DUKE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY gfiMj K Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/pluralisticunive02jame 3Sp William S'ameEi THE VARIETIES OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE: A STUDY IN HUMAN NATURE. Gifford Lectures delivered at Edinburgh in 1901- 1902. 8vo. New York, London, Bombay, and Calcutta: Longmans, Green & Co. 1902. PRAGMATISM : A NEW NAME FOR SOME OLD WAYS OF THINK- ING: POPULAR LECTURES ON PHILOSOPHY. 8vo. New York, London. Bombay, and Calcutta : Longmans, Green & Co. 1907. THE MEANING OF TRUTH: A SEQUEL TO “ PRAGMATISM." 8vo. New York, London, Bombay, and Calcutta: Longmans, Green & Co. 1909. -- A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE: HIBBERT LECTURES ON THE PRESENT SITUATION IN PHILOSOPHY. 8vo. New York, Lon- don, Bombay, and Calcutta: Longmans, Green & Co. 1909. SOME PROBLEMS OF PHILOSOPHY: A BEGINNING OF AN IN- TRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY. 8vo. New York, London, Bom- bay, and Calcutta : Longmans, Green & Co. 1911. ESSAYS IN RADICAL EMPIRICISM. 8vo. New York, London, Bom- bay, and Calcutta : Longmans, Green & Co. 1912. “"THE WILL TO BELIEVE, AND OTHER ESSAYS IN POPULAR PHILOSOPHY. i2mo. New York, London, Bombay, and Calcutta: Longmans, Green & Co. 1897. MEMORIES AND STUDIES. 8vo. New York, London, Bombay, and Calcutta: Longmans, Green & Co. 1911. -"THE PRINCIPLES OF PSYCHOLOGY. 2 vols., 8vo. New York : Henry Holt & Co. London: Macmillan & Co. 1890. -- PSYCHOLOGY: BRIEFER COURSE. i2mo. New York : Henry Holt & Co. London : Macmillan & Co. 1892. -■ TALKS TO TEACHERS ON PSYCHOLOGY: AND TO STUDENTS ON SOME OF LIFE'S IDEALS. i2mo. New York: Henry Holt & Co. London, Bombay, and Calcutta : Longmans, Green & Co. 2899. HUMAN IMMORTALITY: TWO SUPPOSED OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE. i6mo. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1898. London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd. / THE LITERARY REMAINS OF HENRY JAMES. Edited, with an Introduction, by William James. With Portrait. Crown 8vo. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1885. r A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College on the Present Situation in Philosophy BY WILLIAM JAMES LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. Fourth Avenue and 30th Street, New York LONDON, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA 1920 COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY WILLIAM JAMES ALL RIGHTS RESERVED FIRST EDITION 1909 REPRINTED AUGUST I909 MARCH 1912, DECEMBER 1916 JUNE I92O CONTENTS LECTURE I The Tapes of Philosophic Thinking 1 Our age is growing philosophical again, 3. Change of tone since 1860, 4. Empiricism and Rationalism defined, 7. The process of Philosophizing: Philosophers choose some part of the world to in- terpret the whole by, 8. They seek to make it seem less strange, 11. Their temperamental differences, 12. Their systems must be rea- soned out, 13. Their tendency to over-technicality, 15. Excess of this in Germany, 17. The type of vision is the important thing in a philosopher, 20. Primitive thought, 21. Spiritualism and Material- ism : Spiritualism shows two types, 23. Theism and Pantheism, 24. Theism makes a duality of Man and God, and leaves Man an outsider, 25. Pantheism identifies Man with God, 29. The con- temporary tendency is towards Pantheism, 30. Legitimacy of our demand to be essential in the Universe, 33. Pluralism versus Monism: The ‘each-form’ and the ‘all-form’ of representing the world, 34. Professor Jacks quoted, 35. Absolute Idealism charac- terized, 36. Peculiarities of the finite consciousness which the Ab- solute cannot share, 38. The finite still remains outside of absolute reality, 40. Recapitulation, 43. Radical Pluralism is to be the thesis of these lectures, 44. Most philosophers contemn it, 45. Foreignness to us of Bradley’s Absolute, 46. Spinoza and ‘ quatenus,’ 47. Difficulty of sympathizing with the Absolute, 48. Idealistic attempt to interpret it, 50. Professor Jones quoted, 52. Absolutist refutations of Plural- ism, 54. Criticism of Lotze’s proof of Monism by the analysis of what interaction involves, 55. Vicious intellectualism defined, 60. Royce’s alternative: either the complete disunion or the absolute union of things, 61. Bradley’s dialectic difficulties with relations, 69. Inefficiency of the Absolute as a rationalizing remedy, 71. Tend- ency of Rationalists to fly to extremes, 74. The question of ‘ exter- nal’ relations, 79. Transition to Hegel, 91. LECTURE II Monistic Idealism 41 in CONTENTS LECTURE III Hegel and his Method 83 Hegel’s influence. 85. The type of his vision is impressionistic, 87. The ‘dialectic’ element in reality, 88. Pluralism involves possible conflicts among things, 90. Hegel explains conflicts by the mutual contradictoriness of concepts, 91. Criticism of his attempt to tran- scend ordinary logic, 92. Examples of the ‘dialectic’ constitution of things, 95. The rationalistic ideal: propositions self-securing by means of double negation, 101. Sublimity of the conception, 104. Criticism of Hegel’s account: it involves vicious intellectualism, 105. Hegel is a seer rather than a reasoner, 107. ‘The Absolute’ and ‘God’ are two different notions, 110. Utility of the Absolute in con- ferring mental peace, 114. But this is counterbalanced by the pe- culiar paradoxes which it introduces into philosophy, 116. Leibnitz and Lotze on the ‘fall’ involved in the creation of the finite, 119. Joachim on the fall of truth into error, 121. The world of the abso- lutist cannot be perfect, 123. Pluralistic conclusions, 125. LECTURE IV Concerning Fechner 131 Superhuman consciousness does not necessarily imply an abso- lute mind, 134. Thinness of contemporary absolutism, 135. The tone of Fechner’s empiricist pantheism contrasted with that of the rationalistic sort, 144. Fechner’s life, 145. His vision, the ‘daylight view,’ 150. His way of reasoning by analogy, 151. The whole uni- verse animated, 152. His monistic formula is unessential, 153. The Earth-Soul, 156. Its differences from our souls, 160. The earth as an angel, 164. The Plant-Soul, 165. The logic used by Fechner, 168. His theory of immortality, 170. The ‘thickness’ of his imagi- nation, 173. Inferiority of the ordinary transcendentalist pantheism, to his vision, 174. LECTURE V The Compounding of Consciousness 179 The assumption that states of mind may compound themselves, 181. This assumption is held in common by naturalistic psycho- IV CONTENTS logy, by transcendental idealism, and by Fechner, 184. Criticism of it by the present writer in a former book, 188. Physical combina- tions, so-called, cannot be invoked as aralogous, 194. Nevertheless, combination must be postulated among the parts of the Universe, 197. The logical objections to admitting it, 198. Rationalistic treat- ment of the question brings us to an impasse, 208. A radical breach with intellectualism is required, 212. Transition to Bergson’s philo- sophy, 214. Abusive use of concepts, 219. Bergson and his Critique of Intellectualism . 223 Professor Bergson’s personality, 225. Achilles and the tortoise, 228. Not a sophism, 229. We make motion unintelligible when we treat it by static concepts, 233. Conceptual treatment is neverthe- less of immense practical use, 235. The traditional rationalism gives an essentially static universe, 237. Intolerableness of the intellect- ualist view, 240. No rationalist account is possible of action, change, or immediate life, 244. The function of concepts is practical rather than theoretical, 247. Bergson remands us to intuition or sensational experience for the understanding of how life makes itself go, 252. What Bergson means by this, 255. Manyness in oneness must be admitted, 256. What really exists is not things made, but things in the making, 263. Bergson’s originality, 264. Impotence of intelleet- ualist logic to define a universe where change is continuous, 267. Livingly, things are their own others, so that there is a sense in which Hegel’s logic is true, 270. Green’s critique of Sensationalism, 278. Relations are as imme- diately felt as terms are, 280. The union of things is given in the immediate flux, not in any conceptual reason that overcomes the flux’s aboriginal incoherence, 282. The minima of experience as vehicles of continuity, 284. Fallacy of the objections to self-com- pounding, 286. The concrete units of experience are ‘their own others,’ 287. Reality is confluent from next to next, 290. Intellect- ualism must be sincerely renounced, 291. The Absolute is only LECTURE VI LECTURE VII The Continuity of Experience 275 v CONTENTS an hypothesis, 292. Fechner’s God is not the Absolute, 293. The Absolute solves no intellectualist difficulty, 296. Does superhuman consciousness probably i xist ? 298. LECTURE VIII Conclusions 301 Specifically religious experiences occur, 303. Their nature, 304. They corroborate the notion of a larger life of which we are a part, 308. This life must be finite if we are to escape the paradoxes of monism, 310. God as a finite being, 311. Empiricism is a better ally than rationalism, of religion, 313. Empirical proofs of larger mind may open the door to superstitions, 315. But this objection should not be deemed fatal, 316. Our beliefs form parts of reality, 317. In pluralistic empiricism our relation to God remains least foreign, 318. The word ‘rationality’ had better be replaced by the word ‘intimacy,’ 319. Monism and pluralism distinguished and defined, 321. Pluralism involves indeterminism, 324. All men use the ‘faith -ladder’ in reaching their decision, 328. Conclusion, 330. NOTES 333 APPENDICES A. The Thing and its Relations 347 B. The Experience of Activity 370 C. On the Notion of Reality as Changing . . . 395 INDEX 401 I THE TYPES OF PHILOSOPHIC THINKING LECTURE I THE TYPES OF PHILOSOPHIC THINKING As these lectures are meant to be public, and so few, I have assumed all very special prob- lems to be excluded, and some topic of general interest required. Fortunately, our age seems to be growing philosophical again — still in the ashes live the wonted fires. Oxford, long the seed-bed, for the english world, of the idealism inspired by Kant and Hegel, has re- cently become the nursery of a very different way of thinking. Even non-philosophers have begun to take an interest in a controversy over what is known as pluralism or humanism. It looks a little as if the ancient english empiri- cism, so long put out of fashion here by nobler sounding germanic formulas, might be re- pluming itself and getting ready for a stronger flight than ever. It looks as if foundations were being sounded and examined afresh. Individuality outruns all classification, yet we insist on classifying every one we meet 3 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE under some general head. As these heads usu- ally suggest prejudicial associations to some hearer or other, the life of philosophy largely consists of resentments at the classing, and complaints of being misunderstood. But there are signs of clearing up, and, on the whole, less acrimony in discussion, for which both Oxford and Harvard are partly to be thanked. As I look back into the sixties, Mill, Bain, and Hamilton were the only official philosophers in Britain. Spencer, Martineau, and Hodgson were just beginning. In France, the pupils of Cousin were delving into history only, and Renouvier alone had an original system. In Germany, the hegelian impetus had spent it- self, and, apart from historical scholarship, nothing but the materialistic controversy re- mained, with such men as Buchner and Ulrici as its champions. Lotze and Fechner were the sole original thinkers, and Fechner was not a professional philosopher at all. The general impression made was of crude issues and oppositions, of small subtlety and of a widely spread ignorance. Amateurishness 4 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING was rampant. Samuel Bailey’s ‘ letters on the philosophy of the human mind,’ published in 1855, are one of the ablest expressions of eng- lish associationism, and a book of real power. Yet hear how he writes of Kant : ‘No one, after reading the extracts, etc., can be surprised to hear of a declaration by men of eminent abili- ties, that, after years of study, they had not succeeded in gathering one clear idea from the speculations of Kant. I should have been al- most surprised if they had. In or about 1818, Lord Grenville, when visiting the Lakes of England, observed to Professor Wilson that, after five years’ study of Kant’s philosophy, he had not gathered from it one clear idea. Wil- berforce, about the same time, made the same confession to another friend of my own. “ I am endeavoring,” exclaims Sir James Mackintosh, in the irritation, evidently, of baffled efforts, “to understand this accursed german philo- sophy.” ’ 1 What Oxford thinker would dare to print such naif and provincial-sounding citations of authority to-day ? 5 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE The torch of learning passes from land to land as the spirit bloweth the flame. The deep- ening of philosophic consciousness came to us english folk from Germany, as it will probably pass back ere long. Ferrier, J. H. Stirling, and, most of all, T. H. Green are to be thanked. If asked to tell in broad strokes what the main doctrinal change has been, I should call it a change from the crudity of the older eng- lish thinking, its ultra-simplicity of mind, both when it was religious and when it was anti- religious, toward a rationalism derived in the first instance from Germany, but relieved from german technicality and shrillness, and content to suggest, and to remain vague, and to be, in the english fashion, devout. By the time T. H. Green began at Oxford, the generation seemed to feel as if it had fed on the chopped straw of psychology and of asso- ^iationism long enough, and as if a little vast- ness, even though it went with vagueness, as of some moist wind from far away, reminding us of our pre-natal sublimity, would be welcome. Green’s great point of attack was the dis- 6 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING connectedness of the reigning english sensa- tionalism. Relating was the great intellectual activity for him, and the key to this relating was believed by him to lodge itself at last in what most of you know as Kant’s unity of apperception, transformed into a living spirit of the world. Hence a monism of a devout kind. In some way we must be fallen angels, one with intel- ligence as such ; and a great disdain for empiri- cism of the sensationalist sort has always char- acterized this school of thought, which, on the whole, has reigned supreme at Oxford and in the Scottish universities until the present day. But now there are signs of its giving way to a wave of revised empiricism. I confess that 1 should be glad to see this latest wave prevail ; so — the sooner I am frank about it the better — I hope to have my voice counted in its favor as one of the results of this lecture-course. What do the terms empiricism and ration- alism mean ? Reduced to their most preg- nant difference, empiricism means the habit of explaining wholes by parts, and rationalism 7 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE means the habit of explaining parts by wholes. Rationalism thus preserves affinities with mo- nism, since wholeness goes with union, while empiricism inclines to pluralistic views. No philosophy can ever be anything but a sum- mary sketch, a picture of the world in abridg- ment, a foreshortened bird’s-eye view of the perspective of events. And the first thing to notice is this, that the only material we have at our disposal for making a picture of the whole world is supplied by the various portions of that world of which we have already had experience. We can invent no new forms of conception, applicable to the whole exclusively, and not suggested originally by the parts. All philosophers, accordingly, have conceived of the whole world after the analogy of some particular feature of it which has particularly captivated their attention. Thus, the theists take their cue from manufacture, the panthe- ists from growth. For one man, the world is like a thought or a grammatical sentence in which a thought is expressed. For such a phi- losopher, the whole must logically be prior to I. THE TYPES OF THINKING the parts ; for letters would never have been invented without syllables to spell, or syllables without words to utter. Another man, struck by the disconnected- ness and mutual accidentality of so many of the world’s details, takes the universe as a whole to have been such a disconnectedness origi- nally, and supposes order to have been superin- duced upon it in the second instance, possibly by attrition and the gradual wearing away by internal friction of portions that originally interfered. Another will conceive the order as only a statistical appearance, and the universe will be for him like a vast grab-bag with black and white balls in it, of which we guess the quan- tities only probably, by the frequency with which we experience their egress. For another, again, there is no really inher- ent order, but it is we who project order into the world by selecting objects and tracing relations so as to gratify our intellectual interests. We carve out order by leaving the disorderly parts out ; and the world is conceived thus after the 9 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE analogy of a forest or a block of marble from which parks or statues may be produced by eliminating irrelevant trees or chips of stone. Some thinkers follow suggestions from hu- man life, and treat the universe as if it were essentially a place in which ideals are realized. Others are more struck by its lower features, and for them, brute necessities express its character better. All follow one analogy or another; and all the analogies are with some one or other of the universe’s subdivisions. Every one is neverthe- less prone to claim that his conclusions are the only logical ones, that they are necessities of universal reason, they being all the while, at bottom, accidents more or less of personal vision which had far better be avowed as such ; for one man’s vision may be much more valu- able than another’s, and our visions are usually not only our most interesting but our most re- spectable contributions to the world in which we play our part. What was reason given to men for, said some eighteenth century writer, except to enable them to find reasons for what 10 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING they want to think and do ? — and I think the history of philosophy largely bears him out. ‘The aim of knowledge,’ says Hegel , 2 ‘is to divest the objective world of its strangeness, and to make us more at home in it.’ Different men find their minds more at home in very different fragments of the world. Let me make a few comments, here, on the curious antipathies which these partialities arouse. They are sovereignly unjust, for all the parties are human beings with the same essen- tial interests, and no one of them is the wdiolly perverse demon which another often imagines him to be. Both are loyal to the world that bears them ; neither wishes to spoil it ; neither wishes to regard it as an insane incoherence; both want to keep it as a universe of some kind ; and their differences are all secondary to this deep agreement. They may be only propensi- ties to emphasize differently. Or one man may care for finality and security more than the other. Or their tastes in language may be dif- ferent. One may like a universe that lends itself to lofty and exalted characterization. To an- il A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE other this may seem sentimental or rhetorical. One may wish for the right to use a clerical vocabulary, another a technical or professorial one. A certain old farmer of my acquaintance in America was called a rascal by one of his neighbors. He immediately smote the man, saying, ‘ I won’t stand none of your diminutive epithets.’ Empiricist minds, putting the parts before the whole, appear to rationalists, who start from the whole, and consequently enjoy magniloquent privileges, to use epithets offen- sively diminutive. But all such differences are minor matters which ought to be subordinated in view of the fact that, whether we be empiri- cists or rationalists, we are, ourselves, parts of the universe and share the same one deep concern in its destinies. We crave alike to feel more truly at home with it, and to contrib- ute our mite to its amelioration. It would be pitiful if small aesthetic discords were to keep honest men asunder. I shall myself have use for the diminutive epithets of empiricism. But if you look behind the words at the spirit, I am sure you will not 12 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING find it matricidal. I am as good a son as any rationalist among you to our common mother. What troubles me more than this misappre- hension is the genuine abstruseness of many of the matters I shall be obliged to talk about, and the difficulty of making them intelligible at one hearing. But there are two pieces, ‘zwei stiicke,’ as Kant would have said, in every philosophy — the final outlook, belief, or atti- tude to which it brings us, and the reasonings by which that attitude is reached and mediated. A philosophy, as James Ferrier used to tell us, must indeed be true, but that is the least of its requirements. One may be true without being a philosopher, true by guessw'ork or by revelation. What distinguishes a philosopher’s truth is that it is reasoned. Argument, not sup- position, must have put it in his possession. Common men find themselves inheriting their beliefs, they know not how. They jump into them with both feet, and stand there. Philoso- phers must do more ; they must first get reason’s license for them ; and to the professional phi- losophic mind the operation of procuring the 13 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE license is usually a thing of much more pith and moment than any particular beliefs to which the license may give the rights of access. Sup- pose, for example, that a philosopher believes in what is called free-will. That a common man alongside of him should also share that belief, possessing it by a sort of inborn intuition, does not endear the man to the philosopher at all — he may even be ashamed to be associated with such a man. What interests the philoso- pher is the particular premises on which the free-will he believes in is established, the sense in which it is taken, the objections it eludes, the difficulties it takes account of, in short the whole form and temper and manner and tech- nical apparatus that goes with the belief in question. A philosopher across the way who should use the same technical apparatus, mak- ing the same distinctions, etc., but drawing op- posite conclusions and denying free-will entirely, would fascinate the first philosopher far more than would the naif co-believer. Their com- mon technical interests would unite them more than their opposite conclusions separate them. 14 I THE TYPES OF THINKING Each would feel an essential consanguinity in the other, would think of him, write at him, care for his good opinion. The simple-minded believer in free-will would be disregarded by either. Neither as ally nor as opponent would his vote be counted. In a measure this is doubtless as it should be, but like all professionalism it can go to abusive extremes. The end is after all more than the way, in most things human, and forms and methods may easily frustrate their own pur- pose. The abuse of technicality is seen in the infrequency with which, in philosophical litera- ture, metaphysical questions are discussed di- rectly and on their own merits. Almost always they are handled as if through a heavy woolen curtain, the veil of previous philosophers’ opinions. Alternatives are wrapped in proper names, as if it were indecent for a truth to go naked. The late Professor John Grote of Cambridge has some good remarks about this. ‘ Thought,’ he says, ‘ is not a professional mat- ter, not something for so-called philosophers only or for professed thinkers. The best phi- 15 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE losopher is the man who can think most simply. . . . I wish that people would consider that thought — and philosophy is no more than good and methodical thought — is a matter inti- mate to them, a portion of their real selves . . . that they would value what they think, and be interested in it. . . . In my own opinion,’ he goes on, ‘ there is something depressing in this weight of learning, with nothing that can come into one’s mind but one is told. Oh, that is the opinion of such and such a person long ago. ... I can conceive of nothing more noxious for students than to get into the habit of saying to themselves about their ordinary philosophic thought, Oh, somebody must have thought it all before .’ 8 Yet this is the habit most en- couraged at our seats of learning. You must tie your opinion to Aristotle’s or Spinoza’s; you must define it by its distance from Kant’s ; you must refute your rival’s view by identifying it with Protagoras’s. Thus does all spontane- ity of thought, all freshness of conception, get destroyed. Everything you touch is shopw T orn. The over-technicality and consequent dreari- 16 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING ness of the younger disciples at our american universities is appalling. It comes from too much following of german models and man- ners. Let me fervently express the hope that in this country you will hark back to the more humane english tradition. American students have to regain direct relations with our subject by painful individual effort in later life. Some of us have done so. Some of the younger ones, I fear, never will, so strong are the professional shop-habits already. In a subject like philosophy it is really fatal to lose connexion with the open air of human nature, and to think in terms of shop-tradi- tion only. In Germany the forms are so pro- fessionalized that anybody who has gained a teaching chair and written a book, however distorted and eccentric, has the legal right to figure forever in the history of the subject like a fly in amber. All later comers have the duty of quoting him and measuring their opinions with his opinion. Such are the rules of the pro- fessorial game — they think and write from each other and for each other and at each other 17 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE exclusively. With this exclusion of the open air all true perspective gets lost, extremes and oddities count as much as sanities, and com- mand the same attention ; and if by chance any one writes popularly and about results only, with his mind directly focussed on the subject, it is reckoned oberflachliches zeug and ganz unwissenschaftlich. Professor Paulsen has recently written some feeling lines about this over-professionalism, from the reign of which in Germany his own writings, which sin by being ‘ literary,’ have suffered loss of credit. Philosophy, he says, has long assumed in Ger- many the character of being an esoteric and occult science. There is a genuine fear of popu- larity. Simplicity of statement is deemed syn- onymous with hollowness and shallowness. He recalls an old professor saying to him once : ‘ Yes, we philosophers, whenever we wish, can go so far that in a couple of sentences we can put ourselves where nobody can follow us.’ The professor said this with conscious pride, but he ought to have been ashamed of it. Great as technique is, results are greater. To teach 18 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING philosophy so that the pupils’ interest in tech- nique exceeds that in results is surely a vicious aberration. It is bad form, not good form, in a discipline of such universal human interest. Moreover, technique for technique, does n’t David Hume’s technique set, after all, the kind of pattern most difficult to follow ? Is n’t it the most admirable ? The english mind, thank heaven, and the french mind, are still kept, by their aversion to crude technique and barba- rism, closer to truth’s natural probabilities. Their literatures show fewer obvious falsities and monstrosities than that of Germany. Think of the german literature of sesthetics, with the preposterousness of such an unaesthetic personage as Immanuel Kant enthroned in its centre ! Think of german books on religions- 'philosophie, with the heart’s battles translated into conceptual jargon and made dialectic. The most persistent setter of questions, feeler of objections, insister on satisfactions, is the re- ligious life. Yet all its troubles can be treated with absurdly little technicality. The wonder is that, with their way of working philosophy, 19 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE individual Germans should preserve any spon- taneity of mind at all. That they still mani- fest freshness and originality in so eminent a degree, proves the indestructible richness of the german cerebral endowment. Let me repeat once more that a man’s vision is the great fact about him. Who cares for Carlyle’s reasons, or Schopenhauer’s, or Spencer’s ? A philosophy is the expression of a man’s intimate character, and all definitions of the universe are but the deliberately adopted reactions of human characters upon it. In the recent book from which I quoted the words of Professor Paulsen, a book of successive chap- ters by various living german philosophers , 3 we pass from one idiosyncratic personal at- mosphere into another almost as if we were turning over a photograph album. If we take the whole history of philosophy, the systems reduce themselves to a few main types which, under all the technical verbiage in which the ingenious intellect of man envelops them, are just so many visions, modes of feeling the whole push, and seeing the whole drift of 20 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING life, forced on one by one’s total character and experience, and on the whole 'preferred — there is no other truthful word — as one’s best work- ing attitude. Cynical characters take one gen- eral attitude, sympathetic characters another. But no general attitude is possible towards the world as a whole, until the intellect has de- veloped considerable generalizing power and learned to take pleasure in synthetic formulas. The thought of very primitive men has hardly any tincture of philosophy. Nature can have little unity for savages. It is a Walpurgis-nacht procession, a checkered play of light and shadow, a medley of impish and elfish friendly and inimical powers. ‘ Close to nature’ though they live, they are anything but Words worth- ians. If a bit of cosmic emotion ever thrills them, it is likely to be at midnight, when the camp smoke rises straight to the wicked full moon in the zenith, and the forest is all whis- pering with witchery and danger. The eeriness of the world, the mischief and the manyness, the littleness of the forces, the magical sur- prises, the unaccountability of every agent, 21 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE these surely are the characters most impressive at that stage of culture, these communicate the thrills of curiosity and the earliest intellectual stirrings. Tempests and conflagrations, pesti- lences and earthquakes, reveal supramundane powers, and instigate religious terror rather than philosophy. Nature, more demonic than divine, is above all things multifarious. So many creatures that feed or threaten, that help or crush, so many beings to hate or love, to understand or start at — which is on top and which subordinate ? Who can tell ? They are co-ordinate, rather, and to adapt ourselves to them singly, to ‘square’ the dangerous powers and keep the others friendly, regardless of con- sistency or unity, is the chief problem. The symbol of nature at this stage, as Paulsen well says, is the sphinx, under wdiose nourishing breasts the tearing claws are visible. But in due course of time the intellect awoke, with its passion for generalizing, simplifying, and subordinating, and then began those diver- gences of conception which all later experience seems rather to have deepened than to have 22 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING effaced, because objective nature has con- tributed to both sides impartially, and has let the thinkers emphasize different parts of her, and pile up opposite imaginary supple- ments. Perhaps the most interesting opposition is that which results from the clash between what I lately called the sympathetic and the cynical temper. Materialistic and spiritualistic phi- losophies are the rival types that result: the former defining the world so as to leave man’s soul upon it as a sort of outside passenger or alien, while the latter insists that the intimate and human must surround and underlie the brutal. This latter is the spiritual way of thinking. Now there are two very distinct types or stages in spiritualistic philosophy, and my next purpose in this lecture is to make their contrast evident. Both types attain the sought-for in- timacy of view, but the one attains it some- what less successfully than the other. The generic term spiritualism, which I began by using merely as the opposite of materialism, 23 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE thus subdivides into two species, the more inti- mate one of which is monistic and the less in- timate dualistic. The dualistic species is the theism that reached its elaboration in the scho- lastic philosophy, while the monistic species is the 'pantheism spoken of sometimes simply as idealism, and sometimes as ‘post-kantian’ or ‘absolute’ idealism. Dualistic theism is pro- fessed as firmly as ever at all catholic seats of learning, whereas it has of late years tended to disappear at our british and american univer- sities, and to be replaced by a monistic pan- theism more or less open or disguised. I have an impression that ever since T. H. Green’s time absolute idealism has been decidedly in the ascendent at Oxford. It is in the ascendent at my own university of Harvard. Absolute idealism attains, I said, to the more intimate point of view ; but the statement needs some explanation. So far as theism represents the world as God’s world, and God as what Matthew Arnold called a magnified non-nat- ural man, it would seem as if the inner quality of the world remained human, and as if our 24 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING relations with it might be intimate enough — for what is best in ourselves appears then also out- side of ourselves, and we and the universe are of the same spiritual species. So far, so good, then; and one might consequently ask, What more of intimacy do you require ? To which the answer is that to be like a thing is not as intimate a relation as to be substantially fused into it, to form one continuous soul and body with it ; and that pantheistic idealism, making us entitatively one with God, attains this higher reach of intimacy. The theistic conception, picturing God and his creation as entities distinct from each other, still leaves the human subject outside of the deepest reality in the universe. God is from eternity complete, it says, and sufficient unto himself ; he throws off the world by a free act and as an extraneous substance, and he throws off man as a third substance, extrane- ous to both the world and himself. Between them, God says ‘ one/ the world says ‘ tw r o,’ and man says ‘ three,’ — that is the orthodox theistic view. And orthodox theism has been 25 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE so jealous of God’s glory that it has taken pains to exaggerate everything in the notion of him that could make for isolation and separateness. Page upon page in scholastic books go to prove that God is in no sense implicated by his crea- tive act, or involved in his creation. That his relation to the creatures he has made should make any difference to him, carry any conse- quence, or qualify his being, is repudiated as a pantheistic slur upon his self-sufficingness. I said a moment ago that theism treats us and God as of the same species, but from the ortho- dox point of view that was a slip of language. God and his creatures are toto genere distinct in the scholastic theology, they have absolutely nothing in common; nay, it degrades God to attribute to him any generic nature whatever ; he can be classed with nothing. There is a sense, then, in which philosophic theism makes us outsiders and keeps us foreigners in relation to God, in which, at any rate, his connexion with us appears as unilateral and not recip- rocal. His action can affect us, but he can never be affected by our reaction. Our relation, in I. THE TYPES OF THINKING short, is not a strictly social relation. Of course in common men’s religion the relation is be- lieved to be social, but that is only one of the many differences between religion and theology. This essential dualism of the theistic view has all sorts of collateral consequences. Man being an outsider and a mere subject to God, not his intimate partner, a character of exter- nality invades the field. God is not heart of our heart and reason of our reason, but our magistrate, rather; and mechanically to obey his commands, however strange they may be, remains our only moral duty. Conceptions of criminal law have in fact played a great part in defining our relations with him. Our relations with speculative truth show the same exter- nality. One of our duties is to know truth, and rationalist thinkers have always assumed it to be our sovereign duty. But in scholastic theism we find truth already instituted and established without our help, complete apart from our knowing ; and the most we can do is to acknowledge it passively and adhere to it, altho such adhesion as ours can make no jot 27 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE of difference to what is adhered to. The situ- ation here again is radically dualistic. It is not as if the world came to know itself, or God came to know himself, partly through us, as pantheistic idealists have maintained, but truth exists per se and absolutely, by God’s grace and decree, no matter who of us knows it or is ignorant, and it would continue to exist unaltered, even though we finite knowers were all annihilated. It has to be confessed that this dualism and lack of intimacy has always operated as a drag and handicap on Christian thought. Orthodox theology has had to wage a steady fight within the schools against the various forms of pan- theistic heresy which the mystical experiences of religious persons, on the one hand, and the formal or aesthetic superiorities of monism to dualism, on the other, kept producing. God as intimate soul and reason of the universe has always seemed to some people a more worthy conception than God as external creator. So conceived, he appeared to unify the world more perfectly, he made it less finite and mechani- 28 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING cal, and in comparison with such a God an external creator seemed more like the product of a childish fancy. I have been told by Hin- doos that the great obstacle to the spread of Christianity in their country is the puerility of our dogma of creation. It has not sweep and infinity enough to meet the requirements of even the illiterate natives of India. Assuredly most members of this audience are ready to side with Hinduism in this matter. Those of us who are sexagenarians have wit- nessed in our own persons one of those gradual mutations of intellectual climate, due to in- numerable influences, that make the thought of a past generation seem as foreign to its suc- cessor as if it were the expression of a different race of men. The theological machinery that spoke so livingly to our ancestors, with its finite age of the world, its creation out of nothing, its juridical morality and eschatology, its relish for rewards and punishments, its treatment of God as an external contriver, an ‘ intelligent and moral governor,’ sounds as odd to most of us as if it were some outlandish savage religion. 29 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE The vaster vistas which scientific evolutionism has opened, and the rising tide of social demo- cratic ideals, have changed the type of our imagination, and the older monarchical theism is obsolete or obsolescent. The place of the divine in the world must be more organic and intimate. An external creator and his institu- tions may still be verbally confessed at Church in formulas that linger by their mere inertia, but the life is out of them, we avoid dwelling on them, the sincere heart of us is elsewhere. I shall leave cynical materialism entirely out of our discussion as not calling for treat- ment before this present audience, and I shall ignore old-fashioned dualistic theism for the same reason. Our contemporary mind having once for all grasped the possibility of a more intimate Weltanschauung, the only opinions quite w y orthy of arresting our attention will fall within the general scope of what may roughly be called the pantheistic field of vision, the vision of God as the indwelling divine rather than the external creator, and of human life as part and parcel of that deep reality. 30 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING As we have found that spiritualism in gen- eral breaks into a more intimate and a less intimate species, so the more intimate species itself breaks into two subspecies, of which the one is more monistic, the other more plural- istic in form. I say in form, for our vocabulary gets unmanageable if we don’t distinguish be- tween form and substance here. The inner life of things must be substantially akin anyhow to the tenderer parts of man’s nature in any spiritualistic philosophy. The wmrd ‘intimacy’ probably covers the essential difference. Ma- terialism holds the foreign in things to be more primary and lasting, it sends us to a lonely corner with our intimacy. The brutal aspects overlap and outwear; refinement has the feebler and more ephemeral hold on reality. From a pragmatic point of view the differ- ence between living against a background of foreignness and one of intimacy means the dif- ference between a general habit of wariness and one of trust. One might call it a social dif- ference, for after all, the common socius of us all is the great universe whose children we are. 31 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE If materialistic, we must be suspicious of this socius, cautious, tense, on guard. If spiritual- istic, we may give way, embrace, and keep no ultimate fear. The contrast is rough enough, and can be cut across by all sorts of other divisions, drawn from other points of view than that of foreign- ness and intimacy. We have so many different businesses with nature that no one of them yields us an all-embracing clasp. The phi- losophic attempt to define nature so that no one’s business is left out, so that no one lies out- side the door saying ‘Where do I come in?’ is sure in advance to fail. The most a philoso- phy can hope for is not to lock out any interest forever. No matter what doors it closes, it must leave other doors open for the interests which it neglects. I have begun by shutting ourselves up to intimacy and foreignness because that makes so generally interesting a contrast, and because it will conveniently introduce a farther contrast to which I wish this hour to lead. The majority of men are sympathetic. Com- 32 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING paratively few are cynics because they like cynicism, and most of our existing materialists are such because they think the evidence of facts impels them, or because they find the idealists they are in contact with too private and tender-minded; so, rather than join their company, they fly to the opposite extreme. I therefore propose to you to disregard material- ists altogether for the present, and to consider the sympathetic party alone. It is normal, I say, to be sympathetic in the sense in which I use the term. Not to demand intimate relations with the universe, and not to wish them satisfactory, should be accounted signs of something wrong. Accordingly when minds of this type reach the philosophic level, and seek some unification of their vision, they find themselves compelled to correct that abo- riginal appearance of things by which savages are not troubled. That sphinx-like presence, with its breasts and claws, that first bald multi- fariousness, is too discrepant an object for phi- losophic contemplation. The intimacy and the foreignness cannot be written down as simply 33 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE coexisting. An order must be made; and in that order the higher side of things must domi- nate. The philosophy of the absolute agrees with the pluralistic philosophy which I am going to contrast with it in these lectures, in that both identify human substance with the divine substance. But whereas absolutism thinks that the said substance becomes fully divine only in the form of totality, and is not its real self in any form but the all- form, the pluralistic view which I prefer to adopt is will- ing to believe that there may ultimately never be an all-form at all, that the substance of reality may never get totally collected, that some of it may remain outside of the largest combination of it ever made, and that a dis- tributive form of reality, the each- form, is logically as acceptable and empirically as probable as the all-form commonly acquiesced in as so obviously the self-evident thing. The contrast between these two forms of a reality which we will agree to suppose substantially spiritual is practically the topic of this course of lectures. You see now what I mean by pan- 34 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING theism’s two subspecies. If we give to the monistic subspecies the name of philosophy of the absolute, we may give that of radical empiricism to its pluralistic rival, and it may be well to distinguish them occasionally later by these names. As a convenient way of entering into the study of their differences, I may refer to a recent article by Professor Jacks of Manches- ter College. Professor Jacks, in some brilliant pages in the ‘Hibbert Journal’ for last Octo- ber, studies the relation between the universe and the philosopher who describes and defines it for us. You may assume two cases, he says. Either what the philosopher tells us is extra- neous to the universe he is accounting for, an indifferent parasitic outgrowth, so to speak ; or the fact of his philosophizing is itself one of the things taken account of in the philosophy, and self-included in the description. In the former case the philosopher means by the universe everything except what his own presence brings ; in the latter case his philosophy is itself an intimate part of the universe, and may be a 35 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE part momentous enough to give a different turn to what the other parts signify. It may be a supreme reaction of the universe upon itself by which it rises to self-comprehension. It may handle itself differently in consequence of this event. Now both empiricism and absolutism bring the philosopher inside and make man intimate, but the one being pluralistic and the other monistic, they do so in differing ways that need much explanation. Let me then contrast the one with the other way of representing the status of the human thinker. For monism the world is no collection, but one great all-inclusive fact outside of which is nothing — nothing is its only alternative. When the monism is idealistic, this all-enveloping fact is represented as an absolute mind that makes the partial facts by thinking them, just as we make objects in a dream by dreaming them, or personages in a story by imagining them. To be, on this scheme, is, on the part of a finite thing, to be an object for the absolute ; and on the part of the absolute it is to be the thinker of 36 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING that assemblage of objects. If we use the word « content ’ here, we see that the absolute and the world have an identical content. The absolute is nothing but the knowledge of those objects ; the objects are nothing but what the absolute knows. The world and the all-thinker thus compenetrate and soak each other up without residuum. They are but two names for the same identical material, considered now from the subjective, and now from the objective point of view — gedanke and gedachtes, as we would say if we were Germans. We philosophers nat- urally form part of the material, on the monis- tic scheme. The absolute makes us by thinking us, and if we ourselves are enlightened enough to be believers in the absolute, one may then say that our philosophizing is one of the ways :n which the absolute is conscious of itself. This is + he full pantheistic scheme, the iden- titatsphilosophie, the immanence of God in his creation, a conception sublime from its tre- mendous unity. And yet that unity is incom- plete, as closer examination will show. The absolute and the world are one fact, I 37 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE said, when materially considered. Our philoso- phy, for example, is not numerically distinct from the absolute’s own knowledge of itself, not a duplicate and copy of it, it is part of that very knowledge, is numerically identical with as much of it as our thought covers. The absolute just is our philosophy, along with everything else that is known, in an act of knowing which (to use the words of my gifted absolutist colleague Royce) forms in its whole- ness one luminously transparent conscious moment. But one as we are in this material sense with the absolute substance, that being only the whole of us, and we only the parts of it, yet in a formal sense something like a pluralism breaks out. When we speak of the absolute we take the one universal known material collectively or integrally; when we speak of its objects, of our finite selves, etc., we take that same iden- tical material distributively and separately. But what is the use of a thing’s being only once if it caL be taken twice over, and if being taken in different ways makes different things true 38 I. THE TYPES OF THINKING of it ? As the absolute takes me, for example, I appear with everything else in its field of perfect knowledge. As I take myself, I appear without most other things in my field of relative ignorance. And practical differences result from its knowledge and my ignorance. Ignorance breeds mistake, curiosity, misfor- tune, pain, for me ; I suffer those consequences. The absolute knows of those things, of course, for it know T s me and my suffering, but it does n’t itself suffer. It can’t be ignorant, for simultaneous with its knowledge of each ques- tion goes its knowledge of each answer. It can’t be patient, for it has to wait for nothing, having everything at once in its possession. It can’t be surprised; it can’t be guilty. No at- tribute connected with succession can be ap- plied to it, for it is all at once and wholly what it is, ‘ with the unity of a single instant,’ and succession is not of it but in it, for we are continually told that it is ‘ timeless.’ Things true of the world in its finite aspects, then, are not true of it in its infinite capacity. Qua finite and plural its accounts of itself to 39 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE itself are different from what its account to itself qua infinite and one must be. With this radical discrepancy between the absolute and the relative points of view, it seems to me that almost as great a bar to intimacy between the divine and the human breaks out in pantheism as that which we found in mo- narchical theism, and hoped that pantheism might not show. We humans are incurably rooted in the temporal point of view. The eter- nal’s ways are utterly unlike our ways. ‘ Let us imitate the All,’ said the original prospectus of that admirable Chicago quarterly called the ‘ Monist.’ As if we could, either in thought or conduct! We are invincibly parts, let us talk as we will, and must always apprehend the absolute as if it were a foreign being. If what I mean by this is not wholly clear to you at this point, it ought to grow clearer as my lectures proceed. II MONISTIC IDEALISM LECTURE II MONISTIC IDEALISM XiET me recall to you the programme which I indicated to you at our last meeting. After agreeing not to consider materialism in any shape, but to place ourselves straightway upon a more spiritualistic platform, I pointed out three kinds of spiritual philosophy between which we are asked to choose. The first way was that of the older dualistic theism, with ourselves represented as a secondary order of substances created by God. We found that this allowed of a degree of intimacy with the creative principle inferior to that implied in the pantheistic belief that we are substantially one with it, and that the divine is therefore the most intimate of all our possessions, heart of our heart, in fact. But we saw that this pantheistic belief could be held in two forms, a monistic form which I called philosophy of the absolute, and a pluralistic form which I called radical empiricism, the former conceiv- ing that the divine exists authentically only 43 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE when the world is experienced all at once in its absolute totality, whereas radical empiricism allows that the absolute sum-total of things may never be actually experienced or realized in that shape at all, and that a disseminated, distributed, or incompletely unified appear- ance is the only form that reality may yet have achieved. I may contrast the monistic and pluralistic forms in question as the ‘all-form’ and the ‘each-form.’ At the end of the last hour I ani- madverted on the fact that the all-form is so radically different from the each-form, which is our human form of experiencing the world, that the philosophy of the absolute, so far as insight and understanding go, leaves us almost as much outside of the divine being as dual- istic theism does. I believe that radical em- piricism, on the contrary, holding to the each- form, and making of God only one of the eaches, affords the higher degree of intimacy. The general thesis of these lectures I said would be a defence of the pluralistic against the mo- nistic view. Think of the universe as existing 44 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM solely in the each-form, and you will have on the whole a more reasonable and satisfactory idea of it than if you insist on the all-form being necessary. The rest of my lectures will do little more than make this thesis more concrete, and I hope more persuasive. It is curious how little countenance radical pluralism has ever had from philosophers. Whether materialistically or spiritualistically minded, philosophers have always aimed at cleaning up the litter with which the world apparently is filled. They have substituted economical and orderly conceptions for the first sensible tangle; and whether these were morally elevated or only intellectually neat, they were at any rate always aesthetically pure and definite, and aimed at ascribing to the world something clean and intellectual in the way of inner structure. As compared with all these rationalizing pictures, the pluralistic em- piricism which I profess offers but a sorry appearance. It is a turbid, muddled, gothic sort of an affair, without a sweeping outline and with little pictorial nobility. Those of you 45 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE who are accustomed to the classical construc- tions of reality may be excused if your first re- action upon it be absolute contempt — a shrug of the shoulders as if such ideas were unwor- thy of explicit refutation. But one must have lived some time with a system to appreciate its merits. Perhaps a little more familiarity may mitigate your first surprise at such a pro- gramme as I offer. First, one word more than what I said last time about the relative foreignness of the divine principle in the philosophy of the absolute. Those of you who have read the last two chap- ters of Mr. Bradley’s wonderful book, ‘Ap- pearance and reality,’ will remember what an elaborately foreign aspect his absolute is finally made to assume. It is neither intelli- gence nor will, neither a self nor a collection of selves, neither truthful, good, nor beautiful, as we understand these terms. It is, in short, a metaphysical monster, all that we are permit- ted to say of it being that whatever it is, it is at any rate worth more (worth more to itself, that is) than if any eulogistic adjectives of ours 46 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM applied to it. It is us, and all other appear- ances, but none of us as such, for in it we are all ‘transmuted,’ and its own as-suchness is of another denomination altogether. Spinoza was the first great absolutist, and the impossibility of being intimate with his God is universally recognized. Quatenus infi- nitus est he is other than what he is quatenus humanam mentem constituit. Spinoza’s philo- sophy has been rightly said to be worked by the word quatenus. Conjunctions, prepositions, and adverbs play indeed the vital part in all philosophies ; and in contemporary idealism the words ‘as’ and ‘qua’ bear the burden of reconciling metaphysical unity with phenome- nal diversity. Qua absolute the world is one and perfect, qua relative it is many and faulty, yet it is identically the self-same world — in- stead of talking of it as many facts, we call it one fact in many aspects. As absolute, then, or sub specie eternitatis, or quatenus infinitus est, the w T orld repels our sympathy because it has no history. As such, the absolute neither acts nor suffers, nor loves 47 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE nor hates ; it has no needs, desires, or aspira^ tions, no failures or successes, friends or ene- mies, victories or defeats. All such things per- tain to the world qua relative, in which our finite experiences lie, and whose vicissitudes alone have power to arouse our interest. What boots it to tell me that the absolute way is the true way, and to exhort me, as Emerson says, to lift mine eye up to its style, and manners of the sky, if the feat is impossible by definition ? I am finite once for all, and all the categories of my sympathy are knit up with the finite world as such, and with things that have a history. ‘Aus dieser erde quellen meine freuden, und ilire sonne scheinet meinen leiden.’ I have neither eyes nor ears nor heart nor mind for anything of an opposite description, and the stagnant felicity of the absolute’s own perfec- tion moves me as little as I move it. If we were readers only of the cosmic novel, things would be different: we should then share the author’s point of view and recognize villains to be as essential as heroes in the plot. But we are not the readers but the very personages 48 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM of the world-drama. In your own eyes each of you here is its hero, and the villains are your respective friends or enemies. The tale which the absolute reader finds so perfect, we spoil for one another through our several vital identifications with the destinies of the par- ticular personages involved. The doctrine on which the absolutists lay most stress is the absolute’s ‘timeless’ char- acter. For pluralists, on the other hand, time remains as real as anything, and nothing in the universe is great or static or eternal enough not to have some history. But the world that each of us feels most intimately at home with is that of beings with histories that play into our history, whom we can help in their vicissi- tudes even as they help us in ours. This satis- faction the absolute denies us ; we can neither help nor hinder it, for it stands outside of history. It surely is a merit in a philosophy to make the very life we lead seem real and earnest. Pluralism, in exorcising the absolute, exorcises the great de-realizer of the only life we are at home in, and thus redeems the nature 49 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE of reality from essential foreignness. Every end, reason, motive, object of desire or aver- sion, ground of sorrow or joy that we feel is in the world of finite multifariousness, for only in that world does anything really hap- pen, only there do events come to pass. In one sense this is a far-fetched and rather childish objection, for so much of the history of the finite is as formidably foreign to us as the static absolute can possibly be — in fact that entity derives its own foreignness largely from the bad character of the finite which it simultaneously is — that this sentimental rea- son for preferring the pluralistic view seems small . 1 I shall return to the subject in my final lecture, and meanwhile, with your permission, I will say no more about this objection. The more so as the necessary foreignness of the absolute is cancelled emotionally by its attri- bute of totality, which is universally considered to carry the further attribute of 'perfection in its train. ‘Philosophy,’ says a recent ameri- can philosopher, ‘ is humanity’s hold on total- ity,’ and there is no doubt that most of us find 50 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM that the bare notion of an absolute all-one is inspiring. ‘I yielded myself to the perfect whole,’ writes Emerson ; and where can you find a more mind-dilating object ? A certain loyalty is called forth by the idea ; even if not proved actual, it must be believed in somehow. Only an enemy of philosophy can speak lightly of it. Rationalism starts from the idea of such a whole and builds downward. Movement and change are absorbed into its immutability as forms of mere appearance. When you accept this beatific vision of what is, in contrast with what goes on, you feel as if you had fulfilled an intellectual duty. ‘Reality is not in its truest nature a process,’ Mr. McTaggart tells us, ‘but a stable and timeless state .’ 2 ‘The true knowledge of God begins,’ Hegel writes, ‘when we know that things as they immedi- ately are have no truth.’ 3 ‘ The consumma- tion of the infinite aim,’ he says elsew T here, ‘ consists merely in removing the illusion which makes it seem yet unaccomplished. Good and absolute goodness is eternally accomplishing itself in the world : and the result is that if needs 51 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE not wait upon us, but is already . . . accom- plished. It is an illusion under which we live. . . . In the course of its process the Idea makes itself that illusion, by setting an antithe- sis to confront it, and its action consists in get- ting rid of the illusion which it has created .’ 4 But abstract emotional appeals of any kind sound amateurish in the business that concerns us. Impressionistic philosophizing, like im- pressionistic watchmaking or land-surveying, is intolerable to experts. Serious discussion of the alternative before us forces me, therefore, to become more technical. The great claim of the philosophy of the absolute is that the abso- lute is no hypothesis, but a presupposition implicated in all thinking, and needing only a little effort of analysis to be seen as a logical necessity. I will therefore take it in this more rigorous character and see whether its claim is in effect so coercive. It has seemed coercive to an enormous num- ber of contemporaneous thinkers. Professor Henry Jones thus describes the range and in- fluence of it upon the social and political life of 52 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM the present time : 5 ‘ For many years adherents of this way of thought have deeply interested the british public by their writings. Almost more important than their writings is the fact that they have occupied philosophical chairs in almost every university in the kingdom. Even the professional critics of idealism are for the most part idealists — after a fashion. And when they are not, they are as a rule more occupied with the refutation of idealism than with the construction of a better theory. It fol- lows from their position of academic authority, were it from nothing else, that idealism exer- cises an influence not easily measured upon the youth of the nation — upon those, that is, who from the educational opportunities they enjoy may naturally be expected to become the lead- ers of the nation’s thought and practice. . . . Difficult as it is to measure the forces ... it is hardly to be denied that the power exercised by Bentham and the utilitarian school has, for better or for worse, passed into the hands of the idealists. . . . “ The Rhine has flowed into the Thames ” is the warning note rung out by 53 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE Mr. Hobhouse. Carlyle introduced it, bringing it as far as Chelsea. Then Jowett and Thomas Hill Green, and William Wallace and Lewis Nettleship, and Arnold Toynbee and David Ritchie — to mention only those teachers whose voices now are silent — guided the waters into those upper reaches known locally as the Isis. John and Edward Caird brought them up the Clyde, Hutchison Stirling up the Firth of Forth. They have passed up the Mersey and up the Severn and Dee and Don. They pollute the bay of St. Andrews and swell the waters of the Cam, and have somehow crept overland into Birmingham. The stream of german idealism has been diffused over the academical world of Great Britain. The disaster is universal.’ Evidently if weight of authority were all, the truth of absolutism would be thus decided. But let us first pass in review the general style of argumentation of that philosophy. As I read it, its favorite way of meeting plu- ralism and empiricism is by a reductio ad ab - surdum framed somewhat as follows : You con- tend, it says to the pluralist, that things, though 54 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM in some respects connected, are in other respects independent, so that they are not members of one all-inclusive individual fact. Well, your position is absurd on either point. For admit in fact the slightest modicum of independence, and you find (if you will only think accurately) that you have to admit more and more of it, until at last nothing but an absolute chaos, or the proved impossibility of any connexion whatever between the parts of the universe, remains upon your hands. Admit, on the other hand, the most incipient minimum of relation between any two things, and again you can’t stop until you see that the absolute unity of all things is implied. If we take the latter reductio ad absurdum first, we find a good example of it in Lotze’s well-known proof of monism from the fact of interaction between finite things. Suppose, Lotze says in effect, and for simplicity’s sake I have to paraphrase him, for his own words are too long to quote — many distinct beings a, b, c, etc., to exist independently of each other : can a in that case ever act on b ? 55 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE What is it to act ? Is it not to exert an influ- ence ? Does the influence detach itself from a and find b? If so, it is a third fact, and the prob- lem is not how a acts, but how its ‘influence’ acts on b. By another influence perhaps ? And how in the end does the chain of influences find b rather than c unless b is somehow prefigured in them already ? And when they have found b, how do they make b respond, if b has nothing in common with them ? Why don’t they go right through b ? The change in & is a response , due to b’s capacity for taking account of a’s influence, and that again seems to prove that b’s nature is somehow fitted to a’s nature in advance. A and b, in short, are not really as distinct as we at first supposed them, not sep- arated by a void. Were this so they would be mutually impenetrable, or at least mutually irrelevant. They would form two universes each living by itself, making no difference to each other, taking no account of each other, much as the universe of your day dreams takes no account of mine. They must therefore belong together beforehand, be co-implicated 56 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM already, their natures must have an inborn mutual reference each to each. Lotze’s own solution runs as follows : The multiple independent things supposed cannot be real in that shape, but all of them, if recip- rocal action is to be possible between them, must be regarded as parts of a single real being, M. The pluralism with which our view began has to give place to a monism; and the ‘transeunt’ interaction, being unintelligi- ble as such, is to be understood as an imma- nent operation . 6 The words ‘ immanent operation ’ seem here to mean that the single real being M, of which a and b are members, is the only thing that changes, and that w T hen it changes, it changes inwardly and all over at once. When part a in it changes, consequently, part b must also change, but without the whole M changing this would not occur. A pretty argument, but a purely verbal one, as I apprehend it. Call your a and b distinct, they can’t interact; call them one, they can. For taken abstractly and without qualification 57 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE the words ‘ distinct ’ and ‘ independent’ suggest only disconnection. If this be the only pro- perty of your a and b (and it is the only property your words imply), then of course, since you can’t deduce their mutual influence from it, you can find no ground of its occurring between them. Your bare word ‘separate,’ contradict- ing your bare word ‘ joined,’ seems to exclude connexion. Lotze’s remedy for the impossibility thus verbally found is to change the first word. If, instead of calling a and b independent, we now call them ‘interdependent,’ ‘united,’ or ‘one,’ he says, these words do not contradict any sort of mutual influence that may be proposed. If a and b are ‘ one,’ and the one changes, a and b of course must co-ordinately change. What under the old name they could n’t do, they now have license to do under the new name. But I ask you whether giving the name of ‘one’ to the former ‘many’ makes us really un- derstand the modus operandi of interaction any better. We have now given verbal permission to the many to change all together, if they can ; 58 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM we have removed a verbal impossibility and substituted a verbal possibility, but the new name, with the possibility it suggests, tells us nothing of the actual process by which real things that are one can and do change at all. In point of fact abstract oneness as such does n’t change, neither has it parts — any more than abstract independence as such interacts. But then neither abstract oneness nor abstract in- dependence exists; only concrete real things exist, which add to these properties the other properties which they possess, to make up what we call their total nature. To construe any one of their abstract names as making their total nature impossible is a misuse of the func- tion of naming. The real way of rescue from the abstract consequences of one name is not to fly to an opposite name, equally abstract, but rather to correct the first name by qualifying adjectives that restore some concreteness to the case. Don’t take your ‘ independence ’ sim- pliciter, as Lotze does, take it secundum quid. Only when we know what the process of in- teraction literally and concretely consists in can 59 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE we tell whether beings independent in definite respects, distinct, for example, in origin, sepa- rate in place, different in kind, etc., can or cannot interact. The treating of a name as excluding from the fact named what the name’s definition fails positively to include, is what I call 1 vicious intellectualism .’ Later I shall have more to say about this intellectualism, but that Lotze’s argument is tainted by it I hardly think we can deny. As well might you contend (to use an instance from Sigwart) that a person whom you have once called an ‘equestrian’ is thereby forever made unable to walk on his own feet. I almost feel as if I should apologize for criticising such subtle arguments in rapid lec- tures of this kind. The criticisms have to be as abstract as the arguments, and in exposing their unreality, take on such an unreal sound themselves that a hearer not nursed in the intellectualist atmosphere knows not which of them to accuse. But le vin est verse, il faut le hoire, and I must cite a couple more instances before I stop. 60 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM If we are empiricists and go from parts to wholes, we believe that beings may first exist and feed so to speak on their own existence, and then secondarily become known to one another. But philosophers of the absolute tell us that such independence of being from being known would, if once admitted, disintegrate the universe beyond all hope of mending. The argument is one of Professor Royce’s proofs that the only alternative we have is to choose the complete disunion of all things or their complete union in the absolute One. Take, for instance, the proverb ‘ a cat may look at a king’ and adopt the realistic view that the king ’s being is independent of the cat’s witnessing. This assumption, which amounts to saying that it need make no essential differ- ence to the royal object whether the feline sub- ject cognizes him or not, that the cat may look away from him or may even be annihilated, and the king remain unchanged, — this assumption, I say, is considered by my ingenious colleague to lead to the absurd practical consequence that the two beings can never later acquire any 61 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE possible linkages or connexions, but must re- main eternally as if in different worlds. For suppose any connexion whatever to ensue, this connexion would simply be a third being addi- tional to the cat and the king, which would itself have to be linked to both by additional links before it could connect them, and so on ad infinitum , the argument, you see, being the same as Lotze’s about how a’s influence does its influencing when it influences b. In Royce’s own words, if the king can be without the cat knowing him, then king and cat ‘ can have no common features, no ties, no true relations ; they are separated, each from the other, by absolutely impassable chasms. They can never come to get either ties or com- munity of nature; they are not in the same space, nor in the same time, nor in the same natural or spiritual order.’ 7 They form in short two unrelated universes, — which is the reductio ad absurdum required. To escape this preposterous state of things we must accordingly revoke the original hypothe- sis. The kimj and the cat are not indifferent 62 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM to each other in the way supposed. But if not in that way, then in no way, for connexion in that way carries connexion in other ways; so that, pursuing the reverse line of reasoning, we end with the absolute itself as the smallest fact that can exist. Cat and king are co-involved, they are a single fact in two names, they can never have been absent from each other, and they are both equally co-implicated with all the other facts of which the universe consists. Professor Royce’s proof that whoso admits the cat’s witnessing the king at all must there- upon admit the integral absolute, may be briefly put as follows: — First, to know the king, the cat must intend that king, must somehow pass over and lay hold of him individually and specifically. The cat’s idea, in short, must transcend the cat’s own separate mind and somehow include the king, for were the king utterly outside and in- dependent of the cat, the cat’s pure other, the beast’s mind could touch the king in no wise. This makes the cat much less distinct from the king than we had at first naively supposed. 03 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE There must be some prior continuity between them, which continuity Royce interprets ideal- istically as meaning a higher mind that owns them both as objects, and owning them can also own any relation, such as the supposed wit- nessing, that may obtain between them. Taken purely pluralistically, neither of them can own any part of a between , because, so taken, each is supposed shut up to itself : the fact of a between thus commits us to a higher knower. But the higher knower that knows the two beings we start with proves to be the same knower that knows everything else. For as- sume any third being, the queen, say, and as the cat knew the king, so let the king know his queen, and let this second knowledge, by the same reasoning, require a higher knower as its presupposition. That knower of the king’s knowing must, it is now contended, be the same higher knower that was required for the cat’s knowing; for if you suppose otherwise, you have no longer the same king. This may not seem immediately obvious, but if you fol- low the intellectualistic logic employed in all 64 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM these reasonings, I don’t see how you can es- cape the admission. If it be true that the inde- pendent or indifferent cannot be related, for the abstract words ‘independent’ or ‘indifferent’ as such imply no relation, then it is just as true that the king known by the cat cannot be the king that knows the queen, for taken merely ‘ as such,’ the abstract term ‘what the cat knows’ and the abstract term ‘ what knows the queen ’ are logically distinct. The king thus logically breaks into two kings, with nothing to connect them, until a higher knower is introduced to recognize them as the self-same king concerned in any previous acts of knowledge which he may have brought about. This he can do because he possesses all the terms as his own objects and can treat them as he will. Add any fourth or fifth term, and you get a like result, and so on, until at last an all-owning knower, otherwise called the absolute, is reached. The co-impli- cated ‘ through-and- through ’ world of monism thus stands proved by irrefutable logic, and all pluralism appears as absurd. The reasoning is pleasing from its ingenuity, 65 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE and it is almost a pity that so straight a bridge from abstract logic to concrete fact should not bear our weight. To have the alternative forced upon us of admitting either finite things each cut off from all relation with its environment, or else of accepting the integral absolute with no environment and all relations packed within itself, would be too delicious a simplification. But the purely verbal character of the opera- tion is undisguised. Because the names of finite things and their relations are disjoined, it does n’t follow that the realities named need a dens ex machina from on high to conjoin them. The same things disjoined in one respect ap- pear as conjoined in another. Naming the dis- junction does n’t debar us from also naming the conjunction in a later modifying statement, for the two are absolutely co-ordinate elements in the finite tissue of experience. When at Athens it was found self-contradictory that a boy could be both tall and short (tall namely in respect of a child, short in respect of a man), the absolute had not yet been thought of, but it might just as well have been invoked II. MONISTIC IDEALISM by Socrates as by Lotze or Royce, as a relief from his peculiar intellectualistic difficulty. Everywhere we find rationalists using the same kind of reasoning. The primal whole which is their vision must be there not only as a fact but as a logical necessity. It must be the minimum that can exist — either that absolute whole is there, or there is absolutely nothing. The logical proof alleged of the irrationality of supposing otherwise, is that you can deny the whole only in words that implicitly assert it. If you say ‘ parts,’ of what are they parts ? If you call them a * many,’ that very word unifies them. If you suppose them unrelated in any particular respect, that ‘respect’ connects them ; and so on. In short you fall into hope- less contradiction. You must stay either at one extreme or the other . 8 ‘Partly this and partly that,’ partly rational, for instance, and partly irrational, is no admissible description of the world. If rationality be in it at all, it must be in it throughout; if irrationality be in it any- where, that also must pervade it throughout. It must be wholly rational or wholly irrational, 67 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE pure universe or pure multiverse or nulliverse ; and reduced to this violent alternative, no one’s choice ought long to remain doubtful. The in- dividual absolute, with its parts co-implicated through and through, so that there is nothing in any part by which any other part can remain inwardly unaffected, is the only rational sup- position. Connexions of an external sort, by which the many became merely continuous instead of being consubstantial, would be an irrational supposition. Mr. Bradley is the pattern champion of this philosophy in extremis , as one might call it, for he shows an intolerance to pluralism so extreme that I fancy few of his readers have been able fully to share it. His reasoning ex- emplifies everywhere what I call the vice of intellectualism, for abstract terms are used by him as positively excluding all that their defi- nition fails to include. Some Greek sophists could deny that we may say that man is good, for man, they said, means only man, and good means only good, and the word is can’t be construed to identify such disparate meanings. 68 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM Mr. Bradley revels in the same type of argu- ment. No adjective can rationally qualify a substantive, he thinks, for if distinct from the substantive, it can’t be united with it; and if not distinct, there is only one thing there, and nothing left to unite. Our whole pluralistic procedure in using subjects and predicates as we do is fundamentally irrational, an example of the desperation of our finite intellectual estate, infected and undermined as that is by the separatist discursive forms which are our only categories, but which absolute reality must somehow absorb into its unity and over- come. Readers of ‘ Appearance and reality ’ will remember how Mr. Bradley suffers from a difficulty identical with that to which Lotze and Royce fall a prey — how shall an influence influence ? how shall a relation relate ? Any conjunctive relation between two phenomenal experiences a and b must, in the intellectualist philosophy of these authors, be itself a third entity ; and as such, instead of bridging the one original chasm, it can only create two smaller 69 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE chasms, each to be freshly bridged. Instead of hooking a to b, it needs itself to be hooked by a fresh relation / to a and by another r" to b. These new relations are but two more entities which themselves require to be hitched in turn by four still newer relations — so behold the vertiginous regressus ad infinitum in full career. Since a regressus ad infinitum is deemed ab- surd, the notion that relations come ‘between’ their terms must be given up. No mere external go-between can logically connect. What occurs must be more intimate. The hooking must be a penetration, a possession. The relation must involve the terms, each term must involve it, and merging thus their being in it, they must somehow merge their being in each other, tho, as they seem still phenomenally so separate, we can never conceive exactly how it is that they are inwardly one. The absolute, however, must be supposed able to perform the unifying feat in his own inscrutable fashion. In old times, whenever a philosopher was assailed for some particularly tough absurdity 70 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM in his system, he was wont to parry the attack by the argument from the divine omnipotence. ‘Do you mean to limit God’s power?’ he would reply : ‘ do you mean to say that God could not, if he would, do this or that ? ’ This retort was supposed to close the mouths of all objectors of properly decorous mind. The functions of the bradleian absolute are in this particular identical with those of the theistic God. Suppositions treated as too absurd to pass muster in the finite world which we in- habit, the absolute must be able to make good ‘somehow’ in his ineffable way. First we hear Mr. Bradley convicting things of absurdity; next, calling on the absolute to vouch for them quand meme. Invoked for no other duty, that duty it must and shall perform. The strangest discontinuity of our world of appearance with the supposed world of abso- lute reality is asserted both by Bradley and by Royce ; and both writers, the latter -with great ingenuity, seek to soften the violence of the jolt. But it remains violent all the same, and is felt to be so by most readers. Whoever feels the 71 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE violence strongly sees as on a diagram in just what the peculiarity of all this philosophy of the absolute consists. First, there is a healthy faith that the world must be rational and self-con- sistent. ‘All science, all real knowledge, all ex- perience presuppose,’ as Mr. Ritchie writes, ‘ a coherent universe.’ Next, we find a loyal cling- ing to the rationalist belief that sense-data and their associations are incoherent, and that only in substituting a conceptual order for their or- der can truth be found. Third, the substituted conceptions are treated intellectualistically, that is as mutually exclusive and discontinuous, so that the first innocent continuity of the flow of sense-experience is shattered for us with- out any higher conceptual continuity taking its place. Finally, since this broken state of things is intolerable, the absolute deus ex machina is called on to mend it in his own way, since we cannot mend it in ours. Any other picture than this of post-kantian absolutism I am unable to frame. I see the in- tellectualistic criticism destroying the imme- diately given coherence of the phenomenal 72 IT. MONISTIC IDEALISM world, but unable to make its own conceptual substitutes cohere, and I see the resort to the absolute for a coherence of a higher type. The situation has dramatic liveliness, but it is in- wardly incoherent throughout, and the ques- tion inevitably comes up whether a mistake may not somewhere have crept in in the pro- cess that has brought it about. May not the remedy lie rather in revising the intellectualist criticism than in first adopting it and then try- ing to undo its consequences by an arbitrary act of faith in an unintelligible agent. May not the flux of sensible experience itself contain a rationality that has been overlooked, so that the real remedy would consist in harking back to it more intelligently, and not in advancing in the opposite direction away from it and even away beyond the intellectualist criticism that disintegrates it, to the pseudo-rationality of the supposed absolute point of view. I myself be- lieve that this is the real way to keep rationality in the world, and that the traditional ration- alism has always been facing in the wrong direction. I hope in the end to make you 73 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE share, or at any rate respect, this belief, but there is much to talk of before we get to that point. I employed the word ‘ violent ’ just now in describing the dramatic situation in which it pleases the philosophy of the absolute to make its camp. I don’t see how any one can help be- ing struck in absolutist writings by that curious tendency to fly to violent extremes of which I have already said a word. The universe must be rational ; well and good ; but how rational ? in what sense of that eulogistic but ambigu- ous word ? — this would seem to be the next point to bring up. There are surely degrees in rationality that might be discriminated and described. Things can be consistent or coher- ent in very diverse ways. But no more in its conception of rationality than in its conception of relations can the monistic mind suffer the notion of more or less. Rationality is one and indivisible : if not rational thus indivisibly, the universe must be completely irrational, and no shadings or mixtures or compromises can ob- tain. Mr. McTaggart writes, in discussing the 74 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM notion of a mixture: ‘The two principles, of rationality and irrationality, to which the uni- verse is then referred, will have to be abso- lutely separate and independent. For if there were any common unity to which they should be referred, it would be that unity and not its two manifestations which would be the ulti- mate explanation . . . and the theory, having thus become monistic ,’ 9 would resolve itself into the same alternative once more: is the single principle rational through and through or not ? ‘Can a plurality of reals be possible?’ asks Mr. Bradley, and answers, ‘No, impossible.’ For it would mean a number of beings not dependent on each other, and this independ- ence their plurality would contradict. For to be ‘ many ’ is to be related, the word having no meaning unless the units are somehow taken together, and it is impossible to take them in a sort of unreal void, so they must belong to a larger reality, and so carry the essence of the units beyond their proper selves, into a whole which possesses unity and is a larger system . 10 75 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE Either absolute independence or absolute mu- tual dependence — this, then, is the only alter- native allowed by these thinkers. Of course ‘independence,’ if absolute, would be prepos- terous, so the only conclusion allowable is that, in Ritchie’s words, ‘ every single event is ulti- mately related to every other, and determined by the whole to which it belongs.’ The whole complete block-universe through-and-through, therefore, or no universe at all ! Professor Taylor is so naif in this habit of thinking only in extremes that he charges the pluralists with cutting the ground from under their own feet in not consistently following it themselves. What pluralists say is that a universe really connected loosely, after the pattern of our daily experience, is possible, and that for certain reasons it is the hypothe- sis to be preferred. What Professor Taylor thinks they naturally must or should say is that any other sort of universe is logically impos- sible, and that a totality of things interrelated like the world of the monists is not an hypothe- sis that can be seriously thought out at all . 11 76 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM Meanwhile no sensible pluralist ever flies or wants to fly to this dogmatic extreme. If chance is spoken of as an ingredient of the universe, absolutists interpret it to mean that double sevens are as likely to be thrown out of a dice box as double sixes are. If free-will is spoken of, that must mean that an english general is as likely to eat his prisoners to-day as a Maori chief was a hundred years ago. It is as likely — I am using Mr. McTaggart’s examples — that a majority of Londoners will burn themselves alive to-morrow as that they will partake of food, as likely that I shall be hanged for brushing my hair as for committing a murder , 12 and so forth, through various sup- positions that no indeterminist ever sees real reason to make. This habit of thinking only in the most vio- lent extremes reminds me of what Mr. Wells says of the current objections to socialism, in his wonderful little book, ‘New worlds for old.’ The commonest vice of the human mind is its disposition to see everything as yes or no, as black or white, its incapacity for discrim- 77 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE ination of intermediate shades. So the critics agree to some hard and fast impossible defini- tion of socialism, and extract absurdities from it as a conjurer gets rabbits from a hat. Social- ism abolishes property, abolishes the family, and the rest. The method, Mr. Wells contin- ues, is always the same : It is to assume that whatever the socialist postulates as desirable is wanted without limit of qualification, — for socialist read pluralist and the parallel holds good, — it is to imagine that whatever pro- posal is made by him is to be carried out by uncontrolled monomaniacs, and so to make a picture of the socialist dream which can be pre- sented to the simple-minded person in doubt — ‘This is socialism’ — or pluralism, as the case may be. ‘Surely! — surely! you don’t w y ant this!* How often have I been replied to, when ex- pressing doubts of the logical necessity of the absolute, of flying to the opposite extreme : ‘But surely, surely there must be some connexion among things!’ As if I must necessarily be an uncontrolled monomanic insanely denying 78 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM any connexion whatever. The whole question revolves in very truth about the word ‘ some.’ Radical empiricism and pluralism stand out for the legitimacy of the notion of some: each part of the world is in some ways connected, in some other ways not connected with its other parts, and the ways can be discriminated, for many of them are obvious, and their differences are obvious to view. Absolutism, on its side, seems to hold that ‘some’ is a category ruin- ously infected with self-contradictoriness, and that the only categories inwardly consistent and therefore pertinent to reality are ‘ all ’ and ‘ none.’ The question runs into the still more general one with which Mr. Bradley and later writers of the monistic school have made us abundantly familiar — the question, namely, whether all the relations with other things, possible to a being, are pre-included in its intrinsic nature and enter into its essence, or whether, in re- spect to some of these relations, it can be with- out reference to them, and, if it ever does enter into them, do so adventitiously and as it were 79 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE by an after-thought. This is the great question as to whether ‘ external ’ relations can exist. They seem to, undoubtedly. My manuscript, for example, is ‘ on ’ the desk. The relation of being ‘ on’ does n’t seem to implicate or involve in any way the inner meaning of the manu- script or the inner structure of the desk — these objects engage in it only by their outsides, it seems only a temporary accident in their re- spective histories. Moreover, the ‘ on ’ fails to appear to our senses as one of those unintel- ligible ‘betweens’ that have to be separately hooked on the terms they pretend to connect. All this innocent sense-appearance, however, we are told, cannot pass muster in the eyes of reason. It is a tissue of self-contradiction which only the complete absorption of the desk and the manuscript into the higher unity of a more absolute reality can overcome. The reasoning by which this conclusion is supported is too subtle and complicated to be properly dealt with in a public lecture, and you will thank me for not inviting you to consider it at all. 13 I feel the more free to pass it by now 80 II. MONISTIC IDEALISM as I think that the cursory account of the ab- solutistic attitude which I have already given is sufficient for our present purpose, and that my own verdict on the philosophy of the absolute as ‘not proven’ — please observe that I go no farther now — need not be backed by argu- ment at every special point. Flanking opera- tions are less costly and in some ways more effective than frontal attacks. Possibly you will yourselves think after hearing my remain- ing lectures that the alternative of an universe absolutely rational or absolutely irrational is forced and strained, and that a via media exists which some of you may agree with me is to be preferred. Some rationality certainly does char- acterize our universe ; and, weighing one kind with another, we may deem that the incomplete kinds that appear are on the whole as accept- able as the through-and-through sort of ration- ality on which the monistic systematizers insist. All the said systematizers who have written since Hegel have owed their inspiration largely to him. Even when they have found no use for his particular triadic dialectic, they have drawn 81 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE confidence and courage from his authoritative and conquering tone. I have said nothing about Hegel in this lecture, so I must repair the omis- sion in the next. Ill HEGEL AND HIS METHOD LECTURE III HEGEL AND HIS METHOD Directly or indirectly, that strange and pow- erful genius Hegel has done more to strengthen idealistic pantheism in thoughtful circles than all other influences put together. I must talk a little about him before drawing my final con- clusions about the cogency of the arguments for the absolute. In no philosophy is the fact that a philosopher’s vision and the technique he uses in proof of it are two different things more palpably evident than in Hegel. The vision in his case was that of a world in which rea- son holds all things in solution and accounts for all the irrationality that superficially ap- pears by taking it up as a ‘moment’ into itself. This vision was so intense in Hegel, and the tone of authority with which he spoke from out of the midst of it was so weighty, that the impression he made has never been effaced. Once dilated to the scale of the master’s eye, the disciples’ sight could not contract to any lesser 85 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE prospect. The technique which Hegel used to prove his vision was the so-called dialectic method, but here his fortune has been quite contrary. Hardly a recent disciple has felt his particular applications of the method to be satisfactory. Many have let them drop entirely, treating them rather as a sort of provisional stop-gap, symbolic of what might some day prove possible of execution, but having no lit- eral cogency or value now. Yet these very same disciples hold to the vision itself as a revelation that can never pass away. The case is curious and worthy of our study. It is still more curious in that these same disciples, altho they are usually willing to abandon any particular instance of the dialec- tic method to its critics, are unshakably sure that in some shape the dialectic method is the key to truth. What, then, is the dialectic method ? It is itself a part of the hegelian vision or intuition, and a part that finds the strongest echo in empiricism and common sense. Great injustice is done to Hegel by treating him as primarily a reasoner. He is in 86 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD reality a naively observant man, only beset with a perverse preference for the use of tech- nical and logical jargon. He plants himself in the empirical flux of things and gets the im- pression of what happens. His mind is in very truth impressionistic ; and his thought, when once you put yourself at the animating centre of it, is the easiest thing in the world to catch the pulse of and to follow. Any author is easy if you can catch the centre of his vision. From the centre in Hegel come those towering sentences of his that are com- parable only to Luther’s, as where, speaking of the ontological proof of God’s existence from the concept of him as the ens perfectissimum to which no attribute can be lacking, he says : ‘It would be strange if the Notion, the very heart of the mind, or, in a word, the concrete totality we call God, were not rich enough to embrace so poor a category as Being, the very poorest and most abstract of all — for nothing can be more insignificant than Being.’ But if Hegel’s central thought is easy to catch, his abominable habits of speech make his applica- 87 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE tion of it to details exceedingly difficult to fol- low. His passion for the slipshod in the way of sentences, his unprincipled playing fast and loose with terms ; his dreadful vocabulary, calling what completes a thing its ‘ negation,’ for example; his systematic refusal to let you know whether he is talking logic or physics or psychology, his whole deliberately adopted pol- icy of ambiguity and vagueness, in short: all these things make his present-day readers wish to tear their hair — or his — out in despera- tion. Like Byron’s corsair, he has left a name ‘ to other times, linked with one virtue and a thousand crimes.’ The virtue was the vision, which was really in two parts. The first part was that reason is all-inclusive, the second was that things are ‘ dialectic.’ Let me say a word about this sec- ond part of Hegel’s vision. The impression that any naif person gets who plants himself innocently in the flux of things is that things are off their balance. Whatever equilibriums our finite experiences attain to are but provisional. Martinique vol- 88 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD canoes shatter our Wordsworthian equilibrium with nature. Accidents, either moral, mental, or physical, break up the slowly built-up equi- libriums men reach in family life and in their civic and professional relations. Intellectual enigmas frustrate our scientific systems, and the ultimate cruelty of the universe upsets our religious attitudes and outlooks. Of no special system of good attained does the universe recognize the value as sacred. Down it tumbles, over it goes, to feed the ravenous appetite for destruction, of the larger system of history in which it stood for a moment as a landing- place and stepping-stone. This dogging of everything by its negative, its fate, its undoing, this perpetual moving on to something future which shall supersede the present, this is the hegelian intuition of the essential provision- ally, and consequent unreality, of everything empirical and finite. Take any concrete finite thing and try to hold it fast. You cannot, for so held, it proves not to be concrete at all, but an arbitrary extract or abstract which you have made from the remainder of empirical 89 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE reality. The rest of things invades and over- flows both it and you together, and defeats your rash attempt. Any partial view whatever of the w'orld tears the part out of its relations, leaves out some truth concerning it, is untrue of it, falsifies it. The full truth about anything involves more than that thing. In the end nothing less than the whole of everything can be the truth of anything at all. Taken so far, and taken in the rough, Hegel is not only harmless, but accurate. There is a dialectic movement in things, if such it please you to call it, one that the whole constitution of concrete life establishes; but it is one that can be described and accounted for in terms of the pluralistic vision of things far more nat- urally than in the monistic terms to which Hegel finally reduced it. Pluralistic empiri- cism knows that everything is in an environ- ment, a surrounding world of other things, and that if you leave it to work there it will inevitably meet with friction and opposition from its neighbors. Its rivals and enemies will destroy it unless it can buy them off by com - 90 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD promising some part of its original preten- sions. But Hegel saw this undeniable character- istic of the world we live in in a non-empirical light. Let the mental idea of the thing work in your thought all alone, he fancied, and just the same consequences will follow. It will be negated by the opposite ideas that dog it, and can survive only by entering, along with them, into some kind of treaty. This treaty will be an instance of the so-called ‘ higher synthesis ’ of everything with its negative; and Hegel’s originality lay in transporting the process from the sphere of percepts to that of concepts and treating it as the universal method by which every kind of life, logical, physical, or psycho- logical, is mediated. Not to the sensible facts as such, then, did Hegel point for the secret of what keeps existence going, but rather to the conceptual way of treating them. Concepts were not in his eyes the static self-contained things that previous logicians had supposed, butw 7 ere germinative, and passed beyond them- selves into each other by what he called their 91 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE immanent dialectic. In ignoring each other as they do, they virtually exclude and deny each other, he thought, and thus in a manner in- troduce each other. So the dialectic logic, ac- cording to him, had to supersede the ‘logic of identity’ in which, since Aristotle, all Europe had been brought up. This view of concepts is Hegel’s revolution- ary performance ; but so studiously vague and ambiguous are all his expressions of it that one can hardly tell whether it is the concepts as such, or the sensible experiences and elements conceived, that Hegel really means to work w T ith. The only thing that is certain is that whatever you may say of his procedure, some one will accuse you of misunderstanding it. I make no claim to understanding it, I treat it merely impressionistically. So treating it, I regret that he should have called it by the name of logic. Clinging as he did to the vision of a really living world, and refusing to be content with a chopped-up intel- lectualist picture of it, it is a pity that he should have adopted the very word that intel- 92 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD lectualism had already pre-empted. But he clung fast to the old rationalist contempt for the immediately given world of sense and all its squalid particulars, and never tolerated the notion that the form of philosophy might be empirical only. His own system had to be a product of eternal reason, so the word ‘logic,’ with its suggestions of coercive necessity, was the only word he could find natural. Pie pre- tended therefore to be using the a 'priori method, and to be working by a scanty equip- ■ment of ancient logical terms — position, nega- tion, reflection, universal, particular, individ- ual, and the like. But what he really worked by was his own empirical perceptions, which exceeded and overflowed his miserably in- sufficient logical categories in every instance of their use. What he did with the category of negation was his most original stroke. The orthodox opinion is that you can advance logically through the field of concepts only by going from the same to the same. Hegel felt deeply the sterility of this law of conceptual thought ; 93 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE he saw that in a fashion negation also relates things ; and he had the brilliant idea of tran- scending the ordinary logic by treating advance from the different to the different as if it were also a necessity of thought. ‘The so-called maxim of identity,’ he wrote, ‘is supposed to be accepted by the consciousness of every one. But the language which such a law demands, “ a planet is a planet, magnetism is magnetism, mind is mind,” deserves to be called silliness. No mind either speaks or thinks or forms con- ceptions in accordance with this law, and no existence of any kind whatever conforms to it. We must never view identity as abstract iden- tity, to the exclusion of all difference. That is the touchstone for distinguishing all bad phi- losophy from what alone deserves the name of philosophy. If thinking were no more than registering abstract identities, it would be a most superfluous performance. Things and concepts are identical with themselves only in so far as at the same time they involve distinction .’ 1 The distinction that Hegel has in mind here 94 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD is naturally in the first instance distinction from all other things or concepts. But in his hands this quickly develops into contradiction of them, and finally, reflected back upon itself, into self-contradiction ; and the immanent self- contradictoriness of all finite concepts thence- forth becomes the propulsive logical force that moves the world . 2 ‘Isolate a thing from all its relations,’ says Dr. Edward Caird , 3 ex- pounding Hegel, ‘ and try to assert it by itself ; you find that it has negated itself as well as its relations. The thing in itself is nothing.’ Or, to quote Hegel’s own words: ‘When we sup- pose an existent A, and another, B, B is at first defined as the other. But A is just as much the other of B. Both are others in the same fash- ion. . . . “ Other” is the other by itself, there- fore the other of every other, consequently the other of itself, the simply unlike itself, the self- negator, the self-alterer,’ etc . 4 Hegel writes elsewhere: ‘The finite, as implicitly other than what it is, is forced to surrender its own imme- diate or natural being, and to turn suddenly into its opposite. . . . Dialectic is the universal 95 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE and irresistible power before which nothing can stay. . . . Summum jus, summa injuria — to drive an abstract right to excess is to commit injustice. . . . Extreme anarchy and extreme despotism lead to one another. Pride comes before a fall. Too much wit outwits itself. Joy brings tears, melancholy a sardonic smile .’ 5 To which one well might add that most human institutions, by the purely tech- nical and professional manner in which they come to be administered, end by becoming obstacles to the very purposes which their founders had in view. Once catch well the knack of this scheme of thought and you are lucky if you ever get away from it. It is all you can see. Let any one pro- nounce anything, and your feeling of a contra- diction being implied becomes a habit, almost a motor habit in some persons who symbolize by a stereotyped gesture the position, sublation, and final reinstatement involved. If you say ‘two’ or ‘many,’ your speech bewrayeth you, for the very name collects them into one. If you express doubt, your expression contradicts its 96 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD content, for the doubt itself is not doubted but affirmed. If you say ‘ disorder,’ what is that but a certain bad kind of order ? if you say ‘ indeter- mination,’ you are determining just that. If you say ‘ nothing but the unexpected happens,’ the unexpected becomes what you expect. If you say ‘ all things are relative,’ to what is the all of them itself relative ? If you say ‘ no more,’ you have said more already, by implying a region in which no more is found; to know a limit as such is consequently already to have got beyond it; and so forth, throughout as many examples as one cares to cite. Whatever you posit appears thus as one- sided, and negates its other, which, being equally one-sided, negates it; and, since this situation remains unstable, the two contradic- tory terms have together, according to Hegel, to engender a higher truth of which they both appear as indispensable members, mutually mediating aspects of that higher concept or situation in thought. Every higher total, however provisional and relative, thus reconciles the contradictions 97 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE which its parts, abstracted from it, prove im- plicitly to contain. Rationalism, you remem- ber, is what I called the way of thinking that methodically subordinates parts to wholes, so Hegel here is rationalistic through and through. The only whole by which all contradictions are reconciled is for him the absolute whole of wholes, the all-inclusive reason to which Hegel himself gave the name of the absolute Idea, but which I shall continue to call ‘the absolute’ purely and simply, as I have done hitherto. Empirical instances of the way in which higher unities reconcile contradictions are in- numerable, so here again Hegel’s vision, taken merely impressionistically, agrees with count- less facts. Somehow life does, out of its total resources, find ways of satisfying opposites at once. This is precisely the paradoxical aspect which much of our civilization presents. Peace we secure by armaments, liberty by laws and constitutions; simplicity and naturalness are the consummate result of artificial breeding and training ; health, strength, and wealth are increased only by lavish use, expense, and wear. 98 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD Our mistrust of mistrust engenders our com- mercial system of credit; our tolerance of anarchistic and revolutionary utterances is the only way of lessening their danger ; our charity has to say no to beggars in order not to defeat its own desires ; the true epicurean has to observe great sobriety ; the way to certainty lies through radical doubt ; virtue signifies not innocence but the knowledge of sin and its overcoming; by obeying nature, we command her, etc. The ethical and the religious life are full of such contradictions held in solution. You hate your enemy ? — well, forgive him, and thereby heap coals of fire on his head ; to realize yourself, renounce yourself ; to save your soul, first lose it; in short, die to live. From such massive examples one easily gen- eralizes Hegel’s vision. Roughly, his ‘dialec- tic’ picture is a fair account of a good deal of the world. It sounds paradoxical, but when- ever you once place yourself at the point of view of any higher synthesis, you see exactly how it does in a fashion take up opposites into itself. As an example, consider the conflict between 99 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE our carnivorous appetites and hunting instincts and the sympathy with animals which our refinement is bringing in its train. We have found how to reconcile these opposites most effectively by establishing game-laws and close seasons and by keeping domestic herds. The creatures preserved thus are preserved for the sake of slaughter, truly, but if not preserved for that reason, not one of them would be alive at all. Their will to live and our will to kill them thus harmoniously combine in this peculiar higher synthesis of domestication. Merely as a reporter of certain empirical aspects of the actual, Hegel, then, is great and true. But he aimed at being something far greater than an empirical reporter, so I must say something about that essential aspect of his thought. Hegel was dominated by the notion of a truth that should prove incontro- vertible, binding on every one, and certain, which should be the truth, one, indivisible, eternal, objective, and necessary, to which all our particular thinking must lead as to its con- summation. This is the dogmatic ideal, the 100 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD postulate, uncritioised, undoubted, and unchal- lenged, of all rationalizers in philosophy. ‘ 7 have never doubted ,’ a recent Oxford writer says, that truth is universal and single and timeless, a single content or significance, one and whole and complete. 8 Advance in think- ing, in the hegelian universe, has, in short, to proceed by the apodictic words must be rather than by those inferior hypothetic wmrds may be, which are all that empiricists can use. Now t Hegel found that his idea of an imma- nent movement through the field of concepts by way of ‘ dialectic ’ negation played most beau- tifully into the hands of this rationalistic de- mand for something absolute and inconcussum in the way of truth. It is easy to see how. If you affirm anything, for example that A is, and simply leave the matter thus, you leave it at the mercy of any one who may supervene and say ‘not A, but B is.’ If he does say so, your state- ment does n’t refute him, it simply contradicts him, just as his contradicts you. The only way of making your affirmation about A self -secur- ing is by getting it into a form which will by 101 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE implication negate all possible negations in advance. The mere absence of negation is not enough ; it must be present, but present with its fangs drawn. What you posit as A must already have cancelled the alternative or made it in- nocuous, by having negated it in advance. Double negation is the only form of affirmation that fully plays into the hands of the dogmatic ideal. Simply and innocently affirmative state- ments are good enough for empiricists, but unfit for rationalist use, lying open as they do to every accidental contradictor, and exposed to every puff of doubt. The final truth must be something to which there is no imaginable alternative, because it contains all its possible alternatives inside of itself as moments already taken account of and overcome. Whatever involves its own alternatives as elements of itself is, in a phrase often repeated, its ‘own other,’ made so by the methode der absoluten negativitiit. Formally, this scheme of an organism of truth that has already fed as it were on its own liabil- ity to death, so that, death once dead for it, 102 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD there ’s no more dying then, is the very fulfil- ment of the rationalistic aspiration. That one and only whole, with all its parts involved in it, negating and making one another impossible if abstracted and taken singly, but necessitating and holding one another in place if the whole of them be taken integrally, is the literal ideal sought after ; it is the very diagram and picture of that notion of the truth with no outlying alternative, to which nothing can be added, nor from it anything withdrawn, and all variations from which are absurd, which so dominates the human imagination. Once we have taken in the features of this diagram that so success- fully solves the world-old problem, the older ways of proving the necessity of judgments cease to give us satisfaction. Hegel’s way we think must be the right way. The true must be essentially the self-reflecting self-contained re- current, that which secures itself by including its own other and negating it ; that makes a spherical system with no loose ends hanging out for foreignness to get a hold upon ; that is forever rounded in and closed, not strung along 103 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE rectilinearly and open at its ends like that uni- verse of simply collective or additive form which Hegel calls the world of the bad infinite, and which is all that empiricism, starting with simply posited single parts and elements, is ever able to attain to. No one can possibly deny the sublimity of this hegelian conception. It is surely in the grand style, if there be such a thing as a grand style in philosophy. For us, however, it re- mains, so far, a merely formal and diagram- matic conception; for with the actual content of absolute truth, as Hegel materially tries to set it forth, few disciples have been satisfied, and I do not propose to refer at all to the con- creter parts of his philosophy. The main thing now is to grasp the generalized vision, and feel the authority of the abstract scheme of a state- ment self-secured by involving double negation. Absolutists who make no use of Hegel’s own technique are really working by his method. You remember the proofs of the absolute which I instanced in my last lecture, Lotze’s and Royce’s proofs by reductio ad absurdum, to 104 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD the effect that any smallest connexion rashly supposed in things will logically work out into absolute union, and any minimal disconnexion into absolute disunion, — these are really argu- ments framed on the hegelian pattern. The truth is that which you implicitly affirm in the very attempt to deny it ; it is that from which every variation refutes itself by proving self- contradictory. This is the supreme insight of rationalism, and to-day the best must-be's of rationalist argumentation are but so many attempts to communicate it to the hearer. Thus, you see, my last lecture and this lecture make connexion again and we can consider Hegel and the other absolutists to be support- ing the same system. The next point I wish to dwell on is the part played by what I have called vicious intellectualism in this wonderful system’s structure. Rationalism in general thinks it gets the ful- ness of truth by turning away from sensation to conception, conception obviously giving the more universal and immutable picture. Intel- lectualism in the vicious sense I have already 105 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE defined as the habit of assuming that a concept excludes from any reality conceived by its means everything not included in the concept’s definition. I called such intellectu- alism illegitimate as I found it used in Lotze’s, Royce’s, and Bradley’s proofs of the absolute (which absolute I consequently held to be non- proven by their arguments) , and I left off by asserting my own belief that a pluralistic and incompletely integrated universe, describable only by the free use of the word ‘ some,’ is a legitimate hypothesis. Now Hegel himself, in building up his method of double negation, offers the vividest possible example of this vice of intellectualism. Every idea of a finite thing is of course a concept of that thing and not a concept of anything else. But Hegel treats this not being a concept of anything else as if it were equivalent to the con- cept of anything else not being , or in other words as if it were a denial or negation of everything else. Then, as the other things, thus implicitly contradicted by the thing first conceived, also by the same law contradict it, the pulse of dialec- 106 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD tic commences to beat and the famous triads begin to grind out the cosmos. If any one finds the process here to be a luminous one, he must be left to the illumination, he must remain an undisturbed hegelian. What others feel as the intolerable ambiguity, verbosity, and unscrupu- lousness of the master’s way of deducing things, he will probably ascribe — since divine oracles are notoriously hard to interpret — ■ to the ‘dif- ficulty’ that habitually accompanies profun- dity. For my own part, there seems something grotesque and saugrenu in the pretension of a style so disobedient to the first rules of sound communication between minds, to be the au- thentic mother-tongue of reason, and to keep step more accurately than any other style does with the absolute’s own ways of thinking. I do not therefore take Hegel’s technical appa- ratus seriously at all. I regard him rather as one of those numerous original seers who can never learn how to articulate. His would-be coercive logic counts for nothing in my eyes; but that does not in the least impugn the phi- losophic importance of his conception of the 107 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE absolute, if we take it merely hypothetically as one of the great types of cosmic vision. Taken thus hypothetically, I wish to discuss it briefly. But before doing so I must call your attention to an odd peculiarity in the hegelian procedure. The peculiarity is one which will come before us again for a final judgment in my seventh lecture, so at present I only note it in passing. Hegel, you remember, considers that the immediate finite data of experience are ‘untrue’ because they are not their own others. They are negated by what is external to them. The absolute is true because it and it only has no external environment, and has attained to being its own other. (These words sound queer enough, but those of you who know something of Hegel’s text will follow them.) Granting his premise that to be true a thing must in some sort be its own other, everything hinges on whether he is right in holding that the several pieces of finite expe- rience themselves cannot be said to be in any wise their own others. When conceptually or intellectualistically treated, they of course can- 108 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD not be their own others. Every abstract con- cept as such excludes what it does n’t include, and if such concepts are adequate substitutes for reality’s concrete pulses, the latter must square themselves with intellectualistic logic, and no one of them in any sense can claim to be its own other. If, however, the conceptual treatment of the flow of reality should prove for any good reason to be inadequate and to have a practical rather than a theoretical or speculative value, then an independent empiri- cal look into the constitution of reality’s pulses might possibly show that some of them are their own others, and indeed are so in the self- same sense in which the absolute is maintained to be so by Hegel. When we come to my sixth lecture, on Professor Bergson, I shall in effect defend this very view, strengthening my thesis by his authority. I am unwilling to say any- thing more about the point at this time, and what I have just said of it is only a sort of sur- veyor’s note of where our present position lies in the general framework of these lectures. Let us turn now at last to the great question 109 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE of fact, Does the absolute exist or not? to which all our previous discussion has been prelim- inary. I may sum up that discussion by saying that whether there really be an absolute or not, no one makes himself absurd or self-contradic- tory by doubting or denying it. The charges of self-contradiction, where they do not rest on purely verbal reasoning, rest on a vicious intellectualism. I will not recapitulate my criticisms. I will simply ask you to change the venue, and to discuss the absolute now as if it were only an open hypothesis. As such, is it more probable or more improbable ? But first of all I must parenthetically ask you to distinguish the notion of the absolute care- fully from that of another object with which it is liable to become heedlessly entangled. That other object is the ‘God’ of common people in their religion, and the creator-God of orthodox Christian theology. Only thor- oughgoing monists or pantheists believe in the absolute. The God of our popular Christianity is but one member of a pluralistic system. He and we stand outside of each other, just as 110 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD the devil, the saints, and the angels stand out- side of both of us. I can hardly conceive of anything more different from the absolute than the God, say, of David or of Isaiah. That God is an essentially finite being in the cosmos, not with the cosmos in him, and indeed he has a very local habitation there, and very one-sided local and personal attachments. If it should prove probable that the absolute does not exist, it will not follow in the slightest degree that a God like that of David, Isaiah, or Jesus may not exist, or may not be the most important ex- istence in the universe for us to acknowledge. I pray you, then, not to confound the two ideas as you listen to the criticisms I shall have to proffer. I hold to the finite God, for reasons which I shall touch on in the seventh of these lectures ; but I hold that his rival and compet- itor — I feel almost tempted to say his enemy — the absolute, is not only not forced on us by logic, but that it is an improbable hypothesis. The great claim made for the absolute is that by supposing it we make the world appear more rational. Any hypothesis that does that 111 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE will always be accepted as more probably true than an hypothesis that makes the world appear irrational. Men are once for all so made that they prefer a rational world to believe in and to live in. But rationality has at least four dimensions, intellectual, sesthetieal, moral, and practical ; and to find a world rational to the maximal degree in all these respects simulta- neously is no easy matter. Intellectually, the world of mechanical materialism is the most rational, for we subject its events to mathe- matical calculation. But the mechanical world is ugly, as arithmetic is ugly, and it is non- moral. Morally, the theistic world is rational enough, but full of intellectual frustrations. The practical world of affairs, in its turn, so supremely rational to the politician, the military man, or the man of conquering business-faculty that he never would vote to change the type of it, is irrational to moral and artistic tempera- ments ; so that whatever demand for rationality we find satisfied by a philosophic hypothesis, we are liable to find some other demand for rationality unsatisfied by the same hypothesis. 112 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD The rationality we gain in one coin we thus pay for in another; and the problem accordingly seems at first sight to resolve itself into that of getting a conception which will yield the largest balance of rationality rather than one which will yield perfect rationality of every descrip- tion. In general, it may be said that if a man’s conception of the world lets loose any action in him that is easy, or any faculty which he is fond of exercising, he will deem it rational in so far forth, be the faculty that of com- puting, fighting, lecturing, classifying, framing schematic tabulations, getting the better end of a bargain, patiently waiting and enduring, preaching, joke-making, or what you like. Albeit the absolute is defined as being neces- sarily an embodiment of objectively perfect rationality, it is fair to its english advocates to say that those who have espoused the hypothe- sis most concretely and seriously have usually avowed the irrationality to their own minds of certain elements in it. Probably the weightiest contribution to our feeling cf the rationality of the universe which 113 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE the notion of the absolute brings is the assur- ance that however disturbed the surface may be, at bottom all is well with the cosmos — central peace abiding at the heart of endless agitation. This conception is rational in many ways, beautiful aesthetically, beautiful intellec- tually (could we only follow it into detail) , and beautiful morally, if the enjoyment of security can be accounted moral. Practically it is less beautiful ; for, as we saw in our last lecture, in representing the deepest reality of the world as static and without a history, it loosens the world’s hold upon our sympathies and leaves the soul of it foreign. Nevertheless it does give peace, and that kind of rationality is so para- mountly demanded by men that to the end of time there will be absolutists, men who choose belief in a static eternal, rather than admit that the finite world of change and striving, even with a God as one of the strivers, is itself eter- nal. For such minds Professor Royce’s words will always be the truest : ‘ The very presence of ill in the temporal order is the condition of the perfection of the eternal order. ... We 114 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD long for the absolute only in so far as in us the absolute also longs, and seeks through our very temporal striving, the peace that is nowhere in time, but only, and yet absolutely, in eternity. Were there no longing in time there would be no peace in eternity. . . . God \i. e. the abso- lute] who here in me aims at what I now tem- porally miss, not only possesses in the eternal world the goal after which I strive, but comes to possess it even through and because of my sorrow. Through this my tribulation the absolute triumph then is won. ... In the absolute I am fulfilled. Yet my very fulfilment demands and therefore can transcend this sor- row .’ 7 Royce is particularly felicitous in his ability to cite parts of finite experience to which he finds his picture of this absolute expe- rience analogous. But it is hard to portray the absolute at all without rising into what might be called the ‘inspired’ style of language — I use the word not ironically, but prosaically and descriptively, to designate the only liter- ary form that goes with the kind of emotion that the absolute arouses. One can follow the 115 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE pathway of reasoning soberly enough , 8 but the picture itself has to be effulgent. This admira- ble faculty of transcending, whilst inwardly preserving, every contrariety, is the absolute’s characteristic form of rationality. We are but syllables in the mouth of the Lord ; if the whole sentence is divine, each syllable is absolutely what it should be, in spite of all appearances. In making up the balance for or against abso- lutism, this emotional value weights heavily the credit side of the account. The trouble is that we are able to see so little into the positive detail of it, and that if once admitted not to be coercively proven by the intellectualist arguments, it remains only a hypothetic possibility. On the debit side of the account the absolute, taken seriously, and not as a mere name for our right occasionally to drop the strenuous mood and take a moral holiday, introduces all those tremendous irrationalities into the universe which a frankly pluralistic theism escapes, but which have been flung as a reproach at every form of monistic theism or pantheism. 116 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD It introduces a speculative ‘problem of evil* namely, and leaves us wondering why the per- fection of the absolute should require just such particular hideous forms of life as darken the day for our human imaginations. If they were forced on it by something alien, and to ‘over- come ’ them the absolute had still to keep hold of them, we could understand its feeling of tri- umph, though we, so far as we were ourselves among the elements overcome, could acqui- esce but sullenly in the resultant situation, and would never just have chosen it as the most rational one conceivable. But the absolute is represented as a being without environment, upon which nothing alien can be forced, and which has spontaneously chosen from within to gi.^e itself the spectacle of all that evil rather than a spectacle with less evil in it . 9 Its per- fection is represented as the source of things, and yet the first effect of that perfection is the tremendous imperfection of all finite experi- ence. In whatever sense the word ‘ rationality ’ may be taken, it is vain to contend that the impression made on our finite minds by such 117 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE a way of representing things is altogether rational. Theologians have felt its irrational- ity acutely, and the ‘fall,’ the predestination, and the election which the situation involves have given them more trouble than anything else in their attempt to pantheize Christianity. The whole business remains a puzzle, both intellectually and morally. Grant that the spectacle or world-romance offered to itself by the absolute is in the abso- lute’s eyes perfect. Why would not the world be more perfect by having the affair remain in just those terms, and by not having any finite spectators to come in and add to what was perfect already their innumerable imperfect manners of seeing the same spectacle ? Sup- pose the entire universe to consist of one superb copy of a book, fit for the ideal reader. Is that universe improved or deteriorated by hav- ing myriads of garbled and misprinted separate leaves and chapters also created, giving false impressions of the book to whoever looks at them ? To say the least, the balance of ration- ality is not obviously in favor of such added 118 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD mutilations. So this question becomes urgent : Why, the absolute’s own total vision of things being so rational, was it necessary to com- minute it into all these coexisting inferior fragmentary visions ? Leibnitz in his theodicy represents God as limited by an antecedent reason in things which makes certain combinations logically incompatible, certain goods impossible. He surveys in advance all the universes he might create, and by an act of what Leibnitz calls his antecedent will he chooses our actual world as the one in which the evil, unhappily necessary anyhow, is at its minimum. It is the best of all the worlds that are possible, therefore, but by no means the most abstractly desirable world. Having made this mental choice, God next proceeds to what Leibnitz calls his act of con- sequent or decretory will: he says ‘ Fiat ’ and the world selected springs into objective being, with all the finite creatures in it to suffer from its imperfections without sharing in its crea- tor’s atoning vision. Lotze has made some penetrating remarks 119 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE on this conception of Leibnitz’s, and they ex- actly fall in with what I say of the absolutist conception. The world projected out of the creative mind by the fiat, and existing in de- tachment from its author, is a sphere of being where the parts realize themselves only singly. If the divine value of them is evident only when they are collectively looked at, then, Lotze rightly says, the world surely becomes poorer and not richer for God’s utterance of the fiat. He might much better have remained con- tented with his merely antecedent choice of the scheme, without follow 7 ing it up by a creative decree. The scheme as such w r as admirable ; it could only lose by being translated into reality . 10 Why, I similarly ask, should the absolute ever have lapsed from the perfection of its own integral experience of things, and refracted itself into all our finite experiences ? It is but fair to recent english absolutists to say that many of them have confessed the imperfect rationality of the absolute from this point of view. Mr. McTaggart, for example, writes : ‘ Does not our very failure to perceive 120 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD the perfection of the universe destroy it ? . . . In so far as we do not see the perfection of the universe, we are not perfect ourselves. And as we are parts of the universe, that cannot be perfect .’ 11 And Mr. Joachim finds just the same diffi- culty. Calling the hypothesis of the absolute by the name of the ‘coherence theory of truth,’ he calls the problem of understanding how the complete coherence of all things in the absolute should involve as a necessary moment in its self-maintenance the self-assertion of the finite minds, a self-assertion which in its extreme form is error, — he calls this problem, I say, an insoluble puzzle. If truth be the universal fons et origo, how does error slip in ? ‘ The co- herence theory of truth,’ he concludes, ‘may thus be said to suffer shipwreck at the very entrance of the harbor .’ 12 Yet in spite of this rather bad form of irrationality, Mr. Joachim stoutly asserts his ‘ immediate certainty ’ 13 of the theory shipwrecked, the correctness of which he says he has ‘never doubted.’ This can- did confession of a fixed attitude of faith in 121 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE the absolute, which even one’s own criticisms and perplexities fail to disturb, seems to me very significant. Not only empiricists, but absolutists also, would all, if they were as candid as this author, confess that the prime thing in their philosophy is their vision of a truth possible, which they then employ their reasoning to convert, as best it can, into a cer- tainty or probability. I can imagine a believer in the absolute re- torting at this point that he at any rate is not dealing with mere probabilities, but that the nature of things logically requires the multi- tudinous erroneous copies, and that therefore the universe cannot be the absolute’s book alone. For, he will ask, is not the absolute de- fined as the total consciousness of everything that is ? Must not its field of view consist of parts ? And what can the parts of a total con- sciousness be unless they be fractional con- sciousnesses ? Our finite minds must therefore coexist with the absolute mind. We are its constituents, and it cannot live without us. — But if any one of you feels tempted to retort 122 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD in this wise, let me remind you that you are frankly employing pluralistic weapons, and thereby giving up the absolutist cause. The notion that the absolute is made of constituents on which its being depends is the rankest em- piricism. The absolute as such has objects, not constituents, and if the objects develop self- hoods upon their own several accounts, those selfhoods must be set down as facts additional to the absolute consciousness, and not as ele- ments implicated in its definition. The abso- lute is a rationalist conception. Rationalism goes from wholes to parts, and always assumes wholes to be self-sufficing . 14 My conclusion, so far, then, is this, that altho the hypothesis of the absolute, in yielding a certain kind of religious peace, performs a most important rationalizing function, it never- theless, from the intellectual point of view, remains decidedly irrational. The ideally per- fect whole is certainly that whole of which the 'parts also are perfect — if we can depend on logic for anything, we can depend on it for that definition. The absolute is defined as the 123 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE ideally perfect whole, yet most of its parts, if not all, are admittedly imperfect. Evidently the conception lacks internal consistency, and yields us a problem rather than a solution. It creates a speculative puzzle, the so-called mys- tery of evil and of error, from which a plural- istic metaphysic is entirely free. In any pluralistic metaphysic, the problems that evil presents are practical, not speculative. Not why evil should exist at all, but how we can lessen the actual amount of it, is the sole question we need there consider. ‘ God,’ in the religious life of ordinary men, is the name not of the whole of things, heaven forbid, but only of the ideal tendency in things, believed in as a superhuman person who calls us to co-op- erate in his purposes, and who furthers ours if they are worthy. He works in an external environment, has limits, and has enemies. When John Mill said that the notion of God’s omnipotence must be given up, if God is to be kept as a religious object, he was surely accurately right; yet so prevalent is the lazy monism that idly haunts the region of God’s 124 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD name, that so simple and truthful a saying was generally treated as a paradox: God, it was said, could not be finite. I believe that the only God worthy of the name must be finite, and I shall return to this point in a later lecture. If the absolute exist in addition — and the hypo- thesis must, in spite of its irrational features, still be left open — then the absolute is only the wider cosmic whole of w 7 hich our God is but the most ideal portion, and which in the more usual human sense is hardly to be termed a religious hypothesis at all. ‘ Cosmic emotion ’ is the better name for the reaction it may awaken. Observe that all the irrationalities and puz- zles which the absolute gives rise to, and from which the finite God remains free, are due to the fact that the absolute has nothing, abso- lutely nothing, outside of itself. The finite God whom I contrast with it may conceivably have almost nothing outside of himself ; he may already have triumphed over and ab- sorbed all but the minutest fraction of the universe; but that fraction, however small, reduces him to the status of a relative being, 125 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE and in principle the universe is saved from all the irrationalities incidental to absolutism. The only irrationality left would be the irra- tionality of which pluralism as such is accused, and of this I hope to say a word more later. I have tired you with so many subtleties in this lecture that I will add only two other counts to my indictment. First, then, let me remind you that the abso- lute is useless for deductive purposes. It gives us absolute safety if you will, but it is com- patible with every relative danger. You cannot enter the phenomenal world with the notion of it in your grasp, and name beforehand any detail which you are likely to meet there. Whatever the details of experience may prove to be, after the fact of them the absolute will adopt them. It is an hypothesis that functions retrospectively only, not prospectively. That, whatever it may be, will have been in point of fact the sort of world which the absolute was pleased to offer to itself as a spectacle. Again, the absolute is always represented 126 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD idealistically, as the all-knower. Thinking this view consistently out leads one to frame an almost ridiculous conception of the absolute mind, owing to the enormous mass of unprofit- able information which it would then seem obliged to carry. One of the many reductiones ad absurdum of pluralism by which idealism thinks it proves the absolute One is as follows : Let there be many facts ; but since on idealist principles facts exist only by being known, the many facts will therefore mean many knowers. But that there are so many knowers is itself a fact, which in turn requires its knower, so the one absolute knower has eventually to be brought in. All facts lead to him. If it be a fact that this table is not a chair, not a rhi- noceros, not a logarithm, not a mile away from the door, not worth five hundred pounds ster- ling, not a thousand centuries old, the abso- lute must even now be articulately aware of all these negations. Along with what everything is it must also be conscious of everything which it is not. This infinite atmosphere of explicit negativity — observe that it has to be explicit — 127 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE around everything seems to us so useless an encumbrance as to make the absolute still more foreign to our sympathy. Furthermore, if it be a fact that certain ideas are silly, the absolute has to have already thought the silly ideas to establish them in silliness. The rubbish in its mind would thus appear easily to outweigh in amount the more desirable material. One would expect it fairly to burst with such an obesity, plethora, and superfoetation of useless information . 15 I will spare you further objections. The sum of it all is that the absolute is not forced on our belief by logic, that it involves features of irrationality peculiar to itself, and that a thinker to w 7 hom it does not come as an ‘immediate certainty’ (to use Mr. Joachim’s words), is in no way bound to treat it as any- thing but an emotionally rather sublime hypo- thesis. As such, it might, with all its defects, be, on account of its peace-conferring power and its formal grandeur, more rational than anything else in the field. But meanwhile the strung-along unfinished world in time is its 128 III. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD rival : reality MAY exist in distributive form, in the shape not of an all but of a set of eaches, just as it seems to — this is the anti-absolutist hypothesis. Prima facie there is this in favor of the eaches, that they are at any rate real enough to have made themselves at least ap- pear to every one, whereas the absolute has as yet appeared immediately to only a few mys- tics, and indeed to them very ambiguously. The advocates of the absolute assure us that any distributive form of being is infected and undermined by self-contradiction. If we are unable to assimilate their arguments, and we have been unable, the only course we can take, it seems to me, is to let the absolute bury the absolute, and to seek reality in more promising directions, even among the details of the finite and the immediately given. If these words of mine sound in bad taste to some of you, or even sacrilegious, I am sorry. Perhaps the impression may be miti- gated by what I have to say in later lectures. IV CONCERNING FECHNER LECTURE IV CONCERNING FECHNER The prestige of the absolute has rather crum- bled in our hands. The logical proofs of it miss fire ; the portraits which its best court-painters show of it are featureless and foggy in the extreme; and, apart from the cold comfort of assuring us that with it all is well, and that to see that all is well with us also we need only rise to its eternal point of view, it yields us no relief whatever. It introduces, on the con- trary, into philosophy and theology certain poisonous difficulties of which but for its intru- sion we never should have heard. But if we drop the absolute out of the world, must we then conclude that the world contains nothing better in the way of consciousness than our consciousness ? Is our whole instinctive belief in higher presences, our persistent inner turning towards divine companionship, to count for nothing ? Is it but the pathetic illusion of beings with incorrigibly social and imaginative minds ? 133 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE Such a negative conclusion would, I believe, be desperately hasty, a sort of pouring out of the child with the bath. Logically it is possible to believe in superhuman beings without iden- tifying them with the absolute at all. The treaty of offensive and defensive alliance which cer- tain groups of the Christian clergy have recently made with our transcendentalist philosophers seems to me to be based on a well-meaning but baleful mistake. Neither the Jehovah of the old testament nor the heavenly father of the new has anything in common with the abso- lute except that they are all three greater than man ; and if you say that the notion of the ab- solute is what the gods of Abraham, of David, and of Jesus, after first developing into each other, were inevitably destined to develop into in more reflective and modern minds, I reply that although in certain specifically philoso- phical minds this may have been the case, in minds more properly to be termed religious the development has followed quite another path. The whole history of evangelical Chris- tianity is there to prove it. I propose in these 134 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER lectures to plead for that other line of develop- ment. To set the doctrine of the absolute in its proper framework, so that it shall not fill the whole welkin and exclude all alternative possibilities of higher thought — as it seems to do for many students who approach it with a limited previous acquaintance with philosophy — I will contrast it with a system which, ab- stractly considered, seems at first to have much in common with absolutism, but which, when taken concretely and temperamentally, really stands at the opposite pole. I refer to the phi- losophy of Gustav Theodor Fechner, a writer but little known as yet to English readers, but destined, I am persuaded, to wield more and more influence as time goes on. It is the intense concreteness of Fechner, his fertility of detail, which fills me with an admi- ration which I should like to make this audi- ence share. Among the philosophic cranks of my acquaintance in the past was a lady all the tenets of whose system I have forgotten except one. Had she been born in the Ionian Archi- pelago some three thousand years ago, that one 135 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE doctrine would probably have made her name sure of a place in every university curriculum and examination paper. The world, she said, is composed of only two elements, the Thick, namely, and the Thin. No one can deny the truth of this analysis, as far as it goes (though in the light of our contemporary knowledge of nature it has itself a rather ‘thin’ sound), and it is nowhere truer than in that part of the world called philosophy. I am sure, for example, that many of you, listening to what poor account I have been able to give of transcendental ideal- ism, have received an impression of its argu- ments being strangely thin, and of the terms it leaves us with being shiveringly thin wrappings for so thick and burly a world as this. Some of you of course will charge the thinness to my exposition ; but thin as that has been, I believe the doctrines reported on to have been thinner. From Green to Haldane the absolute proposed to us to straighten out the confusions of the thicket of experience in which our life is passed remains a pure abstraction which hardly any one tries to make a whit concreter. If we open 136 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER Green, we get nothing but the transcendental ego of apperception (Kant’s name for the fact that to be counted in experience a thing has to be witnessed) , blown up into a sort of timeless soap-bubble large enough to mirror the whole universe. Nature, Green keeps insisting, con- sists only in relations, and these imply the ac- tion of a mind that is eternal ; a self-distinguish- ing consciousness which itself escapes from the relations by which it determines other things. Present to whatever is in succession, it is not in succession itself. If we take the Cairds, they tell us little more of the principle of the uni- verse — it is always a return into the identity of the self from the difference of its objects. It separates itself from them and so becomes conscious of them in their separation from one another, while at the same time it binds them together as elements in one higher self-con- sciousness. This seems the very quintessence of thin- ness ; and the matter hardly grows thicker w 7 hen we gather, after enormous amounts of reading, that the great enveloping self in question is 137 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE absolute reason as such, and that as such it is characterized by the habit of using certain jejune ‘categories’ with which to perform its eminent relating work. The whole active ma- terial of natural fact is tried out, and only the barest intellectualistic formalism remains. Hegel tried, as we saw, to make the system concreter by making the relations between things ‘ dialectic,’ but if we turn to those who use his name most worshipfully, we find them giving up all the particulars of his attempt, and simply praising his intention — much as in our manner we have praised it ourselves. Mr. Haldane, for example, in his wonderfully clever Gifford lectures, praises Hegel to the skies, but what he tells of him amounts to little more than this, that ‘the categories in which the mind arranges its experiences, and gives meaning to them, the universals in which the particulars are grasped in the individual, are a logical chain, in which the first presupposes the last, and the last is its presupposition and its truth.’ He hardly tries at all to thicken this thin logical scheme. He says indeed that absolute mind in 138 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER itself, and absolute mind in its hetereity or other- ness, under the distinction which it sets up of itself from itself, have as their real prius abso- lute mind in synthesis ; and, this being absolute mind's true nature, its dialectic character must show itself in such concrete forms as Goethe’s and Wordsworth’s poetry, as well as in religious forms. ‘The nature of God, the nature of ab- solute mind, is to exhibit the triple movement of dialectic, and so the nature of God as pre- sented in religion must be a triplicity, a trinity.’ But beyond thus naming Goethe and Words- worth and establishing the trinity, Mr. Hal- dane’s Hegelianism carries us hardly an inch into the concrete detail of the world we actually inhabit. Equally thin is Mr. Taylor, both in his prin- ciples and in their results. Following Mr. Brad- ley, he starts by assuring us that reality cannot be self-contradictory, but to be related to any- thing really outside of one’s self is to be self- contradictory, so the ultimate reality must be a single all-inclusive systematic whole. Yet all he can say of this wTole at the end of his excel- 139 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE lently written book is that the notion of it ‘ can make no addition to our information and can of itself supply no motives for practical en- deavor.’ Mr. McTaggart treats us to almost as thin a fare. ‘The main practical interest of Hegel’s philosophy,’ he says, ‘ is to be found in the ab- stract certainty which the logic gives us that all reality is rational and righteous, even when we cannot see in the least how it is so. . . . Not that it shows us how the facts around us are good, not that it shows us how we can make them better, but that it proves that they, like other reality, are sub specie eternitatis, perfectly good, and sub specie temporis , destined to be- come perfectly good.’ Here again, no detail whatever, only the abstract certainty that whatever the detail may prove to be, it will be good. Common non-dia- lectical men have already this certainty as a result of the generous vital enthusiasm about the universe with which they are born. The peculiarity of transcendental philosophy is its sovereign contempt for merely vital functions 140 IY. CONCERNING FECHNER like enthusiasm, and its pretension to turn our simple and immediate trusts and faiths into the form of logically mediated certainties, to ques- tion which would be absurd. But the whole basis on which Mr. McTaggart’s own certainty so solidly rests, settles down into the one nut- shell of an assertion into which he puts Hegel’s gospel, namely, that in every bit of experi- ence and thought, however finite, the whole of reality (the absolute idea, as Hegel calls it) is ‘implicitly present.’ This indeed is Hegel’s vision, and Hegel thought that the details of his dialectic proved its truth. But disciples who treat the details of the proof as unsatisfactory and yet cling to the vision, are surely, in spite of their pretension to a more rational consciousness, no better than common men with their enthusiasms or delib- erately adopted faiths. We have ourselves seen some of the weakness of the monistic proofs. Mr. McTaggart picks plenty of holes of his own in Hegel’s logic, and finally concludes that ‘ all true philosophy must be mystical, not indeed in its methods but in its final conclusions,’ 141 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE which is as much as to say that the rationalistic methods leave us in the lurch, in spite of all their superiority, and that in the end vision and faith must eke them out. But how abstract and thin is here the vision, to sav nothing of the faith ! The whole of reality, explicitly absent from our finite experiences, must nevertheless be present in them all implicitly, altho no one of us can ever see how — the bare word ‘ im- plicit’ here bearing the whole pyramid of the monistic system on its slender point. Mr. Joa- chim’s monistic system of truth rests on an even slenderer point. — ‘/ have never doubted ,’ he says, ‘that universal and timeless truth is a single content or significance, one and whole and complete,’ and he candidly confesses the failure of rationalistic attempts ‘to raise this immediate certainty’ to the level of reflective knowledge. There is, in short, no mediation for him between the Truth in capital letters and all the little ‘lower-case’ truths — and errors — which life presents. The psychologi- cal fact that he never has ‘doubted ’ is enough. The whole monistic pyramid, resting on 142 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER points as thin as these, seems to me to be a machts'pruch, a product of will far more than one of reason. 'Unity is good, therefore things shall cohere ; they shall be one ; there shall be categories to make them one, no matter what empirical disjunctions may appear. In Hegel's own writings, the shall-be temper is ubiquitous and towering; it overrides verbal and logical resistances alike. Hegel’s error, as Professor Royce so well says, ‘lay not in introducing logic into passion,’ as some people charge, ‘but in conceiving the logic of passion as the only logic. . . . He is [thus] suggestive,’ Royce says, ‘but never final. His system as a system has crumbled, but his vital comprehension of our life remains forever .’ 1 That vital comprehension we have already seen. It is that there is a sense in which real things are not merely their own bare selves, but may vaguely be treated as also their own oth- ers, and that ordinary logic, since it denies this, must be overcome. Ordinary logic denies this because it substitutes concepts for real things, and concepts are their own bare selves and 143 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE nothing else. What Royce calls Hegel’s ‘sys- tem ’ was Hegel’s attempt to make us believe that he was working by concepts and grinding out a higher style of logic, when in reality sen- sible experiences, hypotheses, and passion fur- nished him with all his results. What I myself may mean by things being their own others, we shall see in a later lecture. It is now time to take our look at Fechner, whose thickness is a refreshing contrast to the thin, abstract, indigent, and threadbare appearance, the starving, school-room aspect, which the speculations of most of our absolutist philosophers present. There is something really weird and uncanny in the contrast between the abstract pretensions of rationalism and what rationalistic methods concretely can do. If the ‘ logical prius ’ of our mind were really the ‘implicit presence’ of the whole ‘concrete universal,’ the whole of rea- son, or reality, or spirit, or the absolute idea, or whatever it may be called, in all our finite thinking, and if this reason worked (for ex- ample) by the dialectical method, does n’t it 144 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER seem odd that in the greatest instance of ra- tionalization mankind has known, in ‘ science,’ namely, the dialectical method should never once have been tried ? Not a solitary instance of the use of it in science occurs to my mind. Hypotheses, and deductions from these, con- trolled by sense-observations and analogies with what we know elsewhere, are to be thanked for all of science’s results. Fechner used no methods but these latter ones in arguing for his metaphysical conclu- sions about reality — but let me first rehearse a few of the facts about his life. Born in 1801, the son of a poor country pastor in Saxony, he lived from 1817 to 1887, when he died, seventy years therefore, at Leip- zig, a typical gelehrter of the old-fashioned ger- man stripe. His means were always scanty, so his only extravagances could be in the way of thought, but these were gorgeous ones. He passed his medical examinations at Leipzig University at the age of twenty-one, but de- cided, instead of becoming a doctor, to devote himself to physical science. It was ten years 145 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE before he was made professor of physics, although he soon was authorized to lecture. Meanwhile, he had to make both ends meet, and this he did by voluminous literary labors. He translated, for example, the four volumes of Biot’s treatise on physics, and the six of Thenard’s work on chemistry, and took care of their enlarged editions later. He edited re- pertories of chemistry and physics, a pharma- ceutical journal, and an encyclopaedia in eight volumes, of which he wrote about one third. He published physical treatises and experi- mental investigations of his own, especially in electricity. Electrical measurements, as you know, are the basis of electrical science, and Fechner’s measurements in galvanism, per- formed with the simplest self-made appara- tus, are classic to this day. During this time he also published a number of half-philo- sophical, half-humorous writings, which have gone through several editions, under the name of Dr. Mises, besides poems, literary and artistic essays, and other occasional articles. 146 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER But overwork, poverty, and an eye-trouble produced by his observations on after-images in the retina (also a classic piece of investiga- tion) produced in Fechner, then about thirty- eight years old, a terrific attack of nervous prostration with painful hyperaesthesia of all the functions, from which he suffered three years, cut off entirely from active life. Present- day medicine would have classed poor Fech- ner’s malady quickly enough, as partly a habit- neurosis, but its severity was such that in his day it was treated as a visitation incomprehen- sible in its malignity; and when he suddenly began to get well, both Fechner and others treated the recovery as a sort of divine miracle. This illness, bringing Fechner face to face with inner desperation, made a great crisis in his life. ‘Had I not then clung to the faith,’ he writes, ‘that clinging to faith would somehow or other work its reward, so hatte ich jene zeit nicht ausgehalten .’ His religious and cosmo- logical faiths saved him — thenceforward one great aim with him was to work out and com- municate these faiths to the world. He did so 147 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE on the largest scale; but he did many other things too ere he died. A book on the atomic theory, classic also; four elaborate mathematical and experimental volumes on what he called psychophysics — many persons consider Fechner to have prac- tically founded scientific psychology in the first of these books ; a volume on organic evolution, and two works on experimental sesthetics, in which again Fechner is considered by some judges to have laid the foundations of a new science, must be included among these other performances. Of the more religious and phi- losophical w r orks, I shall immediately give a further account. All Leipzig mourned him when he died, for he was the pattern of the ideal german scholar, as daringly original in his thought as he was homely in his life, a modest, genial, laborious slave to truth and learning, and withal the owner of an admirable literary style of the vernacular sort. The materialistic generation, that in the fifties and sixties called his specula- tions fantastic, had been replaced by one with 148 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER greater liberty of imagination, and a Preyer, a Wundt, a Paulsen, and a Lasswitz could now speak of Fechner as their master. His mind was indeed one of those multitudi- nously organized cross-roads of truth which are occupied only at rare intervals by children of men, and from which nothing is either too far or too near to be seen in due perspective. Patientest observation, exactest mathematics, shrewdest discrimination, humanest feeling, flourished in him on the largest scale, with no apparent detriment to one another. He was in fact a philosopher in the ‘ great ’ sense, altho he cared so much less than most phi- losophers care for abstractions of the ‘thin’ order. For him the abstract lived in the con- crete, and the hidden motive of all he did was to bring what he called the daylight view of the world into ever greater evidence, that day- light view being this, that the whole universe in its different spans and wave-lengths, exclu- sions and envelopments, is everywhere alive and conscious. It has taken fifty years for his chief book, ‘ Zend-avesta,’ to pass into a sec- 149 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE ond edition (1901). ‘One swallow,’ he cheer- fully writes, ‘does not make a summer. But the first swallow would not come unless the summer were coming ; and for me that summer means my daylight view some time prevailing.’ The original sin, according to Fechner, of both our popular and our scientific thinking, is our inveterate habit of regarding the spiritual not as the rule but as an exception in the midst of nature. Instead of believing our life to be fed at the breasts of the greater life, our indi- viduality to be sustained by the greater individ- uality, which must necessarily have more con- sciousness and more independence than all that it brings forth, we habitually treat what- ever lies outside of our life as so much slag and ashes of life only; or if we believe in a Divine Spirit, we fancy him on the one side as bodiless, and nature as soulless on the other. What comfort, or peace, Fechner asks, can come from such a doctrine ? The flowers wither at its breath, the stars turn into stone ; our own body grows unworthy of our spirit and sinks to a tenement for carnal senses only. The book 150 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER of nature turns into a volume on mechanics, in which whatever has life is treated as a sort of anomaly ; a great chasm of separation yawns between us and all that is higher than ourselves ; and God becomes a thin nest of ab- stractions. , Fechner’s great instrument for vivifying the daylight view is analogy ; not a rationalistic ar- gument is to be found in all his many pages — only reasonings like those which men continu- ally use in practical life. For example: My house is built by some one, the world too is built by some one. The world is greater than my house, it must be a greater some one who built the world. My body moves by the influence of my feeling and will; the sun, moon, sea, and w r ind, being themselves more powerful, move by the influence of some more powerful feeling and will. I live now, and change from one day to another ; I shall live hereafter, and change still more, etc. Bain defines genius as the power of seeing analogies. The number that Fechner could perceive was prodigious ; but he insisted on the 151 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE differences as well. Neglect to make allowance for these, lie said, is the common fallacy in ana- logical reasoning. Most of us, for example, rea- soning justly that, since all the minds we know are connected with bodies, therefore God’s mind should be connected with a body, proceed to suppose that that body must be just an ani- mal body over again, and paint an altogether human picture of God. But all that the analogy comports is a body — the particular features of our body are adaptations to a habitat so dif- ferent from God’s that if God have a physical body at all, it must be utterly different from ours in structure. Throughout his writings Fechner makes difference and analogy walk abreast, and by his extraordinary power of noticing both, he converts what would ordinarily pass for objections to his conclusions into factors of their support. The vaster orders of mind go with the vaster orders of body. The entire earth on which we live must have, according to Fechner, its own collective consciousness. So must each sun, moon, and planet ; so must the whole solar sys- 152 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER tem have its own wider consciousness, in which the consciousness of our earth plays one part. So has the entire starry system as such its con- sciousness ; and if that starry system be not the sum of all that is, materially considered, then that whole system, along with whatever else may be, is the body of that absolutely total- ized consciousness of the universe to which men give the name of God. Speculatively Fechner is thus a monist in his theology ; but there is room in his universe for every grade of spiritual being between man and the final all-inclusive God ; and in suggesting what the positive content of all this super-hu- manity may be, he hardly lets his imagination fly beyond simple spirits of the planetary order. The earth-soul he passionately believes in ; he treats the earth as our special human guardian angel ; we can pray to the earth as men pray to their saints ; but I think that in his system, as in so many of the actual historic theologies, the supreme God marks only a sort of limit of enclosure of the worlds above man. He is left thin and abstract in his majesty, men prefer- 153 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE ring to carry on their personal transactions with the many less remote and abstract mes- sengers and mediators whom the divine order provides. I shall ask later whether the abstractly mo- nistic turn which Fechner’s speculations took was necessitated by logic. I believe it not to have been required. Meanwhile let me lead you a little more into the detail of his thought. Inevitably one does him miserable injustice by summarizing and abridging him. For altho the type of reasoning he employs is almost childlike for simplicity, and his bare conclusions can be written on a single page, the power of the man is due altogether to the profuseness of his con- crete imagination, to the multitude of the points which he considers successively, to the cumu- lative effect of his learning, of his thorough- ness, and of the ingenuity of his detail, to his admirably homely style, to the sincerity with which his pages glow, and finally to the impres- sion he gives of a man who doesn’t live at sec- ond-hand, but who sees, who in fact speaks as one having authority, and not as if he were 154 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER one of the common herd of professorial philo- sophic scribes. Abstractly set down, his most important conclusion for my purpose in these lectures is that the constitution of the world is identical throughout. In ourselves, visual consciousness goes with our eyes, tactile consciousness with our skin. But altho neither skin nor eye knows aught of the sensations of the other, they come together and figure in some sort of relation and combination in the more inclusive conscious- ness which each of us names his self. Quite similarly, then, says Fechner, we must suppose that my consciousness of myself and yours of yourself, altho in their immediacy they keep separate and know nothing of each other, are yet known and used together in a higher con- sciousness, that of the human race, say, into which they enter as constituent parts. Simi- larly, the whole human and animal kingdoms come together as conditions of a conscious- ness of still wider scope. This combines in the soul of the earth with the consciousness of the vegetable kingdom, which in turn contributes 155 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE its share of experience to that of the whole solar system, and so on from synthesis to synthesis and height to height, till an absolutely univer- sal consciousness is reached. A vast analogical series, in which the basis of the analogy consists of facts directly ob- servable in ourselves. The supposition of an earth-consciousness meets a strong instinctive prejudice which Fechner ingeniously tries to overcome. Man’s mind is the highest consciousness upon the earth, we think — the earth itself being in all ways man’s inferior. How should its con- sciousness, if it have one, be superior to his ? What are the marks of superiority which we are tempted to use here ? If we look more carefully into them, Fechner points out that the earth possesses each and all of them more perfectly than we. He considers in detail the points of difference between us, and shows them all to make for the earth’s higher rank. I will touch on only a few of these points. One of them of course is independence of other external beings. External to the earth 156 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER are only the other heavenly bodies. All the things on which we externally depend for life — air, water, plant and animal food, fellow men, etc. — are included in her as her con- stituent parts. She is self-sufficing in a million respects in which we are not so. We depend on her for almost everything, she on us for but a small portion of her history. She swings us in her orbit from winter to summer and revolves us from day into night and from night into day. Complexity in unity is another sign of superiority. The total earth’s complexity far exceeds that of any organism, for she includes all our organisms in herself, along with an infinite number of things that our organisms fail to include. Yet how simple and massive are the phases of her own proper life ! As the total bearing of any animal is sedate and tranquil compared with the agitation of its blood corpuscles, so is the earth a sedate and tranquil being compared with the animals whom she supports. To develop from within, instead of being fashioned from without, is also counted as 157 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE something superior in men’s eyes. An egg is a higher style of being than a piece of clay which an external modeler makes into the image of a bird. Well, the earth’s history develops from within. It is like that of a wonderful egg which the sun’s heat, like that of a mother-hen, has stimulated to its cycles of evolutionary change. Individuality of type, and difference from other beings of its type, is another mark of rank. The earth differs from every other planet, and as a class planetary beings are extraordinarily distinct from other beings. Long ago the earth was called an animal ; but a planet is a higher class of being than either man or animal ; not only quantitatively greater, like a vaster and more awkward whale or elephant, but a being whose enormous size requires an altogether different plan of life. Our animal organization comes from our in- feriority. Our need of moving to and fro, of stretching our limbs and bending our bodies, shows only our defect. What are our legs but crutches, by means of which, with restless 158 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER efforts, we go hunting after the things we have not inside of ourselves. But the earth is no such cripple ; why should she who already pos- sesses within herself the things we so painfully pursue, have limbs analogous to ours ? Shall she mimic a small part of herself ? What need has she of arms, with nothing to reach for ? of a neck, with no head to carry ? of eyes or nose when she finds her way through space without either, and has the millions of eyes of all her animals to guide their movements on her sur- face, and all their noses to smell the flowers that grow ? For, as we are ourselves a part of the earth, so our organs are her organs. She is, as it were, eye and ear over her whole extent — all that we see and hear in separation she sees and hears at once. She brings forth living beings of. countless kinds upon her surface, and their multitudinous conscious relations with each other she takes up into her higher and more general conscious life. Most of us, considering the theory that the whole terrestrial mass is animated as our bodies are, make the mistake of working the 159 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE analogy too literally, and allowing for no dif- ferences. If the earth be a sentient organism, we say, where are her brain and nerves ? What corresponds to her heart and lungs ? In other words, we expect functions which she already performs through us, to be performed outside of us again, and in just the same way. But we see perfectly well how the earth performs some of these functions in a way unlike our way. If you speak of circulation, what need has she of a heart when the sun keeps all the showers of rain that fall upon her and all the springs and brooks and rivers that irrigate her, going ? What need has she of internal lungs, when her whole sensitive surface is in living commerce w r ith the atmosphere that clings to it ? The organ that gives us most trouble is the brain. All the consciousness we directly know seems tied to brains. — Can there be con- sciousness, we ask, where there is no brain ? But our brain, w T hich primarily serves to corre- late our muscular reactions with the external objects on which we depend, performs a func- tion which the earth performs in an entirely 160 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER different way. She has no proper muscles or limbs of her own, and the only objects external to her are the other stars. To these her whole mass reacts by most exquisite alterations in its total gait, and by still more exquisite vibratory responses in its substance. Her ocean reflects the lights of heaven as in a mighty mirror, her atmosphere refracts them like a monstrous lens, the clouds and snow-fields combine them into white, the woods and flowers disperse them into colors. Polarization, interference, absorp- tion, awaken sensibilities in matter of which our senses are too coarse to take any note. For these cosmic relations of hers, then, she no more needs a special brain than she needs eyes or ears. Our brains do indeed unify and correlate innumerable functions. Our eyes know nothing of sound, our ears nothing of light, but, having brains, we can feel sound and light together, and compare them. We account for this by the fibres which in the brain connect the optical with the acoustic cen- tre, but just how these fibres bring together not only the sensations, but the centres, we fail to 161 A PLURALISTIC universe see. But if fibres are indeed all that is needed to do that trick, has not the earth pathways, by which you and I are physically continuous, more than enough to do for our two minds what the brain-fibres do for the sounds and sights in a single mind ? Must every higher means of unification between things be a literal brain- fibre, and go by that name ? Cannot the earth-mind know otherwise the contents of our minds together ? Fechner’s imagination, insisting on the dif- ferences as well as on the resemblances, thus tries to make our picture of the whole earth’s life more concrete. He revels in the thought of its perfections. To carry her precious freight through the hours and seasons what form could be more excellent than hers — being as it is horse, wheels, and wagon all in one. Think of her beauty — a shining ball, sky-blue and sun-lit over one half, the other bathed in starry night, reflecting the heavens from all her wa- ters, myriads of lights and shadows in the folds of her mountains and windings of her val- leys, she would be a spectacle of rainbow glory, 162 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER could one only see her from afar as we see parts of her from her own mountain-tops. Every quality of landscape that has a name would then be visible in her at once — all that is delicate or graceful, all that is quiet, or wild, or romantic, or desolate, or cheerful, or luxu- riant, or fresh. That landscape is her face — a peopled landscape, too, for men’s eyes would appear in it like diamonds among the dew- drops. Green would be the dominant color, but the blue atmosphere and the clouds would enfold her as a bride is shrouded in her veil — a veil the vapory transparent folds of which the earth, through her ministers the winds, never tires of laying and folding about herself anew. Every element has its own living denizens. Can the celestial ocean of ether, whose waves are light, in which the earth herself floats, not have hers, higher by as much as their ele- ment is higher, swimming without fins, flying without wings, moving, immense and tranquil, as by a half-spiritual force through the half- spiritual sea which they inhabit, rejoicing in the exchange of luminous influence with one 163 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE another, following the slightest pull of one another’s attraction, and harboring, each of them, an inexhaustible inward wealth ? Men have always made fables about angels, dwelling in the light, needing no earthly food or drink, messengers between ourselves and God. Here are actually existent beings, dwell- ing in the light and moving through the sky, needing neither food nor drink, intermediaries between God and us, obeying his commands. So, if the heavens really are the home of angels, the heavenly bodies must be those very angels, for other creatures there are none. Yes! the earth is our great common guardian angel, who watches over all our interests combined. In a striking page Fechner relates one of his moments of direct vision of this truth. ‘On a certain spring morning I went out to walk. The fields were green, the birds sang, the dew glistened, the smoke was rising, here and there a man appeared ; a light as of trans- figuration lay on all things. It was only a little bit of the earth ; it was only one moment of her existence; and yet as my look embraced her 164 IY. CONCERNING FECHNEJt more and more it seemed to me not only so beautiful an idea, but so true and clear a fact, that she is an angel, an angel so rich and fresh and flower-like, and yet going her round in the skies so firmly and so at one with her- self, turning her whole living face to Heaven, and carrying me along with her into that Heaven, that I asked myself how the opinions of men could ever have so spun themselves away from life so far as to deem the earth only a dry clod, and to seek for angels above it or about it in the emptiness of the sky, — only to find them nowhere. . . . But such an experi- ence as this passes for fantastic. The earth is a globular body, and what more she may be, one can find in mineralogical cabinets .’ 2 Where there is no vision the people perish. Few professorial philosophers have any vision. Fechner had vision, and that is why one can read him over and over again, and each time bring away a fresh sense of reality. His earliest book was a vision of what the inner life of plants may be like. He called it ‘Nanna.’ In the development of animals the 165 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE nervous system is the central fact. Plants de- velop centrifugally, spread their organs abroad. For that reason people suppose that they can have no consciousness, for they lack the unity which the central nervous system provides. But the plant’s consciousness may be of another type, being connected with other structures. Violins and pianos give out sounds because they have strings. Does it follow that nothing but strings can give out sound ? How then about flutes and organ-pipes ? Of course their sounds are of a different quality, and so may the con- sciousness of plants be of a quality correlated exclusively with the kind of organization that they possess. Nutrition, respiration, propaga- tion take place in them without nerves. In us these functions are conscious only in unusual states, normally their consciousness is eclipsed by that which goes with the brain. No such eclipse occurs in plants, and their lower con- sciousness may therefore be all the more lively. With nothing to do but to drink the light and air with their leaves, to let their cells proliferate, to feel their rootlets draw the sap, is it conceiv- 166 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER able that they should not consciously suffer if water, light, and air are suddenly withdrawn ? or that when the flowering and fertilization which are the culmination of their life take place, they should not feel their own existence more intensely and enjoy something like what we call pleasure in ourselves ? Does the water- lily, rocking in her triple bath of water, air, and light, relish in no wise her own beauty ? When the plant in our room turns to the light, closes her blossoms in the dark, responds to our wa- tering or pruning by increase of size or change of shape and bloom, who has the right to say she does not feel, or that she plays a purely pas- sive part ? Truly plants can foresee nothing, neither the scythe of the mower, nor the hand extended to pluck their flowers. They can neither run away nor cry out. But this only proves how different their modes of feeling life must be from those of animals that live by eyes and ears and locomotive organs, it does not prove that they have no mode of feeling life at all. How scanty and scattered would sensation 167 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE be on our globe, if the feeling-life of plants were blotted from existence. Solitary would consciousness move through the woods in the shape of some deer or other quadruped, or fly about the flowers in that of some insect, but can we really suppose that the Nature through which God’s breath blows is such a barren wilderness as this ? I have probably by this time said enough to acquaint those of you who have never seen these metaphysical writings of Fechner with their more general characteristics, and I hope that some of you may now feel like reading them yourselves . 3 The special thought of Fech- ner’s with which in these lectures I have most practical concern, is his belief that the more inclusive forms of consciousness are in part constituted by the more limited forms. Not that they are the mere sum of the more limited forms. As our mind is not the bare sum of our sights plus our sounds plus our pains, but in adding these terms together also finds rela- tions among them and weaves them into schemes and forms and objects of which no one 168 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER sense in its separate estate knows anything, so the earth-soul traces relations between the contents of my mind and the contents of yours of which neither of our separate minds is con- scious. It has schemes, forms, and objects pro- portionate to its wider field, which our mental fields are far too narrow to cognize. By our- selves we are simply out of relation with each other, for it we are both of us there, and dif- ferent from each other, which is a positive relation. What we are without knowing, it knows that we are. We are closed against its world, but that world is not closed against us. It is as if the total universe of inner life had a sort of grain or direction, a sort of valvular structure, permitting knowledge to flow in one way only, so that the wider might always have the narrower under observation, but never the narrower the wider. Fechner’s great analogy here is the relation of the senses to our individual minds. When our eyes are open their sensations enter into our general mental life, which grows inces- santly by the addition of what they see. Close 169 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE the eyes, however, and the visual additions stop, nothing but thoughts and memories of the past visual experiences remain — in com- bination of course with the enormous stock of other thoughts and memories, and with the data coming in from the senses not yet closed. Our eye-sensations of themselves know no- thing of this enormous life into which they fall. Fechner thinks, as any common man would think, that they are taken into it directly when they occur, and form part of it just as they are. They don’t stay outside and get represented inside by their copies. It is only the memo- ries and concepts of them that are copies; the sensible perceptions themselves are taken in or walled out in their own proper persons according as the eyes are open or shut. Fechner likens our individual persons on the earth unto so many sense-organs of the earth’s soul. We add to its perceptive life so long as our own life lasts. It absorbs our per- ceptions, just as they occur, into its larger sphere of knowledge, and combines them with the other data there. When one of us dies, it 170 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER is as if an eye of the world were closed, for all perceptive contributions from that particular quarter cease. But the memories and concept- ual relations that have spun themselves round the perceptions of that person remain in the larger earth-life as distinct as ever, and form new relations and grow and develop through- out all the future, in the same way in which our own distinct objects of thought, once stored in memory, form new relations and develop throughout our whole finite life. This is Fechner’s theory of immortality, first published in the little ‘Biichlein des lebens nach dem tode,’ in 1836, and re-edited in greatly im- proved shape in the last volume of his ‘Zend- avesta.’ We rise upon the earth as wavelets rise upon the ocean. We grow out of her soil as leaves grow from a tree. The wavelets catch the sun- beams separately, the leaves stir when the branches do not move. They realize their own events apart, just as in our own consciousness, when anything becomes emphatic, the back- ground fades from observation. Yet the event 171 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE works back upon the background, as the wave- let works upon the waves, or as the leaf’s movements work upon the sap inside the branch. The whole sea and the whole tree are registers of what has happened, and are different for the wave’s and the leaf’s action having occurred. A grafted twig may modify its stock to the roots : — so our outlived private experiences, impressed on the whole earth- mind as memories, lead the immortal life of ideas there, and become parts of the great system, fully distinguished from one another, just as we ourselves when alive were distinct, realizing themselves no longer isolatedly, but along with one another as so many partial systems, entering thus into new combinations, being affected by the perceptive experiences of those living then, and affecting the living in their turn — altho they are so seldom recog- nized by living men to do so. If you imagine that this entrance after the death of the body into a common life of higher type means a merging and loss of our distinct personality, Fechner asks you whether a visual 172 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER sensation of our own exists in any sense less for itself or less distinctly, when it enters into our higher relational consciousness and is there distinguished and defined. — But here I must stop my reporting and send you to his volumes. Thus is the universe alive, according to this philosopher! I think you will admit that he makes it more thickly alive than do the other philosophers who, fol- lowing rationalistic methods solely, gain the same results, but only in the thinnest outlines. Both Fechner and Professor Royce, for ex- ample, believe ultimately in one all-inclusive mind. Both believe that we, just as we stand here, are constituent parts of that mind. No other content has it than us, with all the other creatures like or unlike us, and the relations which it finds between us. Our eaches, col- lected into one, are substantively identical with its all, tho the all is perfect while no each is perfect, so that we have to admit that new qualities as well as unperceived relations ac- crue from the collective form. It is thus su- perior to the distributive form. But having 173 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE reached this result, Royce (tho his treatment of the subject on its moral side seems to me infinitely richer and thicker than that of any other contemporary idealistic philosopher) leaves us very much to our own devices. Fechner, on the contrary, tries to trace the superiorities due to the more collective form in as much detail as he can. He marks the various intermediary stages and halting places of collectivity, — as we are to our separate senses, so is the earth to us, so is the solar system to the earth, etc., — and if, in order to escape an infinitely long summation, he posits a complete God as the all-container and leaves him about as indefinite in feature as the ideal- ists leave their absolute, he yet provides us with a very definite gate of approach to him in the shape of the earth-soul, through which in the nature of things we must first make connexion with all the more enveloping superhuman realms, and with which our more immediate religious commerce at any rate has to be car- ried on. Ordinary monistic idealism leaves every- 174 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER thing intermediary out. It recognizes only the extremes, as if, after the first rude face of the phenomenal world in all its particularity, no- thing but the supreme in all its perfection could be found. First, you and I, just as we are in this room ; and the moment we get below that sur- face, the unutterable absolute itself ! Does n’t this show a singularly indigent imagination ? Is n’t this brave universe made on a richer pattern, with room in it for a long hierarchy of beings ? Materialistic science makes it infi- nitely richer in terms, with its molecules, and ether, and electrons, and what not. Absolute idealism, thinking of reality only under intel- lectual forms, knows not what to do with bodies of any grade, and can make no use of any psychophysical analogy or correspond- ence. The resultant thinness is startling when compared with the thickness and articulation of such a universe as Fechner paints. May not satisfaction with the rationalistic absolute as the alpha and omega, and treatment of it in all its abstraction as an adequate religious ob- ject, argue a certain native poverty of mental 175 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE demand? Things reveal themselves soonest to those who most passionately want them, for our need sharpens our wit. To a mind content with little, the much in the universe may always remain hid. To be candid, one of my reasons for say- ing so much about Fechner has been to make the thinness of our current transcendentalism appear more evident by an effect of contrast. Scholasticism ran thick; Hegel himself ran thick ; but english and american transcenden- talisms run thin. If philosophy is more a mat- ter of passionate vision than of logic, — and I believe it is, logic only finding reasons for the vision afterwards, — must not such thinness come either from the vision being defective in the disciples, or from their passion, matched with Fechner ’s or with Hegel’s own passion, being as moonlight unto sunlight or as water unto wine ? 4 But I have also a much deeper reason for making Fechner a part of my text. His assump- tion that conscious experiences freely compound and separate themselves, the same assumption 176 IV. CONCERNING FECHNER by which absolutism explains the relation of our minds to the eternal mind, and the same by which empiricism explains the composition of the human mind out of subordinate men- tal elements, is not one which we ought to let pass without scrutiny. I shall scrutinize it in the next lecture. V THE COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS LECTURE V THE COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS In my last lecture I gave a miserably scanty outline of the way of thinking of a philosopher remarkable for the almost unexampled rich- ness of his imagination of details. I owe to Fechner’s shade an apology for presenting him in a manner so unfair to the most essential quality of his genius; but the time allotted is too short to say more about the particulars of his work, so I proceed to the programme I suggested at the end of our last hour. I wish to discuss the assumption that states of consciousness, so-called, can separate and combine themselves freely, and keep their own identity unchanged while forming parts of simultaneous fields of experience of wider scope. Let me first explain just what I mean by this. While you listen to my voice, for example, you are perhaps inattentive to some bodily sen- sation due to your clothing or your posture. 181 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE Yet that sensation would seem probably to be there, for in an instant, by a change of atten- tion, you can have it in one field of conscious- ness with the voice. It seems as if it existed first in a separate form, and then as if, with- out itself changing, it combined with your other co-existent sensations. It is after this analogy that pantheistic idealism thinks that we exist in the absolute. The absolute, it thinks, makes the world by knowing the whole of it at once in one undivided eternal act . 1 To ‘ be,’ really to be, is to be as it knows us to be, along with everything else, namely, and clothed with the fulness of our meaning. Meanwhile we are at the same time not only really and as it knows us, but also apparently, for to our separate single selves we appear without most other things and unable to declare with any fulness what our own meaning is. Now the classic doctrine of pantheistic idealism, from the Upanishads down to Josiah Royce, is that the finite knowers, in spite of their apparent ignorance, are one with the knower of the all. In the most limited moments of our private ex- 182 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS perience, the absolute idea, as Dr. McTaggart told us, is implicitly contained. The moments, as Royce says, exist only in relation to it. They are true or erroneous only through its overshadowing presence. Of the larger self that alone eternally is, they are the organic parts. They are, only inasmuch as they are implicated in its being. There is thus in reality but this one self, con- sciously inclusive of all the lesser selves, logos, problem-solver, and all-knower ; and Royce in- geniously compares the ignorance that in our persons breaks out in the midst of its complete knowledge and isolates me from you and both of us from it, to the inattention into which our finite minds are liable to fall with respect to such implicitly present details as those corpo- real sensations to which I made allusion just now. Those sensations stand to our total pri- vate minds in the same relation in which our private minds stand to the absolute mind. Pri- vacy means ignorance — I still quote Royce — and ignorance means inattention. We are finite because our wills, as such, are only fragments 183 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE of the absolute will ; because will means inter- est, and an incomplete will means an incom- plete interest; and because incompleteness of interest means inattention to much that a fuller interest would bring us to perceive . 2 In this account Royce makes by far the manliest of the post-hegelian attempts to read some empirically apprehensible content into the notion of our relation to the absolute mind. I have to admit, now that I propose to you to scrutinize this assumption rather closely, that trepidation seizes me. The subject is a subtle and abstruse one. It is one thing to delve into subtleties by one’s self with pen in hand, or to study out abstruse points in books, but quite another thing to make a popular lec- ture out of them. Nevertheless I must not flinch from my task here, for I think that this particular point forms perhaps the vital knot of the present philosophic situation, and I imagine that the times are ripe, or almost ripe, for a serious attempt to be made at its untying. It may perhaps help to lessen the arduous- ness of the subject if I put the first part of what 184 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS I have to say in the form of a direct personal confession. In the year 1890 I published a work on psychology in which it became my duty to discuss the value of a certain explanation of our higher mental states that had come into favor among the more biologically inclined psychologists. Suggested partly by the asso- ciation of ideas, and partly by the analogy of chemical compounds, this opinion was that complex mental states are resultants of the self-compounding of simpler ones. The Mills had spoken of mental chemistry; Wundt of a ‘psychic synthesis,’ which might develop properties not contained in the elements ; and such writers as Spencer, Taine, Fiske, Bar- ratt, and Clifford had propounded a great evolutionary theory in which, in the absence of souls, selves, or other principles of unity, pri- mordial units of mind-stuff or mind-dust were represented as summing themselves together in successive stages of compounding and re-com- pounding, and thus engendering our higher and more complex states of mind. The ele- 185 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE mentary feeling of A, let us say, and the ele- mentary feeling of B, when they occur in certain conditions, combine, according to this doctrine, into a feeling of A-plus-B, and this in turn com- bines with a similarly generated feeling of C-plus-D, until at last the whole alphabet may appear together in one field of awareness, with- out any other witnessing principle or princi- ples beyond the feelings of the several letters themselves, being supposed to exist. What each of them witnesses separately , 4 all ’ of them are supposed to witness in conjunction. But their distributive knowledge does n’t give rise to their collective knowledge by any act, it is their collective knowledge. The lower forms of consciousness ‘ taken together ’ are the higher. It, ‘taken apart,’ consists of nothing and is nothing but them. This, at least, is the most obvious way of understanding the doctrine, and is the way I understood it in the chapter in my psychology. Superficially looked at, this seems just like the combination of H 2 and O into water, but looked at more closely, the analogy halts badly. 186 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS When a chemist tells us that two atoms of hy- drogen and one of oxygen combine themselves of their own accord into the new compound substance ‘water,’ he knows (if he believes in the mechanical view r of nature) that this is only an elliptical statement for a more complex fact. That fact is that when H 2 and O, instead of keeping far apart, get into closer quarters, say into the position H-O-H, they affect surround- ing bodies differently : they now r wet our skin, dissolve sugar, put out fire, etc., wdiich they didn’t in their former positions. ‘Water’ is but our name for what acts thus peculiarly. But if the skin, sugar, and fire were absent, no witness would speak of water at all. He would still talk of the H and O distributively, merely noting that they acted now in the new position H-O-H. In the older psychologies the soul or self took the place of the sugar, fire, or skin. The lower feelings produced effects on it, and their ap- parent compounds were only its reactions. As you tickle a man’s face with a feather, and he laughs, so when you tickle his intellectual prin- 187 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE ciple with a retinal feeling, say, and a muscu- lar feeling at once, it laughs responsively by its category of ‘ space,’ but it would be false to treat the space as simply made of those simpler feel- ings. It is rather a new and unique psychic creation which their combined action on the mind is able to evoke. I found myself obliged, in discussing the mind-dust theory, to urge this last alternative view. The so-called mental compounds are simple psychic reactions of a higher type. The form itself of them, I said, is something new. We can’t say that awareness of the al- phabet as such is nothing more than twenty- six awarenesses, each of a separate letter ; for those are twenty-six distinct awarenesses, of single letters without others, while their so- called sum is one awareness, of every letter with its comrades. There is thus something new in the collective consciousness. It knows the same letters, indeed, but it knows them in this novel way. It is safer, I said (for I fought shy of admitting a self or soul or other agent of combination) , to treat the consciousness of the 188 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS alphabet as a twenty-seventh fact, the substi- tute and not the sum of the twenty-six simpler consciousnesses, and to say that while under certain physiological conditions they alone are produced, other more complex physiological conditions result in its production instead. Do not talk, therefore, I said, of the higher states consisting of the simpler, or being the same with them; talk rather of their knowing the same things. They are different mental facts, but they apprehend, each in its own peculiar way, the same objective A, B, C, and D. The theory of combination, I was forced to conclude, is thus untenable, being both logi- cally nonsensical and practically unnecessary. Say what you will, twelve thoughts, each of a single word, are not the self-same mental thing as one thought of the whole sentence. The higher thoughts, I insisted, are psychic units, not compounds; but for all that, they may know together as a collective multitude the very same objects wdiich under other condi- tions are known separately by as many simple thoughts. 189 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE For many years I held rigorously to this view , 3 and the reasons for doing so seemed to me during all those years to apply also to the opinion that the absolute mind stands to our minds in the relation of a whole to its parts. If untenable in finite psychology, that opinion ought to be untenable in metaphysics also. The great transcendentalist metaphor has al- ways been, as I lately reminded you, a gram- matical sentence. Physically such a sentence is of course composed of clauses, these of words, the words of syllables, and the syllables of letters. We may take each word in, yet not understand the sentence; but if suddenly the meaning of the whole sentence flashes, the sense of each word is taken up into that whole meaning. Just so, according to our tran- scendentalist teachers, the absolute mind thinks the whole sentence, while we, according to our rank as thinkers, think a clause, a word, a syllable, or a letter. Most of us are, as I said, mere syllables in the mouth of Allah. And as Allah comes first in the order of being, so comes first the entire sentence, the logos that 190 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS forms the eternal absolute thought. Students of language tell us that speech began with men’s efforts to make statements. The rude synthetic vocal utterances first used for this effect slowly got stereotyped, and then much later got decomposed into grammatical parts. It is not as if men had first invented letters and made syllables of them, then made words of the syllables and sentences of the words ; — they actually followed the reverse order. So, the transcendentalists affirm, the complete absolute thought is the pre-condition of our thoughts, and we finite creatures are only in so far as it owns us as its verbal fragments. The metaphor is so beautiful, and applies, moreover, so literally to such a multitude of the minor wholes of experience, that by merely hearing it most of us are convinced that it must apply universally. We see that no smallest raindrop can come into being without a whole shower, no single feather without a whole bird, neck and crop, beak and tail, coming into being simultaneously : so we unhesitatingly lay down the law that no part of anything can be except 191 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE so far as the whole also is. And then, since everything whatever is part of the whole uni- verse, and since (if we are idealists) nothing, w hether part or whole, exists except for a wit- ness, we proceed to the conclusion that the unmitigated absolute as witness of the whole is the one sole ground of being of every partial fact, the fact of our own existence included. We think of ourselves as being only a few of the feathers, so to speak, which help to con- stitute that absolute bird. Extending the analogy of certain wholes, of which we have familiar experience, to the whole of wholes, we easily become absolute idealists. But if, instead of yielding to the seductions of our metaphor, be it sentence, shower, or bird, we analyze more carefully the notion suggested by it that w r e are constituent parts of the ab- solute’s eternal field of consciousness, w~e find grave difficulties arising. First, the difficulty I found with the mind-dust theory. If the abso- lute makes us by knowing us, how can we exist otherwise than as it knows us ? But it know T s each of us indivisibly from everything else. Yet 192 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS if to exist means nothing but to be experienced, as idealism affirms, we surely exist otherwise, for we experience ourselves ignorantly and in division. We indeed differ from the abso- lute not only by defect, but by excess. Our ignorances, for example, bring curiosities and doubts by which it cannot be troubled, for it owns eternally the solution of every problem. Our impotence entails pains, our imperfection sins, which its perfection keeps at a distance. What I said of the alphabet-form and the letters holds good of the absolute experience and our experiences. Their relation, whatever it may be, seems not to be that of identity. It is impossible to reconcile the peculiarities of our experience with our being only the abso- lute’s mental objects. A God, as distinguished from the absolute, creates things by projecting them beyond himself as so many substances, each endowed with perseity, as the scholastics call it. But objects of thought are not things per se. They are there only for their thinker, and only as he thinks them. How, then, can they become severally alive on their own ac- 193 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE counts and think themselves quite otherwise than as he thinks them ? It is as if the char- acters in a novel were to get up from the pages, and walk away and transact business of their own outside of the author’s story. A third difficulty is this : The bird-metaphor is physical, but we see on reflection that in the \ physical world there is no real compounding. ‘ Wholes ’ are not realities there, parts only are realities. ‘ Bird ’ is only our name for the physi- cal fact of a certain grouping of organs, just as ‘Charles’s Wain’ is our name for a certain grouping of stars. The ‘whole,’ be it bird or constellation, is nothing but our vision, nothing but an effect on our sensorium when a lot of things act on it together. It is not realized by any organ or any star, or experienced apart from the consciousness of an onlooker . 4 In the physical world taken by itself there is thus no ‘all,’ there are only the ‘eaches’ — at least that is the ‘ scientific ’ view. In the mental world, on the contrary, wholes do in point of fact realize themselves perse. The meaning of the whole sentence is just as much a 194 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS real experience as the feeling of each word is ; the absolute’s experience is for itself, as much as yours is for yourself or mine for myself. So the feather-and-bird analogy won’t work un- less you make the absolute into a distinct sort of mental agent with a vision produced in it by our several minds analogous to the ‘ bird ’-vision which the feathers, beak, etc., produce in those same minds. The ‘whole,’ which is its experi- ence, would then be its unifying reaction on our experiences, and not those very experiences self- combined. Such a view as this would go with theism, for the theistic God is a separate being ; but it would not go with pantheistic idealism, the very essence of which is to insist that we are literally parts of God, and he only ourselves in our totality — the word ‘ourselves’ here stand- ing of course for all the universe’s finite facts. I am dragging you into depths unsuitable, I fear, for a rapid lecture. Such difficulties as these have to be teased out with a needle, so to speak, and lecturers should take only bird’s- eye views. The practical upshot of the matter, however, so far as I am concerned, is this, that 195 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE if I had been lecturing on the absolute a very few years ago, I should unhesitatingly have urged these difficulties, and developed them at still greater length, to show that the hypothesis of the absolute was not only non-coercive from the logical point of view, but self-contradictory as well, its notion that parts and whole are only two names for the same thing not bearing crit- ical scrutiny. If you stick to purely physical terms like stars, there is- no whole. If you call the whole mental, then the so-called whole, in- stead of being one fact with the parts, appears rather as the integral reaction on those parts of an independent higher witness, such as the theistic God is supposed to be. So long as this was the state of my own mind, I could accept the notion of self-compounding in the supernal spheres of experience no more easily than in that chapter on mind-dust I had accepted it in the lower spheres. I found myself compelled, therefore, to call the abso- lute impossible ; and the untrammelled freedom with which pantheistic or monistic idealists stepped over the logical barriers which Lotze 196 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS and others had set down long before I had — I had done little more than quote these previ- ous critics in my chapter — surprised me not a little, and made me, I have to confess, both resentful and envious. Envious because in the bottom of my heart I -wanted the same freedom myself, for motives which I shall develop later; and resentful because my absolutist friends seemed to me to be stealing the privilege of blowing both hot and cold. To establish their absolute they used an intellectualist type of logic which they disregarded when employed against it. It seemed to me that they ought at least to have mentioned the objections that had stopped me so completely. I had yielded to them against my ‘will to believe,’ out of pure logical scrupulosity. They, professing to loathe the will to believe and to follow purest rationality, had simply ignored them. The method was easy, but hardly to be called can- did. Fechner indeed was candid enough, for he had never thought of the objections, but later writers, like Royce, who should presum- ably have heard them, had passed them by in 197 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE silence. I felt as if these philosophers were granting their will to believe in monism too easy a license. My own conscience would per- mit me no such license. So much for the personal confession by which you have allowed me to introduce the subject. Let us now consider it more objec- tively. The fundamental difficulty I have found is the number of contradictions which idealistic monists seem to disregard. In the first place they attribute to all existence a mental or experiential character, but I find their simul- taneous belief that the higher and the lower in the universe are entitatively identical, incom- patible with this character. Incompatible in consequence of the generally accepted doctrine that, whether Berkeley were right or not in saying of material existence that its esse is sentiri, it is undoubtedly right to say of mental existence that its esse is sentiri or experiri. If I feel pain, it is just pain that I feel, however I may have come by the feeling. No one pre- tends that pain as such only appears like pain, 198 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS but in itself is different, for to be as a mental experience is only to appear to some one. The idealists in question ought then to do one of two things, but they do neither. They ought either to refute the notion that as mental states appear, so they are ; or, still keeping that notion, they ought to admit a distinct agent of unification to do the work of the all-knower, just as our respective souls or selves in popular philosophy do the work of partial knowers. Otherwise it is like a joint-stock company all shareholders and no treasurer or director. If our finite minds formed a billion facts, then its mind, knowing our billion, would make a uni- verse composed of a billion and one facts. But transcendental idealism is quite as unfriendly to active principles called souls as physiologi- cal psychology is, Kant having, as it thinks, definitively demolished them. And altho some disciples speak of the transcendental ego of apperception (which they celebrate as Kant’s most precious legacy to posterity) as if it were a combining agent, the drift of monistic au- thority is certainly in the direction of treating 199 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE it as only an all- witness, whose field of vision w T e finite witnesses do not cause, but constitute rather. We are the letters, it is the alphabet; we are the features, it is the face ; not indeed as if either alphabet or face were something additional to the letters or the features, but rather as if it were only another name for the very letters or features themselves. The all- form assuredly differs from the each-form, but the matter is the same in both, and the each- form only an unaccountable appearance. But this, as you see, contradicts the other idealist principle, of a mental fact being just what it appears to be. If their forms of appear- ance are so different, the all and the eaches cannot be identical. The way out (unless, indeed, we are willing to discard the logic of identity altogether) would seem to be frankly to write down the all and the eaches as two distinct orders of wit- ness, each minor witness being aware of its own ‘content’ solely, while the greater witness know r s the minor witnesses, knows their whole content pooled together, knows their relations 200 V. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS to one another, and knows of just how much each one of them is ignorant. The two types of witnessing are here pal- pably non-identical. We get a pluralism, not a monism, out of them. In my psychology-chap- ter I had resorted openly to such pluralism, treating each total field of consciousness as a distinct entity, and maintaining that the higher fields merely supersede the lower functionally by knowing more about the same objects. The monists themselves writhe like worms on the hook to escape pluralistic or at least dualistic language, but they cannot escape it. They speak of the eternal and the temporal ‘points of view’; of the universe in its infinite ‘ aspect ’ or in its finite ‘ capacity ’ ; they say that ‘ qua absolute’ it is one thing, ‘ qua relative’ another ; they contrast its ‘ truth ’ with its ‘ ap- pearances ’ ; they distinguish the total from the partial way of ‘ taking ’ it, etc. ; but they for- get that, on idealistic principles, to make such distinctions is tantamount to making different beings, or at any rate that varying points of view, aspects, appearances, w T ays of taking, 201 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE and the like, are meaningless phrases unless we suppose outside of the unchanging content of reality a diversity of witnesses who experi- ence or take it variously, the absolute mind being just the witness that takes it most com- pletely. For consider the matter one moment longer, if you can. Ask what this notion implies, of appearing differently from different points of view. If there be no outside witness, a thing can appear only to itself, the eaches or parts to their several selves temporally, the all or whole to itself eternally. Different ‘selves ’ thus break out inside of what the absolutist insists to be intrinsically one fact. But how can what is actually one be effectively so many ? Put your witnesses anywhere, whether outside or inside of what is witnessed, in the last resort your witnesses must on idealistic principles be dis- tinct, for what is witnessed is different. I fear that I am expressing myself with ter- rible obscurity — some of you, I know, are groaning over the logic-chopping. Be a plural- ist or be a monist, you say, for heaven’s sake, 202 Y. COMPOUNDING OF CONSCIOUSNESS no matter which, so long as you stop arguing. It reminds one of Chesterton’s epigram that the only thing that ever drives human beings insane is logic. But whether I be sane or insane, you cannot fail, even tho you be transcenden- talists yourselves, to recognize to some degree by my trouble the difficulties that beset monis- tic idealism. What boots it to call the parts and the whole the same body of experience, when in the same breath you have to say that the all ‘ as such’ means one sort of experience and each part ‘ as such ’ means another ? Difficulties, then, so far, but no stable solu- tion as yet, for I have been talking only criti- cally. You will probably be relieved to hear, then, that having rounded this corner, I shall begin to consider what may be the possibilities of getting farther. To clear the path, I beg you first to note one point. What has so troubled my logical con- science is not so much the absolute by itself as the whole class of suppositions of which it is the supreme example, collective experiences namely, claiming identity with their constitu- 203 A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE ent parts, yet experiencing things quite differ- ently from these latter. If any such collective experience can be, then of course, so far as the mere logic of the case goes, the absolute may be. In a previous lecture I have talked against the absolute from other points of view. In this lecture I have meant merely to take it as the example most prominent at Oxford of the thing which has given me such logical perplexity. I don’t logically see how a collective expe- rience of any grade whatever can be treated as logically identical with a lot of distributive experiences. They form two different concepts. The absolute happens to be the only collective experience concerning which Oxford idealists have urged the identity, so I took it as my pre- rogative instance. But Fechner’s earth-soul,