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-Project Gutenberg's Life's Basis and Life's Ideal, by Rudolf Eucken
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Life's Basis and Life's Ideal
- The Fundamentals of a New Philosophy of Life
-
-Author: Rudolf Eucken
-
-Translator: Alban G. Widgery
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2013 [EBook #43719]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE'S BASIS AND LIFE'S IDEAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marius Masi, Greg Bergquist and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LIFE'S BASIS AND LIFE'S IDEAL
-
-
-
-
- BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
- THE MEANING AND VALUE OF LIFE
-
- Translated by W. R. BOYCE GIBSON
- Crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d. net.
-
- * * * * *
-
- And by W. R. BOYCE GIBSON
-
- RUDOLF EUCKEN'S PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE
-
- Second Edition, crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d. net.
-
- * * * * *
-
- A. AND C. BLACK, 4 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.
-
-
-
-
- AGENTS:
-
-
- AMERICA THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 64 & 66 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
-
- AUSTRALASIA OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
- 205 FLINDERS LANE, MELBOURNE
-
- CANADA THE MACMILLAN COMPANY OF CANADA, LTD.
- ST. MARTIN'S HOUSE, 70 BOND STREET, TORONTO
-
- INDIA MACMILLAN & COMPANY, LTD.
- MACMILLAN BUILDING, BOMBAY
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-
-
-
-
- LIFE'S BASIS AND LIFE'S IDEAL
-
- THE FUNDAMENTALS OF A NEW PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE
-
- BY
-
- RUDOLF EUCKEN
- PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF JENA
-
- TRANSLATED, WITH INTRODUCTORY NOTE
-
- BY
-
- ALBAN G. WIDGERY
- FORMERLY SCHOLAR OF ST. CATHARINE'S COLLEGE, AND BURNEY STUDENT,
- CAMBRIDGE, AND MEMBER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF JENA
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON
- ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK
- 1912
-
-
- _First published December 1911_
- _Second and Revised Edition, February 1912_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- TRANSLATOR'S INTRODUCTORY NOTE vii
-
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE xxi
-
- I. INTRODUCTORY: THE PHILOSOPHIES OF LIFE IN THE PRESENT DAY 1
-
- PRELIMINARY REMARKS 3
-
- I. STATEMENT AND CRITICISM OF INDIVIDUAL SYSTEMS OF LIFE 6
- (a) The Older Systems 6
- 1. The Religious System 6
- 2. The System of Immanent Idealism 15
- (b) The Newer Systems 22
- 1. The Naturalistic System 24
- 2. The Socialistic System 41
- 3. The System of Æsthetic Individualism 61
-
- II. Consideration of the Situation as a Whole, and
- Preliminaries for Further Investigation 81
- (a) The Nature of the New as a Whole and its Relation to
- the Old 81
- (b) The Condition of the Present 86
- (c) The Form of the Problem 92
-
- II. THE OUTLINE OF A NEW PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE 99
- INTRODUCTORY REMARKS AND CONSIDERATIONS 101
-
- I. THE MAIN THESIS 110
- (a) The Ascent to the Main Thesis 110
- 1. Man as a Being of Nature 110
- 2. The Growth of Man beyond Nature 113
- 3. The Inner Contradiction of the New Life 134
- (b) The Development of the Main Thesis 144
- 1. The Main Thesis and the Possibility of a New
- System of Life 144
- (a) _The Development of the Spiritual Life to
- Independence_ 144
- (b) _The Demands of a New System of Life_ 150
- (c) _The Spiritual Basis of the System of Life_ 152
- (d) _Human Existence_ 161
- (e) _Results and Prospects_ 166
- 2. The Transformation and the Elevation of Human
- Life 168
- (a) _Aims and Ways_ 168
- (b) _The Nature of Freedom_ 174
- (c) _The Beginnings of the Independent Spiritual
- Life_ 183
- (d) _The Transcending of Division_ 187
- i. _The Spiritual Conception of History_ 188
- ii. _The Spiritual Conception of Society_ 196
- (e) _The Elevation of Life above Division_ 201
-
- II. THE MORE DETAILED FORM OF OUR SPIRITUAL LIFE 216
- (a) The Problem of Truth and Reality 216
- (b) Man and the World 226
- (c) The Movement of the Spiritual Life in Man 233
- (d) The Emergence of a New Type of Life 240
- 1. _Life's Attainment of Greatness_ 240
- 2. _The Increase of Movement_ 247
- 3. _The Gain of Stability_ 251
- (e) Activism, a Profession of Faith 255
-
- III. THE SPIRITUAL LIFE IN MAN IN CONFLICT AND IN VICTORY 262
- (a) Doubt and Prostration 262
- (b) Consideration and Demand 267
- (c) The Victory 273
-
- III. APPLICATION TO THE PRESENT: CONSEQUENCES AND REQUIREMENTS 287
-
- _Introductory Considerations_ 289
- I. REQUIREMENTS FOR THE FORM OF LIFE AS A WHOLE 298
- (a) The Character of Culture 298
- (b) The Organisation of the Work of Culture 315
-
- II. THE FORM OF THE INDIVIDUAL DEPARTMENTS 322
- _Preliminary Remarks_ 322
- (a) Religion, Morality, Education 324
- 1. Religion 324
- 2. Morality 335
- 3. Education and Instruction 343
- (b) Science and Philosophy 345
- (c) Art and Literature 354
- (d) Social and Political Life 358
- (e) The Life of the Individual 369
-
- CONCLUSION 373
-
- INDEX 375
-
-
-
-
-TRANSLATOR'S INTRODUCTORY NOTE
-
-
-With the consent of the author the title "Life's Basis and Life's Ideal"
-has been adopted for this translation of "Die Grundlinien einer neuen
-Lebensanschauung," with the hope that thereby the purpose of the work
-will be more directly indicated than by a literal translation of the
-German title. It is hoped, further, that the title adopted will make an
-appeal to the general reading public. To make such an appeal is not the
-desire of every writer on philosophical subjects: but in the present
-instance it is the case. The author feels that he has a message for the
-present time, and one that is vital to the true interests of all. It has
-been remarked, and the present writer would be among the first to
-acknowledge the truth of the statement, that the voice is that of a
-prophet in the sense of an ethical teacher, rather than that of a
-philosopher in the more technical sense. Nevertheless, the use of a
-philosophical terminology, and the constant implicit reference to the
-results of philosophical endeavour in the past and present, combined
-with the peculiarities of the author's own views, make it difficult to
-understand his message. To non-philosophical readers who are not already
-acquainted with the more popular works which have been translated under
-the titles of "Christianity and the New Idealism," "The Life of the
-Spirit," and "The Meaning and Value of Life," the present work will
-appear of considerable difficulty. Difficulty in such a work is,
-however, by no means necessarily an evil, for it may compel more careful
-reading and thought. The present work is the latest and best general
-statement, by the author, of his philosophical position. By some
-reference here to certain ideas, principles, and aims of the
-philosophy, the attention of the reader may be drawn to those aspects
-which, in personal contact with the author, one comes to feel are
-regarded by him as of most importance. It is not invariably so, but in
-this case to know the man is to gain immensely in the power to
-understand and appreciate the message. He inspires us with his
-confidence and enthusiasm, even when we have doubts as to the adequacy
-of his philosophical creed. His philosophy is, indeed, the outcome of an
-attitude of life. To know the man is to understand more fully than from
-all his written works what he means when he speaks of the development of
-_personality_ and _spiritual individuality_. Whatever may be the value
-of what is written about Professor Eucken's position, no substitute can
-be found for reading his own words in as many of his different
-expositions as possible.
-
-Should anyone seek in this work for a systematic discussion of
-philosophical problems on the lines of traditional Rationalism, which,
-though often assumed to be dead, still asserts a strong influence upon
-us, he will not only look in vain but will also lose much that is of
-value in that which is offered. The aim of the philosophy is not to
-discuss the basis and ideal of thought, but to probe to the depth of
-life in all its complexity, and to advance to an all-inclusive ideal.
-The starting-point for us all is life as we experience it, not an
-apparent ultimate, such as the _cogito ergo sum_ of Descartes, the _I
-ought_ of Kant, or the _pure being_ of Hegel. At the outset, therefore,
-it is necessary to note the nature of the relation between philosophy
-and life. Philosophy arises within life as an expression of its nature
-and general import. Life may assume various forms, may be, that is, of
-different types; with different individuals and societies it is
-organised in divers ways. Life so organised, having certain definite
-tendencies, is called by Professor Eucken a _system of life_. In the
-philosophies of life which arise in these types or systems of life, life
-becomes more explicitly conscious of its own nature. Further, a
-philosophy of life is also a means of justification and defence of one
-system of life in opposition to other systems. Life as experienced, as
-organised in some way, is prior to any definite intellectual or
-conceptual expression of it. On the other hand a type of life may be
-influenced and modified by changes in the accepted philosophy of life,
-or by the adoption of a new philosophy. A philosophy, therefore, is to
-be judged by the system of life it represents and by its spiritual
-fruitfulness. As the roots of the differences between philosophies are
-in the systems of life from which the philosophies arise, the conflict
-is primarily not between theories, but between systems of life. The
-ground of the author's general appeal thus becomes apparent. The problem
-is a vital one; in one form or another, at one time or another, everyone
-is faced with it: how shall I mould my life? And it is here that we must
-insist upon the importance of Professor Eucken's contention that we have
-to make our decision for one system of life as a whole, and thus for one
-philosophy of life as a whole, as against other systems and other
-philosophies taken as wholes.
-
-Life as experienced is a process, a growth; and in this growth it
-oversteps the bounds of the philosophy in which at an earlier stage it
-expressed itself, and according to which it strove to fashion itself.
-The need for a new philosophy is then felt. Generally, the need is for a
-philosophy more comprehensive and more clearly defined than any of the
-previous philosophies. Now, Professor Eucken contends that none of the
-philosophies of life which are common among us in the present time are
-adequate to represent and guide our life at this stage of its
-development. He calls us to turn for a few moments from the rush and
-turmoil of modern life to "come and reason together" as to life's basis
-and ideal. In justification of his view, and in accordance with his own
-principle that we must start with life as we experience it, he considers
-in the first place the common philosophies of life of the present time
-in relation to the systems of life from which they spring. Few will
-disagree with his negative view that Religion--at least as
-ecclesiastically presented--Immanent Idealism, Naturalism, Socialism,
-and Individualism involve limitations, and sometimes unjustifiable
-tendencies and claims, and are inadequate to satisfy the age. His next
-and chief endeavour is to indicate the direction in which a new
-philosophy is to be sought, and also tentatively to sketch the outlines
-of such a philosophy. In the nature of the case--as life is a
-process--no such philosophy can be regarded as complete. It can and
-should strive to take up into itself all that is of value in the
-discarded philosophies. Any attempt to outline a "new" philosophy will
-be judged by how far, with the incompleteness on all hands, it takes the
-different threads of life, and blending them into a unity aids their
-growth individually and as a whole.
-
-Brief reference maybe made here to an attitude, common in the present
-time especially among English-speaking peoples, which the author does
-not explicitly mention. I mean the attitude of Agnosticism. This, he
-would contend and it would seem rightly, is in the main theoretical and
-does not, as such, correspond to or represent a system of life. The
-agnostic's system of life is formed of aspects of the systems discussed,
-with a strong tendency to Naturalism. The case of Huxley, who coined the
-term _Agnosticism_, is an excellent example: notwithstanding his
-frequently insisting with considerable force upon truths essentially
-idealistic, no one can doubt the predominant naturalistic tendency of
-his thought. As a rule the adoption of the attitude of Agnosticism is an
-attempt, as Dr. Ward has so clearly and forcibly argued in his
-"Naturalism and Agnosticism,"[1] to escape from the difficulties of
-Naturalism, which in the end it betrays. Agnosticism is, in fact, only
-an assumed absence of a theory of life. Professor Eucken would insist
-that the instability of the position is intolerable in actual life.
-Life's demand for unification, for consciousness of a meaning and a
-value, drives us beyond it. "Mere research," he writes, p. 272, "can
-tolerate a state of hesitation between affirmation and negation; it must
-often refrain from a decision in the case of special problems. Life,
-however, cannot endure any such intermediary position; for life, such
-hesitation in arriving at a decision must result in complete stagnation,
-and this would help the mere negation to victory."
-
-The great objection to all the systems of life mentioned is that they
-are too narrow, and in some aspects superficial. The new system must
-unite comprehensiveness with depth. The insufficiency of intellectualism
-is now generally recognised: the desire of the age is to do justice to
-the content of experience. Though the new system of life is to include
-all that is of value of earlier systems, it is by no means an
-eclecticism, for it has its integrating principle. This we shall best
-see by considering the method and the result of the philosophy. Life as
-experienced has already been referred to as the starting-point. To
-whatever extent we may seem, on the surface of experience, to be under
-the antithesis of subject and object, when we probe deeper we recognise
-that both are within life: they are a duality in unity. Here again
-reference may be made to the above-mentioned work[2] of Dr. Ward, in
-which probably the best exposition in English of this same truth is to
-be found. Life as experienced is not simply the empirical states of
-consciousness: its basis lies deeper. The method of the philosophy is in
-consequence described as _noölogical_ in distinction from the
-_psychological_ method, which treats of man out of relation to a world,
-and ends with the examination of psychical states; and from the
-_cosmological_ method, which treats the world out of relation to man and
-aims chiefly at comprehension in universals of thought. Expressed in
-another way, life is fundamentally spiritual. Self-consciousness is the
-unifying principle: it is only by relation to life as self-conscious
-that we can predicate meaning or value. All that is regarded as true and
-valuable in all the above-mentioned systems presupposes this relation.
-The self-conscious life is not to be confused with the subjective life
-of the "mere" individual. In fact, there is no "mere" individual, for in
-all there are tendencies which transcend the limits of individual
-experience. For example, life includes the relation of man and world;
-and the life of society is more than a mere sum of the lives of the
-individuals. Perhaps a more correct way to state the author's position
-is to say that the individual shares the self-conscious, or, otherwise
-expressed, the spiritual life which transcends nature, the individual,
-and society. This world-pervading and world-transcending self-conscious
-life--_the Independent Spiritual Life_--may be regarded as an absolute
-or universal life. The pursuit of the ideals of truth, goodness, and
-beauty carries us far beyond considerations of the welfare of the
-individual, or the society, or even humanity as a whole. In our
-activities we often attain something quite different from and far better
-than that at which we aim. Nevertheless, unless truth, goodness, beauty,
-and all tendencies leading to them are self-consciously experienced they
-have neither meaning nor value: viewed universally, they presuppose the
-Independent Spiritual Life. The highest development of the spiritual
-life known to us is personality, our "being-for-self," which is not to
-be identified with subjective individuality. We are not personalities to
-begin with, but have the potentiality to become such through our own
-effort. Personality is our highest ideal: in it, as self-conscious
-experience all other values for us are included. The author calls us,
-therefore, from that excessive occupation with the environment in which
-we forget ourselves, to spiritual concentration and the pursuit of
-spiritual ideals. The spirit of his message may be expressed in words
-familiar to all: "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world
-and lose his own soul." Remembering that life is fundamentally
-self-conscious or spiritual, it may be said that life's basis and life's
-ideal is life itself--life completely self-conscious and following out
-its own necessities. The basis of man's life is the Independent
-Spiritual Life which is appropriated but not created by him in his
-striving for a comprehensive and harmonious personality. The ideal of
-man's life is such a personality. The more man "loses his life" in the
-pursuit of the ideals of truth, goodness, and beauty, the more surely
-will he "save it," the more comprehensive, harmonious, and spiritual in
-nature will he become. Then he will realise himself as a personality,
-and become conscious of his unity with the Independent Spiritual Life.
-The dominant Idealism of this philosophy of life is evident: but the
-meanings of truth, goodness, and beauty are different from what they
-appear to be in many of the older presentations of Idealism. Truth,
-goodness and beauty are not abstract ideals but concrete experiences.
-The present writer has long been of the opinion that much of
-contemporary idealistic philosophy, including that of Professor Eucken,
-might be better termed _Spiritualism_ than _Idealism_.
-
-If life as experienced is a process, it is not difficult to understand
-that importance should be attributed to history. In the author's
-exposition not only is constant reference made to historical
-development, but the nature of history is made a definite subject of
-discussion. I would call attention to this aspect of the author's work:
-it appears a means of doing more justice to the content of experience
-than is done in most forms of Idealism. On the one hand a Rationalism
-which tends to shut out the historical as transient and merely
-appearance is avoided, and on the other a Historical Relativism which
-denies all stability and permanence is strenuously opposed. While the
-absolute and eternal--the Independent Spiritual Life--is the
-presupposition of the temporal manifestation of the spiritual life in
-man, for man the historical is real. The form of our spiritual life is
-due to our own acts and decisions. It is in this connection that the
-fundamental nature of our spiritual effort may best be seen. The
-author's voice is that of a prophet in so far as his whole exposition is
-presented as an endeavour to arouse men from their apathy and from the
-pursuit of what they themselves know to be unsatisfying ideals. The
-importance attached to spiritual effort in his philosophy leads
-Professor Eucken to adopt the term "_Activism_" as a definite
-philosophical badge. The activistic note is evident throughout, much
-more so perhaps in the present volume than in those which have preceded
-it. The significance of this emphasis is most clear in its bearing upon
-our relation to the past and the present. The present is neither to be
-dominated by the past nor sacrificed to the future, but the past is to
-be appropriated by our activity in the present, and the present, while
-possessing reality and value in itself, looks forward to the future.
-Historical content, spiritual endeavour in past, present, and future,
-must be unified by a common task. The past is ours only so far as we
-appropriate it. Spiritual inheritance is not the same as natural
-inheritance. We may by our spiritual effort adopt or reject ideas or a
-system of life which have come to us from the past. The character which
-the past will have for us will depend on our present spiritual
-condition. All spiritual progress involves a break with the past. In the
-same way we may take up an attitude of antagonism to the confusions
-which exist in modern life, and we may follow a new course. All this is
-not to deny the value of history in itself and for our present efforts:
-the reverse of such a denial is nearer the truth. For if we realise the
-depths and independence of our own life we are not only in a position to
-understand and appreciate the movement of history, but, by the nature of
-life, we are then driven beyond the mere present. The past relives with
-a new spiritual meaning in the consciousness that makes it its own.
-History is more than a succession of facts; it must be revalued as a
-present experience. Life is not subjectively individual, and to realise
-it we must find our place in universal tendencies which are working
-themselves out in history. The content of history cannot be pressed into
-the narrow scheme of moral effort and attainment, as that is usually
-conceived, but in it all spheres of life assert their independent right.
-History is not an evolution of categories, but a conflict of concrete
-realities, of systems of life, of personalities. Though the great man
-cannot be understood out of relation to his time, he is not simply a
-product of the social environment. The great man strives to raise the
-time to his own level. It may be said that in order adequately to
-appreciate the author's position in regard to history the book
-translated into English under the title of "The Problem of Human Life
-as viewed by the Great Thinkers from Plato to the Present Time" should
-be read in the light of the general principles of his philosophy. The
-reality of evil and of antitheses in life are fully acknowledged; but by
-the spiritual life being thereby called to assert its independence and
-to strive to overcome them they may be a factor leading to good. Evil,
-so regarded, is not explained away, but the solution is essentially a
-practical one. The theoretical problem of evil remains an enigma to us.
-The author's message is positive, not negative: it is a call to pursue
-definite positive aims rather than to eradicate painful experiences.
-"Not suffering, but spiritual destitution is man's worst enemy" (p.
-314).
-
-It has been said with, it would seem, a large amount of truth, that the
-philosophy of Hegel has been most fruitfully studied on English soil.
-There is reason to believe that it will be somewhat the same in the case
-of Professor Eucken's philosophy. His debts to Kant and Hegel are
-obvious, but it is interesting to notice that the points in which he
-more especially diverges from Hegelianism are largely the same as have
-been emphasised in England. The importance he attaches to personality
-and ethical activity, his insistence upon human endeavour as a
-determining factor in reality, and his emphasis on the dialectic as
-being not one of categories but of concrete realities, are in accord
-with much of the best of recent English philosophical thought. In the
-present work there is much of value for those who--while dissenting from
-such perversions as Pragmatism--hold what is commonly termed a "Personal
-Idealism." The position of our author is not the same as that of English
-Personal Idealism, nevertheless his work aids it in many ways, and
-especially in its insistence upon the distinction between personality
-and subjective individuality. A comparison of some of the views of the
-three philosophical writers who have been most discussed in our
-time--the late Professor James, M. Bergson, and our author--would be of
-interest. To enter upon a systematic and exhaustive comparison here is
-far from my intention, but a few points may be suggested. The modes of
-exposition, which in a greater or less degree indicate the respective
-methods, manifest striking contrasts: in many respects the positions of
-M. Bergson and Professor Eucken appear totally dissimilar. The
-acquaintance with natural science, and the constant reference to its
-data, that we find in the works of M. Bergson, are not found in those of
-our author. Their place is taken, however, by what some will regard as
-more interesting, and even more important, an acquaintance with the
-present condition of human life, and also a constant reference to
-history. Common to these writers is a reaction against formalism and
-intellectualism, and in one form or another there is in their writings a
-strong element of empiricism. Freedom in some sense is insisted upon by
-all; though so far as we may judge from their published expositions
-there seem to be considerable differences of view in this matter.
-Together with this assertion of the reality of Freedom, both M. Bergson
-and our author definitely acknowledge the reality of Necessity and
-recognise the importance of struggle in development. Neither writer
-claims that we can gain more than the knowledge of a direction in which
-the solution of the problem may be sought. Our author himself might
-quite well have said, though with application in the main to different
-classes of facts, what M. Bergson has said: "It seems to me that in a
-great number of different fields there is a great number of collections
-of facts, each of which, considered apart, gives us a direction in which
-the answer to the problem may be sought--a direction only. But it is a
-great thing to have even a direction, and still more to have several
-directions, for at the precise point where these directions converge
-might be found the solution we are seeking. What we possess meanwhile
-are lines of facts.[3]..." "But what is this new reality," writes
-Professor Eucken (p. 135), "and this whole to which the course of the
-movement trends? The more we reflect over the question the more strongly
-we feel that it is a direction rather than a conclusion that is offered
-to us in this matter...." There is another passage from M. Bergson the
-quotation of which in the present context is justified by its harmony
-with so much that Professor Eucken himself says with regard to man's
-ideal of life: "If, then, in every province, the triumph of life is
-expressed by creation, ought we not to think that the ultimate reason of
-human life is a creation which, in distinction from that of the artist
-or the man of science, can be pursued at every moment and by all men
-alike; I mean the creation of self by self, the continual enrichment of
-personality by elements which it does not draw from outside, but causes
-to spring forth from itself?"[4] Whether in the works of the late
-Professor James there is evidence of a lurking desire for an Absolute
-may be left undiscussed. M. Bergson certainly gives more than a hint of
-something like an Absolute. Of the absolutist (not rationalistic)
-tendency in the philosophy of our author there can be no doubt.
-Notwithstanding the antagonism to intellectualism shown in this
-philosophy, the influence of Hegel seems evident in its absolutist
-tendency. Dr. Ward has justly said that, "with Hegel, the Absolute seems
-at one time to be a perfect Self with no hint of aught beside or beyond
-its own completed self-consciousness, and at another not to be a self at
-all, but only the absolutely spiritual--art, religion, and
-philosophy--the over-individual ends, as they are sometimes called,
-which become realised in subjective spirits: not self-conscious Spirit,
-but simply the impersonal Spirit in all spirits."[5] How far a
-corresponding criticism is applicable to the ideas of the Independent
-Spiritual Life, and the spiritual life in humanity and the world, in the
-present philosophy, its readers must be left to decide.
-
-The relation of philosophy to life as Professor Eucken conceives it may
-justify him in treating primarily of what may be called in a special
-sense the problems of life. The difficulty of the problems of the theory
-of knowledge no one will deny, though many are impatient of
-considerations of them. In any general appeal such as we have to do with
-in this work it is almost impossible to deal seriously with them. Still
-the problems of the theory of knowledge force themselves upon us, and
-will not be thrust on one side. The late Professor James did his best to
-leave us in no doubt as to his position in this matter: we have more
-than a glimpse of the attitudes of M. Bergson and Professor Eucken. We
-await, however, as likely to aid us in a fuller understanding and
-estimate of the philosophy, the volume the author has promised us on the
-theory of knowledge. Whatever the points of similarity may be in the
-views of those mentioned, we cannot fail to note the differences--to
-some of these in the case of Pragmatism the author has himself called
-our attention; further, we cannot mistake the dominant Idealism of the
-philosophy of life here presented to us. One word must be said as to the
-author's attitude towards Mysticism; an attitude that has not always
-been understood. The Mysticism he opposes is of the type that is
-virtually the negation of the Activism which is to him fundamental. But
-when that is recognised, the careful reader cannot fail to see that,
-ultimately, the philosophy is essentially mystical.
-
-As I understand it, the suggestion that our author's philosophy would
-form a rallying-point for Idealists of various kinds is a tribute to its
-unity and comprehensiveness, of which there can be no doubt. Roughly, we
-may take up one of two attitudes to the work of a philosopher. We may
-accept his general point of view, his main principles, in a word his
-"system," however tentative, and modify it in detail. On the other hand
-we may reject his main position, and yet find much to accept in his
-working out of various aspects of detail, and we may incorporate this in
-some other general system. It is not for me to state here the attitude I
-take towards, or the difficulties I feel in, the philosophy; I think
-that there will be few who will not gain much from the inspiration and
-originality which are shown by the author. For his own philosophy of
-life he seeks no other treatment than that which he has meted to others:
-a sincere endeavour to understand its basis and its ideal. His hope is
-that however much its limitations may be pointed out, the truth in it
-may be acknowledged and appropriated, if possible in a higher view. The
-acquisition of a higher view would cause no one more real joy than
-Professor Eucken.
-
-I have to thank the author for his personal kindness in the discussion
-of some difficult points and in the revision of a portion of the proof
-sheets. At his suggestion or with his consent a number of small
-alterations, as, for example, in the titles of sections, have been made
-from the present German text. Owing to an accident, the time for the
-preparation of this translation was unfortunately curtailed: I should be
-indebted for any suggestions for its improvement. I am indebted to the
-Rev. Felix Holt, B.A., for reading through the whole in manuscript and
-making many valuable suggestions. For all defect and error I alone am
-responsible.
-
- ALBAN G. WIDGERY
-
- CAMBRIDGE, _October 1911_
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
- [1] "Naturalism and Agnosticism." 3rd Edition, 1906. Vols. I. and II.
- A. & C. Black.
-
- [2] _Ibid._ Vol. II. Lects. xiv.-xx.
-
- [3] _Hibbert Journal_, October 1911: p. 26.
-
- [4] _Ibid._ p. 42.
-
- [5] "The Realm of Ends; or, Pluralism and Theism" (1911), p. 46.
-
-
-NOTE TO SECOND EDITION
-
-I have taken the opportunity given by reprinting to revise the whole. I
-have made a number of alterations rendering the author's meaning more
-clear. My thanks are again due to Mr. Holt for his help.
-
- ALBAN G. WIDGERY
-
- CAVERSWALL, STOKE-ON-TRENT,
- _January 1912_
-
-
-
-
-AUTHOR'S PREFACE
-
-
-We may hope for a friendly reception of our investigation only by those
-who acknowledge that that which occupies us here is a real problem. It
-is hardly open to dispute that life in the present time displays a
-serious incongruity between an incalculably rich and fruitful activity
-with regard to the material, and complete uncertainty and destitution in
-respect of the spiritual, side of life. Attempt after attempt is made to
-deliver us from this state of perplexity, and to give more soul and
-unity to a culture which outwardly is so imposing. But in the main these
-attempts are far too irresolute in their advance from superficiality to
-depth, and from individual appearances to the whole: in their innermost
-nature they are under the influence of the temporary conditions beyond
-which they wish to lead us. In truth, we cannot make an advance in
-relation to our life as a whole unless we win a new basis for it. This,
-however, we cannot do without raising the problem of our relation to
-reality, and, if it is in any way possible, moulding this relationship
-in a new way: further, we can be of service in the satisfaction of the
-needs of the time only when we gain an independence of it and a
-superiority to it.
-
-Here, therefore, so far as the realm of conviction is concerned, we have
-a task for philosophy. The confusion that reigns, however, makes the way
-difficult for philosophy also; and sets insuperable limits to its power.
-We do not meet in immediate experience with facts upon which a new type
-of life might be based: much toil and trouble are necessary to arrive at
-that, which, when it is once attained, may seem to be simple and easy.
-He who finds the problem too complex, and shirks to expend the necessary
-effort, can do nothing else than resign himself submissively to the
-prevailing confusion. To-day we are unable at first to sketch more than
-the outlines and to indicate fundamentals: we must be quite sure of the
-basis and the main tendency of life if we would undertake the
-construction of systems; and yet it is just these things which are
-to-day the subject of agitation and conflict. Not for a moment do we
-doubt the imperfection of our own attempt; we can but hope that others
-will take up and pursue the matter further.
-
-Notwithstanding these limitations and this trouble, an urgent inner
-necessity compels us to recognise that there can be no enduring life of
-genuine culture unless humanity is inwardly united by common aims. More
-and more clearly this main question is seen to be involved in all the
-particular questions of the time; more and more does it become evident
-to us that our achievement in individual matters can be but
-insignificant, if life as a whole is in a state of stagnation and
-exhaustion. Though some who may already have taken up a definite course,
-or who in their attention to work in some special sphere have lost all
-sense for the whole, may refuse to consider the matter, yet wherever
-life is still flowing, and where fresh impulse resists the tendency to
-division which deprives it of all soul, to deal with the problem will be
-felt to be a necessity. Above all, therefore, we trust in the young,
-who, among all cultured nations, are striving for a deeper and nobler
-life. The more successful this striving, the sooner shall we advance
-from a state of confusion to one of order and clearness, from a realm of
-illusions to the kingdom of truth, and in face of the chaotic whirl of
-appearances we shall attain stability within ourselves.
-
- RUDOLF EUCKEN
-
- JENA, _Christmas 1906_
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-INTRODUCTORY
-
-THE PHILOSOPHIES OF LIFE IN THE PRESENT DAY
-
-PRELIMINARY REMARKS
-
-
-He who strives after a new philosophy of life confesses himself thereby
-to be of the conviction that the philosophies of the present no longer
-satisfy mankind; and so we must begin by giving reasons for sharing this
-conviction. In doing this we hope to be able to take a positive survey
-of the present situation as a whole, and also to gain a firm
-starting-point for the course in which the new is to be sought, and not
-simply to remain fixed in a mere negative attitude. A precise statement
-of the question is the first condition for a correct answer; to satisfy
-this requirement is the chief concern of the first part of our treatise.
-
-Philosophies of life, representations of human life as a whole, surround
-us to-day in abundance and court our adherence. The fusion of rich
-historical development with active reflection gives occasion to the most
-diverse combinations and makes it easy for the individual to project a
-representation corresponding to his circumstances and his mood. Thus,
-to-day, the philosophies of life of individuals whirl together in
-chaotic confusion, gain and lose the passing favour, displace one
-another, and themselves change kaleidoscopically. It is not the concern
-of philosophy to occupy itself more closely with opinions so accidental
-and so fleeting.
-
-There are, however, philosophies of life of another kind, conceptions of
-life, which unite and dominate large numbers of people, hold up a common
-ideal for their activity, and constitute a power in the life of
-universal history. These philosophies of life are rooted in particular
-concrete forms of life, in actual combinations of working and striving,
-which with dominating power surround the individual and point out his
-course. With such ascendancy they may seem to him to be unassailable and
-a matter of natural necessity; in reality they are a product of the
-industry of universal history, and from this point of view appear merely
-as attempts to comprehend the boundless stream of life and to win a
-character for our otherwise indefinite existence. For at first we stand
-defenceless and helpless in face of the wealth of impressions and
-suggestions which throng upon us and draw us in opposite directions.
-Only in one way are we able to prevail: life must concentrate and
-acquire a controlling centre within itself, and from that begin a
-process of counteraction. We lack distinction of centre and environment;
-we need an inner aspiration, an aspiration which seeks to draw the whole
-of existence to itself and to mould it in its own particular way. This,
-however, is impossible, unless at the same time a philosophy of life, a
-profession of faith as to the nature of the whole, a justification of
-our undertaking, is evolved. A philosophy of life established in this
-manner will be incomparably more powerful, and fuller in content, than
-the mere foam on the surface of time.
-
-Nevertheless, with all its advantages, such a philosophy of life, like
-the corresponding system of life itself, is not ultimate truth: it
-remains an attempt, a problem which, ever anew, divides men into
-opposing camps. For the experience of history teaches us that the effort
-after concentration and an inner synthesis of life does not follow one
-clear, direct course throughout, but that different possibilities offer
-themselves and, in course of time, struggle upwards to reality.
-Different systems thus advance by the side of and in opposition to one
-another, each making the claim to undivided supremacy, to a superiority
-over all others. Philosophies of life now become means and instruments
-to justify and to establish such claims. They must enter into the
-severest conflict one with another, and the strife keeps up a powerful
-tension and pressure because here, by means of the ideas, tendencies of
-life compete with one another; because not mere representations of
-reality but realities themselves struggle together. It is manifest from
-the existence of these last problems that we do not grow up in a
-finished world, but have first to form and build up our world. We are
-concerned not merely with interpreting a given reality, but first of all
-with winning the true, primary, and all-comprehensive reality. By this
-our life is made uncertain and laborious, but it is raised at the same
-time to an inner freedom and a more genuine independence.
-
-And now for the first time we see in its true light the fact that its
-own views of life can become inadequate to an age. For the fact that an
-age lacks an inner unity, that cogent reasons drive it beyond the extant
-syntheses, is now a sign that it is not clear and certain as to its own
-life. To open up a way for a new synthesis, to organise life more
-adequately, becomes the most pressing of all demands, the question of
-questions. Even the most cautious and most subtle reflection will not
-lead us far in this matter; all hope of success depends upon our life
-containing greater depths, which hitherto have not been fully grasped,
-and more especially upon a transcendent unity present in it, which
-hitherto has not come to complete recognition. All thought and
-reflection is thus called to direct itself to the comprehension of such
-depths and of such a unity. Everything here depends on facts; on facts,
-however, which do not come to us opportunely from without, but which
-reveal themselves only to the eye of the spirit and to aspiration.
-
-
-
-
-I. STATEMENT AND CRITICISM OF INDIVIDUAL SYSTEMS OF LIFE
-
-
-It must be admitted that the first glance at the present conditions of
-life shows a chaotic confusion. A more careful examination, however,
-soon discloses a limited number of schemes of life, which, although they
-are often combined by individuals, are in their nature distinct and
-remain differentiated. We recognise five such systems of life: those of
-Religion and of Immanent Idealism on the one hand, and those of
-Naturalism, Socialism, and Individualism on the other hand. For, two
-main groups may be clearly distinguished: one, older, which gives to
-life an invisible world for its chief province; and one, newer, which
-places man entirely in the realm of sense experience; within these
-groups, the ways again lead in diverse directions. Let us see what each
-of these organisations makes out of life; on what each supports itself;
-and what each accomplishes. Let us see also where each meets with
-opposition and in what it finds its limits; and this not according to
-our individual opinion, but according to the experiences of the age.
-
-
-(a) THE OLDER SYSTEMS
-
-1. THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEM
-
-The religious organisation of life has influenced us in the past with
-especial power. This has worked in the form of Christianity, which, as
-an ethical religion of redemption, occupies a thoroughly unique position
-among religions. As a religion it unites life to a supernatural world,
-and subjects our existence to its supremacy; as a religion of redemption
-it heightens the contrast between the two worlds to such a degree of
-harshness that a complete revolution becomes a necessity; as an ethical
-religion it regards the spiritual life as a power of positive creation
-and self-determination, and insists upon a complete change of the heart.
-Arising in an age of decay, an age weary of life, it confidently took up
-the conflict against this faintness; it did not carry on this conflict,
-however, by a further development of the natural world and of culture,
-but through the revelation of a supernatural order, of a new community
-of life, which, through the building up of an invisible Kingdom of
-God--which wins a visible expression in the Church--becomes to man in
-faith and hope the most certain presence. Christianity ratified an
-affirmation of life; still, it did not accomplish this immediately, but
-by the most fundamental and definite negation; and thus to a cursory
-consideration it might appear to be a flight from the world. In reality,
-it unites the negation and the affirmation, flight from, and renewal of,
-the world; the deepest feeling of, and the happiest deliverance from,
-guilt and suffering, and thereby gives to life a greater breadth as well
-as a ceaseless activity in search of its true self. Religion does not
-mean a special domain by the side of others; its intention is rather to
-be the innermost soul and the supreme power of the whole life. Through
-its ideals and its standards it lends to the whole sphere of life a
-distinctive character; it leads to a definite organisation of mankind
-and offers powerful opposition to all dissipation, all merely individual
-caprice. It comes to the individual as a supreme power which brings to
-him salvation and truth, shapes him for the highest ends, and connects
-his thought and feeling with an invisible world.
-
-With such an undertaking Christianity has exercised most deep-reaching
-influences on the course of history; in the first place it implanted a
-new vitality in an exhausted humanity; then in the Middle Ages it worked
-to the education of a new race; and now that it has become mature it
-has not ceased to exercise strong, though quieter, influences:
-considering all the facts, it appears to be the most powerful force in
-history.
-
-But all the greatness of past achievement could not prevent a strong
-movement from arising in the Modern Age against Christianity; a movement
-which still continues to increase in power and which undermines the
-position of Christianity, where outwardly it still appears quite secure.
-It is true that there never was a period when it was not opposed by
-individuals, but through the lack of any spiritual import these isolated
-oppositions had never combined so as to produce a united effect. An
-effect of this kind was first produced with the emergence of new systems
-of thought and new streams of life since the beginning of the
-seventeenth century; as long, however, as this movement was limited to
-the cultured classes and left the masses untouched, that which existed
-in it as a menace did not produce its full effect. It was the conviction
-of Bayle, that the spirit of the Enlightenment would never permeate the
-masses. In the nineteenth century this "unexpected" happened, and the
-nature of spiritual endeavour and the disposition of men join together
-in an assault upon Christianity; an assault which no one with insight
-will call anything but dangerous.
-
-The thing most evident and most talked of is the subversion of the old
-conception of the world; a conception which is usually associated with
-Christianity. This conception is less and less able to assert itself in
-face of the triumphant onward march of modern science. The
-representation of nature, like that of human history, has been broadened
-immeasurably and at the same time has acquired inner unity, law, and
-order; a direct intervention of a supernatural power is felt more and
-more to be an intolerable derangement. The earth, hitherto the centre of
-the whole and the chief platform upon which the destiny of the universe
-was decided, sinks to a position of more correct proportion, and man is
-much more closely linked to nature and fitted into a common order. How
-then can that which takes place in him decide what shall be the destiny
-of the whole?
-
-If we would withdraw from this shattered conception of the world, as
-from a mere external matter, to the substance of Christianity, this
-substance must be much more clearly and much more forcibly present to us
-than it really is. For, in this change we are concerned not simply with
-individual phrases, but with the whole mode of thought. We have learnt
-to think far more causally and critically; we perceive the peculiarity
-of the historical circumstances in which Christianity arose, and, along
-with this, become aware of a wide disparity from the circumstances of
-the present. We question all historical tradition as to its grounds, and
-so overthrow the weight of authority; our thought has become throughout
-less naïve and we strive to transcend the form of the immediate
-impression. From this point of view it comes about quite easily that the
-religious mode of thought appears to be a mere anthropomorphism, a
-childlike, imaginative interpretation of the world, which, to an
-intelligence equipped with the clearness of objective consideration, can
-pass only for a stage in evolution, which has once for all been
-overcome. Such is the teaching of Positivism, and it is just in this
-reference to religion that its influence extends far beyond the limits
-of the positivistic school.
-
-The change of thought would not be so far-reaching and so dangerous if
-it did not give expression to a change of life as a whole; but this is
-what it really does: the Modern Age through the whole course of its
-development sets a universal--a system--over against the religious
-system of life. That all departments of life should subordinate
-themselves to Religion, that every activity has value only so far as it
-either directly or indirectly furthers Religion, appears to the Modern
-Age a much too narrow conception, and one which is a mischievous denial
-of the truth that these departments of life contain. So the different
-branches of the spiritual life--for example, science and art, politics
-and economics--liberate themselves radically from the supremacy of
-Religion, and this is felt to be an incalculable gain in freedom and
-breadth. Since, unimpeded, the new life increases in comprehensiveness,
-and draws the whole content of reality into itself, it seems to rest
-firmly and securely in itself and to need no completion of any kind
-whatever.
-
-Religion, however, must first seek a place in this new life. It finds
-this place with greater difficulty, in that modern life, as it works out
-its own peculiar characteristics, ever more directly and ever more
-harshly opposes Christianity. The initial assumptions of the two are
-fundamentally different. Early Christianity spoke to a generation which
-had become perplexed concerning the rationality of the universe and
-concerning its own capacity; a generation which could attain to an
-affirmation of life only through the building up of a new world in
-contrast to that of sense impression. The world, then disdained, has
-acquired in the Modern Age an ever-increasing power of attraction. New
-peoples and epochs have grown up, which have a feeling of power and wish
-to exert the force of their youth in work upon the surrounding world;
-this world meets such a desire since it shows itself to be still in the
-midst of change and full of problems. If formerly the world surrounded
-man as an unchangeable fate, it now proves to be capable of change and
-of upward development; man can work and strive to transform it into a
-kingdom of reason. The more that power and object unite in this, the
-more victorious is the advance of work; the nearer the world is brought
-to man's inner life, the more does it become to him his true and only
-home. The idea of immanence comes to have a magical sound; everything
-which oversteps the boundary marked out by the work of the world soon
-comes to be regarded as a flight into a realm of shadows, into an
-"other" world. Satisfaction is obtained in life in grappling with
-realities; in the display of masculine strength: while the religious
-attitude to life, with its waiting and hope, and its expectation of
-supernatural aid, seems lifeless, feeble, and altogether lacking in
-spirit.
-
-At the same time, all capacity for understanding the world in which
-Christianity set the soul of man disappears. That world was one of pure
-inwardness, a world in which the fundamental relation of life was that
-of the spiritual life to its own ideal conception, to absolute spirit; a
-world in which the questions of character and of the determination of
-the will were the chief problems. To earlier Christianity that world was
-anything but a mere "other" world; rather it constituted that which was
-nearest and most certain; the chief basis of life, from which the world
-of sense first received its truth and its value. But the more
-significant the world of sense becomes to man, and the more powerfully
-it draws his affections to itself, the more does the relation to this
-world become the fundamental relation of life; the more does that pure
-inner world fade, and the more it appears to be something artificial,
-shadowy, something added as an afterthought; and the turning to it comes
-to be regarded as a flight into an "other" world. Christianity must
-necessarily be alien and unintelligible to anyone who feels the world
-which was to Christianity the chief world to be a mere "other" world;
-for him all the contentions of Christianity are inevitably distorted,
-and every element of joyful affirmation and heroic victory which it
-contains obscured; the whole must present a miserable and morbid
-picture. Now that the centre of life has changed its position in
-relation to the world, is it possible to avoid the consequences of a
-growing tendency to displace and dissolve Christianity?
-
-The inner world was to Christianity essentially a realm of conviction
-and decision, a relation of will to will, of personality to personality:
-free action, in power and love, in guilt and reconciliation, formed the
-essence of all events and gave to the world a soul. Only as ethical,
-personal power did the spiritual life appear to find its own depth and
-to be able to govern the world.
-
-Here again the Modern Age takes a directly antagonistic course. Its work
-is considered most of all to lead beyond the subjectivity of man to the
-content and under the objective necessity of things. For we seem first
-to attain genuine truth when we place ourselves in the world of fact,
-reveal its relations, and take part in its movements; we have to follow
-the objective and immanent necessities of things; to interpret every
-particular case from the standpoint of these necessities and to
-harmonise our own conduct with them. Life seems to acquire greatness and
-universal significance only insomuch as the process comes before the
-effect, the law before freedom, fixed relations before the resolution
-into individual occurrences. To the Modern Age, not only has nature been
-transformed into a continuous causal chain, but in its spiritual
-activity also the age forms great complexes, which, through the force of
-logical necessity, are placed beyond the influence of all caprice, and
-of all the interests of the narrowly human. From the point of view of
-such an evolution the realm of ethical life appears to be a mere
-subjective sphere; a tissue of human opinion and striving; something
-which falls outside of genuine reality and which can never be forced
-into its structure. To continue in the position of early Christianity is
-looked upon as a remaining at a lower level of life; conceptions such as
-freedom of the will and moral judgment are regarded as childish
-delusions which are the more decidedly rejected the more the new life
-displays its fundamental character. Again, with a transvaluation of all
-values, that which to Christianity was the highest in life and dominated
-the whole is regarded as a mere accompanying appearance; indeed, a
-danger to the energy and truth of life.
-
-Hence a mode of life has arisen which not only regards the answers of
-Christianity with indifference, but does not even recognise its
-problems; and this mode of life is attracting to itself more and more
-the convictions and energies of mankind. Even now the antithesis which
-the centuries have prepared is being forced with unmistakable clearness
-into prominence. It was possible for us to deceive ourselves with regard
-to its implacability so long as a rationalistic and pantheistic way of
-thinking presented Christianity in the most general way, and tried to
-comprehend its nature as something universal, and at the same time
-placed nature and the universe in the transfiguring light of
-speculative consideration. But, in the course of further experience,
-that mode of thought has been severely shaken and appears more and more
-to be a mere aggregate of phrases; and so the antitheses face one
-another unreconciled and a decision is not to be evaded. In this matter
-mankind is under the influence of a strong reaction against the
-religious, and especially the Christian, mode of life. Throughout many
-centuries Christianity has given life a unity and has thrown light upon
-reality from its standpoint: further, it has presented its way as the
-only possible one; one to which everything which in any way strives
-spiritually upward has to adapt itself. If the truth of the whole now
-falls into doubt, everything which was intended to give to life
-stability and character is soon felt to be heavily oppressive and
-intolerably narrow; and everything which in that mode of life was
-accidental, temporal, and human advances into the foreground. We clearly
-perceive that much passed current as true only because we had become
-unaccustomed to ask questions concerning it, and also that many things
-owed their acceptance not to their inner necessity, but only to social
-sanction. With such feelings it may come to be considered a great
-deliverance to shake off the whole, and a necessary step towards
-truthfulness of life to eliminate every aspect of that mode of life
-which through custom or authority continues to exist.
-
-These tendencies are tendencies of reaction with all their
-one-sidedness. But can we deny that a great change of life has been
-accomplished, a change which reaches far beyond these tendencies, and
-which is still working itself out? That which previously was most
-proximate to us is now made to recede; what held currency as absolutely
-certain must now be laboriously proved, and, through continual
-reflection, loses all freshness and power to convince; immediate
-experience, axiomatic certainty, immovable conviction are lacking. The
-self-evident certainties in the light of which earlier ages lived and
-worked are wanting, and we are compelled to acknowledge that some things
-become uncertain, even impossible, when they cease to be self-evident.
-Again, it cannot fail to be recognised that we are tired of a merely
-religious way of life; we feel its limitations; new needs are awakened
-and seek new forms of life and expression; even the traditional
-terminology displeases us; even the acutest dialectic cannot lend to the
-old the power of youth.
-
-Of course the matter is not finally settled by these judgments of the
-age. For, a later age is not the infallible judge of an earlier; much
-which to us moderns seems certain may soon become problematic; much
-which satisfies us may soon be shown to be inadequate. It may be that
-the old is capable of asserting the ultimate depth of life in contrast
-to the new; that the world of inner spiritual experience which it
-discloses may finally show itself superior to every assault. But, in any
-case, the new contains a wealth of fact not only in individual results
-but in the whole of its being; through its emergence it has transformed
-the whole condition of things; it is impossible to decry it as a mere
-apostasy and to appeal to the consciences of individuals. It may be that
-spiritual power here stands against spiritual power in a titanic
-struggle for the soul of man: victory must fall to the power which
-penetrates to the primary depths of life and is capable of taking
-possession of what is true in the others. But if in this the older view
-of life is inwardly superior, it can develop such superiority only by
-its own complete renewal and energetic inward elevation, through the
-most fundamental settlement with everything antagonistic in an
-all-comprehensive whole of life. Yet how deeply the age is still
-involved in its search! How far it is from the conclusion! For the
-present, as far as the life of culture is concerned, Religion has fallen
-into complete uncertainty; its chief support and realm lie not within
-but outside of that life. It is this which makes all affirmation of
-Religion weak and all negation strong; it is this which threatens to
-stamp, as something subjective and false, every conception of a
-"supernatural." Religion has become uncertain to us not merely in single
-doctrines and tendencies, but in the whole of its being, in its
-fundamental contention as to the nature of life; and what it offers in
-the traditional form in which it has come to us no longer satisfies a
-life which has been aroused to greater breadth and freedom.
-
-
-2. THE SYSTEM OF IMMANENT IDEALISM
-
-By the side of the religious system of life, for thousands of years, now
-as supplementary, now as contradictory, there has been another which may
-be designated as Immanent Idealism. The latter system is not so fixed
-and overawing a structure as the former, but with a quieter force it
-penetrates the whole of life. It is not of a simple nature, but is found
-in many different forms; still, there exists so much in common in these
-that they clearly exhibit and emphasise one common tendency. Like the
-religious system, this Idealism also places life primarily in a world of
-thought, from which it organises sense experience; it is distinguished
-from the former system, however, in that it never separates the two
-worlds one from the other, but conceives them as related elements or
-aspects of a single whole. They are related to one another as appearance
-and reality, as cause and effect, as animating and animated nature
-(_natura naturans_ and _naturata_). The divine is not so much a power
-transcending the world as one permeating it and living in it; not
-something specific outside of things, but their connection in a living
-unity; it does not make demands and present us with problems so much as
-give to the world its truth and depth. Thus, reality appears as an
-inwardly co-ordinated whole: the individual finds his genuine being only
-as a part of this whole. And so, here, the fundamental relation of life
-is that to the invisible whole of reality; with the development of this
-relation, that which seems lifeless becomes animated; the elements which
-seem isolated are brought together; and the world discloses an infinite
-content and gives it to man for a joyous possession.
-
-But it would be impossible for man to accomplish the transition from
-appearance to reality, if he were not rooted in the fundamental
-permanencies and if, in the comprehending of the world, he did not find
-his own being. If this is the case, however, and if, through courageous
-turning from the superficiality to which he in the first place belongs,
-he is able to set himself in the depth of reality, then a magnificent
-life with the widest prospects opens out before him. For, now, he may
-win the whole of infinity for his own and set himself free from the
-triviality of the merely human without losing himself in an alien world;
-he may direct the movement of life to a positive gain, since he guides
-it from within and from the whole. This life will find its centre in the
-activities which bring man into relation with the whole and broaden him
-from within to the whole; thus, in science and art spiritual creation
-becomes the chief concern; its forceful development allows us to hope
-for an ennobling of the whole of existence. With this creative activity
-as centre, the rest is regarded as its environment, its means, its
-presupposition; but there remain a clear distinction and gradation
-between that which a creative life evolves immediately, and that which
-forms a mere condition for this and may never become an aim in itself.
-Thus, the beautiful is separated sharply from the merely useful; the
-inner life from all preservation of physical existence; a genuine
-spiritual culture, as the revelation of the depth of things, from all
-perfecting of natural and social conditions, from mere civilisation.
-Here life finds an aim and a task in itself; they are not presented to
-it from a transcendent world; but it can evolve a morality in the sense
-of taking up the whole into one's own volition, the subjection of
-caprice to the necessity of things.
-
-A life thus full of content and joyous activity arose when Greek culture
-was at its height, and exercised its influence through the course of the
-centuries; Christianity also soon laid aside its original suspicion
-against this life and joined it to itself. This life, however, first
-attained complete independence and self-consciousness in modern culture
-so far as this culture followed the way of Idealism. It is felt to be
-superior to Religion and hopes to be able to shape the world of man more
-satisfactorily than Religion can. In this system formulated conceptions
-and perplexing doctrines of the divine are not necessary, as they are in
-Religion, because the divine is present immediately in the process of
-life and surrounds man on all sides. Man's powers are not drawn in a
-particular direction and nothing is discarded, but everything is to be
-uniformly developed and unified in an all-inclusive harmony; natural
-instincts are restrained and ennobled through their relations in a
-larger whole. A power of organisation is displayed which reaches the
-finest vein of the soul, throws the genuinely human into relief in
-contrast with environment and tradition, and makes it the matter of
-chief concern: with all this it deepens life in itself and finds
-incalculable treasure in such depth. Everywhere there is powerful effort
-and creative activity on the part of man, but at the same time the
-consciousness of an invisible order; a joyful affirmation of life, but
-at the same time a deliverance from unrestrained curiosity and coarse
-enjoyment; a breadth and a freedom of life, and with this a clear
-consciousness of the greatness but also of the limitations of man. Such
-was the state of conviction in the classical period of German
-literature.
-
-This form of life has, with remarkable quickness, been relegated into
-the distance; with all its external proximity it has become inwardly
-more alien to us than the world of Religion. All this has come to pass,
-however, not so much through direct conflict, which its free and
-comprehensive nature could scarcely provoke, as through inner changes of
-conditions and strivings, which have now thrust other facts into
-prominence and driven men to other tasks. The transformation could
-hardly have been effected so quickly and so fundamentally if this mode
-of life did not involve fixed limits and problematic presuppositions
-which we have now become fully conscious of for the first time.
-
-It is the aristocratic nature of this Immanent Idealism which first
-awakens suspicion and opposition. Spiritual creation, from which it
-expects complete salvation, can take possession of and satisfy the whole
-soul only where it breaks forth spontaneously with great and powerful
-effect, where, with overwhelming power, it raises man above himself. An
-incontrovertible experience shows us that this takes place only in rare
-and exceptional cases; there must be a union of many forces before man
-can rise to such a height and be swayed by the compulsion of this
-creation. Now, it is true that the gain of such red-letter days carries
-its effect into ordinary days and that from the heights light pours down
-upon lower levels. But in such transmission there is a serious and
-inevitable loss in power and purity; indeed, in veracity: that which
-fills the life of those producing it and arouses it to its highest
-passion easily becomes to the receiver a subsidiary matter, a pleasant
-accompanying experience. Thus we see epochs of organisation follow upon
-times of creation, but we see that such organisation sinks more and more
-into a reflective and passive reproduction. Such organisation tends to
-become mere imagination; the man imbued with the spirit of such
-organisation easily seems to himself more than he is; with a false
-self-consciousness talks and feels as though he were at a supreme
-height; lives less his own life than an alien one. Sooner or later
-opposition must necessarily arise against such a half-life, such a life
-of pretence, and this opposition will become especially strong if it is
-animated by the desire that all who bear human features should
-participate in the chief goods of our existence and freely co-operate in
-the highest tasks. It must be observed that this longing is one which,
-at the present time, is found to be irresistible. And so the
-aristocratic character of Immanent Idealism produces a type of life
-rigidly exclusive, harsh and intolerable.
-
-But not only does this type of life lack complete power and truthfulness
-in regard to mankind as a whole; it is subject to similar limitations in
-relation to the world and to things. All success in our relation to the
-world and to things depends on the spiritual constituting the thing's
-own depth, on things finding their genuine being in it, and where this
-depth is reached, on the visible world uniting with it willingly, indeed
-joyfully, and moulding itself solely and completely for spiritual
-expression. Spirit and world must strive together in mutual trust and
-each must finally be completely involved one in the other; reality must
-build itself up, if not at one stroke, at any rate in ceaseless advance
-as a kingdom of reason. A solution at once so simple and so easy bluntly
-contradicts the experiences of the last century. Both without and within
-the soul of man an infinite concreteness makes itself evident, which
-withstands all derivation from general principles, all insertion into a
-comprehensive scheme, obstinately asserts its particularity, forms its
-own complexes, and follows its own course. The realistic mode of thought
-of the Modern Age has brought this aspect of reality to full
-recognition. If the spiritual life cannot take complete possession of
-things, if a realm of facts continues to exist over against it, it may
-be doubted whether the spiritual is of the ultimate being of the world
-and reveals the reality of things, or whether it merely comes to them
-from without and only touches their surface. In the latter case external
-limitation becomes the cause of an inward convulsion. This is a fact
-which we find corroborated when we come to reflect that Immanent
-Idealism treats the spiritual life in man much too hastily and boldly as
-absolute spiritual life; that it attributes to human capacity, without
-further consideration, that which belongs to spiritual life in general.
-The experiences of modern life place the particularity and insignificant
-of man more and more before our eyes; they enable us to see with what
-difficulty and how slowly any kind of spiritual life whatever has
-emerged in the human sphere, and with what toil it maintains itself
-there; they insist that, if the spiritual life is not to sink down to a
-mere appearance to man, a sharp distinction must be made between the
-substance of the spiritual life and the form of its existence in man; in
-every sphere modern life puts questions which lead beyond the position
-of Immanent Idealism. Immanent Idealism seems to treat the problem of
-life much too summarily and not to penetrate sufficiently to ultimate
-depths.
-
-The conflict between Immanent Idealism and modern life is still more
-keen in regard to the problem whether reality is rational. It is
-essential to this Idealism to affirm this rationality; it need not
-conceive it as present in a complete state, but it must be sure of an
-advance to it; the movement of reality, with its antitheses and
-conflicts, must pass in elements of reason. Immanent Idealism tolerates
-no inner division of the spiritual life; wherever spiritual movement
-emerges, there can be no doubt concerning the aim; the development of
-power must bring the right disposition with it; every limitation can
-come only from weakness or misunderstanding; there can be no radical
-evil. With an optimism of this kind the leading minds of German
-classical literature are imbued; but how much, in the midst of all the
-progress of civilisation, in the nineteenth century the appearance of
-the world has been darkened! We see now with complete clearness the
-indifference of the forces of nature towards the aims of the spirit; we
-see the incessant crossing of the work of reason by blind necessity; we
-see the spiritual life divided against itself, eminent spiritual powers
-drawn into the service of lower interests, and carried away by
-unrestrained passion. In a time of extraordinary increase of technical
-and social culture, we see the spiritual life win scarcely anything, in
-fact, seriously recede; we see it become perplexed concerning its main
-direction, and oscillate in uncertainty between different possibilities.
-We experience in every sphere a violent convulsion of the spirit. How
-can Immanent Idealism satisfy us under such circumstances; how can it
-assure to our life a firm basis?
-
-Indeed, we may now doubt whether Immanent Idealism signifies a type of
-life at all; whether it is not simply a compromise between a religious
-shaping of life and a life turned towards sense experience; a _via
-media_, which as merely transitional is only able to maintain itself for
-a time. The historical experience of the Modern Age seems to show that
-the latter hypothesis is the true one. At the beginning of the epoch
-Religion stood in secure supremacy and the divine acted on man from a
-sovereignty that was supreme over the world. Then the divine came ever
-closer to the world that it might spread itself over it and permeate it,
-till finally there was no longer any separation, and God and world
-blended together in a single whole. At first this seemed a pure and a
-great gain: the divine put off all rigid sovereignty and spoke to us
-immediately out of the whole extent of life; the world was related,
-through the power of the divine, to an inner whole and, illuminated by
-it, received a transfigured appearance. And yet this solution was only
-apparent; it contained an inner contradiction, which ultimately was
-bound to break forth with a power of destruction. The divine had
-developed its power and its depth in opposition to the world; will it
-retain that power and that depth if the opposition ceases; will not the
-renunciation of supremacy, the fusion with things, rob it of all
-distinctive content? As a matter of fact, with this increase in
-proximity and extension, the divine fades and dissolves more and more;
-ever less power proceeds from it: and so the world is ever less
-transformed and elevated by it; its transfiguring light is dissipated
-and its inner relations are broken. From being a life-penetrating power
-Pantheism becomes more and more a vague disposition; indeed, an empty
-phrase. The living whole, which in the beginning raised things to
-itself, has finally become a mere abstraction which cannot hold its
-ground before vigorous thought. Thus, with an immanent dialectic, such
-as historical life often enough shows, the movement, since it strove for
-breadth, has been destroyed in its life-giving root; it has abandoned
-the basis from which it derived its truth and power. Immanent Idealism
-shows itself to be one great contradiction; a fascinating illusion,
-which, instead of reality, presents us with mere appearance.
-
-Of course, Immanent Idealism is not finally refuted by such doubts and
-difficulties; it puts forward demands which need to be satisfied in
-some way; it contains truths which in some manner must be acknowledged.
-What would become of human life if it should abandon its striving
-forwards to the whole; its spiritual penetration of the world; its
-advance in greatness and breadth; its joyous and vigorous nature; the
-excellence of its disposition? But the indispensable truth that is
-involved in Immanent Idealism must be brought into wider relations, and
-thus made clear and modified, so that it may be more secure and more
-fruitful in its effect. Meanwhile, we see that here also we are in
-complete uncertainty; that which was intended to give a firm support,
-and to point out a clear course to our life, has itself become a
-difficult problem.
-
-
-(b) THE NEWER SYSTEMS
-
-No attack from without and no relaxation from within could have brought
-the older systems of life into the state of chaos which we actually find
-them to be in, if the experience of sense had not become far more to man
-and had not given him far more to do than in earlier times. Hitherto
-genuine spiritual life seemed to be able to unfold itself only in
-energetic detachment from the world of sense; it reduced this world to a
-subordinate sphere which received its position and value only from a
-transcendent order; thus, all tarrying with the things of sense seemed
-to be a sign of a lower disposition, a falling from the heights of human
-life.
-
-This view has been radically altered by the course of the Modern Age.
-When the invisible world became uncertain to man and the life directed
-towards it shadowy, an intense thirst for reality, for a life out of the
-abundance and truth of things, arose, and only the visible world seemed
-to promise satisfaction. This world had been seen previously in a
-particular light which is now felt to be artificial and distorting; if
-this light fails and the world can unfold itself unaffected, it shows a
-far richer content, far firmer relations, far greater tasks. All this is
-more especially because the world no longer appears to be something
-finished, but as still in process and as capable of a thorough-going
-elevation; because great possibilities which human power is able to
-awaken still lie dormant in it. In diverse directions sense experience
-advances far beyond the older form; Natural Science analyses the visible
-world into its single components and makes it penetrable to our thought,
-and at the same time technical skill wins power over its forces. In the
-political and social sphere men find new tasks not only in regard to
-isolated questions, but throughout the whole of its organisation, and
-great hopes of an essential elevation of life are raised. The individual
-also appears more powerful and richer, in that the decay of traditional
-ties gives him complete freedom for his development. Even if, in the
-struggle for the control of life, these movements in many ways fall into
-contradiction one with another, still, in the first place they unite in
-advancing the world of sense in man's estimation, in fixing his love and
-his work there, and in also making men more and more disinclined to
-consider the life-systems rooted in the invisible. Sense experience
-presents itself ever more decidedly as something which can tolerate
-neither partner nor rival; the life directed towards it loses more and
-more the nature of being an opponent, which it hitherto had, and it
-undertakes to shape our whole existence characteristically in positive
-achievement and also to satisfy the spiritual needs of man completely.
-All this signifies an entire reversal of the order of life; for, since
-the world which formerly had seemed secondary now becomes predominant,
-indeed exclusive, all standards and values are changed, and the old
-possession appears also as a new gain. It is true that the new mode of
-thought misses the advantages which a long tradition gave to the old:
-but in place of this, it has the charm of searching and finding for
-itself, the joy of first discovery and successful exertion; here an
-infinite horizon is disclosed; before the research and effort of man
-lies an open way. Endeavour derives particular power and confidence
-from the conviction that the new is nothing else than the old and
-genuine, but hitherto misunderstood, nature: it is a return of life to
-itself, to its plain and pure truth, which permits us to expect a new
-world epoch. And so mankind, exalted in mind and with cheerful courage,
-enters upon the course which promises so much.
-
-
-1. THE NATURALISTIC SYSTEM
-
-The movement towards giving sole attention to the world of sense cannot
-make sure progress without a more definite decision concerning the main
-agents and the main direction of work. Different possibilities here
-offer themselves; three, however, in particular. In reality, these have
-all evolved, sometimes blending together and strengthening one another,
-at other times crossing and hindering one another.
-
-None of these movements has displayed more energy and exercised more
-power than that which makes the sense experience of surrounding nature
-its basis, and strives to include man's entire being within this
-experience. This is Naturalism, which, starting out from the mechanical
-conception of nature, which has been developed in the Modern Age,
-applies the ideas thus obtained to everything, and subordinates even the
-life of the soul to them. The movement originated at the dawn of the
-seventeenth century, when an independence and autonomy of nature began
-to be acknowledged. Nature had been covered with a veil of explanation,
-mainly æsthetic or religious in character, which gave it a colour
-corresponding to the prevailing disposition, but at the same time
-excluded the possibility of a scientific comprehension. A comprehension
-of this kind could only be attained by getting rid of all subjective
-addition which had been made by man, and by investigating nature purely
-by itself. Since Descartes and Galileo that has been accomplished, and
-nature now appears as an immense web of single threads, as a complex of
-fundamentally mobile, but soulless, elements, whose movements take
-simple basal forms, while the combination of these elements produces all
-constructions, even the most complicated. This mighty machinery never
-points beyond, and as it runs its course solely within itself, so it
-requires to be understood solely from itself. Everything spiritual is
-thus eliminated; this realm of fact has no implication of aims, or of a
-meaning of events.
-
-This new scientific conception of nature had first, with much toil and
-difficulty, to wrestle with the traditional, naïvely human,
-representation; this was chiefly a matter of reducing first appearances
-to their simple elements, and of constructing the world anew from these.
-By this process, nature at the same time became accessible to the
-operation of man. For, the technical control of nature presupposes the
-analytic character of research; only such a research, with its discovery
-of the single elements and tendencies, places man in a relation of
-activity towards nature; while in earlier times only an attitude of
-contemplation had been granted to him. Natural Science thus created a
-new type of life, a life energetic, masculine, pressing forward
-unceasingly.
-
-This life, like science itself, in the first place forms a special part
-of a wider whole. As the expulsion of the soul from nature at first
-brought about a strengthening of the soul in itself, nature was the less
-immediately able to govern the whole. The individual of modern times
-strengthened and asserted himself against nature, and insisted upon a
-realm of independent inwardness. The contest was a severe one; yet the
-more nature was seen to extend, on the one hand, to the infinitely
-great, and, on the other, to the infinitely small, the more fixed
-relations it showed, so much the more overwhelmingly did it draw man to
-itself, the more did its conception tend to include the inner aspects of
-the soul also. The final blow in the struggle was given by the modern
-theory of descent, since this theory asserts man to be the product
-solely of natural forces, and maintains that everything which man
-ascribes to himself as characteristic and distinctive is derived from a
-gradual development of natural factors. And so nature is exalted as an
-all-comprehensive world--nature, that is, as represented in the modern
-mechanistic theory, which is thus transformed into a final theory of the
-world, a naturalistic metaphysic. The human and spiritual world, which
-hitherto had been felt to be an independent realm in contrast with
-nature, appears henceforth as its mere continuation, as something which
-fits completely into a wider conception of nature.
-
-A conviction of this kind must fundamentally alter the position of the
-spiritual life, as well as its magnitudes and values: and this
-conviction is no mere theory, but desires and strives to take possession
-of the whole of existence and to change its form completely. Indeed, a
-particular naturalistic type of life arises and wins a powerful
-influence over the thought and activity of the time.
-
-Naturalism denies all independence of the spiritual life, which it
-regards as nothing more than an adjunct to the realm of nature, and one
-that can only exist along with sense existence, as a part of or as a
-supplement to it. Spirituality has, therefore, to subordinate itself and
-conform entirely to the life of nature; it can never produce and guide a
-movement from itself, never evolve a basal and comprehensive activity,
-never withdraw itself into its own sphere as into an independent realm.
-All self-existent spirituality fades to a world of mere shadows;
-whatever makes itself felt in us can only become a complete reality by
-winning flesh and blood through the appropriation of physical forces.
-Life, thus understood, possesses nothing in itself; it receives
-everything from its relations to the environment with which it is bound
-up: thought brings forth no new ideas; all ideas are merely
-abbreviations of sense impressions. Effort can never realise purely
-spiritual values; the essence of all happiness is sensuous enjoyment,
-however refined that may in some cases be. The naturalistic system of
-life receives a more definite delineation from the representation of
-nature, which the mechanical theory, together with a theory of descent
-adapted to it, sketches and impressively holds up to the present age. By
-this theory nature is completely resolved into a co-existence of
-individual forces, which, within the narrow bounds of existence, must
-clash violently together, and assert themselves one against the other in
-ceaseless conflict. This conflict, however, is a source of progressive
-movement, in that it brings together, establishes, and employs
-everything useful for self-preservation; it keeps life in a state of
-youthful freshness, in that new conditions continually arise and demand
-new accommodations with respect to the biologico-economic environment. A
-biologico-economic mode of thought is evolved which revolutionises all
-previous estimations of values. Everything intrinsically valuable
-disappears from the world; its expulsion seems a deliverance from a
-confused, indeed a meaningless, conception of things; the useful, that
-which promotes the interests of living beings, each after its kind, in
-the struggle for existence, becomes the all-dominating value. No
-mysterious being of things is apprehended in the True; but those
-presentations and systems of thought are called true which ensure that
-the best accommodation to the conditions of life shall be attained, and
-which just in this way hold the individuals together. No longer does a
-Good speak to man with austere demand from a transcendent sovereignty;
-but that is good which, within our experience, is of service to the
-preservation of life. The Beautiful, also, is subordinated to the
-useful, and it is solely by its value in relation to this that it
-asserts itself. In everything, it is only one's own welfare, the
-interest of individual preservation, that directly inspires conduct; but
-real life shows man in so many relations, so closely implicated with his
-environment, that he can strive for nothing for himself without also
-striving for others. This extension of interests has no limits; there is
-nothing in the whole of infinity which could not in this way become to
-man, indirectly, a means of self-preservation and thus an object of
-desire.
-
-The naturalistic type of life extends from the most general of impulses
-to every branch of activity, and forms every department of life in a
-distinctive fashion. Knowledge depends entirely upon experience; every
-speculative element must be excluded as a subjective delusion; in all
-its branches knowledge is nothing else than a broadened Natural Science.
-Art may not pursue imaginary ideals; it finds its single task in the
-faithful and simple reproduction of the natural environment. Social life
-and endeavour will develop, above all, natural powers, and will seek to
-adapt itself to the conditions given by nature, and, rejecting all aims
-based upon mere imagination, it will care chiefly for the physical
-welfare of the whole, as the source of all power and of all success.
-
-It is not difficult to understand how this form of life was able to win
-and carry away the minds of its contemporaries. In the first place it
-has the character of simplicity and immediacy, which, in contrast with
-the complexity and the remoteness of the traditional position, appears a
-great advantage. For, in this scheme, life, with all its multiplicity,
-is dominated and unified by the idea of natural self-preservation; and
-the things which immediately affect us, which lie physically and
-psychically near to us, come most directly into relation to this aim. It
-is a further tendency of this scheme of life to bring the whole of
-existence into a state of activity and restless advance. For the state
-of conflict which prevails under the naturalistic system allows nothing
-to persist merely because of its present existence or through the weight
-of tradition, but everything must always be reasserting its right to
-existence; it must stretch and extend itself in order to be useful in
-the life of the present. That which cannot satisfy this test is
-unmercifully thrown over as a dead weight. It is also of great
-importance to the theory in question that nature and the world are
-involved in ceaseless change, and that, along with the conditions of
-life, the requirements also alter: the matter is one of continually
-accommodating oneself anew; and so life is placed entirely in the
-present, and the fixity of an absolute conception and treatment of
-change yields to the instability of a relative one. Last of all, and
-most especially, life according to its own conviction bears the
-character of truth. For human striving appears to attain the firm basis
-of reality, and to become truthful in itself only when it is definitely
-related to the surrounding world; while, so long as it trusted to the
-capacity of the subject--which fondly imagined itself independent--it
-fell into unspeakable error. Only when delivered from subjectivity, only
-when fixed within the web of the whole of nature, does life seem to
-awaken out of a dream, and to become fully real, a genuine, securely
-grounded life.
-
-The energy of negation which this theory employs and with which it
-drives out everything which has become old adds strength to the elements
-of assertion and positive achievement in these changes. In this theory
-there is nothing indefinite which could soften the opposition, nothing
-mediatory which could overcome it, but, distinctly and harshly,
-affirmation and negation stand face to face and call for a plain
-decision between them. Whatever remains in doubt and under suspicion is
-forced into the background, indeed eliminated altogether, through the
-victorious onward march of modern Natural Science and the increasing
-triumphs of technical skill, which seem to demonstrate, immediately, the
-truth of the naturalistic type of life. Thus, this movement spreads in a
-mighty flood through humanity, and seizes with a particular power the
-classes which are struggling upward, and which meet science and culture
-with a faith yet undisturbed. In matters temporal there is hardly
-anything which seems able to withstand such an attack.
-
-Nevertheless, that which gains the support of many contemporaries is not
-thereby proved to be the supreme power and the final truth. In that
-movement there may be far more, and something far more important than it
-itself admits. It may be that it achieves that which it does achieve
-only with the help of elements of another kind; perhaps, indeed, it is
-able to maintain its truth only in so far as it enters into broader
-relations in a wider whole and thereby changes its meaning essentially.
-Whether such is the case can be ascertained not by reference to
-subjective opinion, but by an examination of the life of humanity.
-
-Now, the first movement of opposition is produced in just that sphere
-which seemed Naturalism's strongest bulwark, that is, Natural Science,
-the Natural Science based on mathematics and physics. Only the most
-fleeting survey can lead to the confusion of Natural Science with
-Naturalism; in reality, the naturalistic thinker cannot with justice
-acknowledge any exact Natural Science, and a natural scientist cannot be
-naturalistic in thought in consequence of his science, but only in spite
-of it. For, Natural Science is anything but a mere copy of the sense
-impressions which we experience; its origin and progress are due to the
-fact that thought fundamentally acts upon and transforms those
-impressions. If our intellect were no more than Naturalism can logically
-make it out to be, it could, at most, only refine the animal
-presentations a little; it never could have advanced beyond the single
-presentations to a representative conception of the world as a whole.
-Such an advance can be achieved only by thought raising itself above the
-stream of appearances and placing itself over against it; but how could
-a mere bundle of perceptions, to which Naturalism reduces the intellect,
-achieve this? Incomparably more unity of being and freedom of operation
-are necessary for this achievement than such a bundle could produce.
-
-In earlier times, no doubt, man went very much astray in the
-interpretation of his environment; he transferred his immediate feelings
-into it; he coloured the whole world in human colours, and associated
-with its realities as with beings of the same nature as himself. But
-even the error shows a seeking and an interpretation; the simple putting
-of the question proclaims a being becoming superior to mere nature. The
-most important thing, however, is that man has not regarded the matter
-as finally settled with this anthropomorphism; he has come to regard it
-as inadequate and has pressed forward to a new way of thinking. What
-could drive him to that change but a desire for truth, and how is such a
-conception as _truth_ attainable from nature? And if thought has
-succeeded in breaking through the misty veil of anthropomorphism and
-seeks things in their own relations; if an objective consciousness of
-the world has emerged, a consciousness which is as different from the
-immediacy of sense impressions as the sky is distant from the earth, has
-not man also grown in himself beyond mere sense impression; is it not a
-work of thought which supports and governs the whole construction, and
-differentiates genuine nature from appearance? How much power of
-comprehension and of relating together is exhibited even by Natural
-Science, in that it analyses the sense presentation of the environment
-into its single elements, ascertains the laws of these, and traces the
-movement from the simplest beginnings right up to its present stage of
-development. All activity of thought is thus subject to a certain
-reproach in that it must continually bring itself into relation to
-perception: nevertheless it will interweave all that is imparted to it
-by perception into a framework of thought--transform it, in fact, into a
-realm of thought. Spirituality is bound; but how dull an individual must
-be to confuse such a bound spirituality with mere sensuousness!
-
-The error of Naturalism is obvious; concerned solely with the object and
-its form, it entirely leaves out of account the psychical activity which
-is involved in the perception of an object; it overlooks the
-life-process within which alone we can have knowledge of an object and
-occupy ourselves with it. As soon, however, as we regard the object from
-this point of view, it will be transformed and will assume far more
-spiritual traits. Reality will then burst asunder the framework into
-which Naturalism desires to press it.
-
-The type of life which Naturalism gives rise to also contains more than
-Naturalism is able to explain. At first sight it seems as though man is
-taken up completely into a wider conception of nature; as though his
-life obeys its forces and impulses exclusively; as though all his
-asserted superiority to nature is simply imaginary. As a matter of fact,
-in this turning to nature, man, with his spiritual activity, stands not
-within, but above, nature. For he does not appear as a mere piece of
-nature, but experiences it and thinks over it: its kingdom, its
-organisation, its stability become to him a joyful possession and a
-widening of his being. The spiritual life has developed in relation to
-nature; nature has not welded it together. The same may be said of the
-idea of the increase of power, which constitutes the main gain of life
-in the naturalistic system. For, in the naturalistic type of life power
-is not directed towards externals, as in nature, but is experienced and
-enjoyed, and only thus does it constitute a source of happiness; yet how
-could it be that, without an organisation of life in an inner unity
-which transcends individual occurrences? Thus, the intellectual and the
-technical control of nature which the Modern Age has acquired attracts
-men and prevails over them chiefly as a growth of life, as an increase
-of self-reliance. Even material goods, wealth and property, do not
-determine the endeavour of the man of culture so much through sensuous
-enjoyment, the limit of which is soon reached, as through their
-possibilities as means to activity and creation, to the advancement of
-human capacity. It is this in particular which has filled the material
-civilisation of the present with the spirit of restlessness and
-extravagance, and gives it its demoniacal power over men. It is this
-relation alone which explains and justifies the present estimate of
-material goods, so much higher as that is in modern culture than it was
-in the older systems of thought, which branded as unworthy all endeavour
-directed to the acquirement of such things.
-
-In short, even Naturalism in no way eliminates the subject with its
-inwardness; rather in its own development it everywhere presupposes the
-subject. It does not shape life out of mere and pure nature, but out of
-a close union of a transcendent spiritual life with nature, and out of
-an energetic insistence upon elements of nature within the soul.
-However, man experiences not so much the things themselves as himself
-in the things; the relating together, the surveying, the experiencing of
-the whole is always a spiritual performance. This performance makes
-something different out of nature, just as the naturalistic culture that
-is striven for is different from the state of nature that is found at
-the beginning. The misconception of the relation of nature to the mind;
-the postulation of nature without mind, in place of nature with mind,
-makes Naturalism self-contradictory and untenable. Naturalism therefore
-struggles vainly against the following dilemma: if it is really in
-earnest in the elimination of spiritual realities, it must inevitably
-destroy its own fundamental basis and, as a system of life, must break
-down; while if it in any way acknowledges a transcendence of nature, and
-a transcendence just in that which is fundamental to it, then it is
-necessarily driven beyond itself.
-
-But such contradiction in the basal position must be present through the
-whole development of Naturalism and must make all its factors variating
-in colour and double in meaning, since at one and the same time they
-involve the spiritual element and reject it, eliminate it and bring it
-into the foreground, the former openly and explicitly, the latter
-concealedly and implicitly. Such is the case, in particular, with the
-fundamental conception of the _struggle for existence_. In the context
-of Naturalism, this conception can signify nothing else than the
-preservation of natural existence, of mere life; such a conception,
-however, is as incapable of comprehending the whole wealth of the work
-of civilisation and culture as it is of developing within itself. If the
-preservation of existence in this sense were really the highest aim,
-then, all the work of humanity, incalculable and great as it is, all the
-toil and creative activity of history, would be without result; in no
-way would it lead beyond the starting-point; we should, of course, have
-life, but nothing along with and in life. Indeed, the movement would be
-a continual retrogression, for the experience of the present shows us
-clearly enough that the conflict of life becomes ever more difficult,
-toilsome, and embittered. If all this toil does not yield more than was
-possessed in the original condition, that is, physical existence, then
-this implies that we have to make an ever greater detour to establish
-that which formerly devolved upon us immediately. In such a case our
-life would be a continual sinking, a toil continually increasing in
-difficulty, in order that we might simply be something, without being
-anything in particular. Or, will anyone assert that there is no
-retrogression when the achievement of the same aim costs ever more
-effort, ever more labour and turmoil of spirit?
-
-The fact is that Naturalism also gives to life, which is seen to be thus
-immersed in conflict, some kind of content, which it conceives as
-increasing continually in the course of the movement, and as attaining
-for us through the conflict an ever richer and more comprehensive
-existence. But how can a conception such as that of the _content of
-life_ originate in mere nature? How can it be even conceived unless life
-possesses some consciousness of itself, unless there is a transformation
-of what is external into something internal--a thing which nature can
-never accomplish?
-
-With the conception of the _struggle for existence_, the useful becomes
-the preponderant power of life; it attempts a transvaluation of all
-values, since it lays stress rather on the relation of things to us than
-on their own nature. The conception won acceptance from and power over
-the minds of men because it was a complete change from the generally
-accepted explanation, and at the same time seemed to simplify matters
-greatly. Unfortunately, on further consideration this transformation
-proves to be a complete reversal of the general scheme of life, indeed a
-destruction of it. Man, it is true, does not preserve his physical
-existence without toil; he must continually win it anew, and nothing can
-occupy him which does not acquire some relation to this necessity and
-make itself consistent with it. But the further question arises, whether
-anxiety for the useful is also able to crush out that which is
-distinctive and characteristic in the world of humanity. If we
-recognise the limits of the endeavour after the useful, we shall soon
-become doubtful concerning its claim to be the sole aim of conduct. That
-endeavour is spent solely on the welfare of the individual; it can never
-free itself from reference to the individual, and never, beyond that
-perceived, can it take up anything as an aim in itself. Interest is
-centred solely upon the external products of the activity of men and of
-the process of nature, and not at all upon what men and nature are in
-themselves. We find here nothing but isolated spheres of existence which
-are devoid alike of inner relation to themselves and to one another.
-
-Now, Naturalism can appeal in its own defence to the fact that real life
-shows its individual departments to have thousands of inter-relationships,
-so that the welfare of the individual is inseparably bound up with that of
-his environment, his family, his home, his state; and that therefore, in
-order to prosper himself, his endeavour must be for the good of these
-also. It may even serve his own interest to give up a direct advantage in
-favour of a greater indirect one. Further, Naturalism is able to assert
-that, however little the inner disposition of others may affect us
-directly, this disposition can acquire a value for us in so far as its
-persistence alone assures to us a continuance of achievement. As
-considerations of this kind may be extended without limit, there is
-nothing in the whole breadth of existence which the utilitarian view of
-life need reject.
-
-But, in the midst of all this extension in breadth, this development of
-life retains a fixed limitation in its inner nature, which cannot be
-transcended: we can never strive for the alien, the other, the whole,
-for its own sake, but only as a means for our own welfare; everything
-inward becomes a matter of indifference if, sooner or later, it is not
-transformed into an external result. Human life, however, through its
-own development has grown beyond this limitation; if not in the breadth
-of existence, yet in its inner nature and at its highest, it manifests
-something significantly more. Man is capable of a love which values
-another, not because it hopes for this or that which is useful from
-him, but because with the whole of his existence he is valuable to it.
-Man is capable of a love which can lead him to the willing
-subordination, indeed the joyful sacrifice, of his own existence; of a
-love in which the first self dies and a new self is born. "Love is the
-greatest of all contradictions, and one which the understanding cannot
-solve, since there is nothing more impenetrable than this individuality
-of self-consciousness, which is negated, and which yet I should retain
-as positive" (Hegel). Into what a state of poverty humanity would fall
-if a genuine love of this kind were struck out of the number of its
-possessions! But can Naturalism in any way understand and estimate such
-an inner expansion of the heart, such a _Stirbe und Werde_ [a dying to
-live], to use the words of Goethe?
-
-A deliverance of life from the mere _ego_ is effected in another
-direction in work. Of course, work also stands in close relation to the
-preservation of life; it must demonstrate itself to be in some way
-useful. But work would never fill the soul and attain to anything great
-if it did not also become an aim in itself; if it were not carried on in
-complete submission to the object and according to its requirements. How
-low all educational endeavour, personal guardianship, all work for
-humanity would sink; how humanity would lack all self-forgetting
-devotion to it, all bold pressing forward; and how unintelligible the
-joy in a life's vocation would be, if the idea of utility solely and
-entirely determined conduct, if the chief concern were always how the
-work paid! Should we not sink, in such a case, into a slavery which
-would enthral man far more oppressively than any command which a tyrant
-could be capable of?
-
-It is true that on the average level of existence much is turned to the
-service of the merely useful which was produced from love and work, and
-this reversal of spiritual goods may be the first thing which comes
-definitely under our notice. In order, however, even to be so applied
-and reversed, they must originally have been generated in some manner,
-and this original generation can never proceed from the useful, but only
-out of the inner force and compulsion of the object, as, for example, in
-the case of the great transitions of thought, of artistic creation, and
-of religious conviction. And, as these have proceeded from inner
-movements, so they have also brought about powerful inner changes. They
-have not altered this or that in a given world in order to make it more
-comfortable to man, but with an energetic revolution have transformed
-our world from its very foundations, and have constructed a new world in
-contrast to that which immediately surrounds us. How much or how little
-individual men, or indeed even mankind as a whole, have appropriated of
-this; how far man has corresponded and still corresponds to the
-necessities of his own nature, is a matter and a question in itself: in
-the spiritual life of humanity the new magnitudes are extant, and they
-operate here as norms for testing all achievement. At the same time,
-they show that our life and our nature are of a kind different from what
-Naturalism represents them to be. However much Naturalism may boast that
-it is possible for even the highest to be drawn into the service of the
-merely human, with all its boasting it has not explained the origin of
-the highest: can a thing proceed from its own shadow? The naturalistic
-attempt to trace everything back to the useful really reverses the
-condition of affairs and results in inner destruction wherever
-disposition stands first. For conduct changes its character completely
-according as it is regarded as a mere means, or as an end in itself;
-according as its aim is striven for directly or only indirectly. Do such
-things as love, fidelity, honour deserve these names if the thought of
-selfish advantage is their motive power? It lies in the nature of
-certain things that they must be treated as ends in themselves and as
-matters of primary concern: to degrade them to a subsidiary position is
-in their case only a finer kind of destruction; to be opposed to utility
-is an attribute inseparable from their very being. Where disposition is
-valued only as a pre-condition of achievement, as in Naturalism, at the
-highest only a tolerable appearance, a substitute for a genuine
-disposition, can be reached in the whole moral sphere. Naturalism
-affords us an example of such a substitution when it sets up an
-altruistic action, that is, an action which produces something useful to
-another, in place of an inner expansion of life, which takes the other
-up inwardly into our own volition and being, and which alone leads
-beyond egoism. Naturalism is able to overlook all this; is able to make
-what is the secondary view of things the primary one; the derived, the
-original; is able to put the relation to human perception in place of
-the thing itself, only because its interest is so completely occupied
-with external relations that it does not independently evaluate the
-inner; and again, because a reflection that appeals to the understanding
-hinders all immediate relation and spontaneous appropriation. Otherwise,
-it also would feel how deep, how intolerable, a degradation of man
-ensues if his innermost experience, his striving after truth, his
-wrestling for unity within himself, his love, and his suffering are made
-a mere means to physical self-preservation, and are thus regarded from
-the point of view of utility.
-
-If we glance over the life of universal history, we see that a history
-of a distinctively human character extricates itself from the machinery
-of nature only through man's acquiring an independence over against his
-environment, evolving a life conscious of itself and from it exerting a
-transforming power upon all presented to it. Only thus does a
-civilisation grow up in contrast with the mere state of nature. In
-civilisation and culture man enters into conflict with the infinity of
-the external world, but he cannot carry on this conflict victoriously
-without setting an inner infinity in opposition to that external one. In
-the struggle between these two worlds the life of man is transformed no
-less than the appearance of reality. More and more the visible world
-becomes an expression of an invisible one; more and more life draws the
-world into itself and finds the chief problems in its own sphere. Thus
-life becomes raised above simple physical preservation; that which
-serves in this preservation is regarded as a condition only and as
-something preliminary.
-
-Among the peoples situated nearest to us, this tendency has taken
-different forms; but the separation of creative spiritual activity from
-all mere utility is common to all. Thus, Greek culture gave birth to a
-life resting in its own movement, a life satisfied in itself. In the
-sharpest manner it marked off the beautiful, that which could produce
-pleasure immediately and of itself, from the merely useful, everything
-which served something else. It lauded the life filled with the
-perception and appreciation of the beautiful as the only free life, and
-pronounced every other way of life to be servile. Further, if in
-Christianity, in the comprehensiveness of its relations, the care for
-the welfare of the narrowly human takes up a great amount of attention,
-and a utilitarianism of a religious kind is evolved, the height of its
-creation and disposition is not affected: in it the winning of a new
-life superior to all selfishness, the becoming one with the divine, is
-the one end in itself. If Clement of Alexandria could say that, if it
-was a matter of choosing between the knowledge of God and eternal bliss,
-he would have, without hesitation, to renounce the latter, or if Thomas
-à Kempis said, "I would rather be poor for Thy sake than rich without
-Thee. I choose rather to be a pilgrim with Thee on the earth, than
-without Thee to possess heaven. For where Thou art, there is heaven; but
-where Thou art not, there is death and hell"--then these are not merely
-the lofty sayings of individuals, but a faithful expression of that
-which gave to the whole system its world-penetrating and world-reviving
-power.
-
-The Modern Age, too, which has conceded so much to utilitarian striving,
-is in the innermost essence of its effort far removed from the spirit of
-mere utility. For, from the two poles of its life, from the subject as
-from the object, it breaks through all that is simply "given" and forms
-a new, self-existent world. In modern times the subject frees itself
-from the environment, places itself proudly over against it, and finds
-its securest experience in the self-certainty of its own life. At the
-same time it in no way renounces the surrounding world; but through the
-activity of thought it reconstructs that world, and in this
-conceptualises and idealises all its magnitudes. The more the subject
-becomes assured of seeing all things spiritually and scientifically by
-means of its own organisation, the more true is it that all sense
-experience is sustained and modified by spiritual power. Natural
-self-preservation cannot possibly satisfy the striving of the subject.
-For this striving can never be reduced to a mere means, but finds its
-power, as its joy, in becoming a world in itself; in the proud
-maintenance and establishment of its own nature in face of every
-opposition; in the impression of its particularity upon the infinity of
-things. On the other hand, over against the circumstantiality of man,
-great systems of thought are formed; evolve a characteristic content and
-independent powers; and, as forces in the life of universal history,
-press forward their consequences with inevitable necessity. These
-systems seek to bring reality under their sway, and do not manifest the
-least concern with regard to the continuance and the interests of man.
-Science and art and the political and economical aspects of life afford
-examples of what we mean. Accordingly, in the modern world and in the
-modern man, two movements towards infinity clash together, and from
-these there arise great commotion and violent unrest. Whatever may
-remain enigmatical in this, the fact of the transformation of the first,
-the sense experience of things, is beyond doubt. It is also beyond doubt
-that man, regarded spiritually, does not find himself a member of a
-given world, but must first seek and make clear his fundamental
-relations to the world. From this position Naturalism, with its naïve
-assertion of the finality and permanence of the sense impression,
-appears to be an intolerable dogmatism.
-
-Naturalism is seen to be far below the highest point of universal
-historical development; it cannot appropriate the experiences and
-results of that development; it consists of a confusion of naïve and
-scientific modes of thought, which win the adherence of many
-individuals, but which, through their contradictions, can never
-guarantee to life genuine stability and a clear course. Only because it
-evolves in the atmosphere of a world of another kind, and thereby
-imperceptibly enhances its own conceptions, does it appear at all
-plausible. Nevertheless, even so, it is a mischievous confusion of
-thought which must act detrimentally upon conduct. Those especially will
-be opposed to it who recognise in human life great tasks and severe
-perplexities, and desire that the highest powers and clearest thought
-shall be called forth for the accomplishment of those tasks and the
-solution of those perplexities. But Naturalism, obscuring, as it does,
-the inner problems of life; with its backwardness in the movement of
-universal history; and with its attempt to take from human life all
-proud and free self-consciousness, indeed all soul, can tend only to
-reduce the energy of life.
-
-The rejection of Naturalism by no means signifies failure to appreciate
-the increased attention to nature, out of the wrong interpretation of
-which Naturalism has proceeded. Not only has visible nature become more
-to our knowledge; it has also become incomparably more to our life. The
-fact that we feel ourselves conditioned by it, and have become more
-closely associated with it, can be fully appreciated and must force us
-to a radical revision of the traditional form of life. Such a revision,
-however, can be successful in achieving its aim only if the new
-experiences are systematised to form a consistent whole with the
-remaining facts in a comprehensive, universal life; spiritual endeavour
-is solely and alone capable of offering this universality and of
-accomplishing this task.
-
-
-2. THE SOCIALISTIC SYSTEM
-
-The socialistic system of life is often closely bound up with the
-naturalistic, and blends with it so well as almost to form a single
-whole; indeed, there is so much affinity in their fundamental
-principles that the one may appear to be the completion of the other.
-But when we come to details, we find that a different character and a
-different emotional life are yielded according as the relation to nature
-or to human society governs life; especially as we are parts in an
-infinite nature, or as we place our own province in the foreground and
-seek a new form for it. On the one hand knowledge takes the lead, on the
-other activity. While the former, according to its nature, is more
-concerned with reaching a consistent whole, the latter feels the
-contradictions of experience most intensely. With the one progress
-appears to be a gradual accumulation, with the other it does not seem
-possible to dispense with a radical change; while the former is broader
-in its outlook, the latter has more warmth of enthusiasm. Through the
-domination of thought and life by the problems of society, a distinctive
-form of culture may therefore be expected.
-
-In modern life different motives have led to a closer unity of men on
-the basis of experience. Religion no longer accords to the individual
-firm support as in earlier times, and with every advance of scientific
-research nature is removed inwardly further from us; ceaseless criticism
-and reflection tend to prevent us more and more from comprehending the
-whole as a unity. Man, thus isolated in the whole, seems to himself to
-be lost, unless he succeeds in discovering relations between himself and
-others of the same nature as himself, and unless in co-operation with
-them he helps to build up an independent realm of their own, which may
-lend support and value to the life of the individual.
-
-In the Modern Age social life has tended to this end under the influence
-of fresh impressions and new prospects. Hitherto that life was under the
-influence of an invisible world of thought, especially of one of a
-religious kind. The union of men had particular presuppositions and was
-realised in a particular manner; here, the more closely a certain group
-held together, the more sharply was it separated from others; the
-calling forth of power in one particular direction meant diverting it
-from other tasks. A changed mode of thought was also able to take
-exception to the view that the ties which bind men together came from a
-transcendent order, which is now felt as an "other" world and is the
-subject of doubt. At first, therefore, we are apt to think it a pure
-gain if modern society no longer concerns itself with these invisible
-bonds, and regards the union as arising solely and entirely out of the
-immediate experience of life. For then there is nothing to hinder the
-balanced development of all the relationships of men among themselves;
-the social life serves no other end, but finds its task and happiness in
-itself, and in its actuality is disturbed by no kind of doubt.
-
-With this deliverance from all external constraint, a positive advance
-of the life of society on the basis of the Modern Age is associated. A
-life more free in conduct, and which through progress in the arts
-ceaselessly expands, brings men nearer to one another, and forces them
-into closer union; action and reaction accelerate each other. The
-opinions and strivings of the masses are determined more easily and
-exercise more influence; the whole and its influence upon the individual
-become incomparably stronger. At the same time, the energetic attention
-that men bestow upon the surrounding reality throws into bold relief
-relations which have existed from the earliest times, but which hitherto
-have not been prominent, and enables them to acquire a greater value for
-life. Since the old appears in a new light, and the new arises, diverse
-streams of social life are formed, and through their diversity operate
-to the strengthening of the main tendency.
-
-Modern Sociology shows the individual to be far more dependent upon the
-social environment, upon general conditions, than we are wont to assume
-from the first impression, which usually throws differences into relief
-and overlooks common traits, generally fails to pay sufficient attention
-to the growth of the individuals, and is too apt to take the positions
-which they possess as essentially the result of their own work. In
-contrast to this, the one thing which now has power to impress us is
-the fact that the dependence reaches back to the earliest beginnings;
-that the individual has become what he has become through the
-overpowering influences of heredity, education, and environment.
-Further, the conviction that the differences lie within ascertainable
-limits, and that there is a certain average level throughout all the
-multiplicity of life, is gaining a firmer hold. To ascertain these
-average levels now becomes the chief problem of knowledge, and to
-realise them the chief task of practical political provision. Inner
-changes are also brought about. The fact that, with these changes,
-responsibility, guilt, and desert are transferred more and more from the
-individual to the society tends to call forth more humane sympathy and
-more mildness of judgment, and tends to discredit the excessive
-self-esteem of a self-righteous Pharisaism. At the same time it
-constitutes a powerful motive to work for the whole; to strive to raise
-the whole, morally and physically; to develop a social morality and a
-strong feeling of solidarity.
-
-To the modern man, therefore, the life of the State advances through
-changes in content and form. The State, which in the Middle Ages had to
-leave all problems of inner training to the Church, in its new function
-of culture State now assumes all tasks, influences the whole life of the
-individual, and is confident in its power to transform our existence
-more and more into a realm of reason. Along with this there is a strong
-tendency to place the State increasingly on the power and insight of
-individuals; all through the nineteenth century this tendency won an
-ever more overwhelming power. The more activity we bestow upon a
-particular sphere of work, the more valuable does it become to us, the
-nearer does it stand to our inner nature. Thus, the ancient mode of
-thought, that the individual is a mere member of the political organism,
-and that he receives his tasks and obtains his power from it, was able
-to be revived.
-
-With this the stronger emphasis laid upon national peculiarities, and
-the more definite self-assertion and more vigorous development of
-nations are associated. Formerly national character had been veiled
-and, as far as the spiritual ideals of humanity are concerned, as though
-lost. Now nations appear as points where the spiritual life manifests
-itself and concentrates distinctively. To work out their peculiarities
-clearly, and manfully to assert them in the competition of peoples,
-promises great gain for the organisation and energising of life; for the
-first time, the divine seems to pass into daily toil on earth.
-
-Most of all, the modern organisation of labour, with its enhancing of
-technique and its advance beyond the capacity of production of the mere
-individual, heightens the power of impression of the picture as a whole.
-Work brings about a deliverance from the passivity of the subject; it
-organises itself into independent complexes, which develop into a state
-entirely foreign to our nature. It produces its own motive powers and
-necessities, and requires from the individual the strictest obedience.
-The performance of the individual attains a value only in definitely
-ordered co-operation with others; it loses all worth if he attempts to
-ignore this relation. This is shown with particular clearness in the
-evolution of the factory with its production by machinery. It is shown
-further in every specifically modern work in administrative government,
-in military organisation, in knowledge and education. Everywhere we find
-great organisations; an enormous growth in the capacity of the whole,
-but a sinking of the individual to a mere link of the great chain, a
-proscribing of all individual will. If all thus depends upon the whole,
-the success of endeavour and the happiness of life will be decided
-chiefly by the organisation of the whole. It is not to be wondered at,
-then, if the antitheses which arise in reference to this organisation
-agitate people in the strongest degree; if a faith in the omnipotence of
-political and social forms grows up, and if over these the keenest fight
-rages.
-
-In this connection there is no problem which gives rise to greater
-complications and severer conflicts than that in regard to the
-preservation and raising of the standard of material existence. If, in
-general, we attribute incomparably more value to the material in life
-than was done formerly, so here also the problems of modern labour reach
-their climax. The organisation and concentration of labour have made by
-far their greatest progress in this matter; a gigantic accumulation of
-capital on the one side and of labour power on the other has intensified
-to the uttermost the opposition between man and man. In this conflict
-more than in any other the whole being of man comes into play; here,
-therefore, the most powerful passions flame up. No wonder that, if the
-thought of a fundamental re-organisation rises to the surface, it wins
-an influence amounting to fascination, arouses the hope of an essential
-advancement of the whole of human existence, and impels men to vigorous
-activity.
-
-Thus, then, this sphere, in which fact is regarded as principle, and in
-which the problem of the development of society is elevated to a
-position of importance above all others, and seeks to impress its stamp
-upon the whole of life, is first and foremost. From this point of view
-the organisation of society is the central problem of all culture, and a
-distinctive social culture, a social system of life, is evolved. But
-that which emerges at this point with especial power and clearness would
-not have been able to win men so quickly and influence them so strongly
-if it did not constitute a high-water mark of a wider movement, of a
-general tendency of the modern man to regard the social relation as
-being of the essence of life, and to shape life anew from this. Viewed
-historically, this tendency arose as a reaction against the practice of
-placing the individual in the foreground, a practice which since the
-beginning of the Modern Age had been resorted to in the most diverse
-departments of life. What was felt to be unconditionally right in
-opposition to the bondage of the Middle Ages has, in the course of time,
-shown a reverse side. Many painful experiences have led us to favour a
-movement in the direction of the whole again; and so it comes about that
-all hope of amelioration is able to be regarded as inevitably bound up
-with the complete victory of this movement.
-
-A distinctive social type of life can be formed and can strive for
-supremacy only if great problems arise within society and if its
-position in the whole of our life is capable of and in need of change.
-It will soon be seen that the case is so in respect of both these
-things; and also that two movements, one more general in kind, and
-another more precise but also more uncertain as to its goal, are
-connected.
-
-The point at which the new development of life institutes a new demand
-is the relation of the individual to the means of existence and the
-goods of culture. Formerly an aristocratic order preponderated, which
-allowed only a few to share in the abundance of these goods, while it
-was only afterwards that the many were able to partake of the poor
-remains. In material, as in spiritual, things man was concerned less
-with the equitable distribution of the possessions of humanity than with
-increasing them. The matter of chief importance, and this with regard to
-questions of inward culture also, appeared to be in some way to
-incorporate the contents and goods within the sphere of human existence,
-and to fix them there; the extension of these goods among men was a
-matter of secondary consideration, and often one that was only very
-lightly thought of. The limitation to a small chosen class, indeed,
-seemed to be quite indispensable for a secure and worthy organisation of
-life. Thus, this culture acquired its character at the highest levels of
-society, and from there descended in diminishing degrees to lower
-levels: it was regarded as inevitable that in this descent much should
-be lost, and that the less privileged classes must perforce be satisfied
-with very little.
-
-A movement in opposition to this state of things arose in the first
-place among the individuals who were placed in the background by such an
-organisation, and who, not convinced of the validity of the doctrine of
-the immutability of their fate, began to make comparisons and to ask
-questions. Their desire was not merely for more happiness, but for
-spiritual advance also. In humanity there is an energetic striving and
-advance, and in this a far greater spirituality and a far keener thirst
-for truth are often shown in the classes of the people who are
-struggling upward and pressing forward than in those classes which from
-early times have had possession of power and wealth and which are
-hampered by a feeling of self-satisfaction.
-
-That which at first is striven for by merely a part of mankind acquires,
-through its inner necessities, a power over others also, and becomes a
-requirement of the whole. We experience here what earlier was called the
-power of ideas in history, that is, the fact that in certain periods
-certain thoughts and demands acquire an overwhelming power of
-penetration and impel men to a line of conduct which is even opposed to
-their special interests. We may so far speak of the supremacy of the
-social idea in the present, as not only in the disposition of
-individuals but also through organisation and legislation there is an
-endeavour to bring help to the poor and the weak, to raise those who are
-struggling upward, and to convey as directly as possible both material
-and spiritual goods to all who bear human features. It is not only that
-this appears a matter of justice; a rejuvenation and an energising of
-the whole of culture are also hoped for. Without a radical rejection of
-all that which in the traditional position has decayed, become alien, or
-is now artificial; without a deep-reaching simplification and a greater
-proximity to the soul, how could all partake of culture, and how could
-it become a concern of all? The old demand of leading educationalists,
-of Comenius and Rousseau, of Pestalozzi and Froebel, the desire for a
-rejuvenation of our culture antiquated as it is in many respects, seems
-to be approaching its fulfilment now that the matter is a concern of the
-whole of mankind.
-
-However, this striving, which in itself cannot be rejected, enters upon
-a narrow course and at the same time upon much that is problematical, in
-that it unites with the positivistic tendencies of the age in the
-rejection of all invisible connections and in the restriction of life to
-the experience of sense. Instead of the whole, we now have the average
-and the masses, and instead of a creation from the whole, a building up
-from below; the needs of the masses are the main motive power of life.
-But as with the masses the chief questions are those of the physical
-preservation of life, and of economic existence, it seems as if, with
-their solution, with the deliverance from oppressing cares and necessity
-through a radical revolution, a complete state of happiness and a
-ceaseless spiritual advance of humanity are assured. Material welfare,
-which in earlier organisations of life was so depreciated, in the new
-system becomes the matter of chief concern; it is regarded as that which
-more than anything else leads to the development of every power and
-makes culture the truth for the whole of humanity.
-
-The life of society is thus seen to be full of problems. Nevertheless,
-the position of society in our life as a whole has been changed and
-raised. We have become far more uncertain concerning our relation to
-ultimate and universal reality; we doubt the possibility and the
-validity of first winning, through religion or speculation, a world
-beyond human experience, of the conveying it to that experience, and
-from the point of view of such a world giving the human its light and
-setting it its task. In short, the centre of life has changed from the
-object to the subject; we know that we cannot abstract from our own
-nature our spiritual organisation, but that we carry it into every
-aspect of the whole; that we see and form the world through man. With
-such a transition, the movement from man to world becomes the chief
-movement of life; and the conception of man will decide the nature of
-the conceptions of life and of reality. Henceforth greatness may be
-attributed to these only if human nature is capable of an advance beyond
-what it appears to be in the first impression. That, however, will
-scarcely be possible unless humanity is conceived as a whole and, with
-such a unity, has more power and depth than it has as it exists
-immediately before us. This also will operate to the strengthening of
-the social order, in which sense experience controls thought.
-
-Thus, many different factors unite to make the condition of mankind as
-it is, that is, the state of society on the basis of experience, the
-starting-point and final aim of all endeavour, and the relation of man
-to surrounding men the fundamental relation of his life. But, as in the
-case of culture as a whole, the individual departments of life must also
-win a distinctive character if the welfare of the social whole, the
-achievement for man and the influence on man, becomes the
-all-controlling task which sets the aim and points out the way for all
-activity.
-
-In this context science does not reveal hidden depths of things, but
-aids man in winning power over appearances; it leads him to a more
-zealous and a more active life. Art does not lift him into an ideal
-world; but, within experience, softens the pressure of existence and
-fills life with pure joys. Morality does not subject our conduct to an
-invisible order, but directs man beyond himself to men around him; it
-develops the feeling of solidarity and raises the standard of the inner
-relationships of society. For religion as the revelation of an "other"
-world there is no room; this world shows in humanity an object worthy of
-reverence; so understood, religion also must work to the inner elevation
-of society.
-
-In everything that which distinguishes the individual is thrust into the
-background to make way for that which is common; work has in the first
-place to concern itself with that which is common to all. In that here
-science makes man the chief study of man, it considers him especially as
-a social being and finds its chief theme in the knowledge of social
-conditions. Similarly, the chief subject of art is not, as was formerly
-the case, the doings and experience of individuals, but the forceful
-representation of these social conditions. The raising of the general
-level becomes the chief care of all practical activity, as also of
-education. According to this scheme the individual is of consequence and
-of worth only through those elements of the common life which he brings
-to expression, and through the way in which he reacts upon that life.
-The industry of universal history is understood, therefore, not from
-that which relates primarily to individuals, but from that relating to
-the movements and destinies of society.
-
-Such an estimate of the whole involves a conviction which seldom finds
-expression, but which silently exerts its influence everywhere: the
-belief in a summation of reason by the organisation of individuals into
-a whole. Only a belief of this kind is able to establish the supremacy
-of the mass over against the individuals, also in spiritual things; only
-such a belief is able to justify the hope of a victory of the good in
-the sphere of humanity.
-
-The net result of all these ideas and tendencies is a co-ordinated
-system of thought, a distinctive type of life. In this system man is
-first and foremost a member of society; he originates in it; he remains
-in it; and his activity carries implications far beyond his own life.
-Not community of labour only joins him with his fellows, but also the
-general tone of thought and feeling. This type of life is not one
-without sacrifice; for it has to give up many things which in earlier
-times seemed a secure possession and were a source of joy. Yet these
-things were only illusions which vanished, and mankind seems to find a
-compensation, more than equivalent for all that has been lost, in that
-it is more closely united and through this wins new powers; and
-henceforth out of its own capacity can venture to take up the struggle
-against every irrationality of existence, and to advance its own
-well-being without constraint. A life is therefore evolved, conscious of
-its limits, but at the same time active and courageous.
-
-In this manner, then, transcending all subjective opinions and wishes, a
-distinctive social culture has arisen, and its growth and results are
-clearly evident to us. Through combination of forces and through
-diligent activity on behalf of one another, and this with the aid of a
-highly evolved technique, we have brought about a magnificent elevation
-of our being; necessity and disease have been successfully fought
-against; the standard of education and the amount and kind of joy in
-life have been raised in many ways; in life and suffering men have been
-drawn together inwardly and associated together with a greater degree of
-solidarity. If one accepts the creed of the socialistic movement in the
-narrower sense: that human society can be placed on a new basis and at
-the same time raised essentially in its achievement, one can conceive
-that social culture may grow to the comprehensiveness of culture in
-general, and arouse the hope of a kingdom of reason among men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But here also there is a limit set to things, not from without, but from
-within; not from a rationalising criticism, but through the actual facts
-of the life of humanity. This limit appears with especial clearness when
-we consider the relation of the individual, together with his work, to
-the society in which he stands. If social culture should be regarded as
-absolute culture, the individual must spend himself solely and entirely
-in relation to his environment; all his activity and endeavour must be
-exerted in achievement for this culture--must, indeed, be regarded as a
-mere part of a common work. In such a system man could never attain an
-independent position and a superior right in opposition to society. Let
-us examine whether the experience of history establishes the truth of
-this system or whether it does not much rather show the opposite to be
-more correct.
-
-It was only in the earliest state of culture, and under very simple
-conditions of life, that the individual was solely and entirely bound up
-with the social organism, simply a member of family, of tribe, and such
-like; entirely swayed by custom, authority, and tradition. All further
-evolution was a differentiation and led to the greater independence of
-the individual. There came a time, however, when, in contrast with his
-mere membership of the society, the individual felt himself to have
-arrived at a state of maturity; when he questioned the right of the
-traditional order, and ultimately found himself coming into opposition
-with the whole of society; his own thought thus became the chief basis
-of his life and the measure of all things. At first that may have
-appeared an impious break and a destructive negation; in reality, the
-positive results which have been thus effected could never have been
-produced out of a mere revolt. For, a deepening of life in all its
-branches went hand in hand with the individual's attainment of
-independence; now, for the first time, Religion developed a personal
-religious experience, and Art filled man's whole soul; now only did
-Science set a distinctive world of thought in opposition to the
-traditional presentation; and so the whole of life gained enormously in
-independence, mobility, and depth. How could this point have been
-reached if an immediate relation to reality had not emerged in the soul
-of man; if an inner world had not been formed from this reality, as the
-representative of which the individual might feel superior to the
-society and, from inner necessities, criticise the prevailing condition
-of things? The fact is that all deepening of culture, all awakening of
-life to self-consciousness, is a rising above the life of society, a
-summoning of the individual to creative activity. Never have real
-advances in Religion, Science, and Art, or great transformations of
-life, originated out of a combination of the activities of the majority.
-Only in isolated cases has an incomparable individuality, supreme in the
-entire range of creative activity, been reached, and spiritual tasks
-been treated as ends in themselves, without which there is nothing
-great. Only out of the necessity of spiritual self-preservation, only as
-an overcoming of intolerable contradictions within our own being, could
-creative activity find a sure direction and a lofty self-confidence in
-order to lead the whole of humanity along new paths. The individuals in
-whom this was accomplished were, to be sure, under many influences from
-historico-social life; but, to overlook the essential elevation above
-the entire domain of merely human interests into a realm of
-self-conscious truth, which was accomplished by these individuals, one
-must confuse the conditions with spiritual activity itself.
-
-As this spiritual life has transcended social life from the beginning,
-in the same way its effects are by no means exhausted in that life. It
-has, it is true, exerted its activity upon the social environment, and,
-after the initial opposition has been overcome, has often been
-superabundantly honoured; but even so, it has been accepted in isolated
-and external relations rather than in the whole of its being, and in its
-appropriation through society it is apt to lose what is best in it. Ever
-anew, even after centuries and centuries, it has attracted aspiring
-souls to itself, and has always been able to offer something new to
-them; in fact, in its essence it stands not in time but above it. The
-more such genuine creative activity and production in all its spheres
-become unified, the more a kingdom of truth spreads like an arch over
-the whole machinery of human history, and, measured by the standards of
-that truth, human standards are seen to be extremely low, like the size
-of the earth when contrasted with the region of the fixed stars. This
-realm of eternal truth, however, reveals itself immediately only to the
-soul of the individual, who must convey it to society.
-
-Such an estimate of spiritual depth in the individual is quite
-compatible with the fact that in the course of history the individual
-has often fallen into utter uncertainty; has felt destitute and lonely,
-and has passionately sought a support in society. For the individual may
-cut himself adrift from the invisible connections in which his greatness
-is rooted; he may base himself on his own isolated power and groping
-intellect. When he has indeed done this, he has soon perceived and
-experienced his insufficiency; after such experience he has longed for
-the building up of a new society by spiritual activity, and when this
-has been attained he has fled to it as to a sure haven. Men strove for
-such a society in the later period of Antiquity; one such was founded by
-Early Christianity, by which the centre of life was transferred from the
-individual to the society. But in this transition the individual did not
-again become simply a member of society. For the new union that was
-sought could not come to men from without, but could proceed only as a
-result of spiritual endeavour; for its origin and in the early stages
-of its life it required great creative personalities of the kind of
-Augustine; for its preservation it needed appropriation by individuals,
-who unless they made an independent decision could not come to a
-complete knowledge of the truth. Wherever such individual activity
-languished, the inwardness of life at once became weak; the whole
-threatened to lose its spiritual nature and to be transformed into mere
-mechanism. But after, in the course of history, the individual has
-developed so far as experience shows him to have done; after that, as
-microcosm, he has found an immediate relation to reality and to himself,
-his transcendence may for a time be obscured, but he can never be
-deprived of it. As the individual has grown strong only as the
-representative and champion of a culture that is spiritual, as opposed
-to one that is merely human, so at the same time that spiritual culture
-asserts itself and criticises all which limits man to his own sphere.
-After having attained a greater comprehensiveness, a pure
-self-existence, and other standards toilsomely enough, a narrowly social
-culture must be absolutely intolerable to us.
-
-This assertion is valid especially in regard to the social culture of
-the present. That culture, as we saw, makes significant and justifiable
-demands which have arisen from historical conditions; but its right
-gives place to error, if these demands are made the central point of
-life as a whole, and everything else subordinated to them. The
-unsatisfactoriness of this system of culture and the impossibility of
-achieving its aims would be still more manifest if it did not constantly
-supplement its own results out of the other organisations of life, and
-did not boldly and unjustifiably idealise the man of experience.
-
-This social culture may be shortly described in some of its tendencies:
-(1) Work for society was the compelling motive in the shaping of this
-life of social utility. Some such social principle may suffice for the
-distribution of goods; it never suffices for their original production.
-We saw how spiritual experience can arise only from the compulsion of an
-inner self-preservation, in which man does not think in the least of
-the effects on others, but of himself and the object. Only that effort
-which has sprung up without regard to its mere utility has been able to
-achieve great things. If, therefore, merely social culture rigidly binds
-up vital energy with the direction of all thoughts on the effect, in the
-long run it must seriously degrade life. Can we deny that in the chief
-departments of the spiritual life the present already clearly shows
-tendencies to such a degradation? And can this be otherwise when we only
-more widely diffuse the inherited possession, but are unable to increase
-it through our own activity?
-
-(2) Social culture makes the judgment of the society the test of all
-truth and requires from the individual a complete subordination. It can
-do this, as we saw, only under the assumption that reason is summed in a
-judgment by the people as a whole; but, in face of the experiences of
-history and the impressions of the present time, can this assumption be
-ratified? Upon its emergence, truth has nearly always been championed by
-a minority so small as to be hardly discernible; and what in its case is
-called victory is usually nothing else than the transforming of the
-struggle from an external into an internal one. He who continues firm in
-his faith in the victory of truth does so because he trusts, not so much
-in the wisdom of the majority as in a reason transcending all that is
-empirically human, and which begets a truth with power to constrain. The
-present gives us the opportunity of testing this assertion by an
-example. We see movements of the masses in plenty, but where do we see
-great spiritual creations arise from the resulting chaos? Even Socialism
-in the narrower sense has to thank but a few men for its vital power and
-character, as, for example, Marx; the masses are indeed a condition and
-an environment, but never as such the bearers of creative activity.
-
-(3) Where man, as he is, governs all thought, his well-being, his
-complacency, an existence as free from care as possible, and as rich as
-possible in pleasure, will become the highest of all aims. But would not
-one find an inner emptiness, a monotony, even more intolerable than any
-suffering if this aim were reached and life were freed from all pain
-and necessity? Intelligible as it is that, to the classes whose life is
-spent in hard struggle against necessity and care, the deliverance from
-these appears the highest good and an assurance of complete happiness,
-it is just as unintelligible that anyone who is conscious of the work of
-universal history and the inner movement of humanity can share such a
-belief. For that movement has given rise to difficult problems and
-severe conflicts within the soul of man; a wrestling for a truth and a
-content of life, where we now drift hither and thither on the surface of
-appearance; a longing for infinity and eternity, where now a finitude
-and a past fascinate and charm us; a clashing together of freedom and
-destiny, of nature and spirit. The tendencies and tasks which this
-movement produces may for a time be thrust into the background, but they
-continually reappear and claim their right. It is a foolish undertaking
-to try to make man happy by directing him to give up what is distinctive
-in him, and to give his striving a less worthy character.
-
-(4) From a radical improvement of the conditions of life, the
-socialistic way of thinking expects a continuous advance of culture and
-an increasing ennoblement of man. To some extent this expectation would
-be justified if a strong spiritual impulse and a sure tendency towards
-the good were found everywhere; if it were only a matter of opening the
-door to an inner striving that was everywhere operative; only a matter
-of removing restrictions. The actual picture of human conditions
-corresponds but little to such an optimism. How small a place spiritual
-impulse has in human conduct and effort! How wearisome to the
-indifferent and reluctant average man any thought of spiritual goods
-becomes, and what severe restrictions moral development meets with in
-selfishness, avarice, and jealousy! The impressions which reality gives
-speak too plainly in regard to this for even the believers in
-socialistic culture to be able to hide the facts from themselves; but it
-is noteworthy enough that not that which they see with their eyes and
-grasp with their hands determines their judgment, but that which,
-unconsciously, they add to it: an invisible humanity, a greatness and a
-dignity of human nature, a nobility in the depths of the soul;
-conceptions for which, in this context, there is not the least
-justification.
-
-All these considerations show clearly enough the limits of simply
-socialistic culture, and the sharp contradictions of its adherents. This
-culture only throws man back increasingly upon the merely human, and
-unmercifully holds him firmly fixed in it. It chains him to his own
-appearance and suppresses all tendencies towards depth. It knows nothing
-of life's consciousness of itself; it knows no inner problems, no
-infinite development of the soul; it cannot acknowledge a common life of
-an inner kind, but must derive all from external relations. At the same
-time it excludes all understanding of the movement of universal history;
-for the chief content of this movement constitutes just those problems
-which Socialism regards as foolish delusions. To be sure, the striving
-after an inner independence of life has brought much error with it, and
-it may involve much that is problematical. But that a longing after such
-independence should arise at all and prove itself able to call forth so
-much endeavour sufficiently demonstrates that man is more than a mere
-being of society; more than a member of a social organism.
-
-Ultimately, socialistic culture presupposes, in its own development, a
-greater depth of life than it is itself able to produce. It can make so
-much out of its data only because it assumes in them a more
-comprehensive and a deeper world of thought. Like Naturalism, Socialism
-reaches a tolerable conclusion only by much plagiarism from the old
-Idealism, before the principal conceptions of which it crosses itself as
-before something atrocious.
-
-This inner inconsistency of socialistic culture, its remaining bound up
-with something which inwardly it contradicts, is most plainly shown by
-the historical experience of the Modern Age. Men were at first led to
-take up the movements towards the strengthening of society chiefly by
-the expectation that the invisible forces in human existence would be
-invigorated, and by the hope that the inner life of men would be raised.
-The more they have cut themselves adrift from these invisible
-connections and have placed themselves simply on the basis of experience
-the more have they lost in spiritual content.
-
-The movement towards the modern free State arose in association with
-religious strivings; the desire for political independence attached
-itself to and inwardly grew from the longing for more complete equality
-before God. The more this relation to Religion and, further, to an
-invisible realm receded into the background, the more difficult did it
-become to guard the striving for freedom from being diverted in the
-interests of individuals, classes, and parties; the more did the
-movement inwardly lose by external expansion. We saw that the idea of
-nationality acquired power from the conviction that there results in an
-independent people an individualisation of the spiritual and divine
-which is the first thing to ensure to existence a definite character and
-a firm support. So long as this conviction predominated, each people had
-a great inner task in reaching the highest point of development of its
-nature, and, what is more important, did not need to direct its energies
-upon externals. With the obscuring or the complete surrender of this
-spiritual foundation, a blind adoration of one's own country, an
-increase of unfruitful pride of race, a passionate struggle for external
-expansion and power, inevitably accompanied by the surrender of humanity
-and justice, threatens us.
-
-When in the nineteenth century the modern idea of the State again came
-into currency, the State came to be regarded--as, for example, in the
-system of Hegel--as the realisation of an absolute reason, and desired
-to be honoured as something "earthly divine." Its leading
-administrators, however, men of the kind of Altenstein, were imbued with
-the philosophic spirit; were men who could be regarded as philosophers
-in Plato's sense. To-day we still hear of such spiritual bases of the
-State, in syllabuses of courses of study; but we count so little on a
-philosophical training that when anyone gives any sign of such a
-training he is regarded with astonishment as a rare exception. Even the
-socialistic movement in the narrower sense, the longing for an economic
-revolution, at first stood in close connection with philosophical
-endeavours, and the hope of an inner ennobling of humanity, the hope of
-raising the whole of culture, worked in it as a powerful motive force.
-More and more, out of this a mere desire for power and enjoyment has
-developed, a passionate struggle of class against class, of interest
-against interest, and how this might lead to an inner elevation of
-humanity is not apparent. The more socialistic culture, in its pressing
-forward, has cut itself loose from a richer and more inward culture and
-has trusted solely to its own resources, the more distinct have its
-limitations become, the more has its incapacity to include the whole of
-human existence been made evident.
-
-To assert this does not mean to depreciate the significance of the facts
-which the social tendency has made us conscious of and the tasks which
-it has imposed upon us. Not only do the advance into prominence of the
-economic side of life, and the desire for a more energetic realisation
-of a social organisation in this direction, remain unimpeached, but
-there are demands of an imperative kind which extend beyond the scope of
-this narrow conception. The increasing isolation and separation of
-individuals make us feel the desire for reunion more and more strongly.
-Man, with that which is near him and in him, acquires an ever greater
-significance for the shaping of our life and our world; from no other
-point of departure than from him can we attempt to reach the depths of
-reality and from these to build up a realm of reason.
-
-Socialistic culture, however, treats these problems, to which it gives
-rise, far too externally and too meanly to hold out any hope that its
-method can lead to their solution; and so, as we see it immediately
-before us, it brings truth and error into a melancholy mixture. Only a
-broader conception of life could bring about a differentiation and give
-to each factor its right. In this case also the promised solution of the
-problem is seen to be itself a problem.
-
-
-3. THE SYSTEM OF ÆSTHETIC INDIVIDUALISM
-
-The naturalistic and socialistic tendencies unite in the modern life of
-culture for action in common. How near they stand to each other,
-notwithstanding all their differences, our accounts of them will have
-shown. Not only do both make the world of sense the sole world of man,
-but both also find life entirely in the relation to the environment, be
-it nature or society. Again, both maintain that all happiness arises
-from work upon this environment, whether the work be in the main
-scientific and technical, or practical and political. Thus the culture
-of both systems bears throughout the character of a culture of work; in
-one as in the other great complexes of work arise, and draw the
-individual to themselves; all trouble and effort are for the sake of the
-result; in both a restless progressive movement surrounds us and directs
-all reflection and thought to a better future. With such a tendency we
-have grown closer to the environment and we have ascribed more value to
-the world and to life. With an ever-increasing activity, a proud
-self-consciousness has developed in humanity.
-
-But the limitations and defects of such a culture, centred as it is upon
-results, could not remain concealed. The age, alert and fond of
-reflecting upon its own nature, has been compelled more and more to
-perceive the negation that accompanied the assertion made in that
-system. The striving for results alone made care for the soul
-impossible; the being fitted into a complex whole impaired the
-development to complete individuality. The more industrial and social
-activities have become specialised, the less significant has that part
-of human existence become which is embodied in the individual as such,
-the more have all aspects of his nature other than those involved in
-his work degenerated. The continual thought of the future, the impetuous
-movement ever onward and onward, also threatens to destroy all
-appreciation of the present, all self-consciousness and independence of
-life. If we exist merely in order to serve as means and instruments to a
-soulless process of culture, does not the whole enormous movement
-finally amount to nothing, if it is not experienced and appropriated?
-
-Once such questions arise and make man concerned about the meaning and
-the happiness of his life, a sudden change must soon take place. Man may
-at all times fall into error concerning the aims of the culture of work;
-indeed, concerning work itself. It may appear to him as something which,
-originally his own creation, has broken loose from him, placed itself in
-opposition to him, enslaved him, and finally, like a gigantic spider,
-threatens to suck his life's blood. From this point of view it may be
-regarded as the most important of all tasks again to become master of
-work, and to preserve a life inwardly conscious of itself, in contrast
-with the tendency of work to occupy itself solely with externals; to
-realise a true present in contrast with the restless hurry onward and
-onward; a quietness and a depth of the soul in contrast with work's
-bustle and agitation. To those with such a conviction the culture of
-work must seem sordid, secular, profane, and in contrast a longing for
-more inspiration, more soul, more permanent splendour of life will
-arise.
-
-Many movements of this kind make themselves apparent in the present; the
-longing for a return of life to itself, for more joy and more depth in
-life, grows ever stronger and stronger. Of all these movements, however,
-one stands out with definite achievement--one which, upon the basis of
-the present and with the means of sense experience, seeks a remedy
-which, while in these two aspects it shares the general initial
-assumption of the culture of work, within the limits of this assumption
-is entirely opposed to this culture of work. We mean the system of
-Subjectivism and Individualism. In that this system is blended with a
-kind of art of its own, and gains strength from this, it boldly
-undertakes to govern and shape our whole existence.
-
-He who wishes to rise above the culture of work without transcending the
-region of experience will scarcely discover any other basis than the
-individual with his self-consciousness, his "being-for-self." For,
-however far work with its influences may penetrate into the innermost
-recesses of the soul, there always remains something which is able to
-resist it. Something original seems to spring up here, which fits into
-no scheme and bows down to no external power.
-
-If, therefore, a newly aroused longing for greater immediacy and
-happiness in life drives man once more to the subjective and to the
-individual, he can emphasise this factor conceptually in order to
-depreciate the other systems of life. For, whether the individual
-belongs to an invisible world of thought or to a visible structure, his
-task and his worth is then assigned to him by the whole; his activity
-will have a definite direction determined by the whole, and his power
-will be called into play only so far as it fitted into the framework of
-the whole organisation. If all such relation to the whole is discarded,
-and the individual becomes bold enough to place himself simply upon his
-own capacity, and to acknowledge no other standard than his own
-decision, an infinite course seems to open up before him. What lies in
-him is now able to develop with complete freedom, and he need take
-neither a visible nor an invisible order into anxious consideration. The
-individual, raised to such sovereignty, will make far more out of
-himself, and will mean far more than the narrow and often over-awed
-individual of earlier ages. True, even in earlier times opposition from
-the individual was not lacking, but the circumstances of the Modern Age
-are especially conducive to his development and recognition. We know how
-the modern man extricated himself from the ties which bound him, and how
-he boldly placed himself in opposition to the world. We know how much
-more freely thought rules in modern life; how much more deeply an
-over-subtle reflection penetrates everywhere and takes all stability
-from things. We know, too, how the external form of civilisation, with
-its acceleration of intercourse, and its development in a thousand
-directions, sets the individual more free. Is it to be wondered at if
-the modern individual regards himself as the centre and undertakes to
-shape the whole of life from himself?
-
-The individual can attain complete independence only when he liberates
-his soul from all external connections, from every objective relation,
-and, as a free subject, simply lives his own states of consciousness.
-This is achieved above all in the disposition--transcending all form and
-shape and bound to no particular object--which has obtained an
-independent position chiefly as a result of the Romantic movement. In
-this a complete detachment of life, an inward infinity, and a complete
-independence seem attained; every individual has his own course and his
-own truth; no limit is set to life, no command given, but he can with
-the utmost freedom develop every impulse and exhaust its possibilities
-according to its nature. Thus a life arises, profuse and extremely
-active: a life fine and delicate in nature; a life which is in no way
-directed beyond itself.
-
-But all agitation, profuseness, and refinement could hardly have
-prevented this emotional life from becoming hollow, if, when it turned
-to the individual, it had not united to itself another movement, which
-is flowing with a powerful current through the age. We mean the movement
-towards art, and beyond that towards an æsthetic conception of life.
-From ancient times there has always been an antithesis of an ethical and
-an æsthetical fashioning of life: of a preponderance on the one hand of
-the active, on the other hand of the contemplative relation to reality.
-Emphasis on the activity of man has led to the formation in modern
-systems of life of a culture of work and utility. An æsthetical,
-contemplative mode of thought can with good reason feel itself superior
-to that culture. In contrast to utility, it promises beauty; over
-against the heaviness and weariness of the way of life of a culture of
-work, it promises a joy and a lightness; in opposition to effort,
-hurriedly and continually striving further and further, it promises an
-independent self-consciousness, and an inward calm. But, as this
-movement towards art blends with that towards the subject it lapses into
-a narrow course and assumes a distinctive character. Here, art has less
-to comprehend the object than to stimulate and please the subject; it
-will strive less after content and a further construction than with
-lyrical cadences, to give expression to changing moods. It has a
-difficult task given to it which can only approximately be solved--the
-task of expressing something fundamentally inexpressible and resisting
-all attempts to give it form. But in that art undertakes such an
-impossibility, and exerts its power to the uttermost, it brings about a
-refinement of the soul as well as an enrichment of expression. It
-enables much to be grasped and comprehended which, without it, passes
-like a fleeting shadow. It permits the observation of the most delicate
-vibrations of the soul, and throws light into depths which would
-otherwise be inaccessible.
-
-A distinctive type of life is thus formed from the side of literature
-and art, and this feels securely supreme over all the embarrassments of
-the culture of work and of the masses. The centre of life is transferred
-into the inner tissue of self-consciousness. With the development of
-this self-consciousness, life appears to be placed entirely on its own
-resources and directed simply towards itself. Through all change of
-circumstances and conditions it remains undisturbed; in all the infinity
-of that which happens to it, it feels that it is supreme. All external
-manifestation is valuable to it as an unfolding of its own being; it
-never experiences things, but only itself--that is, its own passive
-states of consciousness--in the things.
-
-A life of such a kind gives rise, in different directions, to
-distinctive tendencies, which, through their antithesis to the
-traditional forms, are sharply accentuated. This system thinks
-especially to turn the whole of human existence into something
-positive, to limit it on none of its sides, to raise it everywhere to
-activity, joy, and pleasure. In the older systems of life, especially in
-the religious, it finds far too much feeble renunciation, far too much
-sad negation: such a depreciation of life is henceforth to give way to a
-complete and joyful affirmation. But an affirmation appears to be
-possible because in this system, through that reference to and
-excitement of subjectivity, all that in any way affects man is
-transformed in activity and advance; because before all else the subject
-feels its own life in every experience and takes pleasure in this. It
-must be added that the self-refinement of life, its mobility and
-delicacy, free it from all the heaviness of existence, and that the free
-play of forces which exist here transforms the whole of existence into
-something lightly poised. We find this to be especially the case when we
-turn to art, which joins beauty to power, or, rather, strengthens life
-in itself through its embodiment in the beautiful.
-
-This free, joyous, and as it would seem purely self-conscious life is
-throughout of an aristocratic and individual character. In that it is
-adapted to the old experience, that to only a few is given the power and
-the disposition for independent creation and independent life, it
-addresses itself to these few and summons them to the greatest possible
-development of the individuality of their nature, to the most decisive
-detachment from the characterless average of the masses. For, without a
-completely developed consciousness of individuality, without an
-energetic differentiation and isolation, life does not seem to attain
-its greatest height. Thus the matter is one of making all the relations
-and all the externals of life as individual as possible. Everything
-which places the development of life under universal standards, and,
-through these, limits that development, is rejected as an unwarrantable
-limitation and an intolerable restriction. This individualising of our
-existence extends also to the matter of our relation to time. One moment
-may not be sacrificed to another; the present may not be degraded to the
-status of being a mere preparation for the future, but every moment
-should be an end in itself, and, with this, life is considered as being
-solely in the present. And so life is a ceaseless change, a perpetual
-self-renewal, a continuous transition; but it is just this which
-preserves to life its youthful freshness and gives to it the capacity to
-attract through every new charm. Hence this system presents the most
-definite contrast to the interminable chain and the gigantic
-construction which the culture of work makes out of the activities of
-the individuals.
-
-Æsthetic Individualism appears most distinctive in the way it represents
-the relation between the spiritual and the sensuous. It cannot take its
-attention from the external world, in order to centre it upon human
-perception, without strengthening the psychical. But, as its own system
-is based upon sense experience, it is impossible for it to acknowledge
-an independent spirituality and to contrast it with the sensuous; the
-spirituality which it recognises always remains bound and blended with
-the sensuous. For it an entirely mutual interpenetration is the highest
-ideal, a spiritualising of the sensuous, and a sensualising of the
-spiritual to an exactly equivalent degree. This high estimate of the
-sensuous, and the endeavour to harmonise the spiritual with it, put this
-new system of life in the sharpest opposition to the older systems,
-especially to religious Idealism, in which the supremacy of the
-spiritual is essential.
-
-From such a basal character this system evolves a distinctive relation
-to the individual values and spheres of life. Artistic literary creation
-becomes the soul of life; the source of the influences for the
-fashioning of a new man. The social, political, sphere is reduced to the
-level of a mere outside world, which urges less to activity on our own
-part than provokes a sceptical and critical attitude. The lack of
-attention to all that which fits man into a common order, be it into the
-State with its laws, or the civic community with its customs and
-arrangements, permits the free relation of individual to individual in
-social contact, friendship and love, to develop so much more
-forcefully. In particular, it is the inter-relationship of the sexes,
-with its many-sidedness and its inseparable interweaving of spirituality
-with sensuousness, which occupies thought and dominates literary
-production. Strike out the erotic element from specifically modern
-literature, and how insignificant the remainder would appear! It is also
-in the relation of the sexes that this scheme of life insists on the
-fullest freedom. There is a marked tendency to regard an acknowledgment
-of fixed standards and of traditional morals in this connection as a
-sign of weakness and of a narrow-minded way of thinking.
-
-Since this scheme seeks to realise an æsthetic conception of life and an
-artistic culture in opposition to all the restraint of tradition and
-environment, it will come into particularly severe conflict with
-traditional religion and morality. It must reject religion, or at least
-what hitherto has been called religion, because, with its blending
-together of the spiritual and the sensuous in a single world, it can by
-no means acknowledge a world of independent spirituality; its thought is
-much too "monistic" for that. It must reject religion also for the
-reason that, with its immediate affirmation of life, it cannot in the
-least understand the starting-point of religion, the experience and
-perception of harsh inner contradictions in our existence. Religion,
-with all the heroism that it truly shows, is here regarded as a mere
-lowering of vital energy; a chimera which pleases the weak.
-
-In relation to morality the matter is not much different. A foundation
-of morality in the necessity of its own nature is lacking in this
-system. What motive could move a man who whole-heartedly accepted
-Æsthetic Individualism to acknowledge something external to the subject
-as a standard, and in accordance with this standard to put a check upon
-his natural impulses? Indeed, with the denial of spiritual activity and
-the division of the world into for and against, the entire antithesis of
-good and evil loses its meaning and its justification. Reality appears
-from the point of view of this system to be rent in twain in an
-unwarrantable manner at the command of a human authority. What is
-usually called morality is considered to be only a statute of the
-community, a means by which it seeks to rob the individual of his
-independence and to subordinate him to itself.
-
-All this reasoning presents itself as an offspring of our own time, and
-wishes to establish the correctness of its claims on its own ground
-through its results. Yet it by no means lacks historical relations:
-often in the course of the centuries the subject has shaken off every
-constraint and sought a solution to life's problems in its own realm.
-This happened, first among the Sophists; then in a form less marked and
-with more direct attention to happiness in Epicureanism; later, in proud
-exaltation and in a titanic struggle with the world, in the Renaissance;
-and again in a more delicate and more contemplative manner in the
-Romantic period. Tendencies from all these operate in the Æsthetic
-Individualism of the present time and enrich it in many ways, though
-their contributions are not always free from contradiction. But, even
-with these historical elements, Æsthetic Individualism is essentially a
-modern product; and it cannot be denied that it has won a great power in
-the present; a movement of culture in this direction is unmistakeable.
-It is the very nature of this scheme of life not to hasten to a definite
-form, and for this reason it does not manifest itself with very definite
-features; but, with invisible power, it is everywhere present and
-creates a spiritual atmosphere from which it is difficult to withdraw
-ourselves. Notwithstanding all the attacks it is subjected to and the
-doubts as to its validity, it draws power continually from both the main
-tendencies which it unites; from the evolution of the subject and from
-the growth of art. Thus, here again we are concerned not with mere
-subjective willing and wishing, but with an actual movement in universal
-history.
-
-Whether this movement be the primary and the all-dominant remains to be
-examined by consideration of the total possessions of humanity. Such an
-examination is in this case peculiarly difficult, because in
-Individualism and Subjectivism diverse forms mingle together and give to
-the movement very different levels. There is, therefore, an obvious
-danger that, viewing these forms from the position of an average level,
-at which we may attempt to arrive, we may judge one too severely and
-another too leniently. And yet we cannot dispense with the assumption of
-such an average level; only, it must not be applied mechanically to the
-individual forms which are so numerous.
-
-In forming our judgment in this matter, it is necessary in the first
-place to distinguish the aims and the methods of the scheme of life.
-There can hardly be any doubt or dispute concerning the aims. For, if we
-are called to give to life an independence, a content and a value; to
-raise it to complete power; to press forward from anxious negation to
-joyful affirmation; to reduce the monotony of existence; to organise the
-whole realm of individuality so that it shall be fully clear; and if, at
-the same time, the fact of the degeneration of the inner life through a
-culture of work lends to such demands the impressiveness and the voice
-of a present need, it is difficult to see how this system is to be
-effectively opposed. Æsthetic Individualism here appears as the champion
-of truths which may be obscured for a time, but which, nevertheless,
-continually gain in significance in human evolution as a whole. A
-further question is whether its aims, which cannot be rejected, are
-attainable along the ways which Individualism follows and beyond which
-it is not able to go; whether the means suffice for the attainment of
-the end. If this should not be the case, we are in presence of a great
-difficulty, in that something, in itself of the highest necessity, is
-desired, but is desired in a way which not only is inadequate to the
-aim, but directly contradicts it.
-
-And yet that is how the matter really stands. It is essential to
-Individualism--with this it stands or falls--that it lead to an
-independent life, to a self-consciousness; that it transform our whole
-condition into something of positive value on the basis of sense
-experience. That the actual condition of human reality, the nature of
-human experience, inexorably resists such a transformation, and that on
-this account the individualistic scheme of life is contradictory, we
-intend to indicate more in detail.
-
-Man desires a self-conscious life, a deliverance from all external ties,
-a removal of all oppressions. This desire is a lofty one, but one which,
-as things are, is very difficult of attainment. For not only in what
-happens to us, but also in the innermost depths of the soul--in our
-spiritual constitution--we are bound up with an overwhelming and
-impenetrable world. The mechanism of nature as well as the organisation
-of society surrounds and visibly and invisibly coerces us. At first
-sight we are no more than parts of an immense whole, and appear to be
-completely determined by that which happens in this whole; we come from
-it and sink back into it, and every moment we are dependent upon that
-which takes place around us. What is Individualism able to do against
-such forces, and what does it succeed in achieving towards life's
-attainment of independence? The means it employs are the arousing of an
-unrestrained mood, and the withdrawal of life to the greatest possible
-concentration in its own passive states of consciousness. Because by
-these means man is in some measure relieved from the oppression of
-things, he imagines himself to be fully free. But is he free simply
-because he appears to himself to be so; free, to take the example of
-Spinoza, in the way in which the stone thrown up into the air might
-during its motion suppose itself to be free? As a matter of fact, as
-everyday experience shows us, it is just in his moods that man is least
-stable and least lord of his own soul, and that the most diverse
-circumstances, physical and psychical, visible and invisible, great and
-small, influence and compel him. The transitoriness of appearances,
-which form the matter of fact as far as moods are concerned, is lacking
-in all firm relation, all inner construction of life; for nothing is
-more mobile, nothing more subject to sudden changes, than mood--nothing
-except the surface of the rolling sea, or a reed shaking in the wind.
-The life of mood is, in reality, a purely superficial life; a projection
-of the psychical nature on to the surface of the immediate passive
-states of consciousness. Life in this case attains no depth, content, or
-independence, but only subjective opinion, the mere semblance of
-independence. We shall see that Individualism so persistently offers the
-semblance instead of the real thing that it has come to believe that
-with the production of the semblance it has acquired the reality. Life
-can only attain a real independence when it has been widened to a realm
-in itself, when inner relations, antitheses, problems thus become
-evident; and when, through the exercise of activity upon these, an inner
-world is raised up, which confidently places itself in opposition to the
-endlessness of the soulless world and is able to take up the struggle
-with it. We must show unrelenting hostility to any attempt to identify
-mood with inner spirituality, with the soul's self-consciousness; for,
-really, there is no greater contrast than that between simple
-disposition and spiritual depth, between the man of mere sentiment, with
-his dependence and vacillation, and the personality rooted in an inner
-infinity.
-
-And so the independence and the predominance of the individual over the
-social environment, which Individualism asserts, are nothing more than
-an appearance. For what is offered in this system is far less a
-self-conscious life and an undisturbed pursuance of our own course than
-the inclination to say and do the opposite of that which is said and
-done by the majority of those who surround us. It is easy to see that
-life, as a matter of fact, always remains related to its environment and
-to the standard of that environment; and that what is represented here
-as independence is nothing but a different kind of dependence, an
-indirect dependence. To the endeavour of Individualism to provide a free
-course for the individual with his particularity it is scarcely possible
-to offer any opposition. Unfortunately, however, intention and
-realisation are different things, and Individualism is apt to assume as
-something simple and self-evident that which of all things is the most
-difficult, that is, individuality itself. Just as Socialism promises a
-sure advance of life as a result of the removal of external hindrances,
-so Individualism expects a magnificent advance of an inexhaustible
-individualistic culture, if only the statutes by which the community
-oppresses and limits the individual are annulled. What, then, is the
-real state of the matter? Are men so full of spiritual impulse that it
-is only necessary to open up a course for it? And further, does that
-which is peculiar in a man signify, as a matter of course, that he is an
-individuality with some sort of value?--and is it at once capable of
-forming a centre of life? How indefinite and how lacking in consistency
-the psychical nature of man usually is! How much that is lofty and how
-much that is mean, how much that is noble and how much that is vulgar,
-is found here! Shall this chaos display itself and be extolled as an
-individuality? In truth, an inner unity appertains to a genuine
-individuality, and the ascertaining and realisation of this are not
-simply a gift from nature, but a result of spiritual endeavour. To
-attain to a genuine individuality requires an energetic concentration of
-life; an overcoming of the spirit of indifference; a unifying of the
-multiplicity of experience; often, also, a transcending of sharp
-contradictions. How difficult it has been for even the most prominent
-individualities--men such as Luther, Kant, Goethe--to find their true
-selves, that is, the essence of their being, the aspect in which their
-strength lay! How great a problem, and what an object of the keenest
-conflict, their genuine individuality formed to them! How could a task
-of such difficulty find fulfilment, and life a unification and
-elevation, in superficial and fleeting mood? If in order to make men
-independent individuals it sufficed to declare them so, we should indeed
-be much further advanced than unfortunately is the case.
-
-The new life ought not to be simply autonomous, independent and
-individual, it should also be powerful and great. Is the mere evolution
-and cultivation of sentiment able to give such power and greatness to an
-unrestrained passivity? Of course, in its own estimation unrestrained
-mood can raise itself high above the whole world, and so magnify the
-supposed independence as to give rise to a feeling of supreme power; but
-again, it is only a representation of power, a semblance of power, and
-not a real power, that is reached. Mere mood and genuine power
-constitute an irreconcilable antithesis. Attention to and cultivation of
-sentiment may refine life; it will at the same time weaken and dissipate
-it. Power develops and grows only in grappling with resistances, whether
-they be outside or within one's own soul. Life will acquire a powerful
-character only where an active spirituality is acknowledged, which,
-drawing from its own nature, holds up standards and aims to the actual
-condition of reality, especially to its own soul, and undertakes to
-change this condition in accordance with the requirements set by these
-standards and aims. Æsthetic Individualism, however, as we saw,
-conceives of the spiritual life as chiefly receptive and contemplative;
-as an appropriation, a mirroring and an enjoyment of an existent
-reality. Thus for it the spiritual life might be closely connected with
-this existent reality, indeed might be one with it; but at the same time
-the view robs that life of the power of arousing and elevating, of
-independent construction and secure advance.
-
-An aristocratic character, the separation of an exoteric and an esoteric
-sphere, has been distinctive of an æsthetic conception of life from
-ancient times even until now. The fact appealed to in justification of
-its assumption of this character is beyond doubt: it is that, not only
-in art but in all spiritual creation, only few among those creating or
-reproducing stand high; that genuine creation always comes about in
-opposition to the mediocre; that if it identified itself with the
-interests and conditions of the majority it would be deeply degraded,
-indeed inwardly destroyed. But this is a contrast between spiritual
-creation and human circumstances, not a division of humanity according
-to two sets of circumstances; in truth, fewer of the really great than
-of those great in their own estimation have boasted of greatness. For
-the genuinely great have been occupied far too much by the demands of
-their task, and been too deeply conscious of the inadequacy of human
-capacity, to have been able to indulge in a reflection upon and a vain
-enjoyment of themselves. The infinity of the task by which, rather than
-by other men, they measured themselves made even the highest result
-appear inadequate to them. It is necessary to Individualism to represent
-the unmistakeable distinction between a culture that is genuinely
-spiritual and one that is merely human, as a difference between two
-classes of men; and it is only because it knows no objective restraint,
-no inner necessities, and can measure men only with men, that it is able
-to believe itself justified in looking down upon other men from its
-standpoint--as though the mere profession of faith in its programme at
-once effected an elevation of nature.
-
-The undertaking to transform life completely into something of positive
-value, suddenly and directly to advance to complete affirmation of life,
-is associated with the desire for power. So far as this is simply a
-desire to abandon an irresolute and narrow mode of thought, false
-humiliation and self-belittlement, and mere accommodation to
-circumstances in tasks where the beginning is difficult and calls for
-great effort, we may frankly admit its justification. But the matter is
-not so simple as it is represented in this train of thought. Ultimately
-no spiritual movement which would win mankind can give up its claim to a
-final affirmation of life. Even the most completely pessimistic systems,
-systems of absolute negation--as, for example, the original
-Buddhism--could not conquer wider areas without making that negative
-milder and transforming it into an affirmative. But the question is
-whether, after all that humanity has experienced and suffered, a quick
-and immediate affirmation is possible; whether the way to a final
-affirmation does not lead rather through an energetic negation. So long
-as the restriction which life felt seemed to come from outside only,
-and not to reach the inner recesses of the soul, as the prevailing mode
-of thought in Antiquity represented the case to be, the decisive
-rejection of all suffering, the proud armouring of the soul against all
-pain, could be accepted as the crown of all virtues. In face, however,
-of actual experience, Antiquity could not continue to hold such a
-conviction. For good or for evil, it was compelled to regard suffering
-as something more important and to occupy itself more with it, and,
-until Christianity opened up new paths, it fell into the danger of
-losing all vital energy. Whatever position one may take up with regard
-to the dogma and the tendencies of Christianity, the fact cannot be
-struck out of history that it has laid bare infinite perplexities in the
-soul of man in regard to his relation to the world, and at the same time
-has taken up suffering into the centre of life, not to perpetuate it,
-but to rise above it by the revealing of a world of spirit and of love.
-This has not made life easier, but more difficult; yet at the same time
-it has made it greater, deeper, and more inwardly determined. Every
-scheme of life which light-heartedly professes to be able to lead us
-quickly over suffering and to cast it off proves itself to be
-intolerably superficial, if not frivolous. Superficiality easily
-triumphs over men and becomes their first opinion; men seem to welcome
-first every way of thinking which makes life comfortable and presents no
-demands of any sort. But the problems of our existence, and the longing
-for genuine and not merely illusory happiness, remain, and in face of
-the seriousness of these problems it soon proves to be fleeting and vain
-to try to find satisfaction in that which is simply comfortable.
-
-The case is no different in regard to Individualism and the problem of
-morality. The value of an energetic opposition to laws of convention and
-external etiquette is beyond question; but it should not be forgotten
-that such a conflict has been carried on within the sphere of morality
-and religion from ancient times; that in every age that which was
-spiritually highest has forcibly withstood the efforts of men
-illegitimately to claim absolute validity for their statutes and
-tendencies. But Individualism commits the error of asserting that the
-mean morality which is reached at the average level of humanity
-constitutes the essence of morality, and in so doing excludes from
-itself the feeling for everything great and deep which lies within
-morality. With all its talk of greatness and breadth, Individualism
-makes life narrow, since it leads man solely to the cultivation and
-unfolding of his own passive states of consciousness, and permits the
-pleasure-seeking _ego_ to draw everything to itself and hold it fast
-there. Everything, however, which exists beyond his sphere it interprets
-as a mere "other" world, and thus declares all submission to the object
-for its own sake, all forgetfulness of self, all becoming more
-comprehensive, and all renewal through genuine love, to be only
-delusory. Further, in this system, in which natural impulse governs
-everything, the conceptions of responsibility and guilt, and with this
-the antithesis of good and evil, must be held to be the result of a
-narrowly human way of thinking, as something which, though serving no
-real purpose, still alarms men and overawes life. Yet through the
-development of a spiritual activity which places it in a more inward and
-free relation to reality, humanity has really advanced beyond the
-position in which man acted as a part of mere nature. In this, too,
-Christianity also marks a great advance; we have only to picture to
-ourselves the life-work of Augustine in order to have a clear example of
-the separation of a genuine morality, as the expression of a new world
-based upon freedom, from the attention to and cultivation of natural
-instincts. The greatest thinker of the Modern Age, Kant, has only
-established this distinction in a newer form. In this connection
-responsibility and guilt, as transcending nature, also become a witness
-of greatness; they give expression to the fact that man is an
-independent co-operator in the universe, and regards the world as in
-some sense his own; to the fact that life does not simply happen to him,
-but also through him. For, along with freedom and its world, the old
-world of given existence remains and holds us fast, not merely
-externally but inwardly also; life is a severe conflict between higher
-and lower, between freedom and destiny. With so much that is complicated
-and perplex, life must be regarded as in the highest degree unfinished.
-But just because of this it involves an incalculable tension, and even
-in its constraints and pains it leaves the self-preservation and the
-welfare of the mere subject at a level far beneath itself. When,
-therefore, Individualism, neglecting the movement of universal history,
-wishes to limit us to this mere subject, and, effacing all dividing
-lines, calls upon us to submit to every force which plays upon us, and
-to enter into the glad enjoyment of life, there is really no difference
-between this and advising a man, who has gone through the many and
-difficult experiences of life, to throw to the winds all he has thus
-gained, and to please himself again with the games of childhood.
-
-The position is similar with regard to the relation of the spiritual and
-the sensuous, as Individualism represents it. It is rightly opposed to
-both a monkish asceticism and a conventional, feigned, low estimate of
-the sensuous; it is indeed with good reason that Æsthetic Individualism
-defends the right of the sensuous. But to give the sensuous its right
-does not mean to permit it to be joined together in an undifferentiated
-unity with the spiritual, as though it were of equal value. Naïve ages
-were able to strive for a perfect balance of spiritual and sensuous;
-but, with the increasing depth of the life of the soul, a division has
-resulted which no toil and no art can simply remove again. Now,
-therefore, either the spiritual will be dominant over the sensuous or
-the sensuous over the spiritual. In Individualism, with its amalgamation
-of the spiritual and the sensuous, by which all claim to spiritual
-activity, and therefore to all independence of spiritual life, is given
-up, the sensuous will inevitably dominate over the spiritual. The result
-is simply a degeneration of the spiritual, a refined sensuousness; and
-it is defenceless against an intrusion of vulgar pleasure. Will any one
-seriously assert that we find ourselves to-day in a naïve position in
-relation to sense?
-
-In this respect, as in all others, the strength of Individualism lies
-chiefly in criticism; its refined perception makes it especially capable
-of apprehending clearly the errors of the traditional conceptions of
-life. Its influence, however, suffers from the contradiction which it
-involves, in that it purposes to solve the problems, to which only an
-independent and self-determining spiritual life is equal, with the means
-of sense experience. Such a spiritual life is to be attained only by
-transcending this sense experience. Owing to the fact that Individualism
-places its sole attention upon the surface of sense experience, its
-aims, in themselves of the highest necessity, must be distorted and
-grossly misrepresented. Independence, greatness, and certainty--ever
-hovering before life--cannot be attained by Individualism in reality,
-but only in picture and semblance. And it can lend to this appearance a
-moderate power of conviction only because, just in the same way as the
-other modern organisations of life, it enriches itself imperceptibly
-from the same traditional modes of thought and of culture, in opposition
-to which it stands, and of which the impelling motives are to it a
-sealed book.
-
-Thus, in truth, it does not offer mere and pure subjectivity, but
-subjectivity on the basis of a rich life of culture, which it is itself
-unable to produce, but without which it would lapse at once into
-complete emptiness. The æsthetic-individualistic scheme of life proves
-to be a phenomenon, accompanying a ripe, indeed an over-ripe, culture.
-An independent culture, with its labour and its sacrifice, it is unable
-to produce.
-
-To reject Æsthetic Individualism means to attack modern art and its
-service to life just as little as to reject Naturalism and Socialism is
-to estimate meanly modern natural science and present social endeavour.
-On the contrary, it may be said that, as Naturalism has no keener
-antagonist than modern natural science, so modern art, with the energy
-which is bestowed upon it and with its many-sided expansion of the soul,
-stands not in agreement with but in opposition to Æsthetic
-Individualism. For, indeed, a creative artist of the first rank has
-never subscribed to a merely æsthetic conception of life. Still, however
-much artistic endeavour and a merely æsthetic conception of the world
-may be associated by the individual, in their nature they remain
-differentiated, and no appreciation of art is able to justify the
-æsthetic conception of life, which subjects all life to a contradiction;
-works against life in striving to attain its own ends; neglects the
-development through the centuries; and, instead of the substance hoped
-for, offers only opinion and appearance. How can life find a support in
-this?
-
-
-
-
-II. CONSIDERATION OF THE SITUATION AS A WHOLE AND PRELIMINARIES FOR
-FURTHER INVESTIGATION
-
-(a) THE NATURE OF THE NEW AS A WHOLE AND ITS RELATION TO THE OLD
-
-
-From the description that has been given of the modern systems of life,
-we have seen that the Modern Age is by no means homogeneous, and that
-the conception "modern" has more than one meaning. Culture, in
-particular, has a character fundamentally different according as life
-finds its basis on the one hand in something external to itself, in
-nature, or in society, or on the other hand in the subjective states of
-consciousness. But that a common striving is present in spite of every
-difference, indeed of every antithesis, is proved by the energy with
-which all deny and reject the older form of culture and its
-transcendence of sense experience; by the vigour of the struggle against
-that which is regarded by the more modern systems as mere phantasy and
-deception, but which nevertheless continues to dominate social life. The
-kinship of these systems extends, beyond a common acquiescence in a
-negation, to a common affirmation. On all sides a thirst after a more
-forceful reality, and a more imposing immediacy of life, is to be found.
-Sense experience manifests itself throughout as fuller in content and
-more plastic; and so the chief point of support is found within it, and,
-though in different ways, the whole of life is organised from it. Still,
-granted that this could be effected only in opposition to the
-traditional conduct of life, the new is by no means desirous of
-remaining in a state of mere opposition. It seeks rather to unite the
-opposing elements to itself, to adapt them to itself, and to satisfy to
-the fullest extent the ideal demands of human nature. It is an attempt
-entirely to renew and completely to revolutionise life--a vast
-undertaking! Whether it has succeeded, or whether it is still engaged in
-bringing the attempt to a successful issue, is the problem that we had
-to investigate.
-
-As far as our chief question is concerned, our result was a decided
-negative. True, much that is great and much that may not be lost again
-has been achieved. The new systems of life have indeed appropriated
-whole groups of facts; have invigorated whole groups with new powers;
-have revealed new tasks of the most fruitful kind, not only in the
-individual but also for the whole; and have given to life dominating
-impulses and a powerful impetus. But all this becomes a doubtful gain,
-indeed it threatens to become a loss, if particular experience and
-achievement desire to govern the whole of life, and to impress upon it
-their own peculiar stamp. Not only does life become intolerably
-one-sided in such a case, but its wealth of experience is cut down in
-order to fit it into the given framework. We also saw that a serious
-inner inconsistency originates. For a long period this inconsistency may
-be concealed, but where any great energy is present in life, it must
-break forth with a disturbing force and become intolerable. Since the
-modern systems regard the whole of life as arising from relation,
-whether it be to the environment or to the subjective states of
-consciousness, they must reduce everything inward and universal to the
-level of a derived and secondary product; they must repudiate and oppose
-an original and independent spirituality, a self-conscious inner world.
-Such an inner spiritual experience has evolved through the whole of
-history, and transcends all forms of life-organisation: it is impossible
-to explain it away. The modern systems must themselves experience this.
-For they could not possibly transform the abundance of diverse
-appearances into an organised whole; they could not pass from universal
-to universal, without presupposing and employing the same transcendent
-and encompassing inner world, which directly they attack. At the same
-time, however, they give to every factor of life a position and a depth
-wholly inconsistent with what they are justified in doing with their own
-mode of thought. They cannot perform their own tasks without drawing
-incessantly upon another kind of reality, one richer and more
-substantial. In truth, they are something other, and something far more
-than they believe themselves to be. Does this not show, beyond
-possibility of refutation, that they do not fill the whole of life?
-
-The contradiction immanent in the modern systems of life is especially
-apparent in the fact that they are unable to banish supersensual powers
-and to limit life to sense experience, without attributing to sense
-experience more content and more value than that which experience itself
-justifies, and which, to be consistent, they should not overstep. The
-naturalistic thinker ascribes unperceived to nature, which to him can be
-only a co-existence of soulless elements, an inner connection and a
-living soul. Only thus can he revere it as a higher power, as a kind of
-divinity; only thus can he pass from the fact of dependence to a
-devotional surrender of his feelings. The socialist bases human society,
-with its motives mixed with triviality and passion, on an invisible
-community, an ideal humanity, which he clothes with the splendour of a
-power and dignity that transfigures the immediate appearance of society.
-It is only in this way that he is able to direct his whole effort upon
-the welfare of mankind, and to expect a pure victory of reason within
-its sphere. The individualist in his conception exalts the individual to
-a height far more lofty than is justified by the individual as he is
-found in experience; for his thought, the individual is far more
-powerful and far more prominent and noble than immediate impressions
-indicate. Only thus is he able, from the freedom and the development of
-the individual, to hope for the beginning of a new epoch.
-
-In these newer systems of life the conception of reality as a whole is
-also subjected to the same groundless and, likewise, false idealisation.
-As in these systems nothing may be acknowledged which transcends sense
-experience, there can be no universal which pervades and holds together
-the manifold. This being the case, reality must be a co-existence of
-single pieces; but no one will readily confess himself of this opinion.
-A pantheism, vague to the highest degree, is therefore seized upon as a
-cure-all, that man may have something which permeates and connects; but
-of this something, however, all more detailed description is lacking,
-and is carefully avoided. A conception so vague allows us at the same
-time to think and not to think something; at the same time to affirm and
-to deny. It seems to accomplish so much and to demand so little; it
-makes the impossible possible; and offers the most convenient asylum to
-all indefiniteness and confusion. It is a pity that in all this it is
-not a reality that surrounds us, but a mere _fata morgana_ which
-deceives. And a conception so vague is to displace religion and accord
-support to the new life! Truly, this requires a stronger faith than that
-with which the older religions were satisfied.
-
-The modern systems of life desire a more forceful reality; in this they
-set work an aim which cannot be rejected. The course they have entered
-upon, however, does not bring them nearer to this aim, but rather
-removes them further from it. Neither the self-evidence of the senses
-nor the oscillation of mood can ever represent genuine reality to a
-being who, for good or for evil, has once learned to think. Many and
-varied impressions may come and go in sense experience; but their
-abundance cannot prevent the chief conceptions, by which they are here
-accompanied, from receiving a character abstract and vague in the
-highest degree. We hear continually of the whole, of reason, of power,
-of evolution; but all these conceptions have no stability and little
-content; they are like shadows and phantoms which vanish as soon as we
-wish to take hold of them. So, by an irony of fate, just those modes of
-thought whose chief impulse was the desire for more reality dissipate,
-dissolve reality. We see that the spiritual life may be denied by the
-individual, but not driven from the work of culture. It is true that
-immediate experience, outer and inner, has become much more to the
-present age than it was to earlier ages; but it has become so only
-through spiritual endeavour. If, therefore, the Modern Age now turns
-definitely against this spiritual activity, to rob it of all
-independence, it destroys that which first gave it its own power.
-
-The modern systems of life have raised the standard of human existence
-enormously in regard to power and content; but they have done this at
-the cost of its spiritual concreteness. They have suppressed the life of
-inner spiritual experience and denied the problems of man's inner
-nature. They know of no grappling of man either with the infinite or
-with his own nature; they recognise no conflict between freedom and
-fate, and no inner development of the soul. And all this because their
-view of life as a whole takes away all depth, and transforms existence
-into a mere series of appearances. Thus, for anyone who regards such
-depth as the basis of life, and who, therefore, will not reject the
-experience and the result of the work of universal history, it becomes a
-necessity to reject and oppose the modern systems as guides of life. The
-more explicitly and exclusively they are presented, the more decided
-must his opposition be. For, what shall all the gain on the
-circumference of life profit man if through attention to that the centre
-of his life becomes empty and weak, if there emerges no content and no
-meaning in life itself? What is the value of all the advancing and
-refining of human existence if it does not bring with it a genuine
-spiritual culture and an inward elevation of mankind?
-
-The increasing experience and perception of such limitations in the new
-may lead men to give more attention again to the old. The striving to
-transcend mere sense experience can no longer appear as a mere flight
-into an "other" world of dreams, or as due to a feeble and cowardly
-disposition; it may now be admitted rather as a deeply rooted endeavour
-to reach greater depths of life. Yet such a relaxation of the opposition
-to the old, and such an inclination to estimate it more highly, by no
-means justifies us in simply taking it up again in the form in which it
-lies before us. For to this not merely the modern system of life, but
-the whole development of life and work, is opposed. The contradictions
-and doubts which have grown up in the course of this development are not
-in the least overcome by the failure of the modern systems of life. For
-we do not find ourselves confronted here with an "either--or," in which
-the invalidity of the one alternative immediately establishes the
-validity of the other; but both may be inadequate. So we remain
-surrounded by the old and the new, under powerful influences from both,
-but not in a position to accept either the one or the other exclusively.
-
-
-(b) THE CONDITION OF THE PRESENT
-
-This situation, with its juxtaposition of the new and the old, is so
-full of confusion and perplexity that only a feeble disposition is
-capable of acquiescing in it. In the old we respect or surmise a depth;
-but this depth does not know how to give itself a form suitable to the
-present, or to influence us with the means available in our own time.
-The new directs all our attention to the immediate present and fills us
-with its intuitions; but this present becomes superficial to us, and
-with increasing power a desire for more substance and soul in life rises
-up in opposition to it. The old lifted us to the proud height of a new
-world, but this height showed signs of becoming severed from the rest of
-existence, and lapsed therefore into a state of painful insecurity. The
-new builds up from the experience of sense, but it finds no conclusion
-without going beyond this experience and thus contradicting itself. The
-old regarded the spiritual life of man, if not man himself, as occupying
-the centre of all and thereby fell into the danger of a hastened
-conclusion and of an anthropomorphic conception of reality. The new
-takes from man every position by which he is especially distinguished,
-and ignores all connection with ultimate depths, but in so doing it
-overthrows more than it intends; it undermines nothing less than the
-possibility of all spiritual work, all science, all culture.
-
-And so we find ourselves in the midst of contradictions, drawn first in
-one direction, then in another: that we are at a crisis in life as a
-whole and in culture, that we are in state of spiritual need, cannot
-fail to be recognised. This crisis is made all the more acute through
-the peculiarity of the historical circumstances which have led up to it
-and the social conditions which surround us. Historically, we are under
-the influences of two cultures: one older, which up to the seventeenth
-century was in undisputed supremacy and which has asserted its authority
-up to the present day, especially in regard to the arrangements of
-social life; and one newer, which, after the influence of many varied
-preliminary tendencies, has arisen since that time with the energy of
-youth, and which, in the minds of individuals, has easily become the
-dominant power. The two cultures had different starting-points and
-followed different main courses. The old culture carried within itself
-the experiences of Greek life, the inner progress of which may be seen
-especially in the development of its philosophy. In the old culture
-endeavour was driven more and more beyond the world of sense to a world
-of thought, in which it went on from a universal to an ethical and
-ultimately to a religious conviction. To the thought of Greece, as she
-grew old, the world of sense experience sank more and more in reality
-and value, and life found its basis and chief realm of experience in a
-region transcending sense. Christianity definitely established this view
-of life, and made the invisible Kingdom of God the true home of man, the
-most immediate and the most secure that this life knows.
-
-New peoples then grew up in this way of thinking; peoples who still had
-their work before them; to these, the break with the world of sense came
-more as the imposition of an overpowering authority than as due to
-their own experience. This fact constituted a point of weakness in every
-way; but no serious complication arose so long as these peoples were not
-yet ripe for spiritual independence. As soon, however, as this was the
-case, it was inevitable that contradictions should manifest themselves,
-and that a newly awakened impulse should urge the movement into an
-entirely opposite direction.
-
-That is what really happened; the main tendency of life is now directed
-just as much upon the world as earlier it went beyond it; it has been
-transferred from the invisible to the visible, from the supernatural to
-the natural. We see this most clearly in the case of religion, which, as
-though with immanent necessity, runs through the sequence of a
-predominant transcendent Theism, a Panentheism, a Pantheism--gradually
-becoming colourless--an Agnosticism, and a Positivism. Everything
-supernatural disappears from thought, and life is concerned solely with
-sense experience. Thus, finally, we appear to have arrived at the same
-point as that from which the Greeks started out: the Monism of the most
-modern coining, for example, is hardly to be distinguished from the
-Hylozoism of the ancient Ionian thinkers. But is the whole result of the
-movement of universal history really only a deception? Has it simply
-brought us back again, from the false paths that we have tried, without
-according us any kind of positive profit whatever? We have become men of
-another kind; we think and feel differently; we have built up a rich
-culture, have transformed the world, have created a spiritual
-atmosphere; and we are capable of striving after infinite life and
-ultimate truth. Could all of this spring out of mere error? If that were
-so, should we not be compelled to reject the whole of this as phantasy
-and deception? But if the error was a means and an instrument in the
-attainment of truth, and if mankind in its going out from itself and in
-its return to itself is inwardly developed, where does the boundary
-between truth and error lie, and what is the meaning of the whole? So
-here again we lapse into uncertainty; history, to other ages a secure
-support, leads us into still greater doubt.
-
-Finally, we must add to this crisis of culture the onward march of the
-social movement, which continually increases in power; the passionate
-longing of ever-growing groups of men for immediate participation in
-culture and the joys of life. Such movements may accomplish themselves
-within a fixed and acknowledged sphere of culture and of life; what
-changes they then bring lie within this sphere; they do not place the
-whole in question. Thus, the democratic movements of the fifteenth and
-sixteenth centuries left certain principles of religious conviction
-untouched; they left the conception of the world entirely unchanged. But
-the matter is quite otherwise when a movement of this kind comes in
-contact with a culture which is inwardly unstable and which is growing
-uncertain concerning its final aims. We cannot fail to recognise what a
-great danger of degeneration there is under such circumstances. The
-masses, thus struggling upward, then seek their own way of life, and in
-so doing they naturally concentrate their attention upon that which lies
-immediately before their eyes and affects their immediate well-being.
-From this position they will advance all the more quickly to a certain
-conclusion, in that they are unconcerned with the experiences and
-perplexities of the work of universal history, and therefore, with
-unclouded enthusiasm, expect complete truth and pure happiness from
-freer exercise of their powers and the rejection of all authority. If we
-wish to ignore the dangers to culture which thus grow up, we must either
-estimate man as he is too highly, or spiritual tasks too meanly. Until
-the present, an independent spiritual life, making man more
-comprehensive in being, raising and freeing him, has manifested itself
-only at individual points; in the first place in chosen individuals,
-from whom it has been conveyed to the common life. The spiritual world
-made its appearance as a power superior to the interests and the
-opinions of individuals and of the masses. Only in such transcendence of
-the merely human did it develop any characteristic content, find an
-inner unity, arouse respect, and lead man beyond mere nature. If all
-this should now become different, if man in the mass should come to feel
-himself to be the measure of all things, and should relate all to his
-perception as the centre of infinity, would not a severe contradiction
-arise between human enterprise and spiritual necessity, and would not
-the full development of this opposition threaten the whole state of
-culture with a violent convulsion? Ultimately the inner necessities of
-our being would certainly win the day against all errors of
-superficiality, but what severe conflicts and losses the division must
-cost!
-
-The consideration of all these facts reveals us under the power of
-different, indeed antagonistic, movements, and most especially in the
-midst of the great struggle for supremacy between the visible and
-invisible world, as the conflict between Positivism and Idealism gives
-expression to it. Life for us contains two movements, one of which
-starts from the centre and the other from the circumference; the former
-cannot embrace the fullness of reality, and its basis is also insecure;
-the latter gives no inner unity to life and lowers the standard of the
-whole. As each of these main tendencies again divides, movements the
-most varied surround us, tear us asunder, and crush our souls under
-their oppositions. God and reason have become uncertain to us, and the
-substitutes that are offered--nature, society, the individual--fail to
-satisfy us. The unrest and uncertainty that arise from this are not
-limited to a single sphere, they extend to the ultimate basal principles
-of life. The new mode of thought declares the chief world of the
-ancients to be a delusion; but we saw its own world dissolved in shadows
-and schemes by spiritual activity. Since the one dissolves the reality
-of the other, we are threatened with the loss of all definite results;
-our own being becomes a dark problem to us; we know neither what we are
-nor what we are not.
-
-The impression that we get of the condition of the present as a whole
-may also be represented in the following manner: the historical
-movement of humanity unfolds an incalculable wealth of life; this life,
-however, cannot reach its own highest point and cannot win a character
-of a spiritual kind unless it organises itself into a whole, unless it
-attains an inner synthesis transcending all isolated states. Such
-syntheses have been realised, and have led to distinctive organisations
-of life; but these organisations have all proved to be too insignificant
-and too narrow, and none has been able to overcome the rest and to
-embrace the whole wealth of life. So life as a whole has broken them
-down; and since it has thus lost all inner structure, it must inevitably
-fall into a state of rapid degeneration, and must threaten to lose all
-content and meaning.
-
-The evil effects on the development of life that are caused by this
-convulsion and division, and by the lack of a dominant tendency; how
-this condition leads to the destruction of everything simple and
-self-evident, and lends to an unrestrained reflection an unwarrantable
-power; how it robs endeavour of all its main tendencies, and permits
-true and untrue, good and evil, to run confusedly together, all this and
-much else is to-day so much and so widely discussed, and presents itself
-with such overpowering clearness to our vision, that its description
-need not detain us even for a moment.
-
-Ought we to submit to this disintegration and degradation of life as to
-an inevitable destiny, or is it possible to work against it and to
-strive after a unity transcending the division? The fact that the
-division makes so strong an impression on us and that we feel it to be
-so intolerable is at once in favour of the latter alternative. How could
-this experience be possible if all multiplicity did not fall within a
-comprehensive whole of life--if our nature were not superior to the
-oppositions and did not drive us compulsorily to seek a unity? The life
-which, in distinct contrast to decaying Antiquity, flows through our age
-in a powerful, ceaselessly swelling flood; the unwearied activity of
-this age; the excellence of its work; its passionate longing for more
-happiness and fullness of life, all forbids a hasty and light
-renunciation. It is true that there are hard contradictions, and that
-spiritual power is at present not equal to cope with them; but this
-power is not a given and fixed magnitude: it is capable of an
-incalculable increase. Thus we ought not to be too ready to assert that
-the limitations of the age are identical with the bounds of humanity,
-and we ought not faint-heartedly to discontinue the struggle for a unity
-and a meaning in life.
-
-This problem cannot be acknowledged without at the same time being
-admitted as the most important and the most urgent of all problems. For,
-on the decision concerning the whole, that concerning the spiritual
-character of life depends, and, as this character extends through the
-whole of life, every single matter will be differently decided according
-to the decision concerning the whole. Only purely technical and merely
-formal matters of work may remain unaffected by the problem, but
-wherever a content comes into question it will at once arise and
-manifest its urgency. This problem, therefore, will not suffer itself to
-be thrust into the background; we can neither dally with it nor turn
-aside from it. The individual, indeed, in his sphere of free decision
-and of independent action can withdraw himself from the question, but he
-can do so only at the price of the debasement of the quality of his
-life, only in that, from an independent co-operator in the building up
-of the ages, he becomes a dependent under-worker.
-
-
-(c) THE FORM OF THE PROBLEM
-
-Only a few words are now necessary to come to a more definite
-understanding concerning the form of the problem, which, with compelling
-force, rises into prominence out of all this complexity. Where the
-convulsion is such a fundamental and universal one as it shows itself to
-us to be, it is of the first importance to rise above the existing
-chaos, and to avoid all that which, even indirectly, would lead us back
-to it. Many of the aids which would-be healers of the time's evils
-recommend with vigour therefore need not be considered.
-
-Every attempt to make a direct compromise between the different forms of
-life, to appropriate eclectically this aspect from one and that aspect
-from another, is inadequate. The view that none of the systems of life
-could have won so much power over mankind without containing some kind
-of truth, which may not be lost, has, to be sure, a good deal of truth
-in it. It is first necessary, however, to attain a position from which
-this truth in each case may be ascertained and rightly appreciated; and
-we can only reach such a position in opposition to the confusion which
-surrounds us.
-
-A recourse to history and an adherence to a high achievement of the past
-promise just as little help. One thing is certain: history cannot be
-eliminated from our life; its highest achievements invite us to consider
-them again and again. But what is to be accepted by us as "high,"
-indeed, what as "spiritual" history, is not at all definite without
-further consideration. It is what is esteemed in our own conviction as
-true and great which decides in this matter. We look at history from the
-position of the present and with the spirit of the present. If,
-therefore, as we saw, the present has fallen inwardly into a state of
-complete uncertainty and doubt, our consideration of history must be
-affected in the same way; and, of course, not its external data, but its
-inner spiritual content and meaning must be made uncertain. At the same
-time, we cannot fail to recognise that in reference to the central
-problem with which we are concerned, the present situation is quite
-peculiar, and lacks historical parallel. Sharp contrasts have always
-been found in human experience; and in transitional periods in history
-they have been felt with painful acuteness. But never did they so extend
-over the whole of life and so deeply affect fundamentals; never was
-there so much uncertainty with regard to what should be the main
-direction of endeavour, and the meaning of all human existence and man's
-relation to the universe, as in the present. Everything which to earlier
-ages appeared an inviolable possession has become to us a problem. What
-gain, therefore, in respect of the chief matter could a return to the
-past bring? In his investigation of the far-off ages the scholar may for
-a time forget the present: the attitude of mind which may result in
-bringing him fame for his work would be dangerous and destructive as a
-disposition of the whole of mankind. For we cannot treat that which is
-foreign to our nature as something of our own, without losing our
-distinctive character and degrading our own life to one of mere
-imitation.
-
-Further, it has become impossible to strive for the ideal by selecting
-from the realm of experience a single point and treating it as an
-archimedean point, as absolutely fixed, and shaping our life from it.
-Descartes attempted to do this with his "I think," and Kant with his "I
-ought." But it is very doubtful whether there is an archimedean point in
-man; whether to make such an assumption is not to over-estimate man. The
-experience of history shows further that that which some have taken as
-absolutely primary and axiomatic has been regarded by others as
-derivative, and has been explained in an entirely different manner. The
-presentationalist does not deny the actuality of thought, or the
-naturalistic thinker conscience; but he understands it as a subsidiary
-phenomenon, and therefore can find no support in it. How then can that
-overcome all doubt which itself calls forth serious doubt?
-
-A whole sphere can be withdrawn from the confusion and used to overcome
-it just as little as can a single leading point. For the uncertainty
-with regard to the whole extends far into every individual sphere; and
-such a sphere may appear, to one in one way, and to another in another.
-
-Science is not infrequently treated as though it were enthroned on high,
-supreme above all the struggles and the doubts of existence, and as
-though, from its sovereign capacity, it were able to give a secure
-content of truth to life. It is true that science has much in its forms
-and in its work which is not the subject of dispute; but that with which
-we are here concerned--its intrinsic value, its spiritual character, and
-its place in life as a whole--is by no means a matter beyond dispute. As
-a matter of fact, every system of life has its own assertion in
-reference to this problem: to each to know signifies something different
-and is capable of something different. Whoever decides for one of these
-assertions concerning the nature of knowing has at the same time made a
-decision concerning the systems of life. He stands not outside, but in
-the midst, of the struggle. The same thing holds good with regard to
-morality, which is often welcomed as a secure refuge from the doubts of
-science. For, however certain it may be that in this sphere also there
-is no difference of opinion in respect of many things, as, for example,
-concerning the goodness or badness of certain types of conduct, still,
-the more we come to be concerned with principles the more do problems
-arise. In the immediate present the fact is most unmistakably clear that
-in this field also the fight does not rage around the interpretation of
-a given and acknowledged fact, but around the fact itself. What a
-different purport and meaning morality has in the systems of Religion,
-Immanent Idealism, Naturalism, Socialism, and Individualism
-respectively!
-
-Finally, the attempt to give to life stability and peace by turning to
-the subject, to personality, as to a point removed from all perplexity,
-also fails. We should be the last to place a low estimate upon
-personality, but the conception receives its meaning and value only in
-its spiritual connections, and without these it soon becomes nothing
-more than a mere term, which blurs and blunts the great antithesis of
-existence. If that which is called personality exists as a merely
-individual point by the side of things, then we can never discover how
-occupation with things is capable of transforming life as a whole. If,
-however, in this activity we should win an inward relation to infinity
-and a spontaneity of life, then this admission involves a confession
-concerning reality as a whole which can never be justified by a theory
-which regards the mere individual as the starting-point. That the idea
-of personality implies a problem rather than a fact is indicated by the
-different conceptions of it which we meet in the different systems of
-life. In considering personality, Religion thinks of the immediate
-relation of the soul to God; Immanent Idealism, of the presence of the
-infinite at the individual point; Individualism, of the supremacy of the
-free subject over against the social environment. It is only by reason
-of the common terminology that we fail to recognise how great the
-differences are in the thought on the matter; how that which one regards
-as of value in personality is severely attacked by another.
-
-All these attempts therefore prove to be inadequate because they lead
-back to the state of uncertainty they were meant to overcome. To reject
-them, however, involves us in a certain assertion, which to some extent
-points out the main direction which further investigation must follow.
-No external compromise can help us, but only the winning of a
-transcendent position which is capable of giving to each factor its
-right without reduction; no flight into history can lead us to the
-truth, but only an activity of the present, not, however, of the present
-of the mere moment, but which embraces the work of universal history; no
-placing a single point or sphere into a supreme and all-dominant
-position can help us to overcome division, but only a conflict for a new
-whole; no mere turning to personality is of value before a sure basis is
-given to it from the whole! All leads us to this conclusion: we must
-strive for a new system of life. And to achieve this is not impossible,
-for, as we saw, a system of life is not imposed upon us by fate, but
-must arise from our own activity. If the systems which have previously
-been formed no longer satisfy, why cannot mankind evolve others? Or is
-it proved that the existent forms exhaust all possibilities? A too
-narrow conception of life was seen to be a common defect of all these
-systems; its richness broke through the attempted unifications, and with
-this they fell into irreconcilable contradiction. Should not a synthesis
-be possible which would do more justice to the whole extent of life;
-which need not deny and exclude so much; and which might also unite what
-at first seems absolutely contradictory? Doubtless such a synthesis
-would not be achieved all at once; it is inevitable that growing life
-should involve many discords and movements within itself. Yet this
-synthesis would present itself at least in a manner similar to that of
-the extant systems; and, since it strives after something human, it must
-always be mindful of its limits.
-
-Should such a universal synthesis be at all possible, it must certainly
-be something which is to be found and disclosed rather than something
-which simply is to be produced from ourselves. How could we hope to
-advance to it if it were not somehow involved in the depth of our being,
-and in our fundamental relation to the world, and if it did not already
-exist here in some way? It is a matter, therefore, of arousing to fuller
-independence and at the same time of raising inwardly something which
-exists within us; of recognising something new and even astonishing in
-the old and the supposedly self-evident, so that the truth of the
-universe may become our truth and give power to our life.
-
-A task of this kind is a matter of the whole soul and not merely of the
-understanding; it is a concern of humanity, not of the individual alone.
-Of that which the single individual may contribute towards the
-attainment of the aim it is hardly possible to think humbly enough. And
-yet each has to use his power to the best of his ability; if in cases of
-great necessity and of ill-fortune in matters of an external kind the
-individual considers it only right to hasten to help, how could he
-withdraw himself where the task is the satisfying of a spiritual need
-of mankind? Still less than in the former case is he able to disregard
-the matter as something alien and indifferent to himself. For, in the
-struggle for the whole, he fights at the same time for the unity of his
-own being, for a meaning for his own life.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-THE OUTLINE OF A NEW PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE
-
-INTRODUCTORY REMARKS AND CONSIDERATIONS
-
-
-Our inquiry ended in a definite negation; it showed the present
-condition of things to be marked by severe internal conflict and in
-danger of dissolution from within. Many movements of thought and life
-cross, disturb, limit, and oppose one another. Since what to one seems a
-wholesome truth seems to another pernicious error, all inner community
-of life disappears, and with it all firmness of conviction and joy of
-creative activity. The more these conflicting tendencies develop the
-more do they crush and destroy all the traditional elements of our life;
-the more are the spiritual contents and goods, which the necessities of
-life compel us to adhere to, deprived of their basis in the depths of
-the soul. The confusion which prevails in the present time, with its
-continual change, its rapid alteration of circumstances, its power to
-convey the most diverse impressions, its production of ever new
-combinations, might even attract and entertain us if it were no more
-than a drama. But if the confusion is more than this, if it includes our
-destiny and is meant to signify the whole of our life, then, by reason
-of its detrimental effects upon the whole of life and upon man's
-inwardness, and by reason of its lack of content and soul, it must
-completely fail to satisfy us, and must provoke an energetic resistance.
-True, a condition of things so full of contradictions has also its
-advantages; it accords to the activity of the individual the greatest
-liberty and gives him a feeling of supremacy; its dissolution of
-everything previously regarded as fixed enables uncontrolled feeling and
-unstable mood to acquire power, and at one time to flatter man
-pleasantly, and at another to carry him away impetuously. The
-individual's attainment of freedom, however, gives as yet no content to
-life; and the feeling of supremacy is as yet not a real supremacy. These
-feelings and tendencies, which, within a wider whole of life, certainly
-serve to add to its animation, inevitably lead to a state of vagueness
-and emptiness when they put themselves forward as the whole. The
-supposed aids which are offered us are no more than mere pretences; and
-they become dangerous and harmful so far as they deceive us concerning
-the seriousness and tension of the situation.
-
-The feeling of tension was increased through the historical treatment
-which accompanied our inquiry. For, from the point of view of history,
-the present confusion shows itself to be not a temporary obscuring of an
-indisputable truth, or a tendency on the part of man to become feeble
-and weary in the appropriation of such a truth, but to involve in doubt
-the basal nature of truth itself: the meaning of our life as a whole was
-seen to have fallen into uncertainty. The systems of thought, in the
-light of which we have hitherto regarded reality and steered the
-oncoming flood of appearances, have broken up and dissolved. We have
-become defenceless in face of the impressions of the environment which
-affect us with increasing force, and impel us now in one direction, now
-in another. It is not simply this or that aspect in human existence, but
-the whole of man's nature which has become problematical in this
-dissolution. Formerly, the chief result of the effort of universal
-history had seemed to be that man rises more and more above nature and
-builds for himself a realm with new contents and new values. Now, the
-desire to be something higher than nature appears to be a bold
-presumption; the idea that man has a special position is ably contested,
-and every distinctive task is denied him. Man appears to be far too
-insignificant and to possess far too little freedom to be able to take
-up arms against the world and to obtain the mastery of it. Doubts such
-as these are all the more painful because they are the result of our own
-work; in that we toiled, investigated, and pressed forward, we
-undermined the foundations of our own life; our work has turned with
-destroying power against ourselves. With the increase of external
-results, life as a whole has become increasingly hollow; it has no
-longer an organising and governing centre. Is it to be wondered at if
-the finer spirits of our age are weary, disheartened, and repelled by
-the feeling of the disharmony of the whole of present culture, which
-calls for so much effort from man and yields him so little genuine
-happiness; speaks of truth and lives from semblance and pretence;
-assumes an imposing mien and utterly fails to satisfy when confronted
-with ultimate problems? Is not the power of attraction, which the figure
-of St. Francis of Assisi was recently able to acquire, an eloquent
-witness to the reality of the longing for more plainness and simplicity
-in life? And yet we cannot take up again the position occupied by an
-earlier age; we cannot take up a past phase unchanged. No return to the
-conditions of the past can bring satisfaction to the spiritual needs of
-the present, for a device of this kind always leads by a detour back
-again to the starting-point. Ultimately, it is from ourselves alone that
-help can come; and we can have recourse to no means other than those of
-the living present.
-
-First of all, our state of necessity must be admitted to the full, and
-the danger of a further degeneration of life in respect of its spiritual
-nature adequately estimated. It is always a gain to obtain a clear idea
-of the condition of the matter in question and to grasp the problem as a
-whole. For, through this, we are saved not only from illusions leading
-to error, but also from the authority of the mere present and from a
-feeling of anxiety and fear in the presence of contemporary opinion. If
-this age is in a state of such uncertainty; if it achieves so little for
-that which concerns the foundations of our spiritual existence, then
-neither its agreement can impress us, nor its opposition appal us; but
-the endeavour to make life firm again can seek confidently what is
-needful for it, and, with care in regard to what it shall affirm and
-deny, can follow the way which its own necessities point out.
-
-One fact in particular must tend to increase our confidence in this
-endeavour: the fact, namely, that a negative result, which proceeds from
-our own work, cannot be a mere negation, but must contain an affirmative
-element within it. From what reason could the traditional systems of
-life have become inadequate to man other than that they do not satisfy a
-demand that we ourselves make upon them, and must make upon them? It is
-plain that we need and seek more than we possess, and this seeking
-betrays that our being is wider or deeper than was assumed in those
-systems. Why did each of the different systems become inadequate, unless
-it was that life itself rejected as too narrow the standard involved in
-them? Why was it impossible to regard the different systems as having a
-certain validity, to allow them to continue side by side, and divide our
-existence amongst them, if not because we cannot possibly give up all
-claim to an inner unity? If, then, the present confusion is rooted in a
-wrong relation between our desire and our achievement, we need not
-faint-heartedly surrender ourselves to it. It is plain that there is
-something higher in us, which we have to arouse to life and realise to
-its fullest extent. We may be confident that the necessity of our being,
-which gave rise to the desire, will also reveal some way by which it may
-be satisfied.
-
-A closer consideration of the results of our inquiry leaves no doubt
-with regard to the direction which research has to take to accomplish
-its task. Diverse, fundamentally different systems passed in review
-before us; each came forward as the unadorned and true expression of a
-reality that seemed common to them all; their struggle appeared to be a
-conflict concerning the interpretation of this reality. It became
-evident, however, that the conflict is, on the contrary, in regard not
-to the interpretation but the fundamental nature of reality; different
-realities arise which are irreconcilably opposed. The systems do not
-originate in a common and secure basis: the basis itself is sought, and
-may assume various forms. The conflict therefore is much more over
-ultimate problems than is usually supposed; it arises primarily out of
-the nature of life itself, out of the inner movement which advances
-against the illimitable world around us, and seeks to gain the mastery
-over it. Our life and our world acquire a definite character only by our
-taking up such a movement of counteraction, the particular nature of
-which decides over all further moulding of life. We have seen that when
-we ourselves became active we took up and emphasised one of the
-possibilities which lie within the range of our life, and held it as
-supreme over all the rest; we took as the fundamental relation one of
-the relations of which our life is capable, as, for example, the
-relation to God, to the immanent reason of the universe, to nature, to
-society, to one's own individuality. A particular sphere of life was
-thus marked out; a scheme of life was yielded which appeared capable of
-taking up all experience into itself: according to the starting-point
-adopted, we sketched a distinctive outline and sought to include the
-whole content of human industry, man's universe of work--as we might
-call it--in order to lead to our own perfection. This scheme, assumed to
-be true, then had to show what it was capable of; a powerful effort was
-brought forth to overcome the resistance of a world which, even when it
-was grasped from within, still remained alien to our nature; and,
-ultimately, to form the whole into a unity. We were not, as it were, an
-empty vessel into which a content flows from outside, but we generated
-from within a movement which went onward and onward, and desired to take
-up everything in itself; it was a matter of radically transforming the
-external into an inner life. We could succeed in this only in that life
-self-consciously pressed forward to win new powers; formed connections,
-branches, and graduations; accomplished an inner construction; and with
-progressive self-elevation became an all-inclusive whole, which did not
-possess a reality by the side of itself, but itself became complete
-reality. Thus, life took possession of the world only in that it widened
-itself from within to the world, and, in the appropriation of
-everything alien to it, advanced from the original outline to full
-concreteness.
-
-According to the results of our inquiry, the chief decision in the
-struggle with regard to the nature of the world also depends upon our
-type of life. We convinced ourselves that there was no conception of
-life common to the different systems, but that from its starting-point,
-throughout its whole development, each of them shaped life differently
-from the others; and we saw that the differences even went as far as
-complete opposition. Each system of life had its own kind of experience;
-each formed its own instruments for the appropriation of the world; each
-saw of the infinite that in particular which corresponded to the main
-direction of its own movement. A consideration of all the facts makes it
-quite clear that a decision depends neither upon externals nor upon the
-individual, but upon the inner life and the whole; and further, that
-cognition does not give a solution to the problems of life, but that
-life itself has to reach a solution through its own organisation and
-construction, its own advance and creative activity.
-
-However, that which was the compelling and deciding power in the systems
-of the present day--the struggle for life itself--has not attained to
-complete recognition in them. Rather, they were too quick to begin to
-occupy themselves with objects, and sought to show themselves superior
-in this respect to their rivals; the attention to results prevented the
-correct appreciation and estimation of experience itself. The
-impossibility of coming to an agreement concerning the object then
-forced us back to the life-process; and we were led to the view that the
-object appeared different because we ourselves placed something
-different into it, and that we saw less the object itself than ourselves
-and our life in the object. Thus we were induced to place our attention
-chiefly on the subject; but then there was a strong tendency to leave
-the world outside as a special realm; and the division of work between
-subject and object drove us still further into uncertainty. In the
-midst of such confusion, we did not come to the point of making a
-decision; we did not attain the position from which alone an agreement
-is possible; at one time one system, at another time another carried us
-away. We failed to recognise that, however much we come into contact
-externally, we live spiritually in separate worlds; that, while using
-the same expressions, we speak different languages, and therefore cannot
-possibly understand one another.
-
-The gain is by no means an insignificant one, and a distinctive
-treatment arises, if we become clearly conscious of the fact that the
-shaping of the process of life itself is the chief object of conflict;
-that the movement is not one between world and life, but lies entirely
-within life; and that the essential matter is the perfecting of life
-itself. The recognition of this fact leads us to an immanent mode of
-treatment that has many advantages. The facts involved are now seen to
-lie deeper. The source of experiences is not so much the relation to the
-environment as the movement and expansion of life itself. Striving and
-conduct may now involve a certain concreteness; indeed, the actual
-experiencing of limitations and negations may lead to an elevation above
-them. The type of life does not seek to justify itself, to show its
-truth, through harmony with an external world; it is justified by its
-own advance, its increase in strength, and its upward growth. It is only
-a justification of this kind, a justification within its own realm, that
-can acquire a power to convince and to restore again to life that
-concreteness of which, in opposition to the excess of unrestrained
-reflection and vague feeling, it is to-day in the direst need. If we
-desire to arise above this state of division, and to attain a greater
-unity, we can achieve our aim only by the power of an inner unification
-of our life.
-
-Instead, therefore, of considering the internal from the point of view
-of the external, we must consider the external from the point of view of
-the internal; our knowledge must be essentially a knowledge of self, our
-experience an experience of self, if we would come any nearer to the
-attainment of the aim. Our inner nature is not given to us as something
-complete; it has first to be aroused to life and developed; we need to
-attain to a state of self-determining activity if we would reach the
-highest that we are capable of. From the recognition of the necessity of
-greater activity, and of seeking the roots of the problem at greater
-depths, we become aware of a new relation of thought to life. Although
-thought may involve certain fundamental forms, and may adhere to them in
-all its activity, it is life in its totality, as we understand it, which
-first gives to thought its more detailed form, a characteristic nature,
-clear aims and sure tendencies. Thought, therefore, is inseparable from
-the movement and the advance of life; all hope of progress rests on the
-hope of a further deepening of life; a revealing of new relations, and a
-development of new powers. It is not from mere knowledge, but only from
-the movement of life as a whole that we can make any advance; but the
-life here referred to is one that includes knowledge, and not one that
-takes up a position independent of knowledge, and, in opposition to it,
-bases itself on supposed practical needs.
-
-A treatment such as the one we have indicated has to be followed in the
-investigation upon which we are about to enter. The chief aim of this
-investigation is to reveal and to call forth life; it is not its chief
-aim to interpret life in conceptual terms. It is from this position,
-therefore, that we ask the question--which the conflict of the different
-systems of life forced upon us--whether a unity transcending the
-oppositions exists in us and can be aroused to life through our
-self-determining activity. It is from this position also that we ask the
-further question--which springs out of the struggle between the older
-and the newer modes of thought--whether ultimately man must give up the
-superior position which from early times he has adjudged himself, or
-whether an inner elevation is possible which gives him the power to cope
-with new tasks and new conditions. Whether such a treatment leads to a
-positive result is a question of fact; and what the answer to this is
-cannot be decided by a preliminary consideration, but only by the actual
-investigation.
-
-
-
-
-I. THE MAIN THESIS
-
-(a) THE ASCENT TO THE MAIN THESIS
-
-
-The most expeditious way of arriving at a comprehensive conception of
-human life is to begin with the impression which we get of it as a
-whole; ascertain what problems arise from this, and seek to make what
-headway we can in solving them until we reach a stage where the
-necessity of a particular assertion becomes apparent. From the outset,
-however, the attention will be centred chiefly upon that which
-differentiates human life from other forms of life existing within our
-knowledge; it is from a consideration of this that we shall most readily
-see the whole in its proper light.
-
-
-1. MAN AS A BEING OF NATURE
-
-No one doubts that human life forms the highest point of development
-that comes within our experience; that it is in some way more than mere
-animal life. But what it is that is characteristic in human life as
-distinct from animal life, and how it is to be interpreted, is a matter
-of dispute. From the earliest times there has been a great diversity of
-opinion and conviction concerning this matter, and absolutely
-contradictory views have been maintained. Some thinkers have believed it
-possible to regard human life, in spite of its uniqueness, as
-essentially the same as that of the animal, and to trace back all
-difference to a difference in the quantity of the fundamental nature
-which they all possess; these thinkers did not concern themselves with
-presenting the higher as developed from the lower by a gradual growth.
-Others, on the contrary, regarded human life as something essentially
-new and in its very nature distinct--the beginning of another kind of
-world--and denied to the uttermost a derivation from lower forms; these
-held it to be impossible to avoid the recognition of a break between
-animal and human life. According to which of these positions was
-accepted, life obtained a fundamentally different prospect and a
-fundamentally different task; activity necessarily had different aims
-and sought different paths; the conflict around this problem affected
-the whole sphere of existence.
-
-As a result of the movements and experiences of the nineteenth century,
-this conflict has entered upon a new stage. In earlier times the
-decision had generally been made as a result of the immediate impression
-of the civilised man who was conscious of his superiority; it did not
-seem possible for him to lift himself far enough above his environment;
-the life of his soul, through its distinctive spiritual character,
-seemed to be as distinct from every impulse which nature exhibited as
-the sky is distant from the earth. Science and art, morality and
-religion were accepted as an original possession of man and as the power
-which had dominated his life from the beginning. He appeared to be a
-higher being; and to direct all thought and endeavour towards the
-strengthening of the distinctively human was regarded as the chief
-requirement of life.
-
-The movements which have arisen in the Modern Age have led to a radical
-change in our treatment of this question: this change is chiefly due to
-science. Modern science breaks down the authority of the immediate
-impression, and, in contrast with it, projects a new representation of
-the world. Man is no longer looked upon as occupying a position of
-lonely elevation, but is seen to be in the closest concatenation with
-nature around him, and is regarded, finally, as a mere part of its
-machinery. Many movements of thought tend toward this conclusion and
-support one another. The physical relationship which exists between man
-and the animals could not have been so clearly perceived, and traced
-with such exactitude of detail by modern science had not the fixed
-boundaries, which in our representation had hitherto divided the life of
-the human soul from that of the animals, been abolished. The new view
-was further supported by the results of a keener investigation into the
-nature of psychical life, since in this investigation the traditional
-conception was analysed into its individual constituents, and it was
-sought to explain from their combinations even the highest spiritual
-achievements. The result of this modification of ideas was that the
-inner life of man was assimilated much more closely to nature than
-before; the juxtaposition and the succession of occurrences gained in
-significance; it was recognised that relations did not hold from the
-beginning but are developed gradually. The forces and impulses which
-were operative in this development seemed to have arisen from an actual
-process of nature, without any co-operation of human caprice. Our
-psychical life appeared to be nothing more than a continuation of
-nature. The great divergence between the heights attained in experience,
-and the theories that were formulated to account for them, caused no
-misgivings because the idea of a gradual evolution during an indefinite
-period of time was sufficient to bridge the widest gulf. At the same
-time the conception of society allied itself with that of history and
-lent its support to the general tendency. Every higher aspect of life
-that was accepted formerly as a proof of a supernatural order now became
-a witness to historico-social relationship and, with its new
-interpretation, lost its old mysteriousness. All this was, of course,
-only on the assumption that human life brings nothing essentially new
-with it. Not the least doubt as to the validity of this assumption came
-to those who entered upon this train of thought.
-
-Thought was able to follow this course with the greater confidence
-because it went hand in hand with a change in practical life. By reason
-of the development of modern life, man's relations to the environment
-have become increasingly significant to man. Modern industry and
-physical science have led him from a preponderatingly contemplative
-relation to his environment to an active one; infinite prospects have
-been disclosed; the forces of nature have been pressed more and more
-into the service of mankind. But even in the service which they render
-man these forces have won a power over him, since with a determining
-power they keep his activity and his thought bent upon themselves. The
-material side of life has escaped from the mean estimation in which it
-had previously been held, if not in the conduct of individuals, yet at
-the height of spiritual culture: to the present age it has become the
-indispensable basis of all development. The social movement, with its
-summoning of the masses to complete participation in happiness and
-culture, supports the tendency to estimate material goods more highly.
-With the cessation of oppression and necessity, and with the increase of
-material well-being, a general advance and an inner development of life
-seem assured. The whole tendency which we have considered exhibits man
-as solely and entirely a part of nature, even though nature may be
-conceived of more broadly than it was formerly; and the life of the
-society and of the individual as being determined by natural forces and
-subject to natural laws. How, along with this tendency, the traditional
-conception of the world has been completely transformed; how biology, in
-the sense of natural science, has been taken as the leading point of
-view for the explanation of life, it is unnecessary to follow further,
-since our consideration of the naturalistic system of life has already
-given us an insight into this matter.
-
-
-2. THE GROWTH OF MAN BEYOND NATURE
-
-But even after we had seen an older type of life disappear and a new one
-with the power of youth rise up, gain mastery over souls, and transform
-conditions, despite all its triumphs the new movement manifested
-limitations--limitations which did not arouse the criticism of the
-thinker, but with the compulsion of an actual power the opposition of
-the developing life of mankind. That which we became aware of in this
-connection will become even more clear to us, and impel us to seek for
-new aims, if we now concentrate our attention upon the process of life
-and follow it throughout its experiences.
-
-There cannot be the least doubt that we belong to nature: no one can
-fail to recognise that it penetrates deep into the life of the soul, and
-to a marked extent impresses its own form upon that life: the boundary
-therefore is not between man and nature, but within the soul of man
-itself. But whether nature is able to claim the whole life of the soul,
-or whether at some point there does not arise an insuperable opposition
-to such a claim, is another question. Even the most zealous champion of
-the claims of nature cannot deny that man achieves something
-distinctive: we not only belong to nature, we also have knowledge of the
-fact; and this knowledge is in itself sufficient to show that we are
-more than nature. For in knowledge, be it in the first place however
-meanly conceived, however much concerned with the simple representation
-of external occurrences, there is a kind of life other than that which
-is shown in the simultaneity and succession of events at the level of
-nature. For it is a characteristic of knowledge that in it we hold the
-single points present together and connect them into a chain; but how
-could we do that without in some way rising above the mere succession
-and surveying it from a transcendent point? In this survey we pass from
-earlier to later, from later to earlier; and at the same time we are
-able to hold the multiplicity together: there must be a unity of some
-kind ruling within us; but the mechanism of nature can never produce
-such a unity. A transcendence of nature therefore is already
-accomplished in the process of thought, even when it only represents
-nature, only displays it to our consciousness. Intellectual achievement,
-however, is by no means exhausted in the representation of nature. The
-development of a new scientific conception of nature sufficiently
-demonstrates, as we saw reason to believe, that thought has far more
-independence than such representation implies; that in arranging and
-transforming phenomena it opposes itself to the environment. For the
-scientific conception of nature is not offered to us immediately as
-something complete; it has to be won from the naïve view with toil and
-difficulty. In order to arrive at this scientific conception, thought
-must have a position antecedent to the impressions, must become
-conscious of itself, realise its own strength, and in its activity lead
-from universal to universal. The work of thought is not simply
-transitional: without its continuance that which has been gained would
-be quickly lost. Mere existence gives to nature no present reality for
-our thought and life. To follow the pathway to reality involves the
-overthrow of manifold delusions; and this necessitates such a longing
-for truth, and a power to gain truth, as only a thought, which
-transcends the sense impression, can produce. Not only is transcendence
-of nature demonstrated through the fact of the existence of thought with
-such independence, thought also carries within its being unique demands,
-measures the life of nature by their standard, and in that life
-recognises limitations not simply on this side and that, but also in the
-inner being of the whole. Thought cannot possibly be satisfied with the
-state of things as they are presented; it desires to illuminate,
-penetrate, and comprehend it; it asks "Whence?" and "Why?"--it insists
-that events must have a meaning and be rational. And from this point of
-view it feels the mere actuality of nature--which excites no opposition
-within its own sphere--to be a painful limitation and constraint,
-something dark and meaningless. To thought, a life which is swayed by
-blind natural impulse must be inadequate, indeed intolerable. Similar
-conflicts arise in other directions. Thought embraces a whole and
-demands a whole; it cannot refrain from passing a judgment upon the
-whole. If this treatment is applied by thought to nature, the
-predominant concentration of life in the single individuals and their
-juxtaposition will appear to be a serious defect; all the passionate
-strivings of the individual beings cannot deceive us concerning the
-inner emptiness of the whole. For in nature there is nothing that
-experiences the whole of this movement as a whole; makes the experience
-self-conscious and something of value in itself. In the movement of
-nature everything individual is sacrificed; and there seems to be
-nothing to which this sacrifice brings results which are experienced as
-a good. The same holds good of a culture that resolves human social
-relationship into a simple co-existence of individuals, regards them as
-battling together in the struggle for existence, and believes all
-progress of the whole to be dependent upon their ceaseless and pitiless
-conflict. Even if such a conflict leads to further external results,
-there is no spiritual product: the results are experienced by no one as
-an inner gain. The indescribable meanness of this whole culture, swayed
-as it is solely by the spirit of egoism; the slavish dependence to which
-this culture condemns man; the rigour of the individualism that rules in
-it, cannot possibly escape from the criticism of thought. Thought, in
-transforming this condition of things into an experience--that is, in
-making us conscious of it--at the same time makes it impossible for man
-to accept it as final. Since it makes us more conscious of the
-limitations of this state of life, thought demonstrates--and that
-through this very consciousness of its limitations itself--that our
-whole existence is not exhausted by that individualisation and
-detachment, but that there is a tendency of some sort within us which
-strives towards the unity of the whole.
-
-Problems no less complex arise in relation to time. Looked at from the
-point of view of nature, no inconsistency is felt in the fact that only
-a short span of time is granted to the life of individuals; that they
-come and go in most rapid succession. For here the individuals do not
-rise to the consideration of anything beyond their own time; their
-presentation and desire are exhausted in the present; they feel no
-longing for a continuation of life. The position is radically changed
-with the entrance of thought. Thought does not drift along with time: as
-certainly as it strives to attain truth, it must rise above time and its
-treatment must be timeless: a timeless validity appertains to truth, a
-comprehension of things "under the form of eternity" (_sub specie
-aeternitatis_). To a being who, in his thought, rises to comprehension
-of experience from the point of view of the eternal, all temporal
-limitation, and especially the short duration of human life, is a source
-of surprise and a contradiction. The rapid sequence of generations, the
-perpetual decay of all that impels us so forcibly to desire life and
-holds us so firmly to it, seem to deprive our endeavour of all its
-value, and give to the whole of existence a shadowy, phantom-like
-character. Feelings of this kind have been aroused anew in our own time.
-The restlessness of the activities of our civilisation and the lack of
-real meaning in this civilisation, which to the present age seems to
-constitute the whole of life, need only to be clearly and forcibly
-comprehended by thought, and all its bustle and all its passion cannot
-prevent the emergence of an acute feeling of its dream-like nature.
-
-The feeling of the lack of reality and depth in the life of nature will
-become the keener in proportion to the degree of independence thought
-evolves. For the more thought finds its own basis in itself, the more
-will it treat nature as an appearance, the more clearly will it
-recognise that sense, with all its obviousness and palpability, does not
-guarantee the possession of truth; for truth comes to us only through
-thought. In thought, therefore, the world of nature loses its immediacy
-and becomes a realm of appearances and phantoms.
-
-A consideration of all the facts leads us to the result that a life
-consisting solely of nature and intelligence involves an intolerable
-inconsistency: form and content are sharply separated from each other;
-thought is strong enough to disturb the sense of satisfaction with
-nature, but is too weak to construct a new world in opposition to it.
-Life is in a state of painful uncertainty, and man is a "Prometheus
-bound" in that he must needs experience all the constraint and
-meaninglessness of the life of nature, and must suffer therefrom an
-increasing pain without being able to change this state in any way.
-
-The experience of our time confirms this conclusion in no indefinite
-manner. Since, with regard to the material and the technical, we have
-attained heights never before reached, the bonds between us and our
-environment have increased a thousandfold, and our work has united us
-more closely with the world, we seem now for the first time to attain a
-sure hold of reality. At the same time, however, the activity of
-thought, and with it unrestrained reflection, have also increased
-immeasurably in modern life. This reflection forbids all naïve
-submission to the immediacy of nature; destroys all feeling of security;
-and comes between us and our own soul, our own volition. We are thrown
-back once more on to the world of sense, that we may seek in it a
-support and a scope for our life and effort; and from the point of view
-of this world the work of thought appears to be a formation of clouds.
-But this formation persists; draws us back again to itself and, with all
-its insubstantiality, proves strong enough to make us regard the
-physical as appearance. Our life is divided into two parts which cannot
-and will not coalesce. The emergence of a new life, which can do nothing
-but comprehend the other in thought, and which, while it is indeed
-capable of depreciating the other, cannot itself advance further, is
-seen to involve a monstrous inconsistency.
-
-If the union of nature and intelligence produces so much confusion, we
-are inevitably led to ask whether man does not possess in himself more
-than thought; whether thought is not rooted in a deeper and a more
-comprehensive life, from which it derives its power. It is not necessary
-that such a life should be manifest to us in all its completeness; we
-shall also be compelled to acknowledge it as a fact even if in the first
-place it has to struggle up in face of opposition; however, in its
-development it must show distinctive contents and powers which could not
-be the work of a subjective reflection. If there is a life and a
-development of this kind, it will be necessary for us to comprehend it
-in its various aspects and tendencies, and only when we have
-accomplished this may we endeavour to obtain a representation of the
-whole.
-
-Now, developments of life which defy limitation by the mechanism of
-nature and set a new kind of being in opposition to it do, in truth,
-appear. We recognise such developments in the processes by which life
-liberates itself from bondage to an individualism and its subjectivity,
-and afterwards attains a self-conscious inwardness. We may consider both
-these developments somewhat more in detail. So far as man belongs to
-nature, his conduct is determined solely by the impulse to
-self-preservation; every movement must either directly or indirectly
-tend to the welfare of the individual; everything may be traced back to
-what happens to the individuals. This by no means indicates a distinct
-separation of man from his environment. For even the mechanism of nature
-closely unites that which happens to the individual with that which
-happens around him; the individual can progress only in so far as he is
-united with others: he cannot advance his own well-being without
-advancing that of others. Even in a "state of nature" man takes his
-family, his nation, and the whole of humanity indeed, up into his
-interests; and as this tendency is not bounded from without, but may be
-immeasurably refined and extended in an indefinite number of directions,
-it easily comes to appear that this involves an inner deliverance from
-self, and that another is of value to us for his own sake. But it is no
-more than an appearance; for with all the external agreement the inward
-separation is far greater, and amounts to opposition. Within the limits
-of nature we can certainly concern ourselves with something which is
-only indirectly useful to us; but we can never be concerned with
-anything which is devoid of all use to ourselves; we cannot take such a
-direct interest in the welfare of others as will tend to our own
-disadvantage. If experience gives evidence of such an activity and such
-an interest, in so doing it demonstrates a transcendence of nature. Now,
-experience does give such evidence, and indeed with irresistible
-clearness. A witness to this is seen in the zeal with which man
-habitually attempts to give to his struggles for mere self-preservation
-a better appearance, a semblance of conduct performed out of genuine
-regard for the interests of others. To what purpose all this trouble to
-acquire such an appearance; for what reason this hypocrisy which
-permeates the whole of human life; and whence this appearance itself if
-we belong solely and entirely to nature? Further, whatever elements of
-semblance there may be in the general state of human life, the
-development of that life is by no means nothing but semblance. The
-social life of man is not explicable as a simple collection of
-individuals related to one another in different ways; but in the family,
-in the state, in humanity as a whole there is evolved an inner unity, a
-sphere of life with distinctive values and contents. And as it is of the
-nature of these to transcend the ends and aims of the individuals, to
-arouse other feelings and stimulate to other efforts, so their demands
-may be directly opposed to those of individual self-preservation. Man
-sees himself compelled to decide whether he will pursue his own welfare
-or that of the whole: from the necessity of a decision it is impossible
-to escape. However much in the majority of cases self-interest may
-preponderate, we cannot dispute the possibility of his acting in direct
-and conscious opposition to his own interest; of his subordinating and
-sacrificing himself; and of his doing this "not grudgingly nor of
-necessity," but willingly and gladly; of his feeling this subordination
-to be not a negation and a limitation, but an affirmation and an
-expansion of his life. All who strive for some essential renewal and
-elevation of human life base their hope and trust upon such a
-disposition. A renewal and an elevation of life involve far too much
-toil, conflict, and danger; they demand a renunciation and a sacrifice
-far too great for them to be commended to us by consideration of our own
-welfare, or for them to dispense with the necessity of counting upon an
-unselfish submission, a sincere sympathy, a genuine love. That which was
-produced with glowing passion in heroic beginnings must with a quieter
-warmth pervade all progress also. An inner community of minds is
-indispensable if the whole of culture is not to become a soulless
-mechanism and inwardly alien to us. It is true that the external way of
-regarding the facts of life often fuses together as one, lower and
-higher, a continuation of nature and the beginning of a new life.
-Language also supports this tendency, since it indicates fundamentally
-different psychical states with the same terms. Yet the love in which
-the union with others is sought only in order to advance one's own
-interests, and the love which finds in this union a release from the
-limitations of the natural _ego_, and gains a new life, remain distinct.
-The sympathy which feels the sufferings of others to be unpleasant
-because one's own complacency is disturbed by them, and which in
-consequence fades away and disappears as soon as the sight of the
-suffering comes to an end, is absolutely separated from a sympathy which
-extends to the soul of the other, and possessing which, in order to
-contribute to the relieving of the other's need, one willingly
-sacrifices one's own complacency: a sympathy, therefore, which extends
-its interest and help without limit beyond all that simply has to do
-with the relation to the environment. How much real love and genuine
-sympathy the experience of humanity shows is a question in itself. Even
-as possibilities of our being, as matters of thought which occupy our
-attention, and as tasks and problems, they give evidence of a
-development of our life beyond the limits of nature.
-
-This forgetfulness of self is a kind of deliverance of life from the
-limitations and the interests of the individual: a new relation of man
-to man, of person to person, thus arises and brings about an essential
-change, indeed a complete transformation of aims and feelings. The
-deliverance is effected in another direction with the emergence of a
-new relation to things, to the object. In the realm of nature everything
-that is external has a value for man only as a means and an instrument
-to the advancement of his own welfare; from the point of view of nature,
-it is impossible to understand how a thing could attract us on account
-of a content and a value of its own. As a matter of fact, the object
-does attract us and acquire a power over us in this manner, and this not
-merely here and there but over a wide area in movements which affect and
-transform the whole of life. Nothing else differentiates work--viewed
-spiritually--from other activity, and nothing else elevates work above
-other activity than this: that in work the object is inwardly present;
-and that man may make its moulding and extension a motive, and find this
-a source of joy. This seems to be something self-evident, only because
-it happens daily to us and around us; and we do not recognise a new type
-of life in it, simply because in human life it is usual to find that
-work only gradually attains complete independence. For it is the
-pressing necessity of life, the impulse to self-preservation, that first
-arouses us from our natural inactivity and compels us to occupy
-ourselves with things; and in this change from inactivity to activity it
-is our own advantage that we first seek. But that which to us, to
-commence with, was simply a means; that which was perhaps most
-unwillingly done, begins to attract and hold us more and more for its
-own sake; becomes an end in itself, and is able so to charm us that it
-forces the idea of utility completely into the background. It is
-possible for work to become so attractive, and of such a value in our
-estimation, that to ensure its success we can make sacrifices, and can
-pursue it in direct opposition to our own welfare. Only when the object
-is regarded and treated in this manner can it win an inner proximity to
-us; reveal to us its relations; develop characteristic laws; make
-demands upon us and call forth our power to meet them. In this way it
-constrains us, but the constraint is not exerted upon us from without,
-but proceeds from our own decision and activity. We do not feel the
-relation to be an oppression, but rather as a witness to our freedom; in
-the subordination to the object we feel that we are caught up into a
-life more comprehensive, clearer and richer than any we can develop from
-the subjective. We reach a stability and a calm in ourselves, and have
-within our own being a support against all vacillation and error. Work,
-therefore, produces relations which on the one hand unify the endeavour
-of the individual and fashion his life as a definite whole; and on the
-other, bind humanity into a creative community. In the former case we
-have vocation, with its demands and its limitations, it is true, but
-with them also its strengthening and its elevation of life; in the
-latter complexes of work develop in whole departments of life, in which
-the individuals find themselves side by side and are ultimately united
-into the community of an all-inclusive whole of culture. From this
-something is evolved which is independent not only of the choice but
-also of the interests of mere man: a kingdom of truth, a world of
-thought transcending all human subjectivity is formed. Thus we see
-something grow up within the human sphere which leads man beyond
-himself, and which is valid not simply for him but even in opposition to
-him. The whole matter bristles with problems: from the point of view of
-the life of nature this new life must appear to be an insoluble riddle;
-and yet it has far too much value and certitude to be banished as
-imaginary.
-
-Along with this detachment of life from the mere individual and the mere
-subjectivity of man, there is a liberation from external ties, and the
-development of a self-conscious spirituality. As at the level of nature
-life is spent in the development of relations with the environment, in
-action and reaction, so the form of life in man remains bound, since the
-life of the soul cannot dissociate itself from the experience of sense.
-The apparent inwardness that is evolved at this level is simply an
-after-effect of sensuous feelings and desires. So far as the life of
-nature extends, the forces and laws of the life of the soul will only
-refine what the external world exhibits in coarser features. The
-mechanism of nature also extends into human life; natural impulses of
-conduct, as well as association of ideas, reveal the fact that the life
-of the soul is in complete dependence upon natural conditions. From this
-point of view it seems impossible that inwardness should ever become
-independent. The actual experience of human life, however, shows that
-what is thus regarded as impossible is indisputably real. The detachment
-from the mere subjectivity of the _ego_ and the development of universal
-values, which exist over against us, can be effected only if the basis
-of life lies deeper than the contact with the environment. It was a work
-of thought which brought about the transition and gave birth to the new
-life; only with the help of thought did it ever become possible to form
-relations of a new kind and to rouse man's interest in them. The
-realities which arose were not of sense but conceptual, ideal. The more
-this movement increased in extent, the more human existence was
-transformed into realities of thought. Is not such a transformation
-evident when in ourselves we see before all else, not the sensuous being
-of nature, but a personality or an individuality; when in relationship
-with one another we form the idea of the state, and feel that we are
-ourselves members of the state; when we regard and value the cognate
-beings around us from the conception of humanity? As a matter of fact, a
-strong tendency in this direction runs through the whole history of
-humanity: sense does not disappear, but is taken up more and more into
-something conceptual; the world of thought gives us increasingly the
-point of view from which we fashion our lives. We find a progressive
-spiritualisation of religion, of morality, of law, of the whole life of
-culture. In everything life seeks a deeper basis; an inwardness wins an
-independence of the environment, and exercises on the environment a
-transforming power. The relations and the order of the realities of
-thought manifest a law different from that of sense presentations with
-their mere juxtaposition. For in the former case an inner unity, an
-objective relation is evolved, and the significance of the individual
-member is estimated according to its position in the whole. The
-distinctive attributes in a conception form no mere collection, and the
-statement of a syllogism no mere sequence; rather, in both, a
-comprehending act of thought grasps the manifold and arranges the
-separate elements according to their relationship within the whole. The
-course of presentation with its mere succession is by no means simply
-suppressed through this development of thought; it persists and governs
-consciousness on the surface. But the surface is not the totality of the
-intellectual life; through it and transcending it an activity of thought
-manifests itself, forms new connections, and maintains itself against
-all opposition.
-
-Accordingly, the power that thought exercises is fundamentally different
-from the physical power of association, or even of custom. In the case
-of thought there is an insistence upon a consistent and related whole
-which, even though externally insignificant, produces most powerful
-effects. If contradictions exist in our world of thought and condition
-of life, they may become intolerable, and the desire to remove them lead
-to the emergence of impetuous movements. If, on the other hand, we
-recognise that certain things which formerly seemed to be unrelated,
-even though they existed side by side, are really inwardly related; or
-if, again, an assertion involves a consequence that has not hitherto
-been deduced, then the demand, that these things shall be unified and
-this consequence developed, is capable of breaking down even the
-strongest opposition. In this matter an invisible is capable of more
-than a visible power. Of course, thought in isolation has not such a
-power; it acquires it only through its relation to a wider life and in
-championing the cause of that life. For thought is wont to defend the
-life of the individual, of a people, a historical situation of humanity,
-on the one hand from an abundance of inconsistencies, and on the other
-from dissolution and incompleteness, without any conflict growing out of
-it. Life as we experience it immediately is anything but a regular
-logic of the schools. In itself simple perception of the fact that an
-inconsistency exists, or that ideas which have been regarded as valid
-require further development, need not arouse the feeling of man and lead
-him to assert his activity; he can acquiesce, and leave the condition of
-things unaltered; he can voluntarily resign himself to the
-inconsistencies and incompleteness. But, nevertheless, there is a point
-at which this condition of inconsistency can be endured no longer, at
-which to transcend it becomes the dominant task of life. This point is
-reached when the confusion is no longer something external to us which
-we contemplate, but enters into the substance of our life, so that the
-inconsistency becomes a division, and an attitude of inconsequence
-towards it a limitation of our own being. The solving of the problem
-then becomes an essential part of our spiritual preservation. And in
-that it commands the whole energy and passion of such preservation it
-can do that of which thought, with its necessity, is not in itself
-capable, it can rouse our whole life to activity and break down even the
-strongest opposition. It is from the inner presence of a determining and
-moulding process of life that thought itself first obtains a
-characteristic form, and is able to impress it upon things, and so
-subject them to itself. A spiritual self-preservation of this kind is
-fundamentally different from all physical self-preservation: for the
-former, it is not a matter of the self asserting its place in the
-co-existence of things, but of becoming an independent inward nature,
-and of establishing a distinctive whole of life. The exact significance
-of spiritual self-preservation is for the present obscure enough; but
-whatever it may be, it derives its power from within and not from
-contact with the environment.
-
-How deeply these inner movements are rooted in human life the so-called
-historical ideas show with particular clearness. Certain thought
-complexes, or rather certain tendencies of life, arise, and win an
-overwhelming power in opposition to all narrowly human concerns. They
-force the activity of mankind into particular channels; they follow out
-their consequences with pitiless rigour; they speak to us in a tone of
-command, and require absolute obedience. Neither the interests of
-individuals nor those of whole classes prevail against them; every
-consideration of utility vanishes before their inner necessity. The
-history of religions, for example, has often shown such an astonishing
-consistency in the following of characteristic tendencies that their
-adherents could see in it the working of a divine spirit. Similarly, the
-Enlightenment, in its time with overpowering might seized minds and
-penetrated deeply into every department of life; to-day we have a
-similar experience in the case of the social movement. On all sides
-something is acknowledged as an imperative requirement, as indispensable
-for the spiritual persistence of man--something which cannot be brought
-in from outside, and which may indeed be entirely inconsistent with
-external conditions. Has not the conflict of inner necessities with the
-external circumstances that were opposed to them been a leading motive
-power in history, and is not all genuine progress achieved through such
-an opposition?
-
-Again, the great force that has been exerted in the movement of history
-in the detection and the elimination of contradictions can be explained
-only in this context. Logic, as we saw, played an unassuming rôle in
-this matter, and the indolence of man always inclined to easy
-accommodation and compromise. It was the increased vital energy, the
-adoption of a particular issue as the main issue, that made movements,
-which had long existed in a state of harmony and peace, irreconcilable
-enemies, and drove them to a life-and-death struggle. With a lower level
-of spiritual activity the Middle Ages unsuspiciously united a religion
-of ecclesiastical organisation with a religion of personal feeling and
-disposition; and it did not feel that there was an inconsistency in
-their union so much as that one was the completion of the other. As soon
-and so far, however, as in the Modern Age spirituality won more
-independence and more self-consciousness, and felt itself to be the
-centre of the whole, it was inevitable that a dependence upon an
-external order should be experienced only as an intolerable oppression;
-and the division of life between the one and the other became an
-impossibility. It was necessary only that a powerful and passionate
-personality, like that of Luther, should take up the problem, and make
-it the sole object of his effort, and the hour of revolution had come.
-How meanly they think of the controlling forces of history who would
-trace back such changes to the selfishness or the vanity of individuals!
-Looked at from our point of view, the inner changes within the life of
-universal history often appear to be simplifications--cases of energetic
-concentration on the essential, and of fundamental separation of the
-subsidiary. The truly great carry on a ceaseless conflict against the
-chaotic confusion which the life of the majority is wont to produce ever
-anew--a condition in which matters of the first importance are confused
-with those that are subsidiary; all inner gradation is lacking; and the
-great is treated as something insignificant, and the insignificant as
-something great. There is a struggle to secure a clear differentiation
-and gradation; to establish a centre, and to transform life into a
-genuinely self-conscious life. Have not all the principal revivals of
-religion, of morality, of education, been simplifications?
-
-These movements show life in a particular form; something emerges in it
-which, unconcerned with the weal and the woe of man, follows its own
-course and makes absolute demands; and, more than anything else,
-disturbs and destroys his calmness and complacency. How heavily Germany
-has had to pay for the movement of the Reformation by being thrown back
-politically, nationally, and economically! It is inevitable that all
-movements of an ideal kind, the social movement of the present included,
-should appear from the point of view of natural well-being, troublesome
-and pernicious disturbances. They can be regarded as something higher
-only when we acknowledge that life does not consist entirely in external
-relations, or in the endeavour to attain harmony with the environment,
-but that an inner task grows out of life itself, and first gives to
-human existence a value and a dignity.
-
-In the development of a self-consciousness and of a movement of life
-itself, we rise above the motive of utility, by which nature is swayed.
-It is a moral element in the widest sense; it is the consciousness of
-something objectively necessary, unconditionally transcending the ends
-of the narrowly human, that first gives to convictions axiomatic
-certainty and to conduct the right energy. This moral element attains to
-a more independent display in the moral self-judgment of man that is
-called "conscience." True, this conception has been the subject of much
-error and has been much over-estimated. Not only has the moral judgment
-less power over man than is frequently assumed, but that which is called
-conscience is often--generally, in fact--nothing more than a by-product
-of custom and of accommodation in human social life. In this case the
-inner life has still attained no independence, but remains dependent
-upon the environment; and the disposition thus produced is nothing more
-than a feeling of aversion to the results of conduct, nothing more nor
-less than concealed fear of punishment--a state of the soul which the
-most prominent thinkers have, with good reason, stigmatised as a
-manifestation of weakness and cowardice. But, however much that is
-foreign to it and of an inferior order may have been associated with
-conscience, nevertheless, judging conduct, as it does, according to the
-inward disposition and not according to consequences, conscience is a
-unique, original phenomenon. To whatever extent conscience, as we know
-it, may have had its source in something external, and in however great
-a degree it may depend upon changing circumstances, it is nevertheless
-impossible to explain the fundamental fact by reference to the
-environment. For, if our life depended solely and entirely upon the
-environment and no movement arose from within, all influence from
-without could do nothing but subdue us by sheer force; there could never
-be an independent recognition and acceptance of the command addressed
-to us; never the feeling of an inner responsibility for conduct; never
-an independent extension of the original precept; and yet all these
-phenomena are in fact found in human experience. True, we are affected
-very greatly by external forces; but that they may achieve what they do
-a movement from within must meet them, take them up, and carry them
-further. The enormous amount of pretence which flourishes amongst us
-with regard to matters of morality, and which so easily obscures our
-vision for the chief matter, would be unintelligible if the spiritual
-did not manifest some kind of independence in the moral judgment. Unless
-there is such a development towards independence, the moral judgment
-must also, as far as its content is concerned, be determined by the
-condition of the social environment: it could never follow a course of
-its own; never give rise to anything new; never enter into inner
-conflict with the environment. Yet, as a matter of fact, we find these
-tendencies in abundance. The individual is able, in the light of his own
-moral conviction, to approve and value something which all around him
-reject; and conversely, to condemn and reject something which all around
-him esteem and respect; and this he is able to do under the compulsion
-of inner necessity, and not simply out of a love of vain paradox. This
-opposition of individuals to the condition of things in the social
-environment has been the main source of all inner progress in matters of
-morality. For it is in matters of morality, in particular, that that
-which hitherto had given no offence has become intolerable to
-individuals; and that new and imperative demands such as had never been
-made before have emerged with constraining power. Or did the idea of
-humanity, the abolition of slavery, and the commandment to love one's
-enemies, for example, arise in some other way? If in respect of such
-matters as these that which on its first appearance was paradoxical
-quickly came to be regarded as self-evident, what else was operative in
-bringing about this result than an inner necessity, from which, when
-once we become conscious of it, we can never again escape? Suitable
-conditions in the social environment were, of course, also necessary for
-the fulfilment and the extension of those moral requirements; but they
-could never have originated from the environment, or have derived from
-it their unconditional nature, their certainty of victory, and their
-indifference to all external consequences: qualities without which they
-could not have effected what they have.
-
-In the life of the individual the moral judgment manifests its power in
-affirmation as well as in negation. If it approves one's disposition and
-conduct, it gives to life a greater stability and joyfulness; if it
-condemns, then existence is paralysed by division. In this experience it
-is implicitly assumed that the distinction of good and evil has its
-source neither in the preferences of the human individual nor in those
-of the human society; but that in this antithesis a new order that is
-present only to the inner nature is revealed.
-
-We see, therefore, that in contrast with its attachment to the external,
-life attains an independent inwardness which we are compelled to
-acknowledge, however mysterious the inward may at present be to us, and
-however little we may be able to define its nature more closely. Earlier
-in our investigation we were led to recognise a movement of life from
-the narrowness of the individual to the comprehensiveness of the whole.
-It is obvious that our two results are closely connected with each other
-and refer to each other. For we attain a unity, as contrasted with the
-juxtaposition of the elements of the visible world, only through a
-powerful activity from within; but this activity cannot emerge unless
-life forms a whole in contrast with its dissipation into disconnected
-points.
-
-These two developments are obviously sides of the same life--a life
-which bears a totally different character from that of the psychical
-life which forms a mere continuation of nature. Within the soul itself
-there is a distinction between two levels, of which that other than
-nature may in agreement with established usage be called "spiritual,"
-however little may be implied by this expression; however mysterious,
-indeed, the conception may for the present be. In contrast with the old,
-this new level is unmistakably at a disadvantage. The old seems to
-include the whole range of human existence; the new, on the other hand,
-must toilsomely struggle for a place of some kind. Nevertheless, in
-spite of its external insignificance, the spiritual gives birth to a
-movement of no mean character; in face of all opposition it seeks to
-form a centre of life of its own, and to make this the chief basis of
-effort; it is to be found thus in the life of mankind as revealed in
-history, and also in that of the individual. Within the conception of
-culture we comprehend all achievements distinctive of man. But what is
-culture if it does not assure to man a position independent of nature;
-if it does not set up ideals which can arise only out of a new life?
-Ultimately the chief motive-power of culture is the longing of mankind
-for a new kind of being in contrast to that of nature. Culture
-necessarily becomes superficial and empty when it directs human striving
-to external objects and does not lead through all occupation with
-externals to its own development and to the advance of its own being.
-The work of culture is genuine and powerful only when man seeks in it
-his own true and ultimate self.
-
-How every development of the spiritual advances towards the attainment
-of a new unity of life may be more clearly seen in the case of the
-individual, in relation to whom we meet with the conceptions of
-personality and of spiritual individuality. However much confusion there
-may be in the ordinary use of these conceptions, the conception of
-personality merits the estimation in which it is held only if it is
-regarded as the bearer of a new life in contrast to that of nature, and
-not simply as something added to nature. The development is more evident
-with the conception of spiritual individuality. For such an
-individuality is by no means something given to a man in the natural
-characteristics which he brings with him into life. Within this
-particular nature, as a rule, many things, significant and
-insignificant--things which are original in himself and things which are
-due to external influence--are chaotically confused; and, as it lacks an
-inner unity and an adjustment of the different aspects, one aspect may
-directly contradict another. If the individual is no more than these
-natural characteristics, he can become active as a whole only through a
-summation of the multiplicity, and not through a dominating and
-organising unity. With the transition to the new kind of life a desire
-for such a unity awakens and gives rise to a definitely characteristic
-movement. A unity must be found within us in some manner; it must be
-included in the range of possibilities open to us. But in order to
-obtain supremacy it must be grasped, be appropriated and strengthened by
-our self-activity. We ourselves therefore become a task in the treatment
-of which it is possible to fall into serious error. Looked at from this
-point of view our spiritual nature is seen to be the product of our own
-activity. We cannot fail to recognise a peculiar interweaving of freedom
-and fate in our existence.
-
-The inner history of all creative minds shows how great may be the
-inspiration and the tension which arise in this striving to realise a
-spiritual nature; an inspiration and a tension which are evident even
-when the main direction for the realisation of this nature has been
-easily found and only the more detailed form has to be sought: they are
-still more apparent when the main direction itself is in question. How
-toilsome it has often been for a man to come to that in which his
-strength lay, and with the aid of reflection to attain a state of secure
-creative activity; to unite all forces to a common achievement; and to
-make a distinct advance beyond the traditional position of the spiritual
-life! Life was by no means a completed gift and something to be easily
-enjoyed, even in the case of natures lavishly equipped by destiny--as,
-for example, Goethe: it was in a struggle for itself that it won a
-complete independence and a proud superiority over everything external.
-This struggle was being fought in all his cares, in all thought for
-natural and social well-being, all utilitarian considerations in regard
-to the externals of life. It gave to the man amid all his doubts and
-agitations the certainty of being something unique, something
-indispensable; at the same time it lifted him into an invisible world,
-and enabled him to understand his own life as an end complete in itself.
-How different this is from the struggle for existence, for the
-preservation of physical life; and how clearly a new life, another kind
-of reality, arises in these movements! The new life does not by any
-means appear only at the heights of spiritual creation; rather it would
-be true to say that the life which is present in the whole of human
-existence becomes most easily discernible at these heights. The movement
-towards a spiritual individuality may be begun in the most simple
-conditions; and it is not to be estimated according to the degree of its
-achievement. For, where world stands against world, everything depends
-upon the decision with regard to the fundamental principle, and this may
-be made at any point. The mere possibility of making such a decision
-testifies here irrefutably to a reality: the reality of a new order of
-things.
-
-
-3. THE INNER CONTRADICTION OF THE NEW LIFE
-
-The conclusion we are led to is that a new life distinct from that of
-nature arises in our soul. With a great diversity of manifestations, it
-surrounds us with an indisputable actuality; no one can fail to
-recognise that something of importance, something distinctive comes to
-pass in us. But as soon as we try to comprehend these manifestations as
-a whole, and to ascertain the meaning of the whole, a difficult problem
-arises. It is comparatively easy, however, to come to an understanding
-as to the negative aspect of the matter. It is obvious that the new life
-is not an embellishment or a continuation of nature; it would bring with
-it something essentially new. Again, it is obvious that it is not a
-product of a single psychical function, such as thought or feeling; it
-would form a whole transcending the psychical functions, and from this
-whole determine the form of each function distinctively. But what is
-this new reality and this whole to which the course of the movement
-trends? The more we reflect over the question the more strongly we feel
-that it is a direction rather than a conclusion that is offered to us in
-this matter; something higher, something inward and so on is to evolve,
-but what is embedded in the inward and in what this supremacy is based
-is at present not apparent. Further, every attempt at a more definite
-orientation at once reveals to us a wide gulf, indeed a harsh
-contradiction, between the content of that which is sought and the form
-of existence from which it is sought. The chief impulse of the spiritual
-life is that it wills to liberate us from the merely human; to give us a
-share in the life of the whole; to remove us from a happening between
-things to their fundamental happening. Seen from within, the history of
-humanity is primarily an increasing deliverance of life from bondage to
-the narrowly human, an emergence of something more than human, and an
-attempt to shape our life from the point of view of this: it is an
-increasing conflict of man with himself. At the same time, however, it
-is a taking up of the whole into himself; since man in all his planning
-and striving is related to the whole, it seems to him that his own
-nature must remain alien to himself if the whole does not disclose
-itself to him and allow him to participate in a life which has its
-source in ultimate depths; if in the life of the whole he does not find
-a purer and a more genuine self. The idea of truth impels us beyond all
-the limitations to which a particular being is subject, beyond all
-communication of things from without. There must be nothing between us
-and reality; the inner life of reality must become ours, and thus our
-life will emerge for the first time from a shadowy existence to full
-reality, from the narrowness of the mere individual to the
-comprehensiveness of infinity. The idea of the good makes similar
-demands. To the spiritual movement, the advancement of merely human
-well-being is far too mean an aim. This movement makes us clearly
-conscious of the triviality of mere happiness; of the oppressive and
-destructive effect of a continual reference to our own subjectivity; and
-of the unworthiness of treating love and justice as only means to our
-welfare. It becomes at the same time an urgent duty to break through the
-narrow limitations of the natural ego, and to conduct our life from the
-point of view of objective truth and comprehensiveness, and so for the
-first time to become capable of genuine love and justice.
-
-It is true that these aims are lofty, and, we feel we have the right to
-say, aims that may not be rejected. But it is not at all evident how
-they are to be reached from the position of man; it is not at all clear
-how man shall press forward from mere existence to the creative basis,
-from the part to the whole: for his particularity and his mere existence
-hold him fixed. But in his existence nature preponderates by far:
-individual tendencies of a new order do appear; but how could they in
-their state of isolation and weakness bring about a revolution and place
-life on a new foundation? As a matter of fact, we usually find these
-impulses to a new life drawn into the service of natural and social
-self-preservation, and, over against the passionate struggle for
-existence, condemned to complete impotence and shadowiness.
-
-The whole life of culture makes us clearly conscious of this perplexity.
-The essence of that life consists in this, and by this alone can it be
-held as true--that it wills to build up a new, spiritual reality within
-the sphere of humanity. But to what extent is such a reality
-recognisable on the basis of experience? In and with all civilisation
-man continues obstinately bent upon the attainment of his own ends: the
-struggle for material goods exerts an immense influence upon and
-controls men; an indescribable amount of pretence and hypocrisy
-accompanies and surrounds the spiritual movement. Between that which man
-really strives for, and that which he asserts that he is striving for,
-and which perhaps it is his intention to strive for, there is great
-divergence. Falsehood like this is not limited to individuals; our whole
-culture is one monstrous deception in so far as it promises to develop
-humanity to something new and higher, while in reality the new is
-occupied mostly with polishing up the old, the life of nature, to give
-it a glittering appearance. It is on this account that in times of
-criticism and introspection so much opposition has been offered to
-culture; that such passionate scorn has been aroused against the
-hypocrisy and pretence which pervades its whole life. But although we
-are fully aware of its deplorable state, we do not break its power over
-us. It is perhaps the most bitter of all our experiences that we are
-held fast under the spell of a condition of things concerning the vanity
-and futility of which no one with any insight has the slightest doubt.
-
-However, in moralising over this state of things we ought to guard
-ourselves from becoming too passionate. For it is a question whether it
-could be otherwise; whether the fault is in any way in our will, and is
-not solely and entirely in the nature of our being itself. For it is
-certainly a contradiction throughout that man, who is an individual
-being existing by the side of others, and whose life belongs to the
-domain of experience, should set himself in a universal life
-transcending all particularity and live from the bases of reality. How
-can that which is primarily a part of a given world build up a new
-world? Ideas like those of the true and the good are, from this point of
-view, simply delusions, manifest impossibilities; man may trouble and
-weary himself with them, but all his endeavour only leads him into a
-state of greater confusion. These ideas are to him for ever an "other"
-world; he may expand himself and develop, but he does not come a step
-nearer by doing so.
-
-It is true that in striving for truth, man advances beyond sense
-presentation to the activity of thought; but the thoughts always remain
-his--thoughts of mere man. However much he may widen his own sphere as a
-consequence of his reflection upon them, he does not go beyond it. In
-history also the striving for a scientific comprehension of truth
-appears to be a vain struggle; the passing through different phases has
-not brought it nearer its aim so much as, with ever-increasing
-clearness, it has manifested the impossibility of attaining what is
-sought.
-
-The ancient conception of truth, with its belief in a relationship of
-the being of man with the whole; with it assumption of an easy
-transference of life from one to the other; with its view of truth as an
-agreement of thought with an external reality, has through the course of
-life become untenable; it has been rejected through the influence of the
-tendency of our being to become more inward. For this tendency
-necessarily led to a detachment from the environment of the world, and
-to a separation of the two sides of our experience. We became clearly
-conscious of this separation at the beginning of the Modern Age. We saw
-that, if we were not to give up all claim to truth, only one course
-remained possible: to make a division within the human domain, a
-division between a merely human and something else which might be
-regarded as the presence of universal and genuine life in man. And so
-Spinoza distinguished an objective thought from the springs of the
-emotions; Kant distinguished practical reason from the theoretical which
-is bound up with the limitations of human nature; and Hegel elevated the
-thought-process, which manifests itself in the work of universal
-history, far above the opinions and the wishes of individuals. Each of
-these championed a distinctive conception of truth and a characteristic
-form of the spiritual life; but with regard to all attempts we come to
-doubt whether even that proclaimed as more than human is not still
-within the domain of man; whether in every case we do not wrongly
-declare the last point which we reach to be the deepest basis of
-reality.
-
-The position is somewhat similar with regard to the idea of the good. In
-the attempts to which we have referred, it passed current as a
-deliverance from all selfish happiness, which was felt to be intolerably
-narrow. A new, purer, and more comprehensive life is to proceed from
-the winning of a new position. Now, there are many different conceptions
-of happiness, and higher levels are distinguished plainly from lower.
-But the highest level does not transcend human desire; man must bring
-all into relation with his own well-being. He cannot in opposition to
-his own well-being adopt something alien as an end in itself; his
-activity can be aroused for nothing which has not some value for
-himself. In this case also, therefore, the bounds of his life hold him
-fast, and, unless these bounds are transcended, the good cannot be
-distinguished from the useful. Of this a clear confirmation is furnished
-by the experiences of religions. In their origin they wished to free man
-from himself and to set him in a new life--whether they promised
-tranquillity in a surrender to the infinite whole or won a positive
-content by the revelation of a kingdom of divine love. How soon the
-succession of events has led back to a quest of happiness! How soon has
-it become evident that the religions have far less revealed a new world
-to the majority of mankind than chained them more firmly to the old; and
-that they easily arouse to greater power the raw instinct of life, which
-they desired to overcome!
-
-We seem to be shut in on all sides: it seems a monstrous inconsistency
-to wish to build up from man a world transcending man; to remove him
-into a world other than that of a man. A world of this kind is, however,
-essential to the spiritual life; with its abandonment that life is only
-a delusion; and the less intelligent people who reject as a meaningless
-folly all striving for the true and the good seem to be right.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Why do we refuse to adopt this view, and to discontinue an endeavour the
-aims of which appear to be unattainable? In the first place, because the
-movement cannot be given up so easily as those critics imagine who adopt
-this view; for it does not consist simply of explanations and theories
-that might be completely refuted by rigorous argument, but a certain
-reality has been evolved, desires aroused, forces called into life, and
-movements inaugurated. Even if they halt in their course they were
-something; they do not disappear therefore before the attacks of
-Scepticism; further, however mean their results may be, they prove to be
-strong enough to indicate the limitations in the life of nature, and to
-make it inadequate for us. The matter is the more mysterious in that the
-striving is anything but a product of the natural desire for happiness.
-For the movement disturbs all our complacency; it leads man to be
-discontented with that which hitherto had fully satisfied him; it
-surrounds him with fixed organisations; desires from him much labour and
-sacrifice, and makes existence, not easier, but more difficult for him.
-Delusions are wont to deceive us by pleasing pictures; to attract us
-with the promise of pleasure and enjoyment. How does a delusion, that
-imposes so much toil and trouble upon us, win so much power over us?
-There is another matter to be considered in this connection. A complete
-renunciation can appear possible only because it is not clearly
-perceived how much which we cannot give up and which ultimately we have
-no desire to give up is involved in it. Only a want of clearness of
-thought, and still more a weakness of character, could wish to retain in
-the particular case what was given up as a whole; could affirm as effect
-what it denied as cause. As soon as this course is recognised to be
-impossible, it becomes evident that with the rejection of the spiritual
-life everything is abandoned which gives to our life dignity, greatness,
-and inner unity, and joins us to others with an inward bond. Realities
-such as love and honour, truth and right, must be regarded as empty
-forms; and even science must come to an end, because there is no longer
-any inner unity of work, no objective necessity.
-
-Such considerations again show us that a complete negation is
-impossible; and it seems that we must remain for ever in painful
-suspense between an unattainable affirmation and an impossible negation.
-We might be able to endure this condition of affairs if it concerned a
-problem which arose in reference to something of little importance to
-our life, something that we could relegate to the background, and simply
-permit to lie there, without compromising our life. But our problem lies
-at the centre of life; is, in fact, itself the centre. To be left in
-suspense here means to condemn life as a whole to a state of paralysis,
-to surrender it to complete dissolution. Against this everyone who has
-any vital energy in him will contend; with his whole might he will seek
-to escape from a condition so intolerable; he will not hold back from
-making a bold venture, mindful of the words of Goethe, "Necessity is the
-best counsellor."
-
-In seeking a way out of the contradiction, it is essentially necessary
-not to forget the source of the contradiction. We saw that source to be
-in the fact that the spiritual life would set up a new world, and at the
-same time remains bound up with the merely human and presents itself as
-an endeavour of mere man. To the spiritual life a universal character is
-indispensable; of this claim nothing can be abated. There must therefore
-be a change as regards man; it must be that more comes to pass in him
-than the first impression makes evident. It must be that the spiritual
-within him, which seems at first to be his own product, is a
-participation in wider connections; the spiritual must be operative in
-man, but not originate out of the merely human. It is true that this
-makes a reversal of the traditional position necessary, and not merely
-of its representations; and such a reversal provokes serious doubt.
-Modern science, however, has taught us sufficiently often that the first
-appearance of anything need not be the ultimate one; that there may be
-cogent reasons for regarding something that at first seems based in
-itself as the proof of something existing beyond. Thus, modern natural
-science has transformed the world of sense into a world present only to
-the eyes of research. Certainly, science accomplishes these changes
-within the bounds of experience: on the contrary, in regard to our
-problem, in which the fundamental form of reality is in question, it is
-indispensable that we should transcend these bounds; without a change in
-respect of the whole, and hence without a resort to metaphysics, it is
-not possible to accomplish our purpose. It is quite clear that the
-tendency of our time is opposed to appeals to metaphysics: yet it is a
-question how far this attitude is justified. So far as metaphysics
-assumes the same form as in the past--that of conceptual speculation of
-a thought hovering unrestrained over the existing world--then it is
-rightly opposed. But the attitude is unjustifiable which assumes that
-with the overthrow of the older metaphysics all metaphysics may be
-ignored. For a metaphysic can proceed also from the whole life, and need
-not be a product of mere thought. The implication therefore is this,
-that the centre of life itself must be changed, and thus a revolution of
-the previous condition accomplished; that an actuality already operative
-in life is to be given its rightful place and brought to its full
-effect. The business of metaphysics, therefore, is not to add something
-in thought to a reality which lies before us, or to weave such a reality
-into a texture of conceptions; but to seek to grasp reality in itself,
-and to rouse it to life in its entire depth for ourselves. Every change
-of thought then rests on a change of life. Such a metaphysic may appeal
-to the saying of Hebbel, "Only fools will banish metaphysic from the
-drama; it makes a great difference, however, whether life evolves out of
-metaphysic or metaphysic out of life."
-
-Even if our age rejects a metaphysic of this kind also, if it surrenders
-itself without resistance to the inconsistencies of the world of sense,
-this would be the last thing which could deter us from an appeal to
-metaphysic. For the inner cleavages and the superficiality of the life
-of our time--and we saw reason to believe that these are facts--stand in
-the closest relation to the rejection of metaphysics: this rejection has
-made the age inwardly insignificant. If an indirect proof of the
-necessity of a revolutionary transformation of life, and at the same
-time of a metaphysic may be offered, our age furnishes one quite
-sufficient in its own experiences; its opposition can be only a
-recommendation of an appeal to metaphysic.
-
-The one main thesis which it is essentially necessary to establish is
-analysed in sufficient detail throughout the whole course of our
-investigation; it simply sums up that which has already been advanced
-point by point. The intolerable contradiction arises, as we saw, from
-this, that the spiritual life with its new world should be a product of
-mere man, and that that life should remain within man and at the same
-time lead in its essence beyond him. This contradiction cannot be
-overcome otherwise than by our recognising and acknowledging in the
-spiritual life a universal life, which transcends man, is shared by him,
-and raises him to itself. That this transition brings with it a change
-in the appearance of life and of the world as a whole, and that as a
-result our striving is brought under entirely different conditions,
-needs more detailed presentation.
-
-
-
-
-(b) THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIN THESIS
-
-1. The Main Thesis and the Possibility of a New System of Life
-
-(a) _The Development of the Spiritual Life to Independence_
-
-
-Our investigation reached its highest point in the demand that the
-spiritual life should become independent of man. Man cannot produce a
-spiritual life of his own capacity: a spiritual world must impart itself
-to him and raise him to itself. It must be shown that this does not by
-any means signify only a change of name, a new labelling of an old
-possession, but implies far-reaching changes, and indeed involves a
-complete reversal of the first condition. At the same time the course of
-the investigation must establish that this transition to the spiritual
-life is not something subsequently inferred or offered simply for the
-explanation of an otherwise unintelligible fact, but that it would
-overcome a false appearance, and help a misunderstood truth to its
-right. The fact that is affirmed should become an immediate experience
-of one's own and should advance life rather than knowledge. Only the
-whole investigation and not an introductory consideration can furnish a
-proof of our contention.
-
-There are within our own soul distinctive movements tending in
-directions different from those of nature. We recognised that there is a
-life which proceeds from some kind of comprehensive whole; a life which
-transcends the opposition of subject and object, and evolves a
-self-consciousness in contrast with the relation to externals. All these
-features present a quite different appearance, form a more coherent
-whole, and will occupy a more definite position in the representation
-of reality, if in them an independent life superior to mere man is
-recognised and acknowledged. The principal reason for this is that it is
-only by means of that deliverance from the simply human that the new
-life is able to express its own nature clearly and to realise as part of
-its own nature what otherwise seemed to have its source in something
-external. The individual traits that we become aware of are the
-revelation of a universal life, if they are no longer regarded as
-limited by the idiosyncrasies of the human. With this acknowledgment
-they can gain ascendancy over man and prove their power upon him.
-
-We saw that it is characteristic of the spiritual life that it is lived
-from the whole; the elements are fashioned by a comprehensive unity; the
-different complexes and tendencies which arise in this life strive
-ultimately towards a single aim. We saw also that it was absolutely
-impossible that the tendency to universality should be originated by
-man, whose chief movement is towards differentiation and division; and,
-further, that it should be realised by him in face of the opposition of
-nature, which extends to the immeasurable in matters great and small.
-The unity that is necessary for this cannot arise out of the many as an
-ultimate result; it must be original and be operative from the
-beginning. We may postulate such a unity only if the spiritual life is
-itself a universal life transcending that of the isolated individuals;
-if it bears in itself a unity which takes the multiplicity up into
-itself. And so the whole from an abstract conception is for the first
-time raised to a living reality; and only on thus becoming a reality can
-it exercise a distinctive power upon individuals and in contrast to
-individuals; and inwardly unite and essentially raise them. Only in this
-way is it conceivable that another kind of activity having its source
-within the soul may exert itself in opposition to the mechanism of
-nature and transcend it; and that selfishness and spiritual weakness may
-in some way be overcome. Man, so far as he shares in the spiritual life,
-is more than a mere individual; a universal life becomes his own and
-works within him as a power of his life.
-
-Further, the taking up of the object into the life-process, the
-transcendence of the antithesis of subject and object, is characteristic
-of the spiritual life. But this remained an inner contradiction, a
-complete impossibility so long as the spiritual life was regarded as an
-occurrence in a being who, with a closed nature, stands over against
-things as though they were alien; and who can take up nothing into
-himself without accommodating it to his own particular nature. The
-contradiction is removed only when the spiritual becomes independent;
-for then both sides of the antithesis come to belong to each other and
-are related to each other in a single life; and a life transcending the
-division may develop, a life that produces the antithesis from within,
-lives in the different sides and seeks in them its own perfection. The
-life-process is now seen to be a movement that is neither from object to
-subject, nor from subject to object; neither the subject's attainment of
-content from the object, nor the object's becoming controlled by the
-subject, but an advance of a self-conscious life in and through the
-antithesis. Life, by this movement, ceases to be a single, thin thread;
-it wins breadth; it expands to an inner universality. At the same time a
-depth is manifested in that a persistent and comprehensive activity
-emerges which lives in the antithesis. In this manner life first becomes
-a life in a spiritual sense, a self-conscious and self-determining life,
-a self-consciousness.
-
-That this change is possible and brings with it a new type of life is
-shown with complete clearness by experience in the separate departments
-of the spiritual life. Thus, artistic creation at its highest is neither
-the production of the truest possible copy of an external object, the
-artist painfully abstaining from all subjective addition; nor a
-presentation of subjective situations and moods, the artist endeavouring
-to the utmost to avoid everything objective; but a transcendence of the
-opposition of soulless objectivity and empty subjectivity by an art that
-is sovereign, autonomous, and with a character of its own; the creative
-activity belonging to which gives life from the soul to the object, and
-moulds the soul by means of the object. This kind of artistic creation
-is directed primarily towards an inner truth, not towards a truth that
-is produced by the object, but one that arises only in the contact of
-the object with the soul. It is manifest that creation is effected here
-not as an interaction between subject and object, but above and through
-this antithesis; it is only by transcending the antithesis that the
-artist can give himself in his work, lend to it a soul, place an
-infinity within it. In this respect conduct manifests a character
-similar to that of creation. Conduct would never attain an inner
-stability and enter upon an independent course, if it could not raise
-itself above the opposition of a submission to orders that are forced
-upon it from without, and a mere play of subjective inclination; if it
-were not able to become the self-assertion and self-development of a
-life transcending that opposition. At this point also the acknowledgment
-of an independent spiritual life teaches us to comprehend as a whole
-that which, in a many-sided development, the different departments of
-life show to be real.
-
-The obscurity in which the conception of inwardness was hitherto
-involved begins to disappear when the spiritual life is no longer
-regarded as supplementary but as an independent life. It cannot be
-denied that, within humanity, there is an endeavour to develop the life
-of the soul to a state of self-determining activity and, at the same
-time, to free that life from the bondage to sense in which it remains at
-the level of nature. Yet, definite affirmation that shall correspond to
-the negation of sense has been lacking; it has not been clear how
-inwardness might find content and characteristic forms; there has been
-no advance from the subjective to the substantial. But since a universal
-activity is operative within the multiplicity and through the division,
-and since it sets itself in the division and from this returns to
-itself, a self-conscious inwardness becomes conceivable which has a life
-of its own with new experiences. Since within this life "to receive"
-presupposes the comprehending power and the self-determining activity of
-a vital whole, something other than sense is able to evolve and through
-all the persistence of sense to become the chief matter. The spiritual
-life is not directed to a reality adjacent to it, but evolves a reality
-out of itself; or rather, it evolves as a reality, a kingdom, a world;
-and so it advances from vague outline to more complete development; it
-struggles for itself, for its own perfection, not for anything external.
-
-It is directly implied in the above conception that the spiritual life
-is something different from single psychical functions, such as
-cognition, volition, and the like; and that man, so far as he shares in
-it, is more than one such function or a sum of such functions. For these
-functions come under the antithesis of subject and object, while the
-spiritual life transcends it. It is also clear that the spiritual life
-does not change this or that in a life which already exists, or add this
-or that to it, but that it introduces a new kind of life--a life by
-which man is distinguished clearly from everything inferior to him.
-
-If the spiritual life is an evolution of a reality in the life-process,
-then the question arises as to how this reality is related to the world
-that immediate experience shows us to be surrounded by. As surely as man
-in his subjective reflection is able to free himself from the world and
-to place himself in opposition to it, so there can be no doubt that the
-spiritual life belongs to the permanent reality of the world and, as we
-see it, grows up out of its movement. The transition to an independent
-inwardness is not something which happens externally to the world but
-within it: no special sphere, separate from all the rest, is originated;
-but reality itself evolves an inner life: it is the world itself that
-reveals a spiritual depth, or, as we might say, a soul. We are not
-justified in doubting and attacking this view simply because the
-spiritual life meets us only in man, and thus, in contrast with the
-infinity of nature, is in its external manifestation so insignificant.
-For something essentially new appears in it, something that involves
-another order of things: the fact that little falls within our range of
-vision is in this connection not at all relevant. If anyone is disturbed
-and driven to denial by the external insignificance of the
-manifestations of the spiritual life, he shows only that he
-misunderstands what is distinctive and revolutionising in that life. The
-spiritual life is not to be thought of merely in reference to the
-experiences of the individual, but also to the work of humanity, to
-history, to the advance of culture. All these show us a development of
-life that presents the world from a new side; and this must be an
-important factor in the estimation of the world, especially if the
-spiritual is recognised as having a life independent of man.
-
-The inward must necessarily present itself as the fundamental and the
-comprehensive; as that which in its invisibility sustains, dominates,
-and unifies the visible world. Nature, which there was a tendency to
-regard as the whole, is now of the essence of a wider reality and a
-stage in its development; and it is impossible for the conception formed
-from it to be regulative of the whole. Ultimately, therefore, reality
-cannot be regarded as something dead, detached, and given: it signifies
-to us something living, something experienced in itself, something
-sustained by incessant activity. At the same time, the lateness of the
-appearance of the spiritual life within our realm and the many ways in
-which this appearance is conditioned force us to acknowledge that the
-life of the world as a whole has a history. The conception of history
-that we have become familiar with in its application to nature and to
-the spiritual life throughout is now extended to the relation between
-the two. However many mysteries it yet involves, definite progress in
-our conception of the world must be admitted.
-
-Most of all it is man with his life and endeavour that appears in a new
-light. Two worlds meet together in him, and, indeed, not merely in such
-a manner that he provides the place in which they meet and enter into
-conflict, but so that he acquires an independent participation in the
-new world, and through his own decision co-operates in its development.
-For spiritual life, with its self-determining activity, can never become
-itself as a mere effect; to become this it must be apprehended and
-roused to activity as cause. But it is cause and animating power only in
-its being as a whole; so, as a whole it must be present to man and
-become his own life. Thus, in contrast to the particularity of his
-natural existence, a life having its source in the infinite grows up
-within him: in the former a mere part of a world; in the latter he
-becomes a world in himself: in the one, bound up with the particular
-nature of man; in the other, he is elevated above all particularity to
-something more than human, to something cosmic.
-
-To such changes in the content of life there must be corresponding
-changes in its form. Empirical consciousness with its discreteness and
-succession of presentations and states cannot possibly comprehend the
-new life; to do that the soul must acquire a greater depth. It must be
-capable of an activity which, with single phases, extends into this
-consciousness, but which as a whole and in its creative work must
-transcend it. With the acknowledgment of an independent spiritual life
-in man two questions giving rise to different methods of treatment
-necessarily become distinguished: the one as to the nature and extent of
-the spiritual that is revealed in him; and the other, how, under the
-specific conditions of his nature, it emerges and establishes itself. It
-will become evident how important it is to distinguish these
-sufficiently, and yet on the other hand to associate them closely.
-
-
-(b) _The Demands of a New System of Life_
-
-If the acknowledgment of an independent spirituality thus alters the
-view of reality as a whole, and in particular of man, we are faced with
-the question whether we may not attain a new synthesis through this
-spirituality, and whether it does not begin a characteristic formation
-of our world. Our treatment of the philosophies of life of the present
-day makes it possible for us to approach this question with definite
-demands. We saw life branch off in different movements, each of which
-took up into itself a wealth of fact; but we found none of them strong
-enough to absorb the others into itself, or even able to estimate them.
-If life is not finally to fall into dissolution, it needs, in contrast
-to these movements, one more universal in character, and this can be
-more than a weak compromise only when there is a still more fundamental
-relation of life than that which the developments that we have
-considered proffered. In that case the more original basal relation
-ought to be able to manifest itself as a presupposition of those
-developments; it should make intelligible how divisions can originate in
-the condition of man; in particular it should illuminate the opposition
-between the idealistic and the naturalistic systems of life--an
-opposition which, like a deep gulf, divides the life of the present. In
-short, it should depend upon whether the change that results with the
-acknowledgment of the independence of the spiritual life makes it
-possible for us permanently to transcend those oppositions and to work
-towards their reconciliation. But we ought then to see that, with its
-universality, the system of life striven for does not fall into a state
-vague and lacking in character. Through its whole being, in affirmation
-and in negation, the system of life must definitely express itself; it
-must synthesise and differentiate, elevate and exclude. But it will be
-able to do this only if it produces a new kind of life-process and a new
-web of life: only thus can essentially new evaluations and tasks, new
-experiences and genuine developments, originate; only thus can life as a
-whole be definitely raised. Of course, this new cannot signify something
-that has just been discovered and that has arisen suddenly. How could it
-be a truth which gives to us security, and how could it dominate our
-life, if it is not rooted in our being, and if it had not exerted an
-influence at all times? But it makes a great difference whether the new
-has been concealed, obscure and against the tendency of our own
-activity; or whether it is taken up fully in our own self-determining
-activity and thereby essentially advanced. If, on the one hand, the new
-must be something old, on the other hand the old must become something
-new if it is to liberate, strengthen, and elevate our life where its
-needs are so urgent.
-
-
-(c) _The Spiritual Basis of the System of Life_
-
-There can be no doubt that the acknowledgment of the independence of the
-spiritual life involves the recognition of a new fundamental relation of
-our life. This relation is no other than that of man to the spiritual
-world, which is immanent in him and at the same time transcends him. It
-is more original than the relations implied in the systems of the
-present day; for these, even though contrary to their own knowledge and
-intention, all presuppose this fundamental relation to the spiritual
-life. Religion could not be so violently attacked and so zealously
-denied by so many, if the relation of life to God were the absolute
-relation and were present before all others. The value of religion
-depends essentially upon the content of the spiritual life which it
-serves. With the mere relation of life to a supernatural power, the
-nature of which is not more closely defined--with mere blind
-devotion--nothing of value is attained. An honest religious attitude of
-a formal kind can go together, on the one hand, with spiritual poverty
-and blindness, and, on the other, with hatred and passion. How sad the
-condition of things in general has often been even when religion has
-shown a strong development of power! How often the help of divine power
-has been invoked even in the commission of crime! If, however, the value
-of religion and its effect on the substance of life are measured
-according to its spiritual content, then this content necessarily
-becomes the chief object of attention and conduct. We can assure
-ourselves of the relation to a supernatural power only from the
-experiences of the spiritual life, and not previously to this life and
-independently of it. The relation of life to the spiritual life must
-therefore necessarily precede its relation to God; life must be certain
-of a universal spiritual character before it can assume a truly
-religious one.
-
-We find the case to be no different as regards the system of Immanent
-Idealism. It is open to considerable doubt whether the world as it lies
-before us can be looked upon as a pure unfolding of the spiritual life,
-as this Idealism asserts. In any case, for the spiritual life to
-comprehend the world within itself it must itself be established as a
-universal power, and clearly distinguished from mere man. Otherwise the
-way of Immanent Idealism leads to an anthropomorphism of a more refined
-kind; and there is a danger that the whole world which this system
-champions may be criticised hostilely and rejected as simply human.
-Immanent Idealism, therefore, also points to the problem of substantial
-spiritual life.
-
-The naturalistic systems do the same thing in a different way, and this,
-indeed, in contradiction to their main contention. For, when they
-attempted to produce a system from themselves, they could achieve their
-object only in that they were implicitly based upon the spiritual life,
-and introduced again indirectly that which they had previously rejected.
-They are developments of the spiritual life in particular directions and
-under particular circumstances: they think that they are able to
-accomplish out of their own resources something which they accomplish
-only with the help of a fundamental spiritual life; and so the more
-consistent they are in their denial of an independent spirituality the
-more inevitably they lose all internal coherence.
-
-Thus from whatever point we start we come to the question of an
-independent spirituality; an answer to this question is involved in
-every system of life. But as its implications are not distinctly
-recognised, it does not receive its proper due. If we consider the
-question adequately, it will be found that a universal life must precede
-all differentiation and division; and that from this life each movement
-must receive a new elucidation. A multiplicity within the whole is quite
-intelligible, because it is a development of the spiritual life, not
-absolutely, that is in question, but in relation to the position of man
-and under the conditions to which he is subject. The desire to give
-greater stability to our life in opposition to the never-ceasing flow of
-appearances that constitutes our immediate existence, also compels us
-strongly to emphasise the importance of the relation to the spiritual
-life, which is acknowledged as independent. Without an elevation above
-this constant change all spiritual work must inevitably become
-disintegrated, and no truth of any kind would be possible to us. In the
-Modern Age especially there is a keen desire for a firm basis, as a
-secure support of life as a whole. But it is useless to seek this basis
-in life as we immediately experience it, whether in thought, in
-activity, or in anything else; for in the whole life of immediate
-experience there is nothing that is free from change. To seek this basis
-in a particular point is also to no purpose, even if one could be raised
-to a position above change; for it could not operate beyond itself in
-such a way as to support the rest of life. If, therefore, we would not
-submit to a dissolution of life, we must seek a basis for it beyond its
-immediate state and in a whole of life. Such a whole of life is offered
-only by the spiritual life, which, transcending man, is also immanent in
-him. Of course this cannot be taken possession of immediately at the
-beginning of the journey of life; but it is held up to us as an aim, and
-we can only gradually approach it. But how could it operate within us
-thus, if our life had not some kind of participation in it from the
-beginning; if our life were not in some way based in the spiritual life,
-and in progressive activity only developed the spiritual that is in it?
-For unless we are based in the spiritual life we should drift helplessly
-to and fro in uncertainty, and our endeavour would never be
-intelligible. From this point of view also, our relation to the
-spiritual life is seen to be the fundamental problem that must precede
-all others.
-
-If there can be no doubt that the problem of life is comprehended most
-universally when we view it in relation to the spiritual life, there may
-be all the more uncertainty whether all characteristic form and, with
-it, all deep-reaching effect are not lost by reason of this
-universality. If the conception of the spiritual life involved its usual
-vagueness, this would in reality be the case, for recourse to it would
-not effect any fundamental transformation of the immediate condition of
-life; and we should not rise above the mere combination of its various
-movements. The case is quite otherwise if the spiritual life is
-distinguished clearly from the human and is acknowledged to be an
-independent world. So understood, it must show a particular content, a
-new structure of life, and must give a distinct form to everything that
-it takes up into itself. It is necessary to consider, also, its relation
-to the world of sense, and we may expect to be faced in this matter with
-complications and problems that will agitate our life in its whole
-extent, and set it in a new light.
-
-In the spiritual life we recognised a new world, a realm of inwardness,
-which has become independent. Within this realm life cannot be directed
-to something alien, but can be occupied only with itself, with its own
-development. Its experiences cannot be related to externals; they must
-lie in itself. Now, have we any knowledge of a movement that reaches
-back in this manner to the elements of life? We perceive a movement of
-this kind clearly enough. In the first place, all development of the
-spiritual life shows, even within the individual, the attribute that a
-universal mode of thought, conviction, disposition, sets itself in the
-single function and continues present within it. The tendencies and
-manifestations of the spiritual are not all at the same level of
-development, but since a universal activity, a comprehensive and
-persistent deed, is present in the particular manifestation, the process
-acquires a depth, and a single act is able to give expression to a
-tendency of the whole as well as to react upon it.
-
-But this movement extends beyond the immediate state of the soul of the
-individual to spiritual work, and gives it a particular form. Life as a
-whole, as reality's consciousness of itself, may be regarded as
-throughout capable of a multiplicity, as containing within itself
-different sides and possibilities. Since its evolution produces this
-multiplicity, life as a whole can express itself in the individual
-aspects and tendencies; expand them till they become different
-departments; experience itself in particular ways in these departments,
-and in so doing achieve a development of its own; it is able also to
-bring these departments and their developments into their relation to
-one another. Since thus, within the world as a whole, life concentrates
-in different ways, and the particular tendencies which thus arise meet
-and enter into conflict with one another, and since their conflict is in
-particular a contest to determine the form of the whole, there is
-revealed the prospect of a wealth of experiences which come not from
-without but out of the movement of life itself, and spring from its
-occupation with itself. The conflict between the different movements of
-life must bring the whole into a state of tension and lead it to further
-development. In the progressive formation of itself, in the development
-of a reality conscious of itself, life through its movement finds itself
-and develops a content. This movement will summon all the psychical
-powers of man to activity; it cannot possibly proceed from them. If we
-are to take part in the building up of that inner world, a spiritual
-creative activity from the basis of our being must be operative through
-these psychical functions, uniting them, and applying them as means and
-instruments.
-
-If, for us men, life becomes conscious of its content only through
-movement and conflict, nevertheless this content may not be regarded as
-ultimately proceeding from them. If, as a whole, life did not transcend
-movement and conflict, if the latter were not included within a
-self-conscious and self-determining life, then they could yield no
-inner result, and could not lead to the further development of the
-whole. The attempts to derive this self-conscious and self-determining
-life from ontological conceptions such as "being," "whole," "movement,"
-and so on, as the older metaphysics often undertook to do; or the
-tendency to treat it only as a supplement to them, are to be dismissed
-most decisively. The fundamental qualities that the spiritual life
-evolves always presuppose a self-conscious life and become intelligible
-only in relation to it. Without it, the conceptions of the true and the
-good remain in complete obscurity, as will be shown later in more
-detail.
-
-If our human reflection often advances from the indefinite to the
-definite, from the abstract to the concrete, this does not involve that
-the latter is originated from the former: the advance could not be
-achieved unless that which comes at the end was operative from the
-beginning as its basis and presupposition.
-
-If a self-conscious life unfolds itself with an increasing content
-through all departments and activities of life, then these departments
-will have their meaning and their value primarily in that which they
-accomplish for the further development of that life, and in the
-particular tendencies that they add to it: this yields a treatment and a
-standard of value different from those which we are led to if we make
-the psychical states of the individual our starting-point. The treatment
-of religion, for example, as a mere occurrence of an unrestrained
-psychical life may understand by religion a particular agitation of this
-or that psychical function; but with this we do not obtain a spiritual
-content. Again, it is not evident how a world of thought formed from
-such an individual psychical life could acquire an independence of man,
-and lift him above the position in which it finds him. The problem of
-religion attains quite a different basis if the spiritual movements and
-contents which emerge with it are emphasised; with this it develops and
-discloses the reality of the spiritual life more deeply. Then through it
-we may discover and win something that alters the condition of life,
-transcends the immediate life of the soul, and is able to exert an
-elevating influence upon man. The value and the truth of a particular
-religion will be judged in the first place by the nature of the
-spiritual substance that it offers, and the degree in which, in its
-advance, it is able to join itself to the movement of life as a whole
-and to guide it further. A great divergence is possible between this
-spiritual substance and the movement and passion that call forth a
-religion on the basis of humanity: the real is, in human relations, by
-no means without further consideration to be regarded as rational.
-
-The case of the other departments of life is the same as that of
-religion: the character and the value of all achievement depend entirely
-upon the range and the kind of substantial spirituality that they
-evolve. The same is valid of whole epochs and cultures, of peoples and
-individuals. The exertion of the greatest energy upon externals and the
-most revolutionary transformation of human conditions cannot protect us
-from becoming inwardly destitute, or lead us beyond mere appearance to
-genuine reality. On the contrary, the experience of history shows often
-enough that spiritual revivals have been accompanied in their origin and
-growth by manifestations externally insignificant; and that something
-which struggles against the broad stream of human life fundamentally
-changes the standards and values of our existence.
-
-Our whole spiritual life, therefore, constitutes a problem; it is an
-indefatigable seeking and pressing forward. In self-consciousness the
-framework is given which has to be filled; in it we have acquired only
-the basis upon which the superstructure has to be raised. We have to
-find experiences in life itself, to reveal something new, to develop
-life, to increase its range and its depth. The endeavour to advance in
-spirituality, to win itself through struggle, is the soul of the life of
-the individual and of the work of universal history: where there is no
-endeavour of this kind, there is no true life and no genuine history;
-our activity in relation to the world as a whole assumes a different
-form, and the world is represented differently and presents to us
-different problems according to that which is attained here in the basal
-structure of life. Life's struggle for itself, for its own content, its
-own truth, is the greatest and most intense of all struggles.
-
-The passion which animates all the endeavour after a revelation of life
-and to win life itself is no other than the desire for a genuine
-reality: for a being within the activity, for a full as opposed to an
-empty life. If the formation of reality from within once begins, and the
-desire for a substantial inwardness gains the day over the merely
-subjective, then the intolerable inadequacy of all that is usually
-called life is bound to be strongly felt. The growth of intelligence has
-led man beyond the life of nature and its blind actuality. In
-intelligence, the inner life already proves far too independent to be
-satisfied with being a mere appearance accompanying nature. With this
-evolution the psychical powers win a greater freedom, and man is able to
-face his environment more boldly: indeed, in his thought he can grasp an
-infinity; and in arousing and using all his powers he may hope from his
-own position, in the interaction of subject and environment, to give to
-life a content, and thus to make it a genuine life. But here the
-limitation of man and the contradictory character of life as it is
-immediately experienced soon come to be felt. All the rousing of forces,
-all the passing backwards and forwards between subject and object that
-we experience in the immediate condition of life, does not lead beyond
-interaction, and yields no content: it does not raise life to a
-self-conscious and self-determining life; so that, in spite of all its
-activity, our life in this condition remains inwardly alien. There is
-thus an enormous disparity between the means that are offered and the
-aims that are reached; an inward unrest; an incessant conflict, without
-any prospect of victory, against the ever-recurring tendency to become
-spiritually destitute; a state of dissatisfaction in the midst of all
-results of an external kind. Only the revelation of a self-conscious
-life, a life which itself evolves as a reality, can be the source of
-progress, and lead from appearances and shadows to a genuine life.
-
-It is apparent that with such an aim a task is presented that dominates
-and comprehends the whole extent of our existence. We have to take up
-everything into that self-conscious and self-determining life and to
-transform the condition of life as it lies immediately before us. A
-demand of this kind is not limited to a change of this or that; it
-implies a complete transformation and renewal. It not only involves the
-whole multiplicity of life, but it must also itself tend to bring about
-an increase in the multiplicity; indeed, this task first gives the
-multiplicity a firm foundation and an inner value. For the development
-and the formation of self-conscious life, it is essential, as we saw,
-that life concentrate in particular tendencies and departments; that the
-whole place itself in them, and return to itself from them; and that by
-this they develop a life of their own and give rise to their own
-experiences. To act thus, to advance the whole in its own development,
-the individual concentrations of life must possess an inner spiritual
-unity which comprehends and dominates all multiplicity. This is seen in
-the case of individuals, peoples, epochs, and whole civilisations: only
-by overcoming the state of confusion and division in which they at first
-find themselves do they come to wrestle with the spiritual life as a
-whole and win a spiritual character. These unities of life, however,
-will enter into the most diverse relations with the whole and with one
-another; and since in so doing they further self-conscious and
-self-determining life, they develop reality without limit. From all the
-facts we have considered we see that, with the attainment of
-independence by the spiritual life, there emerges a distinctive kind of
-being which everywhere exerts its activity, holds up a new aim, and
-desires a transformation: life is for the first time placed on a firm
-foundation, and taken possession of in the deepest source of its
-movement.
-
-
-(d) _Human Existence_
-
-For the construction of a new system of life, this independent nature of
-the spiritual life is primary and most essential. Such construction is
-dependent in the second place upon the relation in which the development
-of the self-conscious and self-determining life of reality stands to the
-position and to the activity of man; in particular whether it wins this
-position and activity for itself with ease or meets with definite
-opposition. Now, there cannot be any doubt that the recognition of the
-fact of the development of the spiritual life to independence of man, as
-we traced it, must make us feel that the state of things at the usual
-level of human life is most unsatisfactory. It is not that one or
-another aspect is inadequate, but that as a whole it is definitely
-opposed to the requirements of an independent spiritual life. For the
-spirituality that is evolved here is treated for the most part as a mere
-means in the pursuit of human welfare. Civilisation, at the level at
-which we are most accustomed to it, lifts man above mere nature, but at
-the same time it forces him into rivalry and conflict with his equals,
-and leads him to expect happiness from victory. This is the case not
-only among individuals but also among nations. Since the desire and the
-conflict for more generate an indescribable amount of excitement and
-passion, life seems to be full, whereas in reality it is entirely
-lacking in content, and behind the tumult is felt to be empty. But man
-has no intention of giving up all claim to a share in genuine
-spirituality: and so he gives a better outward appearance to his
-endeavour and his conduct, and practises deceit upon himself as well as
-upon others. Genuine spiritual life cannot possibly proceed from
-circumstances so contradictory and so confused. Neither can such
-circumstances produce the concentration of life that is necessary for
-the strengthening and advancement of the spiritual life. It is not the
-abuse of some one thing that provokes attack: it is not a particular
-failing, but the ordinary daily course which, unresistingly, man is
-accustomed to accept as his world, that shows in its successes no less
-than in its failures the greatest divergence from genuine spirituality.
-It is just at the point where man becomes proud of his own doings and
-makes much ostentatious display that he can least of all conceal the
-spiritual poverty and the foolishness of his way of thinking.
-
-Attempts to attribute the responsibility of all limitation to man and
-his will, to find the root of all evil in the moral failings of
-humanity, have not been wanting. Universal religions have given these
-attempts an embodiment. It has seemed as though the harmony of reality
-is only disturbed by man, and as though his moral restoration were the
-only thing necessary to lead to all good. To be sure, such a way of
-thinking manifests a disposition of great seriousness, and it may appeal
-to the fact that the perplexity of our existence is nowhere more real
-than in reference to the ethical problem. Still, there is no possibility
-of doubt for the man of the Modern Age that this conception is too
-narrow; that it not only contradicts indisputable impressions and
-experiences, but also takes the question much too subjectively and too
-anthropomorphically, and thus falls into the danger of doing harm to the
-cause that it wishes to serve. It is not simply our disposition, it is
-our being as a whole and the circumstances that we are in, which
-obstinately oppose the emergence and the development of an independent
-spiritual world. It is the most elementary forms of life themselves that
-prevent the elevation of our existence to the level of a genuine
-spiritual life. We cannot blind ourselves to the fact that the greater
-part of our life is bound up with a form of existence in which it is not
-able to embrace the spiritual life. Any kind of appropriation of the
-spiritual--if it is at all possible--can be effected therefore only in
-opposition to that form of existence. In genuine spiritual life all
-movement should proceed from the whole and should be sustained by the
-whole, even when it is concentrated in the individual departments and
-tendencies. Human existence presents the spectacle of individuals ranged
-side by side; and if a movement to overcome the original inertia is to
-begin at all, their impulses, their desire for happiness, and their
-conflicts are necessary. The spiritual life knows no limits; it works
-and creates from the infinite whole: the individual is narrowly limited,
-and with all his activity and work constitutes but a tiny point in the
-infinite whole. The spiritual life presents its content as transcending
-time; even if for us it is only gradually revealed, time is in this a
-mere means to the presentation of an eternal and immutable truth: man,
-however, drifts with time; is dependent upon the momentary situation,
-and experiences himself in an incessant change: how can he comprehend
-the eternal? Spiritual creation is effected in the transcending of the
-antithesis of subject and object: human endeavour is conditioned by this
-antithesis. The former with its self-determining activity overcomes from
-within the attachment to sense: man even in the highest flight of his
-endeavour cannot withdraw himself from it. From the altitudes occupied
-by the spiritual life submission to the impulses and the goods of sense
-seems to be something mean and base: and yet without these man cannot
-possibly preserve his life; he has not conferred sensuous needs and
-desires upon himself by an act of will, but finds himself endowed with
-them from the beginning. Spiritual life with its formation from within
-banishes from itself all mechanism; all compulsion of blind actuality:
-without a mechanism in thought and in conduct, without habits and
-methods determined by custom, human life cannot attain to an enduring
-stability either in the case of the individual or in that of society.
-Thus, through the ever-present necessity of self-preservation and
-self-renewal, human life is compulsorily related to something, bound to
-something, that not only is not adequate to fulfil the tasks of an
-independent spiritual life, but is directly opposed to them. There is
-something in our life which we cannot dispense with, yet which, from the
-spiritual point of view, it is an imperative duty to shake off.
-
-We see clearly enough that it is not merely our will that is in play,
-but that two worlds conflict within us, and that the world to which we
-primarily belong, according to the testimony of experience, holds us
-fixed with superior power, and draws back to itself all movement which
-strives upward. If, in particular, the dimness and the weakness of the
-spiritual life in man; its severance from its source; its disintegration
-into isolated powers; and, finally, the moral perversity which human
-existence exhibits, and the debasement of spiritual power to a mere
-means for natural or social self-preservation, become clear to us, then
-it is evident that a compromise between such a pitiable and shallow
-confusion and a genuine spiritual life is absolutely impossible. The
-acknowledgment of an independent spiritual world tends only to increase
-the contradiction and make us more clearly conscious of it.
-
-A clear consciousness of the inadequacy of the human is especially
-important and necessary in contrast to the utter confusion which reigns
-with regard to the spiritual life and vitiates the whole of the
-endeavour of the present. The increasing transference of life to the
-world of sense has led the present age to abandon all inner bonds of
-mankind. The endeavour of Antiquity to lift our life above the
-insignificantly human by giving it a share in the greatness and
-magnificence of the whole, and the attempt of Christianity to give a new
-nature to life from the relation to God, appear to the present age to be
-Utopian. Since the faith of modern Idealism in the immanent universal
-reason has become more and more dim, man is thrown back more and more
-exclusively upon himself, upon man as he is, upon empirical society.
-There has grown up a strong belief that this empirical existence is
-quite sufficient in itself, and is able to satisfy our spiritual needs
-from itself. The ennobling of man, the improvement of his condition
-within this existence, becomes the aim of aims. Now, this presupposes
-that within the province of man, the good, even if it does not entirely
-preponderate, is still confident of a triumphant advance. It
-presupposes, further, that the establishment of a certain state of life
-will bring complete happiness with it. At the same time, all that is
-disagreeable in human experience--the power of selfishness and pride;
-the weakness of love; the feebleness of all spiritual impulse; the
-incessant increase of the struggle for existence, with the consequent
-degeneration of the inwardness of the whole--appears with dazzling
-clearness to the more refined perception of the modern man. After even a
-little consideration he cannot doubt that, if, in spite of all
-limitations, an unclouded state of human well-being could be
-established; if all pain could be banished from our life, life would
-fall into the power of the other and worse enemy--emptiness and
-monotony. As a refuge from such perplexities there is a tendency to flee
-to society and history. From the point of view of humanity as a whole
-and with the thought of a better future, all defects and losses of
-individuals seem to vanish; the hope of an unceasing progressive
-development rises above the feeling of the unsatisfactoriness of the
-condition of the moment. But what are these relations of empirical
-humanity other than those of a mere collection of individuals who never
-become an inner community, and what is empirical history other than a
-mere succession which never produces an inner unity of movement? In the
-appeal to the former, as in that to the latter, it is only
-surreptitiously that something essential can appear to be acquired. In
-reality, conceptions are here made use of which in other relations have
-a meaning, but which here signify nothing more than empty abstractions,
-simply subjective constructions of thought. However, notwithstanding all
-the glossing over, the real state of things must ultimately assert
-itself: pessimism must then be the last word, and the belief in a
-rationality in human existence must finally be given up. The faith in
-the greatness of the empirical man is, indeed, of all faiths the
-boldest. For, if the other faiths proclaim a new reality in contrast
-with the world of sense, they have the possibility of one in an
-invisible world. In the case that we are considering, however,
-experience itself must offer more than mere experience; we must not only
-be certain of a thing that we do not see, but that which we do not see
-must coincide with that which exists immediately before us. Such a
-position is no longer a faith, but a gross contradiction, a complete
-absurdity.
-
-
-(e) _Results and Prospects_
-
-The immediate experience of man may by no means be rejected as a whole
-on this account; if it were, spiritual work itself would degenerate and
-lack content. However, we only need to take up into a whole the
-impressions and experiences which each in his sphere acknowledges to be
-indisputable, and it will be clear that a movement toward spiritual
-independence can never proceed from such a pitiable state of confusion
-as that which is thereby seen to exist. It is essential that the
-movement toward spiritual independence have an independent starting
-point, and proceed on its own course. Only then is it able to select and
-appropriate the spirituality that exists in those confused experiences,
-and at the same time purify and strengthen it. We may most decisively
-reject all presumption to sovereignty on the part of the human realm;
-nevertheless, for the construction of a spiritual world that realm
-cannot be dispensed with. For this construction is not peacefully and
-securely accomplished through the self-development of a spiritual power
-placed in us, as was supposed by those who attempted to represent
-reality as a whole as a cosmic process of thought. If through the
-joyfulness of its faith and the definiteness of its undertaking this
-attempt captivated the minds of men for a time, at last it was
-frustrated by the fact that we men do not find ourselves immediately in
-the atmosphere of reason, but have first through toil to raise ourselves
-into it; that we have to do not with absolute spiritual life, but with
-spiritual life under the conditions and limitations of human existence.
-Thus, in the first place an independent spiritual life, a universal
-self-consciousness, must work in us and be changed in our activity; and
-this can be accomplished only by a revolutionary transformation of life
-as we immediately experience it; only by the attainment of a new point
-of view. But if at this point of view certain fundamentals of a new
-world become evident, they are as yet only fundamentals, and, without
-the help of a world of immediate existence, without recourse to the
-movements and experiences of human life, they cannot be completely
-developed and embodied. The complete development of a self-conscious
-reality is by no means made possible by combining an original spiritual
-movement with the world of sense brought to meet it. For the spiritual
-life can be furthered by coming into contact with that world only so far
-as the spiritual life takes it up and transforms it; the situation is
-rather that the spiritual movement wrests a content from sense
-experience and at the same time is raised in itself; it is a realisation
-of self through the other. The further the movement advances the more
-one may win one's own in what is apparently alien; the more that which
-is really alien may be separated and opposed. Thus we have a
-characteristic picture of the spiritual life in man; only the more
-detailed treatment can confirm it.
-
-The matter of greatest importance to the whole, and the one upon which
-all hope of success rests, is that the movement towards an independent
-spirituality, to the building up of a new world, should, in spite of the
-opposition of immediate circumstances, become manifest also in the human
-sphere in characteristic operation, and that it should establish stable
-bases in this sphere and rise upon them to the highest by means of work.
-We have now to investigate more closely, to demonstrate more exactly,
-and as far as possible to show that at all the chief points of life such
-movements begin; that one such movement advances another; and that all
-are associated in a community of striving, and that from here the
-spiritual movement that we see in history is lit up, strengthened, and
-for the first time rendered practicable.
-
-
-2. The Transformation and the Elevation of Human Life
-
-(a) _Aims and Ways_
-
-The question before us is whether any kind of transcendence of the gulf
-between the spiritual world and man is effected; whether that world, in
-spite of its antithesis to the world of sense, manifests itself also
-with a characteristic effect in our sphere, and thereby inaugurates a
-movement which takes possession of our whole life and advances it. Only
-on the result of such an inquiry can we judge whether man is able again
-to establish his position, which has been so shaken in the course of
-modern culture; and to save the courage and faith of life from violent
-changes and convulsions. At the same time we must ascertain whether the
-representation of the spiritual life that we have sketched is true in
-reference to things as they are found in the human sphere.
-
-To be sure, proof or verification through experience is, in the case of
-this problem, in the highest degree peculiar. No definite reality
-spreads itself before us by which we must test the validity of our
-representations of thought. Representation and object cannot be simply
-brought into coincidence, but as life, which we wish to comprehend, is
-found in movement, and as, further, in immediate experience genuine fact
-and the form assumed by it in the idea of man are confused, so the
-revelation of the spiritual life does not come to us immediately, but
-has first to be extricated and wrested from the most diverse errors and
-half-truths. Every attempt to obtain proof from experience rests on the
-conviction that a movement of the kind, the recognition of which is
-being fought for by us, is already in some way in process everywhere
-where human life goes beyond mere nature; and that only the clear
-comprehension of the aim and the taking it up with complete
-self-conscious and self-determining activity are lacking. If now the aim
-which is presented is the right one, that is, that which is implied in
-the spiritual movement of life itself, then its acknowledgment and
-appropriation must tend to the elucidation, the unification, and the
-strengthening of all endeavour tending in the direction of this
-movement; it must lead to a development and an elevation of life above
-the condition in which it is immediately experienced. In the first
-place, it must be shown that the connections, preparations, directions
-in life in its general condition, tend towards the new according to its
-chief demands; and, further, it must be shown that the existing
-condition is raised essentially through becoming comprehended by the
-revealed universal movement, and is led to its own perfection. Again, it
-has to be shown that thus life wins a more precise content and a greater
-power in its every aspect: that which is present in all human endeavour
-as a necessary requirement must now become more intelligible, and at the
-same time from something impossible of fulfilment to something possible,
-and reveal new aspects and new tasks. Further, those elements which at
-first sight exist unconnected side by side and tend to limit one another
-must unite, and must strengthen one another. On the other hand,
-divisions must arise: it is as necessary energetically to reject that
-which follows wrong aims as to come to a peaceful settlement with that
-which errs only in the means. The antitheses which the work of humanity
-contains must also become intelligible, and at the same time a way must
-be prepared by which these antitheses may be overcome, not one by which
-merely a compromise between them may be arrived at. The breaking forth
-of the new must tend always toward the self-elevation of life; with
-arousing and strengthening power, it must take up the whole of life into
-its movement: it must demonstrate a transcendence of all the reflection
-and subjectivity of man, and this can be accomplished only through the
-disclosure of new forms and contents of life. Accordingly attention must
-in the first place be centred upon the pointing out of such new forms
-and contents.
-
-The union of the spiritual life with man, its being firmly rooted in
-him, is seen to be at the same time something old and something
-new--something old in so far as it must have been existent and in some
-way effective from the beginning, something new in so far as its
-distinct emergence and its transition to a state of self-determining
-activity must alter the condition of things essentially; in fact, must
-turn life as a whole into a problem. Where the reality of man is
-reduced, as by Hegel, solely to an unfolding of thought and cognition,
-the present may find its most important task in the complete
-clarification and appropriation of the past; life comes to complete
-satisfaction in the drawing of historical achievement to itself. Where
-it is a question of the building up of a reality based on self-conscious
-and self-determining activity, when we ourselves share in such activity,
-we must find ourselves in an essentially different relation to things;
-and with all the connection with the past, life will press forward,
-changing and elevating in contrast with the whole past.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A contact, indeed a union, must therefore be established between the
-independent spiritual world--which in some way must be operative in
-us--and the activity of our own which struggles upward; and, through the
-gain of such a contact, that world must be led to more complete
-organisation, and that which strives upward made secure, unified, and
-advanced. In this it is essential that the movements and the demands
-which the fundamental idea of the spiritual life contains be present to
-our minds. The spiritual life appears, so we saw reason to believe, in
-the first place, to be something essentially new in contrast to the life
-of nature. The spiritual life is not the product of a gradual
-development from the life of nature, but has an independent origin, and
-evolves new powers and standards: new beginnings must, therefore, be
-recognisable in us if the spiritual life is to become our life. The new,
-however, manifested a development of the inner life to independence in
-opposition to its state of subjection at the level of nature, and so
-thus in man also the inner life must in some way come to itself and
-attain to freedom. We saw, further, that this development to
-independence cannot be brought about through new achievements in a given
-world, but that it needs the building up of a new world--a new basis for
-life: it extends even to the final basal forms; not any kind of activity
-could suffice, but a being within the activity, or, rather, a division
-of activity into something sustaining and comprehending on the one hand,
-and something demonstrating and producing on the other, is necessary. It
-is only thus that life becomes turned toward itself and elevated to a
-self-conscious life; activity to self-determining activity; experience
-to self-conscious experience. Man could not participate in such a
-self-conscious and self-determining life, if in him also a new life, a
-spiritual self, had not begun to be in some way. It is impossible for
-this self to be merely individual in nature: it can change the form of
-things and convey a new world only if it encompasses the multiplicity
-and experiences it as its own. An infinite self-conscious and
-self-determining life must not only include man within itself; it must
-become his own life, his true self.
-
-To realise this life, this self, in more detail and to pass from mere
-impulse to fruitful work, such as the building up of a new reality
-necessitates, man must in some way transcend in his own sphere the mere
-juxtaposition of individual powers. Connections must be formed within
-the realm of man that somehow deal with that task and advance towards
-its accomplishment in a way that is beyond the capacity of individuals.
-A transcendence of the antithesis of subject and object, that dominates
-the greater part of life, is also essential to the new life; an
-energetic revolution must raise life to a state of resting upon itself,
-to autonomy: and so in man also movements must appear in opposition to
-this antithesis--condensations and concentrations, in which life from
-being a movement hither and thither becomes a forming of reality from
-within. In these connections only out of a self-development of life has
-a reality arisen at all; and its content was not there complete at the
-outset, but was yielded only through the continuance of that
-self-development: it must be shown, therefore, that in man also life
-begins to turn toward itself, and that this makes it possible to attempt
-tasks which to our capacity are otherwise inaccessible.
-
-It is necessary to acknowledge that in all the spiritual movement which
-appears in the domain of man, there is a revelation of the spiritual
-world: as merely human power cannot lead the whole to new heights, in
-all development of the spiritual life the communication of the new world
-must precede the activity of man. At the same time, where we are
-concerned with a life that is independent, and of which the activity is
-conscious and self-determined, the change cannot possibly simply _happen
-to_ man: it must be taken up by his own activity; it needs his own
-decision and acceptance.
-
-We shall consider the question of the possibility of this almost
-immediately: so much, however, is certain--that this necessity of a
-decision by man himself makes the matter far more complex and of far
-greater risk. The establishment of an independent spiritual life in man
-finds its chief enemy not in nature, but in the limitation and
-perversion of spiritual impulse through man's subordinating it to his
-own ends. The chief conflict is not between spirit and nature, but
-between real and false spirituality. Thus thought emerges in man, seeks
-a representation of the world and would in this attain to truth; but
-when this striving first appears, man is wont to treat himself as the
-central point of the whole, to measure the whole of infinity according
-to what it achieves in relation to him, and to see reflections of
-himself throughout its whole extent. And so we have the anthropomorphic
-way of thinking, the nature of which we have become aware of only
-through toil during the progress of the work of culture; a way of
-thinking from which it has needed even more toil to protect ourselves,
-and which, in forms often hardly noticeable, is ever ready to appear
-again and to draw the spiritual movement into its paths. With the
-emergence of the spiritual life, man becomes more free in relation to
-his environment; more free also in relation to the necessities of mere
-nature: his activity can exert itself more independently, concern itself
-with lofty aims, strive towards the infinite. But all this capacity
-becomes drawn into the service of the human; the wishes and the desires
-of the individual grow to an enormous extent. Since out of the struggle
-for existence, with its natural limitation, an interminable struggle for
-more existence arises, naïve self-preservation becomes transformed into
-an unrestricted egoism. That the more-than-human which appears in the
-domain of man should be employed to the advancement of the merely human
-is a danger that is present even at the highest stages of development:
-at one time man would prove his own power in the more-than-human; at
-another, and this more especially, he treats it as a means to attain his
-material welfare. Religion, for example, would reveal to man a new depth
-of reality, and so create a new life for him; and yet, how often even
-this new reality is degraded to a means for the preservation of his
-insignificant personality, and regarded as something which on his behalf
-guides the whole world aright!
-
-The development of the spiritual life in the human sphere can thus be
-seen to be anything but a sure and steady progress; every step forward
-brings new dangers; unutterable confusion arises through the use and the
-perversion of the new in the interests of man. But, if the development
-of the spiritual life within man is thus an unceasing conflict against
-human error, this conflict, despite its exhibition of the littleness of
-man, is at the same time a witness to his greatness. For it shows not
-only that the spiritual movement needs the active co-operation of man,
-but also that there is a conflict within humanity itself against the
-perversion of the spiritual; that there must be more within man and
-operative in him than the narrowly human. Indeed, in nothing does man
-seem greater than in this development of a more-than-human within the
-domain of man, in this severe and untiring conflict with himself. How
-could this conflict arise and become the soul of universal history if
-man did not possess a life and being transcending his particularity, and
-if he did not realise more in himself than we at the first glance see in
-him? The error of Positivism is that, although it shows most clearly how
-this spiritual movement dissolves the forms of life as it is immediately
-experienced, it does not perceive and value the fact that, at the same
-time, a new life, an inner life emerges; that, indeed, the negation
-itself is possible only through a more comprehensive spiritual
-revelation. To consider the negative and the positive in their relation
-to each other, and to weigh them one against the other, is the
-indispensable condition for the adequate understanding of human life.
-
-
-(b) _The Nature of Freedom_
-
-The arousing of a new world to life within man is a problem and a task:
-it cannot be effected unless the spontaneity and self-determining
-activity that are distinctive of this world also manifest themselves
-within him. Further, it cannot be effected unless within man, who with
-the greater part of his being belongs primarily to nature, a deliverance
-from nature is accomplished and the centre of life is removed to its
-spiritual side; and this cannot happen without the co-operation of man.
-We need freedom, therefore, in two senses: as the presence of an
-independent inner life, and as man's capacity to change--and we cannot
-fail to recognise that these are closely related.
-
-Now, the impressions and experiences of modern life are opposed to
-freedom in both of these senses; indeed, with apparently insuperable
-force they oppose freedom in every sense. Modern science most clearly
-shows that man belongs to a great world-whole and world-movement; his
-life and work seem to be completely determined through his relations in
-this whole; his whole life is subject to an irresistible destiny, and in
-all his undertakings and conduct he can only follow the course directed
-by it. This destiny assumes for us the most diverse forms; and through
-this diversity surrounds us on all sides. Through the power of heredity
-we enter life with a definite nature: in the family, the state, and the
-society a particular kind of environment surrounds us and gives to our
-nature its more detailed colouring: the age meets us with particular
-tendencies, takes us up into itself with a supreme power, and just as
-decidedly directs us towards certain ends as it diverts us from others.
-
-Even in earlier times all this was not ignored, so far as the individual
-aspects are concerned; but the Modern Age was the first to conceive the
-problem as a whole, and with this it has pursued the idea of
-determination even into the inner structure of the life of the soul,
-with the demonstration that here also nothing is spontaneous, nothing
-unmeditated, but that even down to the most primary impulse everything
-depends upon something else, and proceeds from definite relations. From
-this point of view the idea of freedom, and in particular that of a
-freedom of choice, appears to be only a remnant of an unscientific way
-of thinking. The fact that man feels--as an immediate impression--free
-in cases of hesitation between different possibilities has lost its
-power to convince the individual of the Modern Age. For the new mode of
-thought has evolved point for point along with an increasing divergence
-from the naïve manner of representation, and it has won its greatest
-victories in opposition to this manner of representation. The revolution
-that Copernicus accomplished in the representation of the world has
-become typical of the whole of modern work; and as regards our problem
-also, dissent from ordinary opinion is less a cause for doubt than a
-recommendation.
-
-However, our attitude in regard to this problem has, indeed, been
-essentially changed by modern thought. There can be no further talk of a
-vague freedom of the will, of a capacity to act in one manner or
-another unaffected by anything that preceded and by the whole
-environment; the fact of the subjection of man to a destiny, both
-external and internal, is forced upon us with overwhelming power.
-Whether the idea of freedom in every sense is shown to be invalid is
-another question; perhaps the problem is not so much solved as put on
-one side. In any case, if a fundamental problem--one that has been
-discussed from the earliest times--is suddenly declared to be finally
-solved, the suspicion must soon arise that the solution appears to be
-self-evident only because certain presuppositions which are in no way
-self-evident are implicitly assumed in it.
-
-The surrender of every kind of freedom meets in the first place with the
-suspicion that thereby far more is lost than we think or intend; that
-much is lost to which it is impossible to surrender all claim. Great
-trouble is taken to prove that the denial of freedom by no means does
-away with the possibility of an ethical moulding of life. Yet it might
-be shown without difficulty that, in attempts of this kind, either the
-freedom, rejected in its ordinary sense, finds entrance again altered
-and deepened--as, for example, in the philosophy of Spinoza--or the
-ethic that remains after freedom has been denied retains only the name,
-and in itself signifies something merely mechanical. But why do we
-insist upon the ethical; why does so much depend upon its continuance?
-For this reason: that upon it depends whether life merely _happens to_
-us or also _from_ us; whether we are simply parts of a rigid
-world-mechanism or self-determining co-operators in the building up of
-reality. If the former hypothesis is true, we are no more than the
-platform upon which events become connected; and we can possess no other
-unity than a summation of the multiplicity. A unity of this kind could
-not possibly attain to independence and transcendence; could not make an
-inner judgment upon events; could not take up a conflict in opposition
-to the condition of life as it is immediately experienced. The
-conception of conduct would inevitably be degraded to that of mere
-occurrence. We should cease to have inner unity and be comprehensive
-selves; we should not be able to speak of disposition and conviction:
-for it is of the essence of all these things that they cannot be
-imparted, but must arise newly and spontaneously just in the individual,
-and for this a concentration of life, an elevation to self-conscious and
-self-determining activity, is necessary.
-
-Where inner unity and such an activity are lacking, a true present does
-not exist. For if, through the all-dominant relation of cause and
-effect, that which comes later proceeds in certain sequence from that
-which came earlier, our whole existence is only a stream of occurrences,
-and that which is called present is nothing more than the point of
-transition from the past to the future. Now, a real present can be
-reached from such an apparent present only if an independent task
-originates at this point, and a decision has to be made: the more our
-whole life and being here become a problem again, the more securely
-might we trust to the possibility of advancing beyond all previous
-achievement, and of a spontaneous breaking forth of new powers, the more
-will our life be transformed into a genuine present. A genuine present
-does not exist within the sequence, but above it; it cannot come to us
-opportunely, but must be attained through our own activity: it is our
-own work. It is, therefore, not a common and equal possession, but is
-differently constituted according to the individual. The present is the
-more real and comprehensive for us the more spiritual power we evolve
-and the more spiritual content we give to life. Thus the present is not
-a mere point in the succession of times, a mere ripple in the stream of
-appearances, but involves a counteraction to this flow; its formation is
-to be accomplished only by the placing of life in the region of the
-spontaneous, the independent, the time-transcendent.
-
-All the losses in individual matters are, however, only appearances and
-parts of a universal loss that the surrender of freedom involves. This
-loss is no other than that of an independent nature-transcending
-spiritual life in general. Spontaneity is no subsidiary quality, the
-disappearance of which might only involve a modification; with it, the
-spiritual life as a whole stands or falls. The experience of history
-also shows clearly enough that that which has in any way reached a
-spiritual height never persists by simply existing, but that, if it is
-not to degenerate rapidly, it must proceed ever anew from spontaneous
-creative activity. The law of nature, that everything remains in its
-existent state of rest or motion until it is acted upon from without, is
-not true of the spiritual: of it nothing abides that is not continually
-brought forth anew.
-
-The surrender of freedom, therefore, means no less than the inner
-destruction of the spiritual life. And before we submit to this we shall
-feel compelled to make a more careful inquiry, to see whether the
-arguments against freedom are really so cogent as they are represented.
-They do exert a compelling force, but only so long as their
-presuppositions are admitted and held to be unassailable. That they are
-not unassailable will become evident as soon as we clearly recognise
-their nature and implications.
-
-If the world forms a closed and "given" system, in which every
-particular is determined completely by its position in the whole, there
-is no place for spontaneity. The question of freedom has no meaning for
-man if he belongs solely and entirely to such a world, and within it has
-only to weigh aims one against another. But in accordance with the
-results of our investigation we contest these two presuppositions most
-decidedly. To an investigation that begins with the life-process as the
-basis of its treatment, it is certain that a "given" world never can be
-primary, but only secondary. That it may attain to an inner present it
-needs a life that is not itself "given," but with its activity
-encompasses a multiplicity, unifies, and makes it definite; for anything
-to be experienced as "given" a self-conscious and self-determining
-activity is necessary. If this self-determining activity can struggle
-upwards to complete power and consciousness only slowly, still it is
-the first and the sustaining world; and at the same time it can never be
-asserted that the forms of its life are only ideas and appearances. Life
-is not formed from existing individual points, and does not pass between
-such points, but all multiplicity is sustained by an active whole, and
-from this whole animated ever anew. This active whole may not be
-conceived as dependent upon another, and it is quite capable of advance.
-We have endeavoured to show that the matter is not one of subtleties of
-thought, but of different natures of the world and of activity; and that
-with the attainment of independence a new world emerges. We have also
-shown that in us the new world must first wrestle with another, to which
-we primarily belong; that inner changes must take place in us; and that,
-if all our toil is not to be in vain, the relation of the two worlds
-must be changed.
-
-Man, therefore, has a special significance in that the two worlds meet
-together within him, and in that there can be no change in their
-relation to each other at this point without his co-operation. The
-problem of his life concerns more than his conduct, it extends to his
-being; the question is, how far the different worlds may become his own
-world, his life. The matter is one of shifting the centre of life from
-the position in which it is in immediate experience. Thus, the tension
-and the conflict involve the ultimate elements: each of the worlds has
-its own tasks and evaluations; things do not affect man with a given and
-fixed value, but they receive their value first from their relation to
-the main course upon which his life enters; and so all conflict
-concerning particular matters implies a decision concerning the whole.
-Of course, such a decision is not being made from moment to moment; and
-more especially, it is not made simply by reflection, but it is involved
-in the whole of life. Only that which in him, in endeavour and work,
-participates in such decision is true life; individual acts of external
-conduct only bring to expression that which has happened and still
-continues to happen inwardly and in the whole.
-
-In all this the possibility of an inner elevation is presupposed.
-Everyone who strives for an inner development of man; everyone who, with
-clear insight into the meanness of the general condition of human
-affairs, unswervingly continues to strive for the advancement of
-humanity, relies on this possibility: without it there is no hope of a
-development and a growth of one's own life, of an elevation of it above
-the condition in which it is first experienced. And so without this
-possibility endeavour loses all its true tension, and all that we are
-able to accomplish in ourselves and in others is no more than a
-dexterous use of existent forces. But is this condition of the matter,
-spiritually discerned, more than a mere discipline?
-
-It is true that the possibility of an elevation has its fixed
-conditions; it necessitates particular convictions with regard to the
-world and to man. We must view the world as being still in a state of
-flux and regard man as not being simply a closed and limited individual.
-The infinite spiritual life must be present as a whole to him, and
-arouse a new world to life in him; his conduct must be rooted in the
-power and content of the infinite life: only thus can we understand that
-in man also a movement begins and a change is brought about. And so it
-remains ever an inderivable, original phenomenon, which we must
-acknowledge as a fact, that a spontaneous life breaks forth in man, a
-new and relatively independent life-centre originates. We always come
-back in the long run to original phenomena; the origin of living being
-in general is also an original phenomenon. May we deny the fact of such
-original phenomena, because they make our representation of the world
-less uniform and simple? To do so would be nothing else than to make our
-previously formed conceptions the measure of reality; it would be a new,
-specifically modern anthropomorphism.
-
-This freedom, with its requirement of a world of inner life that
-introduces new contents, and also that we belong in some way to this
-world, is by no means a capacity to make a decision capriciously at any
-moment; it is not a denial of the power of necessity. Of course, it
-implies that there may be some kind of counteraction to this necessity;
-and that if this counteraction can attain success only as a result of
-the activity of life as a whole, even the individual moment need not be
-a matter of indifference. For, as the spiritual life has always to win
-its own height anew, so the present in its relations is not a mere
-consequence of the past: times of temptation can come repeatedly when
-all that which has been achieved becomes doubtful again; but times of
-elevation also come when an advance is made beyond that previously
-achieved. It is not possible for us simply to reject the present
-existence and all the conditions which constrain us, and to choose for
-ourselves a new kind of existence, instead of the one we have; from that
-it is impossible to free ourselves: in all further endeavour we have to
-take it into account, to make our peace with it. Nevertheless, life can
-attain to a transcendent point of view, from which the world of sense
-becomes the object of judgment and of adaptation; from which, to be
-regarded as completely ours, it needs acknowledgment and appropriation
-by us; and from which it is seen not to constitute our whole life, as
-that which is ultimate. Indeed, the tendencies within us which are
-concerned with nature, first reach their highest through such
-acknowledgment and appropriation by us: placed on a spiritual basis they
-lose their rigid exclusiveness and become unified; our particular nature
-no longer constitutes our whole being, but becomes the central point of
-a more comprehensive life, which extends further and further to
-infinity.
-
-Our life, therefore, is a conflict between fate and freedom, between
-being "given" and spontaneity; and this conflict may be followed through
-all life's divisions. The conflict appears primarily in the individual
-in the development towards personality and spiritual individuality. For,
-as personality, unless life has a spontaneous source, is an empty word,
-so also spiritual individuality does not come to anyone, but has first
-to be won by the work of life essentially elevating that which destiny
-brings: so far, it is our own work; but it is not entirely our own work,
-because that which comes to us from nature, and the condition of life
-gives us fixed points of support and points out a certain course.
-Similarly, peoples have in their nature, environment, and history
-definite conditions of their being, from which they cannot withdraw. But
-spiritual creation and inward greatness do not grow simply out of these
-conditions, however favourable they may be, but out of a spontaneous
-activity which takes up that which has been presented to it, gives it a
-central point, and from this develops it. The deciding question is
-always whether and how far individuals and peoples attain to and
-preserve such a self-determining activity. This activity alone makes it
-possible for life to be unified inwardly; for its elements to be
-distinguished and separated, and for some to be brought into prominence
-and others relegated to the background; for life to be made secure and
-elevated, and as the result of all for a spiritual individuality to be
-formed. The same thing holds good of the condition of a particular time,
-and man's relation to it. At first man appears to be a child of his age,
-a slave of his age. But by the spiritual life he is able to win an
-independence of the age, and to make himself its lord. Again, he cannot
-free himself from the problems of the age; he cannot alter them just as
-he likes, cannot divert into an opposite direction the power which they
-exert upon him. But there is always an "either--or," either submission
-to the succession of experience, or the beginning of an opposition from
-spiritual self-determining activity: in this, also, the possibility of
-calling new powers to life presents itself. From this spiritual point of
-view activity centred upon the concerns of the particular age is no
-longer regarded as the whole life; the particular age with its work is
-comprehended in an infinite life. As through all its different stages
-and constituents, so ultimately humanity as a whole also carries on a
-struggle for a spiritual being, an advance to a new level. Humanity may
-not be regarded as something finished; it must evolve to a nature other
-than its present one, bring about a transformation of its life, and win
-a spiritual individuality: the life of humanity is in a state of motion
-and it must become self-determined.
-
-The idea of freedom thus reveals far-reaching prospects and the greatest
-tasks; it manifests its truth and power in taking possession of common
-experiences and illuminating them, and in the arousing and
-re-organisation of our life. With the acknowledgment and the adequate
-appreciation of freedom, with the revelation of its universal relations,
-man is elevated in the most essential manner, for it manifests the new
-world as active in the midst of his life and capable of appropriation by
-him: it calls him to independent co-operation in the conflict of the
-worlds; it gives to the simply human and the apparently commonplace an
-incomparable greatness. However powerful destiny may be, it does not
-determine man entirely; for, even in beginning opposition to it there is
-a liberation from it. However mean man's activity, it carries in it a
-decision between worlds; however vanishing the moment, it is not
-entirely lost. True, the idea of freedom involves definite
-presuppositions: it involves, indeed, a profession of faith concerning
-life and reality as a whole, a profession of faith that contradicts
-every form of Naturalism and Intellectualism, and, in opposition to
-their representations of the world, champions another. But this
-profession of faith does not concern this problem only; it is involved
-in our work as a whole, and so the whole may support and confirm it.
-
-
-(c) _The Beginnings of the Independent Spiritual Life_
-
-As the problem of freedom gains in clearness and depth in the relations
-which have been discussed, so also the beginnings of independent
-spiritual life which are manifested in the domain of man become much
-clearer in them. Without such beginnings, which represent a new order
-in contrast to nature, and which oppose the degeneration of life to the
-narrowly human, a movement towards independent spirituality could never
-emerge in us. They are really intelligible and acquire power only when
-they are unified and acknowledged as the activity of a new life and
-being.
-
-These beginnings appear in an elevation of life accessible to every
-individual, an elevation above the forms as well as the content of mere
-nature. We perceive this in the norms with which the research of the
-present is busily occupied. Our life does not consist entirely of simple
-matters of fact, but in certain directions qualities and forms are
-presented to it which are able to contradict the immediate state of
-things and to exercise a certain power over it. Thus the norms of
-thought, the norms of conduct and of artistic creation are evolved, each
-making particular demands, and being different in the manner of its
-operation. However, we are concerned here not with the aspects of
-difference, but with that which is common to all; and this consists in
-the working of an actuality in us that is something other than natural
-occurrence, an actuality that needs our acknowledgment, and through this
-acknowledgment first wins power over us. The demands which these norms
-make upon us are in no way convenient to us; they limit our caprice;
-they often cost hard toil and heavy sacrifice; our desire for natural
-happiness does not commend them to us. How is it then that we do not
-simply reject them? what is it that gives to them a constraining power
-over us? If they remained isolated and impenetrable experiences, if they
-adhered to us as something alien in nature, were foreign elements in our
-being, their power would be unintelligible. It is to be explained only
-upon the hypothesis that they are unfoldings of our own life, which by
-these unfoldings is proved to be something other than a life of nature.
-Unless they are rooted in our own life, these norms are like misty forms
-in the air. They obtain complete reality and motive power first as
-movements of our self, which then is no mere point by the side of other
-points, but an independent manifestation of life of the spiritual
-world.
-
-This is in particular clearly the case in the idea of duty, the
-elucidation of the inner meaning of which is Kant's greatest and most
-enduring service. A duty is always a command; it presents itself as
-independent of all caprice. At the same time, however, it can never be
-forced upon us by an external power; it needs our own assent and
-acknowledgment. Our own volition and being must operate in it, and, in
-this, being must present itself otherwise than it appears to be at the
-first glance. We must bear and maintain within us a new world; in
-submission to its orders we must assert and develop ourselves. In this
-manner alone can we explain the joyfulness which accompanies all genuine
-performance of duty, and without which duty is no more than a task
-forced upon us. How much power duty, and the norms in general, may
-acquire in the greater part of human life is a question in itself; but
-they could not exist for us even as ideas and possibilities if they were
-not in some way based in our own being. However, as they show this being
-in a new light, it follows that they must themselves gain in clearness
-and in power and become more closely unified if they are understood and
-treated as developments and modes of self-preservation of our own life.
-
-It is with regard to content as well as to form that beginnings of a new
-life appear. At the level of nature only that which serves the
-self-preservation and the advancement of the life of the individual
-being is estimated as a good; all that is involved in this may be
-comprehended under the conception of utility. But notwithstanding its
-great power over man the consideration of utility does not form the only
-motive of his life. For a detailed treatment of this matter we may refer
-to what was said in the discussion of "The Growth of Man beyond Nature."
-At present we are concerned especially with the view that the new that
-appears in us should be acknowledged to be the manifestation of a new
-world and the expression of our real being. In the growing of man beyond
-nature negation usually preponderates; he must limit the impulses of
-his natural _ego_, acknowledge and respect the rights of others, be
-ready to subordinate and sacrifice himself. It is for the most part not
-evident what can commend such a negation to him and give it power over
-him; and an impulse aroused to clear consciousness and strong desire
-may, therefore, feel this entire connection with a new world to be an
-unwarrantable limitation, and reject it as a violent intimidation and a
-degradation of life. The matter is seen in its right light only when
-negation is regarded as the reverse side of affirmation, and even then
-only if the winning of a new life and being is acknowledged in this
-affirmation. The positive impulse of self-preservation is indispensable
-to complete vital-energy, but mere self-assertion on the part of an
-individual in opposition to others does not constitute a genuine self; a
-genuine self is constituted only by the coming to life of the infinite
-spiritual world in an independent concentration in the individual. Only
-thus does life, which otherwise were empty, acquire a content. Then the
-individual is no longer compelled to develop his powers in conflict with
-other individuals, but in directing his life towards this infinite
-spiritual world, in its complete appropriation and organisation. Hence,
-only that which raises the spiritual content of life can be regarded as
-good, and goods will be compared in value in accordance with this
-standard. The more they lead beyond mere results to the development of a
-new being and self, the more essential they are to spiritual
-self-preservation; everything else becomes a means or a preliminary
-condition. Negation, also, has greater significance and importance from
-this point of view. The new affirmation can acquire no complete truth
-and no real power in man without a fundamental deliverance of life from
-mere nature and its particularity. Without earnestness of renunciation
-the new life sinks back to the old or both are combined in an
-undifferentiated unity, with the consequence that the new life loses its
-power to stimulate to new endeavour. As human beings are, this negation
-must always be a sharp one.
-
-In this connection, it may be said that life needs the stage of law
-which restricts natural impulse, and constrains to the acknowledgment of
-superior organisations of life; but from the stage of law there must be
-progress to the stage of love, which for the first time reveals an inner
-relation to reality and reacts upon the stage of law, giving it a soul.
-On the other hand, a love that would be genuine comes not to destroy the
-law, but to fulfil, to take it up into itself. As love and law are
-indisputable powers in the life of humanity, so they also proclaim the
-emergence of a new world and the development of a new being within the
-domain of humanity.
-
-
-(d) _The Transcending of Division_
-
-A particularly severe conflict with regard to the problem of the unity
-of life arises between the natural condition of man and the requirements
-of an independent spiritual life. The spiritual life demands an enduring
-whole which includes all multiplicity within itself and of which the
-movement originates within: human existence is primarily a juxtaposition
-of individuals and a succession of moments; no union seems to be more
-than that which is constituted by a mere collection of the individuals.
-If the division were not in some way transcended no spiritual life could
-grow up within humanity, and man have no share in the building up of a
-spiritual world. The nineteenth century gave a confident answer to the
-problem: it contended that history and society of their own capacity
-bind the elements of life into stable forms which take up all
-multiplicity into themselves and raise our existence to spirituality. We
-most emphatically deny the validity of this contention, and hope to show
-that history and society themselves involve difficult problems; further,
-that only when we conceive them in a particular way are they able to
-help in the unification of life and then only in a limited manner; and
-lastly, that they do not so much produce a spiritual life as presuppose
-it, as essential to their own existence. Naturalism and Intellectualism
-have also confused the outlook; if we free it from this confusion,
-history and society will take a secondary place in our estimation; they
-will themselves be seen to be deeper and more comprehensive and to
-involve movements which extend further than appears in immediate
-experience; and they will become witnesses to the living presence of the
-spiritual life within humanity.
-
-
-(i.) _The Spiritual Conception of History_
-
-The nineteenth century transmitted to us a conception of history that is
-far more peculiar in nature and far more open to attack than is usually
-recognised: history is represented as a great stream which takes up all
-individual achievements into itself, unites them, and, regardless of all
-human error and caprice, leads surely to its end. No genuine achievement
-is lost, and all gain seems to be permanent; beyond all the trouble and
-uncertainty of the moment appeal is made to the power which, directing
-and elevating, permeates the movement, clarifies and refines it. In this
-conception the necessity of a process that has the power of determining
-its own activity and making its own decision is primary. The fact that
-the matter is not so simple as this conception of history represents is
-shown by the experience of the age itself, which directly contradicts
-it. For according to this conception the whole past should discharge
-itself into the present and so impart its whole result immediately to
-us, and the direction that our activity ought to take should be pointed
-out to us with complete certainty by history. But we are distinctly
-aware of the extent to which this direction is a matter of question and
-doubt, and of the uncertainty into which we have fallen with regard to
-the relation of the present to the past: in the process of our
-investigation we saw this in particular in the division and conflict
-between the different systems of life. History is seen to be a difficult
-problem far more than a secure fact; and we are compelled to take up a
-new consideration of the question.
-
-In this consideration a distinct delimitation of the achievements
-characteristic of man is primarily necessary. Modern science already
-recognises a history of nature, and much that was formerly regarded as
-complete is now seen to be in a state of flux and movement. Since every
-event leaves effects behind, in the course of ages the results
-accumulate, develop, and act upon one another, that which comes later is
-conditioned by the influence of the earlier and is intelligible only in
-relation to it, a distinctive historical method gains currency. Geology
-presents to us with particular clearness a history of this type. In so
-far as man belongs to nature and the spiritual life has not yet
-developed to any degree of independence in him, he is also the subject
-of such a history. That which happens within him leaves behind effects
-that become the conditions of later occurrence. This conception of
-history, as determined solely by mechanical causes, is still maintained
-in some quarters in spite of further developments of thought. But it is
-not apparent from this point of view how, even with the greatest
-accumulation of effects, history could yield anything of gain to an
-inner unity, to a life from the whole: for that, man must bring with him
-something essentially new; and as a matter of fact this is what he does.
-
-Not only do events happen to us and change our condition, but with our
-own activity we are able to hold fast to these events, to give to them
-an inner permanence, to bring them ever anew from the dim distance into
-the living present. We do not drift onward with the stream of time, but
-withstand it; seek to wrest something fixed from "becoming" and change,
-and salvation in the eternal. We cannot do this without altering the
-whole view of things and manifesting a new spiritual capacity.
-
-The retention in mind of individual events by means of annals, monuments
-and similar methods is the beginning of a history of a higher kind: even
-so much shows a greater activity, since it involves a judgment of the
-significance of events, and on the basis of this judgment begins to
-wage war against the destroying power of "cormorant devouring time." The
-achievement is incomparably higher, if certain spiritual unities and
-tendencies are adhered to and are given permanent currency: thus
-religion in particular gave a stability to life and delivered men from
-the tyranny of the mere moment. The matter remains simple so long as the
-movement is within a single people or a definite sphere of culture. But
-in its progress it goes far beyond these limits. New peoples arise; the
-state of culture undergoes great changes, indeed revolutions; life is
-taken up from new starting points, from which everything of importance
-to earlier ages loses its value. But it is lost only for a time; a
-desire to return to it and to bring it into complete harmony with the
-new is soon felt. The circle of vision is thus increasingly widened, and
-all multiplicity is finally united into a whole. This retention of the
-past is primarily a matter of knowledge and of intellectual
-appropriation. But it is not limited to this; it would operate not only
-in the extension of knowledge but beyond this in the development of
-life. Whatever has been won by human power is to be preserved, unified,
-and used to advance the present. Thus, there arises a historical
-culture; an education on a historical basis; religion and philosophy,
-art and law derive power and content from the work of universal history,
-and life as a whole seems to win a greater comprehensiveness and
-stability. And so it has come to appear as though the past imparts its
-whole result to the present without any effort on the part of man and
-without incurring him in any risk.
-
-In reality the case is entirely different. The stream of the ages
-becomes spiritually significant to us only in so far as we develop an
-independence of it. The stream does not itself, automatically and
-independently of us, select the elements of value which it contains or
-unite the ages to a harmonious result: we ourselves must achieve this.
-Spiritually regarded, we do not from the beginning stand upon a sure
-foundation, on which we might peacefully build; we must first acquire
-such a foundation through endeavour, and in this matter we see doubt and
-violent change continually make that uncertain which is apparently most
-secure, and make it necessary to seek greater depths.
-
-For this treatment of history, involving, as it does, self-determining
-activity, an elevation above time is essential. Without in some way
-transcending time we could not survey individual events and unite them
-in one representation. But we would do far more than that; we would
-select and take up into our own life that which is valuable in the
-earlier, in order thereby to enrich and strengthen our life, and to lead
-it as far as possible from the present of the mere moment to a present
-encompassing the ages. How could this come to pass unless we were able
-to secure an independent vantage ground transcending the stream of the
-ages; a vantage ground from which we may survey and judge the ages,
-appropriate some elements from them and reject others? Experience shows
-clearly enough that the tendency and the content of life with which we
-meet the past, decide what shall be its spiritual representation, and
-how we shall stand in relation to it. For experience shows that each
-main tendency of life has its own view of history and its own treatment
-of history; it shows further that every change in life which is in any
-way far-reaching involves an alteration in our relation to the past;
-gives prominence to the new, and relegates the old to the background.
-There arises therefore a history of history; a history, for example, of
-that which in the life of Antiquity has seemed essential and valuable to
-the different later ages. For us, therefore, history, in regard to its
-spiritual nature, is involved in constant change. The past does not
-decide concerning the present so much as the present concerning the
-past; the past is not something dead and fixed behind us; ever anew it
-becomes the object of passionate conflict.
-
-But does not this dependence of the past upon the present deprive
-history of all independence and of all value? Does it not surrender life
-completely to the contingency of the changing moments? Does it not
-destroy all inner unity of the ages? This would, in fact, be the case
-if the matter remained on a simply human basis; if a spiritual life
-transcending time were not manifested through all the changes of the
-ages; if a spiritual history could not be distinguished from a narrowly
-human one. Spiritual history is concerned with that which through all
-human activity and endeavour reveals a self-conscious inner life and
-which, as such a revelation, is valid not only for a particular age but
-through all ages and independently of all ages. Spiritual history would
-be impossible unless there is active within us from the beginning an
-independent spiritual life which first realises its content through the
-historical process.
-
-Such a transcendent nature is most evident at those highest points of
-human development which we call "classical," not because they should
-dominate and bind all ages, but because in them the spiritual life
-attained to a complete independence over against man, lifted him above
-himself into the fire and flood of creative activity, and made it
-possible for him to produce characteristic contents. These classical
-achievements are especially important for the development of life if
-they not only bring something new in individual departments and in
-particular directions, but also shape and present the whole to us in a
-distinctive manner, and seek to appropriate to themselves, and in the
-appropriation to elevate, the spiritual impulse that exists in man; if a
-new being, in contrast to nature and society, emerges and would become
-lord of the whole. Life as a whole is thus transformed into a problem
-and a conflict. The question is whether this movement is able to take up
-everything into itself and to lead life to its highest level, or whether
-it meets with an insuperable resistance. In this matter life tests
-itself by itself, by its own development--a thing which is possible only
-if its experiences arise out of its being as a whole. If in a particular
-case it proves that essential requirements remain unsatisfied, that the
-movement is not able to include the spiritual life within itself, a
-severe convulsion is inevitable, the spiritual life as a whole comes to
-a standstill, and there can be no advance until life concentrates anew
-and the new concentration gains ground. It is to be expected that a new
-concentration will bring forward and develop that, in particular, which
-formerly did not find complete satisfaction. In the first place,
-therefore, there is an abrupt break and the emergence of an apparently
-irreconcilable opposition: the old is relegated to the background;
-tested by the new, the old soon comes to be regarded as a complete
-mistake. In reality it is not so. For, as certainly as spontaneous
-creative activity was operative in the old and produced characteristic
-contents, it involves something which, superior to all the change of
-time, will survive convulsion and doubt, and assert itself in some way
-in a more comprehensive life. But the old will not survive and re-assert
-itself unless the timeless reality within it separates itself from all
-human and temporary addition; unless it manifests what lies behind the
-historical form.
-
-The same thing happens in the case of the new movement that arises. With
-all its greatness of achievement, limitations become manifest in it;
-then, more comprehensive forms arise; and so in the historical movement
-as a whole the spiritual life is revealed in forms continually
-increasing in content. In opposition to the tendency for one age to be
-separated from another, however, a desire for unity, for a life which in
-some way embraces the multiplicity of movements and concentrations of
-life, and binds them into a whole, makes itself felt. A unity can hardly
-be achieved by simply regarding the different concentrations and
-tendencies as on the same level and making a compromise between them;
-rather it is necessary that the different concentrations and different
-movements contend with one another; it is just their conflict which may
-elevate and deepen life. The movement to secure this unity and to retain
-elements from the past is not an accumulation of elements and tendencies
-in time, but an increasing deliverance from time, the establishment of a
-timeless truth independent of the change of things. Experiences, of
-which the external manifestations no longer exist, are again called to
-life, and preserved for all time by spiritual power; indeed, that which
-is lost in immediacy by the absence of the external manifestation is
-more than compensated for by an advance to the source of the power:
-things which in their temporal form are a mere co-existence are
-transformed into an organised whole. Movements, which in history have
-often been engaged in passionate conflict, may enter into a relation of
-interaction, and may be regarded as a sequence of stages, in which the
-earlier prepares for the later, and the later presupposes the earlier;
-in which all give life to and further one another. A universal life thus
-progressively arises within the domain of man; the individual
-achievements unite more and more to the building up of a new, enduring
-world; the whole realises itself in the individual occurrence, and
-through the development of a time-inclusive present transcends the mere
-moment.
-
-This movement of life in history involves more unrest, conflict and
-doubt, than the nineteenth-century doctrine of evolution implied. For
-this doctrine saw in the historical movement the unfolding of a
-spiritual life, sure as regards its foundation and its main direction;
-the antitheses within that movement seemed to be involved in a single
-process, which determined the limits of each tendency in relation to the
-others; a transcendent necessity was regarded as leading to the
-development of all in their relation to one another. As a fact, the
-conflict is also concerning the substance and the main direction of the
-whole; the spiritual life must first realise itself within the region of
-mankind, and it is realised through the toil and work of man himself. It
-is just the fact that the problem is an ultimate one, that even the
-fundamental forms of life develop only in conflict and experience, and
-that we are concerned not with winning simply this or that in life, but
-genuine life itself, that makes history significant. At the same time,
-this brings man into a more inward relation to the spiritual life, and
-this life is made more his own life and being than if he were
-surrounded by the power of physical or intellectual processes. Nothing
-makes humanity as a whole more significant than that in its province and
-through its work the new world begins to develop.
-
-With such a conception of history, the philosophical treatment of it
-must direct its attention chiefly to the independent spirituality which
-in the course of the centuries, and especially in great changes, is
-evolved in contrast with the narrowly human; and to the main direction
-which is given to life by this spirituality. The philosophical treatment
-of history ought first of all to trace the liberation of life from the
-simply human; the inner elevation of our being to a more-than-human.
-Antiquity at the height of its spiritual development began to desire a
-universal truth independent of man; a moulding of life in accordance
-with an inner right; and an order of things beyond the power of human
-caprice, as was shown by the giving symmetry and harmony precedence in
-art, and justice in conduct. Christianity brought about a liberation of
-the innermost disposition, the root of endeavour and of love, from
-purely natural impulse, however ennobled; and in this way brought men
-into new relationships and set them before new tasks. The Modern Age on
-the part of science began a relentless conflict against the
-anthropomorphism of the mode of life as immediately experienced; thus it
-has made the spiritual life even in its form independent of man, in that
-it has created spiritual complexes and has recognised in them movements
-and inner necessities of their own. Through the whole of this movement
-of universal history life frees itself more and more from its dependence
-upon mere man, and from the bondage to "given" presuppositions and
-"given" natural impulses, and from a "given" world in general. Life is
-based more and more upon its own independent nature, and from its
-position of independence develops a new kind of being. It is this gain
-of a new world through struggle that alone gives to history a meaning
-and an inner unity.
-
-If history thus accomplishes the formation of great spiritual complexes,
-and if there is an endeavour to fit these with all their antitheses into
-an all-comprehensive whole, if it unites all ages and all powers with
-the bond of a universal task, it is a clear witness to the living
-presence of the spiritual life within the human sphere. Apart from this
-presence all these achievements would be impossible, and the whole
-movement must vanish into thin air. The estimate of history here given
-is valid only when a spiritual history is clearly distinguished from
-merely human history. Only when history as a whole gains a soul and a
-support from this spiritual history are the non-spiritual factors able
-to attain to any rational significance; only then can history have a
-meaning and transcend the relativity from which otherwise it cannot
-escape. On the one hand, history demands for its own existence the
-presence of a spiritual world within humanity; on the other, it
-testifies to this presence by that which is characteristic in its own
-content; by that which can be understood only as a progressive
-disclosure of such a world.
-
-
-(ii.) _The Spiritual Conception of Society_
-
-The problem of society is closely akin to that of history. In the life
-around us a certain union is attained in that men dwell together, but
-this immediate union does not simply of itself produce a spiritual
-unity, a spiritual whole: if society manifests such a unity, then in it,
-also, a distinctive revelation of the spiritual must be acknowledged.
-
-Modern science shows clearly and distinctly that the individual is not
-an isolated atom, but exists in relation with a social environment; and
-that, even to the innermost recesses of his being, he is determined by
-the constitution of this environment. But science falls into serious
-error if it goes beyond the truth of this contention and attempts to
-represent spiritual creation as the result of the mere inter-relation
-and accumulation of individual powers. For between spiritual creation
-and this inter-relation and accumulation of individual powers, in spite
-of all their external proximity, there is the widest divergence.
-Spiritual creation requires to be treated as an end complete in itself,
-and must follow the laws of its own being; it claims an inalienable
-supremacy above all trivial human interests, which yet for a time
-dominate the common life. Further, it cannot succeed without the
-development of an inner unity which maintains and characteristically
-forms a whole of life. The existence of men side by side gives rise to a
-variety of opinions, strivings, dispositions, which mingle confusedly
-together; the usual condition of things that arises from this confusion
-has anything but a definite character. The condition of our own time
-must convince everyone who is unprejudiced, how little this pitiable
-confusion can of itself produce anything spiritual and associate men
-together in an inner unity. For in the epoch of railways, telegraphs and
-newspapers, of large towns and of factories, movements of the masses are
-certainly not lacking; they surround the individual and influence him
-more strongly than ever before. But where, out of all the fluctuation of
-public opinion, out of the confusion and bustle of life, does creative
-spiritual activity arise, give to life an inner content, and unite
-humanity in an inner community? Rather, we see humanity continually
-split up into opposing factions; we see the strife tend more and more to
-affect the foundation of our existence.
-
-However, in spite of the spiritual impotency of the movements of the
-masses, creative spiritual activity has emerged in humanity, has
-overcome the separation of the individuals and inwardly unified the
-forces of life. It must not only be possible to effect, but we must
-actually effect a unity which transcends the individuals, a union which
-has its source in the spiritual life itself.
-
-In reality the experience of humanity shows such a union. Of primary
-importance in this connection is the fact of the power of so-called
-"ideas" in history--the fact that certain aims transcending natural
-welfare win power over the whole domain of culture, bind men together
-and lift them above their selfish interests. To be sure, in the
-movements which arise to carry out these ideas much that is
-insignificantly human is introduced; and the interests of individuals
-and of classes often largely preponderate, but the origin and the
-progress of these movements cannot be accounted for by the merely human;
-they are only to be explained as due to man feeling directly within
-himself the necessity of spiritual tasks. If he feels this necessity
-only under particular conditions, and if it is only for a short time
-that it asserts itself at its highest, still it extends its influence
-over life as a whole, and is everywhere a unique phenomenon, even when
-limited and confused by much that is alien to it.
-
-Further, the fact that whole peoples have developed distinctive national
-characters is of importance in this connection. Such a character is
-distinguished essentially from all mere participation of common
-conditions, not only physical but also psychical, that social life
-brings with it. For the development of such a character life must rise
-to energetic activity and become unified; there must be an advance
-towards a common goal; an active relation must be taken up not only
-towards the environment but also towards itself. A national character is
-not "given," but is attained through the work of history; it develops
-only through common experiences, sufferings, and triumphs: in its origin
-and its continuance it involves an elevation above the aims of physical
-and social preservation, a development of pure inwardness.
-
-Finally, no inner relation of humanity proceeds from the physical
-association of men, from their meeting in a common world. If a vital
-whole, a common truth, did not exist within us, all our relations would
-be external: we could not follow common aims in life and endeavour or
-have common experiences; we could not think and live for one another, or
-develop spiritual contents in different departments, such as those of
-law and religion, science and art, and give to them a cognate spiritual
-character. It is always the presence of a self-conscious reality that
-binds humanity together inwardly. We can be as certain in our
-acknowledgment of this presence as we can that our experience shows such
-an inner unity in important achievements and in the formation of whole
-departments of work and other complexes.
-
-With its acknowledgment we avoid the severe contradiction that is shown
-in the contemporary estimate and conception of humanity. To our more
-dispassionate consideration of things the disagreeable aspect of the
-social machinery, the growing sharpness of the conflict, the passionate
-eagerness of the desire for more, the inconsistency between the enormous
-amount of subjective excitement and the spiritual poverty, are clear.
-Logically, this confused and self-contradictory state of affairs ought
-to lead to a rejection of the whole, and to a pronounced pessimism. Yet
-humanity is regarded as noble and worthy of respect; it is made the
-value of all values; the object of our faith and our hope; all our
-efforts are directed towards its well-being. And this is done without it
-being perceived that thus the basis of experience is forsaken and that
-the impression of humanity obtained from experience is bluntly
-contradicted: the introduction of an abstract conception seems to alter
-everything and to lead to its being regarded as good. In the shattering
-of beliefs at least this one has remained: belief in the power of
-abstractions. He who would abandon this belief and at the same time hold
-fast to the high estimate of humanity must admit that a spiritual world
-is active in man, and in so doing acknowledge that man is more than he
-appears in immediate experience. Such a one will feel increasingly the
-necessity of actively comprehending and definitely distinguishing from
-the medley of trivial social concerns every manifestation of a spiritual
-world in man. It is not out of society but in conflict with it that
-everything great has grown. And yet that which is great is rooted in a
-whole of life. Spiritual work must have its basis in this invisible
-whole, not in mere society; and from this position it must protest
-against the presumptuous claim of society to evolve the spiritual life
-of its own power. The community that proceeds from a spiritual union
-will be primarily an invisible one; but whether this invisible unity
-could not realise itself better and be effective also in the visible
-world is a serious and difficult question that continually becomes more
-urgent.
-
-If the conviction that we have here given an account of definitely
-contradicts the historico-social view of life which was so potent in the
-nineteenth century, and which deeply degraded the spiritual life and its
-self-conscious and self-determining activity, it by no means fails to
-recognise the significance of history and society; and has no intention
-of taking up again the mode of thought common in the period of the
-Enlightenment. History and society are indispensable means for the
-development of the spiritual life in humanity: from mere individuals and
-from individual moments it could attain neither content nor power. But
-to declare for this reason that history and society are the generating
-basis of the spiritual life was a definite error; though in the
-historical movement of the problem it certainly finds an explanation and
-an excuse. The higher estimate of history and society has grown up on
-the basis of Idealism; to Idealism the spiritual life seemed to live and
-first to attain to its complete truth in history and society. Later on,
-attention and activity were diverted from a world of thought chiefly to
-the world of sense; and with this change history and society lost their
-spiritual foundation and their animating soul. Nevertheless, their claim
-to produce the spiritual life remained; they were expected to achieve of
-their own power more than was possible even with the greatest exertion.
-In truth they can bring forth spiritual contents, and serve the
-development of the spiritual life within man, only under the
-presupposition of the presence of a transcendent spiritual life. At the
-same time their achievement in the combination of forces and in the
-production of spiritual results is a witness to the reality of the
-spiritual life.
-
-
-(e) _The Elevation of Life above Division_
-
-We saw that the spiritual life attains an independence only if it does
-not simply bring about an effect upon a world independent of it, but
-produces a reality from itself; concentrates so as to become a reality
-itself. At the first glance man seems by no means to satisfy this
-demand. For his life, after, in its progress, rising above its initial
-stages, in which it was undifferentiated from the environment, is
-subject to the antithesis of man and world, of subject and object, and
-the divergence seems to increase continually in the course of his
-development. The more power the life of the soul wins, the more it
-produces a characteristic content, the freer and more active reflection
-becomes, the more does the world recede before man, the more definitely
-is immediate contact with the world prevented. The gulf is not bridged
-by the epistemological consideration that that over against which we
-place ourselves must also, fundamentally, belong to our own life, be in
-some way included within it: this treatment signifies a removal of the
-antithesis to another region rather than an inner transcendence of it. A
-genuine transcendence cannot be effected without an expansion and
-development of life, evolving new connections which transcend the
-division, and lifting us into a sphere above mere subjectivity.
-
-Connections such as these are, as a fact, brought about by an expansion
-and development of life; but these connections which in their individual
-appearances are evident to all are seldom adequately estimated as a
-whole, and in respect of the problems to which they give rise. These
-connections are effected in work, in work as a spiritual occurrence. We
-have already seen how in work the object loses its alien nature and is
-taken up into our own life; we must now follow more closely the process
-by which work is extended and deepened; produces a characteristic sphere
-of life and establishes a spiritual reality in the domain of man.
-
-At first we are occupied in work with an abundance of individual tasks
-that have no inner relation to one another. But the more work advances
-from an external contact with objects to an inner change of them, the
-more necessary is it that these tasks should be unified so as to form a
-whole; and that each task should have its position in this whole, and
-represent in itself a particular aspect of the whole. The proof of
-greatness in a "work" is just that the nature of the individual aspects
-is determined fundamentally by their relation within the whole; that
-what is characteristic in the work as a whole is manifested even in its
-simplest elements; thus, for example, every independent thinker has
-particular views with regard to the nature of the fundamental forms of
-logical thought such as the concept and the judgment; in the same way
-every independent artist creates his own language of forms. Work not
-only leads to a unity of life in the case of individuals; but, further,
-without a union of individual forces for a common end, without an
-organisation of all human work, we should stand defenceless in face of
-the infinity of the world, and we could never advance to a state of
-culture. In such community of work man creates a new sphere of existence
-for himself; he forms his world of work and sets it in contrast to
-everything which does not come within it. This world of work transcends
-the individual; and yet it is our world; it is sustained by human power
-and, directing and forming, reacts upon man. For, the more unity this
-world of work acquires and the more control it wins over the object, the
-more definite departments and relations it evolves in itself, the more
-does it manifest characteristic laws and methods which, with superior
-power, prescribe to human activity its nature and direction, but which
-can originate nowhere else than in the domain of man. And so within the
-domain of man we rise above all caprice and subjectivity: since the law
-of the object determines man's work, his life is raised above the
-antithesis between soul and object. Work is not something that man,
-essentially perfect, undertakes incidentally and as something
-supplementary, but it is that through which he first develops a
-spiritual life; through which he acquires a spiritual existence; and the
-character of the work determines at the same time the nature of this
-existence. As the individual departments of work evolve characteristic
-modes of thought and conviction, so out of work as a whole a particular
-spiritual nature arises which does not exist in relation to a world
-external to it, but contains within itself a world formed by its own
-activity. All this, in conformity with our fundamental conviction,
-involves the implication that man is not a spiritual being from the
-beginning, but only has the potency to become one.
-
-Such a raising of the aim which is set to work involves an increase in
-the amount of toil that it necessitates, and the dangers which are
-incurred: the object and the encompassing life are subject to these
-dangers. For the complete success of work and the formation of a genuine
-self, it is as necessary that the object be taken up entirely into the
-process of work as that there should not be another vital unity more
-ultimate than the self which grows up in the work, but that the self
-should form the final conclusion: whatever is not taken up into the
-process of work lessens its content, weakens its power, endangers its
-truth, and prevents just that from being achieved which is here in
-question. If, however, we consider the opposition that arises at
-different points, genuine work is seen to be a high ideal, an infinite
-task which even in favourable cases is only approximately fulfilled. At
-the same time it is a witness to the sway of elevating and modifying
-powers within the domain of man.
-
-The object is concealed from man chiefly by his own inclination to treat
-himself as the centre of reality; to transform the environment into a
-reflection of his own being; and to measure the infinite by the standard
-of his own well-being. Along with this humanising of the environment,
-man develops the most diverse forms of occupation with it, but however
-far such occupation may be extended, it does not lead man beyond his own
-domain; it does not aid him in his spiritual progress. It is possible
-for occupation upon the environment to aid spiritual progress only when
-things attain an independence, and from this firmly resist the tendency
-of man to represent them in accordance with his subjective wishes. Only
-such independence of the objective makes it possible for it to arouse
-new powers in man and for his life to be based on something deeper than
-immediate feeling and desire, and to begin an inner transformation. But
-this movement has various levels which differ distinctly from one
-another; and from the position of a higher level it is difficult to
-regard the achievement at a lower one as genuine and complete work. The
-Modern Age with its exact research often cannot regard the work of early
-natural science as work of high value. A similar gradation is evident in
-the striving for happiness; for the raising of human well-being. So long
-as endeavour is directed to attaining and preserving mere subjective
-states of feeling, and so long as a movement beyond this subjectivity is
-not acknowledged to exist within man himself, and the requirements of
-this movement are not satisfied--as is the case with Epicureanism and
-Utilitarianism--endeavour, earnest as it may be, does not acquire the
-character of spiritual work; it does not essentially advance life, and
-therefore in the long run does not satisfy human needs. Epicureanism and
-Utilitarianism with all their results inevitably become insipid and
-empty to him.
-
-If there are powerful hindrances to this endeavour for something more
-than the subjective, there is at the same time a wealth of movement
-which bids defiance to them, and the course of history shows continuous
-expansion and development of this movement; it shows that man is able to
-take up a conflict against the trivially human, and, in the building up
-of a new world, to raise himself essentially above his original
-condition. Exact science breaks away from the object of perception,
-removes it to a distance, analyses it there, ascertains its laws, and
-then restores it in changed form to men: in this it also advances human
-life in itself, in that thought rises more freely above perception, and
-a system of pure thought sustains the whole world of sense. A further
-divergence between the struggle for physical existence and the building
-up of a new world appears in history in the endeavour for happiness and
-a significant content of life. In the experience of humanity, morality
-and religion, looked at inwardly, assume two fundamentally different
-forms. On the one hand they are looked upon as a mere means to support
-man in a given world; to bring him into congenial relation with the
-world; and so to organise this world that it may achieve as much as
-possible for human well-being. This form governs human experience at its
-general level, and easily comes to be regarded as the only form. At
-higher levels of creative activity, however, a totally different form
-made its appearance: there was a break with the whole world of sense and
-well-being as though with something intolerably narrow, and in a
-self-conscious life a new world arose and brought forth characteristic
-contents; the appropriation of this world raised life above all mere
-particularity and subjectivity; at the same time this appropriation
-became an infinite task and work for man and for humanity as a whole. If
-this form of religion and morality has been manifested with complete
-clearness only at high levels of life in history, from these heights
-this form has also exerted an influence upon the rest of life, animating
-and raising it; indeed, it is only this genuine conception of religion
-and morality which first gives to them an independence and a value in
-themselves. Thus, notwithstanding the inadequacy of human achievement we
-cannot but recognise that life transcends mere subjectivity and the
-separation that it involves.
-
-In another direction complexities arise in that something objective is
-evolved and established which, however, is not brought sufficiently into
-relation with life as a whole and united with it. Then, work may
-progress within its own province constantly and vigorously, but it loses
-touch with our soul; we do not realise or develop ourselves in it. With
-all the feverish tension of individual powers work is then inwardly
-alien to us, and its power over us may become a heavy oppression.
-Through such a detachment from life as a whole work loses soul and is
-nothing more than mechanical; in short, we have all those results of
-division between work and soul which we may feel with particular
-acuteness in the contemporary state of culture. Experiences rising from
-this division lead us to demand that work shall be so organised as to be
-capable of taking up life as a whole into itself, and with this of
-becoming our true self. Again, life as a whole cannot enter upon work as
-complete, for then it would force something alien upon work, and by this
-pervert it; life as a whole can be evolved only from the unification and
-elevation of work itself. We do not begin and carry on work as a fixed
-individuality, but we form individuality first through work by the
-continual overcoming of the opposition of subjective disposition and
-object. Spiritual contents are not produced by a communication of
-something that is in itself complete to something else that is in itself
-complete, an interaction of disposition and object; rather must we say
-that genuine work sets both sides in motion and with elevating power
-unites them in a single life. So understood, every movement which tends
-to the development of spirituality in individuals, peoples, ages, and
-finally of humanity as a whole, is a witness to the possibility of a
-transcendence of this opposition, of the emergence of a reality within
-the life-process.
-
-We cannot give work a spiritual nature in this way, and make it the
-instrument of a new reality, without being compelled to acknowledge that
-there is much less genuine work among men than we are accustomed to
-assume. On the other hand, we must also recognise that the little that
-there is signifies much more, and indicates much greater advances of
-life than it is usual to admit. Nothing differentiates individuals and
-ages more from one another than the extent to which they take part in
-genuine work; the degree to which they transform their life in such
-work. Mere reflection and good will can accomplish very little in this
-matter; without an energetic nature, a strong inner disposition with a
-definite tendency, as well as the favour of destiny, not much can be
-achieved. What is usually called "life" is only a will to live, a
-straining after life; it yields but an outward appearance and a shadow
-of life: genuine life is first brought forth by that transformation.
-
-But the less human existence in general immediately includes genuine
-work, the more indispensable is it that there should be firmly rooted
-tendencies to such work in the basis of our being, and that these
-tendencies should be developed to greater clearness of form and to
-greater effect in the work of universal history. So that our work may
-not be split up and destroyed, we need definite syntheses that establish
-a structure of life. On the one hand we must accomplish an analysis into
-individual tendencies and departments of life which, operating
-independently, generate life; and on the other hand we must find a unity
-of endeavour among these tendencies and departments; a movement from one
-to another; a common activity directed towards the building up of a new
-world. These syntheses must be an immediate experience at each point;
-they must be involved in all division of work; everywhere set
-distinctive tasks; produce characteristic achievements; and in energetic
-organisation of existence elevate it to the level of a characteristic
-system of life, full of power, which presses forward to further
-development. Only thus could a movement originate which might expand to
-a real whole and be capable of establishing this whole against the world
-as it is for immediate experience; only thus could humanity defend
-itself against the power of the environment and of destiny.
-
-Experience alone can decide whether our life contains such syntheses,
-and whether by means of them it forms a whole: the movement of universal
-history shows that there are such syntheses. The natures of these
-syntheses give to the chief epochs of culture their distinctive
-characters, by which the natures of their elements and of the relations
-between them are determined; and man acquires a definite relation to
-the world and can make a judgment upon it. Such a synthesis, with its
-life-penetrating and life-forming power, certainly contains some truth;
-it is not a product of narrowly human reflection and imagination. The
-course of time and the changes of history, therefore, cannot simply
-break it down completely; rather with the truth that it contains such a
-synthesis elevates life above time into the eternal. But it has not been
-demonstrated that life is capable of only one synthesis, or that it may
-not produce a variety of such: life does not necessarily realise its
-unity in simply establishing a single synthesis; it can seek unity in
-the supremacy of a chief synthesis above others. That experience in our
-own sphere of culture shows the latter to be the case we intend to
-indicate in a few lines.
-
-A characteristic synthesis first made its appearance at the height of
-classical Antiquity. It was art, chiefly plastic art, that determined
-the nature of this synthesis. Form as a unifying and systematising power
-is at the centre of life, takes possession of matter and organises it,
-transforms chaos into a cosmos; and in this exercise of power it
-realises itself, even though its fundamental nature is regarded as
-transcending all change and variation. Spiritual work is formative and
-selective; it is the triumphant realisation of form; it is necessary
-that life in all its stages of development should be permeated by this
-formative spiritual activity. There are numerous independent centres of
-life, but the tendencies from each are towards the realisation of the
-whole, and find their perfection in it alone.
-
-Thought, independent of the world, must extract from the medley of first
-impressions permanent forms, and unite these into a consistent
-representation of the whole; it finds the acme of its achievement in
-bringing this representation clearly to consciousness in a form that is
-complete and free from subjective addition. In conduct, an organisation
-and a unifying of the elements so as to produce a harmonious effect is
-the chief thing. From the chaotic mass of individuals, the state by
-constitution and law forms a living work of art, a differentiated
-organism. For the individual the chief matter in conduct is to bring the
-diverse forces in the soul into the right relation of order and
-gradation, to reach the highest of all harmonies, the harmonious life.
-
-All this involves particular estimates of value, a characteristic
-solution of the problems and a harmonising of the oppositions of our
-existence. It is a matter of general knowledge how this synthesis has
-elevated and ennobled life, and is still increasingly felt as an
-influence tending to further development and harmony. But it is equally
-well known how the progress of life has rebuffed the claim of this
-system of life to be the only valid one. We have become aware of
-contradictions which do not find sufficient acknowledgment in this
-system: a gulf deeper than it is able to transcend has made its
-appearance between man and his environment: in particular, the supremacy
-of form, which constitutes the basis of the system, has been shaken.
-Antiquity, at its highest development, had, without much consideration,
-given to form a living soul; its later course dissolved this union, the
-soul degenerated more and more into an inwardness of feeling, and gave
-up all claim, if not to the world, yet to its organisation and
-formation: form, deprived of soul, threatened to become superficial, and
-to change life into play and enjoyment. It was at this point that
-Christianity intervened with a powerful effect, but it has not, in the
-sense with which we are here concerned, produced an organised system of
-life.
-
-Such a system was first produced in the Modern Age, and more
-particularly in the period of the Enlightenment. This system makes force
-the centre of life; to increase force without limit is the task of
-tasks. The elements of reality are centres of force; but these elements
-are not isolated, because force is called forth only by force, and the
-amount of life depends on the degree to which relations are developed.
-Since in this way one tends towards another, they become interweaved and
-joined, and the many are united. For this system the world does not
-appear as a work of art which rests in itself, but as a process that
-ceaselessly increases in volume: the main achievement of spiritual work
-is, with complete consciousness and self-determining activity, to take
-possession of this process, which actually surrounds us; to change its
-infinite life as much as possible into our own life, and to co-operate
-to the best of our capacity for its advancement. Since here spiritual
-work never tolerates a state of inactive peace, never accepts the world
-as a rigid destiny, but is concerned to develop the world, to analyse
-the world as it first appears into its elements in order to reach the
-forces that move it, life acquires a more active relation to the
-environment than it does in the earlier, more contemplative system, and
-feels itself to be more in the workshop of reality.
-
-The relation of knowledge and life is changed from its traditional
-character. Research cannot transform the world from the apparent calm
-and completeness of the immediate impression into movement and
-development, without analysing the representation offered into its
-ultimate elements; ascertaining their laws, and finally, with the help
-of the idea of unlimited time, reconstructing from the beginning the
-world, which it had first of all destroyed. With such destruction and
-reconstruction modern research brings the world much nearer to us, and
-gives us more power over it than does the earlier type. Corresponding to
-the understanding of reality from its evolution, man finds his own life
-in a progressive movement. Human society is regarded less as a
-well-arranged work of art than as a complex of forces, which come to
-full development and make sure progress only in their relation. The
-chief demand is for the greatest amount of freedom of movement; the
-greatest number of relations between individuals, and a ceaseless
-increase of the stream of life, that should take up into itself all that
-bear human features. The individual also must realise his existence as
-one of "becoming" and motion; he is not bound by a closed standard of
-nature. Through the power of his spiritual nature he is able to
-assimilate ever new capacity, and to grow without limit: nothing gives
-more proud courage and joyous force to his life than this consciousness
-of an inner infinitude. A characteristic ideal of culture and education
-is formed: all individual departments of spiritual work are now regarded
-primarily as means to the increase of human power, and must assume a
-form corresponding to this. And so life everywhere becomes more active
-and more powerful: it finds its aim within itself, in its own elevation,
-and has therefore no need to seek it in something external; the whole
-existence of man becomes more his own work. As work comes more deeply
-into touch with the nature of things the development of power becomes at
-the same time a controlling of the world. It was not to be wondered at,
-therefore, when the modern man, with the development of this system of
-life, believed that for the first time he had left a childlike condition
-of constraint and limitation, and entered a state of freedom and
-maturity.
-
-But the further development of life shows clearly enough that this
-system, which makes force and movement its leading principles, is not
-the final stage of human endeavour: the leading idea of our whole
-investigation is that human endeavour is more than this. We have seen
-that a system of mere force and movement gives no soul to work and does
-not lead life to self-consciousness and self-determination. A rushing
-stream seizes us and carries us along with it, but we reach no position
-independent of it; and so we cannot unify the multiplicity, nor gain a
-content from its immeasurable achievement; indeed, the increasing
-extension of life divides us more and more into single forces, and
-deprives us of a self that transcends the movement. At first this was
-not fully perceived, since the soul was implicitly assumed to be force
-and the extension of movement was regarded as a pure gain to the life of
-the soul. But the further development and the keener emphasis on the new
-state attained could not but clearly indicate the contradiction here
-involved; could not but lead to a separation between soul and work, and
-force them into conflict. Hence there is a danger of work becoming
-mechanical, and of the life of the soul, which, with this separation, is
-thrown back entirely upon the subjective, being lost in indefiniteness.
-
-These experiences of mechanical work and indefinite subjectivity give
-birth to a new situation, in which the problem of the soul, a problem
-which in the earlier systems remained in the background, is forced into
-prominence. The task of life is seen to be a more fundamental one; it is
-a matter not so much of altering a given reality in one way or another
-as of first discovering a genuine reality, of advancing beyond all mere
-activity to a being which exists within the activity.
-
-It has become evident to us in many ways that from the recognition of
-this a characteristic form of life proceeds. The only question is
-whether the change is capable of bringing about a thorough organisation
-of life, whether it can produce independent centres of life and unite
-them into a community of life, and thus lead to the development of a
-system of life. We ourselves most resolutely maintain the view that this
-is really possible; that life is in process of forming itself into a new
-whole, and that with the clearer establishment of this, problems which
-have existed from early times receive full explanation, and a definite
-advance is made in their solution.
-
-We saw that, in its highest stages of development, life concentrates at
-particular points, and that a characteristic sphere of life is in this
-way brought forth, as, for example, in spiritual individualities,
-national character, and so on. As soon as these developments are
-acknowledged to be spiritual and are sufficiently distinguished from
-simply natural existence, as soon as the manifestation of a new world is
-recognised in them, they become a great problem. Then they cannot be
-regarded as a mere product of a particular part of nature, but must be
-accepted as primarily a creation from the spiritual life as a whole, a
-creation which at the same time must maintain itself and transform in
-its own activity that which it receives. The relation to the spiritual
-world as a whole is the fundamental relation of life, and yet the
-further development of life does not follow immediately from the
-relation to the whole, but from the relation to the innumerable other
-centres of life; the infinitude that the individual being acquires from
-the relation to the whole receives that which is particular in its
-organisation and its content only from the experience of the relation to
-others. The relation to others, however, is not produced by nature, but
-as spiritual, only from the spiritual world as a whole and must be
-continually sustained by the whole. The relations of individual to
-individual will therefore be included within the whole, and through the
-presence of the whole will be essentially advanced beyond the capacity
-of mere nature. The love that arises here is fundamentally different
-from all the love which arises from natural impulse; and, understood in
-this manner, notwithstanding all that may be doubtful in respect of its
-fulfilment in individual matters, there is much point in the demand of
-Augustine, that, in the relation of man to man, not man but God should
-be set in the first place, and that man is to be loved only through God.
-
-However, it is not an increase of activity alone that is sought in the
-multiplicity of relations, but a growth of being--a being not beyond all
-activity, but existent within it. It is necessary not only that the
-life-process achieve more, but also that it grow in itself, change that
-which is alien to it into its own, and display more reality within
-itself; life must experience every single activity as the manifestation
-of the activity of the whole, and thus, along with unlimited extension,
-preserve self-consciousness.
-
-The demand for a self-conscious life, the demand for an elevation of
-activity to the organisation and development of being, by no means
-excludes other forms of activity, if only for the reason that this
-demand presents a high ideal to which man can only very slowly
-approximate. But this ideal constitutes an aim and a standard for all
-other activity; the giving of form and the increasing of force must aid
-in the development towards this aim if they are not to become devoid of
-real worth. The more necessary it is to insist upon an animation of
-reality through the development of self-conscious life, the more must we
-guard against the danger of anthropomorphism, which, when we are hasty
-and impatient, inevitably finds an entrance to and corrupts the whole of
-our thought and life. Only with much toil and with continual
-self-criticism can life be brought to the point where the transition to
-self-consciousness is possible; and even then the whole cannot, under
-human circumstances, be attained at one stroke; but at first life must
-endeavour to concentrate, to form a nucleus so that in this way it may
-acquire a firm basis, and from this take up a struggle for its further
-spiritualisation.
-
-The same thing is to be seen in the differentiation and the gradation of
-life: everywhere a movement towards self-consciousness begins, but the
-emergence of this movement forces an antithesis into prominence, and
-life is completely transformed into work and conflict. Thought cannot be
-satisfied with representing the world as a work of art or as a process;
-thought must seek self-consciousness in the world. This it finds in the
-emergence of an independent spiritual life and in reality's
-coming-to-itself; at the same time the difference between spirit and
-nature becomes more pronounced, and all the divergences in life
-increase. Men can find their highest unity neither in joining together
-so as to form a whole as a work of art, nor in a system of progressive
-increase of force. Neither alone could prevent society from becoming
-spiritually destitute, nor could both together. Society also needs a
-self-consciousness and acquires it only through the development of a
-spiritual content and spiritual character; but this must be won by
-continual struggle from the medley which constitutes the general
-condition of social life. Again, the individual does not attain a
-content for his life through an immediate combination of his powers so
-as to form a harmonious whole, or through increasing them without
-limit; the individual also must by activity concentrate his life and so
-gain the basis of a new world: never is he in his life, as a whole,
-personality and spiritual individuality. True, there lies within him the
-potentiality to become such a spiritual individuality, and this
-potentiality may be transformed in his own activity; and the existence
-thus acquired can affect the rest of life, arousing and elevating it.
-
-Thus the ideal is set completely in the distance; it is seen that we do
-not live our life from a given basis, but that, on the contrary, we have
-first to acquire the basis and to preserve it by continuous work; it is
-not a particular direction of life, but a genuine life itself and with
-this a spiritual being that is in question. We appear, therefore, more
-imperfect than ever before. But in this connection the imperfection
-itself is a witness that important tasks are set before us, and that
-superior forces rule in us. In the midst of all that is obscure it
-cannot fail to be recognised that there is a movement towards the
-development of a new self-conscious reality above the capacity and the
-interests of mere man. This movement has been manifested in great
-historical achievements, in the formation of fruitful systems of life
-which at the same time were developments of the life of the individual.
-It has brought forth ever new creations; now it sets before us the task
-of developing a new system of life which does complete justice to
-self-consciousness, and in accordance with its main idea must also
-transform all individual aspects and departments. Where we recognise so
-much to do, we are certainly far removed from opinion and pretence.
-
-
-
-
-II. THE MORE DETAILED FORM OF OUR SPIRITUAL LIFE
-
-(a) THE PROBLEM OF TRUTH AND REALITY
-
-
-Whatever there is peculiar in our conception of the spiritual life must
-be manifested and proved in reference to the problem of truth and
-reality. In the first place our conception decidedly rejects the widely
-held view of truth as a correspondence of our thought with an external
-reality. For the attainment of independence by the inner life makes it
-impossible for something externally existing to be taken up into life
-without undergoing an essential change. It is also inconceivable from
-this point of view how something beyond us could in any way attract and
-arouse us. The problem of truth can do this only if it originates within
-our own life: it can become a compelling power only if the attainment of
-truth aids us to transcend a division within ourselves which has become
-intolerable. The representation of life, that we have given, makes it
-quite evident that such a division does spring up within us. Within our
-own life a certain activity begins, which becomes wider and wider, and
-which would signify our whole being. But this activity finds limits and
-contradiction within ourselves: much takes place in our experience
-independent of this activity and apparently without our co-operation; a
-certain condition of things exists, and asserts a rigid actuality; and,
-so far as this condition extends, we are bound; we bear something
-impenetrable within us. So long as these two sides of our being remain
-separated life is not complete and genuine: activity lacks a foundation,
-a content, and a direction that is sure of its aim; and all the bustle
-of free movements, all effort of reflection cannot conceal the state of
-spiritual poverty. On the other hand, the fact that we bear so much
-within us that only half belongs to us and that presses upon us like a
-fate must cramp and oppress us. And so life does not experience itself
-as a unity; it lacks an inner truth, since activity presents itself as a
-whole and yet is not one. Life itself is therefore a problem. The
-problem must be felt to be the more serious the stronger the desire for
-a self-consciousness becomes. However, self-consciousness cannot
-possibly be reached without a transcendence of the division between
-activity and the given condition of things. Life has first to seek
-itself, its unity, its perfection; and it is just this that is the
-problem of truth: and in this problem life is turned not towards
-externals, but towards itself. We understand now how the desire for
-truth can exert such an enormous power, for, in this struggle for truth,
-we fight not for something alien, but for our own being.
-
-This conception of truth determines also the nature of the effort to
-attain truth. The task cannot be to subordinate one side of life to the
-other, and to derive one side as far as possible from the other; that
-is, to transform the given condition of life as far as possible into
-free activity, or to adapt activity to the given condition in such a way
-that activity is merged into it; but the task is one of pressing forward
-to a transcendent active whole which unites the two sides, and develops
-them both; and in mutual relation gives to activity a content and to the
-given condition a soul. We have seen how a movement to attain such a
-unity runs through history and extends into the soul of the individual.
-That life is in general able to unify and raise itself is the
-presupposition of all striving after truth: the proof of this, however,
-is to be found in the actual furtherance of life, in the new contents
-which are thus obtained.
-
-Such a way of regarding truth, that is, as an upward endeavour of life
-to its own unity, a unity not forced upon it but immanent, exhibits its
-unique nature especially in its opposition to the intellectualistic
-conception of truth, which, notwithstanding that it has been rejected
-and attacked so often, still continues to assert a mighty power.
-According to the intellectualist, cognition should treat the problem and
-solve it of its own capacity; it seems that the synthesis that is sought
-must be found in the first place in the realm of thought, and thence
-imparted to the rest of life. As a fact, however, knowledge itself is
-affected with particular severity by the division of free activity and
-fixed given condition; and from its own capacity thought cannot attain
-to a state of full creative activity which alone is able to overcome the
-division, but for the attainment of this is referred to an advance of
-life as a whole which alone can reach an essentially new position. To be
-sure, cognition has particular fundamental logical principles which
-regulate all its work. But to regulate and to produce are two different
-things. The most scrupulous adherence to these principles does not lead
-beyond reflection to an inner relation to the object, to an inner
-transcendence, a penetration, and an appropriation of the object; it
-leaves us still in the position of simply attempting to know, in a state
-of mere reflection and search. All real knowledge involves a spiritual
-creation, an advance, and a self-formation of life as a whole. The chief
-epochs of culture have therefore given a distinctly unique character to
-the inner nature and the fundamental texture of knowledge; the character
-given to it by one epoch being entirely different from that given to it
-by another. Modern knowledge does not differ from earlier knowledge only
-in a quantitative way: as soon as its connection with the chief
-synthesis characteristic of modern life is revealed, it can no longer be
-regarded as absolute knowledge, but only as a particular kind of
-knowledge beyond which there are possibilities of further developments.
-
-From life as a whole the conflict will extend into all its individual
-departments, and give to the activity in them a greater intensity.
-Religion, art, and human society all have first to overcome the
-opposition of subjective power and alien given condition, and thereby to
-win a truth. In no case does truth mean a taking up of things which are
-presented to the activity of life--it means rather an advance of life to
-its own perfection.
-
-In accordance with this conception of truth, that which claims to be
-true will not be able to prove its right otherwise than through its
-power, that is, through its capacity to embrace life as a whole and to
-raise it above opposition into the state of complete activity. Every
-such attempt must prove its power and its right in opposition to rivals
-by being able to wrest from them the truth contained by them, and in new
-relationships to lead beyond the state they reach, and to change life
-more into a self-consciousness than they are able.
-
-Hence the endeavour after truth here shows more movement, more freedom,
-more multiplicity: different starting points and different ways may be
-chosen, and the correctness of the one need not involve the
-incorrectness of the other. The only indispensable thing is that the
-movement pass beyond the state of division and reflection to one of
-complete activity; only in that way can the content of life gain through
-the movement of life. And so we see the great significance of progress
-in work, in spiritual work; according as it succeeds, genuine life is
-distinguished from the mere will to live. To be sure, each piece of work
-that is here undertaken is a venture; it is far easier and far more
-secure to continue in the state of mere reflection and reasoning. But
-the latter does not lead us to an experience and a decision in a matter
-concerning the development of life, and therefore does not bring us a
-step further in this chief matter. Work with its failures is better than
-all subtle contemplation which leads to no activity; for failure can
-lead us beyond itself to truth, while feebleness and inactivity keep us
-in the old position.
-
-In our conception of it truth is anything but a system of universal
-propositions out of which, by deduction, all detail might be derived.
-Rather the organisation of life into an inner unity, upon which in this
-view of truth everything depends, will exclude all that is only general
-and turn towards the differentiation of the whole. The more life
-progresses in this direction the less is it a mere application of
-general principles; the less does it find its consummation after the
-manner of a conclusion from given premises; the more does it become a
-progressive activity, a new formation and an elevation.
-
-In this conception, there is also room for a truth peculiar to the
-single individuals. As the comprehensive life-synthesis can permeate
-every individual detail of existence, so it is necessary for every
-individual life-centre to realise its own particular synthesis, and that
-every individual should fight for his inner unity and thus, also, for a
-truth of his own; he must, however, realise this unity and truth in
-every particular activity. A truth which is not my truth is, for me, not
-a complete truth. Only it is necessary that such individualisation be
-effected within the whole, not independent of it; it must result from
-the inner necessity of creative activity, not out of a vain wish to
-excel. In any case, it follows here that, as the immanent and universal
-form of truth requires more activity and power, it is also able to grant
-more free movement and multiplicity. Truth and freedom have been thought
-opposed to one another in the course of history; if the former seemed to
-require unconditional submission, the latter had a strong tendency to
-shake off every tie as an oppressive yoke. If we see that truth of life
-can be reached only through freedom, and also that freedom acquires a
-content and a spiritual character only through its relation to truth,
-the opposition by no means entirely disappears, but a basis is won upon
-which we may strive to attain an agreement and a fruitful interaction
-between the two.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So understood, the problem of truth has the closest connection with that
-of reality: with regard to the one as to the other we are concerned in
-a conflict against the external conception common to a naïve state of
-life, which, though far surpassed by the inner movement of the work of
-history, obstinately asserts itself through the evidence of the senses
-in single individuals and hardly ceases to impress men with its apparent
-self-evidence. The naïve way of thinking understands reality as a space
-which encompasses men and things; reality seems to be presented,
-"given," to man through the senses; only that which is exhibited to man
-in these sense-relations passes current as real. In this Ptolemaic form
-of life, dominated by sense impression, everything other than sense
-fades to a mere illusion, and this includes the spiritual life itself,
-although in it alone is reality known. Now, however, as science has with
-no mean power led beyond this Ptolemaic representation of nature, so the
-development of life has led beyond the Ptolemaic reality. Life could not
-emancipate itself from its attachment to the environment and develop an
-inwardness without effecting a revolution in this problem. The inward
-becomes the first and surest experience, with which all that is to pass
-current as real must show itself to be in consistent relation:
-everything external loses its proximity and becomes a problem; it can be
-established as real only through that which it achieves for the inner
-nature and in accordance with the standards of that nature. The power to
-convince possessed by sense impression is now based, not on its
-obviousness, but on the spiritual activity that it arouses. Here also,
-only the experiences of the spiritual life itself can lead to the
-experience of something less than spiritual.
-
-As such a revolution brings clearly to consciousness the spiritual
-achievement in the formation of reality, so at the same time it gives
-the object more movement and transforms it in spiritual endeavour. Two
-things are necessary to the conception of reality: an independence of
-man, and a realisation of the many as a unity. Now, since that which
-lies wholly beyond experience must for that reason be inaccessible to
-us, this assertion of independence can have no other meaning than that,
-within life itself, something becomes detached from the stream of
-consciousness and fixes and asserts itself as independent of it. The
-power thus to transcend the time-process is a characteristic mark of all
-spiritual activity; this activity evolves within us something in
-opposition to us, and in so doing accomplishes a marvellous expansion.
-This is most clearly seen within the sphere of thought. For all the
-functions peculiar to thought receive their differentiating
-characteristic only through such a detachment from the flow of
-sense-presentation and by establishing themselves as independent of it:
-the concept presents its content as something fixed in contrast to the
-stream of presentations; the judgment proclaims its connection of
-concepts to be something that does not pass away with the act of
-connecting them but persists in face of all the changes of the psychical
-life. Life accomplishes a gradation within itself and lifts itself above
-the mere stream of change. Only because life establishes within itself a
-fixed nucleus, and in this manner wins an independence of its own
-momentary condition, can it oppose a world to itself, and set itself the
-task of appropriating this world--that, further, that independent
-nucleus should remain no mere collection, but should be inwardly unified
-is again a requirement and an achievement of the spiritual life. How far
-that requirement will be fulfilled depends upon the nature and the
-degree of the development of the spiritual life.
-
-Reality, therefore, is to be found chiefly in the self-consciousness of
-the spiritual life; from this self-consciousness we build up our
-reality. Since spiritual requirement is from this point of view the
-measure of human undertaking, our activity is judged by the degree to
-which the state of the world is changed in it and has thus become our
-reality. How far our capacity reaches in this matter cannot be decided
-by preliminary consideration, but only by the progress of life itself:
-in particular it is not permissible to assume things-in-themselves
-independent of us and thus to reduce our world to a realm of mere
-appearances. For, so far as that independence reached, things could
-never enter our life, and never be inwardly appropriated; at most they
-could concern us only in their effects. As far as the conception of
-nature as a mechanism is concerned, which regards all occurrence as a
-texture of related individual points which exist, inaccessible, behind
-it, there is much to be said for the view that things are only known in
-their effects; but this view is an intolerable limitation--dogmatic in
-the highest degree--if it is meant to represent our fundamental relation
-to reality and to ourselves. For then we should be related to ourselves
-as to something alien; all the self-consciousness of life would be
-destroyed; there could be no development of being in contrast to single
-acts, but we must be completely resolved in the stream of appearances;
-there would be no advance in the striving after reality. As a matter of
-fact, we are concerned primarily with the content that life is able to
-give to itself; how far it presses forward to reality. Our world is to
-be measured more especially by the degree in which life becomes
-deepened. But from the beginning man, so far as he shares in the
-spiritual life, is not a being adjacent to reality, but within it. He
-would never be able to attain to a reality if he did not bear it within
-himself and needed only to develop it. Thus ultimately he does not look
-inwards from outside, but outwards from within; and his limitation is
-not the chief thing, but the secondary.
-
-The inner structure of our life corresponds with this conviction. It is
-characteristic of all spiritual life that it does not pass hither and
-thither between individual points, but includes and develops a
-multiplicity within a transcendent unity; by this the spiritual life
-grows within itself, and more and more acquires a self-consciousness.
-And it is just in this way that it evolves to a reality. Reality,
-therefore, here is not a fixed and completed magnitude, but is of
-different degrees. In the first place there is a difference in the
-energy which maintains a union of the manifold and a transcendence of
-the division: according to the nature of this energy the self appears,
-sometimes stronger, sometimes weaker; its power of changing, at one
-time greater, at another smaller. Again, the force of the resistance
-that the given condition to be appropriated offers, differs according to
-the amount of its positive power; and the clash of the given condition
-and free activity will be harder or more gentle according to this power.
-One man finds intolerable contradictions where to another all is plain
-and smooth; one believes that things are transformed in their own being
-where another holds that only their surface is affected: and so, that
-which one regards as reality may seem to another only a realm of
-shadows.
-
-Mere energy, however, is too subjective to be able to obtain a genuine
-reality from life: for that, a transformation of life in work, an
-elevation to full activity, is necessary; but the preceding paragraph
-has shown that this transformation and elevation is of different kinds
-and of different degrees. The system of the formation of being promises
-to give to life the most fundamental organisation and the most forceful
-reality. For into the single elements embraced by the movement of life
-it is able to breathe a life of their own, to confer upon them an
-incomparably greater independence than in those systems in which they
-are regarded as lifeless objects which are acted upon, and which only
-set isolated forces in motion. When within a comprehensive life
-different centres of life meet, and in their interaction the activity of
-the whole wins an ever richer content and a more stable nature, genuine
-reality must increasingly unfold itself.
-
-Looked at from this position, reality is not a fact but a problem and an
-ideal; it does not lie at the beginning but at the end of the course: it
-is different with different individuals, peoples, and times; each in its
-particular nature and work has its own reality. Thus we cannot
-comprehend the problem of reality from experience without conceiving
-reality as existing in flux: the assertion of an independent spiritual
-life, transcendent over all human undertaking, is a sufficient safeguard
-against a destructive relativism. It is one of the most troublesome
-appearances in the conflicts of minds that they fail to recognise the
-many-sidedness and fluidity of our conceptions of reality; that each
-takes his conception as the self-evident one and urges it upon the
-others. In this way originate the many unfruitful disputes concerning
-this world and the next, immanence and transcendence, in which the most
-external and superficial conception is usually presented as
-self-evident; while yet, according to the fundamental relation and the
-chief basis of life, very different conceptions arise, and as a fact,
-systems of thought nowhere come into more severe conflict than with
-regard to their conceptions of reality. Only to a mode of thought which,
-without further consideration, accepts the world of sense as the genuine
-and only reality, can philosophy and religion, for example, appear to be
-occupied with things implying an "other" world, and which, therefore,
-are incomprehensible. On the contrary, Augustine thought to attain to
-genuine reality and at the same time a true life only by elevation to a
-realm above sense, so that to him the world of sense was secondary and
-derivative.
-
-To-day we are again deeply concerned with the problem of reality.
-Notwithstanding all the passionate agitation of forces in the
-incalculable extension of and the breathless haste in work, a genuine
-reality fails us; our life lacks the proper character of being real; and
-so, in the midst of all the external results of our work, our life,
-spiritually discerned, threatens to become destitute and unreal. An
-eager desire for reality exists in our time; it is often thought
-possible to satisfy it by the closest possible connection with sense
-impression and impulse, and by expelling as far as possible all elements
-of thought. But thought is there, and cannot be expelled; with its power
-to analyse, it steps continually between us and things, takes away from
-them the proximity they have for us, and dissolves them into mere
-pictures and shadows. As a fact, the problem of reality lies primarily
-within the spiritual life; and it cannot be solved otherwise than in
-that the spiritual life advances within itself from division to unity,
-from the movement of forces to self-determining activity, from all mere
-activity to a formation of being. If thus our life becomes transformed
-into a self-preservation, if in it we unfold and assert a spiritual
-being, we become certain of a reality and feel a satisfaction. Never,
-however, can reality come to us from without.
-
-
-(b) MAN AND THE WORLD
-
-Through our whole investigation we have expressed the conviction that
-man acquires a secure relation to the world only through his belonging
-to a spiritual life acknowledged as independent; otherwise, all entrance
-to the world is shut off. The growing independence of the inner life has
-broken down the immediate connection which dominates the naïve way of
-thinking: if, however, man once finds himself set in a position of
-independence of the world, he can hardly draw it back to himself simply
-of his own capacity. All appeal to subtlety and reflection seems only to
-widen the gulf still more. Only the acknowledgment of an independent
-spiritual life offers a way out of such a desperate situation: if in the
-spiritual life the world attains to a self-consciousness, and if, on the
-other hand, the spiritual life is present and active within man, there
-is a possibility that man and the world are united; and that, at the
-same time, human life also becomes cosmic. But it is a question how far
-the possibility comes to be realised; how far the union that exists in
-the innermost basis can be developed and transformed within us in the
-work of life. Only the actual experience of life can answer this
-question. We must ascertain whether there are any particular
-developments of life which are not productions of the human, but which
-manifest the operation of a transcendent world; and, further, whether
-these developments are able to find a more detailed formation in their
-contact with the world around us, and to adapt themselves to the
-multiplicity of this world. Such a turning to the individual thing would
-be impossible if a complete life-form ruled within us and impressed
-itself on things only from the outside. For in this case this form must
-inevitably be uniformly effective in its whole extent; in appropriating
-the multiplicity it could not itself advance to greater concreteness. If
-such an advance is effected, there is a contact within life between the
-one and the other; and so the world acquires an inner connection with
-our activity, and the spiritual movement can take possession of the
-breadth of our life and with its differentiation gain a greater
-intuitiveness.
-
-An immediate union of man and world is indeed opposed to the fact that
-the spiritual life which should unite them always exists, for us, in its
-particular form in human existence and that this form cannot be
-projected beyond man into the whole. The form of human existence
-constitutes an insuperable boundary; if it governed our life as a whole,
-then man could never overstep his narrow, particular sphere. But it is a
-conviction that is fundamental to our investigation that our whole life
-does not come under this form, but that there are tendencies in life
-which are operative beyond this form of existence, and attain to an
-independence of it. So far as these life-tendencies may be detached and
-developed, man may confidently take up the problem of the world, and
-feel related to the world around him; he can try to transform its life
-into his own. The particularity of his manner of presentation and
-perception then simply sets the limitation, that that which may be
-admitted to be certain and true in its fundamental content can be
-presented only through the medium of human peculiarity; the more
-detailed amplification of the representation is always only of a
-symbolic character. We see from this fact that there is a contradiction
-ever present within our life that prevents it from ever gaining an
-ultimate conclusion; however, it does not take from us the possibility
-of an inner union and a community with the whole. Indeed, the
-contradiction itself, and the powerful movement that it calls forth, are
-to the train of thought here indicated a witness to a fundamental
-expansion of our life.
-
-An attempt to unite our life with the whole appears in the first place
-in thought, in its work of obtaining knowledge. This emergence of
-thought involves a transformation of life that could never be occasioned
-by mere man, but can be understood only as the revelation of a new stage
-of universal life. In thought, the intellect, otherwise bound to the
-mechanism of the sequence of presentations, attains an independence. It
-places itself in a position independent of the world, and seeks to
-comprehend it as a whole, to appropriate it as a whole. The primary
-connection with things is dissolved, to become established anew upon a
-higher level and with an important transformation of its nature; through
-the deviation a real appropriation is achieved. All this is incomparably
-more than a merely becoming conscious of a given world, which is an
-experience that could arise in some way at isolated points; thought
-contains a development of the world which ultimately can proceed only
-from the power of the world itself. How can the individual matter be
-elucidated if the whole remain obscure? How can the desire for
-enlightenment obtain such a power over man, and assert itself in him in
-opposition to the interests of his physical self-preservation, if a
-universal movement were not operative in him? Man does not elucidate the
-world, but the world elucidates itself within him. What is thus reached
-is valid not for him alone, but universally; the development of this
-universal movement of thought enables him to win a closer relation to
-the world, a life embracing the world.
-
-Our thought cannot advance in the definite work of building up science
-without producing and employing a definite logical structure with fixed
-principles: these principles are immanent in the work of thought; they
-are above all the caprice and all the differences of the individuals.
-This logical structure cannot be carried over and applied to the world
-around us, as all scientific research carries it over and applies it,
-without implicitly presupposing an objective logic of things, a
-conceivability of experience: in this, man does not simply project
-externally and apply mechanically forms already existing in a complete
-and final state within him. For the multiplicity of things not only
-gives to those principles a particular form, in the production of which
-they must themselves participate, but through the relation to the world
-the fundamental forms are also further developed in their nature as a
-whole; it is only with the co-operation of both sides that the
-thought-structure achieves what is ultimately reached. The chief thing
-is that thought actually transcends the state of contemplative
-reflection, and advances to fully active work; that out of the movement
-of our thought proceed further developments, which extend to the object
-also; that, moreover, we come under the compulsion of inner necessities,
-and, possessing the highest freedom, are raised securely above all
-caprice. This creative thought in us, which is at the same time our own
-thought, constitutes a witness to a meeting of our thought with a
-thought that has its basis in things and in the whole. Inability to
-imagine such a thought should never lead to the denial of an absolute
-logic, with which all scientific research stands or falls. The
-disclosure of this relation, however, gives to our thought, in the midst
-of all doubt, a firm foundation, a joyful certainty, an infinite task.
-
-Artistic creation and appreciation brings another characteristic
-unfolding of life; and this also demonstrates an inner relation of man
-to the world, and can be developed only when this relation is
-acknowledged. In the first place, for this creation and appreciation a
-deliverance of life from the turmoil of ends and interests, which at
-first sway our existence, is essential; artistic creation and
-appreciation involves a resting and a tarrying in itself. If the world
-were no more than this turmoil, if it did not in some way attain to
-self-consciousness, how could such a deliverance be brought about? If a
-self-conscious life were not present in man, how could a longing for an
-artistic moulding of life arise in him? But an arousing of an inner
-life in things, the revelation of a soul, is accomplished not through
-imparting something from without, but through a meeting together of
-things and human endeavour. On the other hand, the spiritual expresses
-itself in a visible form and in doing so moulds itself. The chief thing
-in this connection is not mere beauty, a preparation for idle enjoyment,
-but a truth, a revelation of contents, a further development of life
-through and above the antithesis. How could something invisible and
-something visible, to express the matter briefly, find a common ground
-and combine together in a common action if nature were not more than the
-mere web of relations into which the mechanistic conception of it
-transforms it; if spiritual life were not more than the subjective form
-of life that it is supposed to be, according to general opinion; if from
-that form of life an inner life did not arise, and beyond all
-subjectivity attain to a full activity, and thus to the building up of a
-reality within its own province? That we do not simply become aware of a
-movement within ourselves, and then read it into nature, but only take
-up and lead to its own truth that which strives upward in nature, is
-again testified by the inner advance of this striving through its
-contact with the world, and by the infinite abundance of particular
-contents which are revealed to us in the world and which continually aid
-in our development. Again, our life experiences the most important
-elevation in that it takes up and carries further a movement of the
-whole, and is liberated from the narrowness of the particular sphere,
-without merging into a vague infinity. To realise clearly that we belong
-to the world, and energetically to amplify this relation, is of the
-greatest significance for artistic creation and appreciation. For it is
-only by becoming firmly established in these relations that artistic
-endeavour is able to resist the tendency to degenerate into play and
-pleasure--a tendency which threatens it with inner destruction; as in a
-similar manner the work of thought must guard itself from degenerating
-into mere reflection. In the realms of thought and art there remains
-much that is alien, ever surmise and symbol; but even symbol is not to
-be disdained, if it serves an important truth.
-
-A universal character is shown most clearly by the movements that
-co-operate towards the ethical moulding of life. Without freedom there
-is no such moulding; but we saw above that freedom requires a world of
-spontaneous life and its presence within man. However, when freedom is
-thought of in these relations, it is elevated above the usual conception
-of it and also above the usual criticism. All moral life is pretence and
-delusion without the arousing and fundamental idea of duty. But where is
-the truth more clearly expressed than in duty, that what man does by no
-means concerns himself alone; and that nothing can constrain him but
-what he acknowledges as his own will, his own being? As duty is
-concerned ultimately not with something isolated but with a whole, not
-with a performance within the old order but with the creation of a new
-order, so in the moral life a whole new world appears to be taken up
-into man's own will and being. Duty exhibits the new world particularly
-in relation and in opposition to the old; the new world appears in
-itself to be pre-eminently a kingdom of love. Love is primarily not a
-subjective emotion, but an expansion and a deepening of life, through
-life setting itself in the other, taking the other up into itself; and
-in this movement life itself becomes greater, more comprehensive and
-noble. Love is not a mere relation of given individuals, but a
-development and a growing in communion, an elevation and an animation of
-the original condition. And this movement of love has no limits; it has
-all infinity for its development; it extends beyond the relation to
-persons to the relation to things; for things also reveal their
-innermost being only to a disposition of love. Again, the striving after
-truth in science and art cannot succeed without love and an animation
-that proceeds from it, without inwardly becoming one with the object.
-How could this unity and activity in the whole be possible, how could
-it even become an object of desire, if the whole itself did not strive?
-And how could such a wealth of cultures proceed out of this movement if
-that which was striven towards at one time was not taken up and carried
-further by other times; how could the single movements tend together
-without the unifying and elevating power of a universal life? As a
-phenomenon to the individual, the movement involves a definite
-contradiction: wherever it has been further and more freely developed it
-has been directed to a kingdom of love; and this has necessarily been
-thought of as the soul of reality, and a severe conflict has been taken
-up against the world of self-assertion. Thus in the realm of morality
-also we find ourselves in world-movements, we create out of the whole,
-work towards the whole, and are borne on the flood of infinite life.
-
-Accordingly, life-developments of various and related kinds arise: with
-their manifold experiences they strive to attain to a harmony and a
-union with one another. They can seek these only on the basis of a
-self-consciousness of reality; find them only through their unification
-in a universal life, to which each individual tendency leads.
-Representations of the whole are attempted at the highest points of
-creative activity by philosophy, religion, and art; these
-representations accompany, indeed govern, the work in these spheres of
-life through history. But the limitations of our capacity, through which
-we are unable to give a suitable form to necessary contents, and through
-which we attribute and must attribute human traits to that which should
-lead us beyond the human, are of particular force in this matter of
-forming a representation of the whole; and, indeed, this is the more so
-the further we remove ourselves from that which may be immediately
-transformed in work. These representations of the whole are, therefore,
-inadequate; their content of truth is clothed in a wrapping of myth, and
-humanity lies under the danger of taking the myth for the chief thing
-and thus of obscuring the truth, and this must produce an incalculable
-amount of error and strife. Still, it is impossible to give up all claim
-to these representations of the whole; for they alone make the fact of
-our belonging to the whole and of the presence of the whole in our life
-quite clear and enable it to exert a far-reaching influence. Only with
-their help can the degeneration of life to the intolerable
-insignificance of the narrowly human be resisted; only with their help
-can a movement from whole to whole begin.
-
-Thus it is a matter not so much of abandoning these representations of
-the whole as of referring them continually to their essence; to those
-unfoldings of life which are experienced by us; to test them by these
-and to renew them from these. It was the error of the earlier
-position--much too indulgent to Intellectualism-that it did not
-sufficiently maintain the relation with these living sources, and so
-fell into the danger of having no definite tendency, or even of failing
-to recognise the relativity of the myth. If a more energetic direction
-of life upon its own content and experiences teaches us to preserve
-these connections better and to develop them more forcefully, a new type
-of representation of the whole is yielded in contrast to the old, and
-far more different from it than may appear at the first glance. We may
-hope that with its development the truth will be seen more clearly
-through the myth, and that the striving, which we cannot give up, to win
-a universal life may not lead us astray into a world of dreams.
-
-
-(c) THE MOVEMENT OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE IN MAN
-
-The question as to in which direction the spiritual life moves in man is
-implied through our whole investigation, and in it receives an answer.
-Nevertheless, it requires to be definitely stated and treated by itself,
-so that the distinctive character of the movement and its influence in
-the moulding of life may be fully acknowledged. It has become clearly
-evident to us that an independent and, therefore, genuine spiritual
-life cannot arise out of life in its usual condition, but only in
-opposition to this condition. For, however little this condition of life
-may lack spiritual elements, they are mixed and bound up with other
-elements far too much to be able to bind themselves immediately into a
-whole, and to display an independent power. That the spiritual life must
-and can gain a basis independent of this condition of life is the
-indispensable, fundamental idea of Idealism. But such attainment of
-independence of the usual condition would help little if the spiritual
-life which is based upon itself had not a particular nature of its own,
-and if from this it did not oppose everything alien and partly alien to
-itself. The doctrines of innate ideas, of an _a priori_, and so on,
-which have occupied humanity for thousands of years did not intend
-anything different from this. The details of the conception of these
-were indeed often open to criticism: it was sought to exhibit individual
-conceptions and propositions as existing complete at the beginning,
-where rather movements or tendencies are in question, which can find
-their realisation only within the work of life. Again, the _a priori_
-was limited to the intellectual sphere, whereas it is indispensable to
-all spiritual activity; for example, how can morality, rising above
-merely natural preservation and rejecting all mere utility, as it does,
-be conceived without such an _a priori_? To deny to spiritual life an
-original nature and power--an _a priori_ in this more comprehensive
-sense--means nothing else than to eliminate that life as an independent
-factor, and to reduce it to the position of a secondary product. For
-without an original nature the spiritual life would be like soft wax
-that may be shaped in one form or another to suit our own pleasure: then
-the spiritual life could not possibly follow its own aims, could not
-possibly attain to an independence in the inner life, in which we
-recognised the characteristic nature of the inner life. As certain as it
-is that there is a spiritual life at all, so certainly does it bring
-certain fundamental tendencies and movements with it; as surely as it
-develops in particular directions--and that it does this we have
-seen--so surely is this _a priori_ also differentiated. To trace this
-fundamental state of spiritual activity in all its relations and
-multiplicity is an especially important task of philosophic research.
-
-The revelation of such an original fundamental activity of the spirit
-must induce us to undertake to form our whole world from this activity,
-and to produce from it or to transform into it that which exists over
-against activity as an independent realm of experience. This has been
-attempted for thousands of years with the summoning of an enormous amount
-of spiritual power and the arousing of a proud self-consciousness. But
-failure was inevitable because it was not recognised that the development
-of the spiritual life in man is conditioned. However certain it may be
-that original spiritual movements must be active within us, they are not
-so with organised content and overwhelming power from the beginning, but
-they acquire content and power only through the process of life itself,
-only in grappling with the oppositions of experience and in the
-appropriation of the tasks and stimuli which experience brings to them.
-The incompleteness and the mutability of what was accepted earlier as a
-fixed and unchangeable racial possession of the spiritual life is to-day
-quite clearly perceived. What great changes morality, for example, has
-undergone in the course of the ages; how toilsomely has much been won
-which later ages have considered self-evident! To be sure, morality
-remains, even through all such changes, an original spiritual phenomenon,
-which can never be derived from an external source, but which could
-emerge and establish itself only as an inner necessity of the spiritual
-life in opposition to the realm of mere utility. But the actuality of
-this original phenomenon gives rise to a difficult problem, for the
-solution of which a closer contact with the environment, a fundamental
-arrangement with experience, is necessary. And so the problem is traced
-to a more ultimate source, and, though this makes the matter less
-simple, it gives a higher significance to our work and to the movement
-of history.
-
-Even the fundamental forms of thought which are often accepted as of
-everything the most fixed share in this gradual amplification. Man, so
-far as he participates in spiritual impulse, thinks, of course, in
-conceptions; he gives to appearances fixed points of support by the
-establishing of things, and relates events causally. But all this is
-full of problems and is comprehended only in its upward endeavour; it
-raises more problems than it solves; and around the solution of these
-the whole work of science moves. What different things the "idea" meant
-to Plato and to Kant, and to ancient and to modern thought generally:
-how every thinker of moment has given a particular conception of
-substance and of causality; how whole epochs have exhibited their
-particular nature in the treatment of these problems!
-
-For the sake of its own perfection, therefore, the spiritual life must
-continually turn back to the realm of experience, from which, at first,
-it tore itself free. Attempts to evolve the whole life from that _a
-priori_ have always given as a result something of a bloodless nature,
-abstract in the highest degree, a mere web of formulæ, in so far as
-experience, which had been relegated to the background, has not
-indirectly asserted its right again, and infused the formulæ with life.
-Accordingly, our life does not spend itself in one direction, but bears
-within it the counter-tendencies of a tearing oneself free from the
-world of sense and a returning back to it, of a detachment from it and
-an appropriation of it to oneself. But, in this, independent life and
-bound life do not become combined; how could that be the case without
-the loss of all inner unity? A basis is necessary; and it is furnished
-only by self-determining activity. Experience acquires a spiritual
-content and value only so far as it is based upon this activity, and is
-taken up into a spiritual movement. Experience does not share something
-with the spiritual life, but, through stimulation and opposition, it
-forces that life to further development within itself. The state in
-which the world of sense is first found undergoes an inner elevation in
-that appropriation: sense presentation, for example, is to scientific
-work something quite different from what it is to naïve perception; even
-if it obstinately withstands a complete resolution into magnitudes of
-pure thought, it takes up more and more thought elements; it enters into
-conceptual relations; it answers questions which the work of thought
-sets. To the whole sphere of sense science gives the background of a
-world of thought, and transforms mere sense into a spatially bound
-spirituality.
-
-The same thing is valid with regard to the things of value in life; in
-these, also, sense and spirit are not simply combined; but something of
-sense becomes a spiritual good only so far as it serves the spiritual
-life in some way; it cannot do this, however, without itself undergoing
-a transformation. This is to be seen nowhere more clearly than in
-economics. Money and estate had at all times a value for
-self-preservation and enjoyment, but in the doctrine of economics and
-political economy they could obtain acknowledgment only after a power to
-advance the spiritual life had been recognised in them. As culture in
-the ancient world had not yet reached this point of view, it branded all
-endeavour after material wealth as inferior, and as far as possible
-checked such endeavour. Only since the Modern Age has recognised in
-money and estate an indispensable means of gaining control over the
-surrounding world and of increasing human power have they secured a
-place within the spiritual life, and as a result of this have become
-more highly estimated. At the same time, however, they have been changed
-inwardly in the process, since that which they achieve, not towards
-ostentatious display and enjoyment, but towards the increase of human
-power over things has become the chief matter.
-
-As in this way the content and the value of that which is offered by the
-world of sense shows its dependence upon the condition of the spiritual
-life, so in science also a similar relation between experience and the
-spiritual life is found. Science appeals to experience with particular
-zeal, more especially after it has first accomplished far-reaching
-changes in its own thought constructions; only then does experience give
-anything new to knowledge and exhibit a greater depth. Experience can
-answer only in the measure in which it is questioned; the question,
-however, varies according to the stage of development of the spiritual
-life.
-
-Such a view fully appreciates the significance of life-work, and must
-strive energetically to gain its acknowledgment. This work is not a
-carrying out of a complete scheme in a given condition of things, an
-application of firmly rooted principles to particular cases, but a
-self-realisation and self-perfecting of the spiritual life which builds
-up a self-conscious reality. In this our life is not divided between two
-different realms, but, in a comprehensive spiritual world, different
-stages of reality meet together, which must be brought into relation and
-developed. To be sure, the world of sense retains a certain
-independence; it resists a complete transformation into spiritual
-magnitudes, and our life, therefore, retains a certain restriction and
-impenetrability. But the self-consciousness of the spirit becomes more
-and more the chief basis and sphere of life: this self-consciousness
-continually takes up more into itself; it makes the world that was to us
-at first primary, indeed the only world, more and more secondary and
-subordinate.
-
-This increasing spiritualisation of human life never becomes a sure
-possession that calls for no toil; ever anew it demands our attention
-and activity; it has continually to be won anew as a whole. As soon as
-the tension slackens, the world of experience with its appeal to sense
-preponderates, and it soon appears to be man's sole world, one which
-cannot tolerate anything beyond itself. For the spiritualisation of
-human life, a longing rooted in the whole being is primarily necessary;
-for with the keen feeling of the vanity of the world of sense
-experience, this leads to the removal of the centre of life into the
-invisible world of self-determining activity. Further, a clear
-presentation of this invisible world is needed; and in this the help of
-the visible is not to be dispensed with. For its own establishment the
-realm of the invisible must borrow means of expression from the visible,
-which now governs human presentation; must transform and refine them for
-its aims; prepare out of them an impressive presentation of the whole.
-Along with the energy of turning to the spiritual life a creative
-imagination is required, through which the invisible may become equal to
-holding its own against the visible.
-
-The help of such imagination is indispensable for religion, in order
-that the supernatural world advocated by it may gain an effective
-presence in the province of humanity. And so with bold upward flights of
-imagination the heroes of religion have projected a new condition of
-reality as a whole, a kingdom of justice or of love, and have judged
-human existence by the standard of this new condition. Similarly,
-philosophy did not become an independent world of thought without the
-help of imagination; and of how indispensable it is to art we need not
-speak at all. Again, work in political, social, educational matters, at
-least as far as radical renewals are concerned, has really been taken up
-and carried on, and has won a triumphant power, only where the state
-striven for has been presented as something visible and clearly present;
-this alone has united the multiplicity, and has led with compelling
-force beyond the extant situation as though that were something
-intolerable. Humanity as a whole must be present in an ideal condition
-to our minds for us to be aroused sufficiently from our indolence.
-
-Our life, therefore, contains movements which tend in opposite
-directions: there are a pressing forward and a turning backward, a
-detachment from experience and a taking up again of experience; and so
-we may well speak of an action and reaction within its movement. But
-the antitheses that arise aid in advancement only so long as they are
-encompassed by a whole of activity. In that the course of history
-increases far more than it diminishes the antitheses, the dangers grow
-more and more, the possibilities and the tasks of human existence,
-however, also grow.
-
-
-(d) THE EMERGENCE OF A NEW TYPE OF LIFE
-
-The conception of the spiritual life here developed gives rise to a
-particular type of life which can bring about a transformation and
-elevation of man from two main positions: the union of man with the
-spiritual life is much closer, and the spiritual life in itself is
-incomparably more, than is represented by the customary conception of
-that life. For in our conception man does not merely enter into some
-kind of relation with the spiritual life, but finds his own being in it,
-and becomes so completely united with it that it is able to determine
-him immediately as his own self. The spiritual life is not a particular
-function among others, not a part or an aspect of a more comprehensive
-world, but is itself a world, and, indeed, a world in which life first
-attains to self-consciousness and becomes a complete reality. If this
-world becomes the immediate possession of man himself, his life must
-experience a deep-reaching change, indeed a revolution of its usual
-condition: to trace the main tendencies of this revolution is our
-immediate task.
-
-
-(1) _Life's Attainment of Greatness_
-
-The placing of man in the spiritual life, becoming aware of its own
-independence, must make the forms of this life his own, and in this way
-bring about a reversal of the commonplace of every day. Life is
-transposed from the narrowness of its merely particular nature to
-infinity; what was hitherto alien and hostile to man is changed into his
-own possession, and is able to arouse an animating and elevating love.
-At the same time a deliverance from subjectivity and its web of
-interests and ideas is effected, to the advantage of a life-process that
-takes up the object into itself, and thus advances to independence and
-sovereign creation; a life is attained that is not spent in movement to
-and fro between antitheses, but unfolds a content through them. As this
-life attains to complete independence only because it produces a
-universal activity in contrast to individual activities, so
-participation in this life must lead man beyond division to a
-comprehensive unity. It is this that is sought in the idea of
-personality--an idea which is often quite obscure and superficial, but
-which can in this context be elucidated, manifest its complete
-significance, and prove its power of development.
-
-As the spiritual life is a self-consciousness, so man also wins from it
-a life that is not exhausted by activity directed upon anything external
-to this life, and that does not expect its content from outside like an
-empty vessel, but would be itself and realise the possibilities lying
-within itself. So far as such a life extends man does not stand on the
-border of things but in the centre, in the formation and creation of the
-whole; he experiences the world not as something external but from
-within. The question of the limits of this life is no longer primary but
-secondary, and the answer to this question is to be expected from the
-experience of life, not from preliminary reflections. Since, in this,
-life has a content in itself and develops this content through its
-movement, it distinctly grows above all the play of forces with which it
-is often confused; if such a play of forces suffices for a lower stage
-it cannot suffice for further development. For the feeling of joyous
-excitement which accompanies the exertion of power is not sufficient in
-opposition to the serious perplexities that accompany all spiritual
-work; indeed, not even against the cares and needs that are involved in
-the mere preservation of existence in an advancing culture. Life then
-easily comes to be regarded as full of trouble and of work, and becomes
-a burden from which one wishes to be delivered. Life is not from the
-beginning a good, but it must prove itself to be such by its more
-detailed development. In the spiritual life this comes to pass, since it
-produces a reality out of itself; it does not become valuable first in
-its relation to the external world, but it carries a value in itself, as
-is clearly shown by the joy that permeates all experience of the true,
-the good, and the beautiful. This joy must be further increased if all
-the multiplicity of this experience is regarded as the unfolding of a
-comprehensive and persistent fundamental life.
-
-A life of this kind is no indefinite impulse; it cannot become an
-independent reality without penetrating into every aspect and making the
-ordinary state of things everywhere inadequate, indeed intolerable.
-Since the independent spirituality and spiritual character that is
-acquired, and that which the particular thing and activity signifies in
-the spiritual life as a whole, everywhere constitutes the most important
-question, the problem of truth will be raised at each point; and in this
-way a sharp division will be made between the genuine and the spurious;
-everything that strives within us in the direction of the spirit will
-unite and acquire a more stable basis; everything that would satisfy man
-in other ways will be seen to be empty and vain. Life now acquires a
-deeper reality, but this must first be reached and brought to complete
-effect. New forms, in contrast to the ordinary representations, must
-also make their appearance if life is to be equal to the task of
-developing content and character.
-
-Life in the individual must have roots deeper than the immediate
-psychical life; for psychical life cannot itself produce and make clear
-that which occurs in it, for this reason at least, that it involves the
-antithesis of individual and environment, of subject and object, beyond
-which spiritual creation results. The spiritual impulse that the
-immediate life of the soul manifests can be based only upon deeper
-realities and more comprehensive relations. And so a _noölogical_
-treatment is to be distinguished from the psychological, not in order to
-displace or limit the latter, but rather to complete it; and it is a
-problem to show the point of transition in the immediate life of the
-soul. The significance of the individual life, as far as content is
-concerned, will depend upon whether an independent spirituality arises
-within it, and constitutes it a distinctive life-centre. According to
-the new standards a free spiritual activity does not suffice, however
-extended it may be, and however sustained by subjective emotion. For all
-such activity may be without spiritual substance, and in spite of all
-external results the life that is nothing but this activity may remain
-spiritually destitute: how shallow many individuals are whose
-achievements deserve and obtain the highest appreciation! The inwardness
-that the spiritual life requires is not simply a reflex of work in the
-soul--from that little is gained--but the forming of a characteristic
-spiritual self-consciousness that lifts us above all mere achievement,
-and also by giving to activity a soul first makes it complete.
-
-We have often seen how the acknowledgment of an independent spiritual
-life forces us to make a sharper distinction between human history and
-human society and all merely natural history and merely natural
-co-existence of men. At the same time, in that which is called history
-and society, a distinction between an esoteric and an exoteric kind is
-also required. The value of individual epochs and of history as a whole
-depends upon the spiritual substance that grows up in them; everything
-else, to whatever extent it may, with commotion and external result,
-assume the air of being the chief thing, is only environment or
-supplement. Similarly, in the case of society, the spiritual content, if
-it has one at all, and human fortune and conduct must become more
-distinctly separated. There is far less genuine history and society than
-is usually assumed; but this little signifies incomparably more than
-both would imply without the spiritual life.
-
-Similarly, with the acknowledgment of an independent spiritual life in
-us, a new light is shed upon the individual departments of life, and new
-tasks are set them. They have now, primarily, not to further human
-well-being, to be of service in the attainment of narrowly human aims,
-but they are characteristic unfoldings of the spiritual life. The
-particular nature of these departments has its basis in that life, and
-they must prove their capacity by advancing it. They are concerned with
-man only so far as he participates in the spiritual life; and so they
-will not so much strengthen him in his human nature as elevate him
-spiritually, and remould him more and more to the form of the spiritual
-life. A deliverance from the confusion of that which is narrowly human
-with the spiritual is also necessary, and, along with this, life as a
-whole must be more energetically based upon the spiritual life, and the
-spiritual life itself must be given a more distinct form. From the
-position of this life, that which has been handed down to us must be
-evaluated and new paths must be opened up for the future. Religion could
-obtain no content, and all change in it would be only an advance from a
-more crude to a more refined anthropomorphism, if it were based solely
-upon human needs and aided man to attain a supposed happiness. Religion
-rises above such a condition of doubt only if it exhibits its roots in
-an independent spiritual life and is able to show its actuality and its
-power by aiding the development of the spiritual life. At its highest
-religion has always been concerned with winning a new world and a new
-humanity, not with the achievement of something within the old world and
-for the old humanity. And as we need a religion of the spiritual life,
-we also need a morality, an art, and, finally, an all-comprehensive
-spiritual culture, through which something really new may be produced
-and man be elevated in this being, and not simply circle round and round
-continually in the old paths. Everywhere the matter is one of advance
-and revelation; from this point of view the complexes of every day must
-also be seen in a new light, and in what is apparently simple and
-self-evident great achievements and tasks become manifest. We now, for
-the first time and in another sense, win again that which we thought we
-already possessed; indeed, by the revolution to the spiritual life, life
-as a whole is transformed into a task. Every individual has such a
-life-embracing task in the cultivation of a genuine personality and a
-spiritual individuality. Humanity as a whole has such a task in the
-building up of a kingdom of reason within its domain, in the furtherance
-of the movement which comes to it from the whole and summons it to
-co-operation.
-
-Human life by participation in the spiritual life finds its basis in the
-inward and spontaneous, in the infinite and eternal. The development and
-the experiences of the spiritual life and its conflict with a world,
-which is only being won, are here the chief content of human life and
-unite individuals inwardly; the destinies of individuals receive their
-particular nature from such a common life. As this life of independent
-spirituality is possible only by detachment from the chaotic condition
-of life as we find it at its general level, the development of the
-spiritual life must make us clearly conscious of the spiritual
-destitution of the majority; and especially must it oppose the attempt
-on the part of such a life as that of the majority to present itself as
-the whole, and to make itself the standard of human endeavour. In such
-an attempt the trivially human inevitably preponderates, and this now,
-at its highest points, invests itself with ostentatious pomp and a
-feeling of power; now, almost as a whole, relies on the reason of the
-masses, which loudly and noisily proclaims that those things which
-according to human opinion are valuable are of all things the highest;
-confidently makes its judgment and its task the standard of truth; and,
-with arrogant presumption, demands a reverence towards itself that is
-due solely to the spiritual world. From of old there have been many
-indictments of this, but as long as a new life, based in the spiritual
-world in contrast with merely human life, was not attained to, these
-indictments did not lead to a deliverance. Under the guidance of
-religion humanity has evolved such a life and for thousands of years has
-found support in it. However, humanity has lost this life and this
-support, in its old form, and the loss was inevitable. If humanity will
-strive after a new form and at the same time transcend mere appearance,
-it can attain to this only on the basis of the spiritual life, that is
-acknowledged to be independent. Only on this basis can it enter into the
-conflict on the side of gods against idols, for truth against appearance
-and emptiness.
-
-The new life cannot develop without elevating the individual in his
-spiritual nature above all environment. For, as surely as the
-construction of a spiritual reality within humanity needs a union of all
-powers, there is a spontaneous springing up of the independent spiritual
-life only within the soul of the individual. All social and all
-historical life that does not unceasingly draw from this source falls
-irrecoverably into a state of stagnation and desolation. The individual
-can never be reduced to the position of a mere member of society; of a
-church, of a state; notwithstanding all external subordination he must
-assert an inner superiority; each spiritual individual is more than the
-whole external world. But as the individual does not derive this
-superiority from himself, not from a natural particularity and
-peculiarity in distinction from others, but only from the presence of a
-spiritual world, so he is securely guarded from all vain self-assurance
-and the arrogance of the idea of the Superman, which grotesquely
-distorts the great fact of the revelation of a universal life at
-individual points.
-
-The desire for the presence of the infinite at the individual point may
-be characterised as an approximation to mysticism. Indeed, we need both
-a metaphysic and a mysticism; but we want both in a new form, not in the
-old. It seems to us preposterous to declare that necessary demands of
-the spiritual life are finally disposed of, because the older solution
-has become inadequate. If man does not in some way succeed in
-appropriating the spiritual life, if it is not actively present as a
-whole within him and animating him, then his relation to the spiritual
-life remains for ever an external one; and this life cannot acquire a
-complete spontaneity in him, can never become a genuine life of his own.
-But the older mysticism was the offspring of a worn-out age, which
-primarily reflected upon quietness and peace, and was under the
-influence of a philosophy that sought the truth in striving towards the
-most comprehensive universal, and saw in all particularity a defect
-(_omnis determinatio negatio_). And so, to be completely merged in the
-formless infinite could be regarded as the culmination of life. As the
-spiritual life is to us, on the contrary, an increasing activity and
-creation, a world of self-determining activity, so its being called to
-life at individual points is a rousing of life to its highest energy; in
-this also, a continual appropriation is necessary. Further, the movement
-of the spiritual life does not appear to us as an advance from
-particular to universal, but as one from differentiation to the living
-whole; from the indefiniteness of the beginnings to complete
-organisation and distinctive form. The inwardness that we advocate is
-not a feeble echo and a yearning for dissolution, but is of an active
-and masculine nature, and rests on ceaseless self-determining activity.
-One may or may not call this mysticism; in any case mysticism of such a
-kind cannot be charged with that which now appears to us to be defect or
-error in the older form.
-
-
-(2) _The Increase of Movement_
-
-As certainly as a universal life must surround us and, with efficient
-power, in some way be implanted within us, yet only our own activity can
-appropriate and amplify that life for us. As the transition to the
-independent spiritual life changes the problem so that no achievement
-in a given world will satisfy it, but only the winning of a new world,
-our existence must become much more active; our life must be made not
-only much more comprehensive but also inwardly transformed and deepened.
-
-Naïve opinion is accustomed to presuppose a fixed sphere for our
-activity; it is possible for it to do this only because it confuses the
-spiritual and that which is less than the spiritual and leaves them
-undifferentiated. Since the attainment of independence by the spiritual
-life makes this confusion impossible, it may at the same time be
-recognised that the fixed relations in which we seem to be are also in
-reality due to our own activity. From this fact a method of treatment is
-justified, the introduction of which constitutes one of the greatest
-services of Kant. This method in his own terminology is the
-transcendental method. Unlike ordinary opinion, it does not regard the
-relation of the departments of life and all its activities as being
-self-evident, but it enquires into the inner possibility of this
-relation, that is, it indicates the conditions without which the union
-of the manifold could not be accomplished; it reveals the spiritual
-activity that exists in the whole. It reveals a far finer texture of
-life; it shows syntheses from the whole to the elements; it indicates
-clearer limits and makes us more definitely recognise what
-differentiates the individual departments. This is what Kant did in the
-case of scientific knowledge, of morality, and of the realm of the
-beautiful. The transcendental method itself is first indisputably
-justified and given a secure foundation with the acknowledgment that a
-world of independent spirituality emerges in man, and this through his
-own activity, not by a mere favour and gift of destiny. For, when this
-independent spiritual world is acknowledged it first becomes a matter
-beyond doubt that the basis, and the bonds which unite the whole, could
-not be given, but must proceed from our own activity. The transcendental
-method must therefore be applied not only to the individual branches but
-also to the whole, and the possibility of a spiritual life in man in
-general made a problem. Then from the whole the method must also be
-extended to the departments that are not brought into prominence by
-Kant; it must discuss, for example, the possibility of history in a
-characteristically human sense. Since our reality is thus dependent in
-the first place upon our own activity, life and movement acquire a wider
-scope and a greater value.
-
-The movement of life also tends to be increased by the fact that in our
-conviction the more detailed form of the spiritual life itself must
-first be won by our activity, and that this detail can be acquired only
-little by little through attempts, experiences, convulsions; that for
-man the spiritual life with its actuality forms a difficult problem.
-What more particularly separates us from the Enlightenment is that while
-for it the ultimately valid form of the spiritual life appeared to be
-immediately present and to need only an energetic working out, we extend
-the historical treatment not only to the representation, but also to the
-nature, of the spiritual life; and so the ultimately valid form of the
-spiritual life appears to be a high ideal, to which man can only
-gradually approximate. The fact that endeavour is centred not upon
-externals but primarily upon our own being must make our activity far
-more significant and more intense; and this leads to a higher estimate
-of history as well as of a historical treatment. As hence epochs are no
-longer distinguished simply by their achievements, but by the nature of
-their spiritual life, so the life of the present must also be given its
-place in the moving stream, and so our innermost nature also depends on
-spiritual work.
-
-If with such an increase of movement much is mutable that otherwise
-seemed to be as firm as a rock; and if, in particular, the foundations
-of life themselves also suffer change, life seems to lose all support
-and to fall into an unlimited relativism. Indeed, life must thus lose
-all stability if in the spiritual sphere movement does not involve
-something in opposition to change: and this as a fact it does involve.
-As the spiritual life cannot develop a content without presenting it as
-timeless, there is no great achievement in history that does not include
-some kind of timeless truth, and the movement of the spiritual life is
-not merely a flowing onward with time but also an elevation above time.
-In spiritual work, therefore, the achievements of the ages can be
-surveyed and examined; indeed, in distinguishing between past and not
-past the sequence of times can be transformed into a timeless present.
-Of course this is valid only with the presupposition of an absolute
-spiritual life, which is present in all the uncertainty and change of
-human undertaking, and does not allow it to become fixed in error.
-Unless an immanence of the absolute spiritual life is acknowledged, an
-essential characteristic of the spiritual work of the Modern Age remains
-absolutely unintelligible, namely, its critical character. Modern work
-is not completely objective, and occupation with the object does not
-completely exhaust that work; but activity realises its independence of
-the object, investigates its relation to the object, surveys that which
-has been achieved, and tests it by transcendent standards. Such a
-critique belongs especially to the fundamental nature of the
-Enlightenment, to the proud self-confidence of which a conscientious
-self-examination forms a necessary antithesis. The critical method
-reached its highest point in Kant, and we can never go back again upon
-the transformation of life that has been effected by it. But how could
-the critique be justified and exercise such far-reaching influence as it
-has done, if it were not more than a product of a subjective reflection
-that accompanies the object, and that has to do with the object
-externally? The critique could effect an inner transformation and
-elevation of work only because it set new forces in motion. And it did
-this in that it measured all human achievement by the demands of a
-transcendent spiritual life and out of it developed inner necessities,
-to which all achievement had to correspond. So the movement was not lost
-through the lack of an aim; and life did not flow onward with the stream
-of presentations, but found a support in itself; it was able to exert a
-powerful counteraction; it did not need to acknowledge anything that
-had not proved its validity before the judgment-seat of immanent reason.
-This emergence of the question of validity in contrast to that of
-actuality must inwardly raise and ennoble the movement of life; it
-reveals to man an active relation not only to the environment but
-primarily to himself; it leads to a ceaseless differentiation and
-examination of the quality of life.
-
-It is true that the Enlightenment, which acknowledged that alone to be
-true which was clearly and distinctly cognised, exercised this critique
-in a too narrow manner; yet notwithstanding all that may be
-problematical in its application to details, the right and the necessity
-of the fundamental idea are not thereby overthrown: the question
-remains; it can be fully justified only in the relations that we have
-indicated; but at the same time it must be transferred from the merely
-intellectual to the spiritual as a whole, and form in relation to the
-whole that which in the state of culture contains and develops an
-independent spirituality and a self-conscious life; but by this it gains
-a content of truth. This self-consciousness alone can be regarded as
-essence and genuine reality, while everything else is reduced to mere
-environment and becomes matter of secondary importance, if not of mere
-appearance. Task after task is revealed, more especially for the
-present; we see how, with the attainment of independence by the
-spiritual life, the movement is not only extended, but also grows
-inwardly and tends towards the elevation of life.
-
-
-(3) _The Gain of Stability_
-
-The movement of the spiritual life as not only directed towards the
-outside but also turned inwards towards itself gained for us a greater
-independence. But even that which emerges from within exists only in the
-process of formation, and in this that which satisfies us to-day may
-to-morrow be uncertain; and so we cannot dismiss the question whether
-the spiritual life lacks the necessary stability; whether, in the midst
-of all becoming and change, caprice and subjectivity are not without the
-necessary opposition. In any case, the question of fixation must have a
-different appearance within a system of life based upon activity from
-that it would have within a system which proceeded from a given world:
-in the former, that which is fixed cannot be introduced from outside,
-but must exist within the movement itself; it can manifest itself only
-through a movement of a kind and form which transcend the utmost
-capacity of the mere subject.
-
-Our investigation as a whole contends that the fixity is of this kind;
-and at this point only a short revision and a summing up are required.
-All spiritual activity is, as we saw, a transcendence of the antithesis
-of subject and object; it is progressive and formative universal
-activity. But this activity cannot be produced and formed according to
-desire or fancy; we must be elevated into it; and, as a result of this,
-we feel that we are under the compulsion of an inner necessity, which
-distinctly counteracts the caprice of the mere subject. We saw, further,
-that within the life-process spiritual contents are raised out of the
-stream of events, and that they unite so as to form a world in contrast
-with that stream, a world greater and more comprehensive, which
-nevertheless continues within our life. This applies to all the branches
-of our work; everywhere the deciding step to joyful advance is when
-activity proceeds from mere search and contemplation under the necessity
-of the object. No resolution, however, or even the most sincere
-volition, can of itself force us to this decisive step. Man must be
-taken possession of by a spiritual activity and power, and elevated
-above the state of groping and doubt. This is shown in all scientific
-work and artistic creation; everywhere success does not appear to be the
-work of the human, but a gift and a grace from higher forces; everywhere
-those who have created have felt guided and sustained by such forces.
-Beyond individuals humanity as a whole develops complexes in science, in
-law, and so on, which evolve inner necessities and require their
-recognition and fulfilment by man, and follow courses of their own
-regardless of the weal or the woe of individuals; so far as life follows
-these tendencies, it is elevated above doubt to a state of stability and
-joyfulness.
-
-Such movements appear at first as a multiplicity, and are most directly
-effective through that which is distinctive in the particular
-departments of life. But through all multiplicity and above it, there is
-a striving towards a comprehensive unity; every advance towards this
-unity is an immediate gain in stability and certainty. Nothing helps the
-individual to become inwardly firm more than the unification of his life
-in a whole of activity, more than becoming certain of an inward
-all-comprehensive task in the development of a spiritual individuality.
-The development of a spiritual individuality is a task that comes to him
-from within, and which, while it is more than anything else his own, is
-yet above all caprice. This task may tend little to promote that which
-is usually called happiness; the striving to fulfil it may transform the
-whole of existence into a state of toil and trouble, of conflict and
-care; and yet it alone gives to life a meaning and a value, a sure
-direction and a secure self-consciousness, and by assuring man of a
-spiritual existence of his own makes him certain of the spiritual life
-as a whole. Such a unification of the manifold activities so as to form
-a life-work, an incomparable kind of spiritual being, is something
-entirely axiomatic, which is in no way derived from outside. Again, this
-unification does not depend upon particular representations of the
-world; only the fanaticism of party can bind it to definite doctrines of
-the human and the divine. It itself, however, is a secure starting-point
-for the development of convictions; its acknowledgment involves the
-acknowledgment of a spiritual world independent of and operative within
-us, and summoning us to co-operation, even though this implication is
-often concealed from consciousness. Where our own life lacks such a
-fountain-head the conviction of a spiritual life never attains to
-axiomatic certainty, but depends on the thin threads of reasons and
-proofs, and therefore is most easy to overthrow. And so, for the
-overcoming of doubt and faintheartedness everything depends upon
-attaining to a unity of activity and creation which inwardly embraces
-life as a whole, and with this, upon being something, not simply doing
-something.
-
-What is valid of individuals is valid also of peoples and epochs, of
-humanity as a whole. Whether a people feels certain of a spiritual life,
-and is thereby elevated to a state of inward joyfulness, depends
-primarily upon whether it recognises and acknowledges in itself a common
-spiritual task: if this is not the case, the acutest apologetic cannot
-prevent the increase of doubt and faintness of heart. Similarly, the
-disposition and life-feeling of epochs is decided primarily by whether
-their endeavour unites them inwardly or whether it is divided, and at
-the same time becomes inconsistent. The endeavour of our own time does
-suffer from such division and inconsistency; it is this in particular
-that gives the negative tendency so much power over us and in the midst
-of all greatness of achievement in external matters makes us inwardly
-despondent. Humanity as a whole can attain to a stable spiritual life
-which is more than that of the particular times and peoples only by the
-revelation and appropriation of an all-comprehensive task which governs
-it with inner necessities. Such a task alone makes life a preservation
-of spiritual character; and gives conviction an unshakable firmness, and
-a joyous confidence of victory. And so everywhere only the formation of
-life itself is able to guarantee to it inner stability; the movement
-itself by its elevation above all caprice and its inner unity is alone
-able to overcome the dangers which the transformation of life into
-activity brings with it.
-
-
-(e) ACTIVISM: A PROFESSION OF FAITH
-
-The system of life here developed receives its distinctive colour and
-tone chiefly because it brings into prominence the fact that we do not
-belong to a world of reason, which from the beginning had only to be
-perceived and enjoyed, but that we have first to advance to such a
-world; and for this we require a revolution of the first condition of
-things. The basis of true life must continually be won anew; and even
-the individual achievement always contains a decision between one and
-another type of life. Only through ceaseless activity can life remain at
-the height to which it has attained; that which life experiences and
-receives is judged according to the more precise form of activity. Since
-it gives this precedence to activity, to such activity, this system may
-be called "Activism." Activism, however, demonstrates its unique
-character and develops its capacity only if it is definitely
-distinguished from all other apparently related tendencies. Neither a
-sudden resolution nor even a mere incitement of power brings us at once
-into the condition of activity. For at first we are surrounded and
-embraced by a world of inflexible nature and of feeble spirituality,
-which is at the same time mixed with human pretence: this world binds us
-so strongly, and suppresses all independence with such force, that the
-mere individual remains entirely powerless in opposition to it, and
-could soar to no higher wisdom than that of an involuntary submission to
-it. Activity without release from the given world is an absurdity; but
-such release is attainable only through the living presence of a world
-of self-determining activity; the power of such a world alone is able to
-arouse the individual to self-determining activity. But how could man
-appropriate this world to himself without changing its life into his
-own; without acknowledging its content as valid for himself also;
-without making its laws norms of his conduct?
-
-Activity in this way acquires an ethical character; it is this which
-draws the boundary line between spiritual activity and merely natural
-impulse, and distinguishes genuine from imaginary self-determining
-activity. Ethical relation does not mean a submission to alien and
-unsympathetic regulations, but a taking up of the infinite spiritual
-world into our own volition and being: this relation brings things close
-to us and reveals them, so that they are able to impart their life to
-us, and we are able to grow with their growth. So understood, ethical
-relation is primarily not regulative but productive; it is not merely
-being prepared to fulfil certain demands, when they are made upon us, to
-live in accordance with strict regulations, but it involves the motive
-of aiding in the development of the world, of advancing everything good
-and true: it requires an untiring forward endeavour and advance to the
-building up of a kingdom of reason and love. If in this way conduct is
-lifted above the pursuit of that which pleases and interests the mere
-subject, this is not on behalf of something alien, but for the elevation
-of our own being, for the sake of this genuine being, for the sake of
-our spiritual self.
-
-It is this inner elevation and this demand for a new world that
-distinguishes Activism from all mere Voluntarism and Pragmatism, to
-which it appears to approximate, and with which, in its negative aspect,
-it is, indeed, associated. For it shares with them the rejection of an
-intellectualistic view of life, in which cognition is regarded as
-finding truth of its own power and as conveying it to the rest of life.
-Further, Activism desires, as do Voluntarism and Pragmatism also, the
-basing of truth upon a more spontaneous and essential activity. But the
-flight to the will is more a reaction against Intellectualism than an
-overcoming of the difficulty. As such the will does not yield a new
-world and a transcendent power; it may, therefore, be that mere volition
-is implicitly transformed into a self-determining activity encompassing
-the whole extent of life. Pragmatism, also, which has recently made so
-much headway among English-speaking peoples and beyond them, is more
-inclined to shape the world and life in accordance with human condition
-and needs than to invest spiritual activity with an independence in
-relation to these, and apply its standards to the testing and sifting of
-the whole content of human life. But after the experiences of history
-the claim to this latter can scarcely be given up. After man has been
-seen to be particular and limited in nature, as things first present
-themselves, he no longer suffices for the starting-point of the
-endeavour for truth, but to attain to this starting-point an elevation
-above the human into a universal spiritual life is necessary. And that
-is the intention of Activism.
-
-The unique character of Activism becomes clearer especially in
-comparison with organisations of life, of which one indeed makes
-activity the chief thing, but gives to it the character of a mere
-process; while another thinks of the fundamental relation of man to
-reality in general not under the ideas of conduct and progress but under
-those of contemplation and enjoyment. The idea that life constitutes a
-process transcending all human endeavour and decision has shown a strong
-power of attraction in the Modern Age; and, in the system of Hegel
-especially, has found an imposing embodiment. This idea is asserted most
-definitely in the evolutionary conception of history, since it regards
-the motive power of history as striving to its aim, certain of
-accomplishing it, and unaffected by human opinion and preference. By
-this deliverance from the insignificance of human motives and the
-variations of human conditions the object seemed to gain incomparably in
-greatness; but it was considered that this deliverance from man involved
-an elevation above the ethical conception, which then appeared to be
-something subjectively human. But not only does this conception of a
-process that ceaselessly advances with compelling necessity contradict
-the actual state of things as they are found in history, which shows so
-much stagnation and retrogression, and so many different spheres of
-culture existing side by side indifferent to one another, but the
-transformation of life into a mere process, if consistently carried out,
-must also destroy or seriously debase its spiritual character. If life
-were a mere process it would be nothing other than a soulless
-mechanism; only in the case of such a mechanism can one phase proceed
-immediately from the others without at the same time a whole of life
-becoming active and exercising an animating power within the whole
-process. As a fact, the process is usually supplemented in thought by a
-universal life unifying, sustaining, and controlling the individual
-phases; however, so far as such a life does not simply come to us, but
-needs our own activity, the deed comes before the process; and a new
-world reveals itself to us. The disregard of the ethical element by the
-systems which make mere process their fundamental idea is explained by
-the fact that they understand the ethical only as a decision and turning
-of man, accompanying the spiritual life, not as the motive and
-progressive power of the spiritual life itself. They know only a human
-ethic, not an ethic of the spiritual life--as a self-assertion and a
-self-elevation, through which it first attains its complete freedom and
-independence. Still, to trace this further is the less necessary since
-this mode of thought lives rather from earlier achievements than works
-from fresh impulse springing up in the present.
-
-The relation of Activism to the æsthetic mode of thought requires closer
-consideration; we indicated at the beginning of our investigation that
-Æstheticism forms one of the chief streams of the life of the present
-day; at this point, only its relation to Activism need be examined. This
-Æstheticism has its definite conditions. Where the contemplation and
-enjoyment of the world and its beauty are to constitute the essence of
-life, we must be assured that the world is a kingdom of reason and
-beauty, so that the condition in which it is incites us to no
-far-reaching change. Further, there must be no perplexities in our soul,
-and no deep conflicts within our being, so that this contemplation may
-occupy us completely, and be a source of happiness. Lastly, we must be
-closely and surely united with the world so that a change of life may be
-accomplished easily and smoothly. If one of these requirements is not
-satisfied; if, instead of this harmony, the world manifests severe
-conflicts and harsh contradictions; if such exist also within our soul;
-if, lastly, there appears to be a deep gulf between us and the whole,
-then the æsthetic solution of the problem of life is an impossibility.
-If in spite of these contradictions we attempt to entertain this
-solution, our life will become insincere, and will lose all spiritual
-productivity, and, as a whole, our life will be spent in subjective
-mood, empty enjoyment, and become feeble. Now, however, the Modern Age
-develops in a direction which is directly opposed to the requirements of
-the æsthetic form of life. The great world appears to us to be a
-meaningless machine; and in the struggle for existence the earlier
-harmony is forgotten. We perceive in man far too much that is
-insignificant and far too much selfishness, emptiness, and mere show for
-us to be able to regard him as being inwardly complete. Lastly, the
-modern strengthening of the subject and the ceaseless growth of
-reflection have so fundamentally overthrown the immediate relation of
-man to the world that only a far-reaching transformation of life can
-prepare for a reunion. If our life is so full of problems and tasks; if
-we do not find ourselves in a completed world of reason; but if we must,
-with all our powers, work toward such a world, we shall turn to Activism
-as the only help possible. But we shall resolutely reject Æstheticism as
-a veiling of the real condition of things and a too facile solution of
-the great problems of life.
-
-Activism does not imply that immediately and at one stroke our life may
-be transformed into spiritual activity and may quickly establish a
-positive relation to reality: that would be to fail to recognise the
-conditions under which man exists, and the necessity of undergoing
-experiences and changes. Such an attitude might easily lead to the
-formation of syntheses of life that would be much too hasty and far too
-narrow; and the necessary breaking up of these would arouse a keen
-distrust of the whole undertaking. The power which the Romantic movement
-from time to time wins over minds is based on the fact that it warns us
-against an over-estimation of our activity; that it demands that the
-soul should be open to the influences of the world; that its
-impressions should be appropriated without restriction and permitted to
-fade away completely; that in opposition to all the limitation and
-organisation of life, it still longs for the infinite; and that it also
-to some extent satisfies by turning to unrestrained feeling. At the same
-time, the Romantic movement makes us clearly conscious of the power of
-destiny, the transcendence of external and internal necessities above
-all human intention and utilitarian conduct. In this way life acquires a
-much greater comprehensiveness and freshness; it seems to return to its
-source, to retain far more immediacy. But it is one thing to acknowledge
-the importance of this, another to make it the essence of life. When
-such precedence is given to this Romantic tendency life threatens to
-become delicate, feeble, effeminate; it knows no energetic opposition to
-the flow of presentations; instead of a definite union it offers
-aphoristic thoughts and stimuli; through the lack of logical acuteness
-it falls into the direst contradictions; it sacrifices all distinct form
-and organisation to a revelling in vague moods. As in such a state of
-weakness the spiritual life does not succeed in gaining complete
-independence in face of the natural conditions of our existence, so it
-does not attain the necessary ascendancy over sense. Sense, in its own
-province entirely incontestable, raises doubts in us in that it flows
-together with the spiritual, is undifferentiated from it, brings it
-under itself, and turns it from its course. And, in this, sense does not
-possess the naïve freshness and the natural limitation of its original
-state, but it is over-refined and too full of excitement.
-
-To recognise all this clearly is at the same time to acknowledge the
-superiority of Activism over all mere Romanticism. However much may
-still be lacking in Activism, through the fact that man often regards
-the difficult and complicated task as easy and simple, and thus sets too
-low an estimate upon the distance between himself and the spiritual
-world, there is still the objective necessity of the requirement to
-transform our life as far as possible into a state of independence, to
-achieve independence in opposition to a world confused and only half
-rational. Such a self-determining activity is by no means simply a
-matter of subjective disposition; it requires a particular form of life.
-In opposition to the desultoriness and change of the life of sense it
-needs a powerful unification and organisation. It advances to methods
-and laws of the object in contrast to playful caprice; to a logic of the
-object in opposition to a persistence in contradiction; to a further
-construction of the first impression in contrast to comfortable
-complacency; to a courageous continuation and building up of life in
-opposition to a complacent acceptance of destiny. It gives to life a
-dramatic character in contrast to a lyrical, sentimental one, and along
-with this it can acknowledge fully that a genuine drama usually contains
-much that is lyrical.
-
-It is detrimental to Activism itself if it takes the problem of life
-lightly. It is vital that it should not forget or underestimate the fact
-that the effort to solve the problems of life meets with great
-difficulties, that the solution costs incalculable trouble and work, and
-that even when the best is achieved it is only approximate. When
-Activism recognises this fact it may acknowledge a certain validity in
-the positions of its opponents and may learn from them. But there is a
-harsh contradiction that extends to the innermost basis of life, an
-implacable "either--or," whether man simply receives the world and
-accompanies it with his own mood, or whether he finds courage and power
-to take up a conflict against confusion and irrationality, to co-operate
-in the building up of a kingdom of reason. For the latter, the
-affirmation of reason in the innermost basis of reality as a whole and
-of his own being is necessary. Whether men and times find a way to such
-an inner establishment, to such transcendence of all external and
-internal limitation, is that which decides the main tendency of their
-life.
-
-
-
-
-III. THE SPIRITUAL LIFE IN MAN IN CONFLICT AND IN VICTORY
-
-
-We intend to make the following section as short as possible, as we have
-treated this subject so much in detail in "The Truth of Religion" and
-also in "The Struggle for a Concrete Spiritual Experience." We must
-refer those who wish for a closer consideration of the subject to those
-works: the subject will be treated of here only so far as is necessary
-for a representation of life as a whole; a concise statement may have
-distinct advantages.
-
-
-(a) DOUBT AND PROSTRATION
-
-It is a leading idea of our whole investigation, and one which has held
-good in every branch of it, that for us men spiritual life is evolved
-only in opposition to a world other than spiritual; that reality does
-not surround us from the beginning, but forms a high ideal in contrast
-to the customary want of purpose and energy in life. The existence of a
-world lower than the spiritual, and the late appearance of that which
-arises from within as the primary and the all-dominant reality, must
-give birth to many questions and much doubt; from early times these
-facts have occupied and much disturbed reflective thought. Man might
-place the problem on one side without incurring any risk, if the
-spiritual life when it comes to the fore assumes the guidance of life
-and manifests itself as world-transcendent power--externally, in that it
-subordinates to itself and takes up into itself everything else;
-internally, in that with certain progress it presses forward in the
-human province, wins the whole soul of man, and becomes more and more
-his only world. In particular, where the spiritual life is regarded, as
-we regard it, as the self-consciousness of reality; where, therefore,
-that which apparently stands in opposition to the spiritual life must
-ultimately have its basis within it, the demands of the spiritual life
-have a coercive power. And so when experiences a thousandfold, new and
-old, present a picture which contradicts these demands we must feel the
-state of things to be a particularly painful one.
-
-That, however, is what really happens: it is the case in the relation of
-the spiritual life to nature, as well as in its relation to humanity; it
-happens, therefore, in our whole experience. If the spiritual life
-constitutes the fundamental nature of reality; if, in it, reality first
-attains to self-consciousness, it is to be expected that when the
-spiritual life appeared it would create for itself an independent form
-of existence in contrast to that of nature, and would exercise a
-superior power in this form of existence, to which nature must
-accommodate itself. But, as a fact, this is so far from being the case
-that even the attempt to imagine the spiritual in any way leads
-immediately to the quixotic. In the experience of humanity the spiritual
-life is related in its entirety to a natural basis; in no way does it
-seem able to free itself from this, but in all its activity it remains
-dependent upon nature. If nature simply follows its own tendencies; if,
-indifferent to value and lack of value, without aim and ideal, nature
-lives its life of soulless movement, union with an order so alien and
-impenetrable must most seriously affect the spiritual life. The world
-goes on its course unconcerned with the weal or the woe, the persistence
-or the disappearance of spiritual being, of spiritual relations, indeed
-of spiritual life in general. Not only do great catastrophes, as in
-earthquakes, storms, and floods, show how indifferent the existence or
-the non-existence of spiritual life is to the forces of nature, but the
-commonplaces of everyday experience and of individual destiny also show
-the same indifference. In nature we find no difference of treatment in
-accordance with any distinction of good and evil, great and mean, noble
-and vulgar. Even the most eminent personality, who may be almost
-indispensable to our spiritual welfare, is subject to the same
-contingency, the same fate as all others. Regarded from the point of
-view of the world of sense, all spiritual life is a chaotic confusion of
-fleeting appearances, all of which are dependent; it is not an
-independent world, but a subsidiary addition to a world which is other
-than spiritual.
-
-Experience of the impotence of the spiritual life in relation to nature
-has been the cause of mental disquiet from early times. But this
-experience was not necessarily oppressive so long as mankind was called
-upon to transform nature into a realm of reason, and so long as there
-was hope of accomplishing this. For the contrast with the cold and rigid
-external world has deepened the inwardness of human relationship and
-made us conscious of the dignity and greatness of spiritual creation. In
-culture, humanity has formed a characteristic sphere of life, and in
-doing this has aided the spiritual life to attain a certain reality. In
-culture, spiritual factors and values win power; and a new order of life
-in contrast to that of nature is evolved. It cannot be doubted that a
-new reality makes its appearance; but it is an open question whether
-this new reality fulfils the hopes which have been placed upon it; and,
-further, whether perplexities and confusions, which make it doubtful
-whether anything has been gained, do not arise out of its further
-development. This question is certainly not answered lightly in the
-affirmative by the conviction that regards the spiritual life as a
-turning of reality towards its own truth, which therefore in its
-development must insist primarily on complete spontaneity and
-independence. For, if in culture the spiritual life attains an
-independence over against nature, it is at the same time drawn so deeply
-into the particularity and limitation of human life, and is associated
-so much with the merely human, that culture as a whole is anything but
-the unfolding of a realm of pure, or even of only preponderating,
-spirituality.
-
-In the first place, the spiritual life does not introduce a definite and
-fixed content into our experience, and it does not follow paths
-independent of human striving and error; but arises through hard toil
-and only slowly finds any unity: in its further endeavour it by no means
-follows the same tendency, but effects great changes, indeed
-revolutions, into states the exact opposite of its previous states. When
-it is so uncertain as to its own aim the spiritual life becomes
-seriously involved in the seeking and vacillation, in the needs and
-passions, of man: instead of giving to man an immovable support and
-pointing out a definite aim for his activity, it seems itself unable to
-pass beyond a state of uncertain groping and error.
-
-Corresponding to this uncertainty as to its content, there is a want of
-power on the part of the spiritual life within man. Instead of
-controlling the conduct of man directly, the spiritual life generally
-determines it through that which it contributes towards the attainment
-of his aims. If this is so in the case of the individual, it is even
-more so in the case of social life, for in it spiritual activity is
-regarded chiefly as a means to obtain advantages over others, and to
-advance socially. And so that of which it is the nature to be an end
-complete in itself is treated as a means to other ends; it is not itself
-active, and its own power is not a motive force; but even for its own
-maintenance it needs the help and support of things alien to itself: the
-artificial mechanism of social organisation must bring forth toilsomely
-that which, unless it flows immediately from its source, cannot be fresh
-or genuine. Such a state of human affairs remains far below the aims of
-the spiritual life; it produces insincerity, a luxuriant growth of
-hypocrisy and pretence. For all striving for the true and the good
-involves the assertion that the object is desired for its own sake: if
-the object really serves the aims of mere man, there inevitably
-originates a wide divergence between what is willed and what is alleged
-to be willed. In respect of this, one cannot, with the moralists, lay
-the blame simply on the will. For, in man, spiritual impulse in general
-is insignificant; without the compulsion of the social environment it
-would hardly prevail at all against nature. This social compulsion,
-therefore, notwithstanding its defects, cannot be dispensed with;
-however clearly we may see its inadequacy, we cannot renounce it
-altogether. Society cannot exert such coercive power without presenting
-itself as the champion of pure reason; without desiring an infallibility
-for its decisions. This attitude naturally arouses the opposition of
-individuals and a keen struggle ensues, but as one side may be right the
-condition of the spiritual life is not much improved by the struggle.
-
-The state of life, uncertain of its aims and inadequate in its means, is
-rather a paltry substitute for a realm of reason than such a realm
-itself. A noisy and self-conscious agitation, much unrest and
-excitement, but little substance and soul; a ceaseless anxiety
-concerning the means of life and hurried pursuit of them, and in the
-occupation with the means forgetfulness and neglect of life itself; much
-self-glorification and ostentation, and little reverence for the
-spiritual life--such is social life in general. Where the vanity,
-emptiness, and falsehood of the social machinery have come to be clearly
-perceived, man has become absolutely wearied and satiated, and has often
-fled from society to nature, to seek therein simple truth and enduring
-peace. But he could believe it possible to find such in nature only
-because he read this truth and peace into it from himself; as,
-nevertheless, he must ultimately return to those of the same nature as
-himself: thus he remains in a state of vacillation between nature, which
-is indifferent to the spiritual life, and humanity, which corrupts the
-spiritual life by drawing it down to the level of the narrowly human. If
-the spiritual life nowhere attains to pure unfolding and certain effect
-within our experience, how can the spiritual life be accepted by us in
-this experience as the essence of reality? In the midst of such doubt,
-the original suspicions, which may have receded before the hope of the
-emergence of a new world, also become felt again--the insignificance of
-the external manifestation of the spiritual life in contrast with the
-immeasurableness of nature; the late appearance of the spiritual life in
-the world-process, and its probable disappearance as a result of the
-expected changes in the conditions of nature. Does not everything tend
-to give us the impression that the spiritual life signifies no more than
-an episode in the world-process; an episode which passes fleetingly, and
-does not affect the fundamental nature of reality at all? The necessity
-of such a conclusion remains concealed so long as man, in an undeveloped
-state of life, is able to fill the world with forms similar to himself,
-and to understand the control of nature on an analogy with human
-conduct. But the progress of culture and especially the growth of
-scientific knowledge have, with irresistible power, taken us beyond that
-state; have led us from dream and illusion to a state of complete
-alertness. Has not all independence of the spiritual life become
-doubtful with this progress of culture and scientific knowledge, and
-must we not give up all claim to subject our existence to its
-sovereignty, and to determine our life and effort spiritually? For there
-cannot be any doubt that, with the spiritual life, the characteristic
-organisation of our existence also falls. It may be that we have thought
-superficially and confusedly enough to declare something to be in itself
-falsehood and deceit, and at the same time to give to it the guidance of
-our life.
-
-
-(b) CONSIDERATION AND DEMAND
-
-The previous train of thought may appear to be a plain and
-straightforward negation, a complete renunciation of the spiritual life
-as the most adequate solution of our problem. But that train of thought
-is itself the result of a superficial treatment; every deeper
-consideration inevitably contradicts such a summary procedure. A
-contradiction of that train of thought is found especially in the fact
-which governs the whole course of our investigation, that with the
-transition to the spiritual life there appear essentially new magnitudes
-and values, new forms and contents of life, which advance beyond not
-only the nature but also the capacity of mere man. Whence all these, if
-spiritual life is only delusion? The new in us may be never so
-powerless; still, the fact that it emerges in our world of thought and
-hovers before us as a possibility proves that it has a certain reality
-also within us.
-
-Further, is the spiritual life, ultimately, in every sense so powerless
-as it at first appears? That it does not pass by as a phantom among our
-presentations is shown by the fact that we do not simply receive the
-existing condition of things, and its degrading oppression of the
-spiritual life, but we feel it to be a cause of harm and of pain to us.
-Could we experience this if we belonged entirely to that condition of
-things; and is not Hegel right when he says that he who feels a
-limitation is already in some way above it? We feel the insufficiency,
-the feebleness, the threadbareness of all human morality; could we feel
-this if we did not experience a longing for a more genuine morality? And
-whence arises this longing in opposition to an entirely different world,
-if not from a spirituality implanted within our own being? We perceive
-the limitations in our knowledge; a growing insight into all its
-conditions and oppositions may lead us in this matter almost to complete
-scepticism: but whence came the desire for an inner elucidation of
-reality; and how did even the idea of it originate, if we belong
-entirely to the darkness of a nature that is less than spiritual, and if
-there is no fight at all within us? We feel that the rapid flow of time,
-its change and course, its sudden revolutions sometimes even into the
-complete opposite of the previous state, is a defect, a source of
-serious danger to truth: could we feel this to be so if our whole being
-were centred in the passing moment; if we did not survey and compare the
-different times; if our being did not participate in something
-super-temporal? And lastly, if the feeling that culture is inadequate
-and indeed nothing but a pretence is so strong and so painful, then here
-again we set ourselves in a position independent of the condition of
-things, and judge that condition by a transcendent standard which only
-our own being can supply. If all these aims were only invented by man
-and applied to life in an external manner, failure to realise them could
-not agitate us as it does.
-
-Besides, the matter is not by any means at an end with the feeling of
-the inadequacy of our position; a movement in opposition to this
-condition is also not lacking. For, as has been seen throughout our
-whole treatment, spiritual operation, creative activity is to be found
-within human experience. It meets us with especial clearness at the
-heights of the work of history; but these also belong to humanity as a
-whole, and the light kindled there is not entirely lost in the mist of
-the commonplace circumstances of every day. In relation with these
-heights of endeavour there is, in humanity as a whole, a movement in
-opposition to the tendency of mediocre culture to fill life entirely; a
-longing for a more spontaneous, a purer, and a more genuine life. Our
-own power of creation may be dormant; only the advent of a strong
-suggestion, or a serious convulsion, is necessary and it breaks forth
-forcefully, and shows distinctly that there is more spirituality in man
-than the circumstances of every day allow us to perceive. The spiritual
-movement manifests itself also in private life and in the relation of
-individual to individual. He who does not measure spiritual greatness by
-physical standards will often find more genuine greatness in the
-simplicity of these relations than in the famous deeds of history; and
-at the same time he will find that through these relations an effective
-presence of the spiritual life within human experience is strengthened.
-
-If in its opposition to human perversion of it genuine spiritual life
-does not always reach a definite positive result, the operation of that
-life as the law and the judge of human things is all the more distinct.
-Man may try to withdraw himself from the spiritual life; he may reject
-and mock at that which the age presents to him as an aim; he may seek to
-fill his life completely with human interests and inclinations: but he
-cannot do this without degenerating into a state of destitution, which
-even he himself soon finds to be intolerable, and without being forced,
-with the compulsion of necessity, to surrender much which it is
-impossible for him to surrender. The catastrophes of history in which
-that which has been found insignificant sinks, and that which carries a
-spiritual necessity within it rises, careless, as it seems, of the weal
-or the woe of man, show in letters of brass that the spiritual life may
-not be modified by man at his pleasure, in this way or that, in
-accordance with his circumstances and his mood.
-
-When we consider all the facts together, we do not get the impression
-that the spiritual life is simply a fleeting illusion that may easily be
-banished; but rather, that there are serious complications, out of which
-we cannot find our way; and that something occurs within us, something
-is begun within us, that is unaffected by mood and caprice, and that
-shows us to be in relations much more comprehensive, though obscure in
-the highest degree. In particular, for a treatment that starts out from
-the life-process, and sees the spiritual movement chiefly in strivings,
-collisions, and even in failures, there can be no doubt concerning the
-actuality of this movement, the emergence of a new life, and thus of a
-new stage of reality in man.
-
-When we recognise the actuality of the spiritual movement the relation
-of the spiritual life to nature and to the world is also to be regarded
-differently from the manner in which the negative mode of thought
-represents it. It is now impossible, as it often happens, more
-particularly among philosophising natural scientists, to consider the
-representation of nature as a complete representation of reality, and to
-leave the spiritual life out of attention as something supplementary and
-subsidiary. The spiritual life is now itself acknowledged to be a
-reality, and must help to determine the representation of reality as a
-whole. Nature must be more than a soulless machine if its evolution is
-to lead, as it does, to the point where a self-conscious life emerges.
-Within our own experience points of transition are not lacking where
-nature produces something that becomes elevated to the spiritual, and
-furthers the spiritual life. The difference of the sexes, for example,
-is primarily a matter of natural organisation, and what a rich source of
-spiritual animation it is! Nothing manifests the union between nature
-and the spiritual life more convincingly than the beautiful, when, in
-accordance with the result of our investigation, it is regarded as a
-characteristic unfolding of the spiritual life, and not as something
-which merely fascinates man and is a source of pleasure to him. For how
-could the external receive a characteristic soul by being taken up into
-the inner life; how could the inward need an external form for its
-perfection if the two realms were not united, if a comprehensive reality
-did not transcend the antithesis?
-
-Lastly, it should not be forgotten that it is modern science, especially
-in its latest phases, with its destruction of the supposed self-evidence
-of the sense impression of nature, that has placed the relation of
-nature to the spiritual life in a more favourable light than it was
-placed by the dogmatic mechanistic theory, which in earlier times seemed
-to be the ultimate solution of the problem of their relation. Nature has
-again become far more of a problem to us, and we recognise that our
-conception of it is a work of the spirit. The old facts of the
-connection and interaction of phenomena, of the conformity to law on the
-part of occurrences, of the developments of form, and of a progress to
-even more artistic complexes and ever finer organisation, once more make
-us feel, and far more keenly than before, that they involve difficult
-problems. It is more clearly evident to us than it was formerly that
-every attempt to make these facts intelligible is made by the spiritual
-life and by analogy with the spiritual life. If in such analogy we do
-not go beyond symbols, yet the symbols themselves betray a depth and a
-secret of reality. At the present time when scientific work is at its
-highest stage of development, the shallowness and the rashness of a
-radical negation are distinctly recognised.
-
-It is true that for the particular life-problem that we are considering
-we have not yet gained much from this recognition; to perceive the
-impossibility of an absolute negation does not in itself imply the
-victory of a joyful affirmation. For all the perplexities that
-previously occupied us still remain, as do the limitation and the
-curtailment of the spiritual life which proceeded from these
-perplexities; the whole movement also remains in its state of
-stagnation. As certainly as on the one hand there is too much of the
-spiritual life presented to us to allow of negation, so on the other it
-is by no means sufficient for the removal of all doubt.
-
-Mere research can tolerate a state of hesitation between affirmation and
-negation; it must often refrain from a decision in the case of special
-problems. Life, however, cannot endure any such intermediary position;
-for life, such hesitation in arriving at a decision must result in
-complete stagnation, and this would help the negation to victory. If
-life is faced with an "either--or" the affirmation has a prospect of
-victory only if the situation previously described may be in some way
-transformed in its favour. This cannot come to pass unless the spiritual
-movement can transcend the limitations which appear in human life, and
-unless a further development can proceed out of the limitations
-themselves. Only such an advance can help the endangered affirmation to
-victory. But whether the spiritual movement does transcend these
-limitations, not a logical consideration of concepts but only the
-experience of life will decide; let us enquire therefore whether life
-offers what we seek.
-
-
-(c) THE VICTORY
-
-The questions that are given rise to in the consideration of human life
-as it is are answered in the affirmative with joyful certainty by the
-religions. The religions do this in that they announce to man the help
-of a transcendent order; an appearance of divine power and goodness in
-the domain of man. But after the far-reaching changes of life and of
-conviction that we have experienced, can this confidence still be
-justified? And have we a place for this assertion of help from a
-transcendent order when we acknowledge the reality of the independent
-spiritual life?
-
-Everything of a religious character and even that which is related to it
-meets, at least upon the surface, in the present the keenest opposition.
-This opposition is aroused in the first place by anthropomorphism--the
-indulgence in merely human representations and desires--which is often
-found associated with religion. If the essence of religion were
-inseparable from such anthropomorphism, the dissolution and submergence
-of religion could hardly be prevented. But according to the witness of
-history, an energetic conflict against all such mere anthropomorphism
-has been carried on within religion itself and, in its highest stages of
-development, religion has demanded a complete surrender of everything
-narrowly human: anthropomorphism and religion are, therefore, not
-absolutely identical. Our investigation, emphasising as it does the
-radical distinction between the substance of the spiritual life and its
-appropriation by man, counselled us to be cautious in reference to this
-matter, and warned us against a hasty rejection of religion.
-
-The essence of religion is still less affected by the charge that modern
-natural science in conceiving of the spatial world as infinite leaves no
-room for a visible heaven. For, to take such a criticism seriously, we
-must not only think of religion as at a primitive stage which, in the
-development of its spiritual content, it has overstepped, but we must
-also completely ignore the fundamental revolution that modern philosophy
-and the whole tendency of modern thought have accomplished in the
-representation of the visible world. Modern thought has destroyed the
-self-evidence that the naïve man attributed to that representation, by
-the experience and the proof that the visible world around us does not
-come to us completely as we represent it, but that we form the
-representation from our point of view, and under the conditions of our
-spiritual nature. Our own activity is embodied in the representation;
-and it will depend upon the value of this activity how far the
-representation may be accepted as reality as a whole and the ultimate
-and absolute world. Now, as in the visible world the spiritual life is
-always bound up with something alien and which cannot be completely
-transformed by the activity of that life, so every assertion of an
-independent spiritual life is a protest against the view that the world
-of sense is the only world. But in that, unless the spiritual life is
-independent, there is neither science nor culture, the priority of a
-world other than that of sense cannot be in any way a matter of doubt to
-philosophy.
-
-But a world other than the world of sense is by no means the
-transcendent world of religion; such a world as the latter could be
-reached only by a continuation of the life-process beyond the position
-yet attained; the course of our investigation, however, has left no
-uncertainty concerning the direction in which such a world is to be
-sought. We saw that the spiritual life could not acquire an independence
-without becoming a universal life: only the immediate presence of this
-universal life at the individual point arouses and preserves a spiritual
-life in it. In spite of this immediate presence of the whole, the life
-of man receives its more detailed organisation and development from his
-relation to the environment and in the building up of a world; the unity
-that exists in the whole reveals itself at first only in relation to the
-multiplicity. There is, therefore, still the possibility that a new and
-characteristic life should evolve out of an exclusive relation to the
-whole; such a life, in contrast to that building up of a world, would
-bear a world-transcendent character. This possibility constitutes the
-only way of advancing beyond the position hitherto reached.
-
-Now, however much work in the world forms the main part of our life and
-asserts itself to be such, yet, as a fact, our life is not taken up
-entirely by such work. In the striving of humanity and in the soul of
-the individual there is a movement towards a world-transcendent life, a
-life that first attains to a complete inwardness when it becomes
-world-transcendent. Only such an inwardness offers a firm support, a
-spirituality unperverted by the perplexities of the world; but this is
-not possible otherwise than by man's gaining participation in a
-world-transcendent spiritual life which is purely and absolutely
-self-conscious: this life must become man's own life, and spirituality
-in this way self-consciously advance towards divinity. This makes it for
-the first time intelligible how life, even when it suffers complete
-failure in its work in the world, even when the activity exerted upon
-the world is completely frustrated, by no means degenerates into a state
-of destitution and ruin. For a new task is now revealed to man in his
-own attitude to the spiritual life as a whole, a relation which may in
-different cases be very different in character, and he may find in the
-solution of the task incalculable difficulties. Here activity also
-changes its character, since without any external manifestation it can
-become complete and purely inward: character can free itself of
-everything passive and become fully active; from being a mere
-accompaniment it can become an active whole. All this, however, is
-possible only if life is directed toward a world-transcendent
-spirituality and only by the power of such a spirituality.
-
-As this new kind of life does not make its appearance suddenly, but is
-prepared by the whole evolution of spiritual life, which we have
-previously considered, so its main individual tendencies are also
-related to this evolution. Essential qualities of the spiritual life are
-manifested in work in the world, but in this they do not come to pure
-formation and victorious establishment: only the elevation to the
-world-transcendent self-consciousness makes possible that with which the
-spiritual life as a whole cannot well dispense, indeed in which it has
-its essential nature. The striving itself, and its arousing and motive
-power, could not be explained if the end were not operative within our
-life: "Thou wouldst not seek me, if thou hadst not already found me"
-(Pascal).
-
-The spiritual life in man could have no hope of acquiring truth if it
-were not rooted in a life which transcends all error and which in some
-way imparts to us this transcendence. If the spiritual life in man did
-not know of certain truth sustained at one innermost point, a truth that
-exerts a directing power on all human undertaking, and prevents it from
-becoming fixed in error, man would lose all confidence in truth in face
-of the obscurities and errors of life as they are shown by the work of
-culture. Further, for the maintenance of the spiritual life, the
-preservation of spontaneity, a possibility of overcoming all restriction
-by nature and of defying destiny is absolutely necessary. But in work in
-the world this spontaneity is subject to the most severe limitations;
-the power of fate surrounds man on all sides: in the natural course of
-things even his own work becomes a rigid destiny to him, and chains him
-with inexorable necessity. As in the case of the individual, so also in
-that of humanity as a whole, life is a gradual narrowing, an ever
-further exclusion of original possibilities; and this tendency is
-continually felt as an increasing oppression in its opposition to the
-freedom of the will and an independent present. How may the spiritual
-life be prevented from growing feeble and senile, if new pure beginnings
-cannot be produced from a fundamental relation transcending the relation
-with the world, if from this fundamental relation a spontaneous life
-cannot spring up ever anew? The fact that humanity is able not only to
-transform the nature of culture in its particular aspects, but also to
-fall into error concerning culture as a whole, without surrendering
-itself, is an indication that the life of humanity is not exhausted in
-work in the world. The spiritual life must unite in an inner community
-all who participate in it; and this is impossible unless the spiritual
-life leads man to a point where all walls of partition and all
-differences fall away. But spiritual work increases rather than
-diminishes these differences; with culture the differentiation of men
-also grows. We must sink ever deeper in such differentiation; lose more
-and more the possibility of a mutual understanding, of a life and
-feeling with one another and for one another, if this movement toward
-differentiation does not come into contact with a transcendent power
-that counteracts it, if some power does not unite us inwardly. What
-other power could this be than the spiritual life itself, and how could
-it effect this result otherwise than in the revelation of a
-world-transcendent self-conscious life which thus presents itself as an
-Absolute? For, then a removal of differences in negative and in positive
-matters becomes possible: in negative matters so far as all achievements
-in the human sphere, however distant they may be from one another,
-appear equally inadequate when they are judged by the standard of an
-absolute life: in positive matters so far as the absolute life produces
-something at each point transcending all complexity, by which the
-movement is freed from its restrictions and resumes its flow, and by the
-imparting of which to man in the innermost depth of his being, reveals a
-new life in which all may in like manner participate. The possibility of
-a finally valid affirmation of life is first attained when this
-world-transcendent self-conscious life is acknowledged. Without turning
-to the absolute life, life could not withdraw from its perplexities;
-suffering and guilt would crush man. With this turning, however, he
-acquires, not in his merely human nature, but so far as he is taken up
-into the absolute life, part in the perfection, infinity, and eternity
-of that life: in the midst of all change and becoming something
-immovable is disclosed to him; in the midst of all dependence upon the
-world, a sure world-transcendence; in the midst of all darkness and
-suffering, a state of incalculable bliss. From the ultimate depths the
-Yes triumphs over the No, which, at the first glance, seems so easily
-its superior.
-
-This transition derives a power to convince primarily from the union of
-the individual tendencies so as to form a vital whole of
-world-transcendent inwardness. Such a whole, thoroughly characteristic
-in its nature, is never a work of mere man, a product of critical
-reflection; it can proceed only from the spiritual life itself. Looked
-at from the point of view of that life this whole cannot be regarded as
-something later and as something supplementary; but it will be seen that
-that which for us first attains complete clearness through suffering and
-convulsion must be effective from the beginning, and already exist in
-the work upon the world. If, however, it becomes our possession only
-when it takes precedence, then the whole prospect of reality must be
-altered and deepened, and for us life will be divided into the stages of
-the establishing, struggling, triumphing of spirituality.
-
-It is this fact of transcendent spirituality that the religions take up
-and develop, and seek to bring near to humanity. The doctrines they
-contain are ultimately only the framework or the outward manifestation
-of that world-transcendent inwardness; they desire to realise its power
-of deliverance and elevation completely. They themselves have their
-support and justification in this transcendent spiritual life, and the
-precedence of one to the others will be judged by the degree to which in
-affirmation and negation they develop this spiritual life in its
-world-transcending sovereignty and in its world-penetrating power. From
-the point of view of that life, religion as a whole must maintain its
-truth and its indispensable nature: where that life is lacking, religion
-is simply a delusion, a folly the absurdity of which is hardly
-conceivable; but where it is developed religion must pass current as
-that which, of all things, is the most certain, as the fundamental axiom
-of the whole spiritual life. Between this "either--or" there is no
-middle course; historical experience shows that religion has been to
-men and ages either the most certain of all things or the one about
-which there has been most dispute.
-
-We can now return to the question that led us to this discussion, to the
-question of the rationality of our reality. To be sure, even after the
-further revelation of the spiritual life, the answer is not so easy as
-the adherents of religion often think. For they often believe that with
-the acknowledgment of a world-transcendent spirituality, its triumphant
-manifestation within our world is immediately assured; and with this
-conviction they attempt to present this world as a kingdom of justice,
-even if not of love. But all endeavour, however energetic, and all
-recourse to subtlety of thought, yield no satisfactory conclusion: at
-most, the possibility is reached that that which seems irrational may
-acquire some rationality in more comprehensive relations; but even if
-that is so, we are not free from irrationality; and those mere
-possibilities are far from being equal to counteracting the strong
-impression of the reality of evil. Even religion, which would bring
-about a transition to the better, is itself deeply involved in this
-irrationality; a painful martyrdom has often been imposed upon its
-heroes, and its form has continually degenerated in the course of
-history through the influence of human error and passion. Since in the
-latter the restriction is presented as an opposition to the divine, the
-view of the world as it immediately appears is darkened rather than
-illuminated.
-
-Nevertheless, through the revelation that the world has a deeper basis,
-the perplexity concerning life and reality is essentially changed. Evil
-is not removed; the external view of things is not altered; the good is
-perhaps strengthened, and, indeed, life in its innermost depth withdrawn
-from all power of perplexity and led to a new stage. So far, the
-irrationality may appear in another light from this point of view, as
-hence the conflicts and the convulsions may themselves be factors which
-help life to realise its own ideal and to establish it in the new world.
-In history, suffering has been regarded as absolutely irrational, and
-has been unconditionally rejected only where man has been regarded as
-essentially complete. But if an immense problem is recognised in
-suffering, then suffering also, by rousing us to activity and by making
-us less inflexible, may acquire a positive value and be of service in
-the development of being. This, however, does not give us a theodicy; it
-justifies neither philosophy nor religion in trying to act as advocate
-for the Deity. To us evil is an insoluble riddle: no formula can make it
-intelligible why a powerful and clear reason is implanted in our world
-and that at the same time the lower most obstinately asserts itself in
-opposition, treats it as a matter of indifference, offers an
-insurmountable resistance to it.
-
-Thus we can hardly reach a decision in regard to our last conviction by
-way of intellectual consideration; rather, in the decision concerning
-the "either--or" which is the question here, our whole being is
-involved. On the one side there is the external impression of the world,
-the weakness of the good, its perversion into evil, the apparent
-indifference of the world-process towards the aims of the spirit, the
-apparent futility of all that would advance beyond nature. Can anything
-that is aroused within our inner being, and with so much toil finds any
-form, arise in opposition to this immeasurable world? This will be
-possible only when a movement of the world itself, and not a mere
-product of man, is recognised in that which is aroused within man: for
-only then will its extension be a matter of complete indifference, and,
-however mean an extension it shows in the human sphere, a turning of the
-whole would be proved, a revolution of the whole accomplished. Then that
-which for us emerges on the edge of our life must nevertheless be
-regarded as the sustaining basis and the controlling power of reality as
-a whole. Our whole investigation has championed the view that the
-turning to the spiritual life implies a movement of the world: wherever
-the independence of the spiritual life is acknowledged the supremacy of
-reason cannot be doubted.
-
-But it is one thing to acknowledge such a thesis to be necessary,
-another to give it the power to convince and impress, without which it
-does not leave the realm of phantoms, and does not become a living
-power. This is possible only where the spiritual life is taken up as our
-own life, and developed as our own life; where, therefore, its
-vindication attains to the overwhelming power and the axiomatic
-certainty of self-preservation. The centre of reality will be changed
-for us only if we change the centre of our own life, and find true
-immediacy no longer in sense impression, but in self-determining
-activity.
-
-The acknowledgment of a self-conscious inwardness, of a
-world-transcendent spirituality, together with the recognition of
-another kind of world, full of oppositions, must give a characteristic
-form to our conception of our reality. Here, a rational solution of the
-world-problem is for ever excluded, and the world present to man must be
-accepted as a particular kind of reality, which cannot be regarded as
-the only and ultimate one. From this point of view the whole life of
-humanity must appear to be a mere link in a great chain; an act of a
-drama, the course of which we are unable to survey; the fundamental idea
-of which, however, glimmers through sufficiently clearly to point out a
-direction to our life.
-
-Through the emergence of a world-transcendent inwardness there appear
-characteristic tasks and complications, also for the more detailed
-development of our life. Unqualified esteem for that inwardness has
-often led religions to demand that life should be placed solely and
-entirely in that transcendent sphere, in the realm of faith and of
-disposition, and to free life as far as possible from the work of the
-world; the former life seemed to excel the latter as the divine the
-human. But this comparison does not hold good; for the divine is to us
-not only a world-transcendent sovereignty but also a world-pervading
-power: to honour the former preponderatingly may be the only salvation
-for times and individuals in a state of prostration and collapse, and in
-this way life would be given a preponderatingly religious character; but
-this form of life can never be accepted as the normal one and the one
-alone worth striving for. For one thing, that transcendent world, as far
-as its contents and tasks are concerned, is presented to us only in
-outline; all its more detailed nature must result from the world of our
-activity, and must retain a symbolic character. If the connection of the
-spiritual world with the empirical world is broken it falls into the
-danger of becoming destitute; so that religion may come to be simply a
-revelling in feeling; or a devotion, indifferent to all content and
-which, therefore, judged by spiritual standards, is worthless. It is by
-hard work alone, in relation to men and things, that our life acquires a
-spiritual character. Religion does, indeed, elevate life above work, and
-give to life its full depth. Still, movement and differentiation must be
-included within a vital whole; and the relation to activity which is the
-chief factor in life cannot be given up even at its greatest depth. The
-high estimate of spirituality may not rightly lead to a mean estimate of
-nature, to a conflict with nature such as has been the case in the realm
-of religion in the tendency to asceticism. For as certainly as our
-acknowledgment of an independent spirituality involves a subordination
-of nature, this subordination does not imply a mean estimate, still less
-a rejection. Asceticism which appears to be the attainment of a high
-level of spiritual life soon leads to an inward degeneration. For in
-asceticism the chief task is not the powerful development and courageous
-advance of spirituality, but simply a negation and suppression of sense.
-Reflection and thought will thus be centred upon just those things
-beyond which the spiritual movement wishes to lead. Particular temporary
-circumstances may make the tendency to asceticism comprehensible; such
-times were over-refined and diseased, and the diseased may not rightly
-give to life its rule.
-
-But if, in this way, we oppose a specifically religious or ascetic form
-of life we are not prevented from acknowledging the strong and fruitful
-influence of a world of transcendent inwardness upon life as a whole.
-For its perfect health and breadth, our life needs two tendencies which,
-though they directly contradict each other, must, nevertheless, within
-us be complementary to each other: it needs an energetic conflict
-against all that is irrational, and at the same time to be elevated into
-a sphere in which everything is rational, into a realm of peace and
-perfection. Within the spiritual life itself, tasks are given their form
-and are estimated on the one hand from the human point of view, and on
-the other from an ultimate, one might say an absolute, view of things.
-The significance of this distinction is to be seen most clearly in
-history, and, perhaps, in the contrast between the Greek and the
-Christian character. The former places man in the midst of the world,
-and requires him energetically to take up the struggle for the cause of
-rationality and decisively to reject the irrational. Suffering and pain
-were to be avoided; man was never to submit to them. Courage appeared to
-be the chief quality of this form of life, and in relation to others
-justice was its determining idea. But if this idea demands that each
-should receive according to his achievement, then the higher and the
-lower, the noble and the common, must be distinctly separated and never
-allowed to be confused. That the noble form a small minority, and that
-history hardly promises any change in this matter, is a fact that has
-not escaped perception; and the permanence of the antithesis of an
-esoteric and an exoteric form, therefore, appears to be inevitable. The
-difference that exists is regarded as due primarily to nature, not to
-free decision. To make nature completely active, and to unify that which
-it offers in a scattered and an unsystematic manner, appears to be our
-whole life-work.
-
-The result, therefore, is a powerful, active, self-conscious life, which
-not only affects us by its results but to which we must assign a
-permanent significance. But as the only and exclusive form of life, it
-involves great restrictions and rigour; its limitations may remain
-hidden in days of joyful creative activity and in the highest circles of
-society, but they must be keenly felt if life falls into a condition of
-stagnation, and man, as man, asks questions with regard to the
-happiness of life. This destiny may then become an intolerable
-compulsion; mere courage, an over-exertion of human power; mere justice,
-severity and unmercifulness; the sharp distinction between men, an
-actual separation, which tends on the one side to proud haughtiness and
-on the other to doubt and depression. A keen perception of such
-limitations and dangers must necessarily force life into new paths.
-
-The counter movement has won the victory in Christianity, which makes
-not work in the world but the relation to a world-transcendent spiritual
-life the chief thing. Man does not in the first place trust a nature
-that safely leads him but at the same time limits him; but his nature
-seems full of problems, and to need a complete transformation, which
-only a miracle of grace can accomplish. Men are not regarded as being
-separated by fixed differences, but in comparison with the divine
-perfection all differences vanish, and from the relation to God the
-feeling of equality and brotherhood is evolved. Thought of in relation
-to the requirement of a pure inwardness of the whole being, differences
-in achievement are totally insignificant: justice gives place to an
-infinite love that dispels all harshness, makes all differences
-consistent and harmonious, and tolerates no feeling of hostility.
-
-The antithesis of a nature which is operative within the world and which
-elevates above the world must permeate life as a whole and must give
-rise to opposite tendencies in every part of life. On the one hand,
-there is a distinct formation in finite relations, an insistence upon
-plastic organisation and complete consciousness of life; on the other,
-an aspiration towards the infinite, a more submissive faith, a more
-unrestrained disposition, a higher estimate of the naïve and the
-childlike. In the former, man, full of confidence in his own power,
-himself produces a rationality of reality, and disdains all aids alien
-to himself; in the latter, life is sustained by a trust in an infinite
-good and power which, in a way transcending the capacity of man, guides
-to the attainment of the best; in short, as a whole and in its
-individual aspects each is a fundamentally different type of life from
-the other.
-
-The type of life advocated by Christianity has resulted in a great
-deepening of life; it cannot possibly be given up again in favour of an
-earlier type. But this Christian type also does not suffice for the
-moulding of life as a whole. Most severe complications would ensue if
-the position of Christianity were taken up as an ultimate conclusion and
-an absolute evaluation in the conditions which at present exist, and its
-principles without further consideration were applied to our life as a
-whole. The annulling of all differences, even of spiritual capacity; the
-displacement of justice through pity; the cessation of the conflict
-against evil; the low estimate of man's own power, would all endanger
-most severely the rational character of life; an adoption of this type
-of life in its entirety would lead to the discontinuance of the work of
-culture; in particular, it is inconsistent with any kind of political
-organisation. Finite conditions are not to be judged by infinite
-standards; and we men are, after all, in the finite and remain so.
-
-And so, from the earliest times since Christianity, from being merely
-one of opposing systems, became the dominant power, compromises have
-been sought. The system of the development of power and of justice has
-nevertheless asserted its influence, and though Christianity has had an
-external supremacy, this system has forced characteristically Christian
-life to be regarded as a matter of mere subjective disposition and of
-private life. But as such compromises do not fully and truly express
-spiritual necessity, they easily lead to falsity. To rise above this
-tendency to make such compromises, the acknowledgment of the right and
-of the limits of each type, the acknowledgment of the necessity of both
-within a comprehensive whole, is necessary. Such a whole and along with
-it a common ground, upon which the movements meet together, and can
-strive to understand one another, is given to us by the spiritual life,
-acknowledged in its independence. It is not for us to force our life
-into a finished scheme, but to develop fully and to acknowledge the
-movements and oppositions which exist in our life. True, life will ever
-remain unfinished, but can we wish to make it more complete than it can
-be, and can the incompleteness cause us anxiety, when we are sure of its
-main direction?
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-APPLICATION TO THE PRESENT
-
-CONSEQUENCES AND REQUIREMENTS
-
-_Introductory Considerations_
-
-
-With a consideration of the present we set out: to the present we now
-return. The convictions at which we have arrived, and which have led us
-to a characteristic philosophy of life, must now be considered in
-relation to the needs of the present; we must see whether this
-philosophy proves to be true in this connection, and this by its own
-development, as well as by the simplification of the condition of a
-time, which, as it is immediately experienced, is confused in the
-highest degree.
-
-But, at the outset of our treatment of this problem, we perceive how
-difficult it is for the acknowledgment of an independent spirituality to
-determine our relation to the temporal environment; we see how this
-acknowledgment transforms that relation into a problem. The conception
-of the "present" is by no means simple and certain, even as far as its
-external boundary is concerned. The mere to-day is obviously too short a
-period to constitute the present; but how much is to be added and where
-must it cease in order that we may have a genuine present? True, the
-present must involve a characteristic content that associates the
-moments and unites them so as to produce a common effect; but does our
-time give us such a content? The first glance at the state of life in
-our time reveals a chaotic confusion, which includes the most diverse
-endeavours, now in passionate union, now in complete indifference to one
-another, and yet again in harsh hostility; further, there is a constant
-displacement of the individual elements by a process of elevation and of
-degradation. Even if something common and permanent is operative in the
-present, its close amalgamation with this change and movement prevents
-it from being purely developed: the truth contained in the present state
-of life is inseparably mixed with human error and passion.
-
-And yet this is not an experience simply of the present, but one common
-to all ages. For fundamental spiritual creation has always been effected
-in the direst contradiction to the social environment. What harsh
-judgments, and judgments that set its value at nil, have been passed
-upon society with regard to its capacity not only in religion but also
-in philosophy and art! How severe a conflict has been carried on in all
-departments of life against the presumption of society! The present,
-especially, is troubled by these problems, because, as has become
-evident to us from the beginning of our investigation, it carries within
-it movements of a diverse and contradictory nature, so that it can
-hardly produce a consistent impression of the whole, still less attain
-to a definite character. Human interests and parties seek with all their
-energy to impress upon the time their own character; they call that
-modern which is useful to and in harmony with themselves. The most
-diverse tendencies cross one another; experiences in particular
-departments of life determine the conception of the whole; the different
-classes of society follow different courses in accordance with their
-different interests; much that is accidental is regarded as vital and is
-allowed to influence us: the extreme has the advantage of being able to
-make an impression upon us; and the superficial and the negative creep
-into favour through the easiness of the conclusion presented by them: in
-short, in this state of the time, that which arises in human opinion is
-incapable of offering to spiritual endeavour a secure support and an
-orientation concerning its aims.
-
-This uncertainty cannot be removed by turning our attention to history,
-by taking an interest in past ages. For, with whatever clearness a
-highly developed science of history may present the whole course of the
-ages to us, to believe that our own life is enriched and made more
-stable by this, we must confuse knowledge and life, the mere present
-representation of earlier times and the appropriation of them by our own
-activity--a danger into which the purely academic mode of thought easily
-falls. The power and the tendency of life in the present determine the
-nature of our appropriation of the past and of its transformation in
-self-determining activity. If this life stagnates, then we are helpless
-in face of the stream of earlier systems of thought. Even if these
-systems attract us to themselves, and carry us with them for a time,
-finally they will manifest their antitheses and throw us back again upon
-ourselves: we cannot escape from ourselves; we can never find a
-substitute from outside for want of conviction and power of our own. It
-is a fundamental error, not, indeed, of historical research but of a
-feeble historical relativism, to expect us to form a conviction of our
-own by concerning ourselves with the past; and to think that the later
-stage in history proceeds from the earlier as a self-evident final
-result. By taking such an attitude to the past we should only fall into
-the half-will and half-life common to an age of decadence. If the
-present is thus uncertain in the heart of its spiritual nature, and it
-is not possible to escape from this uncertainty by resorting to the
-past, it may appear to be essential that we should be completely
-delivered from the tyranny of time, and that we should take up an
-attitude of entire unconcern of its affirmation and its negation of
-spiritual endeavour.
-
-But a rejection of the immediate relation to time by no means settles
-the matter. If spiritual work were completely dissociated from the
-temporal environment and the historical movement, it would be dependent
-solely upon the capacity of the mere individual and upon the passing
-moment; all relation, all community of work, would thus be given up, and
-the performance of others could not be anything to us, nor our
-achievement anything to others; there would be no inner building up of
-life, and no hope of reaching greater depths. Not only is it impossible
-to abandon such aims, but our experience of spiritual work itself
-contradicts the disintegration of life into nothing but isolated
-points. If all spiritual creation is effected in contradiction to time,
-what is denied in this contradiction is rather that which lies upon the
-surface of time than that which is deeper; rather human accommodation to
-than the spiritual content of time. All who believe that distinctive
-human history is sustained by the activity of a spiritual life will
-attribute to time such a spiritual content.
-
-Every age, therefore, in virtue of the presence of this spiritual life,
-will contain characteristic spiritual motives, movements, and demands,
-and will be especially qualified to convey certain contents to man, to
-open up certain experiences to him, and to point out certain directions.
-All these must be appropriated by anyone who wishes to transcend the
-original state of emptiness, and to advance to spiritual creation and to
-a spiritual fashioning of life. In consequence of this a more friendly
-attitude may be taken up towards time; and we shall be far more grateful
-to it--though perhaps not with explicit consciousness, perhaps even in
-contradiction to definite purpose--than we could ever be with regard to
-the experiences on the surface of time. However low, for example, the
-estimate Plato may have formed of "the many" around him; and though with
-the whole passion of his soul he may have insisted upon a transformation
-of the immediate condition of life, what he offered of his own and the
-new that he required, with all its originality and uniqueness,
-contradicts neither the natural spirit of the Greek nor the contemporary
-Greek culture: Plato can be regarded only as a Greek of a particular
-time. His conflict with the time is not the conflict of an incomparable
-individuality with his environment, but a selection and a unification of
-the possibilities existing in time; it is an arousing to life of the
-deeper realities of time against its superficialities, of spiritual
-necessities in opposition to the conduct and interests of men. In this
-manner the great man also is a child of his age, and is unintelligible
-out of relation to it. Could one think of Goethe as living in the Middle
-Ages, or of Augustine as living in the age of the Enlightenment?
-Indeed, we may carry our contention further, and say that the great has
-been just that which has had the closest relation with the time; and
-that it has reached a permanent significance, just because it expressed
-the unique nature and the inner longing of the time, that which was
-incomparable and inderivable in it. That which has been able to work
-permanently beyond the time in which it made its appearance was born not
-from a timeless consideration of things, but from the deepest feeling of
-the needs of the time; only thus can we escape from the feeling of
-unreality which otherwise accompanies the striving after spirituality.
-This consideration must commend to spiritual work the closest possible
-relation with the time, and the spiritual life may hope for an essential
-advance of its own striving as a result of this relation.
-
-Still, the matter is not so simple as it is often thought to be. The
-spiritual content of the ages is not a complete fact that permeates life
-with a sure and definite effect, so that it could be taken up by
-activity. Rather, that which is great and characteristic in the ages is
-found only in creative spiritual activity, abstracted from which it is
-no more than a possibility; a suggestion that is inevitably lost, if an
-advancing spiritual activity is lacking. Spiritual creation is not a
-mere copy, an employment of an existent time-character. Rather, time
-first attains a spiritual character through spiritual activity, and by
-spiritual creation possibility first becomes complete reality. This
-spiritual creation is not simply a summation but a potentialisation, an
-essential elevation of that which exists in time. Without this activity
-the spiritual elements in time remain merely coexistent, and have no
-living unity; they realise no life of the whole, no being within the
-activity, nothing that means to us development of being. Temporal life
-then remains only a half-life, a life of pretence; it lacks complete
-self-consciousness and true stability and joy, and at the same time it
-lacks a genuine present. To attain such a present thus appears to be a
-difficult task, the performance of which is not so much presupposed by
-the different branches of spiritual life as is an object of their work.
-Art, for example, is rightly required to express the feeling of the life
-of the time; yet it does not find such a feeling of life already
-existent, but it must first wrest it from the chaos of the general
-condition of life. Art is great in giving to the time that which it did
-not already possess, but which is, nevertheless, necessary to the
-complete reality of its life. Spiritual work, therefore, is not
-something just added in time, but that which first gives to time a
-genuine life and a genuine present. This task may be achieved with quite
-different degrees of success; it is not all times that reach this
-elevation and attain to a genuine present; those that do so we call
-great and "classical" times. The general state of our life--which,
-however, does not imply time as a whole--appears from this point of view
-to be especially afflicted with the defect and fault of insincerity; our
-age does not so much live a life of its own as a strange life; and yet
-this life is represented as being a life of our own. And it is
-especially so in our own time, when along with a state of division in
-our own purposes we are inundated by systems of thought alien to us. We
-are thus in danger of becoming half-hearted and living a life of
-pretence: in religion we assert the profession of faith and the feelings
-of times long gone by to be our own conviction and feelings; we build
-our cathedrals in styles that correspond to another spiritual condition
-and another tendency of life; in philosophy we hang upon systems and
-problems of other times; in everything we lack sincerity. But why is
-this so, and why do we renounce all claim to a life in accordance with
-our own nature? Certainly not because our time lacks problems and tasks
-of its own, or because it is deficient in spiritual possibilities and
-necessities; for, of these there is an abundance; in this matter our
-time is not behind any other. But there predominates a wrong relation
-between these tasks and the central power of the spiritual life, which
-is equal to cope with them and out of the possibilities create a
-reality.
-
-In any case spiritual work has a great deal to do with the time; and in
-regard to this it finds itself in no simple situation. Spiritual work
-must acknowledge a given condition, which it cannot alter to suit its
-own preferences; but it can make something else out of this condition
-and also see something else in it than immediately meets the eye. The
-possibilities of a time are revealed only in spiritual work, and through
-it alone are they separated from the human additions that usually
-overgrow them. These possibilities cannot become clearly evident, unless
-a close relation to history is won: they are not suggestions simply of
-the moment, for they have been prepared by the whole work of history.
-History acquires quite a different--a far more positive--meaning when
-the spiritual life is acknowledged to be independent, and when it is
-admitted that spiritual life is not just the embellishment of a reality
-other than spiritual, but the formation of the only genuine and
-substantial reality, the transition to a self-consciousness of life.
-For, as such a formation of reality, this creative activity extends
-beyond the particular time in which it originates, and becomes part of a
-time-transcending present. True, this activity always appears in a
-garment that seems simply temporary; but this garment does not
-constitute its being: the imperishable in it, its fundamental life,
-remains inwardly near and present even after great changes of temporal
-condition; and within the sphere of spiritual work is always capable of
-new effect.
-
-Christianity, for example, in spite of the attacks that are and have
-been made upon it, still asserts itself as a living power. Yet there
-cannot be the slightest doubt that in everything that lies on the
-surface of our life we are as far as possible removed from the centuries
-of its formation; that not only the view of the world but also the tasks
-of life and the nature of feeling and disposition have become radically
-different. But life is not exhausted in these activities on the surface,
-which must be regarded as external manifestations that proceed from an
-inner unity. That which these centuries have performed for the essence
-of life: the realisation of a freedom of spiritual inwardness, the
-acknowledgment of an independent spiritual world with great aims and
-tasks, may, indeed, become obscured for the consciousness of individuals
-and of whole periods; it remains, however, an essential part, a
-presupposition of all further spiritual life.
-
-As in this manner in the case of Christianity, spiritual reality has
-also been evolved otherwise in some creative epochs; and in the movement
-of history they have all together produced a certain condition of
-spiritual evolution which constitutes the invisible basis of our own
-activity, and from which it is first possible to elucidate the spiritual
-nature of a particular time. This universal, historical state of
-spiritual evolution indicates a level, to which must correspond all
-work, which desires not simply to attain the aim of the moment but also
-to serve in the building up of a spiritual reality within the domain of
-humanity. This historical condition of the spiritual life is not
-conferred upon us by history; rather history only mediates an incentive
-that must first be transformed by our own activity and conviction. Only
-a mode of thought which transcends the movement of history can recognise
-a spiritual content in history and in our own time, and use this content
-for our own striving.
-
-Spiritual work, therefore, and philosophy as part of it, has a twofold
-relation to time, a negative and a positive: it must possess an
-independence of time, and it must seek an intimate relation with it. The
-"modern," according to the sense in which it is taken, will arouse us at
-one time to energetic opposition, at another to the closest intimacy;
-the former when it desires to subject us to the contemporary conditions
-with all their contingency, the latter when it champions the spiritual
-possibilities of the time and the state of spiritual evolution in
-contrast with the human. We are concerned in a conflict for genuine
-against false time; we are to distinguish clearly between the merely
-human and the spiritual present; the spiritual life must first give a
-genuine reality to time, and in doing this must advance in itself.
-
-Every particular philosophic conviction must justify itself in its
-treatment of this problem; it must be in a position to wrest the truth
-from the error in time; to understand and to estimate the endeavour of
-the time without yielding to it; to comprehend as a whole the manifold
-elements of truth in the life of the present, and to elucidate them from
-a transcendent unity. Without doubt great problems and fruitful
-possibilities exist in the time, but we often feel the most painful
-contrast between their demands and the achievements of man. To diminish
-this divergence; for the time to attain more to its own perfection and
-become a genuine present, is an urgent task in the performance of which
-philosophy also must co-operate; and by this endeavour philosophy can
-also gain much for itself.
-
-
-
-
-I. REQUIREMENTS FOR THE FORM OF LIFE AS A WHOLE
-
-(a) THE CHARACTER OF CULTURE
-
-
-The term "culture" received its present meaning in the latter half of
-the eighteenth century; culture itself reaches back to the beginning of
-the Modern Age. The whole evolution of the Modern Age is a striving
-beyond the religious form of life which prevailed in the Middle Ages,
-and which began to be felt to be narrow and one-sided. In opposition to
-this type of life a new type arose, increased in strength, and finally
-we became fully conscious of it in the idea of culture. The new type has
-been felt to be far superior to the old in many ways; it is not limited
-to one side of human nature, but desires to take it, and to develop it
-as a whole; it does not refer man to any kind of external aid, but makes
-his life depend as much as possible upon his own power, and finds an aim
-fully sufficient in the limitless extension of this power; it directs
-man's perception and endeavour not so much beyond the world as to it,
-and hopes by this means to give a stability to his striving, and a close
-relation with the abundance of things. The movement has brought about a
-far-reaching transformation of life: that which was lying dormant has
-been aroused; the rigid made plastic; the manifold woven into a whole of
-life; the whole range of life has acquired more spontaneous freshness
-and inner movement. The result of the work of history now becomes for
-the first time a complete possession, since above everything contingent
-and accidental it elevates an essential, and above everything tending to
-separation and hostility, a common humanity.
-
-The animating and ennobling influence of modern culture is nowhere more
-manifest than in the life-work of Goethe. For we recognise the greatness
-of his nature primarily in that, with the acutest vision and the
-greatest freedom, he entered into the multiplicity of experience and
-events; with placid yet powerful dominance stripped off all that was
-mere semblance and pretence, all that was simply conventional and
-partial, and fully realised the genuine, the freshness of life, and the
-purely human. (_V._ "The Problem of Human Life.") His treatment of
-Biblical narratives is a good example of this: that a king reigned in
-Egypt who knew not Joseph suggests to him how quickly even the most
-magnificent human achievements are forgotten; that Saul went forth to
-find his father's she-asses, and found a kingdom, symbolises to him the
-truth that we men often reach something totally different from, and also
-much better than, that for which we strove and hoped; the miracle of the
-walking on the water is to him a parable of unflinching faith--the
-holding fast to apparent impossibilities--without which there can be no
-great creation.
-
-If, with this achievement, modern culture may have the feeling of being
-the fulfilment of the strivings of the ages, yet its own course has
-produced oppositions, and engendered perplexities that culminate in a
-dangerous crisis. Culture, as it was represented at the height of German
-spiritual life, was directed chiefly towards the inner development of
-man; it was called with especial satisfaction "spiritual culture." Its
-adherents were concerned not so much with finding a better relation to
-the environment as with growing in the realm of their own soul, and with
-employing whatever the experience of life brought in the development of
-a self-conscious personality, of pure inwardness. Only in this way did
-they seem to advance from the previous state of limitation to the
-complete breadth of existence, and the exercise of all their powers. A
-joy in life, a firm confidence in the rationality of reality gave this
-inner culture a soul; and a bold flight bore it far above the narrowness
-and heaviness of daily life; æsthetic literary creation became the
-chief sphere of its work, and the chief means for the development and
-self-perfecting of personality.
-
-Inner culture has by no means vanished from our life; effects of many
-kinds are felt from it in the present. But it has been forced to resign
-its supremacy in favour of a realistic culture, which makes the relation
-to the environment the chief matter, and removes the centre of life to
-the intellectual and practical control of this environment. In realistic
-culture the inner development of work, of work in the direction of
-natural science and technical art, as well as in politics and social
-endeavour, is less occupied with the acquiring of a powerful
-individuality than with the establishment of an agreeable condition of
-society as a whole. Since activity is related more and more closely with
-things, and receives laws and directions from them, culture is freed
-from dependence upon man and his subjectivity. Culture is an impersonal
-power in contrast with man; it does not lead ultimately to a good to him
-so much as make him simply a means and an instrument of its progressive
-movement. An immeasurable structure of life, a ceaseless self-assertion
-and self-advancement, an arousing and an exertion of all powers that can
-bring man into relation with the environment, are manifest in this
-culture: but at the same time there is an increasing transformation of
-our life into a mere life of relation and mediation, a deprivation and a
-vanishing of self-consciousness. In the midst of the magnificent
-triumphs in external matters there is an increasingly perceptible
-contrast between an astonishing development of the technical, and a
-pitiful neglect of the personal side of life: in regard to the former we
-surpass all other times, as much as we fall below most in regard to the
-latter. Along with a ceaseless increase of technical capacity, there is
-a rapid degeneration of personal life, a pauperising of the soul. Where
-the matter is one of a technical nature there is a magnificent
-condition, definite progress in all departments, work conscious of its
-aim; but there is a painful groping and helpless hesitation, a
-stagnation of production, an emptiness that is only just hidden by a
-veneer of academic education, where powerful personalities and
-impressive individualities are required.
-
-For a time we were carried away entirely by the tendency to place our
-attention solely upon the environment, and we seemed to be satisfied
-absolutely by it. But the inner life that has been evolved within human
-experience by the work of thousands of years, and through severe
-convulsions, prevents this condition being accepted as a conclusion;
-that which has once become an independent centre cannot possibly permit
-itself to be degraded to the position of a mere means and an instrument.
-It is impossible to give up all claim to self-conscious and
-self-determining life and a satisfaction of this life. Our spiritual
-nature compels us to ask questions and to make claims; if they are not
-satisfied, then, notwithstanding all the wealth of experiences, the
-feeling of poverty spreads and we seek for aids, and, first, we turn
-back to that inner culture from which we had turned away. But we find
-the ways shut off; a direct return is impossible. This culture had
-characteristic principles and presuppositions; and the course of modern
-life itself has, if not overthrown them, involved them in serious doubt.
-We have become clearly conscious of the limitations which this inner
-culture had without itself feeling them; movements which it united have
-now separated, and have become hostile. Inner culture rested on a firm
-faith in the power of reason in reality, and this faith begot a joyful
-confidence. For it the world was sustained and determined by inner
-forces: we feel the rigid actuality of occurrences, the indifference of
-the machinery of the world towards the aims of the spirit, and the
-contradictions of existence. In the former case the greatness of man was
-the predominant faith; and this greatness was sought in his freedom: we,
-however, feel much more our bondage to obscure powers and at the same
-time our insignificance. In the former again, it aroused no opposition
-to call only a chosen part of humanity, the creative, to full and
-complete life, and to assign a most meagre portion to the majority: we
-cannot possibly renounce the concern for all mankind and for the
-welfare of every individual. In the former, morality and art were
-harmoniously united in the ideal of life; in our time they have
-separated and are at deadly enmity with one another. Everywhere life has
-given rise to more problems, more inconsistencies, more obscurities;
-thus, with all its external proximity, the joyfully secure ideal of life
-of our classical writers is inwardly removed far from us; without
-insincerity we cannot proclaim it to be our profession of faith. In
-particular the resort to Goethe, as to one with a secure standard of
-life, is in general no more than an expression of perplexity, no more
-than a flight from a clear decision of our own: the universality and the
-flexibility of his spirit permit a point of contact with him to be found
-by those whose views directly contradict those of one another, and
-allows each to abstract, and make a profession of faith of that which is
-preferable and pleasing to himself.
-
-Thus to-day we are in a state of uncertainty and indefiniteness in
-reference to the problem of culture. Since the new does not suffice, and
-the old cannot be taken up again, we are in doubt with regard to the
-whole conception of culture; we know neither what we have of it nor what
-it demands from us. We cannot give up our claim to being something more
-than nature, without sinking again to the level of the mere animal; but
-in what this "more" consists and how it is at all possible to surpass
-nature is to us completely obscure. A developed historical consciousness
-and the free unfolding of the powers of the present permit many things
-to rush in upon us; and we are involved in much inconsistency. We have
-seen diverse systems of life arise and attract man to themselves; their
-conflict relegates to the background all that is common to them,
-produces the greatest uncertainty, and gives rise to the inclination, in
-order to avoid all perplexities, to regard life as being made up
-entirely of that which occurs within sense experience; and to acquire
-aims from this experience, as well as to derive powers from it. But in
-this we fall into the danger of idealising sense experience falsely,
-and of expecting achievements from movements within it which are
-possible only if these movements flow from deeper sources. We flee to
-morality to become free from all religion and metaphysics; as though
-morality, elevating man, as it does, above simply physical preservation
-and the compulsion of mere instinct, is not itself a metaphysic, and as
-though it does not of necessity require the existence of an order
-superior to nature. Then we flee to the subject with its unrestrained
-inwardness and contrast this inwardness with all the restricting
-relations of life; as though the subject had any content and any value
-without an independent inner world, the recognition of which involves a
-complete revolution of the representation of reality; as then according
-to the witness of history also humanity has reached such an inner world
-only through wearisome toil and forceful resolutions. The whole course
-of Antiquity had been leading up to this inner world, but the collision
-of Antiquity at the time of its decay, with Christianity which was then
-arising, first developed it clearly. Such an inner world must ever be
-justified anew; and for this our own activity and conviction are
-necessary. If we surrender its basis, it becomes dead capital which,
-little by little, is inevitably spent, and then the appeal to the
-subject that has lost its spiritual content is but a mere semblance of
-help, which deceives us concerning the seriousness of the situation with
-sweet-sounding words like "personality," "individuality," and so forth.
-If the spiritual life is not strengthened and does not energetically
-counteract this tendency, then, notwithstanding all external progress,
-we must inwardly sink lower and lower.
-
-It is obvious that there is already such a counteraction in existence;
-otherwise, how could spiritual destitution and the insignificance of the
-merely human be so keenly felt in the present; how could so ardent a
-desire for an inner elevation spread amongst men as we experience it
-around us? There is no lack of attempts and endeavours after new aims
-and new ways. But much is still lacking for these attempts to be equal
-to satisfy the requirements of the matter. We place far too much hope
-in external reforms, instead of primarily strengthening the inner basis
-of life; we fix our attention far too much upon individual tasks instead
-of seizing the whole; we have far too much faith that we can rise to a
-new life out of this chaotic condition, instead of insisting upon an
-attainment of independence in relation to this condition.
-
-How could independence be attained except by an energetic reflection of
-man upon himself, upon his fundamental relation to reality, upon the
-life dwelling in him, in short, except by self-consciousness? It is not
-the first time that, in the course of the ages, to satisfy such a demand
-has become the most urgent of all tasks. The work of history has not
-unshakable foundations from the beginning; but the spiritual nature of
-epochs always involves the activity and the decisions of man; it
-involves, therefore, presuppositions that for a long period may be
-accepted as established truths, and which, yet, finally become
-problematic. At the beginning of the Modern Age, especially in the
-transition to the Enlightenment, apparently established truths became
-problematic in this way: the present is in a similar situation. The
-threads that we have hitherto followed break; all external help is
-rejected, as is also the authority of history; nothing else remains to
-us than our own capacity, and the hope to find in it a new support and
-the basis for a new construction. Only by our own power, and after a
-break with the immediate present, shall we be able to strive after a new
-idea of culture which corresponds to the historical position of
-spiritual evolution, and which can take up into itself the experiences
-of humanity. Such times of error, of vacillation, of searching, of
-necessary renewal, are disagreeable and severe, but it depends only on
-the summoning of spiritual power whether they become great and fruitful.
-For, with regard to these central questions the times do not make men,
-but men make the times, not, of course, in accordance with their own
-preferences, but by seizing and realising the necessities that exist in
-the spiritual condition of the time.
-
-Now, as scarcely anything else in life is more called upon to co-operate
-in the renewing of culture than philosophy, so the system here concisely
-presented is placed in the service of this task; it attempts a
-construction chiefly by the union of three demands and points of attack:
-it requires a more energetic development and a complete unification of
-the life-process; it requires the acknowledgment and development of a
-spiritual life of independent nature present to us; and lastly, it
-requires that this life shall be understood and treated as the world's
-consciousness of itself and thus as the only reality. All these demands
-must tend towards an essential alteration of the existent state of
-culture; they make much inadequate that previously sufficed; but they
-also reveal an abundance of new prospects and the possibility of a
-thorough inner elevation.
-
-It is a leading idea of our whole investigation that only from the
-life-process itself are we able to orientate ourselves in relation to
-ourselves and the world; and this idea is in agreement with the present
-mode of thought in science. But to apply to our own time that which is
-already acknowledged in general ideas is by no means simple. To give the
-life-process such a position in our thought and to estimate it so highly
-is possible only when life is distinctly distinguished from the states
-of the mere subject, from the mere reflex of the environment in the
-individual. This detachment cannot be accomplished unless we comprehend
-as a whole that which exists in individual manifestations of life;
-distinguish different levels in life, indicate relations and movements
-within them, and thus advance to new experiences of life; reveal a union
-of fact, a distinctive synthesis in life, which from a transcendent
-unity shapes the multiplicity that it contains. But if in general it is
-difficult to free ourselves so much from the condition of life in which
-we find ourselves, to be able to illuminate this condition in this way,
-and to throw its inner framework into relief; for us there is also to be
-added the immeasurable expansion that directs the interests and the
-vision to the outside, and is accustomed to treat, as a mere supplement,
-a mere means and instrument, the life that in reality sustains all
-infinity. A culture that has made the attainment of results the chief
-thing has been detrimental to the spiritual, which no longer trusts
-itself to encompass these achievements and to change them in a
-development of life, to take up the conflict for dominion over reality.
-It willingly flees to the passivity of the subject, where sooner or
-later it expires in complete destitution.
-
-If inwardness is so feeble and external relations so overwhelm us, life
-necessarily receives its content from outside, and seems to be
-determined essentially by that which happens around us. It is this that
-lends so much power to-day to a superficial enlightenment that centres
-in natural science, and expects life to be advanced without limit, and
-man to be revived and ennobled, simply by reaching a more valid
-representation of the environment. We do not ask here how far the
-representations proposed overcome the difficulties of the older
-representations, or whether new and more difficult problems do not arise
-from the solutions offered; but we do ask whether life can obtain its
-aim and content from outside, and whether it can be treated simply as an
-addition to nature without degenerating inwardly, and losing all inner
-motive. We ask what the theories based chiefly on externals make of man,
-and what they achieve for his soul. We summon him to an examination, to
-see whether the picture that is held up to him by these theories agrees
-with what he longs for, and, by a compelling necessity of his being,
-must long for.
-
-To-day it will also be evident that the final decision does not rest
-with the intellect, but with life as a whole. For, little as
-intellectual achievement is absent from truth, the masses--and to the
-masses belong those at the average level of all classes, higher as well
-as lower--will always hold fast to the external impression. The advance
-beyond this impression and the appreciation of the inner conditions of
-knowledge will always remain a concern of the minority. There is,
-however, a point where the problem becomes real to each individual, and
-where each can offer his opinion: this is in reference to the question
-of the happiness and the content of life. The more this question is
-felt, the greater will be the thirst for a substantial truth in contrast
-with the shadows of the Enlightenment; the more will the question
-concerning the nature of life as a whole receive its due consideration,
-and the perception of things externally will give place to a
-comprehension of their inner reality. Only with such a revolution can
-our life and we ourselves be transformed from a state of spiritual
-destitution to one of independent energy; only thus can we discover the
-wealth that is within us; only thus can culture, from being an
-occupation with things, become a preservation and an unfolding of our
-own selves; only thus can we strive for more simplicity in contrast to
-the complexity that would otherwise be our condition; and only thus can
-we wrest from what would otherwise be chaos, fundamentals and
-tendencies. Our demand, therefore, that the starting-point should be the
-life-process itself is in harmony with the innermost longing of the
-time--even if this longing is often indefinite--after a deepening of
-life and an attainment of its independence.
-
-If the turning to the life-process puts the question, the assertion of
-an independent spiritual life gives the answer to it: however strange
-this assertion may seem in relation to superficial temporal experience,
-it meets a deep longing. For we are completely satiated with narrowly
-human culture; the movements and experiences of the Modern Age, and in
-particular of the present, make us so clearly conscious of all that is
-trivial, simply apparent, disagreeable, feeble, shallow, empty, and
-futile in human conduct, that all hope of finding satisfaction in this
-conduct, and of advancing life essentially by its means and powers, must
-be abandoned. We have, therefore, to face the following alternative:
-either absolute doubt and the cessation of all effort, or the
-acknowledgment of a "more" in man; there is no third possibility. But in
-the context of our investigation no discussion is required to show that
-this "more" cannot consist in an individual's elevation of himself above
-others; that it cannot consist in a so-called Superman--a view that
-only involves us more in the narrowly human. Either the "more" sought
-for is only imaginary, a covering of tinsel with which we conceal our
-nakedness, or a world transcending the merely human, a new stage of
-reality, reveals itself to man, which can become his own life. As it is
-this transcendent world alone that engenders a universal life within us
-and opposes the insignificantly human; so also from this alone, and as
-its manifestation, can culture become independent in relation to man.
-Only when it is understood in this way can culture include aims and
-tasks that do not strengthen man in his narrowness, but free him from
-it, and make him spiritually greater.
-
-Not only the conception but the whole nature of that which is called
-culture is an unstable hybrid. It should elevate man above nature, and
-give to his life a characteristic spiritual content; but at the same
-time we have a dread of a detachment from the experience of sense and of
-the construction of an independent world, because these must lead to
-that which, of all things, is the cause of most alarm, to a change of a
-metaphysical character, to a transformation of existence. In truth, in
-the work of humanity two tendencies are usually undistinguished, which,
-if life is to continue to advance, need to be distinctly separated: a
-spiritual culture and a merely human culture. The former reveals new
-contents and aims; with it a new world emerges within man, and
-transforms his life from its basis: the latter uses that which a higher
-organisation has given us, solely as a means for the advancement of our
-natural and social existence. Merely human culture turns the spiritual
-into a mere means to increase narrowly human happiness, whereas the
-spiritual by its very nature makes us feel the whole of this happiness
-to be too insignificant, indeed intolerable. The difference of a merely
-human and a spiritual culture extends from the fundamental disposition
-to all the separate departments of life. Religion, for example, is to
-the former a means by which the individual may make himself as
-comfortable and as secure as possible in an existent world, and conduct
-his own insignificant _ego_ through all dangers; to the latter, it
-signifies a radical break with that world and the gain of a new life, in
-which care for that _ego_, or even the state of society, is relegated
-completely into the background. To the one, morality is simply a means
-in the organisation of human social life, in the accommodation of the
-individual to his environment; to the other, it discloses a new
-fundamental relation to reality, and in the transformation of existence
-in self-determining activity allows life to win an inner union with the
-infinite and its self-consciousness. On the one hand, art, science, the
-life of the state, education, and so forth are the idols of utility, of
-expediency, the adornments of a given existence; on the other, they are
-the gods of truth, of inner independence, of world-renewing spontaneity.
-That there should be an end to the confusion of the worship of idols and
-of gods; that spiritual culture should be distinguished from merely
-human culture; that the spiritual content of the individual departments
-of life should be energetically developed, and the spiritual poverty of
-merely human culture made clear--all this is the urgent demand of the
-present, without the fulfilment of which its state of confusion cannot
-be overcome. Yet spiritual culture can never become independent unless
-the spiritual world is independent. Only the presence of this spiritual
-world makes it possible for culture, at the level at which it is
-generally found, to be tested by a transcendent standard to see how much
-spiritual substance, how much content and value, it contains. This test
-will prove that we possess far less spirituality than we think; and that
-the most of what is called culture is no more than the semblance of
-culture, no more than imagination and presumption. But at the same time
-we recognise and gain in the little spirituality that remains to us
-incomparably more; we win the presence of a new world, and by this,
-depth of life and the possibility of an inner renewal. Our life would be
-indescribably shallow if it were to pass on one level and were to be
-exhausted in the experiences at that level. The acknowledgment of an
-independent spiritual life saves us from this shallowness, in that it
-shows an inner gradation within our own province and sets life as a
-whole a task.
-
-If the acknowledgment of a spiritual world, inwardly present to us,
-gives to culture a distinctive character, this character receives a
-further modification from the particular manner in which the spiritual
-life makes its appearance and becomes established within our existence;
-at the same time, from this position there is also the possibility of
-different sides and tasks within an all-comprehensive work of culture.
-Of special significance in reference to this modification is the
-circumstance that the spiritual life does not possess man as a natural
-fact, does not operate within him with complete power and sure direction
-from the beginning, but is present to him at first only as a
-possibility, and as a transcendence of the general condition of things.
-In accordance with this, although the spiritual belongs to our nature,
-it is not so much "given" to us as set as a task; for its realisation it
-needs our own attention and appropriation; all development of the
-spiritual life within us, therefore, involves our own activity and so
-receives an ethical character. The spiritual life also has such an
-ethical character because, transcending our original condition, it must
-be conveyed to us, and must be maintained by an imparting and an
-activity. In the spiritual life we find ourselves in a sphere of
-activity and of freedom in contrast with that of nature; in this way our
-life becomes our work, our own life in a much more real sense. We see
-this in the case of the fundamental form of the spiritual life that is
-called "personality." We men are by no means personalities from the
-beginning; but we bear within us simply the potentiality of becoming a
-personality. Whether we shall realise our personality is decided by our
-own work; it depends primarily upon the extent to which we succeed in
-striving beyond the given existence to a state of self-determining
-activity. The fact that we thus take part in the formation of our own
-being proves that we are citizens of a new world--a world other than
-nature--and shows that we are incomparably more than we could become
-simply as parts of nature. Neither philosophy nor religion will convince
-one who, at this point, does not recognise an elevation to a higher
-power, indeed a transformation of existence. But one who recognises this
-will desire such a transformation and such an elevation of culture also;
-he will not come to an easy compromise with the given condition of
-things and draw the greatest possible amount of pleasure from this
-condition; but he will set culture an objective ideal; arouse it from
-the prevailing state of indolence; fully acknowledge the antitheses of
-experience, and will be provoked rather to make further exertions than
-disposed to abandon himself to these antitheses. Life finds its main
-problem in itself, solely in the development of an ethical character,
-and attains to complete independence and a transcendence of nature only
-when the spiritual takes precedence. Every culture that does not treat
-the ethical task, in the widest sense, as the most important of tasks
-and the one that decides all, sinks inevitably to a semblance of
-culture, a half-culture, indeed a comedy. The æsthetic system, with its
-transformation of life into play and pleasure, with its beautiful
-language and its spiritual poverty, is such a life. To-day, therefore,
-we can revive and strengthen culture only by establishing such an
-ethical conviction. Only a culture of an ethical character can develop
-an independent and positive spirituality; only such a culture can free
-the impulse of life from being directed simply to natural
-self-preservation, and in doing this not make the impulse weaker, but
-stronger. In nothing have minds been more divided and in nothing will
-they become more divided than with regard to the question whether, after
-the perception of the inadequacy of mere nature and society, a new world
-reveals itself to them, or whether this negation is the ultimate
-conclusion; the former will be possible only through that which we call
-ethical.
-
-The conception that we have here presented of the spiritual life and of
-its relation to man also makes it for the first time possible to
-understand and acknowledge the manifold and opposing elements in our
-time without falling into a shallow eclecticism. Realism advances in
-power, and Idealism seems to be endangered in respect not only of its
-form but also of its innermost nature. Idealism is indeed in danger so
-long as the spiritual life has not attained to independence in relation
-to man; for, so long as the spiritual life is regarded as a production
-of man the knowledge of man's relation to nature and his animal origin
-must lead to a serious prostration, to a complete dissolution of
-Idealism. If, on the other hand, it is established that with the
-spiritual life a new order transcending the power of man makes its
-appearance within him, then the recognition of human incapacity becomes
-a direct witness to the independence of the spiritual life. We must,
-therefore, cease to treat spiritual developments, such as religion, art,
-morality, as the natural attributes of all called men. Man's natural
-character simply offers tendencies and relations which can find a
-spiritual character only by the revelation of a spiritual world. The
-decisive point of transition is not between man and animal, but between
-nature and spirit. But even where culture is supposed to be at its
-highest, human existence is for the most part at the level of
-nature--and is only embellished in some degree.
-
-In Idealism a religious shaping of life is to be distinguished from an
-immanent shaping of life by spiritual creation, especially in art and
-science. The demand for a universal spiritual system involves the
-rejection of the specific religious system as being in many ways too
-narrow and open to hostile criticism; this universal system, however, as
-it is presented when the spiritual life is acknowledged to be
-independent, is closely related to religion. Not only is all
-spirituality within us dependent upon a universal spiritual life, but
-this spiritual life within us always presents itself as something
-transcendent and is not coincident with our life. This religious
-character must be the more clearly emphasised the greater the toil with
-which the spiritual life must defend itself from a world apparently
-alien and hostile. Immanent Idealism, filling life as it does through
-art and science, cannot possibly be the whole and conclusive--for this
-reason at least, that it has too little with which to counteract the
-perplexities of spiritual and of material life, and because it
-concentrates life too little within itself. But a scientific character
-is indispensable to a universal spiritual culture, in order that life
-may not pass in subjective feeling and presentation, and that life may
-have an objective character, and be led to the clearness of a universal
-consciousness. An æsthetic form and creative activity pertain also to
-this life; for, otherwise, no representation of reality as a whole could
-be obtained from the confused impressions of immediate experience; the
-spiritual could attain to no clear present, and could not permeate
-reality with ennobling power, and change all that is deformed and
-indifferent to it in the original condition of things.
-
-From the point of view of spiritual culture the movements in the
-direction of Realism also may be regarded as of value, if only they do
-not desire to dominate life and to impress their form directly upon it.
-The tendency to place a low estimate upon the natural and material
-conditions of life and of human social relationship has everywhere
-revenged itself upon the spiritual life, since it has allowed that life
-to fall into a state of weakness and effeminacy, and prevented it from
-realising its full power and strength.
-
-The acknowledgment of the multiplicity of tasks that are involved in all
-the departments must be a source of great danger to life, if every
-department of human experience does not serve the development of an
-independent spiritual life. The more power the spiritual life acquires,
-the more securely will it tend to prevent division. Nevertheless,
-everything is in a state of movement; man must first win a coherent
-character for his life. But it is already a great gain that we are not
-defenceless in face of the antitheses within the human sphere, that the
-presence of an independent spiritual life elevates us inwardly above
-them and only allows an inner unity to take up a conflict.
-
-We may also briefly consider how the conception of the spiritual life as
-a coming of reality to itself, as a formation and development of being,
-must tend to deepen and strengthen the work of culture. How much more
-this work must become to us, how much more indispensable must it be, if
-it is not simply a matter of giving an existent material a new form, of
-arousing dormant powers, but if in it we first advance from a life that
-is only a half-life and a life of pretence to a real and genuine life;
-if we struggle not for one thing or another within existence, but for
-our being as a whole! If once life is awakened to reflect upon itself,
-and if at the same time it makes a claim to self-consciousness and a
-content, it cannot doubt the poverty of the life of mere nature and just
-as little that of the life of mere society; in the former, as in the
-latter, there are only suggestions of a genuine life, only
-possibilities, most of which do not come to be realised. Not suffering,
-but spiritual destitution is man's worst enemy. From this position the
-outlook of the life of the majority can be only a cloudy one, its value
-only mean. If we abstract from the experience of man that which is due
-to the necessity of self-preservation and to social training, how much
-inner movement, how much life of his own, how much that is spiritual
-remains in him! How many dead souls there are in all classes of society;
-how many who, allowing their powers to lie dormant, drift about
-aimlessly! Nevertheless other possibilities exist in man, and even if
-they are not positively developed, still they prevent him from feeling
-satisfied in that state of spiritual poverty, and always keep him in an
-insecure state of suspension.
-
-The less we think of the immediate welfare and capacity of man, the more
-will the spiritual life transcend us and the more urgent will the task
-of the spiritual life become--to preserve to human existence in the
-midst of all externality and pretence some kind of substance and some
-kind of soul. However, we have already occupied ourselves with the
-question of the nature and significance of truth and reality in the
-spiritual life.
-
-
-(b) THE ORGANISATION OF THE WORK OF CULTURE
-
-A problem from which no system of life can escape is that of the
-organisation of culture, the question how the work of culture can be
-divided into different departments and at the same time preserve a
-unity. To-day we are in a state of great perplexity in this matter; an
-old solution has become untenable, and a new one has not yet been found.
-
-The Middle Ages handed down to us a system of culture that may be
-described as a hierarchy, in the widest sense of that term. The
-multiplicity of life was united into a whole; but this whole was
-dominated by distinctive religious and philosophic convictions, which
-assigned to each individual department its place in the whole and set it
-its task; these departments attained to a complete independence as
-little as that system had an independence for individual forms. The
-Modern Age has evolved and has realised a system of freedom in
-increasing opposition to the earlier system. How this everywhere effects
-an emancipation is demonstrated by our problem of the increasing
-development to independence by the individual departments of life. The
-state and society, science and art, find their tasks more and more
-within themselves, in their own development; they engender distinctive
-laws and methods of their own; they seem to be able to reach their aims
-of their own capacity. Effort is directed more and more into individual
-departments, and there is a feeling of complete satisfaction in this
-tendency. Our life has gained immensely in comprehensiveness and breadth
-by the transition to this modern system: it comes more closely into
-touch with the realm of fact; it produces a greater diversity of
-movement, since the different departments have their own
-starting-points, enter upon distinctive paths, and direct their powers
-into these paths. The attainment of independence by the individual
-departments of life constitutes one of the chief gains of modern
-culture, and it cannot again be given up.
-
-But the attainment of independence by the individual departments brings
-great perplexities with it, which make a definite counter-movement
-necessary. At first the tendencies characteristic of the individual
-departments directly contradict one another; indeed, this is inevitable,
-if they are not systematised in some way. For, particular experiences of
-human life are present in each department: one feels our greatness more,
-another our weakness; one is moved more by the harmony of existence,
-another more by the antitheses; one tends rather to exert power upon the
-environment, the other to concentration in itself; from these
-experiences there must originate different modes of life and different
-representations of the world. In this condition of life it is impossible
-for the different tendencies not to cross one another and to clash
-together; and this threatens to divide our life, and to rob it of all
-its inner unity. A glance at the condition of life in the present is
-sufficient to convince us that such dangers are more than fancies.
-
-To the difficulty in respect of the relations of the different
-departments among themselves, we must add another, if anything greater,
-in respect of the relation of each department to life as a whole. To be
-well organised each department needs a co-operation of form and content,
-of the technical and the personal; the former gives the department its
-particular nature; for the latter a relation with life as a whole is
-necessary. The work of science, for example, follows certain forms of
-thought, which it evolves from itself, and which are equally valid for
-all times and parties. But even the most conscientious following of
-these laws does not give to science a content and a character; science
-can acquire these only in relation with a movement of life as a whole,
-which, in its striving from whole to whole, takes up the experiences of
-humanity and unites them into a whole. Only in this way does science,
-from being simply an arrangement and accumulation, become knowledge, an
-inner appropriation of things. If in accordance with this the individual
-departments are detached more and more from life as a whole, and are
-made dependent solely upon their own capacity, it can hardly be
-otherwise than that in the midst of all perfection in execution they
-lose more and more all spiritual content and all definite character. At
-the same time, it may soon follow that the effect upon humanity as a
-whole will become subsidiary and a matter of indifference; the
-individual departments will become exclusively a matter of a circle of
-specialists, and strive for an effect within this circle only. In this
-way an art arises which, in the artist, forgets the man, and which does
-not so much convey new content to human life, or help the time to attain
-to a characteristic feeling of life, and elevate it above the
-meaninglessness and the confusion of commonplace everyday experience,
-but which is for the most part mindful of refinement in execution, and
-so, easily degenerates into the complicated and the virtuoso. In the
-case of science we find the same thing. It may, through exaggerating the
-independence necessary to it, assume an air of proud self-satisfaction,
-and, by detachment from the movement of life as a whole, that which is
-its main concern, namely, knowledge, may suffer. For it soon tends to
-become mere erudition, which treats problems as something half-alien,
-gains no inner relation to things, does not understand how to animate
-reality, indeed even rejects, as unscientific, all striving after such
-animation. This tendency produces, to use an expression of Hegel's,
-excellent "counter-servers," who do not look after business of their
-own, but only that of others.
-
-No people are more threatened by the danger of this tendency than we
-Germans; more especially because the tendency is closely related with a
-most advantageous quality of our nature--willing subordination to the
-object, fidelity to and conscientiousness in our work. But since we
-follow this one tendency, aspects and tendencies which are absolutely
-necessary to a complete life stagnate and decay. We do not sufficiently
-develop a personal life independent of the object; we do not encompass
-and transform it from its very base by a transcendent life-process; and
-so we are occupied too much with the material, and do not completely
-spiritualise it; we do not bring into relief simple lines in the
-infinite abundance, which we require and must maintain complete. How
-many excellent scholars our time possesses, who are equipped with an
-astonishing capacity for work, who are masters of even the most
-complicated technical matters, and yet how few spiritual types there are
-among them; how few who have anything to say to humanity, and who will
-exert their influence in this way beyond the present! The history of
-German formative art also indicates a painful divergence between the
-amount of untiring work and the carefulness of execution, and the
-creation of simple and pure forms that would increase the spiritual
-possessions of humanity, and be permanent factors in its movement.
-However, the trait is rooted far too deeply in our being for even the
-most determined resolution to be able directly to achieve much to
-counteract it. Nevertheless, it is not a matter of indifference whether
-we give ourselves complacently up to this one-sidedness, and fortify
-ourselves proudly in it; or whether we oppose it to the best of our
-ability.
-
-We find ourselves therefore in the present in a difficult situation with
-regard to the organisation of culture. To give up the independence of
-the individual departments, or even only to limit it in any way, would
-be an enormous and impossible retrogression; on the other hand, some
-kind of inner unity of life must be obtained. A transcendence of the
-antithesis must, therefore, be sought; and this needs a distinctive
-structure of life. The spiritual life offers such a structure in so far
-as it constitutes the development of being. For we saw how independent
-centres and characteristic movements arise in an all-comprehensive life.
-Between these movements there may be manifold relations and antitheses,
-but they are within a vital whole and with their experiences can aid its
-further development. Viewing the departments of life from this position,
-it will be necessary to show that each individual department has a root
-in life as a whole and a significance for this life; only thus can the
-power of this whole life be exerted in the individual departments, and
-penetrate them. But the department does not receive its form simply from
-the whole by way of derivation; but it can take up and treat the problem
-independently, and with its own means; that which exists in the whole as
-an affirmation may be only a question and a suggestion in the individual
-department. Yet this is in no way without value: for, nevertheless, it
-leads us beyond the indefiniteness of the original condition, and guides
-effort in circumscribed paths. What gives work in the individual
-departments special significance and intensity is the fact that they
-take up the problem of the whole in a particular sphere, and can treat
-that problem in a characteristic manner; that they are not mere aids and
-assistants, but independent co-operators. In this connection it is of
-especial importance that the spiritual life is not conferred upon man in
-a finished form; but that within him it must first be worked towards
-with great toil and through doubt and error, from indefinite outlines to
-more detailed development. It is obvious that the form of the whole will
-ever be questionable; and that the individual departments must
-co-operate in the examination and justification of the forms proposed.
-Indeed, it is just the mark of great achievements in the individual
-departments that, while they transform their own sphere, they at the
-same time develop the whole. It is this that distinguishes Leibniz from
-Wolff, and Kant from Herbart.
-
-Such an organisation gives to life a movement in two directions: it must
-be conducted from whole to part, and from part to whole. The individual
-departments must be developed far enough to reveal their particularity
-and to produce a characteristic tendency of their own; but they must
-remain within a whole, to receive from it and to lead back to it. The
-relations between the individual departments will be distinctive in such
-a system; the influence of one upon another will be without suspicion,
-and advantageous, only when it is exerted through the mediation of the
-whole; while disturbances are inevitable, when one conveys immediate
-experiences to another and imposes its nature upon another. It was
-necessary, for example, to reject the earlier encroachments of religion
-upon other departments of life; art, too, often found it necessary to
-resist the tendency to subordinate it to morality; and to-day there is a
-strong inclination to shape every department of life in accordance with
-the instructions of natural science. Yet although such encroachments
-must be rejected, and the independence of each in relation to the others
-preserved, the changes that are effected in one department are by no
-means indifferent and lost to the other departments. For, if through
-these changes life as a whole is developed, then the effect of the
-change must extend to the other departments. In this manner of mediation
-religion has exercised a strong influence upon the other departments of
-life; and in this sense, to-day, an influence of natural science upon
-the whole circle of existence will be readily acknowledged. But this
-does not involve a limitation or an enslaving of other departments,
-because the change in life as a whole must now be ascertained first;
-and, besides, each individual department must test by its own
-experiences the suggestion coming from the whole.
-
-When we take all these facts into consideration we see that the
-organisation of culture is a difficult problem and that our organisation
-is unstable. In culture, different tendencies will cross one another;
-antitheses cannot be avoided, and collisions will not be lacking. But
-that which life loses in completeness and exclusiveness, it gains in
-wealth and movement; and division need not be a cause of anxiety so long
-as a powerful spiritual life embraces and unifies the multiplicity.
-Without such a counteraction by the spiritual life we must drift
-towards ever greater specialisation; and, with this, we should not only
-see life become more and more disintegrated, but we should also become
-less and less spiritual, and be transformed into a soulless mechanism.
-
-
-
-
-II. THE FORM OF THE INDIVIDUAL DEPARTMENTS
-
-_Preliminary Considerations_
-
-
-Before we proceed to discuss the individual departments of life we may
-briefly consider the common task that is imposed upon them all by the
-distinctive condition of the time: they must become independent in
-relation to the earlier as well as to the more modern conceptions of
-them, and, if necessary, take up a conflict against both. The course of
-our investigation can have left no doubt with regard to the state of
-prostration of the older forms of life: the uncertainty affects the
-whole and the fundamental principles much more than it has ever done
-before. Formerly the struggle was concerned rather with individual
-departments or individual tendencies of life; it was carried on more in
-reference to the conception and meaning of fundamental truths than with
-regard to the validity of those truths themselves. The passionate
-struggles of the period of the Reformation left the fundamentals of
-Christianity untouched; in a similar manner the later attacks upon
-ecclesiastical religion usually had a basis of firm faith in morality,
-and derived their power more especially from it. To-day the authority of
-morality is just as seriously shaken as that of religion; and the
-conception of truth is itself in the same condition of uncertainty.
-
-In this condition of things an appeal to history cannot be employed as
-proof of any position; a patchwork of our own and of something alien
-gives us still less a position above perplexity: there is no other way
-than to take up the problem with the means of the present itself. For
-this the acknowledgment of the independence of the spiritual life forms
-a fit foundation. The spiritual life is not dependent upon and fixed to
-particular temporal conditions; ever anew it can break forth
-spontaneously, and from the particularity of the time advance to eternal
-truths. It is to us a source of joy that a time has come again when we
-need not follow other paths, but must go our own; when nothing can bind
-us but that which has been approved by our own being and our own
-conviction. It is not necessary for a time such as this to take up an
-attitude of hostility towards the whole past; rather--and especially
-when it thinks worthily of itself--it will seek a friendly relationship
-with history. But this is possible only when the present has attained
-complete independence, and only from this independent position; only
-when an eternal content is revealed in that which history conveys to us.
-In opposition to submission to authority such a time makes a demand for
-unlimited freedom and complete spontaneity; such freedom and spontaneity
-are essential if life is again to find the truthfulness and the inner
-power that we so painfully miss.
-
-Such a requirement of life and thought arising out of the immediate
-present may easily lead us to separate from those to whom the crisis
-does not seem so serious, and who believe that it is possible to
-transform the old in a quiet and inhostile manner into the new. The
-conflict will be far more acute with those who, with us, make the demand
-for an independent present; but who, by the conceptions of an
-independent present, freedom and spontaneity, understand something
-totally different from that which we ourselves understand by them from
-the point of view of an independent spiritual life. In all times of
-spiritual revival the freedom and immediacy which the spiritual life
-needs for itself have been usurped by mere man as though they were a
-right pertaining to him: and then it appears that only the complete
-emancipation of individuals, a severance of all connections,
-unconditional submission to the passing moment, are necessary in order
-to lead life to truth and greatness, and man to a glorious state of
-happiness. Such a movement cannot spread without making the antitheses
-of life appear less acute, concealing its problems and its depths, and
-falsely idealising man with all the contingency of his experience: with
-all the bustle of its preparation and all its agitation the movement
-must terminate in a state of spiritual destitution; it threatens life
-with inner destruction. With a modernity of this kind we have nothing in
-common.
-
-We must, therefore, with all our power, wage war against the narrowly
-human and imaginary freedom on behalf of one that is genuine and
-spiritual: this conflict is exceptionally complicated and difficult,
-because real life does not make such a clear distinction between the
-genuine and the false as the conceptions do, but rather allows them to
-be confused. For this reason the conflict will be carried on not only on
-the right hand and on the left, but also against the confusion that
-obscures the great "either--or," without the distinct presence of which
-a spontaneous life does not acquire power and consciousness. A way must
-be found by which, notwithstanding manifold dangers and complications,
-we may advance to a life that combines depth with freedom, stability
-with movement: this is an inner necessity of the age, and once it is
-recognised and taken up as such, it will in some way be realised.
-
-
-(a) RELIGION, MORALITY, EDUCATION
-
-1. RELIGION
-
-In no sphere of life is there more inner division and uncertainty at the
-present time than in that of religion. To one, the rejection of all
-religion seems to be indispensable to the sincerity of life and to the
-attainment of healthy conditions, because, as a pernicious legacy from
-past ages, it oppresses our life, confuses our thought, paralyses our
-power of activity, and provokes men to the greatest hatred of one
-another. To another, on the contrary, religion seems to be the only
-firm support in face of the needs and confusions of the age--the only
-thing that inwardly unites men and elevates each individual above
-himself, the only thing that reveals a depth in life and allows life to
-share in the infinite and the eternal. The adherents to each of these
-views show the greatest earnestness and zeal; we cannot treat the
-negation lightly and dispose of it with the convenient catchword
-"unbelief," if only for the reason that on the part of many this
-negative attitude is due to a sincere anxiety for the truthfulness of
-life. To rise above this conflict in regard to religion we must, in the
-first place, estimate the points at issue impartially; and nothing else
-is more called upon to do this than philosophy.
-
-Philosophy will not make light of the prostration of religion; for a
-survey of history shows that the state of life has undergone a complete
-change since the epoch when religion exercised an undisputed supremacy.
-At that time the world and human life received all meaning and value
-from their relation to an invisible and supernatural order. The course
-of the Modern Age has made the world that surrounds us ever more
-significant, and since man has directed his activity upon this world,
-the world of faith has been allowed to recede more and more. The
-movement that led to our present position attained increasing power and
-consciousness through three stages: at the height of the Renaissance the
-divine was revered less in its world-transcendent sovereignty than in
-its world-pervading operation; then, the Pantheism of a speculative and
-æsthetic culture associated the world and God together in one reality;
-finally, in the investigation of inimitable nature and the formation of
-political and social relations the world of sense gives man so much to
-do, fetters his power so much, and gives him at the same time such a
-proud consciousness of this power, that the conception of a transcendent
-world fades entirely; and an Agnosticism that rejects as superfluous and
-unfruitful all reflection upon and care concerning such a world gains
-ground.
-
-This change in the direction and in the disposition of life must itself
-have forced religion more or less out of the field of our attention. But
-it is fraught with far more dangers to religion that the work of the
-Modern Age in all its main tendencies is directed against the principles
-of the life upon which the development of religion rests. Modern natural
-science has dispossessed man of the central position that he formerly
-attributed to himself, and has deprived nature of its soul. The modern
-science of history, with its demonstration of ceaseless change in all
-that is human, has undermined the faith in an absolute truth. At the
-same time, with regard to the beginnings of Christianity, there is a
-wide divergence between the traditional conception of faith and the new
-conception obtained by historical research. The tendency of modern
-culture has been to make the increasing of power, in work upon things
-and in their control, the highest ideal; from the point of view of this
-ideal of impersonal power, the world of pure inwardness, the home of
-Christianity, has been able to appear to be simply a subjective and
-subsidiary accompaniment of the life-process. He who estimates rightly
-the fact that all these tendencies of modern life work together and
-strengthen one another cannot fail to recognise that they force religion
-from the centre of life to its circumference, and transform it from an
-impregnable fact into a difficult problem; they destroy that
-self-evidence of religion which previously made life secure and calm.
-If, however, religion no longer springs up in the consciousness of
-contemporaries from a necessity of their own life, it is not difficult
-to understand that the complications of the problem are too great for
-many of them; that the burden of obsolete forms over-balances the power
-of their own impulse, and thus, by a sudden revolution, to reject it
-seems the only way to save truth. Then religion seems to be only a
-delusion that arose in a past age--a delusion similar to astrology and
-alchemy; one which, in face of growing enlightenment, must ultimately be
-completely dispelled.
-
-But if the philosophic treatment understands the negation rightly, it
-can only warn us against being hasty in our acceptance of it. To be
-sure, quite apart from all the caprice and purpose of man, the condition
-of life has become very much changed; but it was less the state of
-affairs itself that permitted the changes to clash so irreconcilably
-with religion than the interpretation which it received and the
-exclusiveness which was attributed to it. The decision in this matter
-has depended in particular upon what is called the spirit of the age,
-which is often nothing more than the inclination and disposition of man;
-such inclination, as history shows, may change into the direct opposite;
-it does not form a sure touchstone of truth.
-
-These considerations, indeed, do not make much headway in opposition to
-the storm and stress of the movements of the age: that which operates far
-more strongly in favour of religion is the experience and the feeling
-that the attempted negation of religion by no means easily and directly
-solves the problem of life; and, further, that along with religion much
-becomes untenable to which even the modern man cannot lightly renounce
-all claim. Whatever there may be in religion, it has brought man into
-union with the deepest basis of reality, and at the same time revealed to
-him a life of pure inwardness: it has set a task for life as a whole and
-has given to life a meaning and a value; it has counteracted the lower
-impulses and the egoism of mere self-preservation; and has organised
-humanity spiritually. These aims have hardly become superfluous and
-worthless: even without religion, and after abandoning its principles, it
-would be necessary to accomplish these aims in other ways. It is in the
-attempts at reconstruction that the futility of the negation of religion
-becomes painfully evident. Phrases concerning the greatness and
-noble-mindedness of all that bear human features; a blind faith in the
-elevating power of intellectual enlightenment or even of external
-organisation; a confusion of thought which, unobserved, rejects and
-elevates its own principles, and so maintains in the conclusion that
-which it rejected in the premises; all these things can deceive him alone
-concerning the spiritual poverty and the complete powerlessness of what
-is offered in them, whose zeal in his antagonism to religion has deprived
-him of balance of feeling and impartiality of judgment. If it is inquired
-what content and value human life still retains after the surrender of
-all relation to the whole and of all inner relation, it will be
-recognised that the complete negation of religion consistently carried
-out must lead to an appalling convulsion of human existence as a whole.
-
-But if such considerations counsel us to be cautious in regard to the
-negation of religion, they do not justify an adherence to its
-traditional form. The far-reaching changes of life that we are aware of
-cannot possibly be explained away or their significance lessened; they
-must be estimated, and brought into relation with religion. The boundary
-between the eternal and the temporal, the substance and the outward form
-in religion, has been made uncertain by these changes; in particular
-they forbid philosophy to treat the religious problem from the point of
-view of a dogmatic confession. The antithesis between Catholicism and
-Protestantism is the offspring of an age that preceded the development
-of modern culture, with all its deep-reaching revolutions. The main
-problem of religion at the time when the antithesis made its appearance
-was differently stated from the way in which we now state it. For then
-it was a question whether Christianity was to be formed from society or
-from personality; while to-day Christianity fights for its existence as
-a whole, and must defend its fundamental truths against a time in which
-activity is directed into other paths. The present antithesis cannot
-possibly be regarded as ultimately identical with the former one; and it
-is for this reason impossible to take up the present conflict concerning
-religion under the banner of a particular dogmatic confession. Such an
-ante-dating of the conflict also has the disadvantage that it prevents
-the great antitheses which are involved to-day both in Catholicism and
-Protestantism from being clearly displayed. Two different streams have
-been present in Catholicism from its beginning: to the one, the power of
-the ecclesiastical system is the main thing; while to the other, on the
-contrary, the religious disposition is of supreme importance. The
-influences of modern culture have increased this difference, both
-directly and indirectly, and, chiefly outside of Germany, there are
-signs of the beginning of a stronger movement towards a more inward
-Catholicism. Protestantism carries within it an antithesis of the old
-ecclesiastical form of religion, which adheres as much as possible to
-the state of things in the sixteenth century, and a form transformed by
-the Idealism in modern culture more into the universal, the free, the
-purely human, but also not infrequently into vagueness and superficial
-optimism. But so long as the bitterness of sectarian prejudice diverts
-the attention of men from the chief thing, these antitheses are not
-clearly expressed and energetically developed. There are serious
-contradictions involved in these views of religion, and they cannot be
-developed without giving rise to parties. Philosophy must strive with
-all its energy to bring it about that these parties shall be formed in
-relation to the present situation, and not from the point of view of a
-past age; and that the conflict shall be raised to a higher level, to
-truth and greatness, by bringing itself into relation with the needs of
-the age.
-
-The task of philosophy is not limited to estimating as impartially as
-possible the state of things as we immediately experience it; that task
-also includes a positive treatment of the religious problem. That which
-is characteristic in the philosophy of life advocated in this treatise,
-Noëtism, as it might be called, must also find a definite expression and
-show what capacity it has, in the fulfilment of this task. In accordance
-with its fundamental relation to history, which has been much discussed,
-Noëtism cannot make history most important, even in religion, and cannot
-read into history as much as possible of what the present demands; it
-must regard any such procedure as a weakness and a half-truth. Noëtism
-must insist upon religion's justifying itself and establishing its
-reality before the tribunal of the spiritual life: only then can the
-truth that exists in history and that which, through progressive
-differentiation, promotes the cause of transcendent truth and brings it
-nearer to humanity as a whole, be elucidated. We have not for a moment
-lost sight of the fact that it is essential to religion to be related
-not to single individuals but to all; and that religion can evolve no
-power without compelling men to some kind of unity.
-
-Now, for the treatment of the religious problem, Noëtism offers first a
-position from which demands are made compatible which are otherwise
-directly opposed to one another. Religion is concerned with experiences
-which at one and the same time must possess a universal character,
-belong to our own life, and be immediately accessible to each. The
-attempt of speculative philosophy to establish religion by deduction
-from the nature of the whole has the required universal character; but
-it introduces religion to the soul from outside, and remains a mere
-intellectual gain. The contrary attempt to base religion in the
-individual soul developed an inwardness; but this attempt shows that the
-soul does not know how to build up a world and to contrast it with the
-subject, to present this world as something transcendent; it makes no
-sure progress beyond the fluctuation and undulation of feeling. Only an
-independent spiritual life, inwardly present to us, elevates us above
-this division of subjective feeling and a transcendent world, and
-inaugurates universal experiences in our own domain. How with the
-spiritual life new realities are manifested; how a world-whole which
-transcends human existence becomes evident, has already been discussed,
-and it is not necessary to make any repetition here. Every
-acknowledgment of an independent spiritual life is favourable to
-religion in so far as this acknowledgment makes us clearly perceive the
-inadequacy, the illusoriness, and the vanity of all narrowly human
-conduct and occupation, its futility in matters both small and great. So
-long as attention is fixed on individual matters, and so long as we may
-expect some improvement in these in the present or in the future, we
-may not be aware of the futility of this conduct; but as soon as the
-situation is grasped as a whole and estimated as a whole, such human
-conduct is found to be entirely inadequate, these external aids are
-found wanting, and there remains only the inexorable "either--or":
-either the power of a new world is operative in man, and makes him
-strong outwardly and inwardly, or the whole life of man is spiritually
-lost--one great delusion, one great error.
-
-If from the point of view of the spiritual life the contour of a new
-world is acquired, we may turn back to history, and ask how far it
-indicates a movement which tends in the direction of such a world. The
-spiritual life itself brings a distinctive standard for this inquiry:
-the fundamental fact is not a single factor within life, but the
-existence of a self-conscious whole of life, of a spiritual process
-itself. From the point of view of the spiritual life, the chief thing in
-religions will be the kind of life they reveal; what they make of the
-life-process; how through the relation to an absolute life they evolve
-the life-process to a higher stage. Only so far as they express this
-life-process, and not in themselves, are the doctrines and practices of
-religion of value.
-
-If we apply this test to the individual religions, Christianity
-distinctly shows itself to be far superior to the others. More than any
-of the other religions, Christianity fulfils the demands which are made
-by the nature of the spiritual life and its relation to the world; and
-so far as Christianity satisfies these demands, but not in its
-historical form as a whole, it may assert itself to be absolute.
-
-If Christianity as a religion of redemption requires that we should tear
-ourselves from the old world and aspire to a new one, this demand
-receives a distinctive significance by the more detailed conception
-which Christianity forms of it. As evil and that which is to be overcome
-is regarded not, as among the Hindus, as mere appearance, but as moral
-guilt, which disorganises the world, it is not the fundamental reality
-of the world but a particular conception of it that is rejected; and so
-there remains the possibility of life being given a positive character;
-and in this the main thing is not intellectual enlightenment, but
-radical moral renewal, an elevation into a world of love, grace, and
-reverence. This view of the world makes it impossible to base life
-simply upon affirmation or negation; but affirmation and negation must
-be present within it, and thus life is given an inner comprehensiveness
-and an inner movement which it would not otherwise possess. Christianity
-included the innermost basis of human life in this movement and
-transformation, since it not only regarded the divine as influencing the
-human by individual manifestations of its power, but proclaimed a
-complete union of both, and maintained this through its whole
-development. A wearied and exhausted age may have formulated this
-fundamental truth in the most unfortunate manner in the doctrine of the
-divine humanity of Christ; nevertheless, the effectiveness of the truth
-involved was not prevented by this. Only from the power of a conception
-of a union of the divine and the human can religion acquire the
-character of pure and complete inwardness, of a spiritual
-self-consciousness: otherwise the relation of the divine and the human
-remains a more or less external one. But this is not the place to trace
-how the Christian type of life has been visibly embodied in the course
-of history in the personality and the life of its founder, and in the
-common labours of centuries, in which the Semitic and Germanic natures
-have been harmonised, and great peoples and personalities have given
-their best to the world: here we may only remark further that the whole
-is not a work completed at one particular point in time, but a
-continuous task of all ages; and that, in the fundamental life
-transcending all mere time, a fixed standard is offered by which to test
-the achievement of all particular ages, and to differentiate the results
-of the work of history as far as they correspond with the fundamental
-character of religion. Religion must maintain the fundamental character
-of the life that it advocates, in face of all change in the state of
-culture, just as decidedly as for its development in detail it remains
-dependent upon the help of the work of culture.
-
-Religion in the present, therefore, has great and difficult tasks. For
-one thing, religion must energetically maintain the supremacy, in
-opposition to modern culture, of the type of life that it advocates. The
-fact that there are points of direct antagonism between the religious
-type of life and modern culture ought neither to be denied nor in any
-way obscured. On the one hand, we have an ideal of a life of the pure
-inwardness of ethical disposition; on the other, the ideal of spiritual
-power: in the former the tendency is to personal, in the latter to
-impersonal life: in the one case there is a positive development only by
-a complete transformation; in the other the immediate impulse of life is
-the ruling motive power of the whole. It shows only superficiality and
-confusion to seek an agreeable compromise between these antitheses; for,
-in truth, either the one or the other must assume the guidance of the
-whole. The whole course of our investigation permits of no doubt as to
-our own attitude in this matter.
-
-But it is impossible to defend the supremacy of the type of life
-advocated by Christianity without recognising the necessity that this
-type of life must be in a form which appropriates to itself the long
-experience of humanity and corresponds to the present stage of spiritual
-evolution. The changes necessitated by this evolution are far too great
-for the traditional form of Christianity to be able to express them; in
-order to develop their own power, and to establish themselves
-triumphantly in opposition to a hostile world, they must acquire an
-independent form for themselves.
-
-There are three kinds of changes that are especially necessary to the
-form of Christianity in the present. (1) The representation of the world
-found in the older form of Christianity has become absolutely untenable:
-in this matter we must not seek weak compromises between the old and the
-new, but without fear we must fully acknowledge the elements of fact
-that exist in the new. We cannot do this unless we make deep changes in
-the way we regard religion; we must find the courage and the power for
-such a renewal. (2) The whole movement of modern life has made us feel
-that the realities with which traditional religion has to do are far too
-insignificant and too narrow; a rigid insistence upon them threatens to
-involve us in a degeneration to the narrowly human and subjective. The
-conceptions of "inwardness," "personality," and "morality," in
-particular, need to be interpreted more comprehensively and deeply; the
-soul's "being for self" must be based upon a self-consciousness of the
-spiritual life. Religion must take up the conflict with the world
-spiritually, and through this grow in greatness in its whole effect and
-government. (3) The older form of Christianity was the product of an
-exhausted and faint-spirited age; hence its fundamental attitude is
-predominantly passive and negative. It shows a strong tendency to
-depreciate human nature, and to leave the salvation of man entirely to
-God's mercy: in emphasising man's redemption from evil it is apt to
-forget the elevation of his nature toward the good. The joyousness of
-the Christian life is insufficiently dwelt upon; and the raising of men
-from their prostration and perplexities falls short of a restoration to
-a free and self-determining activity. What is needed is a thorough-going
-reconstruction which shall emphasise the importance of action and
-joyousness in Christian morality, without in any way weakening the
-opposition to all systems of natural morality based on the rights of
-force.
-
-In a word, with all respect to Christianity, we demand its expression in
-a new form. We require that Christianity shall identify itself more
-definitely with a religion of the spiritual life as opposed to a
-religion which merely ministers to human frailty, and that it shall show
-greater decision in casting off the antiquated accessories that hamper
-its movement. We ask that it shall make prominent those simple and
-fundamental features of its system which have value for all time, and in
-this way restore sincerity and settled confidence to life. We can
-hardly expect that the reunion of man on a religious basis will take
-place all at once, but it would be a great gain if we could only clearly
-realise what the oppositions are which still keep us apart. Such insight
-would help to check that insincerity in religious matters which must
-first be got rid of, if there is to be any source of spiritual health in
-us.
-
-
-2. MORALITY.
-
-From the perplexities of religion many flee to morality as to something
-secure and untouched by dissension. The position of morality is, indeed,
-different from that of religion. Of atheists there are many; but there
-are few, if any, who deny the validity of all moral values: that
-fidelity is better than deceit, love better than hate, concerning this
-there is no dispute. But it is a question how far this agreement extends
-and how much we may gain from it. Within the same sphere of culture at
-least it is with very little difficulty that we come to agreement in
-respect of individual matters of morality; if ethical societies limited
-themselves to practical morality, and did not at the same time wish to
-settle questions of principle, they would find scarcely any opposition.
-But, as soon as we comprehend the individual matters as a whole and ask
-for a foundation for the whole, problem after problem makes its
-appearance, and it soon becomes clear that we can neither establish nor
-distinctively form morality without a conviction concerning life as a
-whole and our fundamental relation to reality. If, therefore, there is
-so much uncertainty in the present concerning life as a whole and our
-fundamental relation to reality, we must inevitably become doubtful and
-unclear with regard to morality. In fact, the position may be described
-in this way: we lack a morality which has a secure basis and a definite
-character; in morality, also, after-effects of the past mingle with the
-impulses of the present; and we are accustomed to conceal the poverty
-of our own possessions by historical knowledge and mere learning--so
-much is this the case that we are able even in a state of disgraceful
-poverty to think ourselves rich. There are no less than five types of
-morality which seek our adherence and the guidance of our soul: we may
-suppose that in each of these there is some truth, but no single one is
-able to win our acceptance entirely; each leads to a certain point, and
-then we recognise a limit. We have a religious morality, in which our
-volition is related to and our destiny is determined by a divine power;
-but this endangers the spiritual independence of man, and has a strong
-tendency to make his life too passive; besides, in this case, the
-prostration of religion also weakens the power of morality and its power
-to direct life. We have a morality of culture, which directs all power
-towards increasing the progress of humanity, and subordinates all
-subjective preference to the requirements of an objective operation and
-creation; but the ceaselessly increasing differentiation of work makes
-this form of morality a danger to the soul as a whole; man is in danger
-of being made a mere means and instrument of a soulless process of
-culture. We have a social morality, which makes the welfare of society
-the chief thing, and which, by strengthening the feeling of solidarity,
-produces humane efforts in abundance, but is unable to include life as a
-whole; in this form of morality there is a great danger of
-overestimating external conditions of life, and of levelling and
-weakening life. Certain great thinkers have advocated a morality of pure
-reason, which elevates man above the sphere of the useful and the
-pleasant; and gives to him an inner independence; but with all its
-greatness this morality is too formal and too abstract for us; and,
-besides, we lack to-day the certainty of an invisible world, which alone
-can give a secure foundation to this type of morality. Lastly, we have
-an individualistic morality, a morality of beautiful souls, which
-regards the complete development of one's own particular nature, the
-harmonious cultivation of the whole range of one's powers, as the aim
-of conduct, but which not only necessitates individuals who are far
-greater and far more characteristic in nature than we find in experience
-in general, but also has little power to arouse us to effort, and, if
-accepted exclusively, soon tends to degenerate into a refined
-self-enjoyment and vain self-reflection.
-
-The presence of all these tendencies and motives in morality subjects us
-to-day to an abundance of ethical stimuli; but it does not give us an
-ethic. At the most it conceals the fact that the multiplicity of
-activities do not form for us a universal task, which could counteract
-the separation into individuals, parties, particular departments, and
-give us the consciousness of serving in our work aims that transcend the
-well-being and preference of mere man. We are in need of a morality that
-proceeds from our own life; and in this we need much more than we are
-conscious of needing. For we have no universal aim that we might take up
-in our disposition, and by which we might test all individual
-activities; and so life must become disunified and inwardly alien; we
-lose all spiritual relation to the world. The world surrounds us in the
-first place as a dark and immovable fate; we do not make ourselves
-masters of this fate, just because we give ourselves too much to do with
-things. Rather, to accomplish this, we must transform reality from its
-very foundation by our own activity and decision; we must wage war
-against obscurity and irrationality, and this conflict must tend to
-divide our whole existence into friend and enemy, good and evil, but
-along with this first give to life complete activity, and lead it to
-world-embracing greatness. Only in this way does man, from being simply
-a spectator, become a co-operator in the building up of the world; only
-thus does that which occurs within him become in the fullest sense his
-own. Everything which obscures the ethical character of human life
-involves, therefore, a loss in greatness and dignity; a degeneration to
-a state of servitude, to being a mere part of an alien whole. Particular
-parties may be in agreement with and find satisfaction in this
-condition; humanity as a whole will not rest content with it. As
-certainly as humanity confidently maintains that its life has meaning
-and value, so certainly will it take up the problem of morality ever
-anew against all attempted intimidation.
-
-If to-day we are again to take up this problem, then in the first place
-the conditions and the requirements of the problem must be quite clear.
-We can never acquire a morality from the troubled confusion of social
-life; on the contrary, morality involves a transcendence of this; it
-necessitates distinctive convictions concerning the world as a whole and
-our position in it. There is no independent morality, no morality in
-itself; morality involves a fundamental whole of life, which is
-appropriated in it and by this appropriation first attains to
-perfection. In contrast to the existing condition of things a new
-condition must first be raised in ideas that precede conduct. The new
-condition acquires a moral character only through requiring on the one
-hand moral freedom as opposed to the mechanism of natural impulse, on
-the other a transcendent ideal in opposition to mere self-preservation.
-These two together reveal a new order of things distinct from nature;
-they must seem impossible from the point of view of the world of sense,
-not only freedom with its apparent annulling of all connections, but
-also the freeing of conduct from bondage to mere nature. For how would
-one conceive an activity that did not tend ultimately to the good of the
-agent, and so aid in his self-preservation? Does it not involve a
-contradiction for him to exert his power for something alien to himself?
-
-If in the present we feel such problems in the fullness of their force,
-and if we must fight for morality as a whole, we must go back to the
-foundations of our existence, and seek primarily for a secure position
-in contrast with the instability of temporal experiences. In accordance
-with the whole course of our investigation, we can find such a position,
-and by further development a distinctive morality also, only in an
-independent spiritual life, which first conducts the world to
-self-consciousness and so to genuine reality. The two requirements
-discussed above cause no difficulty from the point of view of an
-independent spiritual life. We convinced ourselves in a previous section
-of the reality of freedom in the spiritual life; in morality also
-conduct can free itself from the natural _ego_ without degenerating into
-a state of emptiness, because the spiritual life reveals a new and the
-alone genuine self. Thus here activity is not spent upon something alien
-to us, something presented to it from outside, but is within our own
-being, which here, indeed, includes the whole infinity within it.
-Activity in the spiritual life serves true self-preservation, which has
-only the name in common with natural self-preservation.
-
-Wherever it is acknowledged that the spiritual life involves a turning
-of reality to complete independence and spontaneity, morality must take
-a significant, indeed the central, position. For it is clear that only
-the taking up in our own activity and conviction, only complete
-appropriation, can bring life to the highest degree of perfection.
-Morality does not find in existence a life-content which it must convey
-to the individual subject, but is itself within the life-process; a
-complete self-consciousness of the spiritual life is attained first in
-morality, and morality must develop the content of that life. It is not
-that man in morality turns toward the spiritual life, but that the
-spiritual life elevates itself in the whole of its nature; all human
-morality must have its basis in a morality of the spiritual life.
-
-With such a basis in the innermost nature, morality must concern the
-whole multiplicity of life; it can include and estimate the most diverse
-relations and experiences of our existence. But whatever is thus brought
-under the sway of the morality of the spiritual life must undergo an
-essential change, and must be elevated above the nature of that which is
-not taken up in this manner. By an ethical formation and development of
-art and science we do not mean that the individual should be loyal and
-straightforward in their pursuit, and should follow honest aims; this
-conception would be much too narrow. But it is that we should take
-possession of and treat as our own life and being that which otherwise
-remains outside as something half alien to us; that the work should
-acquire the power and fervour of self-preservation; and that in this
-unification the necessity of the object becomes a definite demand of our
-life, and the gain of the object an advance of our life. Only such a
-life which transcends the antithesis of subject and object gives to the
-object a soul, and freedom a content.
-
-The experience of history also makes it clearly evident to us that the
-spiritual life first acquires a secure position and an indisputable
-supremacy over nature by its acknowledgment and appropriation in
-self-determining activity. For history shows that wherever morality is
-not central, the spiritual life, even in the midst of the most
-magnificent results in external matters, languishes inwardly and loses
-its hold. With individuals also the final decision concerning the
-problems of the world and of life always depends upon whether they do or
-do not recognise that man has an inner moral task in his nature as a
-whole. If this is acknowledged, then--and this just in oppositions and
-conflicts--a realm of inwardness is assured us which all apparently
-contrary experiences of the external world cannot expel from its central
-position; but if there is no such acknowledgment, the triumph of these
-experiences and the collapse of the spiritual life cannot be avoided.
-
-The morality of the spiritual life, as we advocate it, will have
-distinctive features in comparison with other conceptions of morality;
-of these we can mention but a few here. The acknowledgment of an
-independent spiritual life makes life as a whole a task, since it
-requires that as a whole it should be changed into a state of
-self-determining activity; that everything must be aroused and set in
-motion. Thus the morality of the spiritual life is constructive and
-progressive, and not simply regulative in character; it is not its
-purpose simply to place life under regulations and to let activity wait
-until there is an opportunity to fulfil them; but, calling forth all
-our powers, morality must work and create, arouse and prepare the
-opportunities, so that in everything the realm of the spirit may be
-increased within the province of humanity. Like the spiritual life
-itself, the morality proceeding from it must be of a transcendent
-nature. To-day or to-morrow may not be considered beyond good and evil;
-morality may not sink to being a mere means of realising the wishes of
-the time. If, however, morality transcends time, and is able to separate
-the transitory and the eternal in time, then, within its task, it may
-very well acknowledge distinctive situations and problems, and present
-different sides; indeed, only by a close relation with the time and by
-penetrating deeply into the experiences of the time will morality
-acquire the necessary proximity and impressiveness. To this extent,
-therefore, we also insist upon a modern morality, however decidedly we
-reject that which to-day is called "modern" morality, and which for the
-most part is no more than a surrender of morality to the wishes and
-moods of the individual.
-
-If in these features the morality of the spiritual life already
-manifests a distinctive character, this distinctiveness is further
-increased by the particular nature of the actual relation of man to the
-moral task, as it appears here. The highering of the ideal will
-necessarily increase its divergence from man, as he is. It will become
-quite evident that morality is not a continuation of nature, a natural
-attribute of man, or a product of social relationship, but the most
-pronounced expression of a great change in the direction of life, the
-institution of a new order of things. If at the same time life is to be
-fashioned morally, a conflict is inevitable; and the general outlook of
-life and of conduct will depend upon where we find the centre of
-opposition and what is the main direction of the conflict. In the first
-place, morality must take up a definite attitude towards the
-sense-nature of man; that nature must be subordinated to the aims of the
-spirit. But we have already seen that there is a danger that the ethical
-task will lose its depth, and that life as a whole will be perverted,
-if the rights of nature are misunderstood and there arises the desire to
-suppress it completely, and if, in a tendency to asceticism, this
-suppression is made the chief concern. The chief moral task is the
-development and establishment of a genuine and real spiritual life, as
-opposed to a false and merely apparent one, which is found in human
-conditions, not only in the state of society but also in the soul of the
-individual: thus a mere transition from society to the individual can
-never give any aid. The condition in which life is generally found
-evolves no independent spiritual life; but it uses the spiritual impulse
-that is present within it simply as a means to other ends, and thus the
-result is an inner perversion; at the same time man is generally
-zealously occupied with giving himself the appearance of intending to
-follow the spiritual for its own sake, and of sacrificing everything to
-it. In opposition to such radical insincerity, to acquire a sincere and
-genuine life is the chief task and the chief desire of morality; for the
-establishment of sincerity and truth in face of an opposing world the
-soul needs before all else loyalty and courage.
-
-And so morality involves life in a great division: it cannot possibly
-take up a friendly attitude towards everything and readily admit
-everything: its chief task must be to arouse life from its confusion and
-apathy. But this does not prevent a morality of the spiritual life
-striving for universality in its inner nature. The morality of the
-spiritual life must, therefore, establish a definite relationship on the
-basis of the present with the prevailing types of morality which were
-previously mentioned. If the morality of the spiritual life is certain
-of its own nature, it is quite possible for it to recognise a certain
-validity in every other kind of morality without degenerating into a
-feeble eclecticism. The relation that we recognised between the
-spiritual life and religion also makes religion valuable to morality:
-the moral significance of culture may be especially acknowledged where a
-universal character is desired for the spiritual life; the relation of
-man to man may also become inwardly important where it is necessary to
-the inner construction of the life of society. Again the morality of the
-spiritual life fully agrees with the demand for an independence of
-morality and for an elevation above narrowly human aims, in the manner
-that the morality of reason advocates; finally, individuality also can
-obtain its due in the spiritual life. All this, however, is valid only
-with the presupposition that we acquire a position above the antitheses
-of experience and not between them, and an inner independence in
-relation to the chaos of time. Only from this position and this
-independence can we advance in any way, even within time.
-
-
-3. EDUCATION AND INSTRUCTION
-
-Education and instruction are especially affected by the difficulties
-that are engendered by the lack of a main tendency in life and of a
-transcendence of the superficiality of time. For the lively interest
-which its questions provoke, the incalculable amount of work and
-activity that is called forth in this department, do not produce their
-full result, because we do not possess enough life of our own of a
-definite character to be able to test and sort, to clarify and deepen,
-that which is presented to us. And so in conflict with one another we
-use up much power without making much progress in the most important
-matter.
-
-Educational reform is the catchword, but we have no philosophy of
-education that is based upon a securely established conviction
-concerning life as a whole, and we trouble ourselves very little to
-obtain one. We wish to improve education, and yet we have not come to an
-understanding with regard to its ideals, its possibility, and its
-conditions. Education must be fundamentally different in character,
-according as man is regarded as a particular and exclusively individual
-being, or as a being in whom a new and universal life seems to emerge;
-according as he is only an elevated being of nature or in the highest
-degree possible a spiritual being; according as the higher proceeds from
-the lower gradually and surely after the manner of organic growth, or we
-must find a new starting-point and accomplish a revolution. Further, an
-individualistic training, as it dominated the classical systems of
-pedagogy, is no longer sufficient; the relation to society must also be
-fully appreciated, and be effective. But attention to this requirement
-involves us in the danger of treating the problem of education too
-externally, and of bringing all more or less to the same level; and this
-danger must be overcome. Yet how can it be overcome, unless we possess
-securely a depth, unless we acknowledge the presence of the infinite
-within the human being, as it is comprehended in our conviction of the
-spiritual life?
-
-The form of instruction suffers from the ceaseless onflow of new
-material, the constant increase in the number of claims. In itself each
-single demand may be quite justifiable; but whether it is better than
-the others can be decided only from an idea which governs the whole. If
-no such idea exists, a gain in the individual departments may be a loss
-to the whole; and an enrichment in one department may lead to a decline
-of the whole. In face of that which has been handed down from the past
-and that which arises in the present, it is difficult to come to a
-balanced judgment; the parties may be right in their attacks one upon
-another, but this does not imply that they are right in their own
-assertions. The immediate impression tends to give the balance in favour
-of the requirements of the present; from the point of view of the
-immediate impression, all occupation with the past may appear to be a
-flight from the living to the dead. The advocate of the claims of
-history may reply to this that man as a spiritual being is not a child
-of the mere moment, and that we concern ourselves with the past not on
-account of what is transitory in it, but for its eternal content. But he
-who thinks thus must throw the eternal content into relief and separate
-it sharply from that which is simply temporal; he must establish a
-relation between this content and his own life, and make that which is
-externally alien his inward possession. This does indeed come to pass in
-a few cases; but can we say that it comes to pass generally or
-predominantly? We Germans in particular have far too strong a tendency
-to substitute scholarly occupation for inner animation, and instead of
-spiritual substance to offer academically correct knowledge. It is
-therefore not without good reason if Classical Antiquity does not so
-much inspire as weary our youth; yet the blame for this does not rest
-upon Antiquity, but on ourselves, and upon the manner in which we treat
-it with calm scholarship, without transforming it into our own
-possession. For how could that influence the whole man which does not
-come from the whole man? Everything points again and again to the same
-thing--we lack spiritual independence, inner transcendence of history
-and environment, we lack a characteristic life as a whole. The contact
-with the incalculable abundance of impressions that we experience must
-therefore remain an external one; and with all our increasing wealth of
-knowledge we threaten to become spiritually poorer.
-
-
-(b) SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY
-
-Science, with its innumerable branches and its powerful penetration of
-life, is indisputably a strong feature of the age. Its effect is not
-exhausted in the abundance of particular achievements; by the
-objectivity of its work it has brought the world much nearer to us, has
-led our life to greater clearness, has made us more alert, and given us
-a secure dominion over things. Science, therefore, must also be a factor
-in the determination of a philosophy of life, and must raise the whole
-position of man. Of course, as soon as we survey and estimate its work
-from the life-process we find that there is no lack of difficult
-problems in science. Since the magnificent results of the natural
-sciences often give rise to the tendency to force their particular bent
-and methods on the human sciences, to which our conception of the
-spiritual life gives a characteristic sphere of their own, there is a
-danger that the balanced development of the individual sciences and the
-complete organisation of what is distinctive in them will be prevented.
-However, we do not lack energetic resistance of this danger; and
-ultimately it is less science itself than the movement to popularise it
-that falls into this danger. Further, the results of science with regard
-to the object easily tend to obscure the subjective element, the
-spiritual activity, the characteristic synthesis, which forms an
-organised collection of pieces of knowledge into the unity of a science.
-It is apt to appear as though science needs only to construct further on
-a given basis and in a given direction; while both of these are open to
-much dispute: different possibilities, prospects, types may be revealed;
-the work of history has run through different stages, and has certainly
-not already exhausted its possibilities. Nevertheless, the subjective
-element with its freedom, mobility, and many-sidedness is becoming more
-adequately appreciated, and there is no reason to fear that science will
-become dogmatically pursued in paths that have become fixed. Finally,
-the problem of the relation of thought to life is the source of much
-perplexity: we Germans, for example, have a strong tendency to take mere
-knowledge for inner appropriation of the object, and instead of
-spiritual substance to offer an abundance of scholarship. This, however,
-is not a defect in science itself, but an error on the part of man, who
-has no life of his own with which to meet the onflow of impressions from
-the environment; and so our estimate of science and our acknowledgment
-of its magnificent achievement cannot be affected by this charge.
-
-Philosophy is in quite a different position: its present state cannot
-satisfy anyone who seeks rather for a universal science than for an
-academic discipline. For our philosophical efforts lack a common aim and
-close relation with the innermost need of the time; they do not even
-show any definite and energetic attempt to overcome the confusion from
-which our world of thought suffers. A great stream of philosophic effort
-came to an end with the speculative philosophy of the first decade of
-the nineteenth century. After a temporary ebb of this philosophic
-effort, we now wish to take up the work again with fresh power, but we
-have not yet acquired inner independence; and therefore, in sifting and
-collecting, we are unable to direct the age to definite aims, or
-radically expel the inconsistencies into which an indefinite relation to
-the past has led the present.
-
-There are three main streams of thought which come to us from the past,
-and we can neither completely take them up nor withdraw ourselves from
-them: the Enlightenment, with its philosophic summit in Descartes; the
-critical philosophy of Kant; and speculative philosophy, with its
-consummation in Hegel. It has been thought that the Enlightenment, with
-its starting out from the subject, its unadorned intellectualism, its
-formal ratiocination, its rejection of everything that is not
-comprehended in clear and distinct ideas, was transcended at the height
-of German classical literature, because at that time a life rich in
-content was set in contrast with it. But, as a fact, no adequate
-settlement with the Enlightenment has been arrived at; the supposed
-transcendence is not final, because the elements of truth in the
-Enlightenment, especially its turning from history to the immediacy and
-independence of spiritual life, were not properly acknowledged. But
-to-day it is less the elements of truth of the Enlightenment that are a
-force than that which is trivial and narrowly human in it--the
-ratiocination of the subject which, the more empty it is, the more it
-feels itself to be the measure of all things, and, rejoicing in
-negation, applies the results of the natural sciences in an attempt to
-bring about the greatest possible suppression of all spiritual
-relations. In this form the Enlightenment gains acceptance by the
-masses, which formerly had seemed inaccessible to it; and thus it
-becomes an instrument by which life is dissipated and made shallow.
-From its position of research, philosophy looks down upon this tendency
-with contempt; but it produces no movement that is able to take up the
-struggle with this tendency to shallowness, and pass through the
-struggle victoriously. Kant is often lauded as the spiritual guide of
-our time; and it is overlooked how much that was certain for him has
-become doubtful; how many new facts, new problems, new prospects, which
-cannot be lost to the world of thought we have received from the
-nineteenth century with its historico-social culture and its
-overwhelming widening of the horizon. Kant's critique of the reason is
-based on a conception of science; on a faith in the possibility of a
-knowledge of truth; on a conviction of a spiritual organisation of man,
-which are rather in contradiction than in harmony with the main
-tendencies of the present. His absolute ethic, the pillar of his
-constructive thought, is incompatible with the empirical and social
-treatment of morality to which the present does homage. But at the same
-time we cannot free ourselves from the influence of Kant. For we cannot
-refute his critique of the reason, breaking up, as it does, the old
-representation and conception of truth; and, without his ethic, our
-ethic would lose the appearance of truth and greatness. In the judgment
-of the present, Hegel experiences a treatment that is just the opposite
-of that which Kant receives: if in reference to the latter we do not
-notice what divides us, so in reference to the former we fail to
-recognise what joins us. For if Hegel's exaggeration of the power of the
-human spirit and his identification of spirit and thought appear alien
-to us, yet his idea of evolution, which embraces all multiplicity, and
-represents all realities and conceptions as in a state of flux; his
-elevation of spiritual factors to the form of independent powers which
-develop and establish their own necessities undeterred by the preference
-of man; his emphasis on the fact of the power of contradiction and
-opposition in history--all this, often in spite of our own conceptions,
-exerts an enormous influence over us; and we cannot shake it off
-without surrendering a considerable portion of our spiritual possession.
-
-These tendencies all whirl confusedly together and draw us now in one
-direction, now in another; we can get beyond the state of decadence only
-when we have succeeded in giving to the world of thought an independent
-character, which corresponds with the spiritual condition of the
-present, and which can do justice to the old as well as the new
-experiences. After the whole course of our investigation, only a brief
-account is necessary to indicate the directions the system of life here
-advocated points out to reach this; a fuller treatment would make a
-particular theory of knowledge necessary. We must bring into prominence
-three of the chief points.
-
-(1) Only the life-process can be the starting-point of philosophy, not
-some kind of being more ultimate than this process, whether we conceive
-of such being as an external world or as a subject existing independent
-of the world: the ideas of "world" and "subject," as also that of
-"being," can be evolved and made clear only within the life-process; at
-the same time, they remain in a state of flux, and never are so directly
-opposed to one another as modern thought has represented them as being.
-Philosophy, with this starting-point, would, however, attain an
-independence in relation to the special sciences only if it were
-possible within the life-process to form a unity and a distinctive
-synthesis, which should deepen our view of reality and set it as a whole
-in a new light. (2) Such a synthesis must transcend the state of change
-of all the relations and caprice of men; this is possible only by the
-revelation and appropriation of an independent spiritual life withdrawn
-from the life of sense. Without such a spiritual life there is no
-release from the chaos of subjective experiences and opinions; only from
-the position of the spiritual life is it possible for a spiritual
-occurrence to be revealed in the province of man, so that we do not need
-to infer from man to the world, but that within him a universal life can
-be immediately experienced. (3) As, on the one hand, the spiritual life
-is an indispensable presupposition, so on the other it is an infinite
-task; the former as far as the fundamental fact is concerned, the latter
-in reference to its detailed content. This content can be acquired only
-through the movement of history as a whole; thus a constructive
-philosophy--and not merely a critical one--could arise only where the
-spiritual life as a whole had acquired a characteristic form. In this
-case, philosophy was not simply an offspring of life, not merely
-something for life to occupy itself with. By its demand for a thorough
-clarification of our ideas and life, and by its raising the question of
-absolute truth, philosophy has exercised no little influence upon the
-progress of life. But that which it achieved of a fruitful nature, it
-achieved not in detachment from, but only in relation to, life, and by
-interaction with it, however much this relation may be concealed at the
-first glance.
-
-Such a connection of philosophy with life as a whole is by no means new;
-it has existed in all times. Never has the world of thought acquired a
-distinctive character except in close relation with life as a whole: it
-is only from life as a whole that thought has received its problems, the
-nature of its procedure, and the demarcation of its work. A survey of
-the history of philosophy makes it evident that the leading thinkers
-differ mostly, and differ from the beginning, in that which they regard
-as the essence of life. In what they regard as the essence of life they
-have found the firm point of support for their work; from that the
-direction of their research has been determined; and from that the
-questions arose to which they required an answer from the universe. And
-we all know that in these matters the question often implies more than
-the answer, that it often carries the answer within itself.
-
-If, therefore, this connection of philosophy with the life-process
-signifies an old and indisputable truth, this truth is not sufficiently
-acknowledged. Its adequate acknowledgment gives rise to a new situation;
-indeed, it tends to the development of a new type of philosophy. With
-the critical tendency of the Modern Age, this type shares the desire not
-to surrender thought to a state of defencelessness in face of the stream
-of appearances, but would primarily concentrate it in itself, and in an
-inner independence find a standard for all further undertaking. But this
-attainment of independence in thought is not accomplished by turning to
-the mere subject, but to a central occurrence, transcending the
-antithesis of subject and object. If thought cannot begin from such an
-occurrence, and understand the movement of life as an unfolding and
-perfecting of this comprehensive occurrence, then there is no truth for
-man. Truth, as a relation of two series absolutely alien to each other,
-is an absolutely nonsensical conception: truth must be immanent, in the
-sense that one life embraces both subject and object, and that in the
-movement of life there is as much a coming together of subject and
-object as a coming together of activity from the centre and from the
-circumference.
-
-That in this we have to do with a peculiar formation of knowledge and
-not with a merely formal modification is shown by the following
-considerations. If thought, in the manner previously supposed, takes its
-starting-point in a world existing independently of the subject, then in
-order to subordinate reality spiritually thought will comprehend it in
-the most general conceptions. Ultimately, the being of things will be
-sought in formal ontological magnitudes, as, for example, in "pure
-being." If the whole abundance of reality appears to be derived simply
-from these general conceptions, it is in danger of being transformed
-into nothing but schemes and shadows, and of losing all genuine life.
-If, as opposed to this, the subject alone is taken as the
-starting-point, then more life and more movement is indeed assured, and
-a more varied prospect will be acquired, but there is no possibility of
-distinguishing between that which is only contingent to the individual
-and that which forms a common inner world; there is no possibility of a
-rejection of the narrowly human, or even of extricating a realm of ideas
-from the abundance of impressions: if in the former case knowledge lost
-all content, in the present case it threatens to be completely
-dissolved. If, further, on the one hand abstract universal conceptions,
-and on the other the subjective states of individuals, form the stem of
-knowledge, then neither in one nor in the other does the fullness of
-spiritual reality attain its due--the reality that exists in the
-building up of a genuine spiritual culture. But in the type of
-philosophy advocated by us this is the chief thing; since in contrast to
-the psychological and the cosmological treatment this philosophy
-develops a noölogical treatment, and sees the central domain of
-philosophical research in the elucidation and unification of facts
-which, in the construction of a spiritual world in the province of man,
-appear in the whole and in every branch. In this connection the
-conception of fact is something more ultimate and universal in its
-relations; but it is just that which makes it more valuable for the
-conviction as a whole.
-
-This conception of its task will bring philosophy into a closer relation
-with personal life, as well as with the work of history, without making
-it the mere instrument either of the one or the other. Otherwise it
-would seem irrational, and a tendency from which one must free oneself
-as much as possible, that in philosophy, personality, not only in
-creative activity but also in appropriation, signifies so much. The
-object, on the contrary, acquires a positive value, if we are certain
-that the standard of life is ultimately also the standard of knowledge;
-if with this the degree of the development of life at a particular point
-necessarily decides the nature of the work of thought there achieved.
-The near relation of the thinker to the proximate and the more distant
-culture environment is explained from this position in a manner no less
-satisfactory: the relation can then remain close, even if in the first
-place it appears to be one of conflict and opposition. Similarly, the
-whole movement of history acquires a greater significance for knowledge;
-far-reaching changes of life transform the temporal situation, since
-they permit us to experience, see, and seek something else; all these
-changes, however, demand from thought an attention to and an
-appreciation of the whole. Nothing other than this is involved in the
-requirement that thought must correspond with the historical state of
-spiritual evolution.
-
-This acknowledgment of personal and of historical life by philosophy
-makes it intelligible why philosophy manifests so much diversity and
-opposition, and why on the surface it shows so little unity. Where the
-conviction of an independent spiritual life rules, the faith in a unity
-of truth can be shaken by this fact just as little as the courage to
-creative activity can be paralysed. The basing of thought upon the
-spiritual life also has the advantage that the main types of thought can
-be derived from the different positions which may be taken up towards
-the spiritual life, and thus a limit may be set to the otherwise
-indefinite abundance. From this point of view there are for us five
-chief types of thought and world-conception. Minds first divide on the
-question whether we can unify life at all, and at the same time whether
-we may venture to make an assertion concerning reality as a whole. He
-who rejects this as impossible and readily surrenders himself to the
-conflict of immediate impressions might be called an indifferentist. If,
-however, a striving towards unity is admitted, then the question whether
-a spiritual life with a reality and values of its own in contrast with
-nature may be acknowledged or not becomes the point of decision, and the
-basis of division into opposing camps. He who gives a negative answer to
-the question, and regards nature as the whole of reality, becomes an
-advocate of Naturalism. He, however, who answers in the affirmative, and
-may be called an idealist, is immediately confronted with a new problem.
-He cannot acknowledge the spiritual life without at the same time giving
-it the supremacy; but now the doubt arises whether this supremacy may be
-easily and peacefully established, or whether it meets with strong
-opposition. When the existence of these oppositions is denied, or they
-are regarded as being easy to overcome, there grows up an optimistic,
-contemplative form of Idealism, which to the holders of other forms
-inevitably seems abstract and shallow. If, on the contrary, the
-oppositions are fully acknowledged, the final division originates with
-the question whether finally we are to submit to the state of stagnation
-brought about by these oppositions, or whether by some kind of
-reinforcement of the counteraction to this state of stagnation life may
-once more be set in progress: the former gives rise to Scepticism and
-Pessimism, the latter to Activism, as it has been discussed by us in an
-earlier section. It is easy to see what distinctive lines of conflict
-and what kinds of conflict must arise between the indifferentist, the
-naturalistic thinker, the optimist, the sceptic, and the activist.
-However, we cannot allow this to detain us; it must, nevertheless, be
-pointed out here, that in philosophy the possibilities are not yet
-exhausted, and that to avail ourselves of these possibilities nothing is
-more necessary than a close relation of its work with the life-process,
-and a firmer grounding in the independent spiritual life.
-
-
-(c) ART AND LITERATURE
-
-Nowhere does modern life throb more violently and more strongly than in
-art and literature. That which in this department has a claim to
-permanence acquires especial power from the fact that this department
-had to establish itself anew in opposition to an attempt to curtail it.
-For who could deny that a culture of work and of utility had a tendency
-to reduce artistic literary creation to the position of an accompaniment
-and a fringe of another kind of life, to a diversion for idle hours? The
-more we feel the limitations of the life of work and utility the more do
-art and literature become independent tasks. From art and literature we
-expect more lightness, more agility, and more joy in life; they should
-conduct life from too great an attention to externals to
-self-consciousness, and in this way give life a soul. They should
-strengthen individuality in opposition to the levelling tendency of the
-culture of the masses, wrest simple fundamentals from chaotic confusion
-of life, and aid the time in reaching a comprehensive vital-feeling and
-a synthesis transcending its inconsistencies. In opposition to that
-which oppresses us and degrades us to instruments of a meaningless
-machinery, we desire some kind of province where life rests in itself
-and purposes nothing else but itself; where it springs up with complete
-spontaneity; and where it can express itself with complete freedom, and
-in this expression find its highest joy.
-
-From such a longing a new art that permeates our life has arisen. Art
-must seek new means of expression for the new situation; it cannot serve
-the development of a new life-content without bringing about liberation
-from all conventional statutes; it cannot prevent a threatened tendency
-of life to become stagnant without desiring a fully free place for the
-subject, and for the development of his individuality. He who sees
-chiefly the dangers in everything forgets that nothing new and great can
-arise without bringing dangers with it.
-
-From the point of view of the system that we champion, we can quite well
-understand the significance of the æsthetic movement of the present,
-acknowledge the deliverance of life which it has accomplished, and in
-general we can go a good distance with it. But there comes a point where
-the courses diverge; not because we think less of the capacity of art,
-but we believe that we think more highly of its task. This deliverance
-from the culture of work, this turning to individuality, promises an
-essential elevation of life only if a new kind of being, a new world, is
-able to break forth in the soul that depends upon itself; if the
-individual in his conflicts aids the development of the infinite life;
-if, through all transformations and prostrations, man wins an inner
-relation to the whole and to things, and by this grows beyond the
-narrowly human.
-
-If this does not come to pass, the movement remains on the surface of
-sense experience and related to the activity and occupation of mere man;
-and so it cannot make anything higher or essentially new of us; it
-remains subject to the oppositions of the age instead of becoming
-superior to them. We are, indeed, enriched by the most diverse forms of
-expression: even the most concealed circumstances, the most delicate
-pulsations of the soul, cannot withdraw themselves from being
-represented. None the less, the description of the world-environment
-acquires the most striking clearness and penetration, and in the
-incalculable wealth of individual forms of art virtuosi are not lacking
-at whose capacity of execution we are astonished. But all this gives to
-art no spiritual content and no real greatness. It can, indeed, bring an
-inexhaustible abundance of stimuli to bear upon individuals and spread a
-shiny gloss over existence and life, but it cannot raise life
-essentially. The care of the mere individual, with his changing
-circumstances, prevents art from taking up sufficiently the problems of
-the present situation as a whole; of the spiritual condition of humanity
-as a whole.
-
-And so art in this form is not able to grasp the epoch with its
-spiritual movement as a whole, and to further humanity in the struggle
-for spiritual existence, in which to-day all individual problems are
-included. Humanity is in a serious crisis; the old foundations of life
-are about to give way, and the new are not yet secured. The world has
-rejected the standards which man had imposed upon it; it turns against
-him, and leaves him nothing more in particular. To be assured of a
-distinctive significance man needs a strengthening, and at the same time
-an aroused reflection forbids him all help from outside. The fact that
-that which is hostile and threatens to degrade and to annihilate man
-takes possession of his own province of life and penetrates into it
-gives a particular acuteness to these problems. We are not only
-surrounded externally by a dark fate, but our soul also degenerates in
-it, and becomes more and more a soulless mechanism. Indeed, our own
-activity becomes the most dangerous opponent of the soul, since in
-forming and taking part in complexes of work which ever become greater
-it turns against us and takes the soul from the soul.
-
-An art which has its basis in the individual and which does not advance
-to spiritual substance cannot possibly prevent the threatened
-dissolution of life. Even the most wonderful expression of disposition,
-even the most delicate and most fluid representations of conditions, do
-not free us from the chaos of the time: they might easily bind us still
-more strongly to it, since they weaken the power, indeed the tendency to
-energetic concentration, and increase the tendency to degenerate into a
-state of weakness and decay; while to overcome these dangers it is
-necessary primarily to increase our activity, to win again an active
-relation to reality. Art cannot free itself from that condition of
-feebleness without entering into a close relation with the central task
-of life and acknowledging a spirituality transcending the subjective
-circumstances and interests of mere man. If these requirements are not
-satisfied, no talent can prevent a decline of art into a more refined
-Epicureanism.
-
-But where such a spiritual life is acknowledged, and at the same time
-there arises the task of winning for man a new life, a new spiritual
-reality, art inevitably acquires a great significance, and becomes
-absolutely indispensable. Without the liberation which it brings, and
-its presentation of things in a harmony, how could a whole with definite
-character be raised? How could the new that hovers before us acquire
-form and exert a penetrating power without the help of a constructive
-imagination which precedes its realisation? How could the soul's
-innermost experience permeate life as a whole, and ennoble its whole
-structure without the help of art? The higher we place the ideal of
-life, the more does the spiritual content which immediate existence
-manifests become a mere sense form, the more is æsthetic activity
-necessary to prevent disunion of life, in the midst of all oppositions
-to give it some kind of unity, and in the midst of the passion of
-conflict some rest within itself. But, to achieve this, art may not
-purpose to form an oasis in a wilderness of life, but, hand-in-hand with
-other activities, must fight for spiritual experience and a genuine
-meaning of life as a whole.
-
-
-(d) POLITICAL AND SOCIAL LIFE
-
-To treat of the complicated problems of the political and social life of
-the present does not come within our purpose; we can consider them only
-so far as the task of the construction of an independent spiritual world
-is affected either for good or evil by the nature of their solution.
-
-In contrast to the epoch of the Enlightenment, the nineteenth century
-brought about a transition from the individual to society: social life
-has developed in numerous branches, has disclosed a superabundance of
-new facts, and has set us new tasks. But this development has also
-brought much perplexity with it. It becomes evident in this development
-also, that each spiritual movement that attains power experiences in its
-further course limitations, and is degraded by its contact with human
-conditions. Along with the social movement there has been the
-often-discussed change by which life from being centred in an invisible
-world becomes occupied with the visible one, and by which all
-departments of life are given a naturalistic, realistic character and
-tendency. There has been no lack of opposition to the movement to make
-society the first consideration; the opposition has gone even so far as
-to dispute the right of the whole. Further, the earlier and the later
-conception of society, the idealistic and the realistic, are often
-confused; and from this confusion contradictions arise that not only
-confuse our ideas but also degrade our life. There is a danger that a
-zealous and excited occupation with nothing but individual tasks may
-take our attention from the whole, and that the problems which the inner
-condition of man involves may not obtain due consideration.
-
-This turning to society is most manifest in the powerful advance of the
-state. In this, an inner longing for a more social life, as Hegel
-especially philosophically advocated it; and actual changes of
-conditions operated together, and strengthened one another. The more
-definite manifestation of individuality on the part of nations and the
-sharper division between them; the active interest of wider circles in
-political problems; the mechanical organisation of work, with its more
-exact differentiation and its more rigid organisation of forces; but
-primarily the longing, which grows out of the ceaselessly increasing
-economical and social perplexities, for a power superior to the parties
-in dispute and acting as arbitrator--all these have immeasurably
-increased the power of the state in different degrees among different
-peoples, but in general through the whole civilised world.
-
-The freedom of the individual, therefore, cannot but suffer from
-manifold limitations; there arises a danger that the individual may
-gradually lose all initiative, and expect all stimulation from the
-state. The spontaneity and the wealth of life suffer from the tendency
-to increase the power of the state, and a bureaucracy which delights in
-correct forms, but which spiritually is entirely unproductive, indeed
-even indifferent, appropriates more and more to itself. The substance of
-the spiritual life is also threatened by the fact that the omnipotent
-state is inclined to treat that life, with all its branches, as a mere
-means in the attainment of its own particular aims; to look upon science
-and art, and chiefly religion and education, especially with regard to
-that which they achieve for the aims of the state, and to shape them as
-much as possible in accordance with these aims. There is also a strong
-tendency to follow the same course to accomplish the ends of the
-contemporary form of government. An independent and genuine spiritual
-life can hardly offer too great an opposition to such a perversion,
-with its deification of human forms. But the matter is by no means
-simple; for not the will of single individuals and parties, but the
-whole tendency of modern life has given this power to the state; indeed,
-on the economic side the state will soon experience a further increase
-of power. The more the guidance on this side belongs to the state, the
-more necessary is a free movement of spiritual culture in opposition to
-it; the more urgent is the demand that the amalgamation of church and
-state should be discontinued--an amalgamation which, by the growing
-disputes that arise from it, forces religion into an undignified
-position; the more definitely is a greater independence to be desired
-for school organisation in all its branches. The Germans especially have
-much to do in this matter; and there is much at stake. For, with the
-limitations of our spatial extension, we can be a permanent determining
-factor in world-culture only by giving our culture the greatest
-intensity; but this requires a calling forth of the complete power and
-of the spontaneity of individuals. Ultimately, in this matter also, the
-chief thing proves to be the taking up again of central problems and the
-realisation of human being in its innermost depths as an unconditional
-end in itself and the bearer of an infinite life. No conception can
-guard us from sinking to the position of puppets of the soulless
-mechanism of the state, if we do not find the power to give soul to our
-life and to maintain it against all attempted limitation.
-
-The longing for more freedom and independence has therefore an
-indisputable validity. But this acknowledgment may easily lead to new
-complications by freedom and independence being conceived in a manner
-much too external, and also by a really questionable association of
-these ideas with the problem of equality. The conviction of the modern
-man concerning the world on the one hand, and the demands of life on the
-other, are often in direct contradiction with regard to the conception
-of equality. We become aware of our limitation on all sides: we are
-represented simply as a product of heredity and environment: all
-possibility of making a decision for ourselves is rejected as a
-delusion. If thus we are deprived of all independence and all
-spontaneity of life, then even in social life we shall become mere
-bearers of a _rôle_ imposed upon us by a dark fate. One does not see how
-freedom could retain a value, arouse enthusiasm, and lead to sacrifice
-in such a case. If the whole is a soulless mechanism, in which only the
-excess of existent power is the cause of decisions, then we ourselves
-cannot be exceptions.
-
-Other complications have their origin in the democratic tendency which
-permeates not only our political endeavour but also our whole life of
-culture. How far-reaching a change, indeed how complete a revolution,
-has been accomplished by this tendency in opposition to a condition of
-things which has stood for hundreds or rather thousands of years, is but
-seldom fully appreciated. In the earlier form of social life spiritual
-work was the chief matter only of a limited and exclusive circle; to the
-people as a whole it was only secondary, and the benefit that they
-received from it was often of the most meagre character. Even the
-Reformation left this aristocratic form of life as it was; for as
-certainly as it made the care for every individual member of the church
-more urgent, that care was bestowed from above in an authoritative
-manner. The earlier Enlightenment, as it was represented, for example,
-by Bayle, was of the conviction that the deliverance from delusion and
-superstition would always be limited to a small circle of those standing
-spiritually high, and would never reach the masses. We know how this has
-changed; how the masses are determined to form a mere dependent body of
-the so-called higher classes no longer, but to take the problem of life
-independently into their own hands, and how they obtain their
-representation of the world and the task of their life from that which
-is more immediately present to them and directly concerns their welfare;
-and how in this way they are inclined to look upon themselves as the
-whole of humanity. We have already referred to the danger that culture
-as a whole will thus be made shallow--a danger that arises from the fact
-that here the decision is made by those who scarcely participate in the
-work of history, and who depend almost entirely upon the immediate
-impression. Further, we have already contended that only a
-simplification and rejuvenation of culture are able to cope with this
-danger. The fact is important that this democratic movement appeals to
-the equality of all who bear human features. Here again there appears to
-be a direct contradiction between theoretical conviction and actual
-conditions. Experience everywhere shows a pronounced inequality among
-men; it shows this not only in the traditional social relationships but
-also in the organisation of modern industry. More, however, than all
-social arrangements, nature shows the greatest inequality amongst men;
-and the actual relation of individuals in work and idleness, in love and
-hate, in independent thinking and blind subordination shows it none the
-less. From the point of view of experience the idea of equality seems to
-be an empty phrase. If it is more than this, if we recognise in it a
-truth that we cannot afford to lose, then it implies the conviction that
-humanity has spiritual relations; that each has a significance in a
-spiritual nature, and that there is a universal life present everywhere
-which opposes the guilt and folly of the individual and even in spite of
-himself gives him a value. Thus we have seen that in history, religion
-and ideal culture were the first to bring the idea of equality into good
-repute. But to-day the champions of equality turn with particular
-keenness against religion and ideal culture, and are not aware that in
-so doing they are destroying the foundations of their own belief.
-
-These inconsistencies are not felt, chiefly because of the power which
-abstractions usually exercise over men in the present day. A faith in
-abstractions reigns amongst us which is capable of far greater things
-than faith in religion or faith in reason. We are surrounded by the
-bustle of a fierce and ceaselessly increasing struggle for existence:
-ideas are overgrown by interests; the motives of people in general are
-trivial, and all spiritual aspiration is feeble, and along with this
-there is an unutterable amount of pretence which permeates and distorts
-all conduct. Yet the disagreeable aspect of this condition seems to
-vanish as soon as the mere word "humanity" is mentioned. But what is
-humanity from the point of view of Naturalism other than a collection of
-beings of nature? How can a power to elevate and to strengthen proceed
-from this conception, which in the naturalistic context signifies no
-more than the subjective unification of the individuals? Or, again, the
-idea of a ceaseless progress of humanity is placed in opposition to the
-confusions which exist in the present. But how can this idea be
-established if a compelling reason is not active within man? How could
-the present be so incomplete and so full of perplexity as it seems,
-especially to the advocates of the idea of progress, if century after
-century had made progress upon progress? Rather, if man has such a noble
-nature as he is assumed to have, life should be full of reason and
-bliss. The old faith saved man by resorting to an invisible world; it
-required a firm confidence in that which one did not see. The new faith,
-which denies an invisible world, desires more: it desires that we should
-be convinced of the direct opposite of that which we see and comprehend.
-These considerations in no way signify a depreciation on our part of the
-effort to attain freedom and equality--an effort that has an
-indisputable validity. But this validity must be based upon a whole of
-life and be more definitely determined, otherwise the effort is stifled
-by the inconsistencies in which the conceptions of freedom and equality
-are involved in the minds of their advocates.
-
-The independence of the individual and the spontaneity of the spiritual
-life are endangered not only by the mechanism of a bureaucracy
-indifferent to spiritual values but also none the less by the movements
-of the masses, which in modern life in particular surround and browbeat
-the individual. The man of the present day often believes that he has
-gained freedom when in reality he has only changed the nature of his
-dependence. What makes the movements of the masses, with their so-called
-public opinion, so irksome is the falsehood that is generally contained
-in this opinion, which is presented as proceeding from the experience
-and decision of a great majority, and therefore as having a definite
-presupposition of truth. The fact, as a rule, is that a few venture an
-assertion and urge it upon the others with unobserved compulsion, since
-they proclaim as already existent the agreement that they are only
-seeking. Of course sometimes there is much more in public opinion; it
-may be the expression of a spiritual necessity which subjects to itself
-the dispositions of men. Whether public opinion is to be an interpreter
-of truth or a mere product of man remains to be decided; and this
-decision can rest only with the individual. He will be equal to making
-this decision if he possesses a spiritual experience, and has in this a
-touchstone by which to distinguish the genuine from the false.
-
-Philosophy can maintain the rights of the individual only so far as he
-is rooted in spiritual relationships and derives power from them; it
-must absolutely oppose all glorification of the natural, spiritually
-destitute individual. We find such a glorification to-day more
-especially in that which, with particular emphasis, is called "modern"
-morality, but which in fact threatens rather to be a complete negation
-of morality; even though this negation is against the intentions of its
-advocates, mostly women, who display great enthusiasm for this "modern"
-morality. It seems as though life is limited and degraded because
-society, particularly in the matter of the sexual life, prescribes rigid
-statutes which, if they were not irrational at the beginning, have
-nevertheless become irrational, and tend to brand the right as wrong and
-the wrong as right. The shaking off of these restrictions and of the
-pressure of society in general seems to promise a form of life
-incomparably more powerful, sincere, and individual: this life is also
-to offer more beauty, for to-day generally the idea of beauty is
-emphasised with great partiality where life has no clear ideas and no
-significant content.
-
-This criticism of the statutes of society is not entirely without
-reason. Such statutes do not in themselves constitute a morality, as it
-is easy to imagine they do; but they only advocate a morality; as life
-undergoes such far-reaching changes, these statutes must continually be
-examined anew as to their validity and value. But this relativity does
-not make them worthless, and does not justify their complete rejection
-in favour of an absolute freedom on the part of individuals. We could
-expect an elevation of life by such an effort for freedom only if we
-might assume that the individuals are thoroughly noble, energetic, and
-spiritually rich, and if in the relations between the sexes a state of
-paradisiacal innocence reigned which only the evil arrangements of
-society had disturbed. But this is a way of thinking which does more
-honour to the hearts than to the heads of its advocates. He who takes
-men as they really are and does not paint them in romantic colours, and
-who at the same time recognises the dangers of a highly developed,
-pleasure-seeking, and over-refined state of culture, will not despise
-those social arrangements, notwithstanding their relativity, but value
-them as an indispensable safeguard against the selfishness, the greed
-for pleasure, and the instability of the mere individual--a safeguard
-not only against the tyranny of externals but also for the individual
-against himself. It is unfortunate enough that such safeguards are
-necessary; but, as they are necessary, it is better to preserve and
-improve them as much as possible than to reject them, and to expose
-humanity to dangers that might throw it back into the condition of the
-animals. Man is not better because he is painted more beautifully;
-rather Pascal is right when he says: "L'homme n'est ni ange ni bête, et
-le malheur veut, que qui veut faire l'ange fait la bête."
-
-The tendency to think that man may be transformed inwardly and the whole
-condition of life raised by changes in external organisation is most
-definitely felt in the social movements of the age. In this there is a
-clearly marked opposition to the earlier mode of thought, which, placing
-a low estimate upon everything external, and finding greatness too
-easily in disposition, overlooked how much the organisation of the
-conditions of life means for men in whom the spiritual is only in
-process of development; and, further, failed to notice that there is
-also a strong movement from external to internal. Nevertheless, the fact
-cannot be denied, notwithstanding all this, that the problems of the
-whole and of man's inner nature require to be treated as of chief
-importance. Otherwise, as Aristotle suggested, notwithstanding all the
-alteration of conditions, the old problems will continually make their
-appearance anew, and the substance of life might easily suffer from that
-which was intended to improve its condition.
-
-In conclusion, we may briefly consider the problems that have been
-raised in the nineteenth century by the increased emphasis on the idea
-of nationality. Influences of an idealistic nature first raised the
-cultivation and establishment of a particular national character to the
-position of a matter of the greatest importance. This character appeared
-to be an extremely valuable form of individualisation of the spiritual
-life, a form in which that life attains to concreteness and greater
-definiteness and penetration. The co-existence of these individual
-nationalities gave promise of an incomparably richer formation of the
-life of humanity as a whole: the inner development of their peculiar
-natures, and their lofty rivalry, also promised to bring a wealth of
-arousing and elevating motives. The nineteenth century has, indeed, won
-an incalculable amount through this movement; to take up an abstract
-cosmopolitanism again would be decidedly retrograde.
-
-But the more the idea of nationality has been brought from its high
-place in the realm of thought to the domain of human circumstance, the
-more has it been debased and the more dangers has it produced. If
-previously the cultivation of an ideal type of life was most prominent,
-and if the nations could thus permit one another to follow their own
-courses peacefully, this has become less and less the case in face of
-the desire and effort for power and expansion in the visible world; and
-owing to the narrowness of physical space occupied by the nations, the
-different strivings have clashed together more and more severely. If
-this tendency continues without the counteraction of an inner task
-common to humanity as a whole, and of unifying and elevating ideas, it
-is hardly possible to avoid mutual hostility, a degeneration into
-obstinacy and injustice. The idea of nationality may therefore become a
-danger to the ethical character of life. This is the case if, by milder
-or by severer means, one nation tries to force its own character and
-speech upon another. The mode of thought based on the old _cujus regio
-ejus natio_ is in no way better than that based on the old _cujus regio
-ejus religio_, which we are now accustomed to regard with contempt as a
-piece of barbarism. The desire for external power at the same time tends
-to lessen the attention to the inner development and unification of
-nationality, without which ultimately little progress can be made in the
-development of power. It is through a common national character, with
-its unification of the feelings and efforts of the individuals, that a
-people is first elevated into a genuine nation; it is a character such
-as this that gives to a people a power of influencing humanity as a
-whole; it is a character such as this that gives to the individuals the
-consciousness of being "members one of another," and with this a
-stability and a joy in life and activity. Such a national character
-necessitates certain natural conditions, that are like the veins in
-marble which prescribe a certain direction to the work of the artist.
-But these conditions must first be organised and by the complete
-elevation of their nature spiritually unified; and this cannot be
-achieved otherwise than through our own work, which through common
-events and experiences follows its ideal. So far, therefore, national
-character is not a gift of nature but a task which presents itself
-distinctively to each people according to its nature and conditions. In
-this matter a people must always in the first place realise a unity in
-its own nature.
-
-In the fulfilment of this task hardly any other people has had to
-contend with keener opposition, both external and internal, than the
-Germans. Our physical environment does not direct us so definitely into
-distinctive paths as is the case with other peoples. But our inner
-nature contains, before all else, harsh antitheses. Our strength lies
-chiefly in arousing to life depths of the soul otherwise undreamt of.
-Thus in music and in poetry we have been able to surpass all other
-peoples; again, we have been able to give to religion a wonderful
-inwardness, and in education to evolve the leading ideas. At the same
-time, however, we are driven to the physical world to take possession of
-and to shape things; we are not the Hindus of Europe, as other people
-indeed previously called us. We came into history by achievements in
-war, and the desire for conflict and victory has been maintained through
-all the phases of our varied history. By the continued diligence of our
-citizens in work we have subordinated the world around us to our aims;
-our capacity for organisation has been most marked, as the present state
-of industry and trade shows. However, not only have these movements
-towards inwardness, and towards the world, a strong tendency to oppose
-one another, but also, in contrast with these magnificent gifts, there
-are many defects and tendencies that make the development of a powerful
-and unified life exceedingly difficult. We show a want of form and
-taste, a heaviness and formality, a tendency to occupation with detail
-and, in general, with what is petty in life, and, as a result of this,
-an uncultured "Philistinism" in all spheres of society, and along with
-this the inclination on the part of individuals to insist on the
-correctness of their positions, and thus to cause division; finally--and
-this is the worst of all--much envy and jealousy. None of these features
-can be denied. There is an infinite amount which must be altered and
-overcome amongst us if we are to become what we are capable of becoming,
-and if we are to reach the highest in our nature. The limitations that
-have been brought about by our history, which on the whole has not been
-a happy one, constitute an important determining factor in this matter.
-The more problems we bear within us, the more possibilities of genuine
-creation that exist within us, and the more we may be to humanity in the
-future, the more painful is it if attention and activity are diverted
-from the chief task, and if an externalising of the idea of nationality
-allows us to consider ourselves great rather than lead us to strive for
-true greatness. The people that has produced Luther and Bach, Kant and
-Goethe, cannot be devoid of true greatness, if it only remains faithful
-to its own nature, and if it concentrates its power and treats the chief
-thing really as such.
-
-
-(e) THE LIFE OF THE INDIVIDUAL
-
-The problems and antitheses that are to be found in the life of the
-present penetrate deeply into the life of the individual, and often make
-their appearance within him with a particular power. The antithesis that
-exists between the conceptions of the world and the demands of life is
-especially harsh. The tendency of the age is to form a conception of the
-world which reduces the status of the individual in the greatest degree:
-from the point of view of nature and of society, he seems to be no more
-than a fleeting appearance, a matter of indifference, and to show no
-independence, and never to be able to take part with spontaneous
-activity in the course of events. On the other hand, the contemporary
-form of life demands the greatest independence and freedom of the
-individual. We see in him the chief bearer of life, and we expect
-salvation from the severe perplexities of the time, primarily from his
-strengthening. This state of inconsistency cannot be tolerated for long;
-either the degradation of the individual, that is found in the
-conceptions of the world, must be applied to life, and lead it to a
-resigned submission to an impenetrable world-process, or the positive
-estimate of the individual which governs conduct must be acknowledged in
-the conviction concerning reality as a whole: only a weakness of
-disposition and a feebleness of thought can divide our existence between
-the one conviction and the other.
-
-The course which our investigation has taken cannot leave any possible
-doubt as to the direction which our conviction points out to us in this
-matter: however much we also demand an energetic development of the
-individual, that the stagnation of the age may be overcome, at the same
-time we insist upon a necessary condition of this, on his inner
-strengthening by an inner world present to him, on his elevation by a
-spirituality transcending nature. Only if he thus acquires an inner
-relation to infinity, and becomes an independent centre of life, can he
-satisfy the demands that are generally made upon him, and, remarkably
-enough, especially by those who theoretically deny the inner world as a
-whole, and hail a most shallow Naturalism as a deliverance.
-
-Of course that inner elevation of the individual by no means lifts him
-gently and simply out of all the confusion that the experience of our
-existence shows; at the first glance it may even seem to make the
-confusion greater. For, if each individual can become a co-operator in
-the building up of a new world, and if his activity thereby acquires a
-value for the whole, then the complete indifference with which,
-according to our human impression, the individual is treated by the
-course of the physical world, the inflexibility and injustice that he
-often experiences in this world, the defect of love and justice in this
-world, in which the bad so often obtain the victory and the good are led
-to destruction, are all the greater mystery. The more the development of
-the spiritual life widens the field of vision; the more it leads us
-beyond a lifeless resignation to the question of the rationality of
-events and compels us to compare the destiny of one man with that of
-another, the deeper must that feeling of mystery become. All attempts
-at a theodicy founder on this difficulty; we must inevitably submit to
-the view that with regard to this problem all is obscure to the eyes of
-man. There is, however, no need on this account to doubt and to regard
-our life as hopeless; our investigation also has shown this. For, in
-contrast with the obscurity of the world around us, we are able to set
-the fact of the emergence of a new world within us. Great things take
-place within us; not only does a new world appear, but we are called by
-an inner necessity of our own being to co-operate in its development,
-and this co-operation is not limited to individual activities, but
-involves our being as a whole. For it was just in this that we were able
-to recognise the development of being as the essence of the spiritual
-life--that the chief movement of our life is to win a genuine being, and
-that in the development of personality and spiritual individuality such
-a being is in question. We saw clearly enough that we are not
-personalities and individuals from the beginning; but that nature gives
-us only the possibility of becoming this. To realise this possibility
-our own activity is necessary; and this activity is not a sudden
-resolution, but requires a revolution of our being and the development
-of a new nature; and this can only be achieved by a faithful and zealous
-life-work, and even then only approximately. Thus life as a whole is a
-task which includes all multiplicity within it, the task of winning our
-own being completely, and just in this way to increase the kingdom of
-the spirit at our point.
-
-This task cannot be completely recognised and adopted without making a
-great divergence from the aim, harsh oppositions and difficult
-conflicts, manifest in the inner recesses of the soul. If our life,
-therefore, appears to be in the highest degree incomplete, a mere
-beginning, then this increase of the task demonstrates more than
-anything else that, in this matter, we are concerned not with phantoms
-and imaginations, but with realities: so here, notwithstanding all our
-incompleteness, we can obtain the certainty of a spiritual existence,
-and even become strengthened by the direct resistance of the external
-world, because that world is henceforth reduced to the secondary
-position. Thus, as we saw, the question upon which minds separate into
-irreconcilable opposition is whether they acknowledge in the inwardness
-of being itself not merely individual problems but a universal task; if
-this is the case, the seriousness of the task will give to them an
-unshakable stability of possession and a security superior to all
-attacks; if it is not the case, the spiritual world is an unintelligible
-paradox, because the want of an independent inner life means that there
-is no basis for the development of an organ for the comprehension of a
-world of inwardness. In this matter there is no possibility of a direct
-agreement; only the proof of the spirit and of power can decide.
-
-But where the life of the individual acquires a genuine being and a
-connection with the realm of self-consciousness, then, notwithstanding
-all that is fleeting and insubstantial, the individual cannot regard
-himself as a transitory appearance in the whole, even in the ultimate
-basis of his being. Where, in contrast with all the meaninglessness of
-mere nature and all the pretence of mere society, a movement towards
-inner unity and substantial being emerges, the individual will be
-elevated into a time-transcendent order, and must necessarily acquire
-some position within it. The whole movement towards spirituality in the
-human sphere would be vain, and all distinctively human life would be a
-meaningless contradiction, if the individuals in whom alone the
-spiritual life breaks forth spontaneously were included solely and
-entirely in the stream of the process of nature. If the spiritual life
-has once revealed itself to us, so far as to begin an independent and
-distinctive being within us, then this being will assert itself in some
-way. This does not imply agreement with the usual belief in immortality,
-which would preserve man just as he is through all eternity, and thus
-condemn him to the torture of rigid continuance in the same form; a
-state that would, indeed, be as unbearable as the pain of the
-traditional hell. As the world as a whole is in the highest degree
-mysterious to us, so our future is veiled in the deepest obscurity. But,
-if with the essence of our being we are elevated into a universal
-spiritual life, and if in the innermost basis of our life we participate
-in an eternal order, then the time-transcendence of this life assures to
-us also some kind of time-transcendence in our being.
-
- _So löst sich jene grosse Frage
- Nach unserm zweiten Vaterland,
- Denn das Beständige der ird'schen Tage
- Verbürgt uns ewigen Bestand._
-
- GOETHE
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUSION
-
-
-In conclusion a few words will suffice. The last section showed that the
-present sets great problems and reveals possibilities in every
-department of life; but that we men are very far from being equal to
-cope with these problems. We are limited especially by the fact that we
-are incapable of elevating ourselves inwardly above the present; that we
-do not take possession of it sufficiently as a whole, and find an inner
-independence in relation to it; and that therefore we do not enter with
-the necessary vigour into the conflict against the trivial and the
-poor-spirited, the decadent and the sceptical that the present contains.
-To point out the way to attain such independence appeared to us to be
-the chief task of philosophy in the present. In the service of this
-task, which cannot be achieved without the manifestation of a new
-actuality, without a fundamental deepening of our reality, we have made
-our investigation, which contains a distinctive conception of the
-spiritual life. In that everywhere we have pressed back from the results
-to the experience, and from the wealth of achievement to the generating
-basis, we have seen nature, history, culture, and human nature as a
-whole in a new light. We have hoped, by widening and strengthening life
-itself from within, to supply a substitute for the external supports
-that life has lost. How far we have succeeded in our endeavour is
-another question; we shall be satisfied even if our work only
-contributes to bring the present to a clearer consciousness of the state
-of spiritual crisis in which it exists and concerning the seriousness of
-which it deceives itself in a thousand ways. There is an enormous amount
-of vigorous activity and efficient work, of honest endeavour and serious
-disposition, in our time, and the tendency to make life more spiritual
-is also evident. But the movement is still far from attaining the depth
-which is necessary to the chief question of our spiritual existence;
-thus the conflict, instead of being between whole and whole, is divided;
-that which is significant and valuable in the endeavour of the time is
-in danger of becoming problematic, and of producing the opposite of what
-it purposes, because it does not fit itself into a universal life, and
-in this realise its limitations and at the same time its right. A more
-energetic concentration of life in itself is therefore the first
-condition of transcending the chaos of the life of the present and of
-preventing spiritual degeneration in the midst of too intense an
-occupation with externals. As for the rest, we may say with Plotinus:
-"The doctrine serves to point the way and guide the traveller; the
-vision, however, is for him who will see it."
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abstractions; their power in modern life, 362 ff.
-
- Activism; profession of faith in, 255 ff.;
- how it differs from a system of mere force, 255 ff.;
- its ethical character, 256;
- how it differs from Voluntarism and Pragmatism, 256 ff.
-
- Æsthetic Individualism, 61 ff.
-
- Æstheticism; its antithesis to Activism, 258 ff.
-
- Antiquity; its distinctive synthesis of life, 208 ff.
-
- _A priori_; its validity and its limitations, 234
-
- Archimedean point in the spiritual life; its impossibility, 94 ff., 154
-
- Art and literature, condition and tasks in the present, 354 ff.
-
- Ascetic organisation of life; rejected, 281 ff.
-
-
- Being, development of; as a system of life, 212 ff., 314
-
-
- Catholicism; different tendencies in, 328 ff.
-
- Christianity; its unique character, 6;
- the opposition to, 7 ff.;
- its permanent truth, 331 ff.;
- changes necessary to it, 332 ff.;
- Christian and Greek forms of life, 283 ff.
-
- "Classical," the; its significance, 192
-
- Concentration of life (within the whole), 156 ff., 160
-
- Conscience; its significance, 129 ff.
-
- Critical character of modern work; its presuppositions, 250 ff.
-
- Culture, 110 ff.;
- genuine and apparent, 269 ff.;
- requirements of a new type, 298 ff.;
- organisation of, 315 ff.
-
-
- Democratic tendency of modern culture, 361 ff.
-
- Departments of life; their relation to life as a whole, 316 ff.
-
- Dogmatic sectarian point of view; rejected, 328
-
- Duty; significance of the idea, 184 ff., 231
-
-
- Education; problems in the present state of, 343 ff.
-
- Enlightenment, the; its synthesis of life, 209 ff.;
- how far problematic, 249;
- relation of the present to it, 347 ff.
-
- Equality; problems of the present conception of, 362
-
- Eternity; how far implied in the life of the individual, 372
-
- Ethical character of life; how to be understood, 256, 258;
- of spiritual culture, 309 ff.;
- its necessity, 337 ff.
-
- Ethics (morality); different types in the present time, 336 ff.;
- conditions of a morality, 338 ff.;
- requirements of morality in a spiritual culture, 339 ff.
-
- Evil; the problem of, 263 ff.;
- the way in which it is solved, 279 ff.
-
- Evolution, doctrine of; spiritual, its limitations, 194 ff., 257 ff.
-
- Experience; its significance for the spiritual life in man, 235 ff.
-
-
- Freedom; its nature, 174 ff.;
- its conflict with destiny, 181 ff.;
- genuine and false, 323 ff.;
- inconsistency in contemporary treatment of the problem, 360 ff.
-
-
- German character; its greatness and its dangers, 317 ff., 368 ff.
-
- Goethe; characteristic influence, 299
-
- Good, the (idea of the good); how it differs from the Useful, 119 ff.;
- apparent inconsistency, 138 ff.;
- more detailed determination, 185 ff.
-
- Great man, the; his relation to his time, 292
-
- Greek and Christian forms of life, 283 ff.
-
-
- Hegel; relation of the present to him indefinite, 348
-
- Historical and social organisation of life; its limitations, 200
-
- Historical Relativism; rejected, 290 ff., 323 ff.
-
- History; the spiritual conception of, its conditions, 188 ff.;
- esoteric and exoteric history, 243 ff.
-
- Human life; how far it is from the spiritual life, 161 ff.
-
-
- Idealisation, false; of immediate existence, 83 ff., 362 ff.
-
- Idealism and Realism; their unification in a spiritual culture, 312 ff.
-
- Ideas in history; their unique character, 126 ff., 188 ff.
-
- Imagination; indispensable in all departments of life, 239
-
- Immanent Idealism, its rise and fall, 15 ff.
-
- Immanental treatment (from the life-process), 107 ff.
-
- Individual, the, and the Society; problems of their relation, 364 ff.
-
- Individual, the; his significance in the new relations, 246, 369 ff.
-
- Individual, life of the; its form in the new system, 369 ff.
-
- Individuality (spiritual); as a problem, 132 ff., 181 ff., 370
-
- Instruction; problems in the present time with reference to, 343 ff.
-
- Inwardness; its attainment of independence in man, 123 ff., 146 ff.;
- as the inner life of reality, 148 ff.;
- inwardness and the inner world, 303
-
- Irrationality, of existence; in what manner overcome, 279
-
-
- Kant; inconsistency in the relation to him in the present time, 348
-
- Knowledge; its form in the new system, 351
-
-
- Life; its detachment from the mere individual, 119 ff.;
- the two movements in it, 282 ff.
-
- Life-process; as the fundamental principle of investigation, 104 ff.,
- 305 ff., 349 ff.
-
- Life's attainment of greatness, 240 ff.
-
- Life-work; its significance in acquiring stability, 253
-
- Love; as a witness to the union with the whole, 231
-
-
- Man; as a being of nature, 110 ff.;
- growing beyond nature, 113 ff.;
- his union with the whole, 226 ff.
-
- Masses, the culture of the; its problems, 89 ff.
-
- Mass-movements; their dangers and limitations, 363 ff.
-
- Metaphysic; in what sense necessary, 141 ff.
-
- "Modern," the; double meaning, 296
-
- Modern Age, the (in a broad sense); the characteristic in its nature,
- 9 ff.
-
- "Modern" Morality; discussed and rejected, 364 ff.
-
- Movement, of the spiritual life in man; its uniqueness, 233 ff.;
- its increase in the new system of life, 247 ff.
-
- Mysticism; in what sense justifiable, 246
-
-
- National Character, 198, 367 ff.
-
- Nationality, the idea of; its problems, 366 ff.
-
- Naturalism; its significance and its limitations, 24 ff.
-
- Nature and Spirit, 270 ff.
-
- Negation; impossibility of an absolute, 267 ff.
-
- Newer Systems of Life; what they have in common, 22 ff., 81 ff.
-
- Noölogical Method; distinguished from the psychological and the
- cosmological, 243, 352
-
- Norms; their significance, 184
-
-
- Pantheism; vague character of the general conception of it, 84
-
- Past; impossibility of flight to the, 93 ff.
-
- People and nation, 366 ff.
-
- Personal conviction, concerning reality as a whole; where the decision
- is made, 253, 281, 311 ff., 340, 372
-
- Personality; the difficulty of the conception, 95 ff.;
- no mere gift of nature, 311, 370
-
- Philosophy; its present position, 346 ff.;
- its three main tendencies in the present time, 347 ff.;
- chief demands, 349 ff.
-
- Philosophy of life; the conception of a, 3 ff.
-
- Political and social life; condition and tasks in the present time, 358
- ff.
-
- Present, the; difficulties of determining its extent, 289 ff.
-
- Protestantism; the different tendencies in it, 329
-
- Public opinion; manner of its formation, 364
-
-
- Reality; difficulty of the conception, 84 ff.;
- longing for, 159 ff.;
- new conception of, 220 ff.
-
- Relation (fundamental), of man to reality; new, from the point of view
- of the spiritual life, 152 ff.
-
- Religion; the system of life of, 6 ff.;
- its form and its justification, 273 ff.;
- its necessity in a spiritual culture, 312 ff.;
- its present condition, 324;
- its requirements in a spiritual culture, 330 ff.;
- specific religious system of life rejected, 281 ff.
-
- Romanticism; its significance and its limitations, 258 ff.
-
-
- Science; its present greatness and problems, 345 ff.
-
- Self-preservation, spiritual; distinguished from natural
- self-preservation, 126
-
- Sense; its estimate, 260
-
- Simplification (in revivals), 128
-
- Socialistic system; its significance and its limitations, 41 ff.
-
- Society; the spiritual conception of, 196 ff.;
- emphasis upon society in the nineteenth century, 358 ff.
-
- Spiritual culture, and human culture, 308 ff.
-
- Spiritual life; its independence a necessity, 141 ff.;
- as the fundamental principle of a new organisation of the individual
- departments of life, 157 ff., 244 ff.
-
- Spiritual work; its relation to time, 290 ff.
-
- Stability in life; how won, 251 ff.
-
- State, the; the greater emphasis upon it in the nineteenth century, 359
- ff.
-
- Suffering and spiritual destitution, 314
-
- Syntheses of life; in history, 207 ff.
-
-
- Theodicy; rejected, 279 ff., 371
-
- Thought; its relation to life, 108, 126 ff., 141 ff., 349 ff.;
- its unique operation (in distinction from association), 125 ff.
-
- Time; fundamental relation of man to, 116 ff.
-
- Transcendent Spirituality; as the fundamental principle of religion,
- 278 ff.
-
- Transcendental method; in what sense justifiable, 248
-
- Truth, conception of; its history, 138;
- new conception, 216 ff.
-
-
- Work; its distinctive character, 122;
- its power to develop, 201 ff.;
- the world of work, 201 ff.
-
- World, conceptions of the; chief types, 353 ff.
-
-
-
-
- Printed by
- BALLANTYNE & COMPANY LTD
- Tavistock Street Covent Garden
- London
-
-
-
-
- BY RUDOLF EUCKEN
-
- THE MEANING AND VALUE OF LIFE
-
- TRANSLATED BY
-
- LUCY JUDGE GIBSON & W. R. BOYCE GIBSON, M.A.
-
- SECOND EDITION
-
- Crown 8vo, By Post
- Cloth Price 3s. 6d. net 3s. 9d.
-
-
-FROM THE TRANSLATORS' PREFACE
-
-Eucken's influence as a thinker has for long been felt far beyond the
-borders of his native land. Translations of his books have appeared in
-many foreign languages, including French, Italian, Swedish, Finnish and
-Russian. In our own country such articles on Eucken's works as have
-appeared quite recently in the _Times_, the _Guardian_, and the
-_Inquirer_ are significantly sympathetic and appreciative. 'It seems
-likely,' writes the reviewer in the _Guardian_, 'that for the next
-decade Eucken will be the leading guide for the pilgrims of thought who
-walk on the Idealist Road.'
-
- _PRESS OPINION_
-
- "There are scores of passages throughout the volume one would like to
- quote--the thinking of a man of clearest vision and loftiest outlook
- on the fabric of life as men are fashioning it to-day. It is a volume
- for Churchmen and politicians of all shades and parties, for the
- student and for the man of business, for the workshop as well--a
- volume for every one who is seriously interested in the great business
- of life."--_Aberdeen Journal._
-
-
- PUBLISHED BY
- ADAM & CHARLES BLACK. 4 SOHO SQUARE. LONDON, W.
-
-
-
-
- RUDOLF EUCKEN'S
-
- PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE
-
- By W. R. BOYCE GIBSON
-
- LECTURER IN PHILOSOPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL
-
- THIRD EDITION
-
- With Frontispiece Portrait of Rudolf Eucken
-
- Crown 8vo, By Post
- Cloth Price 3s. 6d. net 3s. 9d.
-
-
-SUMMARY OF CONTENTS
-
- The New Idealism: Eucken's Philosophy a Rallying-point for Idealistic
- Effort
- His Theory of Knowledge
- His Philosophy of History
- The Meaning of a Historical Fact
- The Break with Aristotelianism and Aquinism
- Eucken's Criticism of the Naturalistic Syntagma
- The Great Alternative: Individuality or Personality
- The Category of Action
- Eucken's View of Revelation
- The Problem of the Union of Human and Divine
- The New Spiritual Immediacy
- The Spiritual Life as Eucken conceives it: its Intrinsically
- Oppositional Character
- Eucken's Philosophy as a Philosophy of Freedom
- The New Idealism as a Religious Idealism
-
- "No reader should fail to find pleasure in a book so full of fresh and
- stimulating thought, expressed with great felicity of language."
-
- _The Scottish Review_
-
- "It is done with just the proper combination of sympathy and
- criticism."--_The British Weekly_
-
-
- PUBLISHED BY
- ADAM & CHARLES BLACK. 4 SOHO SQUARE. LONDON, W.
-
-
-
-
-
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