, as we say. What does this mean pragmatically? It
means, not only that there are no preventive conditions present,
but that some of the conditions of production of the possible thing
actually are here. Thus a concretely possible chicken means: (1)
that the idea of chicken contains no essential self-contradiction;
(2) that no boys, skunks, or other enemies are about; and (3) that
at least an actual egg exists. Possible chicken means actual egg--
plus actual sitting hen, or incubator, or what not. As the actual
conditions approach completeness the chicken becomes a better-and-
better-grounded possibility. When the conditions are entirely
complete, it ceases to be a possibility, and turns into an actual
fact.
Let us apply this notion to the salvation of the world. What
does it pragmatically mean to say that this is possible? It means
that some of the conditions of the world's deliverance do actually
exist. The more of them there are existent, the fewer preventing
conditions you can find, the better-grounded is the salvation's
possibility, the more PROBABLE does the fact of the deliverance
become.
So much for our preliminary look at possibility.
Now it would contradict the very spirit of life to say that our
minds must be indifferent and neutral in questions like that of the
world's salvation. Anyone who pretends to be neutral writes himself
down here as a fool and a sham. We all do wish to minimize the
insecurity of the universe; we are and ought to be unhappy when we
regard it as exposed to every enemy and open to every life-
destroying draft. Nevertheless there are unhappy men who think the
salvation of the world impossible. Theirs is the doctrine known as
pessimism.
Optimism in turn would be the doctrine that thinks the world's
salvation inevitable.
Midway between the two there stands what may be called the
doctrine of meliorism, tho it has hitherto figured less as a
doctrine than as an attitude in human affairs. Optimism has always
been the regnant DOCTRINE in european philosophy. Pessimism was
only recently introduced by Schopenhauer and counts few systematic
defenders as yet. Meliorism treats salvation as neither inevitable
nor impossible. It treats it as a possibility, which becomes more
and more of a probability the more numerous the actual conditions
of salvation become.
It is clear that pragmatism must incline towards meliorism. Some
conditions of the world's salvation are actually extant, and she
cannot possibly close her eyes to this fact: and should the
residual conditions come, salvation would become an accomplished
reality. Naturally the terms I use here are exceedingly summary.
You may interpret the word 'salvation' in any way you like, and
make it as diffuse and distributive, or as climacteric and integral
a phenomenon as you please.
Take, for example, any one of us in this room with the ideals
which he cherishes, and is willing to live and work for. Every such
ideal realized will be one moment in the world's salvation. But
these particular ideals are not bare abstract possibilities. They
are grounded, they are LIVE possibilities, for we are their live
champions and pledges, and if the complementary conditions come and
add themselves, our ideals will become actual things. What now are
the complementary conditions? They are first such a mixture of
things as will in the fulness of time give us a chance, a gap that
we can spring into, and, finally, OUR ACT.
Does our act then CREATE the world's salvation so far as it
makes room for itself, so far as it leaps into the gap? Does it
create, not the whole world's salvation of course, but just so much
of this as itself covers of the world's extent?
Here I take the bull by the horns, and in spite of the whole
crew of rationalists and monists, of whatever brand they be, I ask
WHY NOT? Our acts, our turning-places, where we seem to ourselves
to make ourselves and grow, are the parts of the world to which we
are closest, the parts of which our knowledge is the most intimate
and complete. Why should we not take them at their face-value? Why
may they not be the actual turning-places and growing-places which
they seem to be, of the world--why not the workshop of being, where
we catch fact in the making, so that nowhere may the world grow in
any other kind of way than this?
Irrational! we are told. How can new being come in local spots
and patches which add themselves or stay away at random,
independently of the rest? There must be a reason for our acts, and
where in the last resort can any reason be looked for save in the
material pressure or the logical compulsion of the total nature of
the world? There can be but one real agent of growth, or seeming
growth, anywhere, and that agent is the integral world itself. It
may grow all-over, if growth there be, but that single parts should
grow per se is irrational.
But if one talks of rationality and of reasons for things, and
insists that they can't just come in spots, what KIND of a reason
can there ultimately be why anything should come at all? Talk of
logic and necessity and categories and the absolute and the
contents of the whole philosophical machine-shop as you will, the
only REAL reason I can think of why anything should ever come is
that someone wishes it to be here. It is DEMANDED, demanded, it may
be, to give relief to no matter how small a fraction of the world's
mass. This is living reason, and compared with it material causes
and logical necessities are spectral things.
In short the only fully rational world would be the world of
wishing-caps, the world of telepathy, where every desire is
fulfilled instanter, without having to consider or placate
surrounding or intermediate powers. This is the Absolute's own
world. He calls upon the phenomenal world to be, and it IS, exactly
as he calls for it, no other condition being required. In our
world, the wishes of the individual are only one condition. Other
individuals are there with other wishes and they must be
propitiated first. So Being grows under all sorts of resistances in
this world of the many, and, from compromise to compromise, only
gets organized gradually into what may be called secondarily
rational shape. We approach the wishing-cap type of organization
only in a few departments of life. We want water and we turn a
faucet. We want a kodak-picture and we press a button. We want
information and we telephone. We want to travel and we buy a
ticket. In these and similar cases, we hardly need to do more than
the wishing--the world is rationally organized to do the rest.
But this talk of rationality is a parenthesis and a digression.
What we were discussing was the idea of a world growing not
integrally but piecemeal by the contributions of its several parts.
Take the hypothesis seriously and as a live one. Suppose that the
world's author put the case to you before creation, saying: "I am
going to make a world not certain to be saved, a world the
perfection of which shall be conditional merely, the condition
being that each several agent does its own 'level best.' I offer
you the chance of taking part in such a world. Its safety, you see,
is unwarranted. It is a real adventure, with real danger, yet it
may win through. It is a social scheme of co-operative work
genuinely to be done. Will you join the procession? Will you trust
yourself and trust the other agents enough to face the risk?"
Should you in all seriousness, if participation in such a world
were proposed to you, feel bound to reject it as not safe enough?
Would you say that, rather than be part and parcel of so
fundamentally pluralistic and irrational a universe, you preferred
to relapse into the slumber of nonentity from which you had been
momentarily aroused by the tempter's voice?
Of course if you are normally constituted, you would do nothing
of the sort. There is a healthy-minded buoyancy in most of us which
such a universe would exactly fit. We would therefore accept the
offer--"Top! und schlag auf schlag!" It would be just like the
world we practically live in; and loyalty to our old nurse Nature
would forbid us to say no. The world proposed would seem 'rational'
to us in the most living way.
Most of us, I say, would therefore welcome the proposition and
add our fiat to the fiat of the creator. Yet perhaps some would
not; for there are morbid minds in every human collection, and to
them the prospect of a universe with only a fighting chance of
safety would probably make no appeal. There are moments of
discouragement in us all, when we are sick of self and tired of
vainly striving. Our own life breaks down, and we fall into the
attitude of the prodigal son. We mistrust the chances of things. We
want a universe where we can just give up, fall on our father's
neck, and be absorbed into the absolute life as a drop of water
melts into the river or the sea.
The peace and rest, the security desiderated at such moments is
security against the bewildering accidents of so much finite
experience. Nirvana means safety from this everlasting round of
adventures of which the world of sense consists. The hindoo and the
buddhist, for this is essentially their attitude, are simply
afraid, afraid of more experience, afraid of life.
And to men of this complexion, religious monism comes with its
consoling words: "All is needed and essential--even you with your
sick soul and heart. All are one with God, and with God all is
well. The everlasting arms are beneath, whether in the world of
finite appearances you seem to fail or to succeed." There can be no
doubt that when men are reduced to their last sick extremity
absolutism is the only saving scheme. Pluralistic moralism simply
makes their teeth chatter, it refrigerates the very heart within
their breast.
So we see concretely two types of religion in sharp contrast.
Using our old terms of comparison, we may say that the absolutistic
scheme appeals to the tender-minded while the pluralistic scheme
appeals to the tough. Many persons would refuse to call the
pluralistic scheme religious at all. They would call it moralistic,
and would apply the word religious to the monistic scheme alone.
Religion in the sense of self-surrender, and moralism in the sense
of self-sufficingness, have been pitted against each other as
incompatibles frequently enough in the history of human
thought.
We stand here before the final question of philosophy. I said in
my fourth lecture that I believed the monistic-pluralistic
alternative to be the deepest and most pregnant question that our
minds can frame. Can it be that the disjunction is a final one?
that only one side can be true? Are a pluralism and monism genuine
incompatibles? So that, if the world were really pluralistically
constituted, if it really existed distributively and were made up
of a lot of eaches, it could only be saved piecemeal and de facto
as the result of their behavior, and its epic history in no wise
short-circuited by some essential oneness in which the severalness
were already 'taken up' beforehand and eternally 'overcome'? If
this were so, we should have to choose one philosophy or the other.
We could not say 'yes, yes' to both alternatives. There would have
to be a 'no' in our relations with the possible. We should confess
an ultimate disappointment: we could not remain healthy-minded and
sick-minded in one indivisible act.
Of course as human beings we can be healthy minds on one day and
sick souls on the next; and as amateur dabblers in philosophy we
may perhaps be allowed to call ourselves monistic pluralists, or
free- will determinists, or whatever else may occur to us of a
reconciling kind. But as philosophers aiming at clearness and
consistency, and feeling the pragmatistic need of squaring truth
with truth, the question is forced upon us of frankly adopting
either the tender or the robustious type of thought. In particular
THIS query has always come home to me: May not the claims of
tender-mindedness go too far? May not the notion of a world already
saved in toto anyhow, be too saccharine to stand? May not religious
optimism be too idyllic? Must ALL be saved? Is NO price to be paid
in the work of salvation? Is the last word sweet? Is all 'yes, yes'
in the universe? Doesn't the fact of 'no' stand at the very core of
life? Doesn't the very 'seriousness' that we attribute to life mean
that ineluctable noes and losses form a part of it, that there are
genuine sacrifices somewhere, and that something permanently
drastic and bitter always remains at the bottom of its cup?
I can not speak officially as a pragmatist here; all I can say
is that my own pragmatism offers no objection to my taking sides
with this more moralistic view, and giving up the claim of total
reconciliation. The possibility of this is involved in the
pragmatistic willingness to treat pluralism as a serious
hypothesis. In the end it is our faith and not our logic that
decides such questions, and I deny the right of any pretended logic
to veto my own faith. I find myself willing to take the universe to
be really dangerous and adventurous, without therefore backing out
and crying 'no play.' I am willing to think that the prodigal-son
attitude, open to us as it is in many vicissitudes, is not the
right and final attitude towards the whole of life. I am willing
that there should be real losses and real losers, and no total
preservation of all that is. I can believe in the ideal as an
ultimate, not as an origin, and as an extract, not the whole. When
the cup is poured off, the dregs are left behind forever, but the
possibility of what is poured off is sweet enough to accept.
As a matter of fact countless human imaginations live in this
moralistic and epic kind of a universe, and find its disseminated
and strung-along successes sufficient for their rational needs.
There is a finely translated epigram in the greek anthology which
admirably expresses this state of mind, this acceptance of loss as
unatoned for, even tho the lost element might be one's self:
"A shipwrecked sailor, buried on this coast, Bids you set sail.
Full many a gallant bark, when we were lost, Weathered the
gale."
Those puritans who answered 'yes' to the question: Are you
willing to be damned for God's glory? were in this objective and
magnanimous condition of mind. The way of escape from evil on this
system is NOT by getting it 'aufgehoben,' or preserved in the whole
as an element essential but 'overcome.' It is by dropping it out
altogether, throwing it overboard and getting beyond it, helping to
make a universe that shall forget its very place and name.
It is then perfectly possible to accept sincerely a drastic kind
of a universe from which the element of 'seriousness' is not to be
expelled. Whoso does so is, it seems to me, a genuine pragmatist.
He is willing to live on a scheme of uncertified possibilities
which he trusts; willing to pay with his own person, if need be,
for the realization of the ideals which he frames.
What now actually ARE the other forces which he trusts to
co-operate with him, in a universe of such a type? They are at
least his fellow men, in the stage of being which our actual
universe has reached. But are there not superhuman forces also,
such as religious men of the pluralistic type we have been
considering have always believed in? Their words may have sounded
monistic when they said "there is no God but God"; but the original
polytheism of mankind has only imperfectly and vaguely sublimated
itself into monotheism, and monotheism itself, so far as it was
religious and not a scheme of class-room instruction for the
metaphysicians, has always viewed God as but one helper, primus
inter pares, in the midst of all the shapers of the great world's
fate.
I fear that my previous lectures, confined as they have been to
human and humanistic aspects, may have left the impression on many
of you that pragmatism means methodically to leave the superhuman
out. I have shown small respect indeed for the Absolute, and I have
until this moment spoken of no other superhuman hypothesis but
that. But I trust that you see sufficiently that the Absolute has
nothing but its superhumanness in common with the theistic God. On
pragmatistic principles, if the hypothesis of God works
satisfactorily in the widest sense of the word, it is true. Now
whatever its residual difficulties may be, experience shows that it
certainly does work, and that the problem is to build it out and
determine it, so that it will combine satisfactorily with all the
other working truths. I cannot start upon a whole theology at the
end of this last lecture; but when I tell you that I have written a
book on men's religious experience, which on the whole has been
regarded as making for the reality of God, you will perhaps exempt
my own pragmatism from the charge of being an atheistic system. I
firmly disbelieve, myself, that our human experience is the highest
form of experience extant in the universe. I believe rather that we
stand in much the same relation to the whole of the universe as our
canine and feline pets do to the whole of human life. They inhabit
our drawing-rooms and libraries. They take part in scenes of whose
significance they have no inkling. They are merely tangent to
curves of history the beginnings and ends and forms of which pass
wholly beyond their ken. So we are tangents to the wider life of
things. But, just as many of the dog's and cat's ideals coincide
with our ideals, and the dogs and cats have daily living proof of
the fact, so we may well believe, on the proofs that religious
experience affords, that higher powers exist and are at work to
save the world on ideal lines similar to our own.
You see that pragmatism can be called religious, if you allow
that religion can be pluralistic or merely melioristic in type. But
whether you will finally put up with that type of religion or not
is a question that only you yourself can decide. Pragmatism has to
postpone dogmatic answer, for we do not yet know certainly which
type of religion is going to work best in the long run. The various
overbeliefs of men, their several faith-ventures, are in fact what
are needed to bring the evidence in. You will probably make your
own ventures severally. If radically tough, the hurly-burly of the
sensible facts of nature will be enough for you, and you will need
no religion at all. If radically tender, you will take up with the
more monistic form of religion: the pluralistic form, with its
reliance on possibilities that are not necessities, will not seem
to afford you security enough.
But if you are neither tough nor tender in an extreme and
radical sense, but mixed as most of us are, it may seem to you that
the type of pluralistic and moralistic religion that I have offered
is as good a religious synthesis as you are likely to find. Between
the two extremes of crude naturalism on the one hand and
transcendental absolutism on the other, you may find that what I
take the liberty of calling the pragmatistic or melioristic type of
theism is exactly what you require.
The End of
PRAGMATISM