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+ <title>
+ A New Philosophy: Henri Bergson, by Edouard Le Roy
+ </title>
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+ <body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1347 ***</div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ A NEW PHILOSOPHY: HENRI BERGSON
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Edouard le Roy
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Translated from the French by Vincent Benson
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Preface
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This little book is due to two articles published under the same title in
+ the "Revue des Deux Mondes", 1st and 15th February 1912.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their object was to present Mr Bergson's philosophy to the public at
+ large, giving as short a sketch as possible, and describing, without too
+ minute details, the general trend of his movement. These articles I have
+ here reprinted intact. But I have added, in the form of continuous notes,
+ some additional explanations on points which did not come within the scope
+ of investigation in the original sketch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I need hardly add that my work, though thus far complete, does not in any
+ way claim to be a profound critical study. Indeed, such a study, dealing
+ with a thinker who has not yet said his last word, would today be
+ premature. I have simply aimed at writing an introduction which will make
+ it easier to read and understand Mr Bergson's works, and serve as a
+ preliminary guide to those who desire initiation in the new philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have therefore firmly waived all the paraphernalia of technical
+ discussions, and have made no comparisons, learned or otherwise, between
+ Mr Bergson's teaching and that of older philosophies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can conceive no better method of misunderstanding the point at issue, I
+ mean the simple unity of productive intuition, than that of pigeon-holing
+ names of systems, collecting instances of resemblance, making up
+ analogies, and specifying ingredients. An original philosophy is not meant
+ to be studied as a mosaic which takes to pieces, a compound which
+ analyses, or a body which dissects. On the contrary, it is by considering
+ it as a living act, not as a rather clever discourse, by examining the
+ peculiar excellence of its soul rather than the formation of its body,
+ that the inquirer will succeed in understanding it. Properly speaking, I
+ have only applied to Mr Bergson the method which he himself justifiably
+ prescribes in a recent article ("Revue de Metaphysique et de Morale",
+ November 1911), the only method, in fact, which is in all senses of the
+ word fully "exact." I shall none the less be glad if these brief pages can
+ be of any interest to professional philosophers, and have endeavoured, as
+ far as possible, to allow them to trace, under the concise formulae
+ employed, the scheme which I have refused to develop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has become evident to me that even today the interpretation of Mr
+ Bergson's position is in many cases full of faults, which it would
+ undoubtedly be worth while to assist in removing. I may or may not have
+ succeeded in my attempt, but such, at any rate, is the precise end I had
+ in view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion, I may say that I have not had the honour of being Mr
+ Bergson's pupil; and, at the time when I became acquainted with his
+ outlook, my own direct reflection on science and life had already produced
+ in me similar trains of thought. I found in his work the striking
+ realisation of a presentiment and a desire. This "correspondence," which I
+ have not exaggerated, proved at once a help and a hindrance to me in
+ entering into the exact comprehension of so profoundly original a
+ doctrine. The reader will thus understand that I think it in place to
+ quote my authority to him in the following lines which Mr Bergson kindly
+ wrote me after the publication of the articles reproduced in this volume:
+ "Underneath and beyond the method you have caught the intention and the
+ spirit...Your study could not be more conscientious or true to the
+ original. As it advances, condensation increases in a marked degree: the
+ reader becomes aware that the explanation is undergoing a progressive
+ involution similar to the involution by which we determine the reality of
+ Time. To produce this feeling, much more has been necessary than a close
+ study of my works: it has required deep sympathy of thought, the power, in
+ fact, of rethinking the subject in a personal and original manner. Nowhere
+ is this sympathy more in evidence than in your concluding pages, where in
+ a few words you point out the possibilities of further developments of the
+ doctrine. In this direction I should myself say exactly what you have
+ said."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paris, 28th March 1912.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> Preface </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> GENERAL VIEW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> I. Method. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> II. Teaching. </a>
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> ADDITIONAL EXPLANATIONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> I. Mr Bergson's Work and the General
+ Directions of Contemporary Thought. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> II. Immediacy. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> III. Theory of Perception. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> IV. Critique of Language. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> V. The Problem of Consciousness. Duration
+ and Liberty. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> VI. The Problem of Evolution: Life and
+ Matter. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> VII. The Problem of Knowledge: Analysis
+ and Intuition. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> VIII. Conclusion. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> Index. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ GENERAL VIEW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ I. Method.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a thinker whose name is today on everybody's lips, who is deemed
+ by acknowledged philosophers worthy of comparison with the greatest, and
+ who, with his pen as well as his brain, has overleapt all technical
+ obstacles, and won himself a reading both outside and inside the schools.
+ Beyond any doubt, and by common consent, Mr Henri Bergson's work will
+ appear to future eyes among the most characteristic, fertile, and glorious
+ of our era. It marks a never-to-be-forgotten date in history; it opens up
+ a phase of metaphysical thought; it lays down a principle of development
+ the limits of which are indeterminable; and it is after cool
+ consideration, with full consciousness of the exact value of words, that
+ we are able to pronounce the revolution which it effects equal in
+ importance to that effected by Kant, or even by Socrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody, indeed, has become aware of this more or less clearly. Else how
+ are we to explain, except through such recognition, the sudden striking
+ spread of this new philosophy which, by its learned rigorism, precluded
+ the likelihood of so rapid a triumph?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty years have sufficed to make its results felt far beyond traditional
+ limits: and now its influence is alive and working from one pole of
+ thought to the other; and the active leaven contained in it can be seen
+ already extending to the most varied and distant spheres: in social and
+ political spheres, where from opposite points, and not without certain
+ abuses, an attempt is already being made to wrench it in contrary
+ directions; in the sphere of religious speculation, where it has been more
+ legitimately summoned to a distinguished, illuminative, and beneficent
+ career; in the sphere of pure science, where, despite old separatist
+ prejudices, the ideas sown are pushing up here and there; and lastly, in
+ the sphere of art, where there are indications that it is likely to help
+ certain presentiments, which have till now remained obscure, to become
+ conscious of themselves. The moment is favourable to a study of Mr
+ Bergson's philosophy; but in the face of so many attempted methods of
+ employment, some of them a trifle premature, the point of paramount
+ importance, applying Mr Bergson's own method to himself, is to study his
+ philosophy in itself, for itself, in its profound trend and its
+ authenticated action, without claiming to enlist it in the ranks of any
+ cause whatsoever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr Bergson's readers will undergo at almost every page they read an
+ intense and singular experience. The curtain drawn between ourselves and
+ reality, enveloping everything including ourselves in its illusive folds,
+ seems of a sudden to fall, dissipated by enchantment, and display to the
+ mind depths of light till then undreamt, in which reality itself,
+ contemplated face to face for the first time, stands fully revealed. The
+ revelation is overpowering, and once vouchsafed will never afterwards be
+ forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can convey to the reader the effects of this direct and intimate
+ mental vision. Everything which he thought he knew already finds new birth
+ and vigour in the clear light of morning: on all hands, in the glow of
+ dawn, new intuitions spring up and open out; we feel them big with
+ infinite consequences, heavy and saturated with life. Each of them is no
+ sooner blown than it appears fertile for ever. And yet there is nothing
+ paradoxical or disturbing in the novelty. It is a reply to our
+ expectation, an answer to some dim hope. So vivid is the impression of
+ truth, that afterwards we are even ready to believe we recognise the
+ revelation as if we had always darkly anticipated it in some mysterious
+ twilight at the back of consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterwards, no doubt, in certain cases, incertitude reappears, sometimes
+ even decided objections. The reader, who at first was under a magic spell,
+ corrects his thought, or at least hesitates. What he has seen is still at
+ bottom so new, so unexpected, so far removed from familiar conceptions.
+ For this surging wave of thought our mind contains none of those ready-cut
+ channels which render comprehension easy. But whether, in the long run, we
+ each of us give or refuse complete or partial adhesion, all of us, at
+ least, have received a regenerating shock, an internal upheaval not
+ readily silenced: the network of our intellectual habits is broken;
+ henceforth a new leaven works and ferments in us; we shall no longer think
+ as we used to think; and be we pupils or critics, we cannot mistake the
+ fact that we have here a principle of integral renewal for ancient
+ philosophy and its old and timeworn problems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is obviously impossible to sketch in brief all the aspects and all the
+ wealth of so original a work. Still less shall I be able to answer here
+ the many questions which arise. I must decide to pass rapidly over the
+ technical detail of clear, closely-argued, and penetrating discussions;
+ over the scope and exactness of the evidence borrowed from the most
+ diverse positive sciences; over the marvellous dexterity of the
+ psychological analysis; over the magic of a style which can call up what
+ words cannot express. The solidity of the construction will not be
+ evidenced in these pages, nor its austere and subtle beauty. But what I do
+ at all costs wish to bring out, in shorter form, in this new philosophy,
+ is its directing idea and general movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such an undertaking, where the end is to understand rather than to
+ judge, criticism ought to take second place. It is more profitable to
+ attempt to feel oneself into the heart of the teaching, to relive its
+ genesis, to perceive the principle of organic unity, to come at the
+ mainspring. Let our reading be a course of meditation which we live. The
+ only true homage we can render to the masters of thought consists in
+ ourselves thinking, as far as we can do so, in their train, under their
+ inspiration, and along the paths which they have opened up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case before us this road is landmarked by several books which it
+ will be sufficient to study one after the other, and take successively as
+ the text of our reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1889 Mr Bergson made his appearance with an "Essay on the Immediate
+ Data of Consciousness".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was his doctor's thesis. Taking up his position inside the human
+ personality, in its inmost mind, he endeavoured to lay hold of the depths
+ of life and free action in their commonly overlooked and fugitive
+ originality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some years later, in 1896, passing this time to the externals of
+ consciousness, the contact surface between things and the ego, he
+ published "Matter and Memory", a masterly study of perception and
+ recollection, which he himself put forward as an inquiry into the relation
+ between body and mind. In 1907 he followed with "Creative Evolution", in
+ which the new metaphysic was outlined in its full breadth, and developed
+ with a wealth of suggestion and perspective opening upon the distances of
+ infinity; universal evolution, the meaning of life, the nature of mind and
+ matter, of intelligence and instinct, were the great problems here
+ treated, ending in a general critique of knowledge and a completely
+ original definition of philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These will be our guides which we shall carefully follow, step by step. It
+ is not, I must confess, without some apprehension that I undertake the
+ task of summing up so much research, and of condensing into a few pages so
+ many and such new conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr Bergson excels, even on points of least significance, in producing the
+ feeling of unfathomed depths and infinite levels. Never has anyone better
+ understood how to fulfil the philosopher's first task, in pointing out the
+ hidden mystery in everything. With him we see all at once the concrete
+ thickness and inexhaustible extension of the most familiar reality, which
+ has always been before our eyes, where before we were aware only of the
+ external film.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not imagine that this is simply a poetical delusion. We must be
+ grateful if the philosopher uses exquisite language and writes in a style
+ which abounds in living images. These are rare qualities. But let us avoid
+ being duped by a show of printed matter: these unannotated pages are
+ supported by positive science submitted to the most minute inspection. One
+ day, in 1901, at the French Philosophical Society, Mr Bergson related the
+ genesis of "Matter and Memory".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Twelve years or so before its appearance, I had set myself the following
+ problem: 'What would be the teaching of the physiology and pathology of
+ today upon the ancient question of the connection between physical and
+ moral to an unprejudiced mind, determined to forget all speculation in
+ which it has indulged on this point, determined also to neglect, in the
+ enunciations of philosophers, all that is not pure and simple statement of
+ fact?' I set myself to solve the problem, and I very soon perceived that
+ the question was susceptible of a provisional solution, and even of
+ precise formulation, only if restricted to the problem of memory. In
+ memory itself I was forced to determine bounds which I had afterwards to
+ narrow considerably. After confining myself to the recollection of words I
+ saw that the problem, as stated, was still too broad, and that, to put the
+ question in its most precise and interesting form, I should have to
+ substitute the recollection of the sound of words. The literature on
+ aphasia is enormous. I took five years to sift it. And I arrived at this
+ conclusion, that between the psychological fact and its corresponding
+ basis in the brain there must be a relation which answers to none of the
+ ready-made concepts furnished us by philosophy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain characteristics of Mr Bergson's manner will be remarked
+ throughout: his provisional effort of forgetfulness to recreate a new and
+ untrammelled mind; his mixture of positive inquiry and bold invention; his
+ stupendous reading; his vast pioneer work carried on with indefatigable
+ patience; his constant correction by criticism, informed of the minutest
+ details and swift to follow up each of them at every turn. With a problem
+ which would at first have seemed secondary and incomplete, but which
+ reappears as the subject deepens and is thereby metamorphosed, he connects
+ his entire philosophy; and so well does he blend the whole and breathe
+ upon it the breath of life that the final statement leaves the reader with
+ an impression of sovereign ease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Examples will be necessary to enable us, even to a feeble extent, to
+ understand this proceeding better. But before we come to examples, a
+ preliminary question requires examination. In the preface to his first
+ "Essay" Mr Bergson defined the principle of a method which was afterwards
+ to reappear in its identity throughout his various works; and we must
+ recall the terms he employed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are forced to express ourselves in words, and we think, most often, in
+ space. To put it another way, language compels us to establish between our
+ ideas the same clear and precise distinctions, and the same break in
+ continuity, as between material objects. This assimilation is useful in
+ practical life and necessary in most sciences. But we are right in asking
+ whether the insuperable difficulties of certain philosophical problems do
+ not arise from the fact that we persist in placing non-spatial phenomena
+ next one another in space, and whether, if we did away with the vulgar
+ illustrations round which we dispute, we should not sometimes put an end
+ to the dispute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is to say, it is stated to be the philosopher's duty from the outset
+ to renounce the usual forms of analytic and synthetic thought, and to
+ achieve a direct intuitional effort which shall put him in immediate
+ contact with reality. Without doubt it is this question of method which
+ demands our first attention. It is the leading question. Mr Bergson
+ himself presents his works as "essays" which do not aim at "solving the
+ greatest problems all at once," but seek merely "to define the method and
+ disclose the possibility of applying it on some essential points."
+ (Preface to "Creative Evolution".) It is also a delicate question, for it
+ dominates all the rest, and decides whether we shall fully understand what
+ is to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must therefore pause here a moment. To direct us in this preliminary
+ study we have an admirable "Introduction to Metaphysis", which appeared as
+ an article in the "Metaphysical and Moral Review" (January 1903): a short
+ but marvellously suggestive memoire, constituting the best preface to the
+ reading of the books themselves. We may say in passing, that we should be
+ grateful to Mr Bergson if he would have it bound in volume form, along
+ with some other articles which are scarcely to be had at all today.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every philosophy, prior to taking shape in a group of co-ordinated theses,
+ presents itself, in its initial stage, as an attitude, a frame of mind, a
+ method. Nothing can be more important than to study this starting-point,
+ this elementary act of direction and movement, if we wish afterwards to
+ arrive at the precise shade of meaning of the subsequent teaching. Here is
+ really the fountain-head of thought; it is here that the form of the
+ future system is determined, and here that contact with reality takes
+ effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last point, particularly, is vital. To return to the direct view of
+ things beyond all figurative symbols, to descend into the inmost depths of
+ being, to watch the throbbing life in its pure state, and listen to the
+ secret rhythm of its inmost breath, to measure it, at least so far as
+ measurement is possible, has always been the philosopher's ambition; and
+ the new philosophy has not departed from this ideal. But in what light
+ does it regard its task? That is the first point to clear up. For the
+ problem is complex, and the goal distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are made as much, and more, for action than for thought," says Mr
+ Bergson; "or rather, when we follow our natural impulse, it is to act that
+ we think." ("L'Evolution Creatrice", page 321.) And again, "What we
+ ordinarily call a fact is not reality such as it would appear to an
+ immediate intuition, but an adaptation of reality to practical interests
+ and the demands of social life." ("Matiere et Memoire", page 201.) Hence
+ the question which takes precedence of all others is: to distinguish in
+ our common representation of the world, the fact in its true sense from
+ the combinations which we have introduced in view of action and language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, to rediscover nature in her fresh springs of reality, it is not
+ sufficient to abandon the images and conceptions invented by human
+ initiative; still less is it sufficient to fling ourselves into the
+ torrent of brute sensations. By so doing we are in danger of dissolving
+ our thought in dream or quenching it in night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above all, we are in danger of committal to a path which it is impossible
+ to follow. The philosopher is not free to begin the work of knowledge
+ again upon other planes, with a mind which would be adequate to the new
+ and virgin issue of a simple writ of oblivion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time when critical reflection begins, we have already been long
+ engaged in action and science, by the training of individual life, as by
+ hereditary and racial experience, our faculties of perception and
+ conception, our senses and our understanding, have contracted habits,
+ which are by this time unconscious and instinctive; we are haunted by all
+ kinds of ideas and principles, so familiar today that they even pass
+ unobserved. But what is it all worth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does it, in its present state, help us to know the nature of a
+ disinterested intuition?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing but a methodical examination of consciousness can tell us that;
+ and it will take more than a renunciation of explicit knowledge to
+ recreate in us a new mind, capable of grasping the bare fact exactly as it
+ is: what we require is perhaps a penetrating reform, a kind of conversion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rational and perceptive function we term our intelligence emerges from
+ darkness through a slowly lifting dawn. During this twilight period it has
+ lived, worked, acted, fashioned and informed itself. On the threshold of
+ philosophical speculation it is full of more or less concealed beliefs,
+ which are literally prejudices, and branded with a secret mark influencing
+ its every movement. Here is an actual situation. Exemption from it is
+ beyond anyone's province. Whether we will or no, we are from the beginning
+ of our inquiry immersed in a doctrine which disguises nature to us, and
+ already at bottom constitutes a complete metaphysic. This we term
+ common-sense, and positive science is itself only an extension and
+ refinement of it. What is the value of this work performed without clear
+ consciousness or critical attention? Does it bring us into true relation
+ with things, into relation with pure consciousness?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is our first and inevitable doubt, which requires solution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it would be a quixotic proceeding first to make a void in our mind,
+ and afterwards to admit into it, one by one, after investigation, such and
+ such a concept, or such and such a principle. The illusion of the clean
+ sweep and total reconstruction can never be too vigorously condemned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it from the void that we set out to think? Do we think in void, and
+ with nothing? Common ideas of necessity form the groundwork for the
+ broidery of our advanced thought. Further, even if we succeeded in our
+ impossible task, should we, in so doing, have corrected the causes of
+ error which are today graven upon the very structure of our intelligence,
+ such as our past life has made it? These errors would not cease to act
+ imperceptibly upon the work of revision intended to apply the remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is from within, by an effort of immanent purgation, that the necessary
+ reform must be brought about. And philosophy's first task is to institute
+ critical reflection upon the obscure beginnings of thought, with a view to
+ shedding light upon its spontaneous virgin condition, but without any vain
+ claim to lift it out of the current in which it is actually plunged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One conclusion is already plain: the groundwork of common-sense is sure,
+ but the form is suspicious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In common-sense is contained, at any rate virtually and in embryo, all
+ that can ever be attained of reality, for reality is verification, not
+ construction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything has its starting-point in construction and verification. Thus
+ philosophical research can only be a conscious and deliberate return to
+ the facts of primal intuition. But common-sense, being prepossessed in a
+ practical direction, has doubtless subjected these facts to a process of
+ interested alteration, which is artificial in proportion to the labour
+ bestowed. Such is Mr Bergson's fundamental hypothesis, and it is
+ far-reaching. "Many metaphysical difficulties probably arise from our
+ habit of confounding speculation and practice; or of pushing an idea in
+ the direction of utility, when we think we fathom it in theory; or,
+ lastly, of employing in thought the forms of action." (Preface to "Matter
+ and Memory". First edition.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of reform will consist therefore in freeing our intelligence from
+ its utilitarian habits, by endeavouring at the outset to become clearly
+ conscious of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notice how far presumption is in favour of our hypothesis. Whether we
+ regard organic life in the genesis and preservation of the individual, or
+ in the evolution of species, we see its natural direction to be towards
+ utility: but the effort of thought comes after the effort of life; it is
+ not added from outside, it is the continuance and the flower of the former
+ effort. Must we not expect from this that it will preserve its former
+ habits? And what do we actually observe? The first gleam of human
+ intelligence in prehistoric times is revealed to us by an industry; the
+ cut flint of the primitive caves marks the first stage of the road which
+ was one day to end in the most sublime philosophies. Again, every science
+ has begun by practical arts. Indeed, our science of today, however
+ disinterested it may have become, remains none the less in close relation
+ with the demands of our action; it permits us to speak of and to handle
+ things rather than to see them in their intimate and profound nature.
+ Analysis, when applied to our operations of knowledge, shows us that our
+ understanding parcels out, arrests, and quantifies, whereas reality, as it
+ appears to immediate intuition, is a moving series, a flux of blended
+ qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is to say, our understanding solidifies all that it touches. Have we
+ not here exactly the essential postulates of action and speech? To speak,
+ as to act, we must have separable elements, terms and objects which remain
+ inert while the operation goes on, maintaining between themselves the
+ constant relations which find their most perfect and ideal presentment in
+ mathematics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything tends, then, to incline us towards the hypothesis in question.
+ Let us regard it henceforward as expressing a fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The forms of knowledge elaborated by common-sense were not originally
+ intended to allow us to see reality as it is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their task was rather, and remains so, to enable us to grasp its practical
+ aspect. It is for that they are made, not for philosophical speculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now these forms nevertheless have existed in us as inveterate habits, soon
+ becoming unconscious, even when we have reached the point of desiring
+ knowledge for its own sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in this new stage they preserve the bias of their original utilitarian
+ function, and carry this mark with them everywhere, leaving it upon the
+ fresh tasks which we are fain to make them accomplish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An inner reform is therefore imperative today, if we are to succeed in
+ unearthing and sifting, in our perception of nature, under the veinstone
+ of practical symbolism, the true intuitional content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This attempt at return to the standpoint of pure contemplation and
+ disinterested experience is a task very different from the task of
+ science. It is one thing to regard more and more or less and less closely
+ with the eyes made for us by utilitarian evolution: it is another to
+ labour at remaking for ourselves eyes capable of seeing, in order to see,
+ and not in order to live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophy understood in this manner&mdash;and we shall see more and more
+ clearly as we go on that there is no other legitimate method of
+ understanding it&mdash;demands from us an almost violent act of reform and
+ conversion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mind must turn round upon itself, invert the habitual direction of its
+ thought, climb the hill down which its instinct towards action has carried
+ it, and go to seek experience at its source, "above the critical bend
+ where it inclines towards our practical use and becomes, properly
+ speaking, human experience." ("Matter and Memory", page 203.) In short, by
+ a twin effort of criticism and expansion, it must pass outside
+ common-sense and synthetic understanding to return to pure intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophy consists in reliving the immediate over again, and in
+ interpreting our rational science and everyday perception by its light.
+ That, at least, is the first stage. We shall find afterwards that that is
+ not all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a genuinely new conception of philosophy. Here, for the first
+ time, philosophy is made specifically distinct from science, yet remains
+ no less positive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What science really does is to preserve the general attitude of
+ common-sense, with its apparatus of forms and principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that science develops and perfects it, refines and extends it,
+ and even now and again corrects it. But science does not change either the
+ direction or the essential steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this philosophy, on the contrary, what is at first suspected and
+ finally modified, is the setting of the points before the journey begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that, in saying so, we mean to condemn science; but we must recognise
+ its just limits. The methods of science proper are in their place and
+ appropriate, and lead to a knowledge which is true (though still
+ symbolical), so long as the object studied is the world of practical
+ action, or, to put it briefly, the world of inert matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But soul, life, and activity escape it, and yet these are the spring and
+ ultimate basis of everything: and it is the appreciation of this fact,
+ with what it entails, that is new. And yet, new as Mr Bergson's conception
+ of philosophy may deservedly appear, it does not any the less, from
+ another point of view, deserve to be styled classic and traditional.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What it really defines is not so much a particular philosophy as
+ philosophy itself, in its original function.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everywhere in history we find its secret current at its task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All great philosophers have had glimpses of it, and employed it in moments
+ of discovery. Only as a general rule they have not clearly recognised what
+ they were doing, and so have soon turned aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on this point I cannot insist without going into lengthy detail, and
+ am obliged to refer the reader to the fourth chapter of "Creative
+ Evolution", where he will find the whole question dealt with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One remark, however, has still to be made. Philosophy, according to Mr
+ Bergson's conception, implies and demands time; it does not aim at
+ completion all at once, for the mental reform in question is of the kind
+ which requires gradual fulfilment. The truth which it involves does not
+ set out to be a non-temporal essence, which a sufficiently powerful genius
+ would be able, under pressure, to perceive in its entirety at one view;
+ and that again seems to be very new.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not, of course, wish to abuse systems of philosophy. Each of them is
+ an experience of thought, a moment in the life of thought, a method of
+ exploring reality, a reagent which reveals an aspect. Truth undergoes
+ analysis into systems as does light into colours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the mere name system calls up the static idea of a finished building.
+ Here there is nothing of the kind. The new philosophy desires to be a
+ proceeding as much as, and even more than, to be a system. It insists on
+ being lived as well as thought. It demands that thought should work at
+ living its true life, an inner life related to itself, effective, active,
+ and creative, but not on that account directed towards external action.
+ "And," says Mr Bergson, "it can only be constructed by the collective and
+ progressive effort of many thinkers, and of many observers, completing,
+ correcting, and righting one another." (Preface to "Creative Evolution".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us see how it begins, and what is its generating act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How are we to attain the immediate? How are we to realise this perception
+ of pure fact which we stated to be the philosopher's first step?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unless we can clear up this doubt, the end proposed will remain to our
+ gaze an abstract and lifeless ideal. This is, then, the point which
+ requires instant explanation. For there is a serious difficulty in which
+ the very employment of the word "immediate" might lead us astray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The immediate, in the sense which concerns us, is not at all, or at least
+ is no longer for us the passive experience, the indefinable something
+ which we should inevitably receive, provided we opened our eyes and
+ abstained from reflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, we cannot abstain from reflection: reflection is
+ today part of our very vision; it comes into play as soon as we open our
+ eyes. So that, to come on the trail of the immediate, there must be effort
+ and work. How are we to guide this effort? In what will this work consist?
+ By what sign shall we be able to recognise that the result has been
+ obtained?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the questions to be cleared up. Mr Bergson speaks of them
+ chiefly in connection with the realities of consciousness, or, more
+ generally speaking, of life. And it is here, in fact, that the
+ consequences are most weighty and far-reaching. We shall need to refer to
+ them again in detail. But to simplify my explanation, I will here choose
+ another example: that of inert matter, of the perception on which the
+ physical is based. It is in this case that the divergence between common
+ perception and pure perception, however real it may be, assumes least
+ proportions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore it appears most in place in the sketch I desire to trace of an
+ exceedingly complex work, where I can only hope, evidently, to indicate
+ the main lines and general direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We readily believe that when we cast our eyes upon surrounding objects, we
+ enter into them unresistingly and apprehend them all at once in their
+ intrinsic nature. Perception would thus be nothing but simple passive
+ registration. But nothing could be more untrue, if we are speaking of the
+ perception which we employ without profound criticism in the course of our
+ daily life. What we here take to be pure fact is, on the contrary, the
+ last term in a highly complicated series of mental operations. And this
+ term contains as much of us as of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, all concrete perception comes up for analysis as an indissoluble
+ mixture of construction and fact, in which the fact is only revealed
+ through the construction, and takes on its complexion. We all know by
+ experience how incapable the uneducated person is of explaining the simple
+ appearance of the least fact, without embodying a crowd of false
+ interpretations. We know to a less extent, but it is also true, that the
+ most enlightened and adroit person proceeds in just the same manner: his
+ interpretation is better, but it is still interpretation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is why accurate observation is so difficult; we see or we do not see,
+ we notice such and such an aspect, we read this or that, according to our
+ state of consciousness at the time, according to the direction of the
+ investigation on which we are engaged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who was it defined art as nature seen through a mind? Perception, too, is
+ an art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This art has its processes, its conventions, and its tools. Go into a
+ laboratory and study one of those complex instruments which make our
+ senses finer or more powerful; each of them is literally a sheaf of
+ materialised theories, and by means of it all acquired science is brought
+ to bear on each new observation of the student. In exactly the same way
+ our organs of sense are actual instruments constructed by the unconscious
+ work of the mind in the course of biological evolution; they too sum up
+ and give concrete form and expression to a system of enlightening
+ theories. But that is not all. The most elementary psychology shows us the
+ amount of thought, in the correct sense of the term, recollection, or
+ inference, which enters into what we should be tempted to call pure
+ perception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Establishment of fact is not the simple reception of the faithful imprint
+ of that fact; it is invariably interpreted, systematised, and placed in
+ pre-existing forms which constitute veritable theoretical frames. That is
+ why the child has to learn to perceive. There is an education of the
+ senses which he acquires by long training. One day, which aid of habit, he
+ will almost cease to see things: a few lines, a few glimpses, a few simple
+ signs noted in a brief passing glance, will enable him to recognise them;
+ and he will hardly retain any more of reality than its schemes and
+ symbols.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perception," says Mr Bergson on this subject, "becomes in the end only an
+ opportunity of recollection." ("Matter and Memory", page 59.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All concrete perception, it is true, is directed less upon the present
+ than the past. The part of pure perception in it is small, and immediately
+ covered and almost buried by the contribution of memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This infinitesimal part acts as a bait. It is a summons to recollection,
+ challenging us to extract from our previous experience, and construct with
+ our acquired wealth a system of images which permits us to read the
+ experience of the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With our scheme of interpretation thus constituted we encounter the few
+ fugitive traits which we have actually perceived. If the theory we have
+ elaborated adapts itself, and succeeds in accounting for, connecting, and
+ making sense of these traits, we shall finally have a perception properly
+ so called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perception then, in the usual sense of the word, is the resolution of a
+ problem, the verification of a theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus are explained "errors of the senses," which are in reality errors of
+ interpretation. Thus too, and in the same manner, we have the explanation
+ of dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us take a simple example. When you read a book, do you spell each
+ syllable, one by one, to group the syllables afterwards into words, and
+ the words into phrases, thus travelling from print to meaning? Not at all:
+ you grasp a few letters accurately, a few downstrokes in their graphical
+ outline; then you guess the remainder, travelling in the reverse
+ direction, from a probable meaning to the print which you are
+ interpreting. This is what causes mistakes in reading, and the well-known
+ difficulty in seeing printing errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This observation is confirmed by curious experiments. Write some everyday
+ phrase or other on a blackboard; let there be a few intentional mistakes
+ here and there, a letter or two altered, or left out. Place the words in a
+ dark room in front of a person who, of course, does not know what has been
+ written. Then turn on the light without allowing the observer sufficient
+ time to spell the writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of this, he will in most cases read the entire phrase, without
+ hesitation or difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has restored what was missing, or corrected what was at fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, ask him what letters he is certain he saw, and you will find he will
+ tell you an omitted or altered letter as well as a letter actually
+ written.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The observer then thinks he sees in broad light a letter which is not
+ there, if that letter, in virtue of the general sense, ought to appear in
+ the phrase. But you can go further, and vary the experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose we write the word "tumult" correctly. After doing so, to direct
+ the memory of the observer into a certain trend of recollection, call out
+ in his ear, during the short time the light is turned on, another word of
+ different meaning, for example, the word "railway."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The observer will read "tunnel"; that is to say, a word, the graphical
+ outline of which is like that of the written word, but connected in sense
+ with the order of recollection called up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this mistake in reading, as in the spontaneous correction of the
+ previous experiment, we see very clearly that perception is always the
+ fulfilment of guesswork.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the direction of this work that we are concerned to determine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the popular idea, perception has a completely speculative
+ interest: it is pure knowledge. Therein lies the fundamental mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notice first of all how much more probable it is, a priori, that the work
+ of perception, just as any other natural and spontaneous work, should have
+ a utilitarian signification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Life," says Mr Bergson with justice, "is the acceptance from objects of
+ nothing but the useful impression, with the response of the appropriate
+ reactions." ("Laughter", page 154.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this view receives striking objective confirmation if, with the author
+ of "Matter and Memory", we follow the progress of the perceptive functions
+ along the animal series from the protoplasm to the higher vertebrates; or
+ if, with him, we analyse the task of the body, and discover that the
+ nervous system is manifested in its very structure as, before all, an
+ instrument of action. Have we not already besides proof of this in the
+ fact that each of us always appears in his own eyes to occupy the centre
+ of the world he perceives?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "Riquet" of Anatole France voices Mr Bergson's view: "I am always in
+ the centre of everything, and men and beasts and things, for or against
+ me, range themselves around."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But direct analysis leads us still more plainly to the same conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us take the perception of bodies. It is easy to show&mdash;and I
+ regret that I cannot here reproduce Mr Bergson's masterly demonstration&mdash;that
+ the division of matter into distinct objects with sharp outlines is
+ produced by a selection of images which is completely relative to our
+ practical needs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The distinct outlines which we assign to an object, and which bestow upon
+ it its individuality, are nothing but the graph of a certain kind of
+ influence which we should be able to employ at a certain point in space:
+ it is the plan of our future actions which is submitted to our eyes, as in
+ a mirror, when we perceive the surfaces and edges of things. Remove this
+ action, and in consequence the high roads which it makes for itself in
+ advance by perception, in the web of reality, and the individuality of the
+ body will be reabsorbed in the universal interaction which is without
+ doubt reality itself." Which is tantamount to saying that "rough bodies
+ are cut in the material of nature by a perception of which the scissors
+ follow, in some sort, the dotted line along which the action would pass."
+ ("Creative Evolution", page 12.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodies independent of common experience do not then appear, to an
+ attentive criticism, as veritable realities which would have an existence
+ in themselves. They are only centres of co-ordination for our actions. Or,
+ if you prefer it, "our needs are so many shafts of light which, when
+ played upon the continuity of perceptible qualities, produce in them the
+ outline of distinct bodies." ("Matter and Memory", page 220.) Does not
+ science too, after its own fashion, resolve the atom into a centre of
+ intersecting relations, which finally extend by degrees to the entire
+ universe in an indissoluble interpenetration?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A qualitative continuity, imperceptibly shaded off, over which pass
+ quivers that here and there converge, is the image by which we are forced
+ to recognise a superior degree of reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But is this perceptible material, this qualitative continuity, the pure
+ fact in matter? Not yet. Perception, we said just now, is always in
+ reality complicated by memory. There is more truth in this than we had
+ seen. Reality is not a motionless spectrum, extending to our view its
+ infinite shades; it might rather be termed a leaping flame in the
+ spectrum. All is in passage, in process of becoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this flux consciousness concentrates at long intervals, each time
+ condensing into one "quality" an immense period of the inner history of
+ things. "In just this way the thousand successive positions of a runner
+ contract into one single symbolic attitude, which our eye perceives, which
+ art reproduces, and which becomes for everybody the representation of a
+ man running." ("Matter and Memory", page 233.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way again, a red light, continuing one second, embodies such a
+ large number of elementary pulsations that it would take 25,000 years of
+ our time to see its distinct passage. From here springs the subjectivity
+ of our perception. The different qualities correspond, roughly speaking,
+ to the different rhythms of contraction or dilution, to the different
+ degrees of inner tension in the perceiving consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pushing the case to its limits, and imagining a complete expansion, matter
+ would resolve into colourless disturbances, and become the "pure matter"
+ of the natural philosopher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now unite in one single continuity the different periods of the
+ preceding dialectic. Vibration, qualities, and bodies are none of them
+ reality by themselves; but all the same they are part of reality. And
+ absolute reality would be the whole of these degrees and moments, and many
+ others as well, no doubt. Or rather, to secure absolute intuition of
+ matter, we should have on the one hand to get rid of all that our
+ practical needs have constructed, restore on the other all the effective
+ tendencies they have extinguished, follow the complete scale of
+ qualitative concentrations and dilutions, and pass, by a kind of sympathy,
+ into the incessantly moving play of all the possible innumerable
+ contractions or resolutions; with the result that in the end we should
+ succeed, by a simultaneous view as it were, in grasping, according to
+ their infinitely various modes, the phases of this matter which, though at
+ present latent, admit of "perception."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, in the case before us, absolute knowledge is found to be the result
+ of integral experience; and though we cannot attain the term, we see at
+ any rate in what direction we should have to work to reach it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it must be stated that our realisable knowledge is at every moment
+ partial and limited rather than exterior and relative, for our effective
+ perception is related to matter in itself as the part to the whole. Our
+ least perceptions are actually based on pure perception, and "we are aware
+ of the elementary disturbances which constitute matter, in the perceptible
+ quality in which they suffer contraction, as we are aware of the beating
+ of our heart in the general feeling that we have of living." ("The Journal
+ of Philosophy, Psychology, and Scientific Methods", 7th July 1910.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the preoccupation of practical action, coming between reality and
+ ourselves, produces the fragmentary world of common-sense, much as an
+ absorbing medium resolves into separate rays the continuous spectrum of a
+ luminous body; whilst the rhythm of duration, and the degree of tension
+ peculiar to our consciousness, limit us to the apprehension of certain
+ qualities only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What then have we to do to progress towards absolute knowledge? Not to
+ quit experience: quite the contrary; but to extend it and diversify it by
+ science, while, at the same time, by criticism, we correct in it the
+ disturbing effects of action, and finally quicken all the results thus
+ obtained by an effort of sympathy which will make us familiar with the
+ object until we feel its profound throbbing and its inner wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In connection with this last vital point, which is decisive, call to mind
+ a celebrated page of Sainte-Beuve where he defines his method: "Enter into
+ your author, make yourself at home in him, produce him under his different
+ aspects, make him live, move, and speak as he must have done; follow him
+ to his fireside and in his domestic habits, as closely as you can...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Study him, turn him round and round, ask him questions at your leisure;
+ place him before you...Every feature will appear in its turn, and take the
+ place of the man himself in this expression...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An individual reality will gradually blend with and become incarnate in
+ the vague, abstract, and general type...There is our man..." Yes, that is
+ exactly what we want: it could not be better put. Transpose this page from
+ the literary to the metaphysical order, and you have intuition, as defined
+ by Mr Bergson. You have the return to immediacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a new problem then arises: Is not our intuition of immediacy in danger
+ of remaining inexpressible? For our language has been formed in view of
+ practical life, not of pure knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The immediate perception of reality is not all; we have still to translate
+ this perception into intelligible language, into a connected chain of
+ concepts; failing which, it would seem, we should not have knowledge in
+ the strict sense of the word, we should not have truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without language, intuition, supposing it came to birth, would remain
+ intransmissible and incommunicable, and would perish in a solitary cry. By
+ language alone are we enabled to submit it to a positive test: the letter
+ is the ballast of the mind, the body which allows it to act, and in acting
+ to scatter the unreal delusions of dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The act of pure intuition demands so great an inner tension from thought
+ that it can only be very rare and very fugitive: a few rapid gleams here
+ and there; and these dawning glimpses must be sustained, and afterwards
+ united, and that again is the work of language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while language is thus necessary, no less necessary is a criticism of
+ ordinary language, and of the methods familiar to the understanding. These
+ forms of reflected knowledge, these processes of analysis really convey
+ secretly all the postulates of practical action. But it is imperative that
+ language should translate, not betray; that the body of formulae should
+ not stifle the soul of intuition. We shall see in what the work of reform
+ and conversion imposed on the philosopher precisely consists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attitude of the ordinary proceedings of common thought can be stated
+ in a few words. Place the object studied before yourself as an exterior
+ "thing." Then place yourself outside it, in perspective, at points of
+ vantage on a circumference, whence you can only see the object of your
+ investigation at a distance, with such interval as would be sufficient for
+ the contemplation of a picture; in short, move round the object instead of
+ entering boldly into it. But these proceedings lead to what I shall term
+ analysis by concepts; that is to say, the attempt to resolve all reality
+ into general ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are concepts and abstract ideas really, but distant and simplified
+ views, species of model drawings, giving only a few summary features of
+ their object, which vary according to direction and angle? By means of
+ them we claim to determine the object from outside, as if, in order to
+ know it, it were sufficient to enclose it in a system of logical sides and
+ angles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And perhaps in this way we do really grasp it, perhaps we do establish its
+ precise description, but we do not penetrate it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concepts translate relations resulting from comparisons by which each
+ object is finally expressed as a function of what it is not. They
+ dismember it, divide it up piece by piece, and mount it in various frames.
+ They lay hold of it only by ends and corners, by resemblances and
+ differences. Is not that obviously what is done by the converting theories
+ which explain the soul by the body, life by matter, quality by movements,
+ space itself by pure number? Is not that what is done generally by all
+ criticisms, all doctrines which connect one idea to another, or to a group
+ of other ideas?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way we reach only the surface of things, the reciprocal contacts,
+ mutual intersections, and parts common, but not the organic unity nor the
+ inner essence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In vain we multiply our points of view, our perspectives and plane
+ projections: no accumulation of this kind will reconstruct the concrete
+ solid. We can pass from an object directly perceived to the pictures which
+ represent it, the prints which represent the pictures, the scheme
+ representing the prints, because each stage contains less than the one
+ before, and is obtained from it by simple diminution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, inversely, you may take all the schemes, prints, pictures you like&mdash;supposing
+ that it is not absurd to conceive as given what is by nature interminable
+ and inexhaustible, lending itself to indefinite enumeration and endless
+ development and multiplicity&mdash;but you will never recompose the
+ profound and original unity of the source.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, by forcing yourself to seek the object outside itself, where it
+ certainly is not, except in echo and reflection, would you ever find its
+ intimate and specific reality? You are but condemning yourself to
+ symbolism, for one "thing" can only be in another symbolically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To go further still, your knowledge of things will remain irremediably
+ relative, relative to the symbols selected and the points of view adopted.
+ Everything will happen as in a movement of which the appearance and
+ formula vary with the spot from which you regard it, with the marks to
+ which you relate it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Absolute revelation is only given to the man who passes into the object,
+ flings himself upon its stream, and lives within its rhythm. The thesis
+ which maintains the inevitable relativity of all human knowledge
+ originates mainly from the metaphors employed to describe the act of
+ knowledge. The subject occupies this point, the object that; how are we to
+ span the distance? Our perceptory organs fill the interval; how are we to
+ grasp anything but what reaches us in the receiver at the end of the wire?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mind itself is a projecting lantern playing a shaft of light on
+ nature; how should it do otherwise than tint nature its own colour?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these difficulties all arise out of the spatial metaphors employed;
+ and these metaphors in their turn do little but illustrate and translate
+ the common method of analysis by concepts: and this method is essentially
+ regulated by the practical needs of action and language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The philosopher must adopt an attitude entirely inverse; not keep at a
+ distance from things, but listen in a manner to their inward breathing,
+ and, above all, supply the effort of sympathy by which he establishes
+ himself in the object, becomes on intimate terms with it, tunes himself to
+ its rhythm, and, in a word, lives it. There is really nothing mysterious
+ or strange in this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consider your daily judgments in matters of art, profession, or sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between knowledge by theory and knowledge by experience, between
+ understanding by external analogy and perception by profound intuition,
+ what difference and divergence there is!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who has absolute knowledge of a machine, the student who analyses it in
+ mechanical theorems, or the engineer who has lived in comradeship with it,
+ even to sharing the physical sensation of its laboured or easy working,
+ who feels the play of its inner muscles, its likes and dislikes, who notes
+ its movements and the task before it, as the machine itself would do were
+ it conscious, for whom it has become an extension of his own body, a new
+ sensori-motor organ, a group of prearranged gestures and automatic habits?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The student's knowledge is more useful to the builder, and I do not wish
+ to claim that we should ever neglect it; but the only true knowledge is
+ that of the engineer. And what I have just said does not concern material
+ objects only. Who has absolute knowledge of religion, he who analyses it
+ in psychology, sociology, history, and metaphysics, or he who, from
+ within, by a living experience, participates in its essence and holds
+ communion with its duration?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the external nature of the knowledge obtained by conceptual analysis
+ is only its least fault. There are others still more serious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If concepts actually express what is common, general, unspecific, what
+ should make us feel the need of recasting them when we apply them to a new
+ object?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does not their ground, their utility, and their interest exactly consist
+ in sparing us this labour?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We regard them as elaborated once for all. They are building-material,
+ ready-hewn blocks, which we have only to bring together. They are atoms,
+ simple elements&mdash;a mathematician would say prime factors&mdash;capable
+ of associating with infinity, but without undergoing any inner
+ modification in contact with it. They admit linkage; they can be attached
+ externally, but they leave the aggregate as they went into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Juxtaposition and arrangement are the geometrical operations which typify
+ the work of knowledge in such a case; or else we must fall back on
+ metaphors from some mental chemistry, such as proportioning and
+ combination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all cases, the method is still that of alignment and blending of
+ pre-existent concepts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the mere fact of proceeding thus is equivalent to setting up the
+ concept as a symbol of an abstract class. That being done, explanation of
+ a thing is no more than showing it in the intersection of several classes,
+ partaking of each of them in definite proportions: which is the same as
+ considering it sufficiently expressed by a list of general frames into
+ which it will go. The unknown is then, on principle, and in virtue of this
+ theory, referred to the already known; and it thereby becomes impossible
+ ever to grasp any true novelty or any irreducible originality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On principle, once more, we claim to reconstruct nature with pure symbols;
+ and it thereby becomes impossible ever to reach its concrete reality, "the
+ invisible and present soul."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This intuitional coinage in fixed standard concepts, this creation of an
+ easily handled intellectual cash, is no doubt of evident practical
+ utility. For knowledge in the usual sense of the word is not a
+ disinterested operation; it consists in finding out what profit we can
+ draw from an object, how we are to conduct ourselves towards it, what
+ label we can suitably attach to it, under what already known class it
+ comes, to what degree it is deserving of this or that title which
+ determines an attitude we must take up, or a step we must perform. Our end
+ is to place the object in its approximate class, having regard to
+ advantageous employment or to everyday language. Then, and only then, we
+ find our pigeon-holes all ready-made; and the same parcel of reagents
+ meets all cases. A universal catechism is here in existence to meet every
+ research; its different clauses define so many unshifting points of view,
+ from which we regard each object, and our study is subsequently limited to
+ applying a kind of nomenclature to the preconstructed frames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again the philosopher has to proceed in exactly the opposite
+ direction. He has not to confine himself to ready-made business concepts,
+ of the ordinary kind, suits cut to an average model, which fit nobody
+ because they almost fit everybody; but he has to work to measure,
+ incessantly renew his plant, continually recreate his mind, and meet each
+ new problem with a fresh adaptive effort. He must not go from concepts to
+ things, as if each of them were only the cutting-point of several
+ concurrent generalities, an ideal centre of intersecting abstractions; on
+ the contrary, he must go from things to concepts, incessantly creating new
+ thoughts, and incessantly recasting the old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no solution of the problem in a more or less ingenious
+ mosaic or tessellation of rigid concepts, pre-existing to be employed. We
+ need plastic fluid, supple and living concepts, capable of being
+ continually modelled on reality, of delicately following its infinite
+ curves. The philosopher's task is then to create concepts much more than
+ to combine them. And each of the concepts he creates must remain open and
+ adjustable, ready for the necessary renewal and adaptation, like a method
+ or a programme: it must be the arrow pointing to a path which descends
+ from intuition to language, not a boundary marking a terminus. In this way
+ only does philosophy remain what it ought to be: the examination into the
+ consciousness of the human mind, the effort towards enlargement and depth
+ which it attempts unremittingly, in order to advance beyond its present
+ intellectual condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you want an example? I will take that of human personality. The ego is
+ one; the ego is many: no one contests this double formula. But everything
+ admits of it; and what is its lesson to us? Observe what is bound to
+ happen to the two concepts of unity and multiplicity, by the mere fact
+ that we take them for general frames independent of the reality contained,
+ for detached language admitting empty and blank definition, always
+ representable by the same word, no matter what the circumstances: they are
+ no longer living and coloured ideas, but abstract, motionless, and neutral
+ forms, without shades or gradations, without distinction of case,
+ characterising two points of view from which you can observe anything and
+ everything. This being so, how could the application of these forms help
+ us to grasp the original and peculiar nature of the unity and multiplicity
+ of the ego? Still further, how could we, between two such entities,
+ statically defined by their opposition, ever imagine a synthesis?
+ Correctly speaking, the interesting question is not whether there is
+ unity, multiplicity, combination, one with the other, but to see what sort
+ of unity, multiplicity, or combination realises the case in point; above
+ all, to understand how the living person is at once multiple unity and one
+ multiplicity, how these two poles of conceptual dissociation are
+ connected, how these two diverging branches of abstraction join at the
+ roots. The interesting point, in a word, is not the two symbolical
+ colourless marks indicating the two ends of the spectrum; it is the
+ continuity between, with its changing wealth of colouring, and the double
+ progress of shades which resolve it into red and violet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is impossible to arrive at this concrete transition unless we begin
+ from direct intuition and descend to the analysing concepts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, the same duty of reversing our familiar attitude, of inverting our
+ customary proceeding, becomes ours for another reason. The conceptual
+ atomism of common thought leads it to place movement in a lower order than
+ rest, fact in a lower order than becoming. According to common thought,
+ movement is added to the atom, as a supplementary accident to a body
+ previously at rest; and, by becoming, the pre-existent terms are strung
+ together like pearls on a necklace. It delights in rest, and endeavours to
+ bring to rest all that moves. Immobility appears to it to be the base of
+ existence. It decomposes and pulverises every change and every phenomenon,
+ until it finds the invariable element in them. It is immobility which it
+ esteems as primary, fundamental, intelligible of itself; and motion, on
+ the contrary, which it seeks to explain as a function of immobility. And
+ so it tends, out of progresses and transitions, to make things. To see
+ distinctly, it appears to need a dead halt. What indeed are concepts but
+ logical look-out stations along the path of becoming? what are they but
+ motionless external views, taken at intervals, of an uninterrupted stream
+ of movement?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of them isolates and fixes an aspect, "as the instantaneous lightning
+ flashes on a storm-scene in the darkness." ("Matter and Memory", page
+ 209.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Placed together, they make a net laid in advance, a strong meshwork in
+ which the human intelligence posts itself securely to spy the flux of
+ reality, and seize it as it passes. Such a proceeding is made for the
+ practical world, and is out of place in the speculative. Everywhere we are
+ trying to find constants, identities, non-variants, states; and we imagine
+ ideal science as an open eye which gazes for ever upon objects that do not
+ move. The constant is the concrete support demanded by our action: the
+ matter upon which we operate must not escape our grasp and slip through
+ our hands, if we are to be able to work it. The constant, again, is the
+ element of language, in which the word represents its inert permanence, in
+ which it constitutes the solid fulcrum, the foundation and landmark of
+ dialectic progress, being that which can be discarded by the mind, whose
+ attention is thus free for other tasks. In this respect analysis by
+ concepts is the natural method of common-sense. It consists in asking from
+ time to time what point the object studied has reached, what it has
+ become, in order to see what one could derive from it, or what it is
+ fitting to say of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this method has only a practical reach. Reality, which in its essence
+ is becoming, passes through our concepts without ever letting itself be
+ caught, as a moving body passes fixed points. When we filter it, we retain
+ only its deposit, the result of the becoming drifted down to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do the dams, canals, and buoys make the current of the river? Do the
+ festoons of dead seaweed ranged along the sand make the rising tide? Let
+ us beware of confounding the stream of becoming with the sharp outline of
+ its result. Analysis by concepts is a cinematograph method, and it is
+ plain that the inner organisation of the movement is not seen in the
+ moving pictures. Every moment we have fixed views of moving objects. With
+ such conceptual sections taken in the stream of continuity, however many
+ we accumulate, should we ever reconstruct the movement itself, the dynamic
+ connection, the march of the images, the transition from one view to
+ another? This capacity for movement must be contained in the picture
+ apparatus, and must therefore be given in addition to the views
+ themselves; and nothing can better prove how, after all, movement is never
+ explicable except by itself, never grasped except in itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if we take movement as our principle, it is, on the contrary,
+ possible, and even easy, to slacken speed by imperceptible degrees, and
+ stop dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a dead stop we shall never get our movement again; but rest can very
+ well be conceived as the limit of movement, as its arrest or extinction;
+ for rest is less than movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way the true philosophical method, which is the inverse of the
+ common method, consists in taking up a position from the very outset in
+ the bosom of becoming, in adopting its changing curves and variable
+ tension, in sympathising with the rhythm of its genesis, in perceiving all
+ existence from within, as a growth, in following it in its inner
+ generation; in short, in promoting movement to fundamental reality, and,
+ inversely, in degrading fixed states to the rank of secondary and derived
+ reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, to come back to the example of the human personality, the
+ philosopher must seek in the ego not so much a ready-made unity or
+ multiplicity as, if I may venture the expression, two antagonistic and
+ correlative movements of unification and plurification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is then a radical difference between philosophic intuition and
+ conceptual analysis. The latter delights in the play of dialectic, in
+ fountains of knowledge, where it is interested only in the immovable
+ basins; the former goes back to the source of the concepts, and seeks to
+ possess it where it gushes out. Analysis cuts the channels; intuition
+ supplies the water. Intuition acquires and analysis expends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not a question of banning analysis; science could not do without it,
+ and philosophy could not do without science. But we must reserve for it
+ its normal place and its just task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concepts are the deposited sediment of intuition: intuition produces the
+ concepts, not the concepts intuition. From the heart of intuition you will
+ have no difficulty in seeing how it splits up and analyses into concepts,
+ concepts of such and such a kind or such and such a shade. But by
+ successive analyses you will never reconstruct the least intuition, just
+ as, no matter how you distribute water, you will never reconstruct the
+ reservoir in its original condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Begin from intuition: it is a summit from which we can descend by infinite
+ slopes; it is a picture which we can place in an infinite number of
+ frames. But all the frames together will not recompose the picture, and
+ the lower ends of all the slopes will not explain how they meet at the
+ summit. Intuition is a necessary beginning; it is the impulse which sets
+ the analysis in motion, and gives it direction; it is the sounding which
+ brings it to solid bottom; the soul which assures its unity. "I shall
+ never understand how black and white interpenetrate, if I have not seen
+ grey, but I understand without trouble, after once seeing grey, how we can
+ regard it from the double point of view of black and white."
+ ("Introduction to Metaphysics.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are some letters which you can arrange in chains in a thousand ways:
+ the indivisible sense running along the chain, and making one phrase of
+ it, is the original cause of the writing, not its consequence. Thus it is
+ with intuition in relation to analysis. But beginnings and generative
+ activities are the proper object of the philosopher. Thus the conversion
+ and reform incumbent on him consist essentially in a transition from the
+ analytic to the intuitive point of view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result is that the chosen instrument of philosophic thought is
+ metaphor; and of metaphor we know Mr Bergson to be an incomparable master.
+ What we have to do, he says himself, is "to elicit a certain active force
+ which in most men is liable to be trammelled by mental habits more useful
+ to life," to awaken in them the feeling of the immediate, original, and
+ concrete. But "many different images, borrowed from very different orders
+ of things, can, by their convergent action, direct consciousness to the
+ precise point where there is a certain intuition to be seized. By choosing
+ images as unlike as possible, we prevent any one of them from usurping the
+ place of the intuition it is intended to call up, since it would in that
+ case be immediately routed by its rivals. In making them all, despite
+ their different aspects, demand of our mind the same kind of attention,
+ and in some way the same degree of tension, we accustom our consciousness
+ little by little to a quite peculiar and well-determined disposition,
+ precisely the one which it ought to adopt to appear to itself unmasked."
+ ("Introduction to Metaphysics".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strictly speaking, the intuition of immediacy is inexpressible. But it can
+ be suggested and called up. How? By ringing it round with concurrent
+ metaphors. Our aim is to modify the habits of imagination in ourselves
+ which are opposed to a simple and direct view, to break through the
+ mechanical imagery in which we have allowed ourselves to be caught; and it
+ is by awakening other imagery and other habits that we can succeed in so
+ doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But then, you will say, where is the difference between philosophy and
+ art, between metaphysical and aesthetic intuition? Art also tends to
+ reveal nature to us, to suggest to us a direct vision of it, to lift the
+ veil of illusion which hides us from ourselves; and aesthetic intuition
+ is, in its own way, perception of immediacy. We revive the feeling of
+ reality obliterated by habit, we summon the deep and penetrating soul of
+ things: the object is the same in both cases; and the means are also the
+ same; images and metaphors. Is Mr Bergson only a poet, and does his work
+ amount to nothing but the introduction of impressionism in metaphysics?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is an old objection. If the truth be told, Mr Bergson's immense
+ scientific knowledge should be sufficient refutation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only those who have not read the mass of carefully proved and positive
+ discussions could give way thus to the impressions of art awakened by what
+ is truly a magic style. But we can go further and put it better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That there are analogies between philosophy and art, between metaphysical
+ and aesthetic intuition, is unquestionable and uncontested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time, the analogies must not be allowed to hide the
+ differences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Art is, to a certain extent, philosophy previous to analysis, previous to
+ criticism and science; the aesthetic intuition is metaphysical intuition
+ in process of birth, bounded by dream, not proceeding to the test of
+ positive verification. Reciprocally, philosophy is the art which follows
+ upon science, and takes account of it, the art which uses the results of
+ analysis as its material, and submits itself to the demands of stern
+ criticism; metaphysical intuition is the aesthetic intuition verified,
+ systematised, ballasted by the language of reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophy then differs from art in two essential points: first of all, it
+ rests upon, envelops, and supposes science; secondly, it implies a test of
+ verification in its strict meaning. Instead of stopping at the acts of
+ common-sense, it completes them with all the contributions of analysis and
+ scientific investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We said just now of common-sense that, in its inmost depths, it possesses
+ reality: that is only quite exact when we mean common-sense developed in
+ positive science; and that is why philosophy takes the results of science
+ as its basis, for each of these results, like the facts and data of common
+ perception, opens a way for critical penetration towards the immediate.
+ Just now I was comparing the two kinds of knowledge which the theorist and
+ the engineer can have of a machine, and I allowed the advantage of
+ absolute knowledge to practical experience, whilst theory seemed to me
+ mainly relative to the constructive industry. That is true, and I do not
+ go back upon it. But the most experienced engineer, who did not know the
+ mechanism of his machine, who possessed only unanalysed feelings about it,
+ would have only an artist's, not a philosopher's knowledge. For absolute
+ intuition, in the full sense of the word, we must have integral
+ experience; that is to say, a living application of rational theory no
+ less than of working technique.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To journey towards living intuition, starting from complete science and
+ complete sensation, is the philosopher's task; and this task is governed
+ by standards unknown to art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Metaphysical intuition offers a victorious resistance to the test of
+ thorough and continued experiment, to the test of calculation as to that
+ of working, to the complete experiment which brings into play all the
+ various deoxidising agents of criticism; it shows itself capable of
+ withstanding analysis without dissolving or succumbing; it abounds in
+ concepts which satisfy the understanding, and exalt it; in a word, it
+ creates light and truth on all mental planes; and these characteristics
+ are sufficient to distinguish it in a profound degree from aesthetic
+ intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter is only the prophetic type of the former, a dream or
+ presentiment, a veiled and still uncertain dawn, a twilight myth preceding
+ and proclaiming, in the half-darkness, the full day of positive
+ revelation...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every philosophy has two faces, and must be studied in two movements&mdash;method
+ and teaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are its two moments, its two aspects, no doubt co-ordinate and
+ mutually dependent, but none the less distinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have just examined the method of the new philosophy inaugurated by Mr
+ Bergson. To what teaching has this method led us, and to what can we
+ foresee that it will lead us?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what we have still to find.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. Teaching.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The sciences properly so called, those that are by agreement termed
+ positive, present themselves as so many external and circumferential
+ points from which we view reality. They leave us on the outside of things,
+ and confine themselves to investigating from a distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The views they give us resemble the brief perspectives of a town which we
+ obtain in looking at it from different angles on the surrounding hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Less even than that: for very soon, by increasing abstraction, the
+ coloured views give place to regular lines, and even to simple
+ conventional notes, which are more practical in use and waste less time.
+ And so the sciences remain prisoners of the symbol, and all the inevitable
+ relativity involved in its use. But philosophy claims to pierce within
+ reality, establish itself in the object, follow its thousand turns and
+ folds, obtain from it a direct and immediate feeling, and penetrate right
+ into the concrete depths of its heart; it is not content with an analysis,
+ but demands an intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there is one existence which, at the outset, we know better and more
+ surely than any other; there is a privileged case in which the effort of
+ sympathetic revelation is natural and almost easy to us; there is one
+ reality at least which we grasp from within, which we perceive in its deep
+ and internal content. This reality is ourselves. It is typical of all
+ reality, and our study may fitly begin here. Psychology puts us in direct
+ contact with it, and metaphysics attempt to generalise this contact. But
+ such a generalisation can only be attempted if, to begin with, we are
+ familiar with reality at the point where we have immediate access to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The path of thought which the philosopher must take is from the inner to
+ the outer being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Know thyself": the old maxim has remained the motto of philosophy since
+ Socrates, the motto at least which marks its initial moment, when,
+ inclining towards the depth of the subject, it commences its true work of
+ penetration, whilst science continues to extend on the surface. Each
+ philosophy in turn has commented upon and applied this old motto. But Mr
+ Bergson, more than anyone else, has given it, as he does everything else
+ he takes up, a new and profound meaning. What was the current
+ interpretation before him? Speaking only of the last century, we may say
+ that, under the influence of Kant, criticism had till now been principally
+ engaged in unravelling the contribution of the subject in the act of
+ consciousness, in establishing our perception of things through certain
+ representative forms borrowed from our own constitution. Such was, even
+ yesterday, the authenticated way of regarding the problem. And it is
+ precisely this attitude which Mr Bergson, by a volte-face which will
+ remain familiar to him in the course of his researches, reverses from the
+ outset.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has appeared to me," says he, ("Essay on the Immediate Data of
+ Consciousness", Conclusion.) "that there was ground for setting oneself
+ the inverse problem, and asking whether the most apparent states of the
+ ego itself, which we think we grasp directly, are not most of the time
+ perceived through certain forms borrowed from the outer world, which in
+ this way gives us back what we have lent it. A priori, it seems fairly
+ probable that this is what goes on. For supposing that the forms of which
+ we are speaking, to which we adapt matter, come entirely from the mind, it
+ seems difficult to apply them constantly to objects without soon producing
+ the colouring of the objects in the forms; therefore in using these forms
+ for the knowledge of our own personality, we risk taking a reflection of
+ the frame in which we place them&mdash;that is, actually, the external
+ world&mdash;for the very colouring of the ego. But we can go further, and
+ state that forms applicable to things cannot be entirely our own work;
+ that they must result from a compromise between matter and mind; that if
+ we give much to this matter, we doubtless receive something from it; and
+ that, in this way, when we try to possess ourselves again after an
+ excursion into the outer world, we no longer have our hands free."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avoid such a consequence, there is, we must admit, a conceivable
+ loophole. It consists in maintaining on principle an absolute analogy, an
+ exact similitude between internal reality and external objects. The forms
+ which suit the one would then also suit the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it must be observed that such a principle constitutes in the highest
+ degree a metaphysical thesis which it would be on all hands illegal to
+ assert previously as a postulate of method. Secondly, and above all, it
+ must be observed that on this head experience is decisive, and manifests
+ more plainly every day the failure of the theories which try to assimilate
+ the world of consciousness to that of matter, to copy psychology from
+ physics. We have here two different "orders." The apparatus of the first
+ does not admit of being employed in the second. Hence the necessity of the
+ attitude adopted by Mr Bergson. We have an effort to make, a work of
+ reform to undertake, to lift the veil of symbols which envelops our usual
+ representation of the ego, and thus conceals us from our own view, in
+ order to find out what we are in reality, immediately, in our inmost
+ selves. This effort and this work are necessary, because, "in order to
+ contemplate the ego in its original purity, psychology must eliminate or
+ correct certain forms which bear the visible mark of the outer world."
+ ("Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness", Conclusion.) What are
+ these forms? Let us confine ourselves to the most important. Things appear
+ to us as numerable units, placed side by side in space. They compose
+ numerical and spatial multiplicity, a dust of terms between which
+ geometrical ties are established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But space and number are the two forms of immobility, the two schemes of
+ analysis, by which we must not let ourselves be obsessed. I do not say
+ that there is no place to give them, even in the internal world. But the
+ more deeply we enter into the heart of psychological life, the less they
+ are in place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact is, there are several planes of consciousness, situated at
+ different depths, marking all the intervening degrees between pure thought
+ and bodily action, and each mental phenomenon interests all these planes
+ simultaneously, and is thus repeated in a thousand higher tones, like the
+ harmonies of one and the same note.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or, if you prefer it, the life of the spirit is not the uniform
+ transparent surface of a mere; rather it is a gushing spring which, at
+ first pent in, spreads upwards and outwards, like a sheaf of corn, passing
+ through many different states, from the dark and concentrated welling of
+ the source to the gleam of the scattered tumbling spray; and each of its
+ moods presents in its turn a similar character, being itself only a thread
+ within the whole. Such without doubt is the central and activating idea of
+ the admirable book entitled "Matter and Memory". I cannot possibly
+ condense its substance here, or convey its astonishing synthetic power,
+ which succeeds in contracting a complete metaphysic, and in gripping it so
+ firmly that the examination ends by passing to the discussion of a few
+ humble facts relative to the philosophy of the brain! But its technical
+ severity and its very conciseness, combined with the wealth it contains,
+ render it irresumable; and I can only in a few words indicate its
+ conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First of all, however little we pride ourselves on positive method, we
+ must admit the existence of an internal world, of a spiritual activity
+ distinct from matter and its mechanism. No chemistry of the brain, no
+ dance of atoms, is equivalent to the least thought, or indeed to the least
+ sensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some, it is true, have brought forward a thesis of parallelism, according
+ to which each mental phenomenon corresponds point by point to a phenomenon
+ in the brain, without adding anything to it, without influencing its
+ course, merely translating it into another tongue, so that a glance
+ sufficiently penetrating to follow the molecular revolutions and the
+ fluxes of nervous production in their least episodes would immediately
+ read the inmost secrets of the associated consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no one will deny that a thesis of this kind is only in reality a
+ hypothesis, that it goes enormously beyond the certain data of current
+ biology, and that it can only be formulated by anticipating future
+ discoveries in a preconceived direction. Let us be candid: it is not
+ really a thesis of positive science, but a metaphysical thesis in the
+ unpleasant meaning of the term. Taking it at its best, its worth today
+ could only be one of intelligibleness. And intelligible it is not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How are we to understand a consciousness destitute of activity and
+ consequently without connection with reality, a kind of phosphorescence
+ which emphasises the lines of vibration in the brain, and renders in
+ miraculous duplicate, by its mysterious and useless light, certain
+ phenomena already complete without it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day Mr Bergson came down into the arena of dialectic, and, talking to
+ his opponents in their own language, pulled their "psycho-physiological
+ paralogism" to pieces before their eyes; it is only by confounding in one
+ and the same argument two systems of incompatible notations, idealism and
+ realism, that we succeed in enunciating the parallelist thesis. This
+ reasoning went home, all the more as it was adapted to the usual form of
+ discussions between philosophers. But a more positive and more categorical
+ proof is to be found all through "Matter and Memory". From the precise
+ example of recollection analysed to its lowest depths, Mr Bergson
+ completely grasps and measures the divergence between soul and body,
+ between mind and matter. Then, putting into practice what he said
+ elsewhere about the creation of new concepts, he arrives at the conclusion&mdash;these
+ are his own expressions&mdash;that between the psychological fact and its
+ counterpart in the brain there must be a relation sui generis, which is
+ neither the determination of the one by the other, nor their reciprocal
+ independence, nor the production of the latter by the former, nor of the
+ former by the latter, nor their simple parallel concomitance; in short, a
+ relation which answers to none of the ready-made concepts which
+ abstraction puts at our service, but which may be approximately formulated
+ in these terms: ("Report of the French Philosophical Society", meeting,
+ 2nd May 1901.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Given a psychological state, that part of the state which admits of play,
+ the part which would be translated by an attitude of the body or by bodily
+ actions, is represented in the brain; the remainder is independent of it,
+ and has no equivalent in the brain. So that to one and the same state of
+ the brain there may be many different psychological states which
+ correspond, though not all kinds of states. They are psychological states
+ which all have in common the same motor scheme. Into one and the same
+ frame many pictures may go, but not all pictures. Let us take a lofty
+ abstract philosophical thought. We do not conceive it without adding to it
+ an image representing it, which we place beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We do not represent the image to ourselves, again, without supporting it
+ by a design which resumes its leading features. We do not imagine this
+ design itself without imagining and, in so doing, sketching certain
+ movements which would reproduce it. It is this sketch, and this sketch
+ only, which is represented in the brain. Frame the sketch, there is a
+ margin for the image. Frame the image again, there remains a margin, and a
+ still larger margin, for the thought. The thought is thus relatively free
+ and indeterminate in relation to the activity which conditions it in the
+ brain, for this activity expresses only the motive articulation of the
+ idea, and the articulation may be the same for ideas absolutely different.
+ And yet it is not complete liberty nor absolute indetermination, since any
+ kind of idea, taken at hazard, would not present the articulation desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In short, none of the simple concepts furnished us by philosophy could
+ express the relation we seek, but this relation appears with tolerable
+ clearness to result from experiment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same analysis of facts tells us how the planes of consciousness, of
+ which I spoke just now, are arranged, the law by which they are
+ distributed, and the meaning which attaches to their disposition. Let us
+ neglect the intervening multiples, and look only at the extreme poles of
+ the series.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are inclined to imagine too abrupt a severance between gesture and
+ dream, between action and thought, between body and mind. There are not
+ two plane surfaces, without thickness or transition, placed one above the
+ other on different levels; it is by an imperceptible degradation of
+ increasing depth, and decreasing materiality, that we pass from one term
+ to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the characteristics are continually changing in the course of the
+ transition. Thus our initial problem confronts us again, more acutely than
+ ever: are the forms of number and space equally suitable on all planes of
+ consciousness?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us consider the most external of these planes of life, and one which
+ is in contact with the outer world, the one which receives directly the
+ impressions of external reality. We live as a rule on the surface of
+ ourselves, in the numerical and spatial dispersion of language and
+ gesture. Our deeper ego is covered as it were with a tough crust, hardened
+ in action: it is a skein of motionless and numerable habits, side by side,
+ and of distinct and solid things, with sharp outlines and mechanical
+ relations. And it is for the representation of the phenomena which occur
+ within this dead rind that space and number are valid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For we have to live, I mean live our common daily life, with our body,
+ with our customary mechanism rather than with our true depths. Our
+ attention is therefore most often directed by a natural inclination to the
+ practical worth and useful function of our internal states, to the public
+ object of which they are the sign, to the effect they produce externally,
+ to the gestures by which we express them in space. A social average of
+ individual modalities interests us more than the incommunicable
+ originality of our deeper life. The words of language besides offer us so
+ many symbolic centres round which crystallise groups of motor mechanisms
+ set up by habit, the only usual elements of our internal determinations.
+ Now, contact with society has rendered these motor mechanisms practically
+ identical in all men. Hence, whether it be a question of sensation,
+ feeling, or ideas, we have these neutral dry and colourless residua, which
+ spread lifeless over the surface of ourselves, "like dead leaves on the
+ water of a pond." ("Essay on the Immediate Data," page 102.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the progress we have lived falls into the rank of a thing that can be
+ handled. Space and number lay hold of it. And soon all that remains of
+ what was movement and life is combinations formed and annulled, and forces
+ mechanically composed in a whole of juxtaposed atoms, and to represent
+ this whole a collection of petrified concepts, manipulated in dialectic
+ like counters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quite different appears the true inner reality, and quite different are
+ its profound characteristics. To begin with, it contains nothing
+ quantitative; the intensity of a psychological state is not a magnitude,
+ nor can it be measured. The "Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness"
+ begins with the proof of this leading statement. If it is a question of a
+ simple state, such as a sensation of light or weight, the intensity is
+ measured by a certain quality of shade which indicates to us
+ approximately, by an association of ideas and thanks to our acquired
+ experience, the magnitude of the objective cause from which it proceeds.
+ If, on the contrary, it is a question of a complex state, such as those
+ impressions of profound joy or sorrow which lay hold of us entirely,
+ invading and overwhelming us, what we call their intensity expresses only
+ the confused feeling of a qualitative progress, and increasing wealth.
+ "Take, for example, an obscure desire, which has gradually become a
+ profound passion. You will see that the feeble intensity of this desire
+ consisted first of all in the fact that it seemed to you isolated and in a
+ way foreign to all the rest of your inner life. But little by little it
+ penetrated a larger number of psychic elements, dyeing them, so to speak,
+ its own colour; and now you find your point of view on things as a whole
+ appears to you to have changed. Is it not true that you become aware of a
+ profound passion, once it has taken root, by the fact that the same
+ objects no longer produce the same impression upon you? All your
+ sensations, all your ideas, appear to you refreshed by it; it is like a
+ new childhood." (Loc. cit., page 6.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is here none of the homogeneity which is the property of magnitude,
+ and the necessary condition of measurement, giving a view of the less in
+ the bosom of the more. The element of number has vanished, and with it
+ numerical multiplicity extended in space. Our inner states form a
+ qualitative continuity; they are prolonged and blended into one another;
+ they are grouped in harmonies, each note of which contains an echo of the
+ whole; they are encircled by an innumerable degradation of halos, which
+ gradually colour the total content of consciousness; they live each in the
+ bosom of his fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am the scent of roses," were the words Condillac put in the mouth of
+ his statue; and these words translate the immediate truth exactly, as soon
+ as observation becomes naive and simple enough to attain pure fact. In a
+ passing breath I breathe my childhood; in the rustle of leaves, in a ray
+ of moonlight, I find an infinite series of reflections and dreams. A
+ thought, a feeling, an act, may reveal a complete soul. My ideas, my
+ sensations, are like me. How would such facts be possible, if the multiple
+ unity of the ego did not present the essential characteristic of vibrating
+ in its entirety in the depths of each of the parts descried or rather
+ determined in it by analysis? All physical determinations envelop and
+ imply each other reciprocally. And the fact that the soul is thus present
+ in its entirety in each of its acts, its feelings, for example, or its
+ ideas in its sensations, its recollections in its percepts, its
+ inclinations in its obvious states, is the justifying principle of
+ metaphors, the source of all poetry, the truth which modern philosophy
+ proclaims with more force every day under the name of immanence of
+ thought, the fact which explains our moral responsibility with regard to
+ our affections and our beliefs themselves; and finally, it is the best of
+ us, since it is this which ensures our being able to surrender ourselves,
+ genuinely and unreservedly, and this which constitutes the real unity of
+ our person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us push still further into the hidden retreat of the soul. Here we are
+ in these regions of twilight and dream, where our ego takes shape, where
+ the spring within us gushes up, in the warm secrecy of the darkness which
+ ushers our trembling being into birth. Distinctions fail us. Words are
+ useless now. We hear the wells of consciousness at their mysterious task
+ like an invisible shiver of running water through the mossy shadow of the
+ caves. I dissolve in the joy of becoming. I abandon myself to the delight
+ of being a pulsing reality. I no longer know whether I see scents, breathe
+ sounds, or smell colours. Do I love? Do I think? The question has no
+ longer a meaning for me. I am, in my complete self, each of my attitudes,
+ each of my changes. It is not my sight which is indistinct or my attention
+ which is idle. It is I who have resumed contact with pure reality, whose
+ essential movement admits no form of number. He who thus makes the really
+ "deep" and "inner" effort necessary to becoming&mdash;were it only for an
+ elusive moment&mdash;discovers, under the simplest appearance,
+ inexhaustible sources of unsuspected wealth; the rhythm of his duration
+ becomes amplified and refined; his acts become more conscious; and in what
+ seemed to him at first sudden severance or instantaneous pulsation he
+ discovers complex transitions imperceptibly shaded off, musical
+ transitions full of unexpected repetitions and threaded movements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, the deeper we go in consciousness, the less suitable become these
+ schemes of separation and fixity existing in spatial and numerical forms.
+ The inner world is that of pure quality. There is no measurable
+ homogeneity, no collection of atomically constructed elements. The
+ phenomena distinguished in it by analysis are not composing units, but
+ phases. And it is only when they reach the surface, when they come in
+ contact with the external world, when they are incarnated in language or
+ gesture, that the categories of matter become adapted to them. In its true
+ nature, reality appears as an uninterrupted flow, an impalpable shiver of
+ fluid changing tones, a perpetual flux of waves which ebb and break and
+ dissolve into one another without shock or jar. Everything is ceaseless
+ change; and the state which appears the most stable is already change,
+ since it continues and grows old. Constant quantities are represented only
+ by the materialisation of habit or by means of practical symbols. And it
+ is on this point that Mr Bergson rightly insists. ("Creative Evolution",
+ page 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The apparent discontinuity of psychological life is due, then, to the
+ fact that our attention is concentrated on it in a series of discontinuous
+ acts; where there is only a gentle slope, we think we see, when we follow
+ the broken line of our attention, the steps of a staircase. It is true
+ that our psychological life is full of surprises. A thousand incidents
+ arise which seem to contrast with what precedes them, and not to be
+ connected with what follows. But the gap in their appearances stands out
+ against the continuous background on which they are represented, and to
+ which they owe the very intervals that separate them; they are the
+ drumbeats which break into the symphony at intervals. Our attention is
+ fixed upon them because they interest it more, but each of them proceeds
+ from the fluid mass of our entire psychological existence. Each of them is
+ only the brightest point in a moving zone which understands all that we
+ feel, think, wish; in fact, all that we are at a given moment. It is this
+ zone which really constitutes our state. But we may observe that states
+ defined in this way are not distinct elements. They are an endless stream
+ of mutual continuity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And do not think that perhaps such a description represents only or
+ principally our life of feeling. Reason and thought share the same
+ characteristic, as soon as we penetrate their living depth, whether it be
+ a question of creative invention or of those primordial judgments which
+ direct our activity. If they evidence greater stability, it is in
+ permanence of direction, because our past remains present to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For we are endowed with memory, and that perhaps is, on the whole, our
+ most profound characteristic. It is by memory we enlarge ourselves and
+ draw continually upon the wealth of our treasuries. Hence comes the
+ completely original nature of the change which constitutes us. But it is
+ here that we must shake off familiar representations! Common-sense cannot
+ think in terms of movement. It forges a static conception of it, and
+ destroys it by arresting it under pretext of seeing it better. To define
+ movement as a series of positions, with a generating law, with a
+ time-table or correspondence sheet between places and times, is surely a
+ ready-made presentation. Are we not confusing the trajectory and its
+ performance, the points traversed and the traversing of the points, the
+ result of the genesis of the result; in short, the quantitative distance
+ over which the flight extends, and the qualitative flight which puts this
+ distance behind it? In this way the very mobility which is the essence of
+ movement vanishes. There is the same common mistake about time. Analytic
+ and synthetic thought can see in time only a string of coincidences, each
+ of them instantaneous, a logical series of relations. It imagines the
+ whole of it to be a graduated slide-rule, in which the luminous point
+ called the present is the geometrical index.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it gives form to time in space, "a kind of fourth dimension," ("Essay
+ on the Immediate Data".) or at least it reduces it to nothing more than an
+ abstract scheme of succession, "a stream without bottom or sides, flowing
+ without determinable strength, in an indefinable direction."
+ ("Introduction to Metaphysics".) It requires time to be homogeneous, and
+ every homogeneous medium is space, "for as homogeneity consists here in
+ the absence of any quality, it is not clear how two forms of homogeneity
+ could be distinguished one from the other." ("Essay on the Immediate
+ Data", page 74.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quite different appears real duration, the duration which is lived. It is
+ pure heterogeneity. It contains a thousand different degrees of tension or
+ relaxation, and its rhythm varies without end. The magic silence of calm
+ nights or the wild disorder of a tempest, the still joy of ecstasy or the
+ tumult of passion unchained, a steep climb towards a difficult truth or a
+ gentle descent from a luminous principle to consequences which easily
+ follow, a moral crisis or a shooting pain, call up intuitions admitting no
+ comparison with one another. We have here no series of moments, but
+ prolonged and interpenetrating phases; their sequence is not a
+ substitution of one point for another, but rather resembles a musical
+ resolution of harmony into harmony. And of this ever-new melody which
+ constitutes our inner life every moment contains a resonance or an echo of
+ past moments. "What are we really, what is our character, except the
+ condensation of the history which we have lived since our birth, even
+ before our birth, since we bring with us our prenatal dispositions?
+ Without doubt we think only with a small part of our past; but it is with
+ our complete past, including our original bias of soul, that we desire,
+ wish, and act." ("Creative Evolution", pages 5-6.) This is what makes our
+ duration irreversible, and its novelty perpetual, for each of the states
+ through which it passes envelops the recollection of all past states. And
+ thus we see, in the end, how, for a being endowed with memory, "existence
+ consists in change, change in ripening, ripening in endless
+ self-creation." ("Creative Evolution", page 8.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this formula we face the capital problem in which psychology and
+ metaphysics meet, that of liberty. The solution given by Mr Bergson marks
+ one of the culminating points of his philosophy. It is from this summit
+ that he finds light thrown on the riddle of inner being. And it is the
+ centre where all the lines of his research converge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is liberty? What must we understand by this word? Beware of the
+ answer you are going to give. Every definition, in the strict sense of the
+ term, will imply the determinist thesis in advance, since, under pain of
+ going round in a circle, it will be bound to express liberty as a function
+ of what it is not. Either psychological liberty is an illusive appearance,
+ or, if it is real, we can only grasp it by intuition, not by analysis, in
+ the light of an immediate feeling. For a reality is verified, not
+ constructed; and we are now or never in one of those situations where the
+ philosopher's task is to create some new concept, instead of abiding by a
+ combination of previous elements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man is free, says common-sense, in so far as his action depends only on
+ himself. "We are free," says Mr Bergson, ("Essay on the Immediate Data of
+ Consciousness", page 131.) "when our acts proceed from our entire
+ personality, when they express it, when they exhibit that indefinable
+ resemblance to it which we find occasionally between the artist and his
+ work." That is all we need seek; two conceptions which are equivalent to
+ each other, two concordant formulae. It is true that this amounts to
+ determining the free act by its very originality, in the etymological
+ sense of the word: which is at bottom only another way of declaring it
+ incommensurable with every concept, and reluctant to be confined by any
+ definition. But, after all, is not that the only true immediate fact?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That our spiritual life is genuine action, capable of independence,
+ initiative, and irreducible novelty, not mere result produced from
+ outside, not simple extension of external mechanism, that it is so much
+ ours as to constitute every moment, for him who can see, an essentially
+ incomparable and new invention, is exactly what represents for us the name
+ of liberty. Understood thus, and decidedly it is like this that we must
+ understand it, liberty is a profound thing: we seek it only in those
+ moments of high and solemn choice which come into our life, not in the
+ petty familiar actions which their very insignificance submits to all
+ surrounding influences, to every wandering breeze. Liberty is rare; many
+ live and die and have never known it. Liberty is a thing which contains an
+ infinite number of degrees and shades; it is measured by our capacity for
+ the inner life. Liberty is a thing which goes on in us unceasingly: our
+ liberty is potential rather than actual. And lastly, it is a thing of
+ duration, not of space and number, not the work of moments or decrees. The
+ free act is the act which has been long in preparing, the act which is
+ heavy with our whole history, and falls like a ripe fruit from our past
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how are we to establish positive verification of these views? How are
+ we to do away with the danger of illusion? The proof will in this case
+ result from a criticism of adverse theories, along with direct observation
+ of psychological reality freed from the deceptive forms which warp the
+ common perception of it. And it will here be an easy task to resume Mr
+ Bergson's reasoning in a few words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first obstacle which confronts affirmation of our liberty comes from
+ physical determinism. Positive science, we are told, presents the universe
+ to us as an immense homogeneous transformation, maintaining an exact
+ equivalence between departure and arrival. How can we possibly have after
+ that the genuine creation which we require in the act we call free?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer is that the universality of the mechanism is at bottom only a
+ hypothesis which is still awaiting demonstration. On the one hand it
+ includes the parallelist conception which we have recognised as effete.
+ And on the other it is plain that it is not self-sufficient. At least it
+ requires that somewhere or other there should be a principle of position
+ giving once for all what will afterwards be maintained. In actual fact,
+ the course of phenomena displays three tendencies: a tendency to
+ conservation, beyond question; but also a tendency to collapse, as in the
+ diminution of energy; and a tendency to progress, as in biological
+ evolution. To make conservation the sole law of matter implies an
+ arbitrary decree, denoting only those aspects of reality which will count
+ for anything. By what right do we thus exclude, with vital effort, even
+ the feeling of liberty which in us is so vigorous?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We might say, it is true, that our spiritual life, if it is not a simple
+ extension of external mechanism, yet proceeds according to an internal
+ mechanism equally severe, but of a different order. This would bring us to
+ the hypothesis of a kind of psychological mechanism; and in many respects
+ this seems to be the common-sense hypothesis. I need not dwell upon it,
+ after the numerous criticisms already made. Inner reality&mdash;which does
+ not admit number&mdash;is not a sequence of distinct terms, allowing a
+ disconnected waste of absolute causality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the mechanism of which we dream has no true sense&mdash;for, after
+ all, it has a sense&mdash;except in relation to the superficial phenomena
+ which take place in our dead rind, in relation to the automaton which we
+ are in daily life. I am ready to admit that it explains our common
+ actions, but here it is our profound consciousness which is in question,
+ not the play of our materialised habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without insisting, then, too strongly on this mongrel conception, let us
+ pass to the direct examination of inner psychological reality. Everything
+ is ready for the conclusion. Our duration, which is continually
+ accumulating itself, and always introducing some irreducible new factor,
+ prevents any kind of state, even if superficially identical, from
+ repeating itself in depth. "We shall never again have the soul we had this
+ evening." Each of our moments remains essentially unique. It is something
+ new added to the surviving past; not only new, but unable to be foreseen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For how can we speak of foresight which is not simple conjecture, how can
+ we conceive an absolute extrinsic determination, when the act in birth
+ only makes one with the finished sum of its conditions, when these
+ conditions are complete only on the threshold of the action beginning,
+ including the fresh and irreducible contribution added by its very date in
+ our history? We can only explain afterwards, we can only foresee when it
+ is too late, in retrospect, when the accomplished action has fallen into
+ the plan of matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus our inner life is a work of enduring creation: of phases which mature
+ slowly, and conclude at long intervals the decisive moments of
+ emancipating discovery. Undoubtedly matter is there, under the forms of
+ habit, threatening us with automatism, seeking at every moment to devour
+ us, stealing a march on us whenever we forget. But matter represents in us
+ only the waste of existence, the mortal fall of weakened reality, the
+ swoon of the creative action falling back inert; while the depths of our
+ being still pulse with the liberty which, in its true function, employs
+ mechanism itself only as a means of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, does not this conception make a singular exception of us in nature,
+ an empire within an empire? That is the question we have yet to
+ investigate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have just attempted to grasp what being is in ourselves; and we have
+ found that it is becoming, progress, and growth, that it is a creative
+ process which never ceases to labour incessantly; in a word, that it is
+ duration. Must we come to the same conclusion about external being, about
+ existence in general?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us consider that external reality which is nearest us, our body. It is
+ known to us both externally by our perceptions and internally by our
+ affections. It is then a privileged case for our inquiry. In addition, and
+ by analogy, we shall at the same time study the other living bodies which
+ everyday induction shows us to be more or less like our own. What are the
+ distinctive characteristics of these new realities? Each of them possesses
+ a genuine individuality to a far greater degree than inorganic objects;
+ whilst the latter are hardly limited at all except in relation to the
+ needs of the former, and so do not constitute beings in themselves, the
+ former evidence a powerful internal unity which is only further emphasised
+ by their prodigious complication, and form wholes with are naturally
+ complete. These wholes are not collections of juxtaposed parts: they are
+ organisms; that is to say, systems of connected functions, in which each
+ detail implies the whole, and where the various elements interpenetrate.
+ These organisms change and modify continually; we say of them not only
+ that they are, but that they live; and their life is mutability itself, a
+ flight, a perpetual flux. This uninterrupted flight cannot in any way be
+ compared to a geometrical movement; it is a rhythmic succession of phases,
+ each of which contains the resonance of all those which come before; each
+ state lives on in the state following; the life of the body is memory; the
+ living being accumulates its past, makes a snowball of itself, serves as
+ an open register for time, ripens, and grows old. Despite all
+ resemblances, the living body always remains, in some measure, an
+ absolutely original and unique invention, for there are not two specimens
+ exactly alike; and, among inert objects, it appears as the reservoir of
+ indetermination, the centre of spontaneity, contingence, and genuine
+ action, as if in the course of phenomena nothing really new could be
+ produced except by its agency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such are the characteristic tendencies of life, such the aspects which it
+ presents to immediate observation. Whether spiritual activity
+ unconsciously presides over biological evolution, or whether it simply
+ prolongs it, we always find here and there the essential features of
+ duration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I spoke just now of "individuality." Is it really one of the
+ distinctive marks of life? We know how difficult it is to define it
+ accurately. Nowhere, not even in man, is it fully realised; and there are
+ beings in existence in which it seems a complete illusion, though every
+ part of them reproduces their complete unity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, but we are now dealing with biology, in which geometrical precision
+ is inadmissible, where reality is defined not so much by the possession of
+ certain characteristics as by its tendency to accentuate them. It is as a
+ tendency that individuality is more particularly manifested; and if we
+ look at it in this light, no one can deny that it does constitute one of
+ the fundamental tendencies of life. Only the truth is that the tendency to
+ individuality remains always and everywhere counterbalanced, and therefore
+ limited, by an opposing tendency, the tendency to association, and above
+ all to reproduction. This necessitates a correction in our analysis.
+ Nature, in many respects, seems to take no interest in individuals. "Life
+ appears to be a current passing from one germ to another through the
+ medium of a developed organism." ("Creative Evolution", page 29.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems as if the organism played the part of a thoroughfare. What is
+ important is rather the continuity of progress of which the individuals
+ are only transitory phases. Between these phases again there are no sharp
+ severances; each phase resolves and melts imperceptibly into that which
+ follows. Is not the real problem of heredity to know how, and up to what
+ point, a new individual breaks away from the individuals which produced
+ it? Is not the real mystery of heredity the difference, not the
+ resemblance, occurring between one term and another?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever be its solution, all the individual phases mutually extend and
+ interpenetrate one another. There is a racial memory by which the past is
+ continually accumulated and preserved. Life's history is embodied in its
+ present. And that is really the ultimate reason of the perpetual novelty
+ which surprised us just now. The characteristics of biological evolution
+ are thus the same as those of human progress. Once again we find the very
+ stuff of reality in duration. "We must not then speak any longer of life
+ in general as an abstraction, or a mere heading under which we write down
+ all living beings." ("Creative Evolution", page 28.) On the contrary, to
+ it belongs the primordial function of reality. It is a very real current
+ transmitted from generation to generation, organising and passing through
+ bodies, without failing or becoming exhausted in any one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may, already, then, draw one conclusion: Reality, at bottom, is
+ becoming. But such a thesis runs counter to all our familiar ideas. It is
+ imperative that we should submit it to the test of critical examination
+ and positive verification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One system of metaphysics, I said some time ago, underlies common-sense,
+ animating and informing it. According to this system, which is the inverse
+ of that which we have just intimated, reality in its very depths is fixity
+ and permanence. This is the completely static conception which sees in
+ being exactly the opposite of becoming: we cannot become, it seems to say,
+ except in so far as we are not. It does not, however, mean to deny
+ movement. But it represents it as fluctuation round invariable types, as a
+ whirling but captive eddy. Every phenomenon appears to it as a
+ transformation which ends where it began, and the result is that the world
+ takes the form of an eternal equilibrium in which "nothing is created,
+ nothing destroyed." The idea does not need much forcing to end in the old
+ supposition of a cyclic return which restores everything to its original
+ conditions. Everything is thus conceived in astronomical periods. All that
+ is left of the universe henceforward is a whirl of atoms in which nothing
+ counts but certain fixed quantities translated by our systems of
+ equations; the rest has vanished "in algebraical smoke." There is
+ therefore nothing more or less in the effect than in the group of causes;
+ and the causal relation moves towards identity as towards its asymptote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a view of nature is open to many objections, even if it were only a
+ question of inorganised matter. Simple physics already betoken the
+ insufficiency of a purely mechanic conception. The stream of phenomena
+ flows in an irreversible direction and obeys a determined rhythm. "If I
+ wish to prepare myself a glass of sugar and water, I may do what I like,
+ but I must wait for my sugar to melt." ("Creative Evolution", page 10.)
+ Here are facts which pure mechanism does not take into account, regarding
+ as it does only statically conceived relations, and making time into a
+ measure only, something like a common denominator of concrete successions,
+ a certain number of coincidences from which all true duration remains
+ absent, which would remain unchanged even if the world's history, instead
+ of opening out in consecutive phases, were to be unfolded before our eyes
+ all at once like a fan. Do we not indeed speak today of aging and atomic
+ separation. If the quantity of energy is preserved, at least its quality
+ is continually deteriorating. By the side of something which remains
+ constant, the world also contains something which is being used up,
+ dissipated, exhausted, decomposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Further still, a specimen of metal, in its molecular structure, preserves
+ an indelible trace of the treatment it has undergone; natural philosophers
+ tell us that there is a "memory of solids." These are all very positive
+ facts which pure mechanism passes over. In addition, must we not first of
+ all postulate what will afterwards be preserved or deteriorated? Whence we
+ get another aspect of things: that of genesis and creation; and in reality
+ we register the ascending effort of life as a reality no less startling
+ than mechanic inertia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, we have a double movement of ascent and descent: such is what
+ life and matter appear to immediate observation. These two currents meet
+ each other, and grapple. It is the drama of evolution, of which Mr Bergson
+ once gave a masterly explanation, in stating the high place which man
+ fills in nature:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot regard the general evolution and progress of life in the whole
+ of the organised world, the co-ordination and subordination of vital
+ functions to one another in the same living being, the relations which
+ psychology and physiology combined seem bound to establish between brain
+ activity and thought in man, without arriving at this conclusion, that
+ life is an immense effort attempted by thought to obtain of matter
+ something which matter does not wish to give it. Matter is inert; it is
+ the seat of necessity; it proceeds mechanically. It seems as if thought
+ seeks to profit by this mechanical inclination in matter to utilise it for
+ actions, and thus to convert all the creative energy it contains, at least
+ all that this energy possesses which admits of play and external
+ extraction, into contingent movements in space and events in time which
+ cannot be foreseen. With laborious research it piles up complications to
+ make liberty out of necessity, to compose for itself a matter so subtile,
+ and so mobile, that liberty, by a veritable physical paradox, and thanks
+ to an effort which cannot last long, succeeds in maintaining its
+ equilibrium on this very mobility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But it is caught in the snare. The eddy on which it was poised seizes and
+ drags it down. It becomes prisoner of the mechanism it has set up.
+ Automatism lays hold of it, and life, inevitably forgetting the end which
+ it had determined, which was only to be a means in view of a superior end,
+ is entirely used up in an effort to preserve itself by itself. From the
+ humblest of organised beings to the higher vertebrates which come
+ immediately before man, we witness an attempt which is always foiled and
+ always resumed with more and more art. Man has triumphed; with difficulty,
+ it is true, and so incompletely that a moment's lapse and inattention on
+ his part surrender him to automatism again. But he has triumphed..."
+ ("Report of the French Philosophical Society", meeting, 2nd May 1901.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Mr Bergson adds in another place: ("Creative Evolution", pages
+ 286-287.) "With man consciousness breaks the chain. In man and in man only
+ it obtains its freedom. The whole history of life, till man, had been the
+ history of an effort of consciousness to lift matter, and of the more or
+ less complete crushing of consciousness by matter falling upon it again.
+ The enterprise was paradoxical; if indeed we can speak here, except
+ paradoxically, of enterprise and effort. The task was to take matter,
+ which is necessity itself, and create an instrument of liberty, construct
+ a mechanical system to triumph over mechanism, to employ the determinism
+ of nature to pass through the meshes of the net it had spread. But
+ everywhere, except in man, consciousness let itself be caught in the net
+ of which it sought to traverse the meshes. It remained taken in the
+ mechanisms it had set up. The automatism which it claimed to be drawing
+ towards liberty enfolds it and drags it down. It has not the strength to
+ get away, because the energy with which it had supplied itself for action
+ is almost entirely employed in maintaining the exceedingly subtile and
+ essentially unstable equilibrium into which it has brought matter. But man
+ does not merely keep his machine going, he succeeds in using it as it
+ pleases him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He owes it without doubt to the superiority of his brain, which allows
+ him to construct an unlimited number of motor mechanisms, to oppose new
+ habits to old time after time, and to master automatism by dividing it
+ against itself. He owes it to his language, which furnishes consciousness
+ with an immaterial body in which to become incarnate, thus dispensing it
+ from depending exclusively upon material bodies, the flux of which would
+ drag it down and soon engulf it. He owes it to social life, which stores
+ and preserves efforts as language stores thought, thereby fixing a mean
+ level to which individuals will rise with ease, and which, by means of
+ this initial impulse, prevents average individuals from going to sleep and
+ urges better people to rise higher. But our brain, our society, and our
+ language are only the varied outer signs of one and the same internal
+ superiority. Each after its fashion, they tell us the unique and
+ exceptional success which life has won at a given moment of its evolution.
+ They translate the difference in nature, and not in degree only, which
+ separates man from the rest of the animal world. They let us see that if,
+ at the end of the broad springboard from which life took off, all others
+ came down, finding the cord stretched too high, man alone has leapt the
+ obstacle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But man is not on that account isolated in nature: "As the smallest grain
+ of dust forms part of our entire solar system, and is involved along with
+ it in this undivided downward movement which is materiality itself, so all
+ organised beings from the humblest to the highest, from the first origins
+ of life to the times in which we live, and in all places as at all times,
+ do but demonstrate to our eyes a unique impulse contrary to the movement
+ of matter, and, in itself, indivisible. All living beings are connected,
+ and all yield to the same formidable thrust. The animal is supported by
+ the plant, man rides the animal, and the whole of humanity in space and
+ time is an immense army galloping by the side of each of us, before and
+ behind us, in a spirited charge which can upset all resistance, and leap
+ many obstacles, perhaps even death." ("Creative Evolution", pages
+ 293-294.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see with what broad and far-reaching conclusions the new philosophy
+ closes. In the forcible poetry of the pages just quoted its original
+ accent rings deep and pure. Some of its leading theses, moreover, are
+ noted here. But now we must discover the solid foundation of underlying
+ fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us take first the fact of biological evolution. Why has it been
+ selected as the basis of the system? Is it really a fact, or is it only a
+ more or less conjectural and plausible theory?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notice in the first instance that the argument from evolution appears at
+ least as a weapon of co-ordination and research admitted in our day by all
+ philosophers, rejected only on the inspiration of preconceived ideas which
+ are completely unscientific; and that it succeeds in the task allotted to
+ it is doubtless already the proof that it responds to some part of
+ reality. And besides, we can go further. "The idea of transformism is
+ already contained in germ in the natural classification of organised
+ beings. The naturalist brings resembling organisms together, divides the
+ group into sub-groups, within which the resemblance is still greater, and
+ so on; throughout the operation, the characteristics of the group appear
+ as general themes upon which each of the sub-groups executes its
+ particular variations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now this is precisely the relation we find in the animal world and in the
+ vegetable world between that which produces and what is produced; on the
+ canvas bequeathed by the ancestor to his posterity, and possessed in
+ common by them, each broiders his original pattern." ("Creative
+ Evolution", pages 24-25.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may, it is true, ask ourselves whether the genealogical method permits
+ results so far divergent as those presented to us by variety of species.
+ But embryology answers by showing us the highest and most complex forms of
+ life attained every day from very elementary forms; and palaeontology, as
+ it develops, allows us to witness the same spectacle in the universal
+ history of life, as if the succession of phases through which the embryo
+ passes were only a recollection and an epitome of the complete past whence
+ it has come. In addition, the phenomena of sudden changes, recently
+ observed, help us to understand more easily the conception which obtrudes
+ itself under so many heads, by diminishing the importance of the apparent
+ lacunae in genealogical continuity. Thus the trend of all our experience
+ is the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there are some certainties which are only centres of concurrent
+ probabilities; there are some truths determined only by succession of
+ facts, but yet, by their intersection and convergence, sufficiently
+ determined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is how we measure the distance from an inaccessible point, by
+ regarding it time after time from the points to which we have access."
+ ("Report of the French Philosophical Society", meeting, 2nd May 1901.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is not that the case here? The affirmative seems all the more inevitable
+ inasmuch as the language of transformism is the only language known to the
+ biology of today. Evolution can, it is true, be transposed, but not
+ suppressed, since in any actual state there would always remain this
+ striking fact that the living forms met with as remains in geological
+ layers are ranged by the natural affinity of their characteristics in an
+ order of succession parallel to the succession of the ages. We are not
+ really then inventing a hypothesis in beginning with the affirmation of
+ evolution. But what we have to do is to appreciate its object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evolution! We meet the word everywhere today. But how rare is the true
+ idea! Let us ask the astronomers who originate cosmogonical hypotheses,
+ and invent a primitive nebula, the natural philosophers who dream that by
+ the deterioration of energy and the dissipation of movement the material
+ world will obtain final rest in the inertia of a homogeneous equilibrium,
+ let us ask the biologists and psychologists who are enemies of fixed
+ species and inquisitive about ancestral history. What they are anxious to
+ discern in evolution is the persistent influence of an initial cause once
+ given, the attraction of a fixed end, a collection of laws before the
+ eternity of which change becomes negligible like an appearance. Now he who
+ thinks of the universe as a construction of unchangeable relations denies
+ by his method the evolution of which he speaks, since he transforms it
+ into a calculable effect necessarily produced by a regulated play of
+ generating conditions, since he implicitly admits the illusive character
+ of a becoming which adds nothing to what is given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finality itself, if he keeps the name, does not save him from his error,
+ for finality in his eyes is nothing but an efficient cause projected into
+ the future. So we see him fixing stages, marking periods, inserting means,
+ putting in milestones, continually destroying movement by halting it
+ before his gaze. And we all do the same by instinctive inclination. Our
+ concept of law, in its classical form, is not general: it represents only
+ the law of co-existence and of mechanism, the static relation between two
+ numerically disconnected terms; and in order to grasp evolution we shall
+ doubtless have to invent a new type of law: law in duration, dynamic
+ relation. For we can, and we must, conceive that there is an evolution of
+ natural laws; that these laws never define anything but a momentary state
+ of things; that they are in reality like streaks determined in the flux of
+ becoming by the meeting of contrary currents. "Laws," says Monsieur
+ Boutroux, "are the bed down which passes the torrent of facts; they have
+ dug it, though they follow it." Yet we see the common theories of
+ evolution appealing to the concepts of the present to describe the past,
+ forcing them back to prehistoric times, and beyond the reasoning of today,
+ placing at the beginning what is only conceivable in the mind of the
+ contemporary thinker; in a word, imagining the same laws as always
+ existing and always observed. This is the method which Mr Bergson so
+ justly criticises in Spencer: that of reconstructing evolution with
+ fragments of its product.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we wish thoroughly to grasp the reality of things, we must think
+ otherwise. Neither of these ready-made concepts, mechanism and finality,
+ is in place, because both of them imply the same postulate, viz. that
+ "everything is given," either at the beginning or at the end, whilst
+ evolution is nothing if it is not, on the contrary, "that which gives."
+ Let us take care not to confound evolution and development. There is the
+ stumbling-block of the usual transformist theories, and Mr Bergson devotes
+ to it a closely argued and singularly penetrating criticism, by an example
+ which he analyses in detail. ("Creative Evolution", chapter i.) These
+ theories either do not explain the birth of variation, and limit
+ themselves to an attempt to make us understand how, once born, it becomes
+ fixed, or else through need of adaptation they look for a conception of
+ its birth. But in both cases they fail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The truth is that adaptation explains the windings of the movement of
+ evolution, but not the general directions of the movement, still less the
+ movement itself. The road which leads to the town is certainly obliged to
+ climb the hills and go down the slopes; it adapts itself to the accidents
+ of the ground; but the accidents of the ground are not the cause of the
+ road, any more than they have imparted its direction." ("Creative
+ Evolution", pages 111-112.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the bottom of all these errors there are only prejudices of practical
+ action. That is of course why every work appears to be an outside
+ construction beginning with previous elements; a phase of anticipation
+ followed by a phase of execution, calculation, and art, an effective
+ projecting cause, and a concerted goal, a mechanism which hurls to a
+ finality which aims. But the genuine explanation must be sought elsewhere.
+ And Mr Bergson makes this plain by two admirable analyses in which he
+ takes to pieces the common ideas of disorder and nothingness in order to
+ explain their meaning relative to our proceedings in industry or language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us come back to facts, to immediate experience, and try to translate
+ its pure data simply. What are the characteristics of vital evolution?
+ First of all it is a dynamic continuity, a continuity of qualitative
+ progress; next, it is essentially a duration, an irreversible rhythm, a
+ work of inner maturation. By the memory inherent in it, the whole of its
+ past lives on and accumulates, the whole of its past remains for ever
+ present to it; which is tantamount to saying that it is experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also an effort of perpetual invention, a generation of continual
+ novelty, indeducible and capable of defying all anticipation, as it defies
+ all repetition. We see it at its task of research in the groping attempts
+ exhibited by the long-sought genesis of species; we see it triumphant in
+ the originality of the least state of consciousness, of the least body, of
+ the tiniest cell, of which the infinity of times and spaces does not offer
+ two identical specimens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the reef which lies in its way, and on which too often it founders, is
+ habit; habit would be a better and more powerful means of action if it
+ remained free, but in so far as it congeals and becomes materialised, is a
+ hindrance and an obstacle. First of all we have the average types round
+ which fluctuates an action which is decreasing and becoming reduced in
+ breadth. Then we have the residual organs, the proofs of dead life, the
+ encrustations from which the stream of consciousness gradually ebbs; and
+ finally we have the inert gear from which all real life has disappeared,
+ the masses of shipwrecked "things" rearing their spectral outlines where
+ once rolled the open sea of mind. The concept of mechanism suits the
+ phenomena which occur within the zone of wreckage, on this shore of
+ fixities and corpses. But life itself is rather finality, if not in the
+ anthropomorphic sense of premeditated design, plan, or programme, at least
+ in this sense, that it is a continually renewed effort of growth and
+ liberation. And it is from here we get Mr Bergson's formulae: vital
+ impetus and creative evolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this conception of being consciousness is everywhere, as original and
+ fundamental reality, always present in a myriad degrees of tension or
+ sleep, and under infinitely various rhythms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vital impulse consists in a "demand for creation"; life in its
+ humblest stage already constitutes a spiritual activity; and its effort
+ sends out a current of ascending realisation which again determines the
+ counter-current of matter. Thus all reality is contained in a double
+ movement of ascent and descent. The first only, which translates an inner
+ work of creative maturation, is essentially durable; the second might, in
+ strictness, be almost instantaneous, like that of an escaping spring; but
+ the one imposes its rhythm on the other. From this point of view mind and
+ matter appear not as two things opposed to each other, as static terms in
+ fixed antithesis, but rather as two inverse directions of movement; and,
+ in certain respects, we must therefore speak not so much of matter or mind
+ as of spiritualisation and materialisation, the latter resulting
+ automatically from a simple interruption of the former. "Consciousness or
+ superconsciousness is the rocket, the extinguished remains of which fall
+ into matter." ("Creative Evolution", page 283.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What image of universal evolution is then suggested? Not a cascade of
+ deduction, nor a system of stationary pulsations, but a fountain which
+ spreads like a sheaf of corn and is partially arrested, or at least
+ hindered and delayed, by the falling spray. The fountain itself, the
+ reality which is created, is vital activity, of which spiritual activity
+ represents the highest form; and the spray which falls is the creative act
+ which falls, it is reality which is undone, it is matter and inertia. In a
+ word, the supreme law of genesis and fall, the double play of which
+ constitutes the universe, comprises a psychological formula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything begins in the manner of an invention, as the fruit of duration
+ and creative genius, by liberty, by pure mind; then comes habit, a kind of
+ body, as the body is already a group of habits; and habit, taking root,
+ being a work of consciousness which escapes it and turns against it, is
+ little by little degraded into mechanism in which the soul is buried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main lines and general perspective of Mr Bergson's philosophy now
+ perhaps begin to appear. Certainly I am the first to feel how powerless a
+ slender resume really is to translate all its wealth and all its strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At least I wish I could have contributed to making its movement, and what
+ I may call its rhythm, clearer to perception. It is from the books of the
+ master himself that a more complete revelation must be sought. And the few
+ words which I am still going to add as conclusion are only intended to
+ sketch the principal consequences of the doctrine, and allow its distant
+ reach to be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evolution of life would be a very simple and easy thing to understand
+ if it were fulfilled along one single trajectory and followed a straight
+ path. "But we are here dealing with a shell which has immediately burst
+ into fragments, which, being themselves species of shells, have again
+ burst into fragments destined to burst again, and so on for a very long
+ time." ("Creative Evolution", page 107.) It is, in fact, the property of a
+ tendency to develop itself in the expansion which analyses it. As for the
+ causes of this dispersion into kingdoms, then into species, and finally
+ into individuals, we can distinguish two series: the resistance which
+ matter opposes to the current of life sent through it, and the explosive
+ force&mdash;due to an unstable equilibrium of tendencies&mdash;carried by
+ the vital impulse within itself. Both unite in making the thrust of life
+ divide in more and more diverging but complementary directions, each
+ emphasising some distinct aspect of its original wealth. Mr Bergson
+ confines himself to the branches of the first order&mdash;plant, animal,
+ and man. And in the course of a minute and searching discussion he shows
+ us the characteristics of these lines in the moods or qualities signified
+ by the three words&mdash;torpor, instinct, and intelligence: the vegetable
+ kingdom constructing and storing explosives which the animal expends, and
+ man creating a nervous system for himself which permits him to convert the
+ expense into analysis. Let us leave aside, as we must, the many suggestive
+ views scattered lavishly about, the many flashes of light which fall on
+ all faces of the problem, and let us confine ourselves to seeing how we
+ get a theory of knowledge from this doctrine. There we have yet another
+ proof of the striking and fertile originality of the new philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More than one objection has been brought against Mr Bergson on this head.
+ That is quite natural: how could such a novelty be exactly understood at
+ once? It is also very desirable; it is the demands for enlightenment which
+ lead a doctrine to full consciousness of itself, to precision and
+ perfection. But we must be afraid of false objections, those which arise
+ from an obstinate translation of the new philosophy into an old language
+ steeped in a different metaphysic. With what has Mr Bergson been
+ reproached? With misunderstanding reason, with ruining positive science,
+ with being caught in the illusion of getting knowledge otherwise than by
+ intelligence, or of thinking otherwise than by thought; in short, of
+ falling into a vicious circle by making intellectualism turn round upon
+ itself. Not one of these reproaches has any foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us begin by a few preliminary remarks to clear the ground. First of
+ all, there is one ridiculous objection which I quote only to record. I
+ mean that which suspects at the bottom of the theories which we are going
+ to discuss some dark background, some prepossession of irrational
+ mysticism. On the contrary, the truth is, we have here perhaps better than
+ anywhere, the spectacle of pure thought face to face with things. But it
+ is a complete thought, not thought reduced to some partial functions, but
+ sufficiently sure of its critical power to sacrifice none of its
+ resources. Here, we may say, really is the genuine positivism, which
+ reinstates all spiritual reality. It does not in any way lead to a
+ misunderstanding or depreciation of science. Even where contingency and
+ relativity are most visible in it, in the domain of inert matter, Mr
+ Bergson goes so far as to say that physical science touches an absolute.
+ It is true that it touches this absolute rather than sees it. More
+ particularly it perceives all its reactions on a system of representative
+ forms which it presents to it, and observes the effect on the veil of
+ theory with which it envelops it. At certain moments, all the same, the
+ veil becomes almost transparent. And in any case the scholar's thought
+ guesses and grazes reality in the curve drawn by the succession of its
+ increasing syntheses. But there are two orders of science. Formerly it was
+ from the mathematician that we borrowed the ideal of evidence. Hence came
+ the inclination always to seek the most certain knowledge from the most
+ abstract side. The temptation was to make a kind of less severe and
+ rigorous mathematics of biology itself. Now if such a method suits the
+ study of inert matter because in a manner geometrical, so much so that our
+ knowledge of it thus acquired is more incomplete than inexact, this is not
+ at all the case for the things of life. Here, if we were to conduct
+ scientific research always in the same grooves and according to the same
+ formulae, we should immediately encounter symbolism and relativity. For
+ life is progress, whilst the geometrical method is commensurable only with
+ things. Mr Bergson is aware of this; and his rare merit has been to
+ disengage specific originality from biology, while elevating it to a
+ typical and standard science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us come to the heart of the problem. What was Kant's point of
+ departure in the theory of knowledge? In seeking to define the structure
+ of the mind according to the traces of itself which it must have left in
+ its works, and in proceeding by a reflective analysis ascending from a
+ fact to its conditions, he could only regard intelligence as a thing made,
+ a fixed system of categories and principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr Bergson adopts an inverse attitude. Intelligence is a product of
+ evolution: we see it slowly and uninterruptedly constructed along a line
+ which rises through the vertebrates to man. Such a point of view is the
+ only one which conforms to the real nature of things, and the actual
+ conditions of reality; the more we think of it, the more we perceive that
+ the theory of knowledge and the theory of life are bound up with one
+ another. Now what do we conclude from this point of view? Life, considered
+ in the direction of "knowledge," evolves on two diverging lines which at
+ first are confused, then gradually separate, and finally end in two
+ opposed forms of organisation, intelligence and instinct. Several contrary
+ potentialities interpenetrated at their common source, but of this source
+ each of these kinds of activity preserves or rather accentuates only one
+ tendency; and it will be easy to mark its dual character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instinct is sympathy; it has no clear consciousness of itself; it does not
+ know how to reflect; it is hardly capable of varying its steps; but it
+ operates with incomparable certainty because it remains lodged in things,
+ in communion with their rhythm and with inner feeling of them. The history
+ of animals in this respect supplies many remarkable examples which Mr
+ Bergson analyses and discusses in detail. As much might be said of the
+ work which produces a living body, and of the effort which presides over
+ its growth, maintenance, and functions. Take a natural philosopher who has
+ long breathed the atmosphere of the laboratory, who has by long practice
+ acquired what we call "experience"; he has a kind of intimate feeling for
+ his instruments, their resources, their movements, their working
+ tendencies; he perceives them as extensions of himself; he possesses them
+ as groups of habitual actions, thus discoursing by manipulations as easily
+ and spontaneously as others discourse in calculation. Doubtless that is
+ only an image; but transpose it and generalise it, and it will help you to
+ understand the kind of action which divines instinct. But intelligence is
+ something quite different. We are talking, of course, of the analytic and
+ synthetic intelligence which we use in our acts of current thought, which
+ works throughout our daily action and forms the fundamental thread of our
+ scientific operations. I need not here go back to the criticism of its
+ ordinary proceedings. But I must now note the service which suits them,
+ the domain in which they apply and are valid, and what they teach us
+ thereby about the meaning, reach, and natural task of intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst instinct vibrates in sympathetic harmony with life, it is about
+ inert matter that intelligence is granted; it is a rider to our faculty of
+ action; it triumphs in geometry; it feels at home among the objects in
+ which our industry finds its supports and its tools. In a word, "our logic
+ is primarily the logic of solids." (Preface to "Creative Evolution".) But
+ if we enter the vital order its incompetence is manifestly apparent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is very important that deduction should be so impotent in biology.
+ Still more impotent is it perhaps in matters of art or religion; whilst,
+ on the contrary, it works marvels so long as it has only to foresee
+ movements or transformations in bodies. What does this mean, if not that
+ intelligence and materiality go together, that language with its analytic
+ steps is regulated by the movements of matter? Philosophy once again then
+ must leave it behind, for the duty of philosophy is to consider everything
+ in its relation to life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not conclude, however, that the philosopher's duty is to renounce
+ intelligence, place it under tutelage, or abandon it to the blind
+ suggestions of feeling and will. It has not even the right to do so.
+ Instinct, with us who have evolved along the grooves of intelligence, has
+ remained too weak to be sufficient for us. Besides, intelligence is the
+ only path by which light could dawn in the bosom of primitive darkness.
+ But let us look at present reality in all its complexity, all its wealth.
+ Round intelligence itself exists a halo of instinct. This halo represents
+ the remains of the first nebulous vapour at the expense of which
+ intelligence was constituted like a brilliantly condensed nucleus; and it
+ is still today the atmosphere which gives it life, the fringe of touch,
+ and delicate probing, inspiring contact and divining sympathy, which we
+ see in play in the phenomena of discovery, as also in the acts of that
+ "attention to life," and that "sense of reality" which is the soul of good
+ sense, so widely distinct from common-sense. And the peculiar task of the
+ philosopher is to reabsorb intelligence in instinct, or rather to
+ reinstate instinct in intelligence; or better still, to win back to the
+ heart of intelligence all the initial resources which it must have
+ sacrificed. This is what is meant by return to the primitive, and the
+ immediate, to reality and life. This is the meaning of intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the task is difficult. We at once suspect a vicious circle. How
+ can we go beyond intelligence except by intelligence itself? We are
+ apparently inside our thought, as incapable of coming out of it as is a
+ balloon of rising above the atmosphere. True, but on this reasoning we
+ could just as well prove that it is impossible for us to acquire any new
+ habit whatsoever, impossible for life to grow and go beyond itself
+ continually.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must avoid drawing false conclusions from the simile of the balloon.
+ The question here is to know what are the real limits of the atmosphere.
+ It is certain that the synthetic and critical intelligence, left to its
+ own strength, remains imprisoned in a circle from which there is no
+ escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But action removes the barrier. If intelligence accepts the risk of taking
+ the leap into the phosphorescent fluid which bathes it, and to which it is
+ not altogether foreign, since it has broken off from it and in it dwell
+ the complementary powers of the understanding, intelligence will soon
+ become adapted and so will only be lost for a moment to reappear greater,
+ stronger, and of fuller content. It is action again under the name of
+ experience which removes the danger of illusion or giddiness, it is action
+ which verifies; by a practical demonstration, by an effort of enduring
+ maturation which tests the idea in intimate contact with reality and
+ judges it by its fruits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It always falls therefore to intelligence to pronounce the grand verdict
+ in the sense that only that can be called true which will finally satisfy
+ it; but we mean an intelligence duly enlarged and transformed by the very
+ effect of the action it has lived. Thus the objection of "irrationalism"
+ directed against the new philosophy falls to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The objection of "non-morality" fares no better. But is has been made, and
+ people have thought fit to accuse Mr Bergson's work of being the too calm
+ production of an intelligence too indifferent, too coldly lucid, too
+ exclusively curious to see and understand, untroubled and unthrilled by
+ the universal drama of life, by the tragic reality of evil. On the other
+ hand, not without contradiction, the new philosophy has been called
+ "romantic," and people have tried to find in it the essential traits of
+ romanticism: its predilection for feeling and imagination, its unique
+ anxiety for vital intensity, its recognised right to all which is to be,
+ whence its radical inability to establish a hierarchy of moral
+ qualifications. Strange reproach! The system in question is not yet
+ presented to us as a finished system. Its author manifests a plain desire
+ to classify his problems. And he is certainly right in proceeding so:
+ there is a time for everything, and on occasion we must learn to be just
+ an eye focussed upon being. But that does not at all exclude the
+ possibility of future works, treating in due order of the problem of human
+ destiny, and perhaps even in the work so far completed we may descry some
+ attempts to bring this future within ken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But universal evolution, though creative, is not for all that quixotic or
+ anarchist. It forms a sequence. It is a becoming with direction,
+ undoubtedly due, not to the attraction of a clearly preconceived goal, or
+ the guidance of an outer law, but to the actual tendency of the original
+ thrust. In spite of the stationary eddies or momentary backwashes we
+ observe here and there, its stream moves in a definite direction, ever
+ swelling and broadening. For the spectator who regards the general sweep
+ of the current, evolution is growth. On the other hand, he who thinks this
+ growth now ended is under a simple delusion: "The gates of the future
+ stand wide open." ("Creative Evolution", page 114.) In the stage at
+ present attained man is leading; he marks the culminating point at which
+ creation continues; in him, life has already succeeded, at least up to a
+ certain point; from him onwards it advances with consciousness capable of
+ reflection; is it not for that very reason responsible for the result?
+ Life, according to the new philosophy, is a continual creation of what is
+ new: new&mdash;be it well understood&mdash;in the sense of growth and
+ progress in relation to what has gone before. Life, in a word, is mental
+ travel, ascent in a path of growing spiritualisation. Such at least is the
+ intense desire, and such the first tendency which launched and still
+ inspires it. But it may faint, halt, or travel down the hill. This is an
+ undeniable fact; and once recognised does it not awake in us the
+ presentiment of a directing law immanent in vital effort, a law doubtless
+ not to be found in any code, nor yet binding through the stern behest of
+ mechanical necessity, but a law which finds definition at every moment,
+ and at every moment also marks a direction of progress, being as it were
+ the shifting tangent to the curve of becoming?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us did that according to the new philosophy the whole of our past
+ survives for ever in us, and by means of us results in action. It is then
+ literally true that our acts do to a certain extent involve the whole
+ universe, and its whole history: the act which we make it accomplish will
+ exist henceforward for ever, and will for ever tinge universal duration
+ with its indelible shade. Does not that imply an imperious, urgent,
+ solemn, and tragic problem of action? Nay, more; memory makes a persistent
+ reality of evil, as of good. Where are we to find the means to abolish and
+ reabsorb the evil? What in the individual is called memory becomes
+ tradition and joint responsibility in the race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, a directing law is immanent in life, but in the shape
+ of an appeal to endless transcendence. In dealing with this future
+ transcendent to our daily life, with this further shore of present
+ experience, where are we to seek the inspiring strength? And is there not
+ ground for asking ourselves whether intuitions have not arisen here and
+ there in the course of history, lighting up the dark road of the future
+ for us with a prophetic ray of dawn? It is at this point that the new
+ philosophy would find place for the problem of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this word "religion," which has not come once so far from Mr Bergson's
+ pen, coming now from mine, warns me that it is time to end. No man today
+ would be justified in foreseeing the conclusions to which the doctrine of
+ creative evolution will one day undoubtedly lead on this point. More than
+ any other, I must forget here what I myself may have elsewhere tried to do
+ in this order of ideas. But it was impossible not to feel the approach of
+ the temptation. Mr Bergson's work is extraordinarily suggestive. His
+ books, so measured in tone, so tranquil in harmony, awaken in us a mystery
+ of presentiment and imagination; they reach the hidden retreats where the
+ springs of consciousness well up. Long after we have closed them we are
+ shaken within; strangely moved, we listen to the deepening echo, passing
+ on and on. However valuable already their explicit contents may be, they
+ reach still further than they aimed. It is impossible to tell what latent
+ germs they foster. It is impossible to guess what lies behind the
+ boundless distance of the horizons they expose. But this at least is sure:
+ these books have verily begun a new work in the history of human thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ADDITIONAL EXPLANATIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. Mr Bergson's Work and the General Directions of Contemporary Thought.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A broad survey of the new philosophy was bound to be somewhat rapid and
+ summary; and now that this is completed it will doubtless not be
+ superfluous to come back, on the same plan as before, to some more
+ important or more difficult individual points, and to examine by
+ themselves the most prominent centres on which we should focus the light
+ of our attention. Not that I intend to probe in minute detail the folds
+ and turns of a doctrine which admits of infinite development: how can I
+ claim to exhaust a work of such profound thought that the least passing
+ example employed takes its place as a particular study? Still less do I
+ wish to undertake a kind of analytic resume; no undertaking could be less
+ profitable than that of arranging paragraph headings to repeat too
+ briefly, and therefore obscurely, what a thinker has said without any
+ extravagance of language, yet with every requisite explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The critic's true task, as I understand it, in no way consists in drawing
+ up a table of contents strewn with qualifying notes. His task is to read
+ and enable others to read between the lines, between the chapters, and
+ between the successive works, what constitutes the dynamic tie between
+ them, all that the linear form of writing and language has not allowed the
+ author himself to elucidate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His task is, as far as possible, to master the accompaniment of underlying
+ thought which produced the resonant atmosphere of the inquirer's
+ intuition, the rhythm and toning of the image, resulting in the shade of
+ light which falls upon his vision. His task, in a word, is to help
+ understanding, and therefore to point out and anticipate the
+ misunderstandings to be feared. Now it seems to me that there are a few
+ points round which the errors of interpretation more naturally gather,
+ producing some astounding misconceptions of Mr Bergson's philosophy. It is
+ these points only that I propose to clear up. But at the same time I shall
+ use the opportunity to supply information about authorities, which I have
+ hitherto deliberately omitted, to avoid riddling with references pages
+ which were primarily intended to impart a general impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us begin by glancing at the milieu of thought in which Mr Bergson's
+ philosophy must have had birth. For the last thirty years new currents are
+ traceable. In what direction do they go? And what distance have they
+ already gone? What, in short, are the intellectual characteristics of our
+ time? We must endeavour to distinguish the deeper tendencies, those which
+ herald and prepare and near future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the essential and frequently cited features of the generation in
+ which Taine and Renan were the most prominent leaders was the passionate,
+ enthusiastic, somewhat exclusive and intolerant cult of positive science.
+ This science, in its days of pride, was considered unique, displayed on a
+ plane by itself, always uniformly competent, capable of gripping any
+ object whatever with the same strength, and of inserting it in the thread
+ of one and the same unbroken connection. The dream of that time, despite
+ all verbal palliations, was a universal science of mathematics:
+ mathematics, of course, with their bare and brutal rigour softened and
+ shaded off, where feasible; if possible, supple and sensitive; in ideal,
+ delicate, buoyant, and judicious; but mathematics governed from end to end
+ by an equal necessity. Conceived as the sole mistress of truth, this
+ science was expected in days to come to fulfil all the needs of man, and
+ unreservedly to take the place of ancient spiritual discipline. Genuine
+ philosophy had had its day: all metaphysics seemed deception and fantasy,
+ a simple play of empty formulae or puerile dreams, a mythical procession
+ of abstraction and phantom; religion itself paled before science, as
+ poetry of the grey morning before the splendour of the rising sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, after all this pride came the turn of humility, and humility of
+ the very lowest. This deified science, borne down in its hour of triumph
+ by too heavy a weight, had necessarily been recognised as powerless to go
+ beyond the order of relations, and radically incapable of telling us the
+ origin, end, and basis of things. It analysed the conditions of phenomena,
+ but was ill-suited ever to grasp any real cause, or any deep essence.
+ Further, it became the Unknowable, before which the human mind could only
+ halt in despair. And in this way destitution arose out of ambition itself,
+ since thought, after trusting too exclusively to its geometrical strength,
+ was compelled at the end of its effort to confess itself beaten when
+ confronted with the only questions to which no man may ever be
+ indifferent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This double attitude is no longer that of the contemporary generation. The
+ prestige of illusion has vanished. In the religion of science we see now
+ nothing but idolatry. The haughty affirmation of yesterday appears today,
+ not as expressing a positive fact or a result duly established, but as
+ bringing forward a thesis of perilous and unconscious metaphysics. Let us
+ go even further. If true intelligence is mental expansion and aptitude for
+ understanding widely different things, each in its originality, to the
+ same degree, we must say that the claim to reduce reality to one only of
+ its modes, to know it in one only of its forms, is an unintelligent claim.
+ That is, in brief formula, the verdict of the present generation. Not, of
+ course, that it in any way misconceives or disdains the true value of
+ science, whether as an instrument of action for the conquest of nature, or
+ as intelligible language, allowing us to know our whereabouts in things
+ and "talk" them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is aware that in all circumstances positive methods have their evidence
+ to produce, and that, where they pronounce within the limits of their
+ power, nothing can stand against their verdict. But it considers first of
+ all that science was conceived of late under much too stiff and narrow a
+ form, under the obsession of too abstract a mathematical ideal which
+ corresponds to one aspect of reality only, and that the shallowest. And it
+ considers afterwards that science, even when broadened and made flexible,
+ being concerned only with what is, with fact and datum, remains radically
+ powerless to solve the problem of human life. Nowhere does science
+ penetrate to the very depth of things, and there is nothing in the world
+ but "things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Experience has shown where the dream of universal mathematics leads us.
+ Number is driven to the heart of phenomena and nature dissected with this
+ delicate scalpel. Speaking in more general terms, we adopt spatial
+ relation as the perfect example of intelligible relation. I do not wish to
+ deny the use of such a method now and again, the services it may render,
+ or the beauty of construction peculiar to the systems it inspires. But we
+ must see what price we pay for these advantages. Do we choose geometry for
+ an informing and regulating science? The more we advance towards the
+ concrete and the living, the more we feel the necessity of altering the
+ pure mathematical type. The sciences, as they get further from inert
+ matter, unless they agree to reform, pale and weaken; they become vague,
+ impotent, anaemic; they touch little but the trite surface of their
+ object, the body, not the soul; in them symbolism, artifice, and
+ relativity become increasingly evident; at length, arbitrary and
+ conventional elements crop up and devour them. In a word, the claim to
+ treat the living as inert matter conduces to the misconception in life of
+ life itself, and the retention of nothing but the material waste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experience furnishes us with a lesson. There is not so much one
+ science as several sciences, each distinguished by an autonomous method,
+ and divided into two great kingdoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us therefore from the outset follow Mr Bergson in tracing a very sharp
+ line of demarcation between the inert and the living. Two orders of
+ knowledge will thereby become separate, one in which the frames of
+ geometrical understanding are in place, the other where new means and a
+ new attitude are required. The essential task of the present hour will now
+ appear to us in a precise light; it will henceforward consist, without any
+ disregard of a glorious past, in an effort to found as specifically
+ distinct methods of instruction those sciences which take for objects the
+ successive moments of life in its different degrees, biology, psychology,
+ sociology;&mdash;then in an effort to reconstruct, setting out from these
+ new sciences and according to their spirit, the like of what ancient
+ philosophy had attempted, setting out from geometry and mechanics. By so
+ doing we shall succeed in throwing knowledge open to receive all the
+ wealth of reality, while at the same time we shall reinstate the sense of
+ mystery and the thrill of higher anxieties. A further result will be that
+ the phantom of the Unknowable will be exorcised, since it no longer
+ represents anything but the relative and momentary limit of each method,
+ the portion of being which escapes its partial grip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is one of the first controlling ideas of the contemporary generation.
+ Others result from it. More particularly, it is for the same body of
+ motives, in the same sense, and with the same restrictions, that we
+ distrust intellectualism; I mean the tendency to live uniquely by
+ intelligence, to think as if the whole of thought consisted in analytic,
+ clear and reasoning understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again, it is not a question of some blind abandonment to sentiment,
+ imagination, or will, nor do we claim to restrict the legitimate rights of
+ intellectuality in judgment. But around critical reason there is a
+ quickening atmosphere in which dwell the powers of intuition, there is a
+ half-light of gradual tones in which insertion into reality is effected.
+ If by rationalism we mean the attitude which consists in cabining
+ ourselves within the zone of geometrical light in which language evolves,
+ we must admit that rationalism supposes something other than itself, that
+ it hangs suspended by a generating act which escapes it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The method therefore which we seek to employ everywhere today is
+ experience; but complete experience, anxious to neglect no aspect of being
+ nor any resource of mind; shaded experience, not extending on the surface
+ only, in a homogeneous and uniform manner; on the contrary, an experience
+ distributed in depth over multiple planes, adopting a thousand different
+ forms to adapt itself to the different kinds of problems; in short, a
+ creative and informing experience, a veritable genesis, a genuine action
+ of thought, a work and movement of life by which the guiding principles,
+ forms of intelligibility, and criteria of verification obtain birth and
+ stability in habits. And here again it is by borrowing Mr Bergson's own
+ formula from him that we shall most accurately describe the new spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the attitude and fundamental procedure of this new spirit are in no
+ way a return to scepticism or a reaction against thought cannot be better
+ demonstrated than by this resurrection of metaphysics, this renaissance of
+ idealism, which is certainly one of the most distinctive features of our
+ epoch. Undoubtedly philosophy in France has never known so prosperous and
+ so pregnant a moment. Notwithstanding, it is not a return to the old
+ dreams of dialectic construction. Everything is regarded from the point of
+ view of life, and there is a tendency more and more to recognise the
+ primacy of spiritual activity. But we wish to understand and employ this
+ activity and this life in all its wealth, in all its degrees, and by all
+ its functions: we wish to think with the whole of thought, and go to the
+ truth with the whole of our soul; and the reason of which we recognise the
+ sovereign weight is reason laden with its complete past history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what is that, really, but realism? By realism I mean the gift of
+ ourselves to reality, the work of concrete realisation, the effort to
+ convert every idea into action, to regulate the idea by the action as much
+ as the action by the idea, to live what we think and think what we live.
+ But that is positivism, you will say; certainly it is positivism. But how
+ changed! Far from considering as positive only that which can be an object
+ of sensation or calculation, we begin by greeting the great spiritual
+ realities with this title. The deep and living aspiration of our day is in
+ everything to seek the soul, the soul which specifies and quickens, seek
+ it by an effort towards the revealing sympathy which is genuine
+ intelligence, seek it in the concrete, without dissolving thought in
+ dreams or language, without losing contact with the body or critical
+ control, seek it, in fine, as the most real and genuine part of being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence its return to questions which were lately declared out of date and
+ closed; hence its taste for problems of aesthetics and morality, its close
+ siege of social and religious problems, its homesickness for a faith
+ harmonising the powers of action and the powers of thought; hence its
+ restless desire to hark back to tradition and discipline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new philosophy was required to answer this new way of looking at things.
+ Already, in 1867, Ravaisson in his celebrated "Report" wrote these
+ prophetic lines: "Many signs permit us to foresee in the near future a
+ philosophical epoch of which the general character will be the
+ predominance of what may be called spiritualist realism or positivism,
+ having as generating principle the consciousness which the mind has in
+ itself of an existence recognised as being the source and support of every
+ other existence, being none other than its action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This prophetic view was further commented on in a work where Mr Bergson
+ speaks with just praise of this shrewd and penetrating sense of what was
+ coming: "What could be bolder or more novel than to come and predict to
+ the physicists that the inert will be explained by the living, to
+ biologists that life will only be understood by thought, to philosophers
+ that generalities are not philosophic?" ("Notice on the Life and Works of
+ M. Felix Ravaisson-Molien", in the Reports of the Academy of Moral and
+ Political Sciences, 1904.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us give each his due. What Ravaisson had only anticipated Mr
+ Bergson himself accomplishes, with a precision which gives body to the
+ impalpable and floating breath of first inspiration, with a depth which
+ renews both proof and theses alike, with a creative originality which
+ prevents the critic who is anxious for justice and precision from
+ insisting on any researches establishing connection of thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One reason for the popularity today enjoyed by this new philosophy is
+ doubtless to be found in the very tendencies of the milieu in which it is
+ produced and in the aspirations which work it. But, after once remarking
+ these desires, we must further not forget that Mr Bergson has contributed
+ more than anyone else to awaken them, determine them, and make them become
+ conscious of themselves. Let us therefore try to understand in itself and
+ by itself the work of genius of which just now we were seeking the dawning
+ gleams. What synthetic formula will be best able to tell us the essential
+ direction of its movement? I will borrow it from the author himself: "It
+ seems to me," he writes, ("Philosophic Intuition" in the "Revue de
+ Metaphysique et de Morale", November 1911.) "that metaphysics are trying
+ at this moment to simplify themselves, to come nearer to life." Every
+ philosophy tends to become incarnate in a system which constitutes for it
+ a kind of body of analysis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarded literally, it appears to be an infinite complication, a complex
+ construction with a thousand alcoves of high architecture, "in which
+ measures have been taken to provide ample lodging for all problems."
+ (Ibid.) Do not let us be deceived by this appearance: it signifies only
+ that language is incommensurable with thought, that speech admits of
+ endless multiplication in approximations incapable of exhausting their
+ object. But before constructing such a body for itself, all philosophy is
+ a soul, a mind, and begins with the simple unity of a generating
+ intuition. Here is the fitting point at which to see its essence; this is
+ what determines it much better than its conceptual expression, which is
+ always contingent and incomplete. "A philosophy worthy of the name has
+ never said but one thing; and that thing it has rather attempted to say
+ than actually said. And it has only said one thing, because it has only
+ seen one point: and that was not so much vision as contact; this contact
+ supplied an impulse, this impulse a movement, and if this movement, which
+ is a kind of vortex of a certain particular form, is only visible to our
+ eyes by what it has picked up on its path, it is no less true that other
+ dust might equally well have been raised, and that it would still have
+ been the same vortex." ("Philosophic Intuition" in the "Revue de
+ Metaphysique et de Morale", November 1911.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence comes the fact that a philosophy is at bottom much more independent
+ of its natal environment than one might at first suppose; hence also the
+ fact that ancient philosophies, though apparently relative to a science
+ which is out of date, remain always living and worthy of study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, then, is the original intuition of Mr Bergson's philosophy, the
+ creative intuition whence it comes forth? We cannot hesitate long: it is
+ the intuition of duration. That is the perspective centre to which we must
+ indefatigably return; that is the principle which we must labour to expose
+ in its full light; and that is, finally, the source of light which will
+ illumine us. Now a philosophy is not only an expressed intuition; it is
+ further and above all an acting intuition, gradually determined and
+ realised, and tested by its explanatory works; and it is by its fruits
+ that we can understand and judge it. Hence the review upon which we are
+ entering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. Immediacy.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The philosopher's first duty is in clear language to declare his
+ starting-point, with what a mathematician would call the "tangent to the
+ origin" of the path along which he is travelling, as afterwards the
+ critic's first duty is to describe this initial attitude. I have therefore
+ first of all to indicate the directing idea of the new philosophy. But it
+ is not a question of extracting a quintessence, or of fencing the soul of
+ doctrine within a few summary formulae. A system is not to be resumed in a
+ phrase, for every proposition isolated is a proposition falsified. I wish
+ merely to elucidate the methodical principle which inspires the beginning
+ of Mr Bergson's philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To philosophy itself falls the task and belongs the right to define itself
+ gradually as it becomes constituted. On this point, an anticipation of
+ experience seems hardly possible; here, as elsewhere, the finding of a
+ synthetic formula is a final rather than preliminary question. However, we
+ are obliged from the outset of the work to determine the programme of the
+ inquiry, if only to direct our research. It is the same on the threshold
+ of every science. There, it is true, the analogy ceases. For in any
+ science properly speaking the determination of beginning consists in the
+ indication of an object, and a matter, and beyond that, to each new object
+ a new science reciprocally corresponds, the existence of the one involving
+ the legitimacy of the other. But if the various sciences&mdash;I mean the
+ positive sciences&mdash;divide different objects thus between them,
+ philosophy cannot, in its turn, come forward as a particular science,
+ having a distinct object, the designation of which would be sufficient to
+ characterise and circumscribe it. Such was always the traditional
+ conception: such will ours continue to be. For, as a matter of fact, every
+ object has a philosophy and all matter can be regarded philosophically. In
+ short, philosophy is chiefly a way of perceiving and thinking, an attitude
+ and a proceeding: the peculiar and specific in it is more an intuition
+ than a content, a spirit rather than a domain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, then, is the characteristic function of philosophy, at least its
+ initial function, that which marks its opening?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To criticise the works of knowledge spontaneously effected; that is to
+ say, to scrutinise their direction, reach, and conditions: that is today
+ the unanimous answer of philosophers when questioned about the goal of
+ their labours. In other terms, what they study is not so much such and
+ such a particular "thing" as the relation of mind to each of the realities
+ to be studied. Their object, if we must employ the word, is knowledge
+ itself, it is the act of knowing regarded from the point of view of its
+ meaning and value. Philosophy thus appears as a new "order" of knowledge,
+ co-extensive with what is knowable, as a kind of knowledge of the second
+ degree, in which it is less a question of learning than of understanding,
+ in which we aim at progressing in depth rather than in extent; not effort
+ to extend the quantity of knowledge, but reflection on the quality of this
+ knowledge. Spontaneous thought&mdash;vulgar or scientific&mdash;is a
+ direct, simple, and practical thought turned towards things and partial to
+ useful results; seeking what is formulable rather than what is true, or at
+ least so fond of formulae which can be handled, manipulated, or
+ transmitted, that it is always tempted to see the truth in them; a thought
+ which, moreover, sets out from more or less unguarded postulates, abandons
+ itself to the motive impulses of habits contracted, and goes straight on
+ indefinitely without self-examination. Philosophy, on the contrary,
+ desires to be thought about thought, thought retracing its life and work,
+ knowledge labouring to know itself, fact which aspires to fact about
+ itself, mental effort to become free, to become entirely transparent and
+ luminous in its own eyes, and, if need be, to effect self-reform by
+ dissipating its natural illusions. What we have before our eyes then are
+ the initial postulates themselves, the first spontaneous thoughts, the
+ obscure origins of reason; and we are proceeding towards a point of
+ departure rather than arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new philosophy does not refuse to carry out this first critical task;
+ but it carries it out in its own way after determining more precisely the
+ real conditions of the problem. At the hour when methodical research
+ begins, the philosopher's mind is not clean-swept; and it would be
+ chimerical to wish to place oneself from the beginning, by some act of
+ transcendence, outside common thought. This thought cannot be inspected
+ and judged from outside. It constitutes, whether we wish it or no, the
+ sole concrete and positive point of departure. Let us add that
+ common-sense constitutes also our sole point of insertion into reality. It
+ can only then be a question of purifying it, not in any way of replacing
+ it. But we must distinguish in it what is pure fact, and what is ulterior
+ arrangement, in order to see what are the problems which really are
+ presented, and what are, on the contrary, the false problems, the illusory
+ problems, those which relate only to our artifices of language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The search for facts is then the first necessary moment of all philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But common thought comes before us at the outset as a piece of very
+ composite alluvial ground. It is a beginning of positive science, and also
+ a residue of all philosophical opinions which have had some vogue. That,
+ however, is not its primary basis. Primum vivere, deinde philosophari,
+ says the proverb. In certain respects, "speculation is a luxury, whilst
+ action is a necessity." ("Creative Evolution", page 47.) But "life
+ requires us to apprehend things in the relation they have to our needs."
+ ("Laughter", page 154.) Hence comes the fundamental utilitarianism of
+ common-sense. Therefore if we wish to define it in itself and for itself,
+ and no longer as a first approximation of such and such a system of
+ metaphysics, it appears to us no longer as rudimentary science and
+ philosophy, but as an organisation of thought in view of practical life.
+ Thus it is that outside all speculative opinion it is effectively lived by
+ all. Its proper language, we may say, is the language of customary
+ perception and mechanical fabrication, therefore a language relative to
+ action, made to express action, modelled upon action, translating things
+ by the relations they maintain to our action; I mean our corporal and
+ synthetic action, which very evidently implies thought, since it is a
+ question of the action of a reasonable being, but which thus contains a
+ thought which is itself eminently practical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, we are here regarding common-sense considered as a source of
+ fact. Its utilitarianism then becomes a kind of spontaneous metaphysics
+ from which we must detach ourselves. But is it not the very task of
+ positive science to execute this work of purification? Nothing of the
+ kind, despite appearances and despite intentions. Let us examine more
+ closely. The general categories of common thought, according to Mr
+ Bergson, ("Philosophic Intuition" in the "Metaphysical and Moral Review",
+ November 1911, page 825.) remain those of science; the main roads traced
+ by our senses through the continuity of reality are still those along
+ which science will pass; perception is an infant science and science an
+ adult perception; so much so that customary knowledge and scientific
+ knowledge, both of them destined to prepare our action upon things, are of
+ necessity two visions of the same kind, though of unequal precision and
+ reach. It does not follow that science does not practise a certain
+ disinterestedness as far as immediate mechanical utility is concerned; it
+ does not follow that it has no value as knowledge. But it does not set
+ itself genuinely free from the habits contracted in common experience, and
+ to inform its research it preserves the postulates of common-sense; so
+ that it always grasps things by their "actable" side, by their point of
+ contact with our faculty for action, under the forms by which we handle
+ them conceptually or practically, and all it attains of reality is that by
+ which nature is a possible object of language or industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us turn now towards another aspect of natural thought, to discover in
+ it the germ of the necessary criticism. By the side of "common-sense,"
+ which is the first rough-draft of positive science, there is "good sense,"
+ which differs from it profoundly, and marks the beginning of what we shall
+ later on call philosophic intuition. (Cf. an address on "Good Sense and
+ Classical Studies", delivered by Mr Bergson at the Concours general prize
+ distribution, 30th July 1895.) It is a sense of what is real, concrete,
+ original, living, an art of equilibrium and precision, a fine touch for
+ complexities, continually feeling like the antennae of some insects. It
+ contains a certain distrust of the logical faculty in respect of itself;
+ it wages incessant war upon intellectual automatism, upon ready-made ideas
+ and linear deduction; above all, it is anxious to locate and to weigh,
+ without any oversights; it arrests the development of every principle and
+ every method at the precise point where too brutal an application would
+ offend the delicacy of reality; at every moment it collects the whole of
+ our experience and organises it in view of the present. It is, in a word,
+ thought which keeps its freedom, activity which remains awake, suppleness
+ of attitude, attention to life, an ever-renewed adjustment to suit
+ ever-new situations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its revealing virtue is derived from this moving contact with fact, and
+ this living effort of sympathy. This is what we must tend to transpose
+ from the practical to the speculative order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, then, will be for us the beginning of philosophy? After taking
+ cognisance of common utilitarianism, and to emerge from the relativity in
+ which it buries us, we seek a departure-point, a criterion, something
+ which decides the raising of inquiry. Where are we to find such a
+ principle, except in the very action of thought; I mean, this time, its
+ action of profound life independent of all practical aim? We shall thus
+ only be imitating the example of Descartes when solving the problem of
+ temporary doubt. What we shall term return to the immediate, the
+ primitive, the pure fact, will be the taking of each perception considered
+ as an act lived, a coloured moment of the Cogito, and this will be for us
+ a criterion and departure-point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us specify this point. Immediate data or primitive data or pure data
+ are apprehended by us under forms of disinterested action; I mean that
+ they are first of all lived rather than conceived, that before becoming
+ material for science, they appear as moments of life; in brief, that
+ perception of them precedes their use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is at this stage previous to language that we are by these pure data in
+ intimate communion with reality itself, and the whole of our critical task
+ is to return to them through a regressive analysis, the goal of which is
+ gradually to make our clear intelligence equal to our primordial
+ intuition. The latter already constitutes a thought, a preconceptual
+ thought which is the intrinsic light of action, which is action itself so
+ far as it is luminous. Thus there is no question here of restricting in
+ any degree the part played by thought, but only of distinguishing between
+ the perceptive and theoretic functions of mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is "the image" of which Mr Bergson speaks at the beginning of "Matter
+ and Mind" except, when grasped in its first movement, the flash of
+ conscious existence "in which the act of knowledge coincides with the
+ generating act of reality"? ("Report of the French Philosophical Society",
+ philosophical vocabulary, article "Immediate".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us forget all philosophical controversies about realism and idealism;
+ let us try to reconstruct for ourselves a simplicity, a virginal and
+ candid glance, freeing us from the habits contracted in the course of
+ practical life. These then are our "images": not things presented
+ externally, nor states felt internally, not portraits of exterior beings
+ nor projections of internal moods, but appearances, in the etymological
+ sense of the word, appearances lived simply, without our being
+ distinguished from them, as yet neither subjective nor objective, marking
+ a moment of consciousness previous to the work of reflection, from which
+ proceeds the duality of subject and object. And such also, in every order,
+ appear the "immediate feelings"; as action in birth, previous to language.
+ (Cf. "Matter and Memory", Foreword to the 7th edition.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why depart from the immediate thus conceived as action and life? Because
+ it is quite impossible to do otherwise, for every initial fact can be only
+ such a pulsation of consciousness in its lived act, and the fundamental
+ and primitive direction of the least word, were it in an enunciation of a
+ problem or a doubt, can only be such a direction of life and action. And
+ we must certainly accord to this immediacy a value of absolute knowledge,
+ since it realises the coincidence of being and knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us not think that the perception of immediacy is simple passive
+ perception, that it is sufficient to open our eyes to obtain it, today
+ when our utilitarian education is completed and has passed into the state
+ of habit. There is a difference between common experience and the initial
+ action of life; the first is a practical limitation of the second. Hence
+ it follows that a previous criticism is necessary to return from one to
+ the other, a criticism always in activity, always open as a way of
+ progressive investigation, always ready for the reiteration and the
+ renewal of effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this task of purification there is doubtless always to be feared an
+ illusion of remaining in the primitive stage. By what criteria, by what
+ signs can we recognise that we have touched the goal? Pure fact is shown
+ to be such on the one hand because it remains independent of all
+ theoretical symbolism, because the critique of language allows it to exist
+ thus as an indissoluble residue, because we are unable not to "live" it,
+ even when we free ourselves from the anxiety of utility; on the other
+ hand, because it dominates all systems, and imposes itself equally upon
+ them all as the common source from which they derive by diverging
+ analyses, and in which they become reconciled. Assuredly, to attain it, to
+ extricate it, we must appeal to the revelations of science, to the
+ exercise of deliberate thought. But this employment of analysis against
+ analysis does not in any way constitute a circle, for it tends only to
+ destroy prejudices which have become unconscious: it is a simple artifice
+ destined to break off habits and to scatter illusions by changing the
+ points of view. Once set free, once again become capable of direct and
+ simple view, what we accept as fact is what bears no trace of synthetic
+ elaboration. It is true that here a last objection presents itself: how
+ shall we think this limit, purely given, to any degree at all in fact, if
+ it must precede all language?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer is easy. Why speak thus of limit? This word has two senses: at
+ one time it designates a last term in a series of approximations, and at
+ another a certain internal character of convergence, a certain quality of
+ progression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, it is the second sense only which suits the case before us. Immediacy
+ contains no matter statically defined, and no thing. The notion of fact is
+ quite relative. What is fact in one case may become construction in
+ another. For example, the percepts of common experience are facts for the
+ physicist, and constructions for the philosopher; the same applies to a
+ table of numerical results, for the scholar who is trying to establish a
+ theory, or for the observer and the psychologist. We may then conceive a
+ series in which each term is fact in relation to those which follow it,
+ and constructed in relation to those which precede it. The expression
+ "primitive fact" then determines not so much a final object as a direction
+ of thought, a movement of critical retrogression, a journey from the most
+ to the least elaborate, and the "contact with pure immediacy" is only the
+ effort, more and more prolonged, to convert the elements of experience
+ into real and profound action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. Theory of Perception.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Of what the work of return to immediacy consists, and how the intuition
+ which it calls up reveals absolute fact, we shall see by an example, if we
+ study more closely a capital point of Mr Bergson's philosophy, the theory
+ of external perception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the act of perceiving realises the lived communion of the subject and
+ object in the image, we must admit that here we have the perfect knowledge
+ which we wish to obtain always: we resign ourselves to conception only for
+ want of perception, and our ideal is to convert all conception into
+ perception. Doubtless we might define philosophy by this same ideal, as an
+ effort to expand our perceptive power until we render it capable of
+ grasping all the wealth and all the depth of reality at a single glance.
+ Too true it is that such an ideal remains inaccessible to us. Something,
+ however, is given us already in aesthetic intuition. Mr Bergson has
+ pointed it out in some admirable pages, ("Laughter", pages 153-161.) and
+ has explained to us also how philosophy pursues an analogous end. (First
+ lecture on "The Perception of Change", delivered at Oxford, 26th May
+ 1911.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But philosophy must be conceived as an art implying science and criticism,
+ all experience and all reason. It is when we look at metaphysics in this
+ way that they become a positive order of veritable knowledge. Kant has
+ conclusively established that what lies beyond language can only be
+ attained by direct vision, not by dialectic progress. His mistake was that
+ he afterwards believed such a vision for ever impossible; and whence did
+ this mistake arise, if not from the fact that, for his new vision, he
+ exacted intuitive faculties quite different from those at man's disposal.
+ Here again the artist will be our example and model. He appeals to no
+ transcendent sense, but detaches common-sense from its utilitarian
+ prejudices. Let us do the same: we shall obtain a similar result without
+ lying ourselves open to Kant's objections. This work is everywhere
+ possible, and it is, par excellence, the work of philosophy: let us try
+ then to sketch it in relation to the perception of matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must distinguish two senses of the word "perception." This word means
+ first of all simple apprehension of immediacy, grasp of primitive fact.
+ When we use it in this sense, we will agree to say pure perception. It is
+ perhaps in place to see in it nothing but a limit which concrete
+ experience never presents unmixed, a direction of research rather than the
+ possession of a thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However that may be, the first sense is the fundamental sense, and what it
+ designates must be at the root of all ordinary perception; I mean, of
+ every mental operation which results in the construction of a percept: a
+ term formed by analogy with concept, representing the result of a complex
+ work of analysis and synthesis, with judgment from externals. We live the
+ images in an act of pure perception, whilst the objects of ordinary
+ perception are, for example, the bodies of which we speak in common
+ language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the relation of the two senses which we have just
+ distinguished, common opinion seems very precise. It might be thus
+ resumed: at the point of departure we have simple sensations, similar to
+ qualitative atoms (this is the part of pure perception), and afterwards
+ their arrangement into connected systems, which are percepts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But criticism does not authorise this manner of looking at it. Nowhere
+ does knowledge begin by separate elements. Such elements are always a
+ product of analysis. So there is a problem to solve to regain the basis of
+ pure perception which is hidden and obscured by our familiar percepts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not suppose that the solution of this problem is easy. One method only
+ is of any use: to plunge into reality, to become immersed in it, in a
+ long-pursued effort to assimilate all the records of common-sense and
+ positive science. "For we do not obtain an intuition of reality, that is
+ to say, an intellectual sympathy with its inmost content, unless we have
+ gained its confidence by long companionship with its superficial
+ manifestations. And it is not a question merely of assimilating the
+ leading facts; we must accumulate and melt them down into such an enormous
+ mass that we are sure, in this fusion, of neutralising in one another all
+ the preconceived and premature ideas which observers may have
+ unconsciously allowed to form the sediment of their observations. Thus,
+ and only thus, is crude materiality to be disengaged from known facts."
+ ("Introduction to Metaphysics" in the "Metaphysical and Moral Review",
+ January 1903. For the correct interpretation of this passage
+ ("intellectual sympathy") it must not be forgotten that before "Creative
+ Evolution", Mr Bergson employed the word "intelligence" in a wider
+ acceptation, more akin to that commonly received.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A directing principle controls this work and reintroduces order and
+ convergence, after dispensing with them at the outset; viz. that, contrary
+ to common opinion, perception as practised in the course of daily life,
+ "natural" perception does not aim at a goal of disinterested knowledge,
+ but one of practical utility, or rather, if it is knowledge, it is only
+ knowledge elaborated in view of action and speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Need we repeat here the proofs by which we have already established in the
+ most positive manner that such is really the meaning of ordinary
+ perception, the underlying reason which causes it to take the place of
+ pure perception? We perceive by habit only what is useful to us, what
+ interests us practically; very often, too, we think we are perceiving when
+ we are merely inferring, as for example when we seem to see a distance in
+ depth, a succession of planes, of which in reality we judge by differences
+ of colouring or relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our senses supplement one another. A slow education has gradually taught
+ us to co-ordinate their impressions, especially those of touch to those of
+ vision. (H. Bergson, "Note on the Psychological Origins of Our Belief in
+ the Law of Causality". Vol. i. of the "Library of the International
+ Philosophical Congress", 1900.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theoretical forms come between nature and us: a veil of symbols envelops
+ reality; thus, finally, we no longer see things themselves, we are content
+ to read the labels on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, our perception appears to analysis completely saturated with
+ memories, and that in view of our practical insertion in the present. I
+ will not come back to this point which has been so lucidly explained by Mr
+ Bergson in a lecture on "Dream" ("Report of the International
+ Psychological Institute", May 1901.) and an article on "Intellectual
+ Effort", ("Philosophical Review", January 1902.) the reading of which
+ cannot be too strongly recommended as an introduction to the first chapter
+ of "Matter and Memory", in which further arguments are to be found. I will
+ only add one remark, following Mr Bergson, as always: perception is not
+ simply contemplation, but consciousness of an original visual emotion
+ combined with a complete group of actions in embryo, gestures in outline,
+ and the graze of movement within, by which we prepare to grasp the object,
+ describe its lines, test its functions, sound it, move it, and handle it
+ in a thousand ways. (This is attested by the facts of apraxia or psychic
+ blindness. Cf. "Matter and Memory", chapter ii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the preceding observations springs the utilitarian and practical
+ nature of common perception. Let us attempt now to see of what the
+ elaboration which it makes reality undergo consists. This time I am
+ summing up the fourth chapter of "Matter and Memory". First of all, we
+ choose between the images, emphasising the strong, extinguishing the weak,
+ although both have, a priori, the same interest for pure knowledge; we
+ make this choice above all by according preference to impressions of
+ touch, which are the most useful from the practical point of view. This
+ selection determines the parcelling up of matter into independent bodies,
+ and the artificial character of our proceeding is thus made plain. Does
+ not science, indeed, conclude in the same way, showing us&mdash;as soon as
+ she frees herself even to a small extent from common-sense&mdash;full
+ continuity re-established by "moving strata," and all bodies resolved into
+ stationary waves and knots of intersecting fluxes? Already, then, we shall
+ be nearer pure perception if we cease to consider anything but the
+ perceptible stuff in which numerically distinct percepts are cut. Even
+ there, however, a utilitarian division continues. Our senses are
+ instruments of abstraction, each of them discerning a possible path of
+ action. We may say that corporal life functions in the manner of an
+ absorbing milieu, which determines the disconnected scale of simple
+ qualities by extinguishing most of the perceptible radiations. In short,
+ the scale of sensations, with its numerical aspect, is nothing but the
+ spectrum of our practical activity. Commonly we perceive only averages and
+ wholes, which we contract into distinct "qualities". Let us disengage from
+ this rhythm what is peculiar to ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above all, let us strive to disengage ourselves from homogeneous space,
+ this substratum of fixity, this arbitrary scheme of measurement and
+ division, which, to our greater advantage, subtends the natural,
+ qualitative, and undivided extension of images. (We usually represent
+ homogeneous space as previous to the heterogeneous extension of images: as
+ a kind of empty room which we furnish with percepts. We must reverse this
+ order, and conceive, on the contrary, that extension precedes space.) And
+ we shall finally have pure perception in so far as it is accessible to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no disputing the absolute value of this pure perception. The
+ impotence of speculative reason, as demonstrated by Kant, is perhaps, at
+ bottom, only the impotence of an intelligence in bondage to certain
+ necessities of the corporal life, and exercised upon a matter which it has
+ had to disorganise for the satisfaction of our needs. Our knowledge of
+ things is then no longer relative to the fundamental structure of our
+ mind, but only to its superficial and acquired habits, to the contingent
+ form which it takes on from our corporal functions and our lower needs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The relativity of knowledge is therefore not final. In unmaking what our
+ needs have made we re-establish intuition in its original purity, and
+ resume contact with reality. ("Matter and Memory", page 203.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is how things are really presented. Here we are confronted by the
+ moving continuity of images. Pure perception is complete perception. From
+ it we pass to ordinary perception by diminution, throwing shadows here and
+ there: the reality perceived by common-sense is nothing else actually than
+ universal interaction rendered visible by its very interruption at certain
+ points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whence we have this double conclusion already formulated higher up: the
+ relation of perception to matter is that of the part to the whole, and our
+ consciousness is rather limited than relative. It must be stated that
+ primarily we perceive things in themselves, not in us; the subjectivity of
+ our current perception comes from our work of outlining it in the bosom of
+ reality, but the root of pure perception plunges into full objectivity.
+ If, at each point of matter, we were to succeed in possessing the stream
+ of total interaction of which it marks a wave, and if we were to succeed
+ in seeing the multiplicity of these points as a qualitative heterogeneous
+ flux without number or severance, we should coincide with reality itself.
+ It is true that such an ideal, while inaccessible on the one hand, would
+ not succeed on the other without risk to knowledge; in fact, says Mr
+ Bergson, ("Matter and Memory", page 38.) "to perceive all the influences
+ of all the points of all bodies would be to descend to the state of
+ material object."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a solution of this double difficulty remains possible, a dynamic and
+ approximate solution, which consists in looking for the absolute intuition
+ of matter in such a mobilisation of our perspective faculties that we
+ become capable of following, according to the circumstances, all the paths
+ of virtual perception of which the common anxiety for the practical has
+ made us choose one only, and capable of realising all the infinitely
+ different modes of qualification and discernment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we have still to see how this "complete experience" can be practically
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. Critique of Language.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The perception of reality does not obtain the full value of knowledge,
+ except when once socialised, once made the common property of men, and
+ thereby also tested and verified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one means only of doing that; viz. to analyse it into manageable
+ and portable concepts. By language I mean the product of this
+ conceptualisation. Thus language is necessary; for we must always speak,
+ were it only to utter the impotence of words. Not less necessary is a
+ critique of spontaneous language, of the laws which govern it, of the
+ postulates which it embraces, of the methods which convey its implicit
+ doctrines. Synthetic forms are actually theories already; they effect an
+ adaptation of reality to the demands of practical use. If it is impossible
+ to escape them, it is at least fitting not to employ them except with due
+ knowledge, and when properly warned against the illusion of the false
+ problems which they might arouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us first of all consider thought in itself, in its concrete life. What
+ are the principal characteristics, the essential steps? We readily say,
+ analysis and synthesis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can be known except in contrast, correlation, or negation of
+ another thing; and the act of knowledge, considered in itself, is
+ unification. Thus number appears as a fundamental category, as an absolute
+ condition of intelligibility; some go so far as to regard atomism as a
+ necessary method. But that is inexact. No doubt the use of number and the
+ resulting atomism are imposed by definition, we might say, on the thought
+ which proceeds by conceptual analysis, and then by unifying construction;
+ that is to say, on synthetic thought. But, in greater depth, thought is
+ dynamic continuity and duration. Its essential work does not consist in
+ discerning and afterwards in assembling ready-made elements. Let us see in
+ it rather a kind of creative maturation, and let us attempt to grasp the
+ nature of this causal activity. (H. Bergson, "Intellectual Effort" in the
+ "Philosophical Review", January 1902.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The act of thought is always a complex play of moving representations, an
+ evolution of life in which incessant inner reactions occur. That is to
+ say, it is movement. But there are several planes of thought, from
+ intuition to language, and we must distinguish between the thought which
+ moves on the surface among terms displayed on a single plane, and the
+ thought with goes deeper and deeper from one plane to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not think solely by concepts or images; we think, first of all,
+ according to Mr Bergson's expression, by dynamic schemes. What is a
+ dynamic scheme? It is motive rather than representative, inexpressible in
+ itself, but a source of language containing not so much the images or
+ concepts in which it will develop as the indication of the path to be
+ followed in order to obtain them. It is not so much system as movement,
+ progress, genesis; it does not mark the gaze directed upon the various
+ points of one plane of deliberate contemplation so much as an effort to
+ pass through successive planes of thought in a direction leading from
+ intuition to analysis. We might define it by its function of calling up
+ images and concepts, representations which, for one and the same scheme,
+ are neither strictly determined nor anything in particular in themselves,
+ concurrent representations which have in common one and the same logical
+ power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The representations called up form a body to the scheme, and the relation
+ of the scheme to the concepts and images which it calls up resembles,
+ mutatis mutandis, the relation pointed out by Mr Bergson between an idea
+ and its basis in the brain. In short, it is the very act of creative
+ thought which the dynamic scheme interprets, the act not yet fixed in
+ "results."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is easier than to illustrate the existence of this scheme. Let us
+ merely remark a few facts of current observation. Recall, for example, the
+ suggestive anxiety we experience when we seek to remember a name; the
+ precise syllables of the name still escape us, but we feel them
+ approaching, and already we possess something of them, since we
+ immediately reject those which do not answer to a certain direction of
+ expectancy; and by endeavouring to secure a more intimate feeling of this
+ direction we suddenly arouse the desired recollection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way, what does it mean to have the sense of a complex
+ situation in active life, if not that we perceive it, not as a static
+ group of explicit details, but as a meeting of powers allied or hostile,
+ convergent or divergent, directed towards this or that, of which the
+ aggregate whole tends of itself to awaken in us the initial reactions
+ which analyse it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way again, how do we learn, how can we assimilate a vast
+ system of conceits or images? Our task is not to concentrate an
+ enumerative attention on each individual factor; we should never get away
+ from them, the weight would be too heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What we entrust to memory is really a dynamic scheme permitting us to
+ "regain" what we should not have succeeded in "retaining." In reality our
+ only "knowledge" is through such a scheme, which contains in the state of
+ potential implication an inexhaustible multiplicity ready to be developed
+ in actual representations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, finally, is any discovery made? Finding is solving a problem; and to
+ solve a problem we must always begin by supposing it solved. But of what
+ does such a hypothesis consist?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not an anticipated view of the solution, for then all would be at an
+ end; nor is it a simple formula putting in the present indicative what the
+ enunciation expressed in the future or the imperative, for then nothing
+ would be begun. It is exactly a dynamic scheme; that is to say, a method
+ in the state of directed tension; and often, the discovery once realised
+ as theory or system, capable of unending developments and resurrections,
+ remains by the best of itself a method and a dynamic scheme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one last example will perhaps reveal the truth still more. "Anyone who
+ has attempted literary composition knows well that when the subject has
+ been long studied, all the documents collected, all the notes taken, we
+ need, to embark on the actual work of composition, something more, an
+ effort, often very painful, to place oneself suddenly in the very heart of
+ the subject, and to seek as deep down as possible an impulse to which
+ afterwards we shall only have to let ourselves go. This impulse, once
+ received, projects the mind on a road where it finds both the information
+ which it had collected and a thousand other details as well; it develops
+ and analyses itself in terms, the enumeration of which would have no end;
+ the further we advance, the more we discover; we shall never succeed in
+ saying everything; and yet, if we turn sharply round towards the impulse
+ we feel behind ourselves, to grasp it, it escapes; for it was not a thing
+ but a direction of movement, and though indefinitely extensible, it is
+ simplicity itself." (H. Bergson, "Metaphysical and Moral Review", January
+ 1903. The whole critique of language is implicitly contained in this
+ "Introduction to Metaphysics".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought, then, which proceeds from one representation to another in
+ one and the same plane is one kind; that which follows one and the same
+ conceptual direction through descending planes is another. Creative and
+ fertile thought is the thought which adopts the second kind of work. The
+ ideal is a continual oscillation from one plane to the other, a restless
+ alternative of intuitive concentration and conceptual expansion. But our
+ idleness takes exception to this, for the feeling of effort appears
+ precisely in the traject from the dynamic scheme to the images and
+ concepts, in the passing from one plane of thought to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the natural tendency is to remain in the last of these planes, that
+ of language. We know what dangers threaten us there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose we have some idea or other and the word representing it. Do not
+ suppose that to this word there is one corresponding sense only, nor even
+ a finished group of various distinct and rigorously separable senses. On
+ the contrary, there is a whole scale corresponding, a complete continuous
+ spectrum of unstable meanings which tend unceasingly to resolve into one
+ another. Dictionaries attempt to illuminate them. The task is impossible.
+ They co-ordinate a few guiding marks; but who shall say what infinite
+ transitions underlie them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A word designates rather a current of thought than one or several halts on
+ a logical path. Here again a dynamic continuity exists previous to the
+ parcelling out of the acceptations. What, then, should be the attitude of
+ the mind?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A supple moving attitude more attentive to the curve of change than to the
+ possible halting-points along the road. But this is not the case at all;
+ the effort would be too great, and what happens, on the contrary, is this.
+ For the spectrum a chromatic scale of uniform tints is very quickly
+ substituted. This is in itself an undesirable simplification, for it is
+ impossible to reconstitute the infinity of real shades by combinations of
+ fundamental colours each representing the homogeneous shore, which each
+ region of the spectrum finally becomes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However cleverly we proportion these averages, we get, at most, some
+ vulgar counterfeit: orange, for example, is not a mixture of yellow and
+ red, although this mixture may recall to those who have known it elsewhere
+ the simple and original sensation of orange. Again, a second
+ simplification, still more undesirable, succeeds the first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are no longer any colours at all; black lines serve as guide-marks.
+ We are therefore with pure concepts decidedly in full symbolism. And it is
+ with symbols that we shall henceforward be trying to reconstruct reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I need not go back to the general characteristics or the inconveniences of
+ this method. Concepts resemble photographic views; concrete thickness
+ escapes them. However exact, varied, or numerous we suppose them, they can
+ certainly recall their object, but not reveal it to any one who had not
+ had any direct intuition of it. Nothing is easier than to trace the plan
+ of a body in four dimensions; all the same, this drawing does not admit
+ "visualisation in space" as is the case with ordinary bodies, for want of
+ a previous intuition which it would awaken: thus it is with concepts in
+ relation to reality. Like photographs and like plans, they are extracted
+ from reality, but we are not able to say that they were contained in it;
+ and many of them besides are not so much as extracts; they are simple
+ systematised notes, in fact, notes made upon notes. In other terms,
+ concepts do not represent pieces, parts, or elements of reality. Literally
+ they are nothing but simple symbolic notations. To wish to make integral
+ factors of them would be as strange an illusion as that of seeing in the
+ co-ordinates of a geometric point the constitutive essence of that point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not make things with symbols, any more than we should reconstruct a
+ picture with the qualifications which classify it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whence, then, comes the natural inclination of thought towards the
+ concept? From the fact that thought delights in artifices which facilitate
+ analysis and language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first of these artifices is that from which results the possibility of
+ decomposition or recomposition according to arbitrary laws. For that we
+ need a previous substitution of symbols for things. Nothing demonstrates
+ this better than the celebrated arguments which we owe to Zeno of Elea. Mr
+ Bergson returns to the discussion of them over and over again. ("Essay on
+ the Immediate Data", pages 85-86; "Matter and Memory", pages 211-213,
+ "Creative Evolution", pages 333-337.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nerve of the reasoning there consists in the evident absurdity there
+ would be in conceiving an inexhaustible exhausted, an unachievable
+ achieved; in short, a total actually completed, and yet obtained by the
+ successive addition of an infinite number of terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the question is to know whether a movement can be considered as a
+ numerical multiplicity. Virtual divisibility there is, no doubt, but not
+ actual division; divisibility is indefinite, whereas an actual division,
+ if it respects the inner articulations of reality, is bound to halt at a
+ limited number of phases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What we divide and measure is the track of the movement once accomplished,
+ not the movement itself: it is the trajectory, not the traject. In the
+ trajectory we can count endless positions; that is to say, possible halts.
+ Let us not suppose that the moving body meets these elements all
+ ready-marked. Hence what the Eleatic dialectic illustrates is a case of
+ incommensurability; the radical inability of analysis to end a certain
+ task; our powerlessness to explain the fact of the transit, if we apply to
+ it such and such modes of numerical decomposition or recomposition, which
+ are valid only for space; the impossibility of conceiving becoming as
+ susceptible of being cut up into arbitrary segments, and afterwards
+ reconstructed by summing of terms according to some law or other; in
+ short, it is the nature of movement, which is without division, number, or
+ concept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But thought delights in analyses regulated by the sole consideration of
+ easy language; hence its tendency to an arithmetic and geometry of
+ concepts, in spite of the disastrous consequences; and thus the Eleatic
+ paradox is no less instructive in its specious character than in the
+ solution which it embodies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At bottom, natural thought, I mean thought which abandons itself to its
+ double inclination of synthetic idleness and useful industry, is a thought
+ haunted by anxieties of the operating manual, anxieties of fabrication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What does it care about the fluxes of reality and dynamic depths? It is
+ only interested in the outcrops scattered here and there over the firm
+ soil of the practical, and it solidifies "terms" like stakes plunged in a
+ moving ground. Hence comes the configuration of its spontaneous logic to a
+ geometry of solids, and hence come concepts, the instantaneous moments
+ taken in transitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scientific thought, again, preserves the same habits and the same
+ preferences. It seeks only what repeats, what can be counted. Everywhere,
+ when it theorises, it tends to establish static relations between
+ composing unities which form a homogeneous and disconnected multiplicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its very instruments bias it in that direction. The apparatus of the
+ laboratory really grasps nothing but arrangement and coincidence; in a
+ word, states not transitions. Even in cases of contrary appearance, for
+ example, when we determine a weight by observing the oscillation of a
+ balance and not its rest, we are interested in regular recurrence, in a
+ symmetry, in something therefore which is of the nature of an equilibrium
+ and a fixity all the same. The reason of it is that science, like
+ common-sense, although in a manner a little different, aims only in actual
+ fact at obtaining finished and workable results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us imagine reality under the figure of a curve, a rhythmic succession
+ of phases of which our concepts mark so many tangents. There is contact at
+ one point, but at one point only. Thus our logic is valid as infinitesimal
+ analysis, just as the geometry of the straight line allows us to define
+ each state of curve. It is thus, for example, that vitality maintains a
+ relation of momentary tangency to the physico-chemical structure. If we
+ study this relation and analogous relations, this fact remains
+ indisputably legitimate. Let us not think, however, that such a study,
+ even when repeated in as many points as we wish, can ever suffice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must afterwards by genuine integration attain moving continuity. That
+ is exactly the task represented by the return to intuition, with its
+ proper instrument, the dynamic scheme. From this tangential point of view
+ we try to grasp the genesis of the curve as envelope, or rather, and
+ better still, the birth of successive tangents as instantaneous
+ directions. Speaking non-metaphorically, we cling to genetic methods of
+ conceptualisation and proceed from the generating principle to its
+ conceptual derivatives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But our thought finds it very difficult to sustain such an effort long. It
+ is partial to rectilineal deduction, actual becoming horrifies it. It
+ desires immediately to find "things" sharply determined and very clear.
+ That is why immediately a tangent is constructed, it follows its movement
+ in a straight line to infinity. Thus are produced limit-concepts, the
+ ultimate terms, the atoms of language. As a rule they go in pairs, in
+ antithetic couples, every analysis being dichotomy, since the discernment
+ of one path of abstraction determines in contrast, as a complementary
+ remainder, the opposite path of direction. Hence, according to the
+ selection effected among concepts, and the relative weight which is
+ attributed to them, we get the antinomies between which a philosophy of
+ analysis must for ever remain oscillating and torn in sunder. Hence comes
+ the parcelling up of metaphysics into systems, and its appearance of
+ regulated play "between antagonistic schools which get up on the stage
+ together, each to win applause in turn." (H. Bergson, "Report of the
+ French Philosophical Society", meeting, 2nd May 1901.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The method followed to find a genuine solution must be inverse; not
+ dialectic combination of pre-existing concepts, but, setting out from a
+ direct and really lived intuition, a descent to ever new concepts along
+ dynamic schemes which remain open. From the same intuition spring many
+ concepts: "As the wind which rushes into the crossroads divides into
+ diverging currents of air, which are all only one and the same gust."
+ ("Creative Evolution", page 55.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The antinomies are resolved genetically, whilst in the plane of language
+ they remain irreducible. With a heterogeneity of shades, when we mix the
+ tints and neutralise them by one another, we easily create homogeneity;
+ but take the result of this work, that is to say, the average final
+ colour, and it will be impossible to reconstitute the wealth of the
+ original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you desire a precise example of the work we must accomplish? Take that
+ of change; (Cf. two lectures delivered by Mr Bergson at Oxford on "The
+ Perception of Change", 26th and 27th May 1911.) no other is more
+ significant or clearer. It shows us two necessary movements in the reform
+ of our habits of imagination or conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us try first of all to familiarise ourselves with the images which
+ show us the fixity deriving from becoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two colliding waves, two rollers meeting, typify rest by extinction and
+ interference. With the movement of a stone, and the fluidity of running
+ water, we form the instantaneous position of a ricochet. The very movement
+ of the stone, seen in the successive positions of the tangent to the
+ trajectory, is stationary to our view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is dynamic stability, except non-variation arising from variation
+ itself? Equilibrium is produced from speed. A man running solidifies the
+ moving ground. In short, two moving bodies regulated by each other become
+ fixed in relation to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this, let us try to perceive change in itself, and then represent it
+ to ourselves according to its specific and original nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The common conception needs reform on two principal points:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (1) All change is revealed in the light of immediate intuition, not as a
+ numerical series of states, but a rhythm of phases, each of which
+ constitutes an indivisible act, in such a way that each change has its
+ natural inner articulations, forbidding us to break it up according to
+ arbitrary laws, like a homogeneous length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) Change is self-sufficient; it has no need of a support, a moving body,
+ a "thing" in motion. There is no vehicle, no substance, no spatial
+ receptacle, resembling a theatre-scene, no material dummy successively
+ draped in coloured stuffs; on the contrary, it is the body or the atom
+ which should be subordinately defined as symbols of completed becoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of movement thus conceived, indivisible and substantial, what better image
+ can we have than a musical evolution, a phrase in melody? That is how we
+ must work to conceive reality. If such a conception at first appears
+ obscure, let us credit experience, for ideas are gradually illuminated by
+ the very use we make of them, "the clarity of a concept being hardly
+ anything, at bottom, but the assurance once obtained that we can handle it
+ profitably." (H. Bergson, "Introduction to Metaphysics".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we require to reach a conception of this kind with regard to change,
+ the Eleatic dialectic is there to establish it beyond dispute, and
+ positive science comes to the same conclusion, since it shows us
+ everywhere nothing but movements placed upon movements, never fixed
+ "things," except as temporary symbols of what we leave at a given moment
+ outside the field of study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In any case, the difficulty of such a conception need not stop us; it is
+ little more than a difficulty of the imaginative order. And as for the
+ conception itself, or rather the corresponding intuition, it will share
+ the fate of all its predecessors: to our contemporaries it will be a
+ scandal, a century later a stroke of genius, after some centuries common
+ evidence, and finally an instinctive axiom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. The Problem of Consciousness. Duration and Liberty.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Armed with the method we have just described, Mr Bergson turned first of
+ all toward the problem of the ego: taking up his position in the centre of
+ mind, he has attempted to establish its independent reality by examining
+ its profound nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first chapter of the "Essay on the Immediate Data" contains a decisive
+ criticism of the conceptions which claim to introduce number and measure
+ into the domain of the facts of consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that it is our business to reject as false the notion of psychological
+ intensity; but this notion demands interpretation, and the least that we
+ can say against the attempt to turn it into a notion of size is that in
+ doing so we are misunderstanding the specific character of the object
+ studied. The same reproach must be levelled against association of ideas,
+ the system of mechanical psychology of which the type is presented us by
+ Taine and Stuart Mill. Already in chapters ii. and iii. of the "Essay",
+ and again all through "Matter and Memory", the system is riddled with
+ objections, each of which would be sufficient to show its radical flaw.
+ All the aspects, all the phenomena of mental life come up for successive
+ review. In respect of each of them we have an illustration of the
+ insufficiency of the atomism which seeks to recompose the soul with fixed
+ elements, by a massing of units exterior to one another, everywhere and
+ always the same: this is a grammatical philosophy which believes reality
+ to be composed of parts which admit of number just as language is made of
+ words placed side by side; it is a materialist philosophy which improperly
+ transfers the proceedings of the physical sciences to the sciences of the
+ inner life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the contrary, we must represent the state of consciousness to ourselves
+ as variable according to the whole of which it forms a part. Here and
+ there, although it always bears the same name, it is no longer the same
+ thing. "The more the ego becomes itself again, the more also do its states
+ of consciousness, instead of being in juxtaposition, penetrate one
+ another, blend with one another, and tinge one another with the colouring
+ of all the rest. Thus each of us has his manner of loving or hating, and
+ this love or hate reflect our entire personality." ("Essay on the
+ Immediate Data", pages 125-126.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At bottom Mr Bergson is bringing forward the necessity, in the case before
+ us, of substituting a new notion of continuous qualitative heterogeneity
+ for the old notion of numerical and spatial continuity. Above all, he is
+ emphasising the still more imperious necessity of regarding each state as
+ a phase in duration; and we are here touching on his principal and leading
+ intuition, the intuition of real duration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Historically this was Mr Bergson's starting-point and the origin of his
+ thought: a criticism of time under the form in which common-sense imagines
+ it, in which science employs it. He was the first to notice the fact that
+ scientific time has no "duration." Our equations really express only
+ static relations between simultaneous phenomena; even the differential
+ quotients they may contain in reality mark nothing but present tendencies;
+ no change would take place in our calculations if the time were given in
+ advance, instantaneously fulfilled, like a linear whole of points in
+ numerical order, with no more genuine duration than that contained in the
+ numerical succession. Even in astronomy there is less anticipation than
+ judgment of constancy and stability, the phenomena being almost strictly
+ periodic, while the hazard of prediction bears only upon the minute
+ divergence between the actual phenomenon and the exact period attributed
+ to it. Notice under what figure common-sense imagines time: as an inert
+ receptacle, a homogeneous milieu, neutral and indifferent; in fact, a kind
+ of space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scholar makes use of a like image; for he defines time by its
+ measurement, and all measurement implies interpretation in space. For the
+ scholar the hour is not an interval, but a coincidence, an instantaneous
+ arrangement, and time is resolved into a dust of fixities, as in those
+ pneumatic clocks in which the hand moves forward in jerks, marking nothing
+ but a sequence of pauses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such symbols are sufficient, at least for a first approximation, when it
+ is only a question of matter, the mechanism of which, strictly considered,
+ contains nothing "durable." But in biology and psychology quite different
+ characteristics become essential; age and memory, heterogeneity of musical
+ phases, irreversible rhythm "which cannot be lengthened or shortened at
+ will." ("Creative Evolution", page 10.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then it is that the return of time becomes necessary to duration. How are
+ we to describe this duration? It is a melodious evolution of moments, each
+ of which contains the resonance of those preceding and announces the one
+ which is going to follow; it is a process of enriching which never ceases,
+ and a perpetual appearance of novelty; it is an indivisible, qualitative,
+ and organic becoming, foreign to space, refractory to number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Summon the image of a stream of consciousness passing through the
+ continuity of the spectrum, and becoming tinged successively with each of
+ its shades. Or rather imagine a symphony having feeling of itself, and
+ creating itself; that is how we should conceive duration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That duration thus conceived is really the basis of ourselves Mr Bergson
+ proves by a thousand examples, and by a marvellous employment of the
+ introspective method which he has helped to make so popular. We cannot
+ quote these admirable analyses here. A single one will serve as model,
+ specially selected as referring to one of the most ordinary moments of our
+ life, to show plainly that the perception of real duration always
+ accompanies us in secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the moment when I write these lines a clock near me is striking the
+ hour; but my distracted ear is only aware of it after several strokes have
+ already sounded; that is, I have not counted them. And yet an effort of
+ introspective attention enables me to total the four strokes already
+ struck and add them to those which I hear. If I then withdraw into myself
+ and carefully question myself about what has just happened, I become aware
+ that the first four sounds had struck my ear and even moved my
+ consciousness, but that the sensations produced by each of them, instead
+ of following in juxtaposition, had blended into one another in such a way
+ as to endow the whole with a peculiar aspect and make of it a kind of
+ musical phrase. In order to estimate in retrospect the number of strokes
+ which have sounded, I attempted to reconstitute this phrase in thought: my
+ imagination struck one, then two, then three, and so long as it had not
+ reached the exact number four, my sensibility, on being questioned,
+ replied that the total effect differed in quality. It had therefore noted
+ the succession of the four strokes in a way of its own, but quite
+ otherwise than by addition, and without bringing in the image of a
+ juxtaposition of distinct terms. In fact, the number of strokes struck was
+ perceived as quality, not as quantity: duration is thus presented to
+ immediate consciousness, and preserves this form so long as it does not
+ give place to a symbolical representation drawn from space." ("Essay on
+ the Immediate Data", pages 95-96.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now are we to believe that return to the feeling of real duration
+ consists in letting ourselves go, and allowing ourselves an idle
+ relaxation in dream or dissolution in sensation, "as a shepherd dozing
+ watches the water flow"? Or are we even to believe, as has been
+ maintained, that the intuition of duration reduces "to the spasm of
+ delight of the mollusc basking in the sun"? This is a complete mistake! We
+ should fall back into the misconceptions which I was pointing out in
+ connection with immediacy in general; we should be forgetting that there
+ are several rhythms of duration, as there are several kinds of
+ consciousness; and finally, we should be misunderstanding the character of
+ a creative invention perpetually renewed, which is that of our inner life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it is in duration that we are free, not in spatialised time, as all
+ determinist conceptions suppose in contradiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall not go back to the proofs of this thesis; they were condensed some
+ way back after the third chapter of the "Essay on the Immediate Data". But
+ I will borrow from Mr Bergson himself a few complementary explanations, in
+ order, as far as possible, to forestall any misunderstanding. "The word
+ liberty," he says, "has for me a sense intermediate between those which we
+ assign as a rule to the two terms liberty and free-will. On one hand, I
+ believe that liberty consists in being entirely oneself, in acting in
+ conformity with oneself; it is then, to a certain degree, the 'moral
+ liberty' of philosophers, the independence of the person with regard to
+ everything other than itself. But that is not quite this liberty, since
+ the independence I am describing has not always a moral character.
+ Further, it does not consist in depending on oneself as an effect depends
+ on the cause which of necessity determines it. In this, I should come back
+ to the sense of 'free-will.' And yet I do not accept this sense completely
+ either, since free-will, in the usual meaning of the term, implies the
+ equal possibility of two contraries, and on my theory we cannot formulate,
+ or even conceive in this case the thesis of the equal possibility of the
+ two contraries, without falling into grave error about the nature of time.
+ I might say then, that the object of my thesis, on this particular point,
+ has been precisely to find a position intermediate between 'moral liberty'
+ and 'free-will.' Liberty, such as I understand it, is situated between
+ these two terms, but not at equal distances from both. If I were obliged
+ to blend it with one of the two, I should select 'free-will.'" ("Report of
+ the French Philosophical Society", philosophical vocabulary, article
+ "Liberty".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, when we place ourselves in the perspective of homogeneous time;
+ that is to say, when we substitute for the real and profound ego its image
+ refracted through space, the act necessarily appears either as the
+ resultant of a mechanical composition of elements, or as an
+ incomprehensible creation ex nihilo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have supposed that there is a third course to pursue; that is, to
+ place ourselves back in pure duration...Then we seemed to see action arise
+ from its antecedents by an evolution sui generis, in such a way that we
+ discover in this action the antecedents which explain it, while at the
+ same time it adds something absolutely new to them, being an advance upon
+ them as the fruit upon the flower. Liberty is in no way reduced thereby,
+ as has been said, to obvious spontaneity. At most this would be the case
+ in the animal world, where the psychological life is principally that of
+ the affections. But in the case of man, a thinking being, the free act can
+ be called a synthesis of feelings and ideas, and the evolution which leads
+ to it a reasonable evolution." ("Matter and Memory", page 205.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in a most important letter, ("Report of the French Philosophical
+ Society", meeting, 26th February 1903.) Mr Bergson becomes a little more
+ precise still. We must certainly not confuse the affirmation of liberty
+ with the negation of physical determinism; "for there is more in this
+ affirmation than in this negation." All the same, liberty supposes a
+ certain contingence. It is "psychological causality itself," which must
+ not be represented after the model of physical causality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In opposition to the latter, it implies that between two moments of a
+ conscious being there is not an equivalence admitting of deduction, that
+ in the transition from one to the other there is a genuine creation.
+ Without doubt the free act is not without explanatory reasons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But these reasons have determined us only at the moment when they have
+ become determining; that is, at the moment when the act was virtually
+ accomplished, and the creation of which I speak is entirely contained in
+ the progress by which these reasons have become determining." It is true
+ that all this implies a certain independence of mental life in relation to
+ the mechanism of matter; and that is why Mr Bergson was obliged to set
+ himself the problem of the relations between body and mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that the solution of this problem is the principal object of
+ "Matter and Memory". The thesis of psycho-physiological parallelism is
+ there peremptorily refuted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The method which Mr Bergson has followed to do so will be found set out by
+ himself in a communication to the French Philosophical Society, which it
+ is important to study as introduction. ("Report" of meeting, 2nd May
+ 1901.) The paralogism included in the very enunciation of the parallelist
+ thesis is explained in a memoire presented to the Geneva International
+ Philosophical Congress in 1904. ("Revue de Metaphysique et de Morale",
+ November 1904.) But the actual proof is made by the analysis of the
+ memoire which fills chapters ii. and iii. of the work cited above. (An
+ extremely suggestive resume of these theses will be found in the second
+ lecture on "The Perception of Change".) It is there established, by the
+ most positive arguments, (Instead of brutally connecting the two extremes
+ of matter and mind, one regarded in its highest action, the other in its
+ most rudimentary mechanism, thus dooming to certain failure any attempt to
+ explain their actual union, Mr Bergson studies their living contact at the
+ point of intersection marked by the phenomena of perception and memory: he
+ compares the higher point of matter&mdash;the brain&mdash;and the lower
+ point of mind&mdash;certain recollections&mdash;and it is between these
+ two neighbouring points that he notes a difference, by a method no longer
+ dialectic but experimental.) that all our past is self-preserved in us,
+ that this preservation only makes one with the musical character of
+ duration, with the indivisible nature of change, but that one part only is
+ conscious of it, the part concerned with action, to which present
+ conceptions supply a body of actuality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What we call our present must be conceived neither as a mathematical point
+ nor as a segment with precise limits: it is the moment of our history
+ brought out by our attention to life, and nothing, in strict justice,
+ would prevent it from extending to the whole of this history. It is not
+ recollection then, but forgetfulness which demands explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to a dictum of Ravaisson, of which Mr Bergson makes use, the
+ explanation must be sought in the body: "it is materiality which causes
+ forgetfulness in us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are, in fact, several planes of memory, from "pure recollection" not
+ yet interpreted in distinct images down to the same recollection
+ actualised in embryo sensations and movements begun; and we descend from
+ the one to the other, from the life of simple "dream" to the life of
+ practical "drama," along "dynamic schemes." The last of these planes is
+ the body; a simple instrument of action, a bundle of motive habits, a
+ group of mechanisms which mind has set up to act. How does it operate in
+ the work of memory? The task of the brain is every moment to thrust back
+ into unconsciousness all that part of our past which is not at the time
+ useful. Minute study of facts shows that the brain is employed in choosing
+ from the past, in diminishing, simplifying, and extracting from it all
+ that can contribute to present experience; but it is not concerned to
+ preserve it. In short, the brain can only explain absences, not presences.
+ That is why the analysis of memory illustrates the reality of mind, and
+ its independence relative to matter. Thus is determined the relation of
+ soul to body, the penetrating point which it inserts and drives into the
+ plane of action. "Mind borrows from matter perceptions from which it
+ derives its nourishment, and gives them back to it in the form of
+ movement, on which it has impressed its liberty." ("Matter and Memory",
+ page 279.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, then, is how the cycle of research closes, by returning to the
+ initial problem, the problem of perception. In the two opposing systems by
+ which attempts have been made to solve it, Mr Bergson discovers a common
+ postulate, resulting in a common impotence. From the idealistic point of
+ view we do not succeed in explaining how a world is expressed externally,
+ nor from the realistic point of view how an ego is expressed internally.
+ And this double failure comes again from the underlying hypothesis,
+ according to which the duality of the subject and object is conceived as
+ primitive, radical, and static. Our duty is diametrically opposed. We have
+ to consider this duality as gradually elaborated, and the problem
+ concerning it must be first stated, and then solved as a function of time
+ rather than of space. Our representation begins by being impersonal, and
+ it is only later that it adopts our body as centre. We emerge gradually
+ from universal reality, and our realising roots are always sunk in it. But
+ this reality in itself is already consciousness, and the first moment of
+ perception always puts us back into the initial state previous to the
+ separation of the subject and object. It is by the work of life, and by
+ action, that this separation is effected, created, accentuated, and fixed.
+ And the common mistake of realism and idealism is to believe it effected
+ in advance, whereas it is relatively second to perception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence comes the absolute value of immediate intuition. For from what
+ source could an irreducible relativity be produced in it? It would be
+ absurd to make it depend on the constitution of our brain, since our brain
+ itself, so far as it is a group of images, is only a part of the universe,
+ presenting the same characteristics as the whole; and in so far as it is a
+ group of mechanisms become habits, is only a result of the initial action
+ of life, of original perceptive discernment. And, on the other hand, no
+ less absurd would be the fear that the subject can ever be excluded or
+ eliminated from its own knowledge, since, in reality, the subject, like
+ the object, is in perception, not perception in the subject&mdash;at least
+ not primitively. So that it is by a trick of speech that the theses of
+ fundamental relativity take root: they vanish when we return to immediacy;
+ that is to say, when we present problems as they ought to be presented, in
+ terms which do not suppose any conceptual analysis yet accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. The Problem of Evolution: Life and Matter.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After the problem of consciousness Mr Bergson was bound to approach that
+ of evolution, for psychological liberty is only truly conceivable if it
+ begins in some measure with the first pulsation of corporal life. "Either
+ sensation has no raison d'etre or it is a beginning of liberty"; that is
+ what the "Essay on the Immediate Data" (Page 25.) already told us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was easy then to foresee the necessity of a general theoretical frame
+ in which our duration might take a position which would render it more
+ intelligible by removing its appearance of singular exception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus in 1901, I wrote ("Revue de Metaphysique et de Morale", May 1901)
+ with regard to the new philosophy considered as a philosophy of becoming:
+ "It has been prepared by contemporary evolution, which is investigates and
+ perfects, sifting it from its ore of materialism, and turning it into
+ genuine metaphysics. Is not this the philosophy suited to the century of
+ history? Perhaps it indicates that a period has arrived in which
+ mathematics, losing its role as the regulating science, is about to give
+ place to biology." This is the programme carried out, in what an original
+ manner we are well aware, by the doctrine of Creative Evolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we examine ancient knowledge, one characteristic of it is at once
+ visible. It studies little but certain privileged moments of changing
+ reality, certain stable forms, certain states of equilibrium. Ancient
+ geometry, for example, is almost always limited to the static
+ consideration of figures already traced. Modern science is quite
+ different. Has not the greatest progress which it has realised in the
+ mathematical order really been the invention of infinitesimal analysis;
+ that is to say, an effort to substitute the process for the resultant, to
+ follow the moving generation of phenomena and magnitudes in its
+ continuity, to place oneself along becoming at any moment whatsoever, or
+ rather, by degrees at all successive moments? This fundamental tendency,
+ coupled with the development of biological research, was bound to incline
+ it towards a doctrine of evolution; and hence the success of Spencer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But time, which is everywhere in modern science the chief variable, is
+ only a time-length, indefinitely and arbitrarily divisible. There is no
+ genuine duration, nothing really tending to evolution in Spencer's
+ evolution: no more than there is in the periodic working of a turbine or
+ in the stationary tremble of a diapason. Is not this what is emphasised by
+ the perpetual employment of mechanical images and vulgar engineering
+ metaphors, the least fault of which is to suppose a homogeneous time, and
+ a motionless theatre of change which is at bottom only space? "In such a
+ doctrine we still talk of time, we pronounce the word, but we hardly think
+ of the thing; for time is here robbed of all effect." ("Creative
+ Evolution", page 42.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whence comes a latent materialism, ready to grasp the chance of
+ self-expression. Whence the automatic return to the dream of universal
+ arithmetic, which Laplace, Du Bois-Reymond, and Huxley have expressed with
+ such precision. (Ibid., page 41.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to escape such consequences we must, with Mr Bergson, reintroduce
+ real duration, that is to say, creative duration into evolution, we must
+ conceive life according to the mode exhibited with regard to change in
+ general. And it is science itself which calls us to this task. What does
+ science actually tell us when we let it speak instead of prescribing to it
+ answers which conform to our preferences? Vitality, at every point of its
+ becoming, is a tangent to physico-chemical mechanism. But
+ physico-chemistry does not reveal its secret any more than the straight
+ line produces the curve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consider the development of an embryo. It summarises the history of
+ species; ontogenesis, we are told, reproduces phylogenesis. And what do we
+ observe then?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that a long sequence of centuries is contracted for us into a short
+ period, and that our view is thus capable of a synthesis which before was
+ too difficult, we see appearing the rhythmic organisation, the musical
+ character, which the slowness of the transitions at first prevented us
+ from seeing. In each state of the embryo there is something besides an
+ instantaneous structure, something besides a conservative play of actions
+ and reactions; there is a tendency, a direction, an effort, a creative
+ activity. The stage traversed is less interesting than the traversing
+ itself; this again is an act of generating impulse, rather than an effect
+ of mechanical inertia. So must the case be, by analogy, with general
+ evolution. We have there, as it were, a vision of biological duration in
+ miniature; expansion and relaxation of its tension bring its homogeneity
+ to notice, but at the same time, properly speaking, evolution disappears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And further, Mr Bergson establishes by direct and positive arguments that
+ life is genuine creation. A similar conclusion is presented as the
+ envelope of his whole doctrine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is imposed first of all by immediate evidence, for we cannot deny that
+ the history of life is revealed to us under the aspect of a progress and
+ an ascent. And this impulse implies initiative and choice, constituting an
+ effort which we are not authorised by the facts to pronounce fatalistic:
+ "A simple glance at the fossil species shows us that life could have done
+ without evolution, or could have evolved only within very restricted
+ limits, had it chosen the far easier path open to it of becoming cramped
+ in its primitive forms; certain Foraminifera have not varied since the
+ silurian period; the Lingulae, looking unmoved upon the innumerable
+ revolutions which have upheaved our planet, are today what they were in
+ the most distant times of the palaeozoic era." ("Creative Evolution", page
+ 111.) Moreover, if, in us, life is indisputably creation and liberty, how
+ would it not, to some extent, be so in universal nature? "Whatever be the
+ inmost essence of what is and what is being made, we are of it: ("Revue de
+ Metaphysique et de Morale", November 1911.) a conclusion by analogy is
+ therefore legitimate. But above all, this conclusion is verified by its
+ aptitude for solving problems of detail, and for taking account of
+ observed facts, and in this respect I regret that I can only refer the
+ reader to the whole body of admirable discussions and analyses drawn up by
+ Mr Bergson with regard to "the plant and the animal," or "the development
+ of animal life."" ("Creative Evolution", chapter ii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As regards matter, two main laws stand out from the whole of our science,
+ relative to its nature and its phenomena: a law of conservation and a law
+ of degradation. On the one hand, we have mechanism, repetition, inertia,
+ constants, and invariants: the play of the material world, from the point
+ of view of quantity, offers us the aspect of an immense transformation
+ without gain or loss, a homogeneous transformation tending to maintain in
+ itself an exact equivalence between the departure and arrival point. On
+ the other hand, from the point of view of quality, we have something which
+ is being used up, lowered, degraded, exhausted: energy expended, movement
+ dissipated, constructions breaking up, weights falling, levels becoming
+ equalised, and differences effaced. The travel of the material world
+ appears then as a loss, a movement of fall and descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition, there is only a tendency to conservation, a tendency which is
+ never realised except imperfectly; while, on the contrary, we notice that
+ the failure of the vital impulse is most infallibly interpreted by the
+ appearance of mechanism. Reality falling asleep or breaking up is the
+ figure under which we finally observe matter: matter then is secondary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, according to Mr Bergson, matter is defined as a kind of descent;
+ this descent as the interruption of an ascent; this ascent itself as
+ growth; and thus a principle of creation is at the base of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a view seems obscure and disturbing to the mathematical
+ understanding. It cannot accustom itself to the idea of a becoming which
+ is more than a simple change of distribution, and more than a simple
+ expression of latent wealth. When confronted with such an idea, it always
+ harks back to its eternal question: How has something come out of nothing?
+ The question is false; for the idea of nothing is only a pseudo-idea.
+ Nothing is unthinkable, since to think nothing is necessarily to think or
+ not to think something; and according to Mr Bergson's formula, (Cf. the
+ discussion on existence and non-existence in chapter iv. of "Creative
+ Evolution", pages 298-322.) "the representation of void is always a full
+ representation." When I say: "There is nothing," it is not that I perceive
+ a "nothing." I never perceive except what is. But I have not perceived
+ what I was seeking, what I was expecting, and I express my deception in
+ the language of my desire. Or else I am speaking a language of
+ construction, implying that I do not yet possess what I intend to make.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us abruptly forget these idols of practical action and language. The
+ becoming of evolution will then appear to us in its true light, as phases
+ of gradual maturation, rounded at intervals by crises of creative
+ discovery. Continuity and discontinuity will thus admit possibility of
+ reconciliation, the one as an aspect of ascent towards the future, the
+ other as an aspect of retrospection after the event. And we shall see that
+ the same key will in addition disclose to us the theory of knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. The Problem of Knowledge: Analysis and Intuition.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We know what importance has been attached since Kant to the problem of
+ reason: it would seem sometimes that all future philosophy is a return to
+ it; that it is no longer called to speak of anything else. Besides, what
+ we understand by reason, in the broad sense, is, in the human mind, the
+ power of light, the essential operation of which is defined as an act of
+ directing synthesis, unifying the experience and rendering it by that very
+ fact intelligible. Every movement of thought shows this power in exercise.
+ To bring it everywhere to the front would be the proper task of
+ philosophy; at least it is in this manner that we understand it today. But
+ from what point of view and by what method do we ordinarily construct this
+ theory of knowledge?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spontaneous works of mind, perception, science, art, and morality are
+ the departure-point of the inquiry and its initial matter. We do not ask
+ ourselves whether but how they are possible, what they imply, and what
+ they suppose; a regressive analysis attempts by critical reflection to
+ discern in them their principles and requisites. The task, in short, is to
+ reascend from production to producing activity, which we regard as
+ sufficiently revealed by its natural products.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophy, in consequence, is no longer anything but the science of
+ problems already solved, the science which is confined to saying why
+ knowledge is knowledge and action action, of such and such a kind, and
+ such and such a quality. And in consequence also reason can no longer
+ appear anything but an original datum postulated as a simple fact, as a
+ complete system come down ready-made from heaven, at bottom a kind of
+ non-temporal essence, definable without respect to duration, evolution, or
+ history, of which all genesis and all progress are absurd. In vain do we
+ persist in maintaining that it is originally an act; we always come round
+ to the fact that the method followed compels us to consider this act only
+ when once accomplished, and when once expressed in results. The inevitable
+ consequence is that we imprison ourselves hopelessly in the affirmation of
+ Kantian relativism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a system can only be true as a partial and temporary truth: at the
+ most, it is a moment of truth. "If we read the "Critique of Pure Reason"
+ closely, we become aware that Kant has made the critique, not of reason in
+ general, but of a reason fashioned to the habits and demands of Cartesian
+ mechanism or Newtonian physics." (H. Bergson, "Report of French
+ Philosophical Society", meeting, 2nd May 1901.) Moreover, he plainly
+ studies only adult reason, its present state, a plane of thought, a
+ sectional view of becoming. For Kant, men progress perhaps in reason, but
+ reason itself has no duration: it is the fixed spot, the atmosphere of
+ dead eternity in which every mental action is displayed. But this could
+ not be the final and complete truth. Is it not a fact that human
+ intelligence has been slowly constituted in the course of biological
+ evolution? To know it, we have not so much to separate it statically from
+ its works, as to replace it in its history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us begin with life, since, in any case, whether we will or no, it is
+ always in life and by life that we are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life is not a brute force, a blind mechanism, from which one could never
+ conceive that thought would spring. From its first pulsation, life is
+ consciousness, spiritual activity, creative effort tending towards
+ liberty; that is, discernment already luminous, although the quality is at
+ first faint and diffused. In other terms, life is at bottom of the
+ psychological nature of a tendency. But "the essence of a tendency is to
+ develop in sheaf-form, creating, by the mere fact of its growth, diverging
+ directions between which its impulse will be divided." ("Creative
+ Evolution", page 108.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along these different paths the complementary potentialities are produced
+ and intensified, separating in the very process, their original
+ interpretation being possible only in the state of birth. One of them ends
+ in what we call intelligence. This latter therefore has become gradually
+ detached from a less intense but fuller luminous condition, of which it
+ has retained only certain characteristics to accentuate them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see that we must conceive the word mind&mdash;or, if we prefer the
+ word, thought&mdash;as extending beyond intelligence. Pure intelligence,
+ or the faculty of critical reflection and conceptual analysis, represents
+ only one form of thought in its entirety, a function, a determination or
+ particular adaptation, the part organised in view of practical action, the
+ part consolidated as language. What are its characteristics? It
+ understands only what is discontinuous, inert, and fixed, that which has
+ neither change nor duration; it bathes in an atmosphere of spatiality; it
+ uses mathematics continually; it feels at home only among "things," and
+ everything is reduced by it to solid atoms; it is naturally "materialist,"
+ owing to the very fact that it naturally grasps "forms" only. What do we
+ mean by that except that its object of election is the mechanism of
+ matter? But it supposes life; it only remains living itself by continual
+ loans from a vaster and fuller activity from which it is sprung. And this
+ return to complementary powers is what we call intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this point of view it becomes easy to escape Kantian relativity. We
+ are confronted by an intelligence which is doubtless no longer a faculty
+ universally competent, but which, on the contrary, possesses in its own
+ domain a greater power of penetration. It is arranged for action. Now
+ action would not be able to move in irreality. Intelligence, then, makes
+ us acquainted, if not with all reality, at least with some of it, namely
+ that part by which reality is a possible object of mechanical or synthetic
+ action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More profoundly, intuition falls into analysis as life into matter: they
+ are two aspects of the same movement. That is why, "provided we only
+ consider the general form of physics, we can say that it touches the
+ absolute." ("Creative Evolution", page 216.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In other terms, language and mechanism are regulated by each other. This
+ explains at once the success of mathematical science in the order of
+ matter, and its non-success in the order of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, when confronted with life, intelligence fails. "Being a deposit of
+ the evolutive movement along its path, how could it be applied throughout
+ the evolutive movement itself? We might as well claim that the part equals
+ the whole, that the effect can absorb its cause into itself, or that the
+ pebble left on the shore outlines the form of the wave which brought it."
+ (Preface to "Creative Evolution".)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is not that as good as saying that life is unknowable? Must we conclude
+ that it is impossible to understand it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We should be forced to do so, if life had employed all the psychic
+ potentialities it contains in making pure understandings; that is to say,
+ in preparing mathematicians. But the line of evolution which ends in man
+ is not the only one. By other divergent ways other forms of consciousness
+ have developed, which have not been able to free themselves from external
+ constraint, nor regain the victory over themselves as intelligence has
+ done, but which, none the less for that, also express something immanent
+ and essential in the movement of evolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By bringing them into connection with one another, and making them
+ afterwards amalgamate with intelligence, should we not thus obtain a
+ consciousness co-extensive with life, and capable, by turning sharply
+ round upon the vital thrust which it feels behind it, of obtaining a
+ complete, though doubtless vanishing vision?" ("Creative Evolution",
+ Preface.) It is precisely in this that the act of philosophic intuition
+ consists. "We shall be told that, even so, we do not get beyond our
+ intelligence, since it is with our intelligence, and through our
+ intelligence, that we observe all the other forms of consciousness. And we
+ should be right in saying so, if we were pure intelligences, if there had
+ not remained round our conceptual and logical thought a vague nebula, made
+ of the very substance at the expense of which the luminous nucleus, which
+ we call intelligence, has been formed. In it reside certain complementary
+ powers of the understanding, of which we have only a confused feeling when
+ we remain shut up in ourselves, but which will become illumined and
+ distinct when they perceive themselves at work, so to speak, in the
+ evolution of nature. They will thus learn what effort they have to make to
+ become more intense, and to expand in the actual direction of life."
+ ("Creative Evolution", Preface.) Does that mean abandonment to instinct,
+ and descent with it into infra-consciousness again? By no means. On the
+ contrary, our task is to bring instinct to enrich intelligence, to become
+ free and illumined in it; and this ascent towards super-consciousness is
+ possible in the flash of an intuitive act, as it is sometimes possible for
+ the eye to perceive, as a pale and fugitive gleam, beyond what we properly
+ term light, the ultra-violet rays of the spectrum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we say of such a doctrine that it seeks to go, or that it goes
+ "against intelligence"? Nothing authorises such an accusation, for
+ limitation of a sphere is not misappreciation of every legitimate
+ exercise. But intelligence is not the whole of thought, and its natural
+ products do not completely exhaust or manifest our power of light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, that intelligence and reason are not things completed, for ever
+ arrested in their inner structure, that they evolve and expand, is a fact:
+ the place of discovery is precisely the residual fringe of which we were
+ speaking above. In this respect, the history of thought would furnish
+ examples in plenty. Intuitions at first obscure, and only anticipated,
+ facts originally admitting no comparison, and as it were irrational,
+ become instructive and luminous by the fruitful use made of them, and by
+ the fertility which they manifest. In order to grasp the complex content
+ of reality, the mind must do itself violence, must awaken its sleeping
+ powers of revealing sympathy, must expand till it becomes adapted to what
+ formerly shocked its habits so much as almost to seem contradictory to it.
+ Such a task, moreover, is possible: we work out its differential every
+ moment, and its complete whole appears in the sequence of centuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At bottom, the new theory of knowledge has nothing new in it except the
+ demand that all the facts shall be taken into account: it renews duration
+ in the thinking mind, and places itself at the point of view of creative
+ invention, not only at that of subsequent demonstration. Hence its
+ conception of experience, which, for it, is not simple information, fitted
+ into pre-existing frames, but elaboration of the frames themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence the problem of reason changes its aspect. A great mistake has been
+ made in thinking that Mr Bergson's doctrine misunderstands it: to deny it
+ and to place it are two different things. In its inmost essence, reason is
+ the demand for unity; that is why it is displayed as a faculty of
+ synthesis, and why its essential act is presented as apperception of
+ relation. It is unifying activity, not so much by a dialectic of
+ harmonious construction as by a view of reciprocal implication. But all
+ that, however shaded we suppose it, entails a previous analysis. Therefore
+ if we place ourselves in a perspective of intuition, I mean, of complete
+ perception, the demand for reason appears second only, without being
+ deprived, however, of its true task: it is an echo and a recollection, an
+ appeal and a promise of profound continuity, our original anticipation and
+ our final hope, in the bosom of the elementary atomism which characterises
+ the transitory region of language; and reason thus marks the zone of
+ contact between intelligence and instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is thought only possible under the law of number? Does reality only become
+ an object of knowledge as a system of distinct but regulated factors and
+ moments? Do ideas exist only by their mutual relations, which first of all
+ oppose them and afterwards force intelligence to move endlessly from one
+ term to another? If such were the case, reason would certainly be first,
+ as alone making an intelligible continuity out of discontinuous perception
+ and restoring total unity to each temporary part by a synthetic dialectic.
+ But all this really has meaning only after analysis has taken place. The
+ demand for rational unity constitutes in the bosom of atomism something
+ like a murmur of deep underlying continuity: it expresses in the very
+ language of atomism, atomism's basic irreality. There is no question of
+ misunderstanding reason, but only of putting it in its proper place. In a
+ perspective of complete intuition nothing would require to be unified.
+ Reason would then be reabsorbed in perception. That is to say, its present
+ task is to measure and correct in us the limits, gaps, and weaknesses of
+ the perceptive faculty. In this respect not a man of us thinks of denying
+ it its task. But we try with Mr Bergson to reduce this task to its true
+ worth and genuine importance. For we are decidedly tired of hearing
+ "Reason" invoked in solemn and moving tones, as if to write the venerable
+ name with the largest of capital R's were a magic solution of all
+ problems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mind, in fact, sets out from unity rather than arrives at it; and the
+ order which it appears to discover subsequently in an experience which at
+ first is manifold and incoherent is only a refraction of the original
+ unity through the prism of a spontaneous analysis. Mr Bergson admirably
+ points out ("Creative Evolution", pages 240-244 and 252-257.) that there
+ are two types of order, geometric and vital, the one a static hierarchy of
+ relations, the other a musical continuity of moments. These two types are
+ opposed, as space to duration and matter to mind; but the negation of one
+ coincides with the position of the other. It is therefore impossible to
+ abolish both at once. The idea of disorder does not correspond to any
+ genuine reality. It is essentially relative, and arises only when we do
+ not meet the type of order which we were expecting; and then it expresses
+ our deception in the language of our expectation, the absence of the
+ expected order being equivalent, from the practical point of view, to the
+ absence of all order. Regarded in itself, this notion is only a verbal
+ entity, unduly taking form as the common basis of two antithetic types.
+ How therefore do we come to speak of a "perceptible diversity" which mind
+ has to regulate and unify? This is only true at most of the disjointed
+ experience employed by common-sense. Reason, accepting this preliminary
+ analysis, and proceeding to language, seeks to organise it according to
+ the mathematical type. But it is the vital type which corresponds to
+ absolute reality, at least when it is a question of the Whole; and only
+ intuition has re-access to it, by soaring above synthetic dissociations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. Conclusion.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As my last word and closing formula I come back to the leitmotiv of my
+ whole study: Mr Bergson's philosophy is a philosophy of duration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us regard it from this point of view, as contact with creative effort,
+ if we wish to conceive aright the original notions which it proposes to us
+ about liberty, life, and intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us say once more that it appears as the enthronement of positive
+ metaphysics: positive, that is to say, capable of continuous, regular, and
+ collective progress, no longer forcibly divided into irreducible schools,
+ "each of which retains its place, chooses its dice, and begins a
+ never-ending match with the rest." ("Introduction to Metaphysics" in the
+ "Revue de Metaphysique et de Morale", January 1903. Psychology, according
+ to Mr Bergson, studies the human mind in so far as it operates in a useful
+ manner to a practical end; metaphysics represent the effort of this same
+ mind to free itself from the conditions of useful action, and regain
+ possession of itself as pure creative energy. Now experience, the
+ experience of the laboratory, allows us to measure with more and more
+ accuracy the divergence between these two planes of life; hence the
+ positive character of the new metaphysics.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us next say that until the present moment it constitutes the only
+ doctrine which is truly a metaphysic of experience, since no other, at
+ bottom, explains why thought, in its work of discovery and verification,
+ remains in subjection to a law of probation by durable action. We have now
+ only to show how it evades certain criticisms which have been levelled
+ against its tendencies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some have wanted to see in it a kind of atheist monism. Mr Bergson has
+ answered this point himself. What he rejects, and what he is right in
+ rejecting, are the doctrines which confine themselves to personifying the
+ unity of nature or the unity of knowledge in God as motionless first
+ cause. God would really be nothing, since he would do nothing. But he
+ adds: "The considerations put forward in my "Essay on the Immediate Data"
+ result in an illustration of the fact of liberty; those of "Matter and
+ Memory" lead us, I hope, to put our finger on mental reality; those of
+ "Creative Evolution" present creation as a fact: from all this we derive a
+ clear idea of a free and creating God, producing matter and life at once,
+ whose creative effort is continued, in a vital direction, by the evolution
+ of species and the construction of human personalities." (Letter to P. de
+ Tonquedec, published in the "Studies" of 20th February 1912, and quoted
+ here as found in the "Annals of Christian Philosophy", March 1912.) How
+ can we help finding in these words, according to the actual expression of
+ the author, the most categorical refutation "of monism and pantheism in
+ general"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now to go further and become more precise, Mr Bergson points out that we
+ must "approach problems of quite a different kind, those of morality."
+ About these new problems the author of "Creative Evolution" has as yet
+ said nothing; and he will say nothing, so long as his method does not lead
+ him, on this point, to results as positive, after their manner, as those
+ of his other works, because he does not consider that mere subjective
+ opinions are in place in philosophy. He therefore denies nothing; he is
+ waiting and searching, always in the same spirit: what more could we ask
+ of him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One thing only is possible today: to discern in the doctrine already
+ existing the points of a moral and religious philosophy which present
+ themselves in advance for ultimate insertion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what we are permitted to attempt. But let us fully understand what
+ is at issue. The question is only to know whether, as has been claimed,
+ there is incompatibility between Mr Bergson's point of view and the
+ religious or moral point of view; whether the premisses laid down block
+ the road to all future development in the direction before us; or whether,
+ on the contrary, such a development is invited by some parts at least of
+ the previous work. The question is not to find in this work the necessary
+ and sufficient bases, the already formed and visible lineaments of what
+ will one day complete it. To imagine that the religious and moral problem
+ is bound to be regarded by Mr Bergson as arising when it is too late for
+ revision, as admitting proposition and solution only as functions of a
+ previous theoretical philosophy beyond which we should not go; that in his
+ eyes the solution of this problem will be deduced from principles already
+ laid down without any call for the introduction of new facts or new points
+ of view, without any need to begin from a new intuition; that his view
+ precludes all considerations of strictly spiritual life, of inner and
+ profound action, regarding things in relation to God and in an eternal
+ perspective: such a view would be illegitimate and unreasonable, first of
+ all, because Mr Bergson has said nothing of the kind, and secondly,
+ because it is contrary to all his tendencies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the "Essay on the Immediate Data" critics proceeded to confine him
+ in an irreducible static dualism; after "Matter and Memory" they condemned
+ him as failing for ever to explain the juxtaposition of the two points of
+ view, utility and truth: why should we require that after "Creative
+ Evolution" he should be forbidden to think anything new, or distinguish,
+ for example, different orders of life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The problems must be approached one after the other, and, in the solution
+ of each of them, it is proper to introduce only the necessary elements.
+ But each result is only "temporarily final." Let us lose the strange habit
+ of asking an author continually to do something other than he has done,
+ or, in what he has done, to give us the whole of his thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Till now, Mr Bergson has always considered each new problem according to
+ its specific and original nature, and, to solve it, he has always supplied
+ a new effort of autonomous adaptation: why should it be otherwise for the
+ future? I seek vainly for the decree forbidding him the right to study the
+ problem of biological evolution in itself, and for the necessity which
+ compels him to abide now by the premisses contained in his past work. (For
+ Mr Bergson, the religious sentiment, as the sentiment of obligation,
+ contains a basis of "immediate datum" rendering it indissoluble and
+ irreducible.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only point which we have to examine is this: will the moral and
+ religious question compel Mr Bergson to break with the conclusions of his
+ previous studies, and can we not, on the contrary, foresee points of
+ general agreement?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the depths of ourselves we find liberty; in the depths of universal
+ being we find a demand for creation. Since evolution is creative, each of
+ its moments works for the production of an indeducible and transcendent
+ future. This future must not be regarded as a simple development of the
+ present, a simple expression of germs already given. Consequently we have
+ no authority for saying that there is for ever only one order of life,
+ only one plane of action, only one rhythm of duration, only one
+ perspective of existence. And if disconnections and abrupt leaps are
+ visible in the economy of the past&mdash;from matter to life, from the
+ animal to man&mdash;we have no authority again for claiming that we cannot
+ observe today something analogous in the very essence of human life, that
+ the point of view of the flesh, and the point of view of the spirit, the
+ point of view of reason, and the point of view of charity are a
+ homogeneous extension of it. And apart from that, taking life in its first
+ tendency, and in the general direction of its current, it is ascent,
+ growth, upward effort, and a work of spiritualising and emancipating
+ creation: by that we might define Good, for Good is a path rather than a
+ thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But life may fail, halt, or travel downwards. "Life in general is mobility
+ itself; the particular manifestations of life accept this mobility only
+ with regret, and constantly fall behind. While it is always going forward,
+ they would be glad to mark time. Evolution in general would take place as
+ far as possible in a straight line; special evolution is a circular
+ advance. Like dust-eddies raised by the passing wind, living bodies are
+ self-pivoted and hung in the full breeze of life." ("Creative Evolution",
+ page 139.) Each species, each individual, each function tends to take
+ itself as its end; mechanism, habit, body, and letter, which are, strictly
+ speaking, pure instruments, actually become principles of death. Thus it
+ comes about that life is exhausted in efforts towards self-preservation,
+ allows itself to be converted by matter into captive eddies, sometimes
+ even abandons itself to the inertia of the weight which it ought to raise,
+ and surrenders to the downward current which constitutes the essence of
+ materiality: it is thus that Evil would be defined, as the direction of
+ travel opposed to Good. Now, with man, thought, reflection, and clear
+ consciousness appear. At the same time also properly moral qualifications
+ appear: good becomes duty, evil becomes sin. At this precise moment, a new
+ problem begins, demanding the soundings of a new intuition, yet connected
+ at clear and visible points with previous problems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the philosophy which some are pleased to say is closed by nature
+ to all problems of a certain order, problems of reason or problems of
+ morality. There is no doctrine, on the contrary, which is more open, and
+ none which, in actual fact, lends itself better to further extension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not my duty to state here what I believe can be extracted from it.
+ Still less is it my duty to try to foresee what Mr Bergson's conclusions
+ will be. Let us confine ourselves to taking it in what it has expressly
+ given us of itself. From this point of view, which is that of pure
+ knowledge, I must again, as I conclude, emphasise its exceptional
+ importance and its infinite reach. It is possible not to understand it.
+ Such is frequently the case: thus it always has been in the past, each
+ time that a truly new intuition has arisen among men; thus it will be
+ until the inevitable day when disciples more respectful of the letter than
+ the spirit will turn it, alas, into a new scholastic. What does it matter!
+ The future is there; despite misconceptions, despite incomprehensions,
+ there is henceforth the departure-point of all speculative philosophy;
+ each day increases the number of minds which recognise it; and it is
+ better not to dwell upon the proofs of several of those who are unable or
+ unwilling to see it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Index.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Absolute, the.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Adaptation, value of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Analysis, conceptual, contrasted with intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Appearances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Art, and philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atomism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Automatism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Automaton, of daily life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being, as becoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brain, work of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Causality, psychological.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Common-sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concepts, analysis by and functions of, as symbols, creation of, as
+ general frames, practical reach of, inferior to intuition, further
+ discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conservation, law of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Constants, search for, represented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Continuity, qualitative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Criticism, of language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deduction, impotence of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Degradation, law of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Determinism, physical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discontinuity, apparent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Disorder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Du Bois-Reymond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Duration, real, perpetually new, and thought, and time, pure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dynamic connection, schemes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ego, encrustations of the.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eleatic dialectic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Embryology, evidence of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evil, a reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evolution, drama of, biological, value and meaning of, not indispensable,
+ distinguished from development, as dynamic continuity, as activity,
+ further discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Existence, as change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Free-will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Genesis, law of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good, a reality, a path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Habit, as obstacle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heredity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heterogeneity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Homogeneity, absence of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Huxley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Images.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediate, the.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inert, the.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instinct, is sympathy, contrasted with intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intellectualism, distrusted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intelligence, product of evolution, and instinct, broad meaning of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intuition, as starting-point, intransmissible without language, aesthetic,
+ triumph of, and duration, and analysis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intuitional effort, content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kant, his point of departure, conclusions of, escape from.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowledge, absolute, utilitarian nature of, new theory of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Language, dangers of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Law, concept of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Liberty, personal importance of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life, tendencies of, is finality, is progress, further discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limit-concepts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Materialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mechanism, psychological, failure of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Memory, problem of, perception complicated by, importance of, racial,
+ planes of, memory of solids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Metaphor, justification of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Method, philosophical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mill, Stuart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Motor-schemes, mechanisms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mysticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Non-morality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothingness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ontogenesis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Palaeontology, evidence of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parallelism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paralogism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perception, an art, affected by memory, further explained, fulfilment of
+ guesswork, utilitarian signification, subjectivity of, pure and ordinary,
+ further discussed, relation to matter, perception of immediacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophy, duty of, function of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phylogenesis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Planes, of consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Progress, and reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quality, and inner world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quantity, and quality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rationalism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ravaisson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Realism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reality, contact with, a flux, recognition of, absolute, elusive nature
+ of, personal, essentially qualitative, pure, inner, contrasting views
+ about, further discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Relation, between mind and matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Religion, its place in philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Renan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Romanticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Schemes, dynamic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science, prisoner of symbolism, cult of, impotence of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sense, good, and common-sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spencer, criticism of, success and weakness of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spiritualism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Symbolism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sympathy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thought, methods of common.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time, required by Mr Bergson's philosophy, in space, and common-sense, and
+ duration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Transformism, errors of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Utility, as goal of perception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Variation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zeno of Elea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zone, of feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1347 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>